Submitted by AutoModerator t3_ydyua0 in askscience

Welcome to our weekly feature, Ask Anything Wednesday - this week we are focusing on Biology, Chemistry, Neuroscience, Medicine, Psychology

Do you have a question within these topics you weren't sure was worth submitting? Is something a bit too speculative for a typical /r/AskScience post? No question is too big or small for AAW. In this thread you can ask any science-related question! Things like: "What would happen if...", "How will the future...", "If all the rules for 'X' were different...", "Why does my...".

Asking Questions:

Please post your question as a top-level response to this, and our team of panellists will be here to answer and discuss your questions. The other topic areas will appear in future Ask Anything Wednesdays, so if you have other questions not covered by this weeks theme please either hold on to it until those topics come around, or go and post over in our sister subreddit /r/AskScienceDiscussion , where every day is Ask Anything Wednesday! Off-theme questions in this post will be removed to try and keep the thread a manageable size for both our readers and panellists.

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Please only answer a posted question if you are an expert in the field. The full guidelines for posting responses in AskScience can be found here. In short, this is a moderated subreddit, and responses which do not meet our quality guidelines will be removed. Remember, peer reviewed sources are always appreciated, and anecdotes are absolutely not appropriate. In general if your answer begins with 'I think', or 'I've heard', then it's not suitable for /r/AskScience.

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Past AskAnythingWednesday posts can be found here. Ask away!

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Hiding_behind_you t1_ituu5ve wrote

Do we understand how memories work? Perhaps more specifically, how are they retained over years despite the brain cells being gradually replaced over the years?

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slouchingtoepiphany t1_itvaxls wrote

You're asking a very good question and we understand some aspects of it, but not all of them, nor is there a single comprehensive theory that fully explains all aspects of memory storage and retrieval. But first, one point of clarification, most neurons are not replaced during life. Except for sensory neurons in the olfactory bulb and a sub-set of neurons in the hippocampus, the neurons we have in our brains are the same throughout our lives.

Just to get encoding/decoding out of the way, information the obtain through our sensory receptors is parceled out (primarily through the thalamus and related ganglia) to different regions of our cerebral cortex: vision (occipital lobe), somatosensory (parietal lobe), auditory (temporal lobe), higher cognitive function (frontal lobe), and movement and motor skills (cerebellum). For movement or behavior in general, the individual draws from information saved in these areas.

Now to address your question. In the cortical areas mentioned above, neurons contact other neurons at synapses (the places where neurotransmitters are released from one neuron to another to either increase (excitatory) or decrease (inhibitory) the potential of the second neuron firing. And thus it continues from neuron to neuron. When neurotransmitters repeatedly act in synapse, in addition to causing the post-synaptic neuron to fire, they elicit subtle changes both pre- and post-synaptically. Pre-synaptically, these changes include increases in the number of NT-containing vesicles formed along with enzymatic modifications to increase how much NT is released. Post-synaptically, the numbers of NT receptors increase, as do the numbers of dendrites, and other changes referred to collectively as "post-synaptic densities." Over time and many thousands of times fired, the synapse becomes "stronger" or more able to fire (a model for this is calls it long-term potentiation or LTP).

This is what happens at a single neuronal synapse and it's the fundamental "unit" of memory, however note that each neuron receives input from about 1,000 neurons and provides output to another 1,000 neurons, and there are many, many neurons in the cortices (I don't recall how many, but there's an estimate for the entire brain of 10 to the 11th power that's sometimes mentioned.

Somehow, all of these individual synaptic changes give rise to memories and learned behaviors, but alas, we don't understand the full sequence of how this processing occurs.

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Blakut t1_itux2al wrote

Are there any drugs or medications that have the opposite effect of anti-depressants? I.e. they trigger depressive thoughts and overwhelming sadness in otherwise healthy individuals?

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Saedius t1_itxv3wy wrote

Also rimonabant was removed from the market due to suicidal ideation. It's a CB1 inverse agonist that acts on the cannabanoid receptor opposite to how marijuana does with the idea being that it would suppress appetite and aid weightloss. It worked (modestly) but it also made people think about killing themselves. That got it removed from the market pretty quickly.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rimonabant

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Blakut t1_ity3cpi wrote

suicidal ideation is a common side effect of many anti depressants, especially in young people

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aTacoParty t1_iu1rl9n wrote

There are several classes of drugs that are known to have depressive side effects (including some heart medications that affect ion channels, and some medications that affect hormones). Usually these are quite minor as a medication would not be approved by the FDA if depression was a major side effect.

