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Archive for August, 2009

White tea benefits more than skin deep

August 22nd, 2009 wellguy No comments

Research from Kingston University in South West London shows white tea has anti-ageing potential and high levels of anti-oxidants. Tests also show that white tea contains extracts that protect the structural proteins of the skin, namely collagen and elastin.

White tea was shown to inhibit enzymes which break down elastin and collagen, as well as oxidants associated with inflammatory diseases. Suppression of an excess of these enzymes and oxidants in inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis has long been the subject of research.

The study, which teamed with Neal’s Yard Remedies, also found eight other plants to be potentially beneficial in protecting against the breakdown of elastin and collagen, but the benefits of white tea significantly outperformed the others tested.

News source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090810085312.htm

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Drug resistant TB strains likely to spread

August 22nd, 2009 wellguy No comments

Reasearch from the University of New South Wales and the University of Western Syndney indicates that antibiotic-resistant strains of tuberculosis are more likely than drug-sensitive strains to persist and spread. Studies point to inconsisent or partial treatment of the disease as well as neglect of infection control measures as contributing factors to the spread of the contagious disease.

The research  focused on data from Cuba, Estonia and Venezuela to estimate the rate of evolution of drug resistant TB strains well as to understand better the “reproductive fitness” of those strains and to predict their spread. 

While the drug-resistant strains have a lower transmission than drug-sensitive strains, the infections they cause are longer lasting. TB is a contagious disease and an individual with untreated TB is likely to infect up to 15 people per year. According to UNSW’s Dr.Fabio Luciani, “….limiting further transmission of TB might be an effective approach to reducing the impact of drug resistance.”

New source:  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090810161957.htm

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Anti-aging gene lowers blood pressure

August 20th, 2009 wellguy No comments

According to medical experts, hypertension, or high blood pressure, is a contributinng factor in about 1/3 of all deaths in the U.S. annually. Researchers have now discovered an anti-aging gene that can actually lower blood pressure.

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center researchers have found an anti-aging gene that may contribute to living longer by lowering blood pressure and its role as a risk factor in many heart diseases.  A single dose of the gene, Klotho, can reduce blood pressure for up to 12 weeks. The research provides insight into how we age and how we can live longer.

Director of the Reynolds Oklahoma Center on Aging William Sonntag states, “If we can increase the health of people for long periods of time, we increase their ability to be active, and do things then we decrease health care costs. That’s really a critical factor.” 

News source:  http://ksbitv.com/internal?st=printamp;id=53600062amp;path=/news 

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Synthetic HDL Therapy Innovation

August 20th, 2009 wellguy No comments

Synthetic-HDL-nanoparticles may be able to carry cholesterol through the bloodstream and onto the liver for excretion.  Such an innovation in drug treatment of cardiovascular disease could be used to prevent stroke and heart attack within the next decade.

 Northwestern University Assistant Professor of Urology Shad Thaxton has designed a nanoparticle that mimics HDL (the “good cholesterol”). The synthetic HDL is able to bind tightly to LDL (the “bad cholesterol”) molecules and thus transport cholesterol from blood-vessel plaques to the liver.

The nanoparticles are composed of gold spheres five nanometers in diameter which are coated with fat and protein molecules which allow them to bind to cholesterol found in arterial plaques.  The work is in its early stages, but Thaxton envisions the synthetic HDL as a preventive therapy in cardiovascular disease if proved safe and effective.

News link: http//www.technologyreview.com/TR35/Profile.aspx?TRID=774  

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Could a protein injection replace bypass surgery to treat heart disease?

August 19th, 2009 wellguy No comments

A researcher at the Tel Aviv University’s Sackler School of Medicine
has already shown a protein injection in the legs of mice with
diseased blood vessels can stimulate the growth of new healthy blood
vessels. Next, she will see if the same technique results in the
restoration of blood flow for those with heart disease.

Dr. Britta Hardy, the researcher credited with the discovery, reports
dramatic and rapid results from the injections. Dr Hardy says, “Within
a short time we saw the formation of capillaries and tiny blood
vessels. After three weeks, they had grown and merged together with
the rest of the circulatory system.”

