Showing posts with label blood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blood. Show all posts

Monday, 28 October 2013

National blood service, Oxford University hospitals NHS trust: technology innovation award runner-up

bedside blood track system Oxford University hospitals NHS trust uses handheld computers at the bedside to scan the identity barcode on a patient's wrist band.

Introducing an identity barcode on a patient's wrist band, using handheld computers at the bedside, electronically controlling the temperature of blood fridges and tracking stock have improved patient safety Oxford University hospitals NHS trust's national blood trust and saved £528,000.

The trust wanted to reorganise its bedside and laboratory transfusion service in order to reduce the number of deaths from "wrong transfusion" – the second most frequent cause of death from transfusion reported to the UK's serious hazards transfusions scheme. In the past 15 years, errors in the UK transfusion service were responsible for 27 deaths and 120 cases of major morbidity.

Oxford hoped that by using technology it would also reduce the amount of time staff spent checking blood, reduce blood wastage and the inappropriate use of supplies, as well as speed up the supply of blood in emergencies.

Consultant haematologist professor Michael Murphy says: "For many members of the public or patients to think a process that is so important is relying on bits of paper and people looking at long numbers, is just unbelievable."

Today transfusion patients are identified by a barcode on their wrist band, which is scanned by a nurse at the bedside using a handheld computer. The nurse also scans his or her own barcode before following the transfusion process written on the computer screen.

There is now a complete electronic audit trail of blood supplies after the blood bank IT system was linked to others in the trust, which has led to significant improvements in blood sample collection, the collection of supplies from fridges and the transfusion-related admin.

Paperwork has been cut by 52 minutes per patient and the bedside transfusion process now requires one nurse instead of two. The initiative is recognised as an exemplar NHS evidence, quality, innovation, prevention and productivity project. The Oxford team wrote a national specification for the electronic transfusion service for the former National Patient Safety Agency.

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Saturday, 28 September 2013

Do you know your blood pressure?

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If you can't remember the last time you had your blood pressure checked, make an appointment with your doctor. You can have high blood pressure for years without a single symptom. Generally, ask your doctor for a blood pressure reading at least every two years. He or she may recommend more-frequent readings if you have high blood pressure or other risk factors for heart disease.

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Monday, 2 September 2013

Amgen Enters The High-stakes Race Of Blood Cancer Drugs

In August Amgen (AMGN) acquired Onyx (ONXX) for $125 a share, or for a total of $9.7 billion net of Onyx's estimated cash holdings. Onyx's main drug, Kyprolis, approved last year in the U.S. for a rare blood cancer, may generate $3 billion in revenue by 2021, according to an estimate by Bloomberg.

Multiple myeloma is the second most common blood cancer and remains incurable despite advances in treatment options over the last decade. There remains a high unmet medical need for patients, as almost all will eventually relapse and become resistant to currently available therapies.

According to the National Cancer Institute, approximately 21,700 Americans are diagnosed with multiple myeloma and 10,710 die yearly from the disease.

Amgen is already a force in cancer therapy and obviously it has further ambitions in the segment. But multiple myeloma is a fiercely contested field and Kyprolis faces a lot of rivals.

Kyprolis vs. Pomalyst

The FDA approved Onyx's Kyprolis in 2012 for treatment of patients with multiple myeloma who have received at least two prior therapies.

Celgene's (CELG) Pomalyst was approved in early 2013 for pretty much the same group of patients.

Pomalyst and Kyprolis do not represent a new class of drug. Kyprolis works like Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) and Takeda's (TKPHF.PK) Velcade, and Pomalyst works like thalidomide/Revlimid, also sold by Celgene.

Kyprolis inhibits the action of the proteasome, which is sort of a garbage disposal system for cells. For some reason, the inhibition somehow hurts cancerous cells more than healthy ones, and this is the same mechanism of action of Velcade, too.

Pomalyst is prescribed to patients who cannot be on thalidomide and/or Revlimid because of toxicities of these drugs, while Kyprolis is mainly used for patients who have pronounced neuropathy due to Velcade.

Pomalyst is an immunomodulator that has a similar labeling and neurotoxic profile as Kyprolis. A main difference is that Pomalyst is a pill and Kyprolis is injected.

In that respect Pomalyst maybe favored if the option is choosing an oral drug or making office visits two days every week for Kyprolis injections.

Pomalyst and Kyprolis are both approved for similar indications, but physicians may not consider them as competitors. Patients need both options, and the use of one does not preclude the use of the other. Eventually both drugs will be experimented with to move them up in the disease' cycle.

Combinations could also work. The response rate to Kyprolis when used by itself, is about 20 percent, but higher when combined with Revlimid and dexamethasone. Pomalyst appears to be more effective when combined with dexamethasone, and the expectation is that it will have more activity when combined with a proteasome inhibitor such as Velcade or Kyprolis.

Onyx also developing an oral compound: oprozomib, an innovative oral proteasome inhibitor in Phase 2 trials.

Competition

Amgen's acquisition of Onyx is not without risks.

The multiple myeloma market is competitive, led by Celgene, which sells the blockbuster Revlimid which together with thalidomide and Pomalyst serves the patient population at every stage of the disease.

There is also the issue of cost. If Kyprolis is approved for use earlier in the course of treatment, it is likely to be used in combination with another drug like Revlimid. That could create resistance in reimbursement, particularly in Europe. Kyprolis costs about $10,000 for a 28-day cycle at the recommended dose for a patient of average size and Revlimid costs $7,900 per 28-day period at the FDA-approved 21-out-of-28-day dosing.

Whether Kyprolis will manage to grow under Amgen's management is an open question. The company's oncology sales force has mixed results: sales of the bone cancer drug Xgeva rose by 85 percent last year according Amgen's 2012 10-K, but sales of older prostate-cancer drug Vectibix were largely flat year-over-year.

Success depends on a successful launch in Europe and the expansion of Kyprolis to a broader market. Right now, Kyprolis is approved as a third-line treatment, a sort of last-ditch effort for myeloma patients who've failed on two previous regimens.

Trials are under way to extend Kyprolis' indication and to support the European application.

Two trials, Clarion and Endeavor, will evaluate the combo of Kyprolis and Velcade. Clarion will test the pair, along with chemo and prednisone, in newly diagnosed patients who are ineligible for transplant.

Endeavor will assess survival in relapsed patients when the Kyprolis-Velcade duo is paired with dexamethasone. Both trials are currently enrolling patients. Clarion is expected to be completed in 2016, while Endeavor's completion date is 2015.