Currently the FDA has a black box warning for suicidal ideation for SSRI's (an anti-depressant). Generally the increase in suicidal ideation occurs within a month or so of initiating treatment before the risk begins to reduce to that of someone without depression. The mechanism for this is unknown although its been proposed that there is a brief phase where the treatment increases motivation/energy before mood. There have been several critiques of the link between suicide and SSRI's with the main points being that the link exists in adolescents and children but not adults. Thus pooled analyses lose this distinction.

Suicidal ideation following anti-depressant initiation - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9178080/

Critique on the link between suicide and anti-depressant-
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31130881/

Medications with depressive side effects - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2729620/

For those seeking help regarding suicide -
https://988lifeline.org/

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thepriceofaslave t1_ituzbg4 wrote

Are anti-depressants being over prescribed? How else should we be dealing with the problem?

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PeanutSalsa t1_ituxg6m wrote

Does the 1000 Genomes Project apply to all of a human's DNA which includes all their coding and non-coding DNA or not?

https://www.nature.com/articles/nature15393

The first paragraph in its abstract states:

>"The 1000 Genomes Project set out to provide a comprehensive description of common human genetic variation by applying whole-genome sequencing to a diverse set of individuals from multiple populations."

But does "whole-genome sequencing" refer to all coding and non-coding DNA of an individual or not?

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CrateDane t1_itvtmvd wrote

It refers to all DNA, not just coding sequences.

Sequencing all the coding sequences is called whole exome sequencing.

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Hiding_behind_you t1_itv4a3v wrote

Is it conceivable to have a bio-electrical implant embedded into a blood vessel that is able to read and detect deficiencies or excesses in the essential nutrients, minerals, and so on, and act as a first warning of illnesses? In effect, a “your iron is at 105%, your carbohydrates are at 87%”, or “early cancer detected; please see a doctor”?

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AgingLemon t1_itwh95c wrote

Researcher here. Medical device companies are working on this. Continuous glucose monitors do this with interstitial fluid, and Dexcom is investigating applying these technologies for other molecules.

A big consideration is the thing you want to measure, which tissues you can access, and whether it’s an appropriate approach. Blood is accessible and a lot, but not all, of health related things are released or leaked into blood. For example Vitamin D measurement in blood is tricky.

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TestAnxietyIsReal t1_itv5uti wrote

Are more people being born with autism and adhd or have diagnostic criteria just improved, leading to more people are getting accurately diagnosed when they previously would not have?

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PeanutSalsa t1_itv8j0u wrote

How does Advil relieve headaches?

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Character_Roof_3889 t1_itvz9ok wrote

Advil, or Ibuprofen, binds to an enzyme called cyclooxygenase (COX-1 and COX-2). It blocks the beginning of a pathway (maybe someone else can fill in this part for me) that leads to inflammation. It is a non-steroidal anti inflammatory drug (NSAID).

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CocktailChemist t1_itx9yq9 wrote

To begin with we would have to know what headaches are on a mechanistic level and at least when I took a neurophysiology of pain course in grad school the answer was pretty unclear.

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PeanutSalsa t1_itw6oi5 wrote

Why is monosodium glutamate (MSG) such a trigger of headaches for people?

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Indemnity4 t1_itxn46w wrote

Upfront: some of it is a very slight form of racism. Used to be called Chinese Restaurant Syndrome.

You eat about 10-20 mg of glutamate a day in a normal diet. It's in cheese, tomatoes, soy sauce, soy-anything like protein boosted meals, roasted meats - essentially it's in anything that tastes savoury.

There is no difference between MSG or naturally occurring glutamate in other foods. Your body sees those as being exactly the same. It's just normal glutamate that has been mixed with salt and dried.

Next, the science. First, MSG not been proved to to be linked to headaches. Second, there is good evidence that MSG at any concentrations has no effect on headaches.

Those are different but good stories: you can give anyone MSG and it doesn't cause migraines or headaches; If someone is susceptible to migraines or headaches, it's been shown it's not the MSG causing it.

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InfiniteMothman t1_ituzmjd wrote

How fast would a mass of U235 have to impact something to achieve a reasonably efficient nuclear detonation?

Presumably the projectile would have to be shaped a certain way. Would a hollow point work?

And if it were filled with heavy hydrogen could we have H bomb level effect from it?

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Indemnity4 t1_iu36dr7 wrote

Wikipedia article on gun-type fission bombs..

The simple part of the gun mechanism is pushing two sub-critical lumps of U235 together to make a large enough mass to be super-critical. You could do this with your hands pushing the two lumps together and it still happens, the bullet design just makes it more efficient.

The speed of the bullet is because the super-critical chain reactions take 1 microsecond. That means you have only 1 microsecond to get the bullet to mix with the target and hopefully form something like a sphere. If the bullet is moving too slow, you get pre-detonation.

