Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

15 May 2008

Green tea compounds beat OSA-related brain deficits

Chemicals found in green tea may be able to stave off the cognitive deficits that occur with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), according to a new study published in the second issue for May of the American Thoracic Society’s American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Green Tea


Researchers examined the effects green tea polyphenols (GTP), administered through drinking water, on rats who were intermittently deprived of oxygen during 12-hour “night” cycles, mimicking the intermittent hypoxia (IH) that humans with OSA experience.

People with OSA have been reported to have increased markers of oxidative stress and exhibit architectural changes in their brain tissue in areas involved in learning and memory. Chronic IH in rats produce similar neurological deficit patterns.

“OSA has been increasingly recognized as a serious and frequent health condition with potential long-term morbidities that include learning and psychological disabilities […],” wrote David Gozal, M.D., professor and director of Kosair Children’s Hospital Research Institute at the University of Louisville, lead author of the article. “A growing body of evidence suggests that the adverse neurobehavioral consequences imposed by IH stem, at least in part, from oxidative stress and inflammatory signaling cascades.”

GTPs are known to possess anti-oxidant properties, acting as a free radical scavengers, and research has shown that the compounds may reduce the risk of a variety of different diseases.


"Recent studies have demonstrated the neuroprotective activity of GTP in animal models of neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease,” wrote Dr. Gozal.

In this study, the researchers divided 106 male rats into two groups that underwent intermittent oxygen depletion during the 12-hour “night” cycle for 14 days. One group received drinking water treated with GTP; the other received plain drinking water.

They were then tested for markers of inflammation and oxidative stress, as well as for performance in spatial learning and memory tasks—namely a water “maze” in which the rat had to memorize the location of a hidden platform.

The IH-rats that received the green tea-treated water performed significantly better in a water maze than the rats that drank plain water. “GTP-treated rats exposed to IH displayed significantly greater spatial bias for the previous hidden platform position, indicating that GTPs are capable of attenuating IH-induced spatial learning deficits,” wrote Dr. Gozal, adding that GTPs “may represent a potential interventional strategy for patients” with sleep-disordered breathing.


Source: American Thoracic Society

17 April 2008

Reprogrammed cells reduce Parkinson's symptoms in rats

Neurons derived from reprogrammed adult skin cells successfully integrated into fetal mouse brains and reduced symptoms in a Parkinson’s disease rat model, according to a study published on April 7 in the online Early Edition of PNAS.


parkinson cells


“This is the first demonstration that reprogrammed cells can integrate into the neural system or positively affect neurodegenerative disease,” says Marius Wernig, lead author of the article and a postdoctoral researcher in Whitehead Member Rudolf Jaenisch’s lab.

Researchers in the Jaenisch lab showed in December 2007 that mice with a human sickle-cell anemia disease trait could also be treated successfully with adult skin cells that had been reprogrammed to an embryonic stem cell-like state.

For the neural experiments Wernig used induced pluripotent stem cells (IPS cells), which were created by reprogramming adult skin cells using retroviruses to express four genes (Oct4, Sox2, c-Myc and Klf4) into the cells’ DNA. The IPS cells were then differentiated into neural precursor cells and dopamine neurons using techniques originally developed in embryonic stem cells.

In one experiment, Wernig transplanted the neural precursor cells into brain cavities of mouse embryos. The mice were naturally delivered and analyzed nine weeks after the transplantation. Wernig saw that transplanted cells formed clusters where they had been injected and then migrated extensively into the surrounding brain tissues. Using electrophysiological studies conducted by Martha Constantine-Paton from MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research and structural analysis, Wernig also saw that the neural precursor cells that migrated had differentiated into several subtypes of neural cells, including neurons and glia, and had functionally integrated into the brain.

To assess the therapeutic potential of the IPS cells, the Jaenisch lab collaborated with Ole Isacson's group at Mclean Hospital/Harvard Medical School and used a rat model for Parkinson's disease, a human condition caused by insufficient levels of the hormone dopamine in a specific part of the midbrain. To mimic this state, the dopamine-producing neurons were killed on one side of the rat brains and the researchers then grafted differentiated dopamine neurons into a part of the rat brains called the striatum.


Four weeks after surgery, the rats were tested for dopamine-related behavior. In response to amphetamine injections, rats typically walk in circles toward the side with less dopamine activity in the brain. Eight of nine rats that received the dopamine neuron transplants showed markedly less or even no circling. Eight weeks after transplantation, the researchers could see that the dopamine neurons had extended into the surrounding brain.

