A man with a brain injury gains the ability to talk and walk temporarily after taking an ambient


A prescription bottle of Ambion, also called Zolpidem

A prescription bottle of Ambion, also called Zolpidem
Photo: Tim Boyle (Getty Images)

Doctors in Amsterdam say a drug commonly associated with drowsiness has given a man with a brain injury a short period of lucidity. In a recent case report, they describe how a single dose of the drug Jolpidam, better known by its brand name Ambian, can temporarily restore a person’s ability to speak and walk. Unfortunately, the effects last only a few hours at a time, but a man’s case can give an understanding of how strokes and other traumas damage the brain.

According to the case report, Published Last month, a 37-year-old man suffered a brain haemorrhage at the age of 29, according to Jટેrtex’s Journal. He suffocated on a piece of meat, which cut off oxygen to his brain for a long time, causing him serious and permanent damage. Its neurological function. However, he initially showed some recovery and maintained a level of awareness, although he was able to move independently, talk, or stay awake for a very long time. For the next eight years, the man’s condition remained the same, and he needed round-the-clock nursing care and a feeding tube to survive.

While zolpidem is often used as a sedative, evidence is being created that it can sometimes Contrasting effect, Including awareness in some people That With certain neurological disorders that leave them in a coma-like state. The doctors decided to give the man one, relatively high dose of the drug. In just 20 minutes he was able to speak. He then spoke on the phone with his father for the first time in years, and with some help, even managed to walk again. He had a suffocation and three weeks before the amnesia, as well as some hearing problems, but otherwise, he was cheerful and cautious, at one point even demanding fast food.

Unfortunately, just over an hour before the miraculous recovery he slowly returned to his original level of work. When he was given repeated doses of zolpidem during the day, the duration of normalcy increased for a shorter period of time until the drug stopped working every day, until he had a sedative effect. Eventually, doctors found Zolpidem to be the most effective – lasting about 30 to 60 minutes per dose before it disappeared in the next hour – when he had not taken it in the last two-three weeks. Because of this, he now receives the drug only for special occasions, such as a family visit or a dental appointment.

Despite the magic of a long-term cure for a man’s condition, his doctors still wanted to understand exactly how Jolpidum is able to bring about amazing, if not brief, changes. Therefore, he studied his brain before and after taking the drug, by EEG and MRI. Their findings suggest that zolpidem, which works by blocking a key neurotransmitter called GAPA, is calming those parts of the human brain that have been injured after an injury, while also increasing the level of brain wave activity associated with alertness.

“If you can compare brain function, like that, with a large string orchestra. In our patient, the first violin is played so loud that it overwhelms the other members of the string orchestra and people can no longer hear each other. V.U. This is the first violin to play more ‘pianosimo’, says medical resident and neuroscience researcher at the University Medical Center Amsterdam, lead author Hisi Arts, lead author, Hisi Arts, lead author, Hisi Arts, lead author’s arts. Said IFL Science.

Because this is the only patient, and there are rare reports of restoration of Zolpidem awareness in similar patients, there is still much to be learned about the effects of the drug on the brain outside of accepted use as a sleep aid. But ideally, this research could lead to an understanding and perhaps one day repairing the unique type of brain damage that is responsible for a man’s condition. The authors speculate that one possible step in the future is to use existing therapies such as deep brain stimulation to balance brain overload in the long run, while being able to do zolpidem.

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