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Aristides Leão

Aristides Azevedo Pacheco Leão (August 3, 1914 in Rio de Janeiro – December 14, 1993 in São Paulo[10]) was a Brazilian neurophysiologist, researcher and university professor.

Aristides Leão
Aristides early 1940s
Born(1914-08-03)August 3, 1914
DiedDecember 14, 1993(1993-12-14) (aged 79)
São Paulo, Brazil
Resting placeRio de Janeiro
Alma materFMUSP [pt] (graduation)
Harvard University (M.A., 1942 - PhD, 1943[1])
Known forDiscover of the Leão's Wave
SpouseElisabeth Raja Gabaglia Leão[2] aka Elisabeth Pacheco Leão[3]
RelativesCandido Portinari (brother-in-law)[4]
AwardsGrand Cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit (1994)[5]
Scientific career
FieldsNeurophysiology
InstitutionsFederal University of Rio de Janeiro
Instituto de Biofísica Carlos Chagas Filho [pt]
ThesisSpreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex (1944)
Doctoral advisorArturo Rosenblueth[6][7]
Hallowell Davis[8][7]
InfluencesAlfred Wallace, Charles Darwin, Fritz Mueller[9]

Leão discovered and described the spreading depression, which also became known as "the Leão wave". This depression is a reaction in the cerebral cortex that can be induced by touch or electric shock, although, more significantly, it occurs spontaneously in migraine and to some extent in epilepsy.[11] It occurs not only in the brain, but in other neural structures.[12]

Leão was president of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences between 1967 and 1981 and defended scientists persecuted by the military dictatoship, besides having created scientific publications and having closed important scientific collaborations of the academy. Elected president emeritus of the institution, the academy's library now bears his name.[13] He was awarded the Grand Cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit[14] and was a full member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.[15]

Biography

Leão was born on August 3, 1914,[16] into a traditional family in Rio de Janeiro, the youngest of seven siblings. He never met his father, Manoel Pacheco Leão, who died shortly before Leão was born. His mother, the painter Francisca Azevedo Leão, raised the children alone, with the help of her brother-in-law, the biologist and director of the Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden, Antônio Pacheco Leão, who assisted in the children's education.[17][18] While living in a large house in the Laranjeiras neighborhood, the family was also helped by a British nanny of whom no records exist.[19]

Leão entered the São Paulo School of Medicine in 1932 at the age of 18.[18] However, he contracted tuberculosis in his second year and had to suspend his studies for two years,[20] while being treated in Belo Horizonte.[21] When he recovered, he decided that he would like to work in scientific research and moved to the United States in 1941, where he was admitted to the graduate research program at Harvard Medical School. He received his master's degree in 1942 and his doctorate of science in 1943.[22]

Career

 
Team in the biophysics lab.

In 1943, he became an adjunct researcher at Harvard's Department of Anatomy, where he identified the phenomenon of spreading depression,[23] and although he had the opportunity to work in the United States, he preferred to return to Brazil in 1944, at the age of 32.[24][21] Upon his return, he was appointed Specialized Technician of the Chair of Biological Physics (1945) at the National School of Medicine of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.[25]

He was invited by Carlos Chagas Filho, to join the new Biophysics Institute, which was still being organized. His colleagues included Gustavo de Oliveira Castro. Romualdo José do Carmo and Hiss Martins Ferreira [pt],[26] He continued his research into cortical spreading depression. The instruments in his laboratory in Brazil were salvaged discards, but they were so carefully restored that they were always ready for use.[27] Despite discouraging practical limitations, he did not abandon his work[23] and so published his first article in Brazil.[21] His first article on spreading depression, 'Spreading depression of electrical activity in the cerebral cortex,' the phenomenon was given the eponym of his name and called Leão's spreading depression.[28]

Leão was director of the institute from 1966 to 1970 and emeritus head of the neurobiology department from 1984 to 1993. He became an associate of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences (1948)[29] and a full member in 1951, and was its vice-president (1955-1957/1965-1967) and president for seven consecutive terms (1967-1981).[30] He was a member of the Deliberative Council at CNPq (1960–74) and then its scientific advisor (1975–84).[31][21] During the Brazilian military dictatorship, as President of the ABC, he also defended the Revista Brasileira de Biologia (Brazilian Journal of Biology) after its editors were arrested by the regime.[32] While president he also encouraged scientific cooperation between Brazil and other countries.[21]