“This experiment shows that in vitro reprogrammed cells can in principle be used to treat Parkinson’s disease,” says Jaenisch. “It’s a proof of principle experiment that argues, yes, these cells may have the therapeutic promise that people ascribe to them.”

Jaenisch and Wernig are optimistic that this work eventually could be applied to human patients, but caution that major hurdles must be addressed first. Those include finding alternatives to the potentially cancer-causing retroviruses used to transform the skin cells into IPS cells and figuring out the best methods and places to transplant the neural precursor cells in humans.


Source: Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research

20 November 2007

The Right Breath


BREATHING TECHNIQUES AND BENEFITS:

From the day we are born, the moment our umbilical cord is severed we are left independently to take the first breath of life. It is when our lungs being there normal function. We are not aware of this daily exercise, which keep as alive. Yet, it is a fact that we are not really breathing the way we should to keep us healthy & well. In our normal breathing pattern. We are not using the entire lung. It is therefore necessary to learn the right techniques of breathing which would exercise the entire lung & thus make us feel healthier & full of energy.

Pranayam is that technique in yoga, which teaches us the proper way to breath. It also work as the basis of spiritual awakening, it increase the energy levels, perception, concentration, & the development of various brain faculties.


WHAT IS PRANAYAM?

It is not just the control & regularization of breath; Pranayam is energy on life force, present as a universal force & also in the human body. It is this ‘pranayam’ or energy, which has to be canalized in the right way to maintain the body & its organs. Pranayam aims to increase the life force. So that it can reach out to the hidden recesses of the brain, which help in expanding the human faculties & awakens the existing dormant energy in the body, in every cell, which in turn improves the function of all the organs of the body.



BENEFITS OF PRANAYAM AND RIGHT BREATHING:
It has been prove that the right technique of breathing through Pranayam has cured asthma , improved blood circulation ,which has increase energy level & reduce stress. It help you make use of your enter lung & keep the chest muscles active. It enable you to get more oxygen with each breath. The right breathing technique helps in chronic obstruction pulmonary disease, it also improves your performance during day to day physical activities. Improved blood circulation helps in some of the skin ailments hair fall & improves the complexion many more illness are benefits by proper breathing.

TECHNIQUE OF RIGHT BREATHING:

Breathing exercises basically focus on the upper chest, the lower ribs & the diaphragm. It is very important to be in a comfortable position, setting cross-legged or may be even lying down while these exercises.

Relax your neck & shoulders muscles.

Breath is slowly & deeply thru your nose for 2 its 4 counts hold your breath for about 3 counts & then slowly exhale then you feel your complete breath out. Continue doing this for at least 5 minutes. The relax for a minute.

Now the 2nd exercise you concentrate on your out breathe or exhalation, which is done with force, you pull the abdomen muscles in its push out the air from the air from the lungs with force do it rhythmically for 50 – 100 times. You should not feel any strain. If you do so just stop & breathe slowly before starting again. You can with practice do this up to 500 times giving a break for 5-10 seconds after every 50-1000 counts. You may feel dizziness. After this once again let the body relax.


ALTERNATE NOSTRIL BREATHING:

Put your thumb on one nostril & forefinger on the other. Gently press the thumb blocking the passage & breathe in thru the other nostril filling in your lungs & expanding your chest fully. Now hold your breath for count of 3-5 & then blocking that nostril with the forefinger, release the thumb & exhale out fully. Do this exercise alternately with each nostril for at least 15-20 times or about 10 minutes. Once again relax.

If just these 3 exercise are done regularly and daily ,it will improve the blood circulation ,increase the oxygen wake and the energy levels . while doing each exercise it is imported to concentrate on each break you take , feeling visualizing and experiencing every breath, which is energizing every cell , fiber muscle and organ of the body.

After completing the breathing exercises ,it is necessary to relax the body completely by lying down is shavasan position letting your arms and legs completely relaxed for about 10 minutes after this it would be very faithful to set for meditation for 10 –15 minutes .Sit cross legged , close your eyes and try to blot out all thoughts from your mind .This may not be possible ,so you may even simply concentrate on one positive through example. “Every day in every way I am feeling better and better”, or any other such thought .Repeat this over and over again like a mantra and visualize your whole body feeling better and energized.

If you can day with the right breathing exercise and meditation, you can definitely improve your mental and physical health , attain a sense of peace , and higher spirituality.

source: drsaratherapy.com

17 November 2007

Most Serious Type of Skin Cancer "Melanoma"


Melanoma is the most serious type of skin cancer. Often the first sign of melanoma is a change in the size, shape, color or feel of a mole. Most melanomas have a black or black-blue area. Melanoma may also appear as a new mole. It may be black, abnormal or "ugly looking."