The two other late-stage trials, Focus and Aspire, seek to support Kyprolis's bid for approval in Europe in 2014.

Amgen's main competitor in multiple myeloma is the heavy weight of the segment, Celgene, especially the $4.3 billion a year Revlimid. But Amgen is strong in promotion, regulatory affairs and good in running trials.

Also, Onyx did a good job with Kyprolis' launch.

Kyprolis' market share increased to over 40 percent as a third-line treatment at the end of the second quarter, compared to 30 percent at the beginning of the year. The next agent had 20 percent share at the end of the second quarter. So at this point, Kyprolis appears to be established as the leading agent in third-line-plus multiple myeloma.

Kyprolis' share of second-line patients doubled to approximately 10 percent at the end of the second quarter. In this setting, the majority of patients had already received Revlimid, Velcade and dexamethasone in the front line.

Onyx also did a good job moving Kyprolis into the clinics. The drug was used in 2,400 clinics and hospitals, an increase of 300 in the second quarter. Depth of adoption, as measured by repeat ordering, also continues to increase as the drug continues to displace the use of older agents.

Europe represents the largest opportunity outside the U.S. and Onyx was getting ready for a launch there. Following approval, the plan is to establish operating affiliates in Germany, France, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom and commercialize the drug in 12 markets.

A survey of blood-cancer specialists found that a high level of unmet need exists for therapies with a more favorable neurotoxic profile.

Against Velcade, a $2 billion proteasome inhibitor, Kyprolis is favorably positioned.

Peripheral neuropathy, a bad side effect, generally affects about 16 percent of resistant MM patients on an IV version of Velcade and 6 percent in patients on injections of the drug, versus 1 percent in a single-arm study with 266 patients treated with Kyprolis. The prescribing information for Kyprolis does not, in contrast to Velcade, contains a warning about the risk of peripheral neuropathy: pain, tingling, or loss of sensation in the extremities.

There are several new candidates to the field. Outstanding among them is the oral proteasome inhibitor ixazomib from Takeda/Millennium (MHCC.PK), which shows little peripheral neuropathy in early-stage clinical data.

Investors' summary

Amgen has consulted with the rating agencies ahead of the acquisition announcement and is expected to maintain its solid investment-grade credit rating. Fitch, however, revised its rating outlook downward to negative from stable.

Yet Fitch views the Onyx acquisition as a strategically sound move that will likely soften the blow of Amgen's patent expiry risks.

The Onyx acquisition will be financed with $8.1 billion in bank loans plus company cash for the balance. Investors found it strange that cash-rich Amgen needs to take out bank loans. Amgen reported cash and short-term investments of $22 billion at June 30, 2013. However, most of that money resides outside the U.S. and it would cost the company too much in taxes to repatriate it.

The loans will have a 5-year term and an average interest rate of 3-month LIBOR plus 104 basis points with current interest rates amounting to around 1.3 percent. Management expects the Onyx deal to deliver a return on capital well in excess of the cost of capital.

Following its launch in 2012, Kyprolis brought in $64 million by year-end, and by the end of the second quarter this year, it racked up another $125 million. It's expected to hit $2 billion to $2.4 billion in sales by 2019. Amgen's current leading cancer drug, Xgeva, brought in $748 million worldwide in 2012.

Amgen has 9 late-stage programs, which are expected to generate registration-enabling data by 2016. The 9 include 4 novel oncology compounds, specifically T-VEC and blinatumomab, as well as rilotumumab and trebananib.

The Onyx transaction could close as early as September 30, subject to a satisfactory outcome from the Hart-Scott-Rodino review and the tender offer, the primary conditions to closing.

No significant share repurchase activity should be expected in 2014 or 2015, but the overall plan remains intact to return, on average, 60 percent of net income to shareholders over the period 2011 to 2015.

Amgen has gotten to the point in its history where management feels that it has to take risks. Major risks. Buying back company stock by itself won't do it anymore, and neither will early stage developments, which can take forever to get to the market. An instant success is needed -- a product that is already on the market and selling well, possibly in cancer therapy -- no matter what the cost.

This, maybe, is the explanation behind the Onyx deal.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. (More...)


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Tuesday, 20 August 2013

Too-low diastolic blood pressure can be deadly for CKD patients

Main Category: Urology / Nephrology
Article Date: 20 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Too-low diastolic blood pressure can be deadly for CKD patients
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Having too-low diastolic blood pressure (DBP) may be deadly for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Blood pressure (BP) recommendations are stricter for patients with CKD than for the general population and focus on lowering actual BP (the measurement of both systolic BP [SBP] and DBP) without consideration for achieving a DBP that is too low.

Researchers reviewed health records for 651,749 U.S. veterans with CKD to assess the association between BP and death. Both actual BP and measurements of SBP and DBP considered separately were assessed.

The researchers found that having a systolic blood pressure of 130 to 159 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure of 70 to 89 mm Hg was associated with the lowest risk for death. Patients with a DBP less than 70 mm Hg, regardless of their SBP, had higher mortality rates.

An accompanying editorial highlights some of the limitations of the study. Among them, the authors suggest that it may not be BP combination but instead the characteristics of the persons with that combination that lead to greater mortality risk.

Blood Pressure and Mortality in U.S. Veterans With Chronic Kidney Disease: A Cohort Study, Csaba P. Kovesdy, MD; Anthony J. Bleyer, MD; Miklos Z. Molnar, MD, PhD; Jennie Z. Ma, PhD; John J. Sim, MD; William C. Cushman, MD; L. Darryl Quarles, MD; and Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, MD, PhD, Ann Intern Med. 2013;159(4):233-242. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-159-4-201308200-00004

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Monday, 19 August 2013

Major study links ageing gene to blood cancer

Main Category: Genetics
Also Included In: Lymphoma / Leukemia / Myeloma;  Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 19 Aug 2013 - 2:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Major study links ageing gene to blood cancer
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A gene that helps control the ageing process by acting as a cell's internal clock has been linked to cancer by a major new study.

Scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, found a genetic variant that influences the ageing process among four new variants they linked to myeloma - one of the most common types of blood cancer.

The study more than doubles the number of genetic variants linked to myeloma, bringing the total number to seven, and sheds important new light on the genetic causes of the disease.

The research, published in the prestigious journal Nature Genetics, was mainly funded by charities Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research and Myeloma UK, with additional support from Cancer Research UK.