Basically, bullet too slow = the bottom blows up and wastes the remaining unreacted mass of U235 by throwing it out the top.

The bullet was hollow, but more similar to when you do the hand gesture of penis entering vagina. It kept the two lumps of material from touching for as long as possible. The hollow bullet landed on a spiked target.

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Peasant_hacking t1_itv0ztu wrote

how long till we see a new specie of human?

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syntheticassault t1_itxaypg wrote

Probably never because you would need an isolated population for many generations. Like 10-100 thousand years of an isolated population.

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Peasant_hacking t1_itxbfrn wrote

so mutations in not isolated population isnt enough?

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atomfullerene t1_iu02vsg wrote

generally speaking, if populations aren't isolated then mutations will eventually spread across the whole species, so you don't get divergence between different populations.

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fwubglubbel t1_itv5z44 wrote

What is the mechanism by which a virus is triggered to deposit its genetic material into a host cell?

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Ambitious_Object_614 t1_itv83p9 wrote

We often get frightened because something is unknown to us .The part of the brain involved in the response of fear is amygdala which lies deep within the brain.How does this work and can we train our brain to be fearless even in the unknown ?or some sort of fear will always exist?

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chai1984 t1_itvci9b wrote

is it a given that whenever placental mammals show up, large birds (like terror birds and giant penguins) and marsupials usually go into steep decline?

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chriswhoppers t1_itwq4my wrote

What has played a bigger roll in medicine, biochemistry or synthetic chemistry?

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syntheticassault t1_itxbcnp wrote

Synthetic chemistry makes the drugs and biochemistry helps understand them.

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00Wow00 t1_itx7hif wrote

Is there one main source that the forever plastic comes from or is it just the nature of all plastics that are currently being produced?

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Hour_Significance817 t1_itxmzof wrote

Regarding the recent recall of several cleaning products from Clorox (specifically Pine Sol) where some products may have been tainted with bacteria (including pseudomonas), how is this possible? The active ingredients in the cleaners include ethoxylated alcohols, sodium lauryl sulfate, sulfonic acid, and other nonionic and ionic surfactants that should be bacteriostatic if not antibacterial (or even downright cytotoxic). Is this recall just out of an abundance of caution, or are there really legitimate concerns based on science and medicine where the recall is warranted?

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Indemnity4 t1_iu34yub wrote

> The recall includes the following products: Pine-Sol Scented Multi-Surface Cleaners, in Lavender Clean, Sparkling Wave and Lemon Fresh scents; CloroxPro Pine-Sol All Purpose Cleaners, in Lavender Clean, Sparkling Wave, Lemon Fresh and Orange Energy scents; and Clorox Professional Pine-Sol Lemon Fresh Cleaners.

Microbes like to eat soaps too.

The multisurface cleaners are mostly water, oils and surfactants. They are not antimicrobial.

Most of the chemicals you listed are very poor antimicrobials, IMHO they are not antimicrobial at all. They mostly work simply by being surfactants that (1) dissolve a fatty outer layer and wash off the bacteria from a surface or (2) maybe if you get lucky they lyse a really narrow class of microbes, usually just e-coli and salmonella bacteria.

Typically these products include a teeny tiny trace amount of water-based anti-microbial chemicals to keep the product shelf stable. For instance, benzyl alcohol or MIT/CIT.

It can easily be that the factory was using contaminated water and the amount of microbes exceeded the control of the antimicrobials. They factory may have had a blocked nozzle and the products either did not get enough or any antimicrobials. A worker may have messed up and put the incorrect chemical in the processing line.

Since the claim the bacteria of concern is Pseudomonas aeruginosa, IMHO that implies their factory was using ground water that became contaminated. The factory water treatment facility got contaminated or was passing, which contaminated their bottle filling equipment. In my own work history I have seen a sand filter positioned after a water treatment facility get contaminated, and nobody checked because it was not expected to ever see dirty water in the first place, so it was only noticed when during a routine stoppage and restart, the first flush of water smelled bad.

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PeanutSalsa t1_itxu41d wrote

What causes headaches to happen?

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NullBuddy t1_itz4ez5 wrote

How do trends and fashion work in all areas (clothing, entertainment, technology, fandom, etc.)?

I mean the psychological and social mechanisms.

Especially concerning trends/hypes which are obviously created to 'cash in' and have obvious drawbacks for some of the stakeholders? (For example, how is it possible, that 'youtube influencers' 'work', it is clear they want to make money/sell stuff and still they get an audience. Why?)

Book recommendations to learn about the psychological/social basics regarding this question/topic also highly appreciated.

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