Thinking of "ABCDE" can help you remember what to watch for:
A for Asymmetry - the shape of one half does not match the other
B for Border - the edges are ragged, blurred or irregular
C for Color - the color in uneven and may include shades of black, brown and tan
D for Diameter - there is a change in size, usually an increase
E for elevation - a mole that is raised above the skin and has a rough surface


Melanoma can be cured if it is diagnosed and treated early. If melanoma is not removed in its early stages, cancer cells may grow downward from the skin surface and invade healthy tissue. If it spreads to other parts of the body it can be difficult to control.


Who gets melanoma?

Anyone can get melanoma, but some people are more likely to get it. If you answer "yes" to any of the questions below, you may be more at risk. Talk with your doctor about your risk factors.

Has anyone in your family had cancerous moles or a melanoma?
Do you have many moles larger than a pencil eraser?
Do you have more than 50 moles of any size?
Did you ever get a bad sunburn that caused blisters when you were a child?
Does your skin usually burn but not tan?

How can I keep from getting melanoma?

The most important way to prevent melanoma is to limit your sun exposure. The following are some ways to do this:
Avoid the strong midday sun between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
When you are outside, try to spend your time in shaded areas as much as possible.
Wear a wide-brimmed hat (to shade your face and protect your ears).
Wear a long-sleeved shirt and long pants while you are out in the sun.
Use a sunscreen with a sun protection factor (SPF) of at least 15. Put the sunscreen on 30 minutes before you go outside. Put it on again every 2 to 3 hours after sweating and swimming.
Do not use sunbeds or tanning salons.
If you are worried about a spot on your skin, tell your doctor about it.
Sunburns in childhood are the most damaging. Children younger than 6 months of age should never be outside in direct sunshine. Children 6 months of age or older should wear sunscreen every day.

click here more information and treatment

source: www.aafp.org

13 November 2007

What You Need to Know About Hoodia Diet Pills

What is Hoodia Gordonii?


Latin Name: Hoodia gordonii
Other Names: hoodia, xhooba, !khoba, Ghaap, hoodia cactus, South African desert cactus.

Hoodia (pronounced HOO-dee-ah) is a cactus-like plant that grows primarily in the semi-deserts of South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola.


In the last few years, hoodia has been heavily marketed for weight loss and has become immensely popular.

Although there has always been a demand for diet pills, after the ban on the herb ephedra, the market was particularly ripe for the next new diet pill.

Much of hoodia's popularity stems from claims that the San Bushmen of the Kalahari desert relied on hoodia for thousands of years to ward off hunger and thirst during long hunting trips. They were said to have cut off the stem and eat the bitter-tasting plant.

Hoodia gordonii grows in clumps of green upright stems.

Although it is often called a cactus because it resembles one, hoodia is actually a succulent plant.

It takes about five years before hoodia gordonii's pale purple flowers appear and the plant can be harvested.

There are over 13 types of hoodia. The only active ingredient identified so far is a steroidal glycoside that has been called "p57". Currently, only hoodia gordonii is thought to contain p57.

What is the History of Hoodia Gordonii?
In 1937, a Dutch anthropologist studying the San Bushmen noted that they used hoodia gordonii to suppress appetite. In 1963, scientists at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), South Africa's national laboratory, began studying hoodia. They claimed that lab animals lost weight after they were given hoodia gordonii.

The South African scientists, working with a British company named Phytopharm, isolated what they believed to be an active ingredient in hoodia gordonii, a steroidal glycoside, which they named p57. After obtaining a patent in 1995, they licensed p57 to Phytopharm. Phytopharm has spent more than $20 million on hoodia research.

Eventually pharmaceutical giant Pfizer learned about hoodia and expressed interest in developing a hoodia drug. In 1998, Phytopharm sub-licensed the rights to develop p57 to Pfizer for $21 million. Pfizer returned the rights to hoodia to Phytopharm, who is now working with Unilever.

Much of the hype about hoodia started after 60 Minutes correspondent Leslie Stahl and crew traveled to Africa to try hoodia. They hired a local Bushman to go with them into the desert and track down some hoodia. Stahl ate it, describing it as "cucumbery in texture, but not bad." She reported that she lost the desire to eat or drink the entire day. She also said she didn't experience any immediate side effects, such as indigestion or heart palpitations.

Where is Hoodia Gordonii Found?
Hoodia gordonii is sold in capsule, powder, liquid, or tea form in health food stores and on the Internet. Hoodia is also found in the popular diet pill Trimspa.

