<code id='DF6EC7D935'></code><style id='DF6EC7D935'></style>
    • <acronym id='DF6EC7D935'></acronym>
      <center id='DF6EC7D935'><center id='DF6EC7D935'><tfoot id='DF6EC7D935'></tfoot></center><abbr id='DF6EC7D935'><dir id='DF6EC7D935'><tfoot id='DF6EC7D935'></tfoot><noframes id='DF6EC7D935'>

    • <optgroup id='DF6EC7D935'><strike id='DF6EC7D935'><sup id='DF6EC7D935'></sup></strike><code id='DF6EC7D935'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='DF6EC7D935'><label id='DF6EC7D935'><select id='DF6EC7D935'><dt id='DF6EC7D935'><span id='DF6EC7D935'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='DF6EC7D935'></u>
          <i id='DF6EC7D935'><strike id='DF6EC7D935'><tt id='DF6EC7D935'><pre id='DF6EC7D935'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          explore

          explore

          author:knowledge    Page View:995
          Scanned cerebellum of a mouse brain, affected by Niemann-Pick Type C, shown in pink and teal — biotech coverage from STAT
          The cerebellum of a mouse brain affected by Niemann-Pick Type C. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health

          About a decade ago, Tatiana Bremova-Ertl’s graduate adviser was studying an obscure, 1950s-era French vertigo drug, probing its effects on people with balance disorders, when she thought of another, very sick group of patients. 

          A graduate student and medical resident at the German Center for Vertigo and Balance Disorders, in Munich, Bremova-Ertl often saw patients with Niemann-Pick Type C, a rare, genetic disease that slowly kills neurons. 

          advertisement

          NPC has a range of manifestations. When symptoms appear in early childhood, it is often fatal before adulthood. When it manifests  later, it can be milder. But it’s always degenerative and leads to a cluster of challenges: cognitive decline, difficulty with speech and swallowing, enlarged liver, low muscle tone, and, notably, difficulty with balance and muscle control. Researchers and a fervent group of parents were working to develop medicines, but little had yet worked. 

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          Dobbs anniversary: the lost opportunity of abortion as health care
          Dobbs anniversary: the lost opportunity of abortion as health care

          NathanHoward/GettyImagesReflectingonthisfirstanniversaryoftheSupremeCourt’sdecisioninDobbstooverturn

          read more
          Why some people catch Covid but never get sick
          Why some people catch Covid but never get sick

          ThisscanningelectronmicroscopeimageshowsSARS-CoV-2(yellow)isolatedfromapatient.NIAID/NIHIntheearlies

          read more
          Hepatitis C has a cure — but many Americans still lack access to it
          Hepatitis C has a cure — but many Americans still lack access to it

          AdobeIn2005,NickVoyleswasdiagnosedwithhepatitisCafterbeingreleasedfromfiveyearsofincarceration.Anurs

          read more

          New warning issued for rebooking air travel after delays, cancellations

          3:08TravelerscheckthestatusoftheirflightsaheadoftheJuly4holidayweekendatRonaldReaganWashingtonNation