Myeloma affects around 4,700 patients each year, and is caused by genetic mutations in white blood cells, which normally help fight infection and injury. Less than four in 10 sufferers survive the disease for more than five years, and three in 10 die within a year (1).

One genetic marker found by the researchers is linked to a gene called TERC, which regulates the length of the telomere 'caps' on the ends of DNA. In healthy cells, these caps erode over time - causing tissues to age - but some cancer cells seem able to ignore the ageing trigger in order to keep on dividing. If further studies confirm the link, TERC could be a target for future myeloma treatments.

The team found the new markers by comparing the genetic make-up of a total of 4,692 myeloma patients with DNA from 10,990 people without the disease. A previous UK study led by the team, from The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) and funded by Myeloma UK, found three genetic variants, or 'spelling mistakes' in DNA, which lead to increased risk of developing myeloma.

The team found the new batch of genetic variants by combining their samples with others from researchers in Germany. The combined results gave the scientists more data and therefore greater statistical accuracy.

All of the four new genetic variants are close to genes which are likely to play important roles in causing myeloma.

Study co-leader Professor Richard Houlston, Professor of Molecular and Population Genetics at The Institute of Cancer Research, said:

"Our study has taken an important step forward in understanding the genetics of myeloma, and suggested an intriguing potential link with a gene that acts as a cell's internal timer.

"We know cancer often seems to ignore the usual controls over ageing and cell death, and it will be fascinating to explore whether in blood cancers that is a result of a direct genetic link. Eventually, understanding the complex genetics of blood cancers should allow us to assess a person's risk or identify new avenues for treatment."

In people affected by myeloma, white blood cells called plasma cells grow uncontrollably in the bone marrow and become stuck there, disrupting normal blood production. It can be very painful, and affects bones in multiple parts of the body.

Professor Chris Bunce, Research Director at Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research, said:

"The identification of these risk gene variants offers more compelling evidence that susceptibility to myeloma can be inherited. Myeloma remains incurable and the effect on patients' quality of life can be devastating.

"By showing how these specific genes influence the cancer's development, this research could potentially lead to the development of targeted myeloma drugs in the future. In addition we know that a common condition called MGUS predisposes to the development of myeloma. The identification of additional genetic risk factors in these patients could revolutionise their future management and prospects."

Heather McKinnon, Clinical Research Programme Manager for Myeloma UK, said:

"We are delighted the original study funded by Myeloma UK two years ago into genetic inheritance in myeloma has now led to further important research. The study published in Nature Genetics identifies four more genetic variations in myeloma and for the first time demonstrates an association with ageing. Myeloma UK is committed to supporting this important research and invests in a programme of work at The Institute of Cancer Research."

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

(1). Cancer Research UK Myeloma statistics (2009). Accessed online 6 August 2013.

The Institute of Cancer Research

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Saturday, 17 August 2013

Safer heart surgery from humble blood pressure cuff

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Main Category: Surgery
Also Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology
Article Date: 16 Aug 2013 - 8:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Safer heart surgery from humble blood pressure cuff
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Scientists have discovered that inflating a blood pressure cuff on the upper arm immediately prior to heart bypass surgery could decrease risk of heart injury and increase long-term survival rate.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), around 395,000 coronary artery bypass graft surgeries were carried out in the US in 2010.

Heart surgery, such as coronary bypass, can often cause heart muscle damage, the researchers say. It is linked to reduced long-term survival and can cause severe health outcomes such as heart attacks.

Researchers from the University School of Medicine, Essen, Germany, analyzed the effects of a procedure called remote ischemic preconditioning on 162 patients scheduled to undergo coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

A control group of 167 patients undergoing heart surgery who did not have remote ischemic preconditioning were also monitored.

Remote ischemic preconditioning is a procedure that involves temporarily cutting off the blood supply, then restoring it to an area away from the heart.

The study, published in the The Lancet, looked at whether this procedure affects long-term survival following bypass surgery, and whether it has effects on other health issues, such as stroke and heart attack.

Blood pressure cuff
Blood pressure cuff: blood flow of the heart bypass patients was restricted before surgery by simple use of a sphygmomanometer

The patients undergoing remote ischemic preconditioning were:

Anesthetized prior to surgery and had their blood flow restricted for 5 minutes with a standard blood pressure cuff, which was inflated on their upper left arm.They then had their blood supply restored for 5 minutes as the cuff deflated.This procedure was repeated three times.

Following the surgery, the patients' blood concentrations of a substance called troponin 1 was measured. This substance is a biomarker protein that reveals any damage to the heart muscle. A higher concentration of troponin 1 means extensive damage has occurred.

Additionally, the patients were monitored for up to 4 years after surgery in order to see whether remote ischemic preconditioning had any effects on their long-term health.

Results of the study showed that patients who had remote ischemic preconditioning had troponin 1 levels 17% lower compared with those who did not undergo the treatment 72 hours after surgery.

One year after surgery, the findings showed that: Patients who had remote ischemic preconditioning were 73% less likely to have died of any cause compared with patients who did not have the treatment.They were also 86% less likely to die from a stroke or heart attack.

Professor Gerd Heusch of the Institute of Pathophysiology at the University School of Medicine, says:

"The results of our study are very encouraging that remote ischemic preconditioning not only reduces heart muscle injury but also improves long-term health outcomes for heart bypass patients."

The study authors say that it was already common knowledge that remote ischaemic preconditioning helps reduce injury to heart muscle, but they add that this study is the first randomized control trial to provide evidence that the procedure encourages longer survival in coronary bypass patients.

"The beauty of remote ischemic preconditioning is that it is non-invasive, simple, cheap, and safe," said Dr. Matthias Thielmann of the department of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery at the university.

"This procedure could be a promising and simple strategy to protect patients' heart muscle during surgery and hopefully improve health outcomes after surgery," he said.

But in a comment piece at the end of the study, Professor Michel Ovize of the Louis Pradel Hospital in France says that although this research highlights the benefits of remote ischemic preconditioning directly related to the heart, he believes the findings show the potential of possibilities beyond that.

"The incidence of non-heart-related events, such as sepsis or stroke, was lower in the remote ischemic preconditioning group than in the control group, albeit of few events overall," said Prof. Ovize.

"These findings suggest that the effect on the heart might be only one aspect of a much wider effect, and that remote conditioning, unlike local conditioning, might lead to persistent protection."