How Does Hoodia Gordonii Work?
Despite its popularity, there are no published randomized controlled trials in humans to show hoodia is safe or effective in pill form.

One study published in the September 2004 issue of Brain Research found that injections of p57 into the appetite center of rat brains resulted in altered levels of ATP, an energy molecule that may affect hunger. The animals receiving the P57 injections also ate less than rats that received placebo injections. However, this was an animal study and injections in the brain are different from oral consumption, so it cannot be used to show that oral hoodia can suppress appetite in humans.

The manufacturer Phytopharm cites a clinical trial involving 18 human volunteers that found hoodia consumption reduced food intake by about 1000 calories per day compared to a placebo group. Although intriguing, the study wasn't published or subjected to a peer-review process, so the quality of the study cannot be evaluated.



source: about.com

09 November 2007

Want Healthy Skin? So Drink Coffee!

Researchers have revealed that drinking coffee, particularly the caffeinated kind, offers considerable protection against some skin cancers.



Researchers at the Wayne State University in Detroit have found that drinking six cups of caffeinated coffee a day can reduce the chances of developing the most common form of skin cancer by 35 % .

They also discovered that those who drank two or three cups were 12 per cent less likely to have the disease.

According to researchers, caffeine could stop skin cancers spreading by stopping cell division, or by acting as an antioxidant.

Around 75,000 cases of non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC), the milder form of the disease, are diagnosed each year.

"The decreased prevalence in non-melanoma skin cancer associated with daily consumption of caffeinated coffee was dose-related and consistent with other studies," the Telegraph quoted Dr Ernest Abel, lead author of the study, as saying.

"Among the possible explanations for caffeine's protective effect on NMSC are an antioxidant effect and/or inhibition of DNA synthesis and cell division," he added.

For the study, Dr Abel and colleagues compared rates of NMSC among more than 77,300 white women aged 50 and over. They excluded women of other ethnic origins as they reported much lower rates of the disease.

The researchers said that the findings should apply equally to men and women of all ages.

Drinking decaffeinated coffee had no effect on participants' chances of developing skin cancer, they added.

The study is published in the European Journal of Cancer Prevention.

08 November 2007

Long-term pill use risks atherosclerosis

Women who use the contraceptive pill for years risk a build-up of plaque in their arteries, according to a study released this week.

While the European study suggests long-term pill users may therefore be at increased risk of heart attack or stroke, the researchers say their findings are no need for alarm.

"Bottom line - don't discontinue your pill suddenly. Don't panic. Don't call your gynaecologist tomorrow morning," says lead researcher Dr Ernst Rietzschel of Ghent University in Belgium, whose team presented the results at an American Heart Association meeting this week.

Rietzschel's team studied 1301 women aged 35-55. Of these, 81% had used the pill for an average 13 years.

The researchers measured plaque levels using a technique called vascular echography.

They saw a rise of 20-30% in arterial plaque in two big arteries - the carotid in the neck and the femoral in the leg - for each decade of use.

A slow build-up of plaque, made up of fat, cholesterol, calcium and other material, on the inside of artery walls can lead to atherosclerosis, when the arteries harden and narrow.

"The main concern is if you have higher plaque levels that you might develop a clot on one of these plaques and have a stroke or a [heart attack] or sudden cardiac death," says Rietzschel.

"That's the main risk with having plaque, with having atherosclerosis."

Women who take the pill long term can take other steps to cut their risk of cardiovascular disease, he says, like eating a healthier diet, getting more exercise, not smoking and controlling cholesterol.

"There are other ways of doing contraception. Oral contraception is not the only possibility," he says.

Dr Gordon Tomaselli, a Johns Hopkins University cardiologist and American Heart Association official, says he is surprised by the findings.

"It's a bit eye-opening, I think," says Tomaselli.

He says the findings need to be factored into the equation for women deciding whether to take the pill.

"What would I tell my daughter to do? I might suggest maybe not oral contraception," Tomaselli says.

A wave of heart disease?

Rietzschel says the findings may indicate that there could be an upswing in heart disease among women who have taken the pill, considering that those who began in the 1960s were now reaching a peak age for such illness.

"We might be at the foot of a wave. But the wave might be a small ripple," he says.

Many studies have looked at the medical consequences of using the pill. For example, experts say cigarette smoking raises the risk of serious side-effects, including heart attacks, blood clots and strokes.

But this is the first study to suggest atherosclerosis as a side-effect.