After the cesium leak in Goiânia, in 1988, he became the president of the newly created State Commission of Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety.[33] Between 1985 and 1991 he participated in the Planning and Science and Technology Secretariats of the Presidency of the Republic, as member and president of the Special Followup Group (GEA) of the Scientific Development Support Program (PADCT).[34]

After his mandatory retirement, he was named Laboratory Head Emeritus of the Department of Neurobiology of the Carlos Chagas Filho Biophysics Institute, where he remained for nine more years as a CNPq research fellow.[35]

Leão's Wave

 
Spreading Depolarization seen using Intrinsic optical signal imaging in gyrencephalic brain. Speed 50x.

Aristides Leão discovered the phenomenon while working on his thesis at Harvard in 1944. He named the phenomenon "spreading depression", but it became known as "the Leão's wave". The true causes of this depression are not known, but it can be induced by electric shocks. The description of this illness helped in the diagnosis of other diseases such as epilepsy. According to Leão's later investigations, it occurs not only in the brain, but also in other neural structures.[12] His research on spreading depression is still widely cited within the medical literature[7] and the spreading depression, in the case of brain damage, can be reversed provided that the blood flow is restored quickly.[a] However, there is no guarantee that the neurons may survive.[37]

History of Discovery

The earliest origin of what has come to be known as spreading depression dates back to 1906, when Sir. William Richard Gowers, in a lecture on epilepsy, noted that “a peculiar spreading disturbance of the nerve structures is evident” and that lasts for several minutes, something that was confirmed and described by Aristides Leão in this way:[38]

While working on his PhD thesis at Harvard under the supervision of Hallowell Davis, Leão aimed to study "experimental "epilepsy". To perform the experiment he opened anesthetized rabbit skulls and placed a row of silver electrodes in contact with the cortical surface, with two serving for stimulation.[11] However, instead of a seizure-like discharge, the stimulation was followed by a flattening of the brain waves in a kind of domino effect, which recovered in the same way.[11]

Somjen 2005 questions whether the ease with which this phenomenon can be caused did not cause other researchers to have observed it before Leão and dismissed it as an "annoying interruption of work" and goes on to say that this phenomenon intrigued him and became the main topic of Aristides' work, with his first article (Leão 1944a) demonstrating the basic characteristics that have been confirmed by other researchers.[11] In a following article (Leão 1944b) he described how blood vessels behave during the event.[11]

The third article (Leão 1947) in focus by Somjen 2005, made after Leão's return to Rio de Janeiro, deals with the slow voltage change that accompanies the phenomenon and the complete cerebral ischemia.[11] Over the years other articles on the subject have been done, but it is still not understood why the spreading depression occurs.[39]

Awards

The researcher is also remembered for his outstanding performance as president of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences between 1967 and 1981. His contribution to science earned him important scientific awards, such as the Einstein Award in 1961; the Prêmio Almirante Álvaro Alberto [pt] in 1973[40] and the Moinho Santista Award (now the Bunge Foundation Award), in 1974[41] and 1977.[42] He also received posthumous tribute from the Brazilian Academy of Sciences, whose library today bears his name,[43][30] being elected president emeritus of this institution on December 20, 1993.[44]

Death

Leão died on December 14, 1993, in São Paulo, at the age of 79, due to respiratory failure. He was buried in Rio de Janeiro, in the family grave.[45]

Legacy

According to Rodrigo Polito at Uol, Leão is the author of one of the most cited physiology articles in the world and dedicated his life to the development of science in his native country.[23] Carlos Chagas Filho described him as "...one of the greatest scientists I knew, he was extremely simple and cultured, a great stimulator of research among young people and an exceptional professor of general and comparative physiology..."[46] who left a great number of disciples in Brazil and abroad, besides having had a great influence on the projection of the Institute of Biophysics as an institution of excellence abroad.[47]

