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Does the US have the biotechnology and other tools to deal with the next wave of diseases? – Genetic Literacy Project

April 19th, 2017 2:47 pm

[Editors note:Tom Frieden served seven and a half years as director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. He talks about health challenges facing the nation, as well as memorable moments from his tenure.]

What immediate health issues are facing the Trump administration?

Tom Frieden: Zika is not over. It is likely to spread in Latin America and the Caribbean for months and years to come, and we still dont fully understand the range of birth defects it causes. Antibiotic resistance in the U.S. is something that threatens to undermine modern medicineAnd we are always concerned about an influenza epidemic.

How prepared is the CDC to deal with these problems?

Its a big problem that when there is an emerging threat, we are not able to surge or work as rapidly as we should, as a result of a lack of additional funding and legislative authority. When there is an earthquake, the Federal Emergency Management Agency doesnt have to go to Congress and say, Will you give us money for this? But the CDC doesA blind spot anywhere puts any of us at risk.

What do you consider unfinished business or a regret?

I hoped that we would be over the finish line on polio [eradication] by now[But] we have further to go.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:Is the U.S. Ready for Future Disease Threats?

For more background on the Genetic Literacy Project, read GLP on Wikipedia

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Primed for Breakout or Bust? A look at Prana Biotechnology Limited (NASDAQ:PRAN) – Morgan Research

April 19th, 2017 2:47 pm

Shares of Prana Biotechnology Limited (NASDAQ:PRAN) are on our watchlist today as the stock has moved-1.05% from the open, touching$2.82 on a recent trade. While the stock has a nice low price tag to it, does it have any value?

Is Prana Biotechnology Limited Ready to Move higher? Sign Up For Breaking Alerts on this Stock Before the Crowd.

Equity marketscan move in an instant, requiring investors to always stay on their toes. Most sudden stock spikes or dropsrequire the attention of anyone who is keeping a keen eye on the shares. What may go somewhatundetected is the slow and steady rise or fall of a particular stock. Sometimes it can be difficultto decipher fact from fiction in the markets.

Why is a company that consistently produces strong returnsgoing down? Why are the underperforming company shares movinghigher? While there may be no clear cut answers to the questions, professional investors workendlesslyto make sense ofequity market nuances.

Based onrecent analysis, Prana Biotechnology Limited (NASDAQ:PRAN) shares have been seen trading -38.43% off of the 50-day peakand 38.24% away from the 50-daybottom. In terms of the stock price in relation to its moving averages, company shares are 1.03% away from the 20-day moving average and 14.59% off of the 50-day average. If we take alongerapproach, shares have been trading -15.43% away from the 200-day moving average.

Occasionally investors may be looking to shift their stockstrategy. Maybe one plan worked for a period of time, but now economic conditions have shifted and a change is required. Whatever the case, the primary goalis typically to maximize profits.

Finding a winning investing strategy may not happen immediately. Navigating the sometimes murky economic waters can be a struggle. Staying afloat may depend on many factors, but doing homework and studying all the available information is essential.

Over the last year, Prana Biotechnology Limited (NASDAQ:PRAN)s stock has performed -20.66%. For the last six months, the stock has performed -9.43%. From the start of the calendar year, shares have been 76.69%. Zooming in closer, company stock has been 11.20% for the quarter, 26.87% over the past month, and -4.95% over the past week.

Interested parties will be eagerly watching how the markets behave the rest of the year. Savvy investors typically try to spot opportunities around every corner. With the uncertainty of the global economic climate, individuals with a stake in the game will need to buckle down and be ready for multiple scenarios. Throw in the rate hike debate, and it makes for a very interesting next couple of months. We are currently keeping a close eye on stocks that are trading under the $5 price level.

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Finding long-term arthritis pain relief – NRToday.com

April 19th, 2017 2:47 pm

My aching joints make it hard to walk. If you have heard yourself, or a loved one, say these words then continue reading.

Many people accept chronic joint pain as a normal part of life, often assuming nothing can be done. But, there is good newsboth non-surgical and surgical treatment options are available that can help relieve, if not eliminate, chronic arthritis pain.

Arthritis is quite commonabout one in every five adults in the U.S. is affected by it. Arthritis is a general term referring to the inflammation and pain caused by more than 100 different types of joint conditions and diseases. The most common type is osteoarthritis, a degenerative disease that causes the cartilage between the joints to wear away. Because arthritis is complex, it should be diagnosed by a doctor, who can recommend treatment options.

Arthritis can affect anyone, regardless of age or gender. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 50 million adults and 300,000 children in the country have some type of doctor-diagnosed arthritis. More common in women than men, the pain usually worsens with age for both as joints further wear down. Carrying excess body weight can also cause issues with joints and worsen arthritis pain.

Living with arthritis and chronic joint pain can be overwhelming. Many people seek relief from over-the-counter anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen. Hot and cold compress therapy can also be used help reduce inflammation. Additionally, low-impact exercises like walking, cycling or water aerobics can help to ease arthritis pain by keeping joints moving and strengthening surrounding muscles.

Weight plays a significant role in joint stress so when people are overweight it puts stress on their joints, especially their weight-bearing joints like knees and hips. Every pound of excess weight exerts about 4 pounds of extra pressure on the knees. That is part of the stress on the body of people who are overweight, causing them to be at greater risk of developing arthritis. Losing even 10 percent of extra weight can have an impact on reducing pain and restoring joint function.

Other options to compliment or reduce the use of over-the-counter treatments are injections. The most common injections are corticosteroids and hyaluronic acid, to provide arthritis pain relief. These are inserted directly into the hip or knee joint by an orthopedic surgeon and can provide continuous relief that can last for several months.

If managing the pain is no longer effective, then surgical options like total joint replacement can provide a life-changing option to help restore mobility. The good news is that community members do not have to leave town to receive joint replacement surgery.

Centennial Orthopedics and Podiatry, located in Roseburg, offers a full range of diagnostic procedures, and surgical services, including total hip, knee and ankle joint replacements. A minimally invasive surgical procedure, anterior hip replacement, is also available locally and has shown to reduce recovery time significantly so patients can get back to enjoying life and the activities that may have been difficult in the past like traveling, gardening, climbing stairs and exercising. The majority of patients who have joint replacement procedures and prepare for their surgery by exercising and building strength are generally able to walk immediately after surgery with reduced pain.

CHI Mercy Healths New Strides Joint Center is designed to help patients both before and after surgery. New Strides nursing and physical therapy teams work closely with community surgeons to help ensure the best outcomes. They educate patients through every step of the procedure so they know what to expect to help reduce anxiety and prepare for their surgery and recovery. New Strides staff uses a unique group approach to physical therapy classes immediately after surgery to aid and track recovery. Mercys New Strides staff also works with patients to ensure their home environments are well-suited for their return, within a day or two, after surgery.

Everyones experience with arthritis is different. But, there may be options available for relief so you dont have to live with chronic pain. My advice to anyone suffering from hip or knee joint painreach out to your physician or call our office at 541-229-2663 to explore your treatment options. Its time to get your life back, and we can help.

Dr. Cary Sanders is an orthopedic surgeon at Centennial Orthopedics and Podiatry, a division of Centennial Medical Group in Roseburg.

Reporter Dan Bain can be reached at 541-957-4221 or e-mail at dbain@nrtoday.com.

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Rheumatoid arthritis cure: Symptoms halted by doing THIS (it could prevent joint damage) – Express.co.uk

April 19th, 2017 2:47 pm

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The autoimmune condition causes pain, stiffness and swelling in the joints, usually in the hands, feet and wrists.

Its the second-most common form of arthritis, affecting one per cent of the UK population - approximately 690,000 people - and there are 20,000 new cases per year, according to The British Society for Rheumatology.

However, ground-breaking new research may have discovered a way to stop or reduce impact, and control its severity, by spotting and treating symptoms in the early stages.

The joint study by the University of Manchester and University of East Anglia found that patients who were prescribed drugs within the first six months of symptoms appearing had a significantly improved ability to walk, grip and dress themselves over the next 20 years, than others who were treated later.