Written by Honor Whiteman


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Friday, 16 August 2013

Researchers have developed an experimental therapy that can kill human blood cancer cells in the laboratory and eradicate the disease in mice

Main Category: Lymphoma / Leukemia / Myeloma
Article Date: 15 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Researchers have developed an experimental therapy that can kill human blood cancer cells in the laboratory and eradicate the disease in mice
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Ottawa researchers have developed unique virus-derived particles that can kill human blood cancer cells in the laboratory and eradicate the disease in mice with few side effects. The study is published in Blood Cancer Journal by co-senior authors Drs. David Conrad and John Bell of the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) and the University of Ottawa (uOttawa).

While Dr. Bell and his colleagues have been investigating replicating viruses for the treatment of solid cancers for many years, with very promising results, this is the first major success they have had treating blood cancer (leukemia). It is also the first success they have had using a non-replicating virus-derived particle as opposed to a replicating virus.

"Our research indicated that a replicating virus might not be the safest or most effective approach for treating leukemia, so we decided to investigate whether we could make virus-derived particles that no longer replicate but still kill cancer," said Dr. Conrad, a hematologist conducting research in the Blood and Marrow Transplant Program at The Ottawa Hospital, and currently completing his PhD at OHRI and uOttawa in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. "We were delighted to see that this novel therapy was very safe at high doses, and worked extremely well in our laboratory leukemia models. We hope to test this in patients in the near future."

The researchers used a specific method and dose of UV light to transform regular replicating viruses into unique particles that could no longer replicate and spread, but could still enter cancer cells efficiently, kill them and stimulate a strong immune response against the cancer. These particles were able to kill multiple forms of leukemia in the laboratory, including samples taken from local patients who had failed all other therapies. Normal blood cells were not affected. This novel treatment was also successful in mouse models of leukemia. In fact, 80 per cent of the mice that received the therapy had markedly prolonged survival and 60 per cent were eventually cured, while all of the untreated mice died of their leukemia within 20 days.

"Leukemia is a devastating disease that can be very difficult to treat, and new therapies are urgently needed," said Dr. Conrad. "While we're still at the early stages of this research, I think this therapy holds a lot of promise because it appears to have a potent, long-lasting effect on leukemia without the debilitating side effects of many cancer therapies used in the clinic right now. We will likely see even better results once we optimize the dose in our preparations to advance this research into human clinical trials."

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

This research was funded by the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, the Terry Fox Foundation, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Ottawa's Department of Medicine and The Ottawa Hospital Foundation.

Non-replicating rhabdovirus-derived particles (NRRPs) eradicate acute leukemia by direct cytolysis and induction of antitumor immunity. Batenchuk C, Le Boeuf F, Stubbert L, Falls T, Atkins HL, Bell JC, and Conrad DP. Blood Cancer J. 2013 Jul 12;3:e123. doi: 10.1038/bcj.2013.23.

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Link between race consciousness and blood pressure in black patients

Main Category: Hypertension
Also Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 15 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Link between race consciousness and blood pressure in black patients
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Black patients preoccupied with racial concerns have higher blood pressure than those who aren't, according to results of new Johns Hopkins-led research. The findings suggest that heightened race consciousness could at least in part account for the disproportionately high rate of hypertension in black Americans - the highest prevalence of any group in the United States and one of the highest rates in the world.

"A preoccupation with race among blacks leads to hyper-vigilance, a heightened awareness of their stigmatized status in society and a feeling that they need to watch their backs constantly," says Lisa A. Cooper, M.D., M.P.H., a professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and senior author of the study described online in the American Journal of Hypertension. "African-Americans have higher blood pressure, and it has been difficult to explain why this is true. It doesn't appear to be genetic, and while things like diet, exercise and reduced access to health care may contribute, we think that a tense social environment, the sense of being treated differently because of your race, could also possibly explain some of what's behind the higher rates."

Cooper says the issue of such hyper-vigilance and race consciousness has drawn more public attention in the wake of the killing of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager, in Florida. Her own African-American son, she says, is very aware of his surroundings.

"It's stressful for him to walk around thinking at anytime someone might think he's dong something wrong just because of his race," she says. "That's just something he lives with. If you don't live with it, maybe it's hard to understand it. It's something people often don't want to talk about."

As part of ongoing research into doctor-patient relationships and racial disparities, Cooper and her colleagues surveyed 266 patients in urban health clinics in Baltimore between September 2003 and August 2005. Sixty-two percent of the patients were black. To test for race consciousness, they used the 2002 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System "Reactions to Race" module developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patients - both black and white - were asked how often they thought about their race.

Two categories were created: Those who said they ever think about their race and those who said they never do. Half of the black patients responded that they "ever" think about it, and one in five white patients said they did.

When blood pressures were measured, being a race-conscious black patient was associated with significantly higher diastolic blood pressure (roughly five millimeters of mercury) and somewhat higher systolic blood pressure (some four millimeters of mercury) than black patients who were not preoccupied with race. There was no effect on blood pressure in race conscious white patients. Systolic blood pressure, the top number in a blood pressure reading, measures the force that pressure from the beating heart places on the arteries moving blood to the rest of the body, while diastolic blood pressure, the bottom number, indicates the pressure in the arteries when the heart rests between beats.

Cooper, director of the Johns Hopkins Center to Eliminate Cardiovascular Health Disparities, says it is well known that chronic stress can increase blood pressure. Similarly, she says tasks that require active coping efforts may increase heart rate and systolic blood pressure, while tasks that require quiet attentiveness and vigilance may lead to decreased cardiac output as well as increased diastolic blood pressure.

In addition to the link between race consciousness and blood pressure, Cooper's team found that whites who were race conscious were more likely to feel respected in the doctor-patient relationship than whites who were not concerned with race, though they were less likely to take their blood pressure medication as prescribed.

"Given the socially dominant status of whites in the United States, higher levels of race consciousness could reflect greater awareness of white privilege," the authors note in the study. "Another explanation, particularly among whites who reside in areas with a high black population, is that race consciousness reflects a heightened fear of victimization, an anxiety-provoking stressor. Scholars of critical race theory are still debating whether race consciousness enhances or adversely effects the health of whites."

Cooper notes that it can be stressful for black people to go shopping in a store and feel they are being watched extra closely. Equally stressful, she says, is for example, waiting a long time to be served at a restaurant, and being ignored, possibly because of one's race.

More research is needed to understand the biological consequences of race consciousness, including those related to stress, she adds, with a goal of developing interventions to help people effectively cope with environmental stressors.

"We need to help people of all races cope with race-related stress in a healthier way," she says.

