Biology & Medicine News and Discussions

weatheriscool
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Epilepsy drug shows promise in slowing joint degeneration in osteoarthritis
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-01- ... ritis.html
by Yale University

Yale researchers have identified a drug target that may alleviate joint degeneration associated with osteoarthritis, a debilitating condition that afflicts as many as 30 million people in the United States alone, which they report in the journal Nature.

Pain relievers and lifestyle changes, such as exercise and reduced excess weight, have long been the therapies most commonly used to treat the joint stiffness and pain caused by degenerative disease, but there is a pressing need for therapies that can prevent joint breakdown that occurs in osteoarthritis.

It is known that specialized proteins known as sodium channels found in cell membranes produce electrical impulses in "excitable" cells within muscles, the nervous system, and the heart. In previous research, Yale's Stephen G. Waxman identified the key role of one particular sodium channel, called Nav1.7, in the transmission of pain signals.

Now, the labs of Chuan-Ju Liu, the Charles W. Ohse Professor of Orthopedics, and Waxman, the Bridget M. Flaherty Professor of Neurology and professor of neuroscience and pharmacology, both at Yale School of Medicine, have found that the same Nav1.7 channels are also present in non-excitable cells that produce collagen and help maintain the joints in the body.

Osteoarthritis, the most common form of arthritis, is a degenerative disease caused by the breakdown of cartilage that eases friction between the joints. It occurs most commonly in the hands, hips, and knees.

In the new study, the researchers deleted Nav1.7 genes from these collagen-producing cells, significantly reducing joint damage in two osteoarthritis models in mice.
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New antibiotic compound very exciting, expert says

21 hours ago

An expert microbiologist has hailed the discovery of a potential new class of antibiotics that could treat lethal hospital infections as "very exciting".

The new compound, zosurabalpin, worked "extremely well" in test-tubes and mice, Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership scientific director Prof Laura Piddock said.

[...]

US researchers focused on finding a new way to treat infections caused by the carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (Crab) bacterium.

The organism, classed a "priority-one critical pathogen" by the World Health Organization, can cause very serious invasive blood and chest infections in critically ill hospital patients.

It is resistant to many known antibiotics.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-67881289
firestar464
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Scientific breakthrough in the study of neurological disorders

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/health/wellne ... share&ei=5
weatheriscool
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Bacterial immune system boosts antibiotic effectiveness against cholera, study reveals
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-bacterial ... eness.html
by Universitaet Tübingen
Bacteria have an immune system that protects them against viruses known as bacteriophages. A research team from the Universities of Tübingen and Würzburg has now shown how this immune system enhances the effect of specific antibiotics against the cholera pathogen Vibrio cholerae.

The immune system is the reason why this bacterium is particularly sensitive to one of the oldest known classes of antibiotics—the antifolates. The team's findings have been published in the latest issue of Nature Microbiology.
weatheriscool
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FDA approves first prescription wearable to treat low bone density
By Paul McClure
January 23, 2024
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-nanofiber ... -skin.html
The FDA has approved a wearable belt that delivers targeted vibrations to the spine and hips as the first non-drug prescription medical device to treat low bone density, the precursor to osteoporosis. Shown to be effective in clinical trials, the novel device offers postmenopausal women an alternative treatment to vitamin and mineral supplements.

Postmenopausal women are at high risk of fractures due to loss of the hormone estrogen. Because estrogen helps maintain bone density, