Showing posts with label Treatments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Treatments. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Treatments for tuberculosis, cancer will likely improve following breakthrough in detecting DNA mutations

Main Category: Tuberculosis
Also Included In: Cancer / Oncology;  Genetics
Article Date: 30 Jul 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Treatments for tuberculosis, cancer will likely improve following breakthrough in detecting DNA mutations
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The slightest variation in a sequence of DNA can have profound effects. Modern genomics has shown that just one mutation can be the difference between successfully treating a disease and having it spread rampantly throughout the body.

Now, researchers have developed a new method that can look at a specific segment of DNA and pinpoint a single mutation, which could help diagnose and treat diseases such as cancer and tuberculosis. These small changes can be the root of a disease or the reason some infectious diseases resist certain antibiotics. The findings were published online in the journal Nature Chemistry.

"We've really improved on previous approaches because our solution doesn't require any complicated reactions or added enzymes, it just uses DNA," said lead author Georg Seelig, a University of Washington assistant professor of electrical engineering and of computer science and engineering. "This means that the method is robust to changes in temperature and other environmental variables, making it well-suited for diagnostic applications in low-resource settings."

DNA is a type of nucleic acid, the biological molecule that gives all living things their unique genetic signatures. In a double strand of DNA, known as a double helix, a series of base pairs bond and encode our genetic information. As genomics research has progressed, it's clear that a change of just one base pair - a sequence mutation, an insertion or a deletion - is enough to trigger major biological consequences. This could explain the onset of disease, or the reason some diseases don't respond to usual antibiotic treatment.

Take, for example, tuberculosis ?" a disease that's known to have drug-resistant strains. Its resistance to antibiotics often is due to a small number of mutations in a specific gene. If a person with tuberculosis isn't responding to treatment, it's likely because there is a mutation, Seelig said.

Now, researchers have the ability to check for that mutation preventatively.

Seelig, along with David Zhang of Rice University and Sherry Chen, a UW doctoral student in electrical engineering, designed probes that can pick out mutations in a single base pair in a target stretch of DNA. The probes allow researchers to look in much more detail for variations in long sequences - up to 200 base pairs ?" while current methods can detect mutations in stretches of up to only 20.

"In terms of specificity, our research suggests that we can do quadratically better, meaning that whatever the best level of specificity, our best will be that number squared," said Zhang, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Rice University.

The testing probes are designed to bind with a sequence of DNA that is suspected of having a mutation. The researchers do this by creating a complimentary sequence of DNA to the double-helix strand in question. Then, they allow molecules containing both sequences to mix in a test tube in salt water, where they naturally will match up to one another if the base pairs are intact. Unlike previous technologies, the probe molecule checks both strands of the target double helix for mutations rather than just one, which explains the increased specificity.

The probe is engineered to emit a fluorescent glow if there's a perfect match between it and the target. If it doesn't illuminate, that means the strands didn't match and there was in fact a mutation in the target strand of DNA.

The researchers have filed a patent on the technology and are working with the UW Center for Commercialization. They hope to integrate it into a paper-based diagnostic test for diseases that could be used in parts of the world with few medical resources.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our tuberculosis section for the latest news on this subject.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Department of Defense's Advanced Research Projects Agency.

University of Washington

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Friday, 26 July 2013

Cat allergy discovery promises new treatments

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Academic Journal
Main Category: Allergy
Also Included In: Veterinary;  Immune System / Vaccines
Article Date: 25 Jul 2013 - 3:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Cat allergy discovery promises new treatments
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New research led by the University of Cambridge in the UK has discovered the reason for the extreme immune reaction in some people who are allergic to cats. A study published online this week in the Journal of Immunology explains how the cat allergen Fel d 1 triggers an immune receptor that is also involved in allergic responses to dust mites.

Lead author Dr. Clare Bryant, from Cambridge's Department of Veterinary Medicine, told the press:

"We are hopeful that our research will lead to new and improved treatments for cat and possibly dog allergy sufferers."

The idea is that new drugs could target the pathway to the newly discovered receptor so it can't trigger the severe immune response in affected people.

Until this study, scientists were somewhat mystified by the severe reaction of the immune system to cat allergen.

They already knew that the most common culprit was the cat allergen Fel d 1, which is present in cat dander, the microscopic pieces of cat skin that are often accompanied by saliva from grooming and become airborne, landing on furnishings, bedding, carpets, curtains and many other surfaces and objects in the home.

Allergic reactions are the result of the immune system responding to what it perceives as dangers or threats to health and life. Normally these threats are from pathogens like viruses and bacteria. Part of the mechanism of recognizing and reacting to pathogens are proteins called receptors, which behave like unique locks, which can only be released when the correct key comes along.

But sometimes the immune system misidentifies a non-threatening substance, reacts to it as if it were a pathogen and mounts the same inflammatory response. One way this happens is because a "key" that shouldn't release a lock somehow does so. In the case of Fel d 1, the lock that it releases or triggers is the pathogen recognition receptor Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4).

TLR4 is already known to be involved in allergic reactions to dust mites and the metal nickel.

But Bryant and colleagues discovered that Fel d 1 is aided and abetted by another culprit. It teams up with a bacterial toxin found everywhere in the environment. It only needs very low doses of this toxin, called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to unleash the severe immune response seen in people with cat allergy.

For their study, the team ran a set of tests where they exposed human cells to cat and dog dander proteins. In some tests they added low levels of LPS, and in the others they did not.