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

This study is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health's National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (K24 HL083113, P50 HL0105187 and R01 HL069403).

Association of Race Consciousness With the Patient–Physician Relationship, Medication Adherence, and Blood Pressure in Urban Primary Care Patients

LaPrincess Brewer, M.D., M.P.H., who was a medical resident at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center at the time of the study and is now a cardiology fellow at the Mayo Clinic, was the first author of the study. Kathryn A. Carson, Sc.M., of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, also contributed to this study. doi: 10.1093/ajh/hpt116

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Red blood cell flow predicted by computer model

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 15 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Red blood cell flow predicted by computer model
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Adjacent to the walls of our arterioles, capillaries, and venules -- the blood vessels that make up our microcirculation -- there exists a peculiar thin layer of clear plasma, devoid of red blood cells. Although it is just a few millionths of a meter thick, that layer is vital. It controls, for example, the speed with which platelets can reach the site of a cut and start the clotting process.

"If you destroy this layer, your bleeding time can go way up, by 60 percent or more, which is a real issue in trauma," said Eric Shaqfeh, the Lester Levi Carter Professor and a professor of chemical engineering and mechanical engineering at Stanford University. Along with his colleagues, Shaqfeh has now created the first simplified computer model of the process that forms that layer -- a model that could help to improve the design of artificial platelets and medical treatments for trauma injuries and for blood disorders such as sickle cell anemia and malaria.

The model is described in a paper appearing in the journal Physics of Fluids.

The thin plasma layer, known as the Fåhræus-Lindqvist layer, is created naturally when blood flows through small vessels. In the microcirculation, the layer forms because red blood cells tend to naturally deform and lift away from the vessel walls. "The reason they don't just continually move away from the wall and go far away is because, as they move away, then also collide with other red blood cells, which force them back," Shaqfeh explained. "So the Fåhræus-Lindqvist layer represents a balance between this lift force and collisional forces that exist in the blood."

Because the deformation of red blood cells is a key factor in the Fåhræus-Lindqvist layer, its properties are altered in diseases, such as sickle cell anemia, that affect the shape and rigidity of those cells. The new model, which is a scaled-down version of an earlier numerical model by Shaqfeh and colleagues that provided the first large-scale, quantitative explanation of the formation of the layer, can predict how blood cells with varying shapes, sizes, and properties -- including the crescent-shaped cells that are the hallmark of sickle cell anemia -- will influence blood flow.

The model can also help predict the outcome of -- and perfect -- treatments for trauma-related injuries. One common thing to do during treatment for trauma injuries is to inject saline, which among other things reduces the hematocrit, the blood fraction of red blood cells. With our model, Shaqfeh said, "we can predict how thick the Fåhræus-Lindqvist layer will be with a given hematocrit, and therefore how close the platelets will be to the periphery of the blood vessels -- and how quickly clotting will occur."

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Thursday, 15 August 2013

The blood vessels of the retina can reveal stroke risk

Main Category: Hypertension
Also Included In: Eye Health / Blindness;  Stroke
Article Date: 14 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
The blood vessels of the retina can reveal stroke risk
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Your eyes may be a window to your stroke risk.

In a study reported in the American Heart Association journal Hypertension, researchers said retinal imaging may someday help assess if you're more likely to develop a stroke - the nation's No. 4 killer and a leading cause of disability.

"The retina provides information on the status of blood vessels in the brain," said Mohammad Kamran Ikram, M.D., Ph.D., lead author of the study and assistant professor in the Singapore Eye Research Institute, the Department of Ophthalmology and Memory Aging & Cognition Centre, at the National University of Singapore. "Retinal imaging is a non-invasive and cheap way of examining the blood vessels of the retina."

Worldwide, high blood pressure is the single most important risk factor for stroke. However, it's still not possible to predict which high blood pressure patients are most likely to develop a stroke.

Researchers tracked stroke occurrence for an average 13 years in 2,907 patients with high blood pressure who had not previously experienced a stroke. At baseline, each had photographs taken of the retina, the light-sensitive layer of cells at the back of the eyeball. Damage to the retinal blood vessels attributed to hypertension - called hypertensive retinopathy - evident on the photographs was scored as none, mild or moderate/severe.

During the follow-up, 146 participants experienced a stroke caused by a blood clot and 15 by bleeding in the brain.

Researchers adjusted for several stroke risk factors such as age, sex, race, cholesterol levels, blood sugar, body mass index, smoking and blood pressure readings. They found the risk of stroke was 35 percent higher in those with mild hypertensive retinopathy and 137 percent higher in those with moderate or severe hypertensive retinopathy.

Even in patients on medication and achieving good blood pressure control, the risk of a blood clot was 96 percent higher in those with mild hypertensive retinopathy and 198 percent higher in those with moderate or severe hypertensive retinopathy.

"It is too early to recommend changes in clinical practice," Ikram said. "Other studies need to confirm our findings and examine whether retinal imaging can be useful in providing additional information about stroke risk in people with high blood pressure."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute funded the study.

Hypertensive Retinopathy and Risk of Stroke

Yi-Ting Ong, Tien Y. Wong, Ronald Klein, Barbara E.K. Klein, Paul Mitchell, A. Richey Sharrett, David J. Couper, M. Kamran Ikram. Hypertension. 2013; published online before print August 12 2013, doi:10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.01414

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Monday, 5 August 2013

Virginia Tech researcher uses micro-fabricated blood vessels to study tumor growth and anti-angiogenic cancer therapy

Main Category: Cancer / Oncology
Also Included In: Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 02 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Virginia Tech researcher uses micro-fabricated blood vessels to study tumor growth and anti-angiogenic cancer therapy
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Researchers have established a 3-D microfluidic system to study a biological process known as endothelial sprouting. This process represents an early step in new blood vessel growth called angiogenesis.

Breakthroughs in an integrated understanding of angiogenesis will benefit researchers in broad biomedical fields, including cancer, vascular science, and tissue engineering. The reason for this interest in the cancer field is that tumors must access the host blood supply to obtain nutrients essential for growth. They do this by co-opting nearby blood vessels, causing them to sprout into and vascularize the tumor bulk in angiogenesis. The progression of the tumor results in fatal cancer.

Scott Verbridge, assistant professor in the School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences at Virginia Tech, along with senior investigators at the Cornell University Physical Sciences-Oncology Center, developed the system using in vitro models, or living engineered tissues, with support from the National Cancer Institute's Physical Sciences in Oncology.