"We thought that once you stopped using oral contraceptives, the risk of clotting went away. That would seem to be too simplistic a view now," Rietzschel says.


source: reuters

13 October 2007

What Do Our Brains Do While Sleeping?



“To do science you have to have an idea, and for years no one had one; they saw sleep as nothing but an annihilation of consciousness. Now we know different, and we’ve got some very good ideas about what’s going on.”
~ Dr. J. Allan Hobson, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard.~


Throughout the ages, scientists and thinkers have been trying to determine why people have to sleep. But so far all they know is what any parent of a newborn quickly discovers: sleep loss makes it harder to cope with stress, our thoughts more mentally foggy and our bodies more prone to get sick.

Neuroscientists have long wondered if sleep is somehow tied to learning and memory, or other cognitive processes. Now new findings suggest that sleep does indeed appear to play a crucial role in sorting and storing our memories. Harvard and McGill Universities have reported that participants who napped after playing a memory game score significantly higher on a retest than those who did not sleep.

“We think what’s happening during sleep is that you open the aperture of memory and are able to see this bigger picture,” said the study’s senior author, Matthew Walker, a neuroscientist who is now at the University of California, Berkeley. He added that many such insights occurred “only when you enter this wonder-world of sleep.”

But the theory that a sleeping brain can do things an awake brain can’t is still controversial. But the new research highlights a transformation in the way scientists are now viewing the sleeping brain. It was once seen as a blank screen, but has now emerged as an active, secretive intelligence that comes out for its “nightshift” to do some serious work.


Researchers say that studies are even showing that taking naps improves memory as well.

“We are finding that if a person takes a nap that contains slow-wave sleep — deep sleep — that performance on declarative memory tasks, which require the memorization of fact-based information like word-pairs, is enhanced compared to a person who doesn’t take a nap,” researcher Matthew Tucker said.

Previous studies of nocturnal sleep have found the same thing. In one 2003 study, Sara Mednick, then at Harvard and now at the University of California, San Diego, led a team that had 73 people come into the lab at 9 a.m. and learn to discriminate between a variety of textured patterns. Some of the participants then took a nap of about an hour at 2 p.m. and the others did not.


When retested at 7 p.m. the rested group did slightly better. When tested again the next morning, after everyone had slept the night, the napping group scored much higher. The naps included both REM and deep sleep.

“We think that a nap that contains both these states does about the same for memory consolidation as a night’s sleep,” when it comes to pattern recognition learning, Dr. Mednick said.

In series of experiments that he began in the early 1990s, Dr. Carlyle Smith of Trent University in Canada has found a strong association between the amount of Stage 2 sleep a person gets and the improvement in learning motor tasks. Mastering a guitar, a hockey stick or a keyboard are all motor tasks.

Musicians, among others, have sensed this instinctually. A piece that is difficult during and evening practice will often flow better in the morning for some reason. But only in recent years has the science caught up and given their hunch some scientific backing.

For instance, Dr. Smith said that people typically got most of their Stage 2 sleep in the second half of the night. “The implication of this is that if you are preparing for a performance, a music recital, say, or skating performance, it’s better to stay up late than get up really early,” he said in an interview. “These coaches that have athletes or other performers up at 5 o’clock in the morning, I think that’s just crazy.”

So here’s the big question: is something going on with memory processing that is unique to sleep?Skip to next paragraph

Subimal Datta, a neuroscientist across the river at Boston University School of Medicine, says yes. In his studies of animals, he has documented that during sleep the brain is awash in a chemical bath unlike any during waking. Levels of inhibitory transmitters increase sharply, and levels of many activating messengers drop, or shut down entirely.

Even before REM is detectable, Dr. Datta said, a small pocket of cells in the brainstem spurs a surge in glutamate — an activating chemical — which leads to protein synthesis and other changes that support long-term memory storage.

“During waking we have a thousand things happening at once, the library is filling up, and we can’t possibly process it all,” Dr. Datta said. While awake the brain is also gathering lots of valuable information subconsciously, he said, without the person’s ever being aware of it.
“It’s during sleep that we have this special condition to clear away this overload, and these REM processes then help store what’s important,” Dr. Datta said.
Dreams still defy scientific understanding but they also appear to play a role in the evolving theory of sleep-dependent learning.
Some scientists argue that during REM sleep, or dream mode, the brain will mix, match and make sense of the memory traces it has preserved, as it looks for connections that help make sense of life.

