Tau tangles are twisted ropes that get stuck inside brain cells and make them stop working properly.
Imagine your brain is like a busy toy factory, where each worker (a brain cell) makes toys (your thoughts and memories). Now, picture tau proteins, which are like the strings used to tie up boxes of toys. Normally, they help keep things organized. But sometimes, these strings get all twisted and knotted, forming tau tangles. It's like when a string gets tangled in a shoelace, it can't do its job anymore.
How tau tangles cause trouble
In the toy factory, if a worker’s strings are all tied up in knots, they can’t move around or pass toys to other workers. Over time, this makes the whole factory slower and less efficient. In the brain, this is what happens when someone has Alzheimer's disease, tau tangles are one of the reasons why memory and thinking get harder.
So, tau tangles are like knots in a shoelace, stuck inside brain cells, making them work less well, just like a toy factory with tangled strings!
Examples
- Imagine brain cells as tangled strings of yarn, making it hard for messages to travel.
- Tau tangles are like knots in the brain that stop it from working properly.
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See also
- How Does Alzheimer's disease - plaques, tangles, causes, symptoms & pathology Work?
- How Does 2-Minute Neuroscience: Alzheimer's Disease Work?
- What are amyloid plaques?
- What is Aβ40?
- What are beta-secretase inhibitors?