Pesquisar Neste Blog

terça-feira, 23 de agosto de 2011

New Way to Treat Common Hospital-Acquired Infection: Novel Approach May Offer Treatment for Other Bacterial Diseases

ScienceDaily (Aug. 22, 2011) — Researchers at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have discovered a molecular process by which the body can defend against the effects of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI), pointing the way to a promising new approach for treating an intestinal disease that has become more common, more severe and harder to cure in recent years.
The right image shows abundant S-nitrosylation (green) in human colitis compared with much less found in the left image of a normal colon.
In the U.S., several million people are infected each year, approximately double the incidence of a decade ago, mainly due to the emergence of a new, highly virulent strain of the bacteria that causes CDI.

As a result of the study findings, published in the Aug. 21 online edition of the journal Nature Medicine, the researchers are preparing to launch clinical trials using their discovery as a new CDI therapeutic approach. The team also included researchers from Case Western Reserve University, Tufts University and the Commonwealth Medical College.

CDI is a bacterial infection that can cause diarrhea and more serious intestinal conditions, such as colitis, the inflammation of the colon. In the most severe cases, CDI can be fatal. It is most commonly acquired in hospitals by patients, particularly the elderly, who are being treated with antibiotics for another infection.

Currently, one of two potent antibiotics is used to treat the infection, but up to 20 percent of patients experience a relapse and a return of symptoms within a few weeks.

"We are treating a disease caused by antibiotics with yet another antibiotic, which creates the conditions for re-infection from the same bacteria," said study co-author Dr. Charalabos Pothoulakis, director of UCLA's Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center and a professor of medicine in the division of digestive diseases. "Identification of new treatment modalities to treat this infection would be a major advance."

Clostridium difficile causes diarrhea and colitis by releasing two potent toxins into the gut lumen that bind to intestinal epithelial cells, initiating an inflammatory response. These toxins are released only when the Clostridium difficile bacteria are multiplying. When antibiotics are used to treat another infection, it changes the bacterial landscape in the gut and, in the process, may kill bacteria that under normal conditions would compete with Clostridium difficile for energy. Scientists believe this may be what provides the opportunity forClostridium difficile to grow and release its toxins.

The UCLA and University of Texas researchers found in laboratory studies that upon infection with Clostridium difficile, human cells in the gut are capable of releasing molecules that will neutralize these toxins, rendering them harmless. In animal studies, the researchers showed that using a drug to induce this process, known as protein s-nitrosylation, inhibitedClostridium difficile toxins from destroying intestinal cells. Forthcoming clinical trials will test this approach in humans.

"Our study suggests a novel therapeutic approach for treatingClostridium difficile infection by exploiting a newly discovered defense mechanism that has evolved in humans to inactivate microbial toxins," said Tor C. Savidge, an associate professor in the division of gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and the paper's lead author.

Along with its potential to provide a much-needed new approach to treating CDI, the discovery could be applied to developing new treatments for other forms of diarrhea, as well as non-diarrheal diseases caused by bacteria.

"We already know through gene-sequencing analysis that hundreds of microbial proteins can be regulated by s-nitrosylation," Pothoulakis said. "If we are successful with this approach, we may be able to treat other bacterial diseases in a similar way."

The study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, The Eli and Edythe Broad Medical Foundation, the John S. Dunn Gulf Coast Consortium for Chemical Genomics/Robert A. Welch Collaborative Grant Program, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Other study authors included Petri Urvil, Numan Oezguen, Ali Kausar, Aproteem Choudhury, Vinay Acharya, Irina Pinchuk, Alfredo G. Torres, Robert D. English, Michael Loeffelholz and Werner Braun from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston; Raj Kumar from the Commonwealth Medical College; Liamfa Shi, Weijia Nie and Hanping Feng from Tufts University; and Bo Herman, Alfred Hausladen and Jonathan S. Stamier from Case Western Reserve University.

Um comentário:

  1. I'm here to give my testimony how I was cured from HIV, I contacted my HIV via blade. A friend of my use blade to peel of her finger nails and drop it where she use it, so after she has left i did know what came unto me i looked at my nails, my nails were very long and I took the blade which she just used on her own nails to cut of my finger nails, as i was maintaining my names, i mistakenly injured myself. I did even bother about it, so when I got to the hospital the next week when i was ill the doctor told me that I am HIV positive, i wondered where did i got it from so i remembered how I use my friend blade to cut off my hand so i feel so sad in my heart to the extent that i don’t even know what to do, so one day i was passing through the internet i met a testimony of a lady that all talk about how she was cured by a doctor called DR Imoloa so i quickly emailed the doctor and he also replied to me and told me the requirements which i will provide and I do according to his command, he prepare a herbal medicine for me which I took. He message me the following week that i should go for a test which i did to my own surprise i found that i was HIV negative. He also have cured for all kinds of incurable diseases like: Huntington's disease, back acne, chronic kidney failure, Addison's disease, Chronic Disease, Crohn's Disease, Cystic Fibrosis, Fibromyalgia, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Fungal Nail Disease, Paralysis, Celia Disease , Lymphoma, Major Depression, Malignant Melanoma, Mania, Melorheostosis, Meniere's Disease, Mucopolysaccharidosis, Multiple Sclerosis, Muscle Dystrophy, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Alzheimer Disease and so many. Thanks to him once more the great doctor that cured me dr. Imoloa so you can also email him via drimolaherbalmademedicine@gmail.com or what'sapp him on +2347081986098.. God Bless you Sir.

    ResponderExcluir