Young people across the country are embodying the “Raise Your Voice” spirit for ALS Awareness Month through the Iced Tea Challenge to support The ALS Association. Yesterday, Iced Tea Challenge campaign organizer Rebecca Wetzel appeared on the “TODAY” show to discuss how youth can be more involved in philanthropy and raising awareness for ALS.
Researchers around the world working together for treatments and a cure for ALS are a main reason why we’re on the verge of changing the nature of the disease forever. As part of National ALS Awareness Month, we sat down with two ALS researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore who are funded by The ALS Association.
The 70th Annual American Academy of Neurology meeting, held in Los Angeles last week, provided an opportunity to check in on antisense therapies and the continued dividends from The ALS Association’s early investment in the technology.
We’re excited to kick off National ALS Awareness Month. The next 31 days will be dedicated to education about the disease and the work happening around the world to find a cure, and to advocating for people with ALS and their caregivers. This year, we’re asking you to Raise Your Voice to elevate the fight against ALS.
At last week’s 70th Annual American Academy of Neurology (AAN) Meeting in Los Angeles, neuroscientists and neurologists from all over the world came together to present their important work and learn from each other. We are proud that many top ALS researchers we support attended and presented a wide range of research, on topics ranging from environmental risk factors to work leading up to clinical trials.
Neuraltus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. reported disappointing results from its phase II clinical trial studying the impact of an immune regulator, NP001, in people living with ALS who had increased levels of inflammation. The company presented the negative results during the 70th Annual American Academy of Neurology Meeting in Los Angeles.
Dr. Timothy Miller, the David Clayson Professor of Neurology from the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis accepted the 2018 Sheila Essey Award for ALS Research April 23 at the American Academy of Neurology 70th Annual Meeting in Los Angeles.
To make cell characteristics visible to the human eye, even under a microscope, scientists normally use chemicals that can kill the very cells they want to observe. Dr. Steven Finkbeiner, director and senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco (pictured above), recently teamed with computer scientists at Google for a groundbreaking new study funded by The ALS Association Neuro Collaborative through ALS Ice Bucket Challenge donations.
Late last month, Congress passed a $1.3 trillion fiscal year 2018 Consolidated Appropriations spending bill that included a $3 billion increase to funding for medical research to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Funding to the NIH has increased to $37 billion, the largest bump they have seen in years.
Researchers at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, funded by The ALS Association with ALS Ice Bucket Challenge donations, are dedicated to finding unique avenues for treating ALS. Using animal models, they transplanted specially engineered neural cells into the motor cortex of the brain, the area responsible for muscle movement.