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The study is one of a number of significant advances in knowledge about rheumatoid arthritis over the past 20 years.

Whats more, the researchers also found treating patients with the disease-modifying drugs - including sulfasalazine, methotrexate and steroids - also gave them a lower risk of dying once the disease was brought under control.

In their research, the study authors examined the cases of 602 patients with rheumatoid arthritis across two decades between 1990 to 2010.

Though there is a broad range in terms of how people are affected by the disease, the number of patients whose lives have improved has increased thanks in part to early treatment, says James Gwinnutt, first study author from The University of Manchester.

Early intervention has become more and more common in the NHS over these past 20 years. In the early 1990s early intervention would happen in about 30 per cent of cases. Nowadays, that figure is probably more like 60 to 70 per cent.

The study is one of a number of significant advances in knowledge about rheumatoid arthritis over the past 20 years.

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It is also encouraging to hear about the progress that has been made. This study confirms how important early diagnosis and the commencement of treatment is, says Dr Natalie Carter, head of research liaison and evaluation at Arthritis Research UK.

Its an incredibly painful condition that can be diagnosed at any age and have an impact on a persons everyday life.

The British Society for Rheumatology describes the first weeks and months following the onset of the disease as the window of opportunity, explaining treatment early in the disease - even within the first 12 weeks - can prevent damage to joints and other organs, improve long-term function, and increase the likelihood of achieving disease remission.

As well as making everyday tasks increasingly difficult, without adequate treatment the life expectancy for a suffer can be shortened by three to seven years and 10 to 15 years in severe cases.

Other research has highlighted a number of lifestyle factors that can reduce risk and severity of rheumatoid arthritis.

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A study published this month in the Annals of Rheumatic Disease found a healthier diet when youre younger can reduce risk, particularly in women who experience an onset of the condition before the age of 55.

The researchers also found lowering BMI, increasing fatty acid intake and having a modest alcohol consumption has a positive effect.

Furthermore, getting enough vitamin D also helps by reduce inflammation, strengthen bone cartilage, and minimise pain and risk for disability in sufferers, according to another 2004 study published in Arthritis & Rheumatism.

According to the NHS, its not known why the immune system attacks the cells that line your joints by mistake, triggering rheumatoid arthritis, but those at increased risk are women, smokers and those with a family history of the condition.

While theres no cure for rheumatoid arthritis, treatments include long-term medication that can relieve symptoms, physiotherapy or occupational therapy to keep you mobile and surgery to correct joint problems that may develop.

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FDA rejects Incyte arthritis drug baricitinib – The News Journal

April 19th, 2017 2:47 pm

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration rejects the approval of baricitinib, an arthritis medicine submitted by Alapocas-based Incyte and Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly.(Photo: SUCHAT PEDERSON/THE NEWS JOURNAL)Buy Photo

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration declined to approve baricitinib, a potential rheumatoid arthritis medicine developed byIncyte and Eli Lilly & Co.

Baricitinib was expected to win approval in the United States and generate more than $2 billion in peak sales for the companies, according to Incyte's regulatory filings. In fact, executives at both Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Alapocas-based Incytepredicted the medicine would challenge market leader Pfizer's Xeljanz.Worldwide, Xeljanz generated more than $927 million in sales in 2016, up 77 percent over 2015 numbers.

"This is certainly a blow," said Jim Butkiewicz, chair of the University of Delaware's economics department. "They are going to have to pay a team to work on this getting approved, and the drug's potential revenue will be delayed for at least another year. This is a setback, no question about it."

European regulatory authorities approved baricitinib last month.

In a letter to the companies, the FDA said it needed more clinical data to determine the most appropriate doses. The agency also requested additional information about risks mixing the drug with other treatments.

"The companies disagree with the agency's conclusions," both Lilly and Incyte said in a statement. "The timing of a resubmission will be based on further discussions with the FDA."

Catalina Loveman, a spokeswoman for Incyte, did not respond to requests for additional comments.

"We are disappointed with this action," said Christi Shaw, president of Lilly Bio-Medicines, in a statement. "We remain confident in the benefit/risk of baricitinib as a new treatment option for adults with moderate-to-severe rheumatoid arthritis."

The rejection will sting both companies. Incyte and Lilly had been working on the drug since December 2009. Under the partnership agreement, Incyte agreed to cover 30 percent of baricitinib'sPhase III trials, estimated to cost over $500 million, in exchange for as much as 29 percent of the drug's sales.

"Pharmaceutical companies invest so much in research and development, and if the drug doesn't succeed, those costs need to passed on elsewhere," Butkiewicz said. "That's always the justification given for why pharmaceutical prices are so high because they have to cover the cost of research."

Wall Street analysts said they expect the FDA's denial will impact Incyte's earnings. Piper Jaffray analyst Josh Schimmer downgraded Incyte in a note issued to investors, calling baricitinib "an important part of the valuation and outlook for us." Michael Schmidt, analyst with Leerink, said that baricitinib contributed $25 to estimated Incyte stock price of $141 per share. Schmidt estimated in a research note that a one-year approval delay would be "a best case scenario."

Incyte's stock was battered by the rejection. After hitting a high of $141.23 per share last week, the stock closed Tuesday at $125.90. Eli Lilly shares also reflected the bad news dropping from $86.15 per share on Thursday to $81.20 at Tuesday's closing.

Separately, Incyte increased the executive compensation for its chief executive officer, HerveHoppenot, that it announced in a Monday regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Hoppenot's base salary jumped to $937,738 last year from $898,800 in 2015. Incyte also increased its stock and option awards to $9.5 million in 2016 from $3.7 million in 2015. That brings his total compensation package to $11.8 million last year from $6 million.

Since leaving Novartis for Incyte in 2014, Hoppenot has guided the company into the prestigious Standard & Poor's 500, an index of the most widely held stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.

Incyte joined the list nearly one week after it reported its 2016 revenue surpassed $1 billion for the first time in the company's 26-year history. The $1.1 billion revenue represented a 47 percent increase from the $753 million it generated in 2015.

The company's growth was largely fueled by the success of Jakafi, a medicine approved in the United States and Europe to treat two rare blood cancer. Jakafi sales hit nearly $853 million last year, and Incyte expects the drug to generate $1 billion in sales this year.

Contact Jeff Mordock at (302) 324-2786, on Twitter @JeffMordockTNJ orjmordock@delawareonline.com.

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Arthritis warning: Eating THESE types of food can ‘lead to joint … – Express.co.uk

April 19th, 2017 2:46 pm

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Saturated fat has long been a prime suspect in the onset of osteoarthritis, after researchers found it changes the composition of cartilage, but scientists now believe carbs may also wreck joints.

The research, published today in Scientific Reports, was conducted by Professor Yin Xiao, from Queensland University of Technology's Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation.

They studied the effects on joints of diets rich in a variety of saturated fatty acids found in such foods as butter, coconut oil, palm oil and animal fat, and simple carbohydrates - a high-fat, high carbohydrate diet common to "junk food".

They reckon junk food changes the chemical composition of load-bearing joints that makes them weaker, eventually leading to painful osteoarthritis.

Professor Xiao said: "Our findings suggest that it's not wear and tear but diet that has a lot to do with the onset of osteoarthritis.

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"The main function of cartilage is to seal the bone ends in a joint and absorb pressure on the bones during weight-bearing movement such as walking.

"We found that a diet containing simple carbohydrates together with 20 per cent saturated fats produced osteoarthritic-like changes in the knee.

"Saturated fatty acid deposits in the cartilage change its metabolism and weaken the cartilage, making it more prone to damage.

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"This would, in turn, lead to osteoarthritic pain from the loss of the cushioning effect of cartilage.

"We also found changes in the bone under the cartilage on a diet rich in saturated fat."

PhD student Sunder Sekar said the team tested lauric acid, a saturated fatty acid found in coconut oil.

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He said fatty acids could cause tissue inflammation in the entire "joint environment".

He said: "Interestingly, when we replaced the meat fat in the diet with lauric acid we found decreased signs of cartilage deterioration and metabolic syndrome so it seems to have a protective effect.

"We tested a variety of saturated fats and found that long term use of animal fat, butter, and palm oil could weaken the cartilage.

"Replacement of traditional diets containing coconut-derived lauric acid with palm oil-derived palmitic acid or animal fat-derived stearic acid has the potential to worsen the development of both metabolic syndrome and osteoarthritis."

The study is supported by the Prince Charles Hospital Research Foundation.

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Vizuri Consumer launches topical analgesic for 24-hour arthritis relief – Drug Store News

April 19th, 2017 2:46 pm

BALTIMORE Vizuri Consumer Healthcare on Tuesday launched PainBloc24, a 24-hour over-the-counter topical pain reliever for arthritis joint pain. PainBloc24 has been clinically shown to help relieve pain with as little as one application per day, the company stated.

This is a great milestone for our company, and we know the 53 million people who suffer from chronic arthritis pain need a longer-lasting pain reliever," stated Jeremy Puttock, VP Vizuri Consumer Healthcare. "Were proud to bring a true breakthrough to the market and look forward to expanding distribution in the coming months.

The patent-pending NeuroMax technology in PainBloc24 delivers the maximum allowable OTC dose of its pain-blocking medicine, capsaicin, to turn off certain nerve fibers that send pain signals to the brain. In a clinical study, 60% of patients reported a reduction in arthritic knee pain for 24 hours following one-to-two daily applications of PainBloc24. In addition, patients who used the product for just seven days continued to experience relief from their arthritis pain for an additional three weeks after the last application.

PainBloc24 is available exclusively online and will be rolled out to food, drug and mass retailers this summer.

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What you need to know about rheumatoid arthritis – St George News

April 19th, 2017 2:46 pm

Stock images, St. George News

ST. GEORGE Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease condition that seems to be on the rise and it can affectanyoneregardless of gender, race or age; there areimperative facts you need to know about thiscondition that is becoming more serious every day.

Rheumatoid arthritis is a health condition that causes repeated swelling of synovial tissues around the joints. According to William Shiel, author and editor of Medicine.Net, RA is an autoimmune illness that can also result when body muscles are wrongly attacked by yourown immune system.

The effects of rheumatoid arthritis health condition have greatly impacted many people both socially and economically. This disease has caused suffering and huge economic losses to its victims and their relatives in treatment and management of the condition.

RA is increasingly becoming a common disease that is affecting almost 1 percent of the global population. In the United States, the disease has affected close to 1.3 million people, as revealed by most recent census findings reported by the Arthritis Foundation on arthritis.org.Although the disease can affect anyone regardless of gender, race or age, the statistics reveal itis more common inwomen than men, with 2 out of 3 victims of the condition likely to be women.However, it has been manifested mostly in people between the ages of 30 and 60 years old.

Because RAis acontinuing illness that advances with time, it is necessary to create maximum cognizance so that the health risk can be handled in the best way possible.

Causes

Although it is not clearly established what initiates RA onset, there are a number of most probable causes of this health condition. The major contributing factor of RA illness is anomalous reaction of the immune system against its own body; that is, abnormal or other than as expected.

Genetic composition is yet another probable cause of Rheumatoid Arthritis. Cases of the same family members suffering from RA have provided critical leads to researchers in establishing genetic factor as a potential cause of RA. Consequently, the prevalence of the condition in women more than in men points out that body hormonal composition also determines the probability of suffering from RA condition.

Environmental factors such as pollution and chemicals contamination have also been suspected of causing this joint disease. Exposure to certain bacteria and virus can also initiate RA.

Symptoms

RA symptoms may remain undetected until late stages of the illness. When the condition has advanced, victims may experience painful, soft and swollen joints. This joint problem is commonly replicated in more than one part of the body with the matching joints in both left and right sides of the body being affected.

Apart from joint complications, many RA victims can experience mild fatigue and fever. The symptoms of RA may be occurring with an on-and-off pattern. When the inflammation and pain become intense, they cause a flare situation that may require quick medical attention.

Other symptoms of RA include red eyes, dry mouth, red skin around the joints, limping and inflamed lungs leading to shortness of breath.

Diagnosis

The best specialist to diagnose RA is a rheumatologist. This is a trained medical personwho has adequate knowledge and skills in dealing with Rheumatoid Arthritis.

A rheumatologist may follow one or more procedures in making adiagnosis: He may give a set of questions to the victimthat can be vital in determiningindications of RA. He may inquire about the victims medical past that touches on boththe patient and their relatives. The rheumatologist can also conductother tests such as physical examination, blood analysis, imaging scans and antibodies assessment. It is essential to note that one test may not be adequate to diagnose rheumatoid arthritis and therefore specialists should combine a number of tests to arrive at a conclusive diagnosis.

Treatment

If you or someone you know is a victim of rheumatoid arthritis, itis very important to deliberate on various ways of treating this increasing and distressing health condition. Treatment of RA is aimed at achieving various objectives such as stopping inflammation, preventing tissue damage, improving physical performance of the patient and relieving pain.

Doctors should conduct aggressive treatment procedures initially aimed at stopping or minimizing inflammation. Treatment can completely minimize the conditions activity thus causing tight control of RA.

Different drugs are used in management and treatment of RA. Anti-inflammatory medications such as nonsteroids can be bought from chemists with a specialists instruction. Such drugs include ibuprofen and ketoprofen. Corticosteroids can also be used to quickly manage inflammations. Lastly, illness altering anti-rheumatic medicines such as sulfasalazine can be administered in treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.

Written by JUDD LaROWE, M.D.

Dr. Judd LaRowes private practice is River View Medical Walk-In Clinic, 1664 S Dixie Drive.in St. George, telephone 435-656-2995 He is also an Intermountain Healthcare provider of internal medicine affiliatedwith Dixie Regional Medical Center.

Email: news@stgnews.com

Twitter: @STGnews

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Husaini trust plans to perform bone marrow transplants, stem cell therapy – The News International

April 19th, 2017 2:46 pm

The Husaini Haematology and Oncology Trust will soon provide facilities of bone marrow transplant and stem cell therapies at its newly established Blood Transfusion Centre and Thalassaemia Centre that was inaugurated by the city director health on Tuesday.

Speaking at the inaugural ceremony, Karachi director health Dr Muhammad Toufique urged the trust officials to share the data of patients undergoing blood transfusions, stem cell therapies and bone marrow transplant.

He said the data would help the Sindh government formulate a plan to establish more such facilities in the future. In addition to the blood screening and storage facilities, the centre is providing blood transfusion service to children suffering from genetic blood disorders as well as diagnostic services related to blood disorders.

This is a state-of-the-art blood transfusion and thalassaemia centre where bone marrow transplant and stem cell therapies would be started very soon, said a renowned haematologist associated with the Husaini Blood Bank, Dr Sarfraz Jaffery, at the inaugural ceremony of the blood transfusion and thalassaemia centre located at Qalandaria Chowk, North Nazimabad.

The head office of the Husaini Haematology and Oncology Trust is equipped with a diagnostic lab, blood bank having storage capacity of around 3,000 blood bags and blood transfusion centre for thalassaemic patients while its management is also planning to introduce bone marrow transplant and stem cell therapy services at the same facility in the near future.

Felicitating the trust officials, the city director health vowed to support them in their services. He said the government was also striving hard for provision of safe blood to thalassaemic children and other patients.

Dr Toufique hoped that institutions like Hussaini would come forward to support the government in establishing such centres in the province. Talking to journalists, the director health said steps were being taken to control the outbreak of Chikungunya in the city.

He said the health department was in contact with the municipal authorities to start fumigation in various areas of Karachi to eliminate the mosquitoes and prevent people from mosquito-borne diseases, including dengue and Malaria.

The Sindh government was planning to merge the Malaria and Dengue Prevention and Control Cells under one project director, who would be utilizing all the resources to eliminate the mosquitoes that were responsible for the deadly infectious diseases in the province, he added.

I would also urge people to take precautionary measures, prevent themselves and their children from mosquitoes by using repellents, improving sanitation conditions in their residential areas and adopt other preventive measures to protect themselves against the mosquitoes, he advised.

Earlier, speaking at a workshop on thalassaemia management held at the same place, noted haematologists of the country stressed the need for promoting the culture of prevention from diseases in the country.

They called for the implementation of laws regarding thalassaemia screening, saying that both the government and private sector could not treat the increasing number of thalassaemic patients.

Senior haematologist from Lahore, Prof Dr Jovaria Mannan, urged the doctors and researchers to use latest research methods in the field of haematology.

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The CNIB has a new vision for providing services – Regina Leader-Post

April 18th, 2017 7:48 pm

Regina Leader-Post
The CNIB has a new vision for providing services
Regina Leader-Post
Certified specialists help people with all levels of vision loss develop or restore their daily living skills and work with them to create a personalized rehabilitation plan. Staff explain eye diseases and how they affect vision, teach techniques to ...

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Lion’s Club offers clear vision for students – Rapid City Journal

April 18th, 2017 7:48 pm

Vision screening program discovers eye problems early

HOT SPRINGS The Hot Springs Lions Club was helping Hot Springs Elementary students see clearly into their futures Tuesday morning, April 11.

A team of specially trained Lions Club volunteers, sporting yellow vests, implemented a free vision screening program, Lions KIDSIGHT South Dakota, at the elementary school. The effort is part of a statewide program provided free for children ages 12 months and up.

Using a specialized screening machine that peers inside the eyes, Pinky Horner, Program Coordinator for KIDSIGHT South Dakota, and six Lions Club members Gary Merkel, Perry Holmes, Chuck Kraus, Gene Nachtigall, Ed Renstrom and Leon Melstad were helping elementary students discover the status of their vision.

A student entered the room, gave a Lion his orange sticker and had his or her named checked on a list of students who were to be screened. (Parental consent was required with all screenings.) The student sat in a chair in front of a Lions Club member who held the screening machine, which looked something like an old Polariod camera.

The room door was closed, the lights turned off and the students eyes were scanned from several feet away.

From the students point of view, sitting in the chair, they saw colored lights that flashed patterns.

From the perspective of the scanner operator, an image of the students eyes appeared on the scanners screen.

Within seconds, the accurate information the scanner collected was sent to a printer, and each student scanned received a precise evaluation of their eyesight, with a prescription for correction if this was necessary. No physical contact was made with the student, and no eye drops were needed.

The scanning could be done with glasses on or off, and the glasses-wearing Lions Club members who tried the machine out on themselves, said their scans were spot-on in terms of diagnosing vision abnormalities.

The Lions Club has traditionally made efforts to improve vision across the nation, but why is vision screening important for young kids?

According to Lions KIDSIGHT South Dakota, the first few years of a childs life are critical in the development of good vision.

Preschoolers should have their vision checked for issues such as misaligned eyes, and problems that need correction with eyeglasses. These problems are not always evident by simply looking at a child, and children often compensate for vision problems so well that parents, teachers, even pediatricians may be unaware of a problem.

By the time a child is old enough to be in primary grades, many of these common vision-robbing conditions can no longer be effectively treated.

Because the eye is almost completely developed by the time a child is six years old, early detection of vision issues is mandatory in enabling critical physical and mental development and preventing sight-robbing diseases.

Less than 20 percent of children receive a comprehensive eye exam prior to age six, according to Lions KIDSIGHT South Dakota. Studies show that during a childs first 12 years, 80 percent of all learning is obtained visually. And down the road, studies indicate 70 percent of juvenile delinquents are found to have a vision problem.

A lazy eye, amblyopia, for example can develop when an undetected vision problem goes untreated during a childs formative years. The incidence of amblyopia in the U.S. is estimated to be 3 to 5 percent of the population. Vision problems can also result in learning difficulties as a child enters the primary grades.

Other problems scanning can detect include: Myopia (near-sightedness), hyperopia (far-sightedness) astigmatism (blurred vision), aniscoria (pupil size deviations) strabismus (lazy eye), anisometropia (unequal refractive power).

The Lions Clubs KIDSIGHT program, has referred hundreds of children to an eye doctor for further examination and treatment. Most parents of those children had no idea their child had any problems with their eyes. However, with this program, the parents were able to get their child the medical care they needed.

Lion Gary Merkel said the KIDSIGHT program would be scanning pre-schoolers at The Discovery Zone on Thursday, April 13, and then returning in the fall to screen pre-schoolers, kindergarteners, and third and fifth graders in the fall.

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Police open fire before football derby in Argentina, with one fan fighting to save eyesight later another … – The Sun

April 18th, 2017 7:48 pm

THE terrifying moment police opened fire on football fans in Argentina has been caught on camera.

It occurred before the same derby between Atletico Belgrano and Talleres in which a fan was thrown over a railing and died of his injuries in hospital.

Argentinian news outlet, Ole, report a man named Diego Frydman was hit with a bullet in his eye.

Keep up to date with ALL the football news, gossip and transfers

And he was rushed to hospital for an operation to save his vision and movement.

It is as yet unclear why the local police in Cordoba opened fire, but it happened as the Talleres bus was pulling into Mario Alberto Kempes stadium.

Mundo D

Mundo D

Mundo D

The shocking incident tops off a dark day in Argentinian football.

A 22-year-old Belgrano fan named Emanuel Ezequiel Balbo was pushed to his death at half-time of the encounter by fellow fans.

His father, Raul, late claimed the killer was a man named Oscar Gomez, who five years over had fatally run over his other son.

Emanuel Ezequiel Balbo was attacked by man who allegedly killed his brother

Emanuel was thrown over a railing and fell down the stand after it he had reportedly been falsely accused of supporting Talleres.

Four have been arrested over the incident.

Fans of both clubs have moved to end the violence which has plagued this fixture.

The Argentinian ambassador for Ecuador is an avid Bergano follower, and he tweeted a picture of himself covering one eye, which simulates a Pirate and their nickname isPiratas.

Several fans of Talleres, their arch-rivals, replicated the gesture, and Belgrano supporters responded with images of themselves making a T sign along with the hashtag #WeAreNotEnemies.

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Police open fire before football derby in Argentina, with one fan fighting to save eyesight later another ... - The Sun

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Diabetes in the Valley: Area families hit hard by condition – Sunbury Daily Item

April 18th, 2017 7:47 pm

LEWISBURG Pamela Dixon of Shamokin Dam recently celebrated her 39th birthday. Christy Kerstetter of McAlisterville will turn 39 years old this July.

Both women are married and are raising boys.

Both women are also diabetic. Dixon is a Type 1, and Kerstetter is a Type 2.

So whats the difference and how does it impact each womans life?

Karen Dohl, PA-C, Diabetes Center of Evangelical, West Branch Medical Center explained the difference.

A Type 1 scenario is an autoimmune disease or a situation where the body is attacking itself.

They develop antibodies that kill off an area of the pancreas and the patient needs insulin to sustain life, Dohl said, adding that it is not curable.

A Type 2 diabetic has a high blood sugar level because the pancreas can not keep up with the body. This can be due to being overweight or other health issues and is often genetic.

Some patients no longer produce insulin on their own, Dohl said. When that happens, the Type 2 patient becomes what is known as Type 2 insulin dependent.

Dohl said sometimes patients get confused and think that if they need insulin they must be a Type 1.

All Type 1 diabetics need insulin on a regular basis to survive, but only some Type 2 patients reach this point.

Many Type 1 patients are diagnosed around the age of puberty.

Dr. John Kennedy specializes in Diabetes and Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism and is employed within the Geisinger Health System in Danville.

He explained that at puberty a relative lack of insulin becomes absolute in these patients. He said that Type 1 can be diagnosed at any age, as early as toddlerhood; though this age group makes up one percent of Type 1 diagnosis. This is the subject of a study currently taking place at Geisinger that involves board certified pediatric endocrinologists.

Dixon was 11 years old when she pre-diagnosed herself while reading The Babysitters Club series. It was a book about the character Stacey and her diagnosis of diabetes that made Dixon think her own situation was similar.

