In close collaboration with researchers from Copenhagen University, Aarhus University, and the Technical University of Denmark, professor Torben Moos has developed a way to break through the natural barriers of the human brain. The hope is that this ground-breaking research will be able to cure a wide range of neurological diseases. Today, only treat the symptoms can be treated because brain cells – unlike all the human body's other organs – are enclosed in an advanced defense system that keeps medicine out.
“Normally, I do not brag, but we are actually on a verge of a breakthrough. We are more than halfway in our attempt to transport medicine from the blood stream into the brain. At the moment, we are able to enter the cells of the human brain capillaries, but we still have to figure out how to enter the brain neurons,” says Torben Moos, professor at the Institute for Medicine and Heath Technology at Aalborg University, Denmark.
The advantages of Danish academia
Denmark has a strong central nerve system (CNS) cluster, led by the Danish-Swedish rel="noopener noreferrer" life science cluster Medicon Valley and the research cluster within neuroscience and cognition at Aarhus University (AU) and Aarhus University Hospital (AUH), NeuroCampus Aarhus. The scientific achievements that Torben Moos and his research team have already obtained taps into this well-established and unique Danish research environment: