Neurology. 2014 Jan 14;82(2):184-6. doi: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000000021.
Brain donation is an unusual pursuit. It is an aspect of medical research that the lay public may not necessarily know much about. In 2003, to learn more about the underlying pathophysiology of essential tremor (ET), we established the Essential Tremor Brain Repository (ETCBR) at Columbia University, a research effort whose purpose was to enhance understanding of the ET brain (NIH R01 NS042859, Elan D. Louis, principal investigator). Now, at a 10-year point in this endeavor, we pause for a moment to reflect, distill, and share. Why? From the moment potential brain donors first inquire about the possibility of donating their brains to science, all the way through the long course of postmortem brain tissue analyses, health professionals are involved. They experience a range of emotions, thoughts, and reactions, yet we are unaware of any literature that has attempted to capture and record the human elements of this process.
脑捐赠是一项不寻常的追求。这是医学研究的一个方面,普通公众可能不一定了解很多。2003 年,为了更多地了解原发性震颤(ET)的潜在病理生理学,我们在哥伦比亚大学建立了原发性震颤脑库(ETCBR),这是一项研究工作,旨在增强对 ET 大脑的理解(NIH R01 NS042859,Elan D. Louis,主要研究者)。现在,在这项努力进行了 10 年之后,我们停下来反思、提炼并分享。为什么?从潜在的脑捐赠者第一次询问将他们的大脑捐赠给科学的可能性的那一刻起,一直到漫长的死后脑组织分析过程,健康专业人员都参与其中。他们经历了一系列的情绪、想法和反应,但我们不知道有任何文献试图捕捉和记录这个过程中的人为因素。