Dixon had the same symptoms as the character in the book: excessive thirst and urination and constant fatigue.

A trip to the hospital with her mother revealed her suspicions were true.

Renee Hughes, RN, BSN, CDE, Diabetes Educator, Diabetes Center of Evangelical, West Branch Medical Center revealed the Four Cardinal Symptoms of a diabetic, includimg the frequent urination, excessive thirst fatigue and also blurred vision.

A blood test confirms the diagnosis. A blood sugar level of 126 or higher is considered diabetic. An A1C test tells the patient the average level of blood sugar over three months. Diabetic, Hughes said, is an A1C of 6.5 or higher.

Kerstetter was diagnosed in 2008 with Type 2 diabetes. The 30-year-olds main complaint at the time was intense fatigue. Upon visiting her family doctor, a blood test was taken and revealed she was Type 2 diabetic, a condition that has occurred in her fathers side of the family.

She was given pills to take not insulin and continued on that pattern for six years.

Hughes said pills that help reduce blood sugar levels are the typical first step for new Type 2 diagnosis. If the pills do not seem to help over time, injections may be prescribed. A type 2 diabetic taking injections is not necessarily taking insulin. Some injections aid in controlling the blood sugar by helping your pancreas produce the insulin naturally.

Kerstetter said this is the medication route she is currently subscribed to. In 2014 after a hospital stay for some complications with her kidneys, her new family doctor began an active look at her numbers on a regular basis to find the medication that worked best for her.

Kerstetter still takes two pills at higher doses than when she was diagnosed as well as the once-per-week injection of Tanzeum after unsuccessful results with other injections.

Dixon, meanwhile, has learned her lesson on how important it is to take her insulin regularly.

As a teenager, she said, she was not overly thrilled to be seen carrying a syringe and vile.

She said by her early 20s, after she got married, she was more compliant to take her medication because the pen form of insulin was available.

Very rarely do we have patients choose to use insulin shots, Kennedy said, It now all about the insulin pens.

Another option is an insulin pump, which Dixon said she has not used.

A catheter is placed under the skin and the pump, a small device, can be carried under a waistband and is programmed to give the correct amount of insulin required. The insulin can be adjusted as needed by pressing buttons.

However, it was the implementation of the Dexcom, Dixon said, that has changed her life. The Dexcom CGM or Continuous Glucose Monitor includes a sensor that is attached discretely to the body and then displays the glucose levels to a monitor that can be checked over 200 times a day. It can also be used in collaboration with the pump.

There is also a share option for patients to have their levels displayed on a spouses cell phone or for parents of children who need insulin.

Since Type 2 is the only preventable form of diabetes, Dohl said the key is to keep your weight under control and think about your lifestyle. She also said most patients do not consider diabetes. They often visit the doctor because they may have fainted or have blurred vision and go home with a diabetic diagnosis.

As many as 8.1 million Americans have diabetes and dont know it, Hughes said.

When symptoms arise, see your doctor and get bloodwork, they said.

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Program identifies risky diabetic drivers and helps them improve – Reuters

April 18th, 2017 7:47 pm

(Reuters Health) - A short questionnaire can identify drivers with type 1 diabetes who are at high risk of future driving mishaps, and an online intervention can help them avoid these mishaps, according to a U.S. study.

Like pilots who have to go through a pre-flight checklist to ensure all systems are a go, drivers with diabetes should go through a check list, asking themselves whether they have had more physical activity, taken more insulin, eaten fewer carbohydrates than usual, feel any unusual symptoms and judge whether they are low or likely to go low during the drive, said lead author Dr. Daniel Cox from the University of Virginia Health System and Virginia Driving Safety Laboratory in Charlottesville.

If the answer is yes, then they should take appropriate steps to avoid hypoglycemia while driving, Cox said by email.

Drivers with type 1 diabetes have a greater risk of collisions than their spouses without diabetes, and those mishaps correspond to the use of insulin pumps, a history of collisions, severe low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) and previous hypoglycemia-related driving mishaps, the study team writes in Diabetes Care.

The researchers developed an 11-item questionnaire to screen drivers with type 1 diabetes for a high risk of driving mishaps and developed an online intervention intended to help high-risk individuals avoid future mishaps.

Their Risk Assessment of Diabetic Drivers (RADD) scale included questions about past experiences while driving, like have you had an automobile accident or received a moving vehicle violation in the last 2 years? and diabetes-specific questions like, have you had low blood glucose in the past 6 months? and was it a hassle trying to hide dizziness or other symptoms of low blood glucose?

Based on answers to 11 questions, around 35 percent of individuals with type 1 diabetes could be classified as high-risk drivers whose mishap rate was nearly three times higher than that of people in the low-risk group.

High-risk drivers who went on to participate in the online intervention at DiabetesDriving.com had a driving mishap rate of about 2.5 per year in the following 12 months, compared with about 4.25 mishaps per year among high-risk drivers who did not participate in the intervention. Still, the mishap rate of high-risk drivers who did the intervention remained higher than that of low-risk drivers.

Driving is a privilege, not a right, Cox said. Whether we have type 1 diabetes, sleep apnea, narcolepsy, slowed reaction times due to aging, or some other chronic or acute condition (e.g., excessive sleepiness or intoxication), we all have a responsibility to ourselves, our families, and others on the road to ensure we are a safe driver.

People with diabetes should realize they should never drive when their blood glucose is below 70, because it is too easy to slip from mild hypoglycemia to moderate hypoglycemia that impairs judgment, information processing speed, and general reaction time, Cox added. As soon as hypoglycemia is detected or suspected, the driver should immediately safely pull off the road, treat it, and not resume driving until the hypoglycemia resolves.

Diabetic patients have a tendency not to disclose their driving mishaps or near miss events due to fear of losing their driving licenses," said Dr. Thinzar Min from Swansea University in the UK, who was not involved in the study.

In the UK, drivers are allowed only one severe hypoglycemic episode in 12 months to retain Group 1 license (cars and motorcycles) and no severe hypoglycemic episodes for Group 2 licenses (trucks and busses), Min noted.

I think the RADD scale would be more accurate if the patients can use it to assess themselves if they are high-risk or not, she said. Online interventions should be aimed at all diabetic patients who are taking insulin.

Dr. Eitaro Nakashima from Chubu Rosai Hospitalin Nagoya, Japan, wrote recently about the pitfalls of tightening driving regulations for diabetic patients in Japan and Europe. "In my opinion, each patient should understand the degree of risk of driving mishaps and prepare sugar in their car. For general public, education and individual customized treatment are important for good outcome instead of tightening of driving regulations, he told Reuters Health by email.

SOURCE: bit.ly/2oJgxvQ Diabetes Care, online April 12, 2017.

(Reuters Health) - People who live near sources of heavy traffic exhaust may be at higher risk of heart disease because the fine particles in this type of pollution lower levels of good cholesterol needed for healthy blood flow, a U.S. study suggests.

U.S. generic drug company Argentum Pharmaceuticals LLC said on Tuesday it had reached an agreement with Allergan Plc that settles a patent dispute over the generic version of Allergan's eye drug, Restasis.

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Program identifies risky diabetic drivers and helps them improve - Reuters

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Cars? Diabetes? Is Apple A Dinosaur? – Seeking Alpha

April 18th, 2017 7:47 pm

Recently, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) has been making headlines with a couple exciting new growth initiatives. Last week the company was granted a permit to test self-driving cars in California, and news surfaced that Apple is working on a glucose sensor to help diabetes patients.

While Apple has been focusing on these distant moonshots with little to no near-term revenue impact, their core business is quickly becoming vulnerable.

Amazon's (NASDAQ:AMZN) Alexa platform is ushering a new era of interacting with computers through voice, not touch. This is something Apple tried to do with Siri, but is miserably failing.

Instead of investing in these long-term projects, Apple needs to double down and innovate around protecting its moat around its iOS ecosystem. Building healthcare services and media content (like Planet of the Apps) would be a great start, instead of wasting time trying to compete with Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) in self-driving cars.