In 2002 it was demonstrated that depolarization occurs in human brains[37] and in 2018, the article "Terminal spreading depolarization and electrical silence in death of human cerebral cortex", published in Annals of Neurology, for the first time revealed that the spreading depression described by Leão occurs in the human brain after the end of cardiac activity.[48][49][50][37] In a possible coincidence, co-author Jed Hartings discovered that the series Star Trek: The Next Generation had laid out this process in general form in the episode Skin of Evil in much the same way as the 2018 research, which leads co-researcher Jens Dreier to believe that the scriptwriters may have borrowed from similar research (or even Leão's).[51][52]

Personal life

Leão enjoyed sport fishing,[53][54] classical composers, Brazilian popular music[55][56] and being considered by his colleagues as having a "prodigious culture", his ornithology collection surpassed that of the National Museum,[57][58] although he considered himself an amateur in the field.[59] In doing so, he also developed as a naturalist[60] and had in Charles Darwin his main reference.[61] He also behaved as a humble person, despite his academic position and achievements.[62] Jacques Veilliard [fr] considers Aristides to be the father of bioacoustics in Brazil.[58]

Scientific papers

  • Leão, Aristides A. P. (1944a). "Spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex". J. Neurophysiol. 7 (6): 359–390. doi:10.1152/jn.1944.7.6.359.
  • Leão, Aristides A. P. (1944b). "Pial circulation and spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex". J. Neurophysiol. 7 (6): 391–396. doi:10.1152/jn.1944.7.6.391.
  • Leão, A. A. P.; Morison, R. S. (1945). "Propagation of spreading cortical depression". J. Neurophysiol. 8 (1): 22–45. doi:10.1152/jn.1945.8.1.33.
  • Leão, Aristides A. P. (1947). "Further observations on the spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex". J. Neurophysiol. 10 (6): 409–414. doi:10.1152/jn.1947.10.6.409. PMID 20268874.

See also

References

  1. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)
  2. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 7:02)(Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  3. ^ (Velloso & Gitirana 2001, p. 456)
  4. ^ (Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 111)
  5. ^ (Ciência 2018)
  6. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 6:36)
  7. ^ a b c Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 110.
  8. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 7:02)
  9. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 10:01)
  10. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  11. ^ a b c d e f Somjen 2005, p. 2.
  12. ^ a b Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 545.
  13. ^ Duque-Estrada.
  14. ^ Ciência 2018.
  15. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)
  16. ^ Ciência 2014.
  17. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)(Botaro et al. 2020, 01:29)
  18. ^ a b Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 112.
  19. ^ (Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, pp. 111–112)
  20. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 03:09)(Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  21. ^ a b c d e Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 113.
  22. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)(Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)
  23. ^ a b c Polito 2003.
  24. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  25. ^ Almeida 2012, pp. 661–662.
  26. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  27. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 05:23, 06:42)
  28. ^ Velloso & Gitirana 2001, p. 455.
  29. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  30. ^ a b Velloso & Gitirana 2001, p. 454.
  31. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)
  32. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 19:35)
  33. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 2)
  34. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 3)
  35. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 3)
  36. ^ Thompson 2018.
  37. ^ a b c Fessl 2018.
  38. ^ Rogawski 2012, p. 6.
  39. ^ Somjen 2005, p. 3.
  40. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 14:25)
  41. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 15:34)
  42. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 3)
  43. ^ (Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 3)
  44. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 22:53)(Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  45. ^ (Engelhardt & Gomes 2015, p. 544)
  46. ^ Filho 2000, p. 102.
  47. ^ Filho 2000, p. 103.
  48. ^ Letzter 2018.
  49. ^ (Dreier et al. 2018)
  50. ^ Andrews 2018.
  51. ^ Alfering 2018.
  52. ^ Hale 2018.
  53. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 03:48)
  54. ^ Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 111.
  55. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 04:10)
  56. ^ Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 115.
  57. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 04:23)
  58. ^ a b Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 114.
  59. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 12:21)
  60. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 10:11)
  61. ^ (Maranhão-Filho & Vincent 2009, p. 114)
  62. ^ (Botaro et al. 2020, 10:48)(Negreiros et al. 2014, p. 3)

Note

  1. ^ Jed Hartings in 2018 said that the process, in the case of patient death, is reversible within the first 10 minutes.[36]