It was during sleep that the Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev was reported to have developed the periodic table of the elements. Friedrich August Kekule, a 19th-century chemist, said he worked out the chemical structure of the benzine ring after dreaming of a snake biting its tail. Athletes like Jack Nicklaus, have also mentioned insights discovered while sleeping.
“It does make sense these insights come during REM,” Dr. Walker said. “I mean, what better time to play out all these different scenarios and solutions and ideas than in dreams, where there are no consequences?”

The problem, he says, is how to study it. Few of us would venture to say we know what goes on in our heads while sleeping, but to quantify and generalize such an elusive state has been quite a journey.

14 September 2007

Sick? Lonely?



Genes tell the tale

Lonely people are more likely to get sick and die young, and researchers said on Thursday they may have found out why -- their immune systems are haywire.

They used a "gene chip" to look at the DNA of isolated people and found that people who described themselves as chronically lonely have distinct patterns of genetic activity, almost all of it involving the immune system.

The study does not show which came first -- the loneliness or the physical traits. But it does suggest there may be a way to help prevent the deadly effects of loneliness, said Steve Cole, a molecular biologist at the University of California Los Angeles who worked on the study.

"What this study shows is that the biological impact of social isolation reaches down into some of our most basic internal processes -- the activity of our genes," Cole said.

"We have known for years that there is this epidemiological relationship between social support -- how many friends and family members you have around you -- and a whole bunch of physical outcomes," he said in a telephone interview.

Many studies of large populations have shown that people who describe themselves as lonely or as having little social support are more likely to die prematurely and to have infections, high blood pressure, insomnia and cancer.

"There are two theories -- the social provision theory, which basically is about what other people do for you in a tangible, material sense. Like, if I am sick and I have got people around me, they will take me to the doctors, they will see I take my pills," Cole said.

"The other is that there is something about being isolated and lonely that changes your body."

His team set out to investigate the second theory.

ALL THE LONELY PEOPLE

John Cacioppo, a psychology professor at the University of Chicago, has been studying the health effects of loneliness for years in a group of people who have allowed him to delve in-depth into their social lives and health.

Cole and Cacioppo's team studied 14 of these volunteers -- six who scored in the top 15 percent of an accepted scale of loneliness.

"These are people who said for four years straight 'there's really nobody that I feel that close to'," Cole said.

The other eight were the least lonely of the group.

Cole's team took blood and studied the gene activity of their immune system cells -- the white blood cells that protect from invaders such as viruses and bacteria.

All 22,000 human genes were studied and compared, and 209 stood out in the loneliest people.

"These 200 genes weren't sort of a random mishmash of genes. They were part of a highly suspicious conspiracy of genes. A big fraction of them seemed to be involved in the basic immune response to tissue damage," Cole said.

Others were involved in the production of antibodies -- the tag the body uses to mark microbes or damaged cells for removal, Cole said.

The findings suggest that the loneliest people had unhealthy levels of chronic inflammation, which has been associated with heart and artery disease, arthritis, Alzheimer's and other ills.

The next step is to see if this might be treated, Cole said. "This is a biological target for intervention," he said. "Maybe we can give these people aspirin." Aspirin, an anti-inflammatory drug, is also a blood thinner taken regularly by many people to prevent heart attacks and stroke.

source : Reuters

05 September 2007

Anti-obesity Gene Keeps Mice And Worms Lean

Researchers have revealed an antiobesity gene that has apparently been keeping critters lean during times of plenty since ancient times. The gene, first discovered by another team in flies, also keeps worms and mice trim, according to the new report in the September issue of Cell Metabolism. If the gene works similarly in humans, the findings could lead to a new weapon against our burgeoning waistlines, according to the researchers.
Animals without a working copy of the gene, known as Adipose (Adp), become obese and resistant to insulin, while those with increased Adp activity in fat tissue become slimmer, the researchers found. Moreover, the gene's "dose" seems to determine how slender an animal turns out to be.

"Maybe if you could affect this gene, even just a little bit, you might have a beneficial effect on fat," said Jonathan Graff of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, noting that people often become overweight very gradually--adding just one or two pounds a year. "After 30 years, that's a lot."

While worms and flies are routinely studied as models of human health and disease, that trend has been less true in fat biology, Graff said. That's because unlike mammals, worms and flies store their fat in multifunctional cells rather than in dedicated fat cells known as adipocytes. However, those differences didn't preclude the possibility that the animals might use similar genes to accomplish their fat storage goals, he added.

In the new study, Graff's team found that worms lacking Adp activity became fat, although they appeared to be otherwise healthy and fertile. The researchers scoured the genetic database in search of related genes and found one with "tremendous" similarity in flies.