All of this and more is covered in HyperChange's weekly Sunday Schemin' podcast.

Disclosure: I am/we are long TSLA.

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.

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19-year old Georgia college student dies of diabetes complication – FOX 5 Atlanta

April 18th, 2017 7:47 pm

COLUMBUS, Ga. - Looking around Marquis House's bedroom in his family's Columbus, Georgia, home, it almost feels like he's still here, like he's going to walk in the door any second.

"This is all his dirty laundry; I haven't had the heart to wash it," Chereia House, his mother, says. "This is his (insulin) pen right here. His glasses he wore to school."

House spends a lot of time in here, remembering Marquis.

"I think about him," she says. "I think about his personality."

Marquis was 19, a diehard New England Patriots' fan in Falcons' country.

He was a University of West Georgia sophomore, and a video-gamer, who still got a kick out of dressing up for the family's pajama costume Christmas photo.

Marquis was also a type 1 diabetic, drilled in staying on top of his blood sugar.

"He was diagnosed when he was 4 years old," his mother remembers. "He was doing his own injections at 4, he was counting his carbs at 5."

So, losing Marquis to a complication of diabetes?

It just doesn't seem possible.

"Because he was so on top of it," Chereia House says. "He knew what to do, he always knew what to do."

And Type 1 diabetes requires a constant balancing act, says Children's Healthcare of Atlanta endocrinologist Dr. Jessica Hutchins.

"Most kids with Type 1 diabetes are taking 4 to 6 injections of insulin a day, depending on how often they're eating and how well their blood sugars are doing," Dr. Hutchins explains.

On February 11, 2017, a Saturday night, Marquis House, alone in his dorm room, called his mom.

"And he said, 'Oh, I've been throwing up.' And I said, 'What is your blood sugar?'"

Chereia House says Marquis reassured her he'd checked his blood sugar and it was within the normal range.

But he was sick to his stomach, so his mother wondered if he should go to the ER.

"He was, like, 'No, mom, I'm fine. It's just a little bug, if I'm still throwing up in the morning, I will go to the hospital,'" House says.

Marquis didn't know it, but he'd developed a serious complication, known as diabetic ketoacidosis, or DKA, often triggered by an infection or missed insulin treatments.

His insulin insulin levels had dropped dangerously low.

His body, searching for fuel for energy, had begun breaking down fat, releasing acids known as ketones into his blood, which were spilling over into his urine.

In the early stages, Dr. Hutchins says, symptoms of DKA include weight loss, an increase in thirst, and frequent urination.

Kids may feel very tired and fatigued.

But as the condition worsens, she says, patients in DKA often experience vomiting, dehydration and mental confusion.

That may explain why Marquis House simply thought he just had a stomach bug.

"Usually the symptoms have been going on for weeks, very subtly and nobody has really noticed," Dr. Hutchins says. "But as far as the actual DKA, that can, within 24 hours can go from vomiting a little bit into a severe life-threatening condition."

When she hung up with Marquis, his mother asked him to call her in the morning.

"That Sunday morning, I got up and I was, like, 'Oh, he didn't call me,' says Chereia House. "So I texted him."

Marquis never responded.

Hours later, he was dead in his dorm room.

Only now, two months after his death, is his family putting together what happened in Marquis' final hours.

"He got up at some point, and was getting ready to administer his insulin," says Chereia Houe. "Or (he was trying to) check his blood. He had everything out. And then passed out."

Today, Chereia House says, it's still hard to believe the heart of their family is gone.

"But when I miss him, I come in and I just lay across his bed," his mother says. "To kind of like get his, to get his scent."

Chereia House, still consumed by questions, says she's telling their story because she wants other parents to know about DKA and other complications of diabetes.

Follow your gut, if you feel something is wrong, she says.

She wishes more than anything she's followed hers with Marquis that February night.

"I feel if I would have pushed him, and made him go to the hospital," Chereia says. "Maybe we would not be here doing this story. Every day I live with that regret, for not pushing it.`"

NEXT ARTICLE:Brain scans may help depression patients find the right treatment

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19-year old Georgia college student dies of diabetes complication - FOX 5 Atlanta

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How diabetes is linked to gut bacteria – ModernMedicine

April 18th, 2017 7:47 pm

The majority of cells within our bodies are not humannor is the majority of our DNA. We are hosts to 1014 bacterial cells (50 percent to 90 percent of all cells) that make up as much as 95 percent of our total DNA.1 Most of these organisms live within the gastrointestinal (GI) tract but also within the genitourinary tract, on our skin, and on the ocular surfaceforming what is collectively known as the microbiome.

Given this abundance of nonhuman species living on and within our bodies, it is not surprising that there is a link between specific bacteria to systemic and ocular diseaseincluding diabetes and diabetes-related eye disease.

What studies tell us

A reduction in gut bacterial diversity precedes the onset of clinical diabetes.2 Reduction of intestinal species that produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), especially butyrate but also propionate and acetate, appears to be particularly important. These SCFAs improve insulin sensitivity by stimulating peroxisome-proliferator agonist gamma receptors3 (PPARG), analogous to the PPARG diabetes medication, pioglitazone (Actos, Takeda).

Butyrate enhances production of the intestinal hormone, glucagon-like peptide-14 (GLP-1), which increases insulin production, decreases glucagon secretion, and inhibits appetite. It is analogous to GLP-1 analog drugs like exenatide (Byetta, Amylin) and liraglutide (Victoza, Novo Nordisk).

Butyrate also enhances intestinal barrier function, preventing translocation of bacteria and lipopolysaccharides derived from the cell walls of Gram-negative organisms (endotoxemia) that leads to so-called leaky gut syndrome. Leaky gut syndrome has been linked to autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes and inflammatory cytokine production in type 2 diabetes (T2DM).5,6

Introduction of butyrate-producing bacteria via probiotic supplementation has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity and reduce inflammation in humans with type 2 diabetes.7

Perhaps more convincingly, transplanting fecal material from healthy adults with markedly higher numbers of butyrate-producing bacteria to obese patients with T2DM and lower numbers of such bacteria resulted in nearly 80 percent better insulin sensitivity in one small study.8

Recent meta-analysis of 11 studies with more than 600 subjects shows that multi-species probiotic supplementation modestly but significantly improves insulin resistance, excess insulin production, fasting blood sugars, and mean blood glucose (HbA1c) in humans with T2DM.9

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Researchers discover birth-and-death life cycle of neurons in the … – Science Daily

April 18th, 2017 7:45 pm

Johns Hopkins researchers have published new evidence refuting the long-held scientific belief that the gut nerve cells we're born with are the same ones we die with.

In a report published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the investigators say the finding has profound implications for the understanding and treatment of disorders and diseases that affect the digestive system.

Pankaj Jay Pasricha M.B.B.S., M.D., , professor of medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Neurogastroenterology, and Subhash Kulkarni, M.S., Ph.D., assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, led a research team that discovered the birth-and-death cycle of the neurons that form the network of millions of nerve cells throughout the digestive tract.

Previous studies have suggested that a healthy adult gut generates few or no new neurons. According to Pasricha, the Johns Hopkins study demonstrates that a healthy adult small intestine loses and regenerates about five percent of its nerve cells every day, or a third of them every week.

"Scientific dogma believed that gut neurons don't regenerate and that this 'brain,' known as the enteric nervous system, remained relatively static shortly after birth," Pasricha says. "We now have proof that, not only do they regenerate, but the whole network turns completely over every few weeks in adult animals."

The enteric nervous system controls and regulates vital gastrointestinal functions such as digestion, immunity and inflammation. After the brain, the digestive tract contains the largest nervous system in the human body.

"The yin and the yang of neuronal loss and birth keeps us going," Kulkarni says.

Pasricha, Kulkarni and their team confined their research to the small intestines of healthy adult mice. Using a variety of techniques, they found proteins associated with neural cell death and were able to observe the loss of neurons. Their work provided irrefutable evidence of ongoing neuronal death due to apoptosis in the adult gut.

This significant rate of nerve cell loss left the research team with the question of how the gut maintains its relatively constant number of neurons.