Bibliography

  • Almeida, Darcy Fontoura de (2012). "A contribuição de Carlos Chagas Filho para a institucionalização da pesquisa científica na universidade brasileira". Dossiê Carlos Chagas Filho (in Brazilian Portuguese). 19 (2): 653–668. doi:10.1590/S0104-59702012005000002. PMID 22473447.
  • Andrews, Robin (2018). "Pioneering Study Reveals What Happens To Your Brain As You Die". Iflscience. from the original on 2018-03-05.
  • Alfering, Yannah (2018). "This Neurologist Found Out What Happens to Our Brains When We Die". Iflscience. from the original on 2020-11-09.
  • Botaro; Negreiros; Mancilio; Lúcio; Almeida (2020). "Aristides Pacheco Leão: Revisitando a História de um Neurocientista". Espaço Memorial Carlos Chagas Filho (in Brazilian Portuguese). from the original on 2021-11-09.
  • Fessl, Sophie (2018). "The End Comes as a Wave". Dana. from the original on 2021-06-24.
  • Ciência, Canal (2018). . Canal Ciência (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2020-02-29.
  • Ciência, Divulga (2014). Unicamp (ed.). "Divulga Cientista – Aristides Pacheco Leão". Ciência em Revista (in Brazilian Portuguese). from the original on 2021-11-09.
  • Dreier; Major; Foreman; Winkler; Kang; Milakara; Lemale; DiNapoli; Hinzman; Woitzik; Andaluz; Carlson; Hartings (2018). "Terminal spreading depolarization and electrical silence in death of human cerebral cortex". Annals of Neurology. 83 (2): 295–310. doi:10.1002/ana.25147. PMC 5901399. PMID 29331091.
  • Duque-Estrada, Maria Inês. . Canal Ciência. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12.
  • Engelhardt; Gomes (2015). "Aristides Leão: a birth centennial homage with comments on his spreading depression" (PDF). Arq Neuropsiquiatr. 6 (73): 544–546. doi:10.1590/0004-282X20150045. PMID 26083892.
  • Filho, Carlos Chagas (2000). "Instituto de Biofísica Carlos Chagas Filho" (PDF). Um aprendiz de ciência (PDF) (in Brazilian Portuguese). Fiocruz. p. 279. doi:10.7476/9788575412473. ISBN 85-209-1082-3. (PDF) from the original on 2017-08-09. (Internet Archive)
  • Hale, Tom (2018). "A Neuroscientist Found Out What Happens To The Brain When We Die - Then Realized That Star Trek Figured It Out First". Iflscience. from the original on 2018-04-26.
  • Letzter, Rafi (2018). "Dying Brains Silence Themselves in a Dark Wave of 'Spreading Depression'". Live Science. from the original on 2018-02-28.
  • Maranhão-Filho; Vincent (2009). "Professor Aristides Leão. Much More Than Spreading Depression". Headache. 49 (1): 110–116. doi:10.1111/j.1526-4610.2008.01210.x. ISSN 0017-8748. PMID 18647182. S2CID 32463240.
  • Negreiros; Botaro; Lúcio; Almeida; Gouveia; Coelho; Mancilio; Saraiva; Marins (2014). "Vitrine Aristides Pacheco Leão: Revisitando a história de um Neurocientista" (PDF). Scientiarum Historia (in Brazilian Portuguese) (VII): 9. ISSN 2176-1248. (PDF) from the original on 2021-11-09.
  • Polito, Rodrigo (2003). . Ciência Hoje (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2006-05-12.
  • Rogawski, MA. (2012). Jasper's Basic Mechanisms of the Epilepsies (ed.). "Migraine and Epilepsy—Shared Mechanisms within the Family of Episodic Disorders" (PDF). Noebles JL (4 ed.).
  • Somjen, G. G. (2005). "Aristides Leão's discovery of cortical spreading depression". Journal of Neurophysiology. 95 (1): 2–4. doi:10.1152/classicessays.00031.2005. PMID 15985690.
  • Thompson, Ann (2018). "The Sounds Inside Your Brain Right Before Death". WVXU. from the original on 2021-11-12.
  • Velloso; Gitirana (2001). "Arquivo Fotográfico Aristides Azevedo Pacheco Leão". História Ciências Saúde-Manguinhos (in Brazilian Portuguese). 8 (2): 454–458. doi:10.1590/S0104-59702001000300008.