“The biotechnology behind our human-based protein therapy is very
complicated, but the goal is simple and the solution is
straightforward. We intend to inject our drug locally to heal any
oxygen-starved tissue. So far in animal models, we’ve seen no side
effects and no inflammation following our injection of the drug into
the legs. The growth of new blood vessels happens within a few weeks,
showing improved blood circulation.”

The same protein has been shown to help prevent new clots from
developing in stents. And it has been suggested that the protein might
also eliminate the need for patients to take expensive and risky blood
thinners.

Because the protein injections appear to be safe and result in growth
of new blood vessels in such a short period of time, it is anticipated
that Phase 1 trials would be brief. According to the study, in as
little as two years an entirely new treatment option for coronary
artery disease patients may be commercially available.

News Source: http://www.examiner.com/x-14041-Charlotte-Health-and-Happiness-Examiner~y2009m8d15-Protein-injection-fights-heart-disease-by-growing-new-blood-vessels

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Poly-L-lactide nanosheets could replace surgical stitches

August 18th, 2009 wellguy No comments

Poly-L-lactide has been used previously as degradable stitches and in
drug delivery. Now researchers at Tokyo’s Waseda University have used
the biodegradable material to develop nanosheets for suture treatment.

The study team applied the sheets to incisions made in mice stomachs.
The wound healed without scarring or tissue adhesion.

Findings were published in the journal Advanced Materials. Shinji
Takeoka, professor in the Department of Life Science and Medical
Bioscience at Waseda University said, “This approach would constitute
an ideal candidate for an alternative to conventional suture/ligation
procedures, from the perspective not only of a minimally invasive
surgical technique but also reduction of operation times,”

The nanosheets (only about 20 nanometers in thickness) could be used
for general wound dressing, but may be particularly useful in plastic
surgery, endoscopic surgery, and regenerative medicine. Clinical
trials could still be several years away.

News link: http://www.plasticsurgerypractice.com/eReport/2009-08-17_05.asp

 

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Who’s Who in Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine

August 17th, 2009 wellguy No comments

Week of August 17, 2009

Naina Sachdev, MD
Medical Director for the Advanced Aesthetics and Integrative Medicine Center

Dr. Sachdev is able to apply critical knowledge garnered through her medical degree from the University of Chicago Medical School and combine it with hands on experience from patients at her advanced Aesthetics and Integrative Medicine Center. With a thriving practice that focuses on Aesthetic, Integrative and Functional Medicine, this internist and anti?aging expert serves as Medical Director for the Advanced Aesthetics and Integrative Medicine Center.

At the upcoming Anti-Aging Conference: Clinical Applications for In-Office Procedures in San Jose, California (September 9-12, 2009), Dr. Sachdev will present, Female Hormone Case Studies — Using Saliva Hormone Assessment, on Thursday, September 10th as a part of the workshop, “LABORATORY TESTING IN ANTI?AGING MEDICINE “.

For more information call the A4M today; 1-888-997-0112.

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Powerful potential new therapy for Asthma discovered

August 16th, 2009 wellguy No comments

The 2-phase study began with vitro experiments with human airway epithelial cells and concluded with experiments conducted with mice. In both phases, when a ragweed extract was introduced no allergic inflammation occurred at the cellular level in cells treated with aldose reductase inhibitors.

According to a public release by the University that conducted the study, “In an initial series of in vitro experiments, the researchers applied ragweed pollen extract (ragweed pollen is notorious for provoking the allergic reactions that lead to allergies and asthmatic airway inflammation) to cultures of human airway epithelial cells -the cells that line the network of air passages within the lungs. Some of the cultures had been pretreated with an aldose reductase inhibitor, while others had not.”

“The untreated cells responded in much the same way airway cells do in an asthma attack, with an increased rate of apoptosis (cell suicide), a jump in the levels of reactive oxygen species, the activation of key “transcription factors” that kick-start the production of inflammatory proteins and the large-scale generation of a whole host of molecules associated with inflammation. Cells treated with aldose reductase inhibitors, by contrast, had a much lower rate of apoptosis, reduced levels of reactive oxygen species, far smaller increases in critical transcription factors and substantially lower increases in inflammatory signaling molecules.”