In the scientific community, relatively little is known about the integrated physico-chemical processes involved in angiogenesis. Blood vessel intrinsic processes can augment or inhibit cell sprouting initially driven by chemical signals from the tumor cells, such that drugs designed to block these tumor-derived chemical triggers may not always be effective. However tools to study these important details have been lacking.

"Angiogenesis has been extensively studied in this field and is one of the areas where innovative microenvironment-targeted therapies have actually made it to patients. However these treatments do not work nearly as well as people hoped," said Verbridge. "Developing in vitro models will help us understand the various regulators of angiogenesis, how these may influence the efficacy of current treatments, and motivate new treatment ideas."

The system uses natural tissue materials, consisting of three defined microchannels embedded in type I collagen hydrogels, designed to imitate the structural support into which new blood vessels regenerate. Two parallel side channels provide the means to create biochemical gradients that cross the endothelial cell-coated central channel.

New blood vessel sprouting transpires when gradients of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) are applied across the central channel, however blood vessel geometry and density were also unexpectedly found to strongly regulate sprouting dynamics.

The results are described in a paper published in the Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A and highlight the importance of mechanical factors, as well as biochemical ones. Verbridge's laboratory, a multidisciplinary research group collaborating with Virginia Tech labs in biomedical engineering, electrical and computer engineering, and chemical engineering; and the Wake Forest Comprehensive Cancer Center, work to develop innovative paradigms for more effective treatment of currently incurable forms of cancer. Tumor metabolism, experimental tumor evolution, energy-based cancer therapies, and graphene nano-bio interfaces are a few of the projects being pursued by lab investigators.

The College of Engineering at Virginia Tech is internationally recognized for its excellence in 14 engineering disciplines and computer science. The college's 6,000 undergraduates benefit from an innovative curriculum that provides a "hands-on, minds-on" approach to engineering education, complementing classroom instruction with two unique design-and-build facilities and a strong Cooperative Education Program. With more than 50 research centers and numerous laboratories, the college offers its 2,000 graduate students opportunities in advanced fields of study such as biomedical engineering, state-of-the-art microelectronics, and nanotechnology. Virginia Tech, the most comprehensive university in Virginia, is dedicated to quality, innovation, and results to the commonwealth, the nation, and the world.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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"Physicochemical regulation of endothelial sprouting in a 3D microfluidic angiogenesis model", Scott S. Verbridge, Anirikh Chakrabarti, Peter DelNero, Brian Kwee, Jeffrey D. Varner, Abraham D. Stroock, Claudia Fischbach, Article first published online: 5 APR 2013, DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.34587

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Tuesday, 30 July 2013

High blood pressure risk and playing college football linked

Main Category: Hypertension
Also Included In: Sports Medicine / Fitness
Article Date: 30 Jul 2013 - 2:00 PDT Current ratings for:
High blood pressure risk and playing college football linked
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College football players, especially linemen, may develop high blood pressure over the course of their first season, according to a small study in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation.

Researchers documented higher blood pressure levels among 113 first-year college players. Only one player had already been diagnosed with hypertension before the season and 27 percent had a family history of hypertension. At post-season, researchers noted:

47 percent of players were considered pre-hypertensive, while 14 percent had stage 1 hypertension.

While previous studies indicate blood pressure elevation during adolescence and young adulthood can increase heart disease and heart-related death later in life, the unique findings of this study suggest early careful monitoring of young football players and timely treatment could improve their heart health later in life.

"High blood pressure is not a good thing at any point in life, but especially during the first two decades," said the study's senior investigator, Aaron L. Baggish, M.D.

"The findings shouldn't scare players," said Baggish, associate director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital. "The earlier in life we can identify and begin treating it the better, and identifying special at-risk groups, like these players, is essential."

From 2006-11, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Harvard Department of Athletics tracked blood pressure changes among players on the Harvard University team, before and after their first season. Researchers also examined changes in endurance-trained competitive rowers, but found no corresponding increase in blood pressure, suggesting the phenomenon may be related to periodic episodes of intense exertion such as football, Baggish said.

Overall, blood pressure levels averaged 116/64 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) - which is normal - before the season, but afterward rose to an average 125/66 mm Hg, which is pre-hypertensive.

Players on the offensive or defensive line who gain weight during the season and have a family history of high blood pressure were most likely to have post-season hypertension.

Researchers also noted structural changes in players' left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber, which can be a potential indicator of worsening heart health since it can grow thicker if the chamber is overworked. In this study, left ventricle thickening (left ventricular hypertrophy) was more prevalent among football players than endurance athletes, and it was significantly greater among linemen.

"Importantly, left ventricular hypertrophy among football players was strongly associated with resting blood pressure suggesting that heart remodeling in some athletes may be due to what happens off the playing field," he said.

"Considering the popularity of football in the United States, I believe this knowledge of an association with enhanced prevalence of prehypertension and stage 1 hypertension after one season in some players is extremely important," said American Heart Association spokesperson Ernesto Schiffrin, M.D., Ph.D., who is not affiliated with the study. "However, the study should not be interpreted to mean that playing football causes hypertension. Instead, it suggests increased surveillance particularly in those most susceptible: those with a family history of hypertension or playing on the offensive or defensive line."

Professional football players tend to have higher rates of both hypertension and premature death from heart disease, especially linemen, Baggish noted. He and his colleagues are continuing to monitor players identified as at-risk to gain a better understanding of hypertension and heart disease, if and when it develops, as they age.

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

Article: "Blood Pressure and Left Ventricular Hypertrophy During American-Style Football Participation" Rory B. Weiner, MD; Francis Wang, MD; Stephanie K. Isaacs, BS; Rajeev Malhotra, MD; Brant Berkstresser, MS, ATC; Jonathan H. Kim, MD; Adolph M. Hutter Jr, MD; Michael H. Picard, MD; Thomas J. Wang, MD; Aaron L. Baggish, MD. doi: 10.1161/?CIRCULATIONAHA.113.003522. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

Editorial: "Tackling Cardiovascular Health Risks in College Football Players" Gary J. Balady, MD; Jonathan A. Drezner, MD, doi: 10.1161/?CIRCULATIONAHA.113.004039

The American Heart Association funded the study.

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From gold, a new way to control blood clotting

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 29 Jul 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
From gold, a new way to control blood clotting
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Using gold nanoparticles, MIT researchers have devised a new way to turn blood clotting on and off. The particles, which are controlled by infrared laser light, could help doctors control blood clotting in patients undergoing surgery, or promote wound healing.