External links

  • Péricles Maranhão Filho (2015). "Professor Leão's original note". Arq. Neuro-Psiquiatr. 73 (8): 729. doi:10.1590/0004-282X20150087. PMID 26222369.


Preceded by President of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences
1967-1981
Succeeded by

aristides, leão, aristides, azevedo, pacheco, leão, august, 1914, janeiro, december, 1993, são, paulo, brazilian, neurophysiologist, researcher, university, professor, aristides, early, 1940sborn, 1914, august, 1914rio, janeiro, brazildieddecember, 1993, 1993,. Aristides Azevedo Pacheco Leao August 3 1914 in Rio de Janeiro December 14 1993 in Sao Paulo 10 was a Brazilian neurophysiologist researcher and university professor Aristides LeaoAristides early 1940sBorn 1914 08 03 August 3 1914Rio de Janeiro BrazilDiedDecember 14 1993 1993 12 14 aged 79 Sao Paulo BrazilResting placeRio de JaneiroAlma materFMUSP pt graduation Harvard University M A 1942 PhD 1943 1 Known forDiscover of the Leao s WaveSpouseElisabeth Raja Gabaglia Leao 2 aka Elisabeth Pacheco Leao 3 RelativesCandido Portinari brother in law 4 AwardsGrand Cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit 1994 5 Scientific careerFieldsNeurophysiologyInstitutionsFederal University of Rio de JaneiroInstituto de Biofisica Carlos Chagas Filho pt ThesisSpreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex 1944 Doctoral advisorArturo Rosenblueth 6 7 Hallowell Davis 8 7 InfluencesAlfred Wallace Charles Darwin Fritz Mueller 9 Leao discovered and described the spreading depression which also became known as the Leao wave This depression is a reaction in the cerebral cortex that can be induced by touch or electric shock although more significantly it occurs spontaneously in migraine and to some extent in epilepsy 11 It occurs not only in the brain but in other neural structures 12 Leao was president of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences between 1967 and 1981 and defended scientists persecuted by the military dictatoship besides having created scientific publications and having closed important scientific collaborations of the academy Elected president emeritus of the institution the academy s library now bears his name 13 He was awarded the Grand Cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit 14 and was a full member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences 15 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Career 1 1 1 Leao s Wave 1 1 1 1 History of Discovery 1 2 Awards 2 Death 3 Legacy 4 Personal life 5 Scientific papers 6 See also 7 References 8 Note 9 Bibliography 10 External linksBiography EditLeao was born on August 3 1914 16 into a traditional family in Rio de Janeiro the youngest of seven siblings He never met his father Manoel Pacheco Leao who died shortly before Leao was born His mother the painter Francisca Azevedo Leao raised the children alone with the help of her brother in law the biologist and director of the Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden Antonio Pacheco Leao who assisted in the children s education 17 18 While living in a large house in the Laranjeiras neighborhood the family was also helped by a British nanny of whom no records exist 19 Leao entered the Sao Paulo School of Medicine in 1932 at the age of 18 18 However he contracted tuberculosis in his second year and had to suspend his studies for two years 20 while being treated in Belo Horizonte 21 When he recovered he decided that he would like to work in scientific research and moved to the United States in 1941 where he was admitted to the graduate research program at Harvard Medical School He received his master s degree in 1942 and his doctorate of science in 1943 22 Career Edit Team in the biophysics lab In 1943 he became an adjunct researcher at Harvard s Department of Anatomy where he identified the phenomenon of spreading depression 23 and although he had the opportunity to work in the United States he preferred to return to Brazil in 1944 at the age of 32 24 21 Upon his return he was appointed Specialized Technician of the Chair of Biological Physics 1945 at the National School of Medicine of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro 25 He was invited by Carlos Chagas Filho to join the new Biophysics Institute which was still being organized His colleagues included Gustavo de Oliveira Castro Romualdo Jose do Carmo and Hiss Martins Ferreira pt 26 He continued his research into cortical spreading depression The instruments in his laboratory in Brazil were salvaged discards but they were so carefully restored that they were always ready for use 27 Despite discouraging