“In collaboration with Boldogh, Srivastava next investigated whether aldose reductase inhibitors could reduce the asthma-like symptoms of mice exposed to ragweed extract, a well-established clinical model mimicking the allergic airway inflammation that commonly leads to asthma in humans. When untreated mice inhaled ragweed extract, their lungs suffered an influx of eosinophils (inflammation-inducing white blood cells), a jump in inflammatory signaling molecules, a buildup of mucin (a protein component of mucus) and an increase in airway hyper-reactivity (the tendency of air passages to suddenly constrict under stress). Mice fed a dose of aldose reductase inhibitor before inhaling ragweed extract, however, showed dramatically reduced levels of these components of the asthmatic response.”

UTMB professor Satish Srivastava, senior author of the paper and his colleagues in the study had speculated that since aldose reductase inhibitors had been shown to stop inflammation in colon cancer, atherosclerosis, sepsis, uveitis and other inflammatory diseases, it might have the same effect on asthma.

“Our hypothesis performed exactly as expected, with the experiments showing that aldose reductase is an essential enzyme in the transduction pathways that cause the transcription of the cytokines and chemokines known to act in asthma pathogenesis,” Srivastava said. “They attract eosinophils and cause inflammation and mucin production in the airway.”

Srivastava sees the clinical human trials as the next step

News link: EurekAlert

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Vitamin C deficiency and high C-reactive protein levels linked to chronic diseases

August 15th, 2009 wellguy No comments

The findings of a cross-sectional study conducted by the Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto are consistent with previous research showing the effects of vitamin C deficiency. Inadequate vitamin C levels have been shown to decrease the body’s ability to burn fat when exercising. A study conducted ten years ago by the Boston University School of Medicine and the Lunus Pauling Institute, Oregon State University concluded that vitamin C intake of 500mg per day can reduce blood pressure and hypertension.

The new study linking vitamin deficiency with high CRP levels is important because levels of C-reactive protein increases in the blood when infection and inflammation are present, and high c-reactive protein levels have been linked to atherosclerosis, cholesterol build-up, heart disease, diabetes, hypertension and cancers.

News links: The Examiner, Science Daily

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Study Finds Bird Flu Virus — Parkinson’s link

August 15th, 2009 wellguy No comments

The theory that exposure to such viruses could make people more susceptible to neurodegenerative diseases is controversial, but not new. An increase in people exhibitin neurological symptoms associated with Parkinson’s disease occurred after the 1918 influenza pandemic. There are no reports yet of survivors of the more recent H5N1 flu exhibiting Parkinson’s disease. But according to Richard Smeyne, a developmental neurobiologist and the senior author of the new study, it’s too early to draw any conclusions about whether those who were infected with H5N1 are at a greater risk of developing neurodegenerative diseases.

Researchers in the new study found that all 225 mice developed tremors and other movement difficulties when a virus solution was sprayed in their noses. Smeyne and his colleagues were able to track the virus over a period of ten days as it moved from the gut through the nervous system to the brain stem, mid-brain and ultimately throughout most of the rest of the brain. At 21 days into the study, the virus had cleared the system of the infected mice, but the research team found the areas affected by the virus still showed signs of inflammation and elevated levels of phosphorylated alpha-synuclein at the end of the 90-day study.

Mice that were infected with the H5N1 virus did indeed experience a loss in dopamine-releasing neurons-the same neurons destroyed by Parkinson’s disease. While this 17% neuron die-off is much less significant than the 70% reduction typically experienced by those with Parkinson’s Disease, Smeyne believes bird viruses may leave those exposed with greater susceptibility to Parkinson’s.

Malú Tansey, a neuroscientist focused on inflammation and neurodegenerative disease at Emory University in Atlanta said the study produced strong evidence that the virus can kill dopamine neurons. But she added, “I don’t think people should be overly concerned if they’re exposed to avian flu virus that they’re going to get Parkinson’s disease. But it should prompt investigators to reexamine inflammation as a potential contributing factor to neurodegenerative disease.”

News Release: Bird Flu Virus a Possible Trigger for Parkinson’s: Science Now

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