Indeed, another scientist, Winifred Doane, had found a naturally occurring strain of plump flies in Nigeria almost 50 years ago that carried a mutation in their Adp gene. The flies lived in a climate marked by cycles of famine, where they may have benefited from being highly efficient at fat storage, Doane had suggested.

To explore Adp's function even further, Graff and his colleagues produced a strain of mutant flies like those that Doane had found years earlier. They found that the mutant flies were indeed fat and also had trouble getting around. Flies with only one copy of the Adp mutation fell somewhere in between the fat and normal flies, evidence that the gene's effects are "dose dependent," they reported.

Treatments that increased Adp in the insects' fat tissue led them to lose weight, evidence that the gene operates within fat cells themselves. In mice that expressed the gene in fat-storing tissues, the same patterns emerged.

"We made mice that expressed Adp in fat-storing tissues, and lo and behold, what happened"" Graff said. "They were skinny--weighed less with markedly less fat--and their fat cells were smaller." Smaller fat cells usually translate into better metabolic function, he said, including better blood sugar control.

"It's a striking conservation of genes that restrain fat," he said. While fat storage is an important mechanism for getting through lean times, "too much fat in times of plenty has deleterious consequences."

The search for molecules underlying weight gain and poor blood sugar control "has taken on additional urgency due to the recent dramatic increase in obesity and diabetes," Graff said. But in a modern world where many people have essentially unlimited access to food, it's a wonder that even more people aren't overweight, he added. If this gene plays a similar role in humans, "it may be that some people's Adp works very well."

The researchers include Jae Myoung Suh, Daniel Zeve, Renee McKay, Jin Seo, Zack Salo, Robert Li, Michael Wang, and Jonathan M. Graff of University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

This work was supported by awards to JMG from the NIH and the NIDDK.

Reference: Suh et al.: "Adipose is a conserved dosage-sensitive anti-obesity gene." Publishing in Cell Metabolism 6, 195--207, September 2007 DOI 10.1016/j.cmet.2007.08.001.

This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Cell Press.

31 August 2007

Red wine compound shown to prevent prostate cancer

Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) have found that nutrients in red wine may help reduce the risk of developing prostate cancer.
The study involved male mice that were fed a plant compound found in red wine called resveratrol, which has shown anti-oxidant and anti-cancer properties. Other sources of resveratrol in the diet include grapes, raspberries, peanuts and blueberries.

In the study resveratrol-fed mice showed an 87 percent reduction in their risk of developing prostate tumors that contained the worst kind of cancer-staging diagnosis. The mice that proved to have the highest cancer-protection effect earned it after seven months of consuming resveratrol in a powdered formula mixed with their food.

Other mice in the study, those fed resveratrol but still developed a less-serious form of prostate cancer, were 48 percent more likely to have their tumor growth halted or slowed when compared to mice who did not consume the compound, the UAB research team said.

The findings were published in August through the online edition of the Journal of Carcinogenesis.

This study adds to a growing body of evidence that resveratrol consumption through red wine has powerful chemoprevention properties, in addition to its apparent heart-health benefits, said lead study author Coral Lamartiniere, Ph.D., of UAB’s Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology.
An earlier UAB study published May 2006 in the same journal found resveratrol-fed female mice had considerable reduction in their risk of breast cancer.

Lamartiniere said his research team has been pleasantly surprised at the chemoprevention power of wine and berry polyphenols like resveratrol in animal models.

"A cancer prevention researcher lives for these days when they can make that kind of finding," Lamartiniere said. "I drink a glass a day every evening because I’m concerned about prostate cancer. It runs in my family."

Lamartiniere and other researchers say work is already underway to test resveratrol consumption in humans to see what concentrations are needed to convey cancer-prevention benefits.

The amounts used in the UAB mice studies were the equivalent of one person consuming one bottle of red wine per day, which is not advisable. Since drinking alcohol in excessive amounts can have harmful health effects, doctors generally recommend moderate red wine consumption, which is an average of two drinks a day for men and one drink a day for women.

Source: University of Alabama at Birmingham

30 August 2007

Weight Loss Drug May Have Killed Man


According to the Turkish media a 40 years old man who had been taking these slimming pills for a few months passed away after getting a heart attack. His family and friends are convinced that it was the slimming pills that were the cause of this heart attack and are keen to make sure that other people do not meet the same fate.
The 40 years old man Ertan Geyik was a television manager at the Kanal 1 station and was probably unaware that the Ministry of Health in Turkey had actually restricted the sale of these pills after independent testing has shown that they contained a number of dangerous and harmful chemicals that were not licensed for sale. The Lida Weight loss pills originate in China and it appears that they found their way into Turkey after getting a permit from the Ministry of Agriculture when in fact the Ministry of Health should have been informed and been responsible for the import permit.