practical limitations he did not abandon his work 23 and so published his first article in Brazil 21 His first article on spreading depression Spreading depression of electrical activity in the cerebral cortex the phenomenon was given the eponym of his name and called Leao s spreading depression 28 Leao was director of the institute from 1966 to 1970 and emeritus head of the neurobiology department from 1984 to 1993 He became an associate of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences 1948 29 and a full member in 1951 and was its vice president 1955 1957 1965 1967 and president for seven consecutive terms 1967 1981 30 He was a member of the Deliberative Council at CNPq 1960 74 and then its scientific advisor 1975 84 31 21 During the Brazilian military dictatorship as President of the ABC he also defended the Revista Brasileira de Biologia Brazilian Journal of Biology after its editors were arrested by the regime 32 While president he also encouraged scientific cooperation between Brazil and other countries 21 After the cesium leak in Goiania in 1988 he became the president of the newly created State Commission of Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety 33 Between 1985 and 1991 he participated in the Planning and Science and Technology Secretariats of the Presidency of the Republic as member and president of the Special Followup Group GEA of the Scientific Development Support Program PADCT 34 After his mandatory retirement he was named Laboratory Head Emeritus of the Department of Neurobiology of the Carlos Chagas Filho Biophysics Institute where he remained for nine more years as a CNPq research fellow 35 Leao s Wave Edit Main article Cortical spreading depression Spreading Depolarization seen using Intrinsic optical signal imaging in gyrencephalic brain Speed 50x Aristides Leao discovered the phenomenon while working on his thesis at Harvard in 1944 He named the phenomenon spreading depression but it became known as the Leao s wave The true causes of this depression are not known but it can be induced by electric shocks The description of this illness helped in the diagnosis of other diseases such as epilepsy According to Leao s later investigations it occurs not only in the brain but also in other neural structures 12 His research on spreading depression is still widely cited within the medical literature 7 and the spreading depression in the case of brain damage can be reversed provided that the blood flow is restored quickly a However there is no guarantee that the neurons may survive 37 History of Discovery Edit The earliest origin of what has come to be known as spreading depression dates back to 1906 when Sir William Richard Gowers in a lecture on epilepsy noted that a peculiar spreading disturbance of the nerve structures is evident and that lasts for several minutes something that was confirmed and described by Aristides Leao in this way 38 While working on his PhD thesis at Harvard under the supervision of Hallowell Davis Leao aimed to study experimental epilepsy To perform the experiment he opened anesthetized rabbit skulls and placed a row of silver electrodes in contact with the cortical surface with two serving for stimulation 11 However instead of a seizure like discharge the stimulation was followed by a flattening of the brain waves in a kind of domino effect which recovered in the same way 11 Somjen 2005 questions whether the ease with which this phenomenon can be caused did not cause other researchers to have observed it before Leao and dismissed it as an annoying interruption of work and goes on to say that this phenomenon intrigued him and became the main topic of Aristides work with his first article Leao 1944a demonstrating the basic characteristics that have been confirmed by other researchers 11 In a following article Leao 1944b he described how blood vessels behave during the event 11 The third article Leao 1947 in focus by Somjen 2005 made after Leao s return to Rio de Janeiro deals with the slow voltage change that accompanies the phenomenon and the complete cerebral ischemia 11 Over the years other articles on the subject have been done but it is still not understood why the spreading depression occurs 39 Awards Edit The researcher is also remembered for his outstanding performance as president of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences between 1967 and 1981 His contribution to science earned him important scientific awards such as the Einstein Award in 1961 the Premio Almirante Alvaro Alberto pt in 1973 40 and the Moinho Santista Award now the Bunge Foundation Award in 1974 41 and 1977 42 He