"There could be only one answer," says Kulkarni. "The high turnover of neurons in the gut could only be reconciled by birth of newborn neurons, or neurogenesis."

Despite years of research, proof of neurogenesis in the healthy digestive system has been elusive. Scientists knew that the numbers of enteric neurons in a healthy small intestine remain remarkably constant for most of the adult life. While previous studies have shown that the adult gut contains cells that can generate neurons in lab settings outside of living organisms, finding whether such cells truly give birth to neurons in healthy adult animals eluded scientists for years.

Pasricha says the key to finding the process came when the team focused on tracing and following the behavior of cells that expressed Nestin, a protein typically associated with brain stem cells.

After years of "staking out" these Nestin-expressing cells and studying their location, behavior and fate in the adult gut tissue, the research team found that some of them, called "enteric neural precursor cells," generated new neurons rapidly, shoring up and maintaining the large neuronal population that would otherwise dwindle fast in light of ongoing neuronal death.

The study also shows that any aberration that tilts the cells' birth-and-death balance may cause disease.

"Although previous studies have shown that regeneration of adult neurons may happen in an injured gut," Kulkarni says, "by and large, this appeared a relatively isolated and rare phenomenon. We now provide evidence that this happens continually and robustly in the adult healthy gut. It helps explain how this nervous system maintains itself, despite constant exposure to dietary factors, toxins, microbes and mechanical forces."

"We didn't believe it ourselves, at first," Pasricha, whose lab has been working on these neural stem cells for many years, says of the findings. "It's an extraordinary result; the mice get an entirely new 'brain' in the gut every few weeks."

He cautions that their study was limited to the mouse small intestine and that further research is necessary to determine whether other species -- including humans -- and other regions of the gut experience the same cellular birth and death processes. Such studies are underway in Pasricha's Johns Hopkins lab.

The researchers hope the findings will help identify new regenerative and other therapies for gastrointestinal motility disorders like achalasia, gastroparesis, pseudo-obstruction, colonic inertia and other problems related to the digestive system.

"And as we dig deeper into this research," says Kulkarni, "we will gain new insights into a whole host of other diseases that affect not just the gut, but other organ systems with which this nervous system communicates, such as the brain."

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Hopkins Researchers Discover Birth-And-Death Life Cycle of Neurons in the Adult Mouse Gut – Newswise (press release)

April 18th, 2017 7:45 pm

Newswise Johns Hopkins researchers today published new evidence refuting the long-held scientific belief that the gut nerve cells were born with are the same ones we die with.

In a report published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the investigators say the findinghas profound implications for the understanding and treatment of disorders and diseases that affect the digestive system.

Pankaj Jay Pasricha, M.B.B.S., M.D., professor of medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Neurogastroenterology, and Subhash Kulkarni, M.S., Ph.D., assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, led a research team that discovered the birth-and-death cycle of the neurons that form the network of millions of nerve cells throughout the digestive tract.

Previous studies have suggested that a healthy adult gut generates few or no new neurons. According to Pasricha, the Johns Hopkins study demonstrates that a healthy adult small intestine loses and regenerates about five percent of its nerve cells every day, or a third of them every week.

Scientific dogma believed that gut neurons dont regenerate and that this brain, known as the enteric nervous system, remained relatively static shortly after birth, Pasricha says. We now have proof that, not only do they regenerate, but the whole network turns completely over every few weeks in adult animals.

The enteric nervous system controls and regulates vital gastrointestinal functions such as digestion, immunity and inflammation. After the brain, the digestive tract contains the largest nervous system in the human body.

"The yin and the yang of neuronal loss and birth keeps us going," Kulkarni says.

Pasricha, Kulkarni and their team confined their research to the small intestines of healthy adult mice. Using a variety of techniques, they found proteins associated with neural cell death and were able to observe the loss of neurons. Their work provided irrefutable evidence of ongoing neuronal death due to apoptosis in the adult gut.

This significant rate of nerve cell loss left the research team with the question of how the gut maintains its relatively constant number of neurons.

"There could be only one answer," says Kulkarni. "The high turnover of neurons in the gut could only be reconciled by birth of newborn neurons, or neurogenesis."

Despite years of research, proof of neurogenesis in the healthy digestive system has been elusive. Scientists knew that the numbers of enteric neurons in a healthy small intestine remain remarkably constant for most of the adult life. While previous studies have shown that the adult gut contains cells that can generate neurons in lab settings outside of living organisms, finding whether such cells truly give birth to neurons in healthy adult animals eluded scientists for years.

Pasricha says the key to finding the process came when the team focused on tracing and following the behavior of cells that expressed Nestin, a protein typically associated with brain stem cells.

After years of staking out these Nestin-expressing cells and studying their location, behavior and fate in the adult gut tissue, the research team found that some of them, called enteric neural precursor cells, generated new neurons rapidly, shoring up and maintaining the large neuronal population that would otherwise dwindle fast in light of ongoing neuronal death.

The study also shows that any aberration that tilts the cells' birth-and-death balance may cause disease.

"Although previous studies have shown that regeneration of adult neurons may happen in an injured gut," Kulkarni says, "by and large, this appeared a relatively isolated and rare phenomenon. We now provide evidence that this happens continually and robustly in the adult healthy gut. It helps explain how this nervous system maintains itself, despite constant exposure to dietary factors, toxins, microbes and mechanical forces.

We didnt believe it ourselves, at first, Pasricha, whose lab has been working on these neural stem cells for many years, says of the findings. It's an extraordinary result; the mice get an entirely new brain in the gut every few weeks."

He cautions that their study was limited to the mouse small intestine and that further research is necessary to determine whether other species -- including humans -- and other regions of the gut experience the same cellular birth and death processes. Such studies are underway in Pasrichas Johns Hopkins lab.

The researchers hope the findings will help identify new regenerative and other therapies for gastrointestinal motility disorders like achalasia, gastroparesis, pseudo-obstruction, colonic inertia and other problems related to the digestive system.

"And as we dig deeper into this research," says Kulkarni, "we will gain new insights into a whole host of other diseases that affect not just the gut, but other organ systems with which this nervous system communicates, such as the brain."

Additional authors of the article are Jenna Leser, Ya-Yuan Fu, Liansheng Liu, Qian Li, Monalee Saha, Cuiping Li, Michael Anderson, Xinzhong Dong and Hongjun Song of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Manish J. Butte of the University of California, Los Angeles; E. Michelle Southard-Smith of Vanderbilt University Medical Center; Raj P. Kapur of Seattle Children's Hospital; Maria-Adelaide Micci of the University of Texas Medical Branch; Changsik Shin and Milena Bogunovic of the Pennsylvania State University; Shiue-Cheng Tang of the National Tsing Hua University; Grigori Enikolopov of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; Laren Becker of the Stanford University School of Medicine; Nikolai Rakhilin and Xiling Shen of Duke University.

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Hopkins Researchers Discover Birth-And-Death Life Cycle of Neurons in the Adult Mouse Gut - Newswise (press release)

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Researchers study secrets of aging via stem cells – Harvard Gazette

April 18th, 2017 7:45 pm

Third in an occasional series on how Harvard researchers are tackling the problematic issues of aging.

If only, wrote an ancient Japanese poet, when one heard that Old Age was coming one could bolt the door.

Science is working on it.

Aging is as much about the physical processes of repair and regeneration and their slow-motion failure as it is the passage of time. And scientists studying stem cell and regenerative biology are making progress understanding those processes, developing treatments for the many diseases whose risks increase as we get older, while at times seeming to draw close to a broader anti-aging breakthrough.

If stem cells offer potential solutions, theyre also part of the problem. Stem cells, which can differentiate into many cell types, are important parts of the bodys repair system, but lose regenerative potency as we age. In addition, their self-renewing ability allows the mutations that affect every cell to accumulate across cellular generations, and some of those mutations lead to disease.

We do think that stem cells are a key player in at least some of the manifestations of age, said Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology David Scadden, co-director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. The hypothesis is that stem cell function deteriorates with age, driving events we know occur with aging, like our limited ability to fully repair or regenerate healthy tissue following injury.