They discovered that the presence of the bacterial toxin LPS somehow increases the signalling to the immune system, intensifying the response to the cat allergen Fel d 1.

In a further set of tests, they then discovered TLR4 was the part of the immune system that was reacting to the combination of LPS and Fel d 1.

And when they used a drug that blocks TLR4 (essentially by occupying the lock so the allergen "key" can't get in to release it), they found the cat dander protein had no effect on human cells: they had prevented the inflammatory immune response. Bryant says:

"Not only did we find out that LPS exacerbates the immune response's reaction to cat dander, we identified the part of immune system that recognises it, the receptor TLR4."

The team also found that the allergen Can f 6, which is present in dog dander, also activates TLR4 when LPS is present.

Drugs to inhibit TLR4 are already available, says Bryant, so they are hopeful that their "research will lead to new and improved treatments for cat and possibly dog allergy sufferers."

Funds from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council (MRC) helped finance the study.

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD


Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Visit our allergy section for the latest news on this subject.

"Allergens as Immunomodulatory Proteins: The Cat Dander Protein Fel d 1 Enhances TLR Activation by Lipid Ligands"; Jurgen Herre, Hans Grönlund, Heather Brooks, Lee Hopkins, Lisa Waggoner, Ben Murton, Monique Gangloff, Olaniyi Opaleye, Edwin R. Chilvers, Kate Fitzgerald, Nick Gay, Tom Monie, and Clare Bryant; Journal of Immunology 1300284, published ahead of print 22 July 2013; DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.1300284; Link to Abstract.

Additional source: University of Cambridge Press Release.

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'Cat allergy discovery promises new treatments'

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Finding may lead to new treatments for neurodegenerative disease and stroke

Main Category: Neurology / Neuroscience
Also Included In: Stroke;  Rehabilitation / Physical Therapy
Article Date: 25 Jul 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Finding may lead to new treatments for neurodegenerative disease and stroke
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In degenerative brain diseases and after stroke, nerve cells die while their support cells activate the brain's immune system to cause further damage. Now Jonathan Gilthorpe, Adrian Pini and Andrew Lumsden at the MRC Centre for Developmental Neurobiology at King's College London, have found that a single protein, histone H1, causes these distinct outcomes.

The research passed peer review within a week of being published in F1000Research, where Jan-Marino Ramirez, of the University of Washington, called the work "a very important contribution to our understanding of neurodegenerative disease and the response of the brain to injury" in his public referee report. He also noted that he is "confident that this study will be a much cited contribution to the field of traumatic brain injury".

The most unexpected finding in this study is that a histone protein is responsible for neuronal damage. "Histone H1 partners with DNA in the cell nucleus and has been thought of as harmless," explain the authors, "The surprise came when we discovered that it can be released from brain cells upon injury, killing healthy nerve cells and activating the damaging immune response".

The research team is now working on ways to suppress these harmful actions, which may lead to the development of new treatments for neurodegenerative disease and stroke.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our neurology / neuroscience section for the latest news on this subject.

Extracellular histone H1 is neurotoxic and drives a pro-inflammatory response in microglia [v1; ref status: indexed] F1000Research 2013, 2:148 (doi: 10.12688/f1000research.2-148.v1)

Faculty of 1000

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All opinions are moderated before being included (to stop spam). We reserve the right to amend opinions where we deem necessary.

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Note: Any medical information published on this website is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional. For more information, please read our terms and conditions.



View the original article here

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Health Tips & Info : Panic Disorder Treatments.


Panic attacks and disorders could be effectively dealt with professional health care trainings which include various exercises, nutritional details and other herbal treatments. All the treatments pertain to psychodynamics, inclusive of the cognitive behavior, interpersonal and the other types of talking therapies therefore helping the individuals to address the problems that are related to anxiety and panic disorders. Psychotherapy provides the people with the chance of identifying and learning so as to manage various factors that help in the contribution of the anxiety occurrences.Various researches and studies have revealed that behavioral and cognitive and the therapies are truly effective and beneficial in treating the anxiety disorder and panic attacks. Behavioral therapies involve various techniques which reduce and even eliminate the unnecessary behaviors that are likely to trigger the panic attacks and anxiety disorders. The therapy of cognitive behavior people are usually advised to bring changes in their thought process in order to attain a positive frame of lifestyle as well as the thought process. This reduces the panic attacks and disorders of anxiety. The process of psychotherapy has also proven to be truly effective with various combinations of effective medications.

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Health Tips & Info : Psychological Treatments for Panic Attacks.


The panic attack and disorder treatment is quite a lengthy process and does not complete in a few days time. Therefore, it is the prime duty of a therapist to make the patient as comfortable as he/she can from the very first day of the treatment. An irritated patient who has already suffered a lot because of the ailment could discontinue the treatment anytime and for this reason the therapist has to be really professional as well as friendly with the patient. Once this is done, the patient always tends to co-operate with the therapist which helps in running the treatment process smoothly with more success. There are different treatment plans for different patients, which means, that a treatment plan for patient A might not suit the patient B. therefore, the therapist has to be well aware of this situation and devise the treatment plan and pattern accordingly.These factors lead to proper band successful treatment results wherein some patients develop the signs of improvement within 8 to 10 appointments or sessions with the therapist.Patients should always select the therapist who is both renowned as well as experienced in the field as it is the therapist who plays a vital role in devising fruitful and result-oriented improvements in the patients.

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