also received posthumous tribute from the Brazilian Academy of Sciences whose library today bears his name 43 30 being elected president emeritus of this institution on December 20 1993 44 Death EditLeao died on December 14 1993 in Sao Paulo at the age of 79 due to respiratory failure He was buried in Rio de Janeiro in the family grave 45 Legacy EditAccording to Rodrigo Polito at Uol Leao is the author of one of the most cited physiology articles in the world and dedicated his life to the development of science in his native country 23 Carlos Chagas Filho described him as one of the greatest scientists I knew he was extremely simple and cultured a great stimulator of research among young people and an exceptional professor of general and comparative physiology 46 who left a great number of disciples in Brazil and abroad besides having had a great influence on the projection of the Institute of Biophysics as an institution of excellence abroad 47 In 2002 it was demonstrated that depolarization occurs in human brains 37 and in 2018 the article Terminal spreading depolarization and electrical silence in death of human cerebral cortex published in Annals of Neurology for the first time revealed that the spreading depression described by Leao occurs in the human brain after the end of cardiac activity 48 49 50 37 In a possible coincidence co author Jed Hartings discovered that the series Star Trek The Next Generation had laid out this process in general form in the episode Skin of Evil in much the same way as the 2018 research which leads co researcher Jens Dreier to believe that the scriptwriters may have borrowed from similar research or even Leao s 51 52 Personal life EditLeao enjoyed sport fishing 53 54 classical composers Brazilian popular music 55 56 and being considered by his colleagues as having a prodigious culture his ornithology collection surpassed that of the National Museum 57 58 although he considered himself an amateur in the field 59 In doing so he also developed as a naturalist 60 and had in Charles Darwin his main reference 61 He also behaved as a humble person despite his academic position and achievements 62 Jacques Veilliard fr considers Aristides to be the father of bioacoustics in Brazil 58 Scientific papers EditLeao Aristides A P 1944a Spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex J Neurophysiol 7 6 359 390 doi 10 1152 jn 1944 7 6 359 Leao Aristides A P 1944b Pial circulation and spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex J Neurophysiol 7 6 391 396 doi 10 1152 jn 1944 7 6 391 Leao A A P Morison R S 1945 Propagation of spreading cortical depression J Neurophysiol 8 1 22 45 doi 10 1152 jn 1945 8 1 33 Leao Aristides A P 1947 Further observations on the spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex J Neurophysiol 10 6 409 414 doi 10 1152 jn 1947 10 6 409 PMID 20268874 See also EditNeuroscience Migraine HeadacheReferences Edit Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 Botaro et al 2020 7 02 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Velloso amp Gitirana 2001 p 456 Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 111 Ciencia 2018 Botaro et al 2020 6 36 a b c Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 110 Botaro et al 2020 7 02 Botaro et al 2020 10 01 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 a b c d e f Somjen 2005 p 2 a b Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 545 Duque Estrada Ciencia 2018 Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 Ciencia 2014 Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 Botaro et al 2020 01 29 a b Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 112 Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 pp 111 112 Botaro et al 2020 03 09 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 a b c d e Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 113 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 a b c Polito 2003 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Almeida 2012 pp 661 662 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Botaro et al 2020 05 23 06 42 Velloso amp Gitirana 2001 p 455 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 a b Velloso amp Gitirana 2001 p 454 Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 Botaro et al 2020 19 35 Negreiros et al 2014 p 2 Negreiros et al 2014 p 3 Negreiros et al 2014 p 3 Thompson 2018 a b c Fessl 2018 Rogawski 2012 p 6 Somjen 2005 p 3 Botaro et al 2020 14 25 Botaro et al 2020 15 34 Negreiros et al 2014 p 3 Negreiros et al 2014 p 3 Botaro et al 2020 22 53 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Engelhardt amp Gomes 