This is not the first time that we have come across people suffering from heart attacks when using weight loss medication that has not been properly tested by health authorities. If you This is not the first time that we have come across people suffering from heart attacks when using weight loss medication that has not been properly tested by health authorities. If you are taking this dangerous and illegal weight loss medication you should stop using it immediately and get a medical checkup, or if you know of anyone else who is taking Lida please warn them that they could be putting their life into danger.

Lida has been advertised as a “miracle herbal pill” to lose weight and no mention is made of the fact that it contains powerful chemicals. This sort of advertising is extremely irresponsible and has caused many deaths worldwide from people who think that they are using harmless herbal and natural weight loss remedies.

© 2007 JDP Global

24 May 2007

When Half a Brain Is Better than a Whole One


You might not want to do it, but removing half of your brain will not significantly impact who you are

The operation known as hemispherectomy—where half the brain is removed—sounds too radical to ever consider, much less perform. In the last century, however, surgeons have performed it hundreds of times for disorders uncontrollable in any other way. Unbelievably, the surgery has no apparent effect on personality or memory.

The first known hemispherectomy was performed on a dog in 1888 by German physiologist Friedrich Goltz. In humans, neurosurgeon Walter Dandy pioneered the operation at Johns Hopkins University in 1923 on a brain tumor patient. (That man lived for more than three years before ultimately succumbing to cancer.) The procedure is among the most drastic kinds of brain surgery—"You can't take more than half. If you take the whole thing, you've got a problem," Johns Hopkins neurologist John Freeman quips.

One side effect Canadian neurosurgeon Kenneth McKenzie reported in 1938 after a hemispherectomy on a 16-year-old girl who suffered a stroke was that her seizures stopped. Nowadays, the surgery is performed on patients who suffer dozens of seizures every day that resist all medication, and which are due to conditions that mostly afflict one hemisphere. "These disorders are often progressive and damage the rest of the brain if not treated," University of California, Los Angeles, neurosurgeon Gary Mathern says. Freeman concurs: "Hemispherectomy is something that one only does when the alternatives are worse."

Anatomical hemispherectomies involve the removal of the entire hemisphere, whereas functional hemispherectomies only take out parts of a hemisphere, as well as severing the corpus callosum, the fiber bundle that connects the two halves of the brain. The evacuated cavity is left empty, filling with cerebrospinal fluid in a day or so.

The strength of anatomical hemispherectomies, a specialty of Hopkins, lies in the fact that "leaving even a little bit of brain behind can lead seizures to return," Freeman says. On the other hand, functional hemispherectomies, which U.C.L.A. surgeons usually perform, lead to less blood loss. "Our patients are usually under two years of age, so they have less blood to lose," Mathern says. Most Hopkins hemispherectomy patients are five to 10 years old.

Neurosurgeons have performed the operation on children as young as three months old. Astonishingly, memory and personality develop normally. A recent study found that 86 percent of the 111 children who underwent hemispherectomy at Hopkins between 1975 and 2001 are either seizure-free or have nondisabling seizures that do not require medication. The patients who still suffer seizures usually have congenital defects or developmental abnormalities, where brain damage is often not confined to just one hemisphere, Freeman explains.

Another study found that children that underwent hemispherectomies often improved academically once their seizures stopped. "One was champion bowler of her class, one was chess champion of his state, and others are in college doing very nicely," Freeman says.

Of course, the operation has its downside: "You can walk, run—some dance or skip—but you lose use of the hand opposite of the hemisphere that was removed. You have little function in that arm and vision on that side is lost," Freeman says.

Remarkably, few other impacts are seen. If the left side of the brain is taken out, "most people have problems with their speech, but it used to be thought that if you took that side out after age two, you'd never talk again, and we've proven that untrue," Freeman says. "The younger a person is when they undergo hemispherectomy, the less disability you have in talking. Where on the right side of the brain speech is transferred to and what it displaces is something nobody has really worked out."

Mathern and his colleagues have recently conducted the first functional magnetic resonance imaging study into hemispherectomy patients, investigating how their brain changes with physical rehabilitation. Probing how the remaining cerebral hemispheres of these patients acquire language, sensory, motor and other functions "could shed a great deal of light on the brain's plasticity, or ability to change," Freeman notes. Still, having half a brain—and therefore only the use of one hand and half a field of vision in each eye—is a condition most would prefer to avoid.

By Charles Choi