When it comes to aging, certain tissue types seem to lead the charge, according to Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology Lee Rubin, who directs the Harvard Stem Cell Institutes Therapeutic Screening Center. Particular tissues nerve cells appear to be one somehow signal to others that its time to age. This raises the prospect, Rubin said, that aging might be reversed by treating these key tissue categories, rather than designing individual treatments for the myriad tissue types that make up the body.

The process of aging involves all tissues in your body and, while different things go wrong in each tissue, they go wrong at basically the same rate, Rubin said. We can think of it as a process that is somehow coordinated, or there are fundamental processes in each tissue that play out.

In addition to key tissues, certain chemical pathways like insulin signaling seem to be able to control aging, said Rubin, whose work has received backing from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, as well as private foundations. The insulin signaling pathway is a chemical chain reaction in which the hormone insulin helps the body metabolize glucose. Reducing it has been shown to greatly extend life span in flies and worms, Rubin said. Also, signaling doesnt have to be reduced in all tissues.

If you just reduce it in neurons, the whole fly or worm lives longer, Rubin said. Certain key tissues in those organisms, if you selectively manipulate those tissues, have a positive effect on a number of processes in other tissues.

Because it circulates throughout the body, blood is an obvious place to look for controlling or signaling molecules that prompt or coordinate aging. A key carrier of oxygen and nutrients, blood is also rich with other compounds, some of which appear to play a role in decline linked to age.

Scadden described recent work done separately by Ben Ebert, a professor of medicine working at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Womens Hospital, and Steve McCarroll, the Dorothy and Milton Flier Associate Professor of Biomedical Science and Genetics, that identified age-related changes in the blood that can increase the risk of diseases we dont typically think of as blood diseases.

Another tantalizing study, published in 2013, used the blood of a young mouse to rejuvenate the organs of an older one. In these parabiotic experiments, conducted by Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology Richard Lee and Forst Family Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology Amy Wagers, the circulatory systems of the two mice were joined, allowing the blood of the young to flow through the older ones body. The older mouse showed improvements in muscle tone and heart function. Later, similar experiments done by Rubin also showed improvements in neuronal health and brain functioning.

The young mouses fate depended on the age of the older mouse, Rubin said. If the latter was middle-aged, the young mouse appeared to be fine. If the older mouse was very old, however, the young mouse did worse.

Rubin said the experiments suggest that blood contains both positive and negative factors that influence aging. It may be, he said, that both are always present, but that positive factors outweigh negative in the young and that negative factors increase as we age.

Researchers have identified but not yet confirmed candidate blood factors for the rejuvenating effects. What seems not in doubt is the overall effect of the young blood on the old mouse. Interest is intense enough that a California company, Alkahest, has begun experiments giving Alzheimers patients plasma from young blood in hopes of improving cognition and brain function.

Even if that approach works, Rubin said, there would be practical hurdles to the widespread administration of young peoples blood plasma to older patients. But with an active compound identified, a drug could be made available to restore at least some cognitive function in Alzheimers patients.

In addition to the overall process of aging, researchers at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, as well as across the University and its affiliated institutions, are investigating an array of diseases whose incidence increases sometimes dramatically with age.

The list includes several of the countrys top causes of death heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer as well as rarer conditions such as the lethal neurodegenerative disorder amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

Two decades ago, when stem cell research hit mainstream consciousness, many thought its greatest promise would be in stem cells ability to grow replacement parts: organs and tissues for damage caused by trauma or disease.

The stem cell revolution is still developing, Scadden said, but so far has taken a different form than many expected. The dream of harnessing stem cells to grow replacement hearts, livers, and kidneys remains, but potentially powerful uses have emerged in modeling disease for drug discovery and in targeting treatment for personalized medicine.

We thought stem cells would provide mostly replacement parts. I think thats clearly changed very dramatically. Now we think of them as contributing to our ability to make disease models for drug discovery.

David Scadden

Researchers have taken from the sick easily accessible cells, such as skin or blood, and reprogrammed them into the affected tissue type nerve cells in the case of ALS, which most commonly strikes between 55 and 75, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

These tissues are used as models to study the disease and test interventions. Work on ALS in the lab of Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology Kevin Eggan has identified a drug approved for epilepsy that might be effective against ALS. This application is now entering clinical trials, in collaboration with Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital.

In the end, stem cells might have their greatest impact as a drug-discovery tool, Scadden said.

Much of stem cell medicine is ultimately going to be medicine, he said. Even here, we thought stem cells would provide mostly replacement parts. I think thats clearly changed very dramatically. Now we think of them as contributing to our ability to make disease models for drug discovery.

Also evolving is knowledge of stem cell biology. Our previous understanding was that once embryonic stem cells differentiated into stem cells for muscle, blood, skin, and other tissue, those stem cells remained flexible enough to further develop into an array of different cells within the tissue, whenever needed.

Recent work on blood stem cells, however, indicates that this plasticity within a particular tissue type may be more limited than previously thought, Scadden said. Instead of armies of similarly plastic stem cells, it appears there is diversity within populations, with different stem cells having different capabilities.

If thats the case, Scadden said, problems might arise in part from the loss of some of these stem cell subpopulations, a scenario that could explain individual variation in aging. Getting old may be something like the endgame in chess, he said, when players are down to just a few pieces that dictate their ability to defend and attack.

If were graced and happen to have a queen and couple of bishops, were doing OK, said Scadden, whose work is largely funded through the NIH. But if we are left with pawns, we may lose resilience as we age.

Scaddens lab is using fluorescent tags to mark stem cells in different laboratory animals and then following them to see which ones do what work. It might be possible to boost populations of particularly potent players the queens to fight disease.

Were just at the beginning of this, Scadden said. I think that our sense of stem cells as this highly adaptable cell type may or may not be true. What we observe when we look at a population may not be the case with individuals.

The replacement parts scenario for stem cells hasnt gone away. One example is in the work of Harvard Stem Cell Institute co-director and Xander University Professor Douglas Melton, who has made significant progress growing replacement insulin-producing beta cells for treatment of diabetes.

Another is in Lees research. With support from the NIH, Lee is working to make heart muscle cells that can be used to repair damaged hearts.

Trials in this area have already begun, though with cells not genetically matched to the patient. In France, researchers are placing partially differentiated embryonic stem cells on the outside of the heart as a temporary aid to healing. Another trial, planned by researchers in Seattle, would inject fully differentiated heart muscle cells into a patient after a heart attack as a kind of very localized heart transplant.

Lees approach will take longer to develop. He wants to exploit the potential of stem cell biology to grow cells that are genetically matched to the patient. Researchers would reprogram cells taken from the patient into heart cells and, as in the Seattle experiment, inject them into damaged parts of the heart. The advantage of Lees approach is that because the cells would be genetically identical to the patient, he or she could avoid antirejection drugs for life.

What were thinking about is longer-term but more ambitious, Lee said. Avoiding immune suppression could change the way we think about things, because it opens the door to many decades of potential benefit.

Change has been a constant in Lees career, and he says theres no reason to think that will slow. Patient populations are older and more complex, disease profiles are changing, and the tools physicians have at their disposal are more powerful and more targeted.

Many of our patients today wouldnt be alive if not for the benefit of research advances, he said. Cardiology has completely changed in the last 25 years. If you think its not going to change even more in the next 25 years, youre probably wrong.

When Lee envisions the full potential of stem cell science, he sees treatments and replacement organs with the power to transform how we develop and grow old.

It may not be there for you and me, but for our children or their children, ultimately, regenerative biology and stem cell biology have that kind of potential, he said. We imagine a world where it doesnt matter what mutations or other things youre born with, because we can give you a good life.

Lees not guessing at future longevity. Hes not even sure extending life span beyond the current record, 122, is possible. Instead, he cites surveys that suggest that most Americans target 90 as their expectation for a long, healthy life.

Thats about a decade more than we get now in America, Lee said. We have work to do.

Originally posted here:
Researchers study secrets of aging via stem cells - Harvard Gazette

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