2015 p 544 Filho 2000 p 102 Filho 2000 p 103 Letzter 2018 Dreier et al 2018 Andrews 2018 Alfering 2018 Hale 2018 Botaro et al 2020 03 48 Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 111 Botaro et al 2020 04 10 Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 115 Botaro et al 2020 04 23 a b Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 114 Botaro et al 2020 12 21 Botaro et al 2020 10 11 Maranhao Filho amp Vincent 2009 p 114 Botaro et al 2020 10 48 Negreiros et al 2014 p 3 Note Edit Jed Hartings in 2018 said that the process in the case of patient death is reversible within the first 10 minutes 36 Bibliography EditAlmeida Darcy Fontoura de 2012 A contribuicao de Carlos Chagas Filho para a institucionalizacao da pesquisa cientifica na universidade brasileira Dossie Carlos Chagas Filho in Brazilian Portuguese 19 2 653 668 doi 10 1590 S0104 59702012005000002 PMID 22473447 Andrews Robin 2018 Pioneering Study Reveals What Happens To Your Brain As You Die Iflscience Archived from the original on 2018 03 05 Alfering Yannah 2018 This Neurologist Found Out What Happens to Our Brains When We Die Iflscience Archived from the original on 2020 11 09 Botaro Negreiros Mancilio Lucio Almeida 2020 Aristides Pacheco Leao Revisitando a Historia de um Neurocientista Espaco Memorial Carlos Chagas Filho in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on 2021 11 09 Fessl Sophie 2018 The End Comes as a Wave Dana Archived from the original on 2021 06 24 Ciencia Canal 2018 Agraciados pela Ordem Nacional do Merito Cientifico Canal Ciencia in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on 2020 02 29 Ciencia Divulga 2014 Unicamp ed Divulga Cientista Aristides Pacheco Leao Ciencia em Revista in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on 2021 11 09 Dreier Major Foreman Winkler Kang Milakara Lemale DiNapoli Hinzman Woitzik Andaluz Carlson Hartings 2018 Terminal spreading depolarization and electrical silence in death of human cerebral cortex Annals of Neurology 83 2 295 310 doi 10 1002 ana 25147 PMC 5901399 PMID 29331091 Duque Estrada Maria Ines Aristides Leao Canal Ciencia Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Engelhardt Gomes 2015 Aristides Leao a birth centennial homage with comments on his spreading depression PDF Arq Neuropsiquiatr 6 73 544 546 doi 10 1590 0004 282X20150045 PMID 26083892 Filho Carlos Chagas 2000 Instituto de Biofisica Carlos Chagas Filho PDF Um aprendiz de ciencia PDF in Brazilian Portuguese Fiocruz p 279 doi 10 7476 9788575412473 ISBN 85 209 1082 3 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 08 09 Internet Archive Hale Tom 2018 A Neuroscientist Found Out What Happens To The Brain When We Die Then Realized That Star Trek Figured It Out First Iflscience Archived from the original on 2018 04 26 Letzter Rafi 2018 Dying Brains Silence Themselves in a Dark Wave of Spreading Depression Live Science Archived from the original on 2018 02 28 Maranhao Filho Vincent 2009 Professor Aristides Leao Much More Than Spreading Depression Headache 49 1 110 116 doi 10 1111 j 1526 4610 2008 01210 x ISSN 0017 8748 PMID 18647182 S2CID 32463240 Negreiros Botaro Lucio Almeida Gouveia Coelho Mancilio Saraiva Marins 2014 Vitrine Aristides Pacheco Leao Revisitando a historia de um Neurocientista PDF Scientiarum Historia in Brazilian Portuguese VII 9 ISSN 2176 1248 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 11 09 Polito Rodrigo 2003 Na onda de Aristides Leao Ciencia Hoje in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on 2006 05 12 Rogawski MA 2012 Jasper s Basic Mechanisms of the Epilepsies ed Migraine and Epilepsy Shared Mechanisms within the Family of Episodic Disorders PDF Noebles JL 4 ed Somjen G G 2005 Aristides Leao s discovery of cortical spreading depression Journal of Neurophysiology 95 1 2 4 doi 10 1152 classicessays 00031 2005 PMID 15985690 Thompson Ann 2018 The Sounds Inside Your Brain Right Before Death WVXU Archived from the original on 2021 11 12 Velloso Gitirana 2001 Arquivo Fotografico Aristides Azevedo Pacheco Leao Historia Ciencias Saude Manguinhos in Brazilian Portuguese 8 2 454 458 doi 10 1590 S0104 59702001000300008 External links EditPericles Maranhao Filho 2015 Professor Leao s original note Arq Neuro Psiquiatr 73 8 729 doi 10 1590 0004 282X20150087 PMID 26222369 Preceded byCarlos Chagas Filho President of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences1967 1981 Succeeded byMauricio Matos Peixoto Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aristides Leao amp oldid 1145656264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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