Currently, the only way doctors can manage blood clotting is by administering blood thinners such as heparin. This reduces clotting, but there is no way to counteract the effects of heparin and other blood thinners.

"It's like you have a light bulb, and you can turn it on with the switch just fine, but you can't turn it off. You have to wait for it to burn out," says Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli, a technical staff member at MIT Lincoln Laboratory and senior author of a paper describing the new particles, which can turn blood clotting off and then restore it when necessary.

Lead author of the paper, which is appearing in the July 24 issue of the journal PLoS One, is Helena de Puig, an MIT graduate student in mechanical engineering. Other authors are Anna Cifuentes Rius, a visiting student from Ramon Llull University in Spain, and MIT senior Dorma Flemister.

Blood clotting is produced by a long cascade of protein interactions, culminating in the formation of fibrin, a fibrous protein that seals wounds. Heparin and other blood thinners interfere with this process by targeting several of the reactions that occur during the blood-clotting cascade. A better solution, Hamad-Schifferli says, would be an agent that targets only the last step - the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin, a reaction mediated by an enzyme called thrombin.

Several years ago, scientists discovered that DNA with a specific sequence inhibits thrombin by blocking the site where it would typically bind fibrinogen. The complementary DNA sequence can shut off the inhibition by binding to the original DNA strand and preventing it from attaching to thrombin.

Hamad-Schifferli and her colleagues had previously demonstrated that gold nanorods can be designed to release drugs or other compounds when activated with infrared light. The size of the nanorod determines the wavelength of light that will activate it, so two rods of different lengths can carry different payloads and be controlled separately.

To manipulate the blood-clotting cascade, Hamad-Schifferli decided to load a smaller gold nanorod (35 nanometers long) with the DNA thrombin inhibitor and a larger particle (60 nanometers long) with the complementary DNA strand. At first, they tried to get the DNA to chemically bond to the gold nanoparticles. However, they found they couldn't load enough DNA onto each particle to make this process effective.

Then, Hamad-Schifferli says, "We realized we could use a bad side effect of nanoparticle biology to our advantage." That is, the particles tend to attract a halo of proteins that bind to gold, making them sticky. In previous studies, she has shown that this large cloud of proteins can be used to hold a drug payload.

"If you do that, you can get way more drug on the nanorod than you normally would if you had to chemically link them together," Hamad-Schifferli says. By soaking the nanorods in a solution of human serum protein and the DNA molecules, the researchers were able to attach six times more DNA than through chemical bonding.

When the gold nanorods are exposed to the correct wavelength of infrared light, the electrons within the gold become very excited and generate so much heat that they melt slightly, taking on a more spherical shape and releasing their DNA payload.

The researchers tested the nanoparticles using blood donated to hospitals, and found that the particles successfully turned blood clotting on and off in all of the samples tested.

"It's really a fascinating idea that you can control blood clotting not just one way but by having two different optical antennae to create two-way control," says Luke Lee, a professor of bioengineering at the University of California at Berkeley who was not part of the research team. "It's an innovative and creative way to interface with biological systems."

For the particles to be practical for use in patients, they would need to be targeted to the site of injury, which the researchers are now working on doing. Once they reached the site, they would need to be within a few millimeters of the skin surface for the infrared light shone on the skin to reach them.

The researchers are also working on modifying the system so the particles can be activated using a continuous wave laser, which is smaller and less powerful than the pulsed femtosecond laser they are currently using.

Written by Anne Trafton

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Monday, 29 July 2013

'Promising' blood test discovered for Alzheimer's dementia

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Main Category: Alzheimer's / Dementia
Also Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience;  Mental Health;  Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 29 Jul 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
'Promising' blood test discovered for Alzheimer's dementia
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Researchers in Germany have identified a new blood test that may in future provide much earlier diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative disorders.

The team, from Saarland University and Siemens Healthcare, describe their test in the open access journal Genome Biology. They found it could be used to discriminate between people with Alzheimer's from healthy people without the dementia.

Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia, can currently only be diagnosed with certainty at autopsy, so there is considerable interest in finding reliable, non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosis in living people.

Andreas Keller focused on microRNAs (miRNAs), working with colleagues from Siemens Healthcare, Saarland University at Homburg, and three other German universities, as well as The Scripps Research Institute, of La Jolla, California. The small non-coding RNA molecules are known to influence the way genes are expressed, and miRNAs can be found circulating in bodily fluids, including blood. ?

The team highlighted and tested a 'signature' panel of 12 miRNAs among 48 people with Alzheimer's and 22 healthy controls and discovered different levels in the people with the dementia.

They then developed the tests in a larger cohort of 202 people, comprising not only people with Alzheimer's disease alongside healthy controls, but also patients with other neurological and neurodegenerative disorders.

Here, the new test not only reliably distinguished people with Alzheimer's from the controls with normal health but was also able to identify other conditions.

Useful biomarkers need to be accurate, sensitive (correctly identifying people with the disease) and specific (correctly filtering out people without the disease).

The new test scored highly on all three measures. It was:

93% accurate95% sensitive92% specific.

However, the authors caution that while their blood test shows obvious promise, it still needs to be validated for clinical use, and may eventually work best when combined with other standard diagnostic tools, such as imaging.

Since people with other brain disorders can sometimes show Alzheimer's-like symptoms, the team also looked for the miRNA signature in other patient groups. Interestingly, while the 12 miRNAs were chosen for their potential to separate Alzheimer's disease from controls, the same signature was more than 95% accurate in distinguishing controls from people with various psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia, depression and bipolar conditions.

It was less accurate (around 82%) in distinguishing patients with other neurodegenerative disorders, such as mild cognitive impairment, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis, from controls.

The test was also able to discriminate between Alzheimer's patients and those with other neurodegenerative disorders, with an accuracy of around 75%.

The authors believe accuracy in distinguishing Alzheimer's disease from the wider range of neurodegenerative conditions might be improved by tweaking the miRNAs used in the test. They explained:

"Since the 12-miRNA signature has been tailored to differentiate between Alzheimer's disease and controls, other miRNAs may likely contribute to a signature that permits also a better differentiation between the other tested diseases and Alzheimer's disease."

The work at Saarland builds on previous studies highlighting the potential of miRNAs as blood-based biomarkers for many diseases, including numerous cancers. It also suggests that miRNAs could yield useful biomarkers for various brain disorders and sheds further light on the mechanisms underpinning Alzheimer's disease.

Two of the miRNAs are known to be involved in amyloid precursor protein processing, which itself is involved in the formation of plaques, a classic hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Further, many of the miRNAs are believed to influence the growth and shape of neurons in the developing brain. ?

Written by Nick Valentine


Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Visit our alzheimer's / dementia section for the latest news on this subject. Genome Biology 2013, 14: R78. DOI: 10.1186/gb-2013-14-7-r78. Published online 29 July 2013. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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''Promising' blood test discovered for Alzheimer's dementia'

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Friday, 26 July 2013

Laser-controlled molecular switch turns blood clotting on, off on command

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 24 Jul 2013 - 14:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Laser-controlled molecular switch turns blood clotting on, off on command
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Researchers have designed tiny, light-controlled gold particles that can release DNA controls to switch blood clotting off and on. The results are reported July 24 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli and colleagues from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The two-way switch for blood clotting relies on the ability of two gold nanoparticles to selectively release different DNA molecules from their surface under different wavelengths of laser excitation. When stimulated by one wavelength, one nanorod releases a piece of DNA that binds the blood protein thrombin and blocks clot formation. When the complementary DNA piece is released from the other nanorod, it acts as an antidote and releases thrombin, restoring clotting activity.

Natural blood clotting is precisely synchronized to occur at the right time and place. Wound healing, surgery and other conditions require manipulation of this process, typically through the use of anticoagulants like heparin or warfarin. However, these drugs are inherently one-sided as they can only block clotting, and reversing their effects depends on removing them from the bloodstream. The methods described in this research open up new possibilities for more precise, selective control of the blood clotting process during therapy.

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

de Puig H, Cifuentes Rius A, Flemister D, Baxamusa SH, Hamad-Schifferli K (2013) Selective Light-Triggered Release of DNA from Gold Nanorods Switches Blood Clotting On and Off. PLoS ONE 8(7): e68511. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0068511

PLOS ONE

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Potential for a faster, simpler diagnosis for fibromyalgia using a finger-stick blood sample

Main Category: Fibromyalgia
Also Included In: Medical Devices / Diagnostics;  Arthritis / Rheumatology
Article Date: 25 Jul 2013 - 3:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Potential for a faster, simpler diagnosis for fibromyalgia using a finger-stick blood sample
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Researchers have developed a reliable way to use a finger-stick blood sample to detect fibromyalgia syndrome, a complicated pain disorder that often is difficult to diagnose.

If it were someday made available to primary care physicians, the test could knock up to five years off of the wait for a diagnosis, researchers predict.

In a pilot study, the scientists used a high-powered and specialized microscope to detect the presence of small molecules in blood-spot samples from patients known to have fibromyalgia.

By "training" the equipment to recognize that molecular pattern, the researchers then showed that the microscope could tell the difference between fibromyalgia and two types of arthritis that share some of the same symptoms.

Though more analysis is needed to identify exactly which molecules are related to development of the disorder itself, the researchers say their pilot data are promising.

"We've got really good evidence of a test that could be an important aid in the diagnosis of fibromyalgia patients," said Tony Buffington, professor of veterinary clinical sciences at The Ohio State University and senior author of the study. "We would like this to lead to an objective test for primary care doctors to use, which could produce a diagnosis as much as five years before it usually occurs."

Patients with fibromyalgia are often desperate by the time they receive treatment because of the lengthy process required to make a diagnosis. The main symptoms, persistent pain and fatigue, mimic many other conditions, so physicians tend to rule out other potential causes before diagnosing fibromyalgia. Additional symptoms include disrupted sleep and memory or thought problems. An estimated 5 million American adults have the disorder, according to the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.

"The importance of producing a faster diagnosis cannot be overstated, because patients experience tremendous stress during the diagnostic process. Just getting the diagnosis actually makes patients feel better and lowers costs because of reductions in anxiety," said Kevin Hackshaw, associate professor of medicine, division of rheumatology and immunology, at Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center and lead author of the study.

The study is published in the Aug. 21, 2013, issue of the journal Analyst.

The technology used in this work is infrared microspectroscopy, which identifies the biochemical content of a blood sample based on where peaks of molecules appear in the infrared spectrum. The technology offers hints at the molecules present in the samples based on how molecular bonds vibrate when they are struck by light.

The spectroscopy works on dried blood, so just a few drops from a finger stick produce enough blood to run this test.

Researchers first obtained blood samples from patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia (14), rheumatoid arthritis (15) and osteoarthritis (12). These other conditions were chosen for comparison because they produce similar symptoms as fibromyalgia, but are easier to diagnose.

The scientists analyzed each sample with the infrared microspectroscopy to identify the molecular patterns associated with each disease. This functioned as a "training" phase of the study.

When the researchers then entered blinded blood samples into the same machinery, each condition was accurately identified based on its molecular patterns.

"It separated them completely, with no misclassifications," Buffington said. "That's very important. It never mistook a patient with fibromyalgia for a patient with arthritis. Clearly we need more numbers, but this showed the technique is quite effective."

The researchers also analyzed some of the potential chemicals that could someday function as biomarkers in the fibromyalgia blood samples, but further studies are needed to identify the molecules responsible for the spectral patterns, he said.

Though an infrared microscope can be expensive, Buffington said the testing could be affordable if a central lab existed to run the samples. That the method can use dried blood samples makes this concept feasible because dried blood can be legally sent via U.S. mail, he noted.

Why is a veterinarian pursuing this type of research? Buffington is a renowned expert on domestic cats, including a painful bladder disorder they suffer called interstitial cystitis (IC). This syndrome also occurs in humans.

It turns out that the origins of IC, like such human disorders as irritable bowel syndrome and fibromyalgia, cannot be traced to the specific area of the anatomy most affected by the syndrome. These disorders are categorized as medically unexplained or functional syndromes, and Buffington has explored the possibility that a common link exists among these types of diseases, and that they might have origins in the central nervous system.

Buffington has filed two invention disclosures with the university, and Ohio State has filed multiple patent applications for the testing method, in the United States and internationally. In November, Ohio State was issued U.S. Patent 8,309,931 on a rapid diagnostic method for functional syndromes in humans and cats.

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

Written by Emily Caldwell

Additional co-authors include Luis Rodriguez-Saona and Marçal Plans of the Department of Food Science and Technology at Ohio State, and Lauren Bell of Metabolon Inc., based in Durham, N.C.

Ohio State University

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'Potential for a faster, simpler diagnosis for fibromyalgia using a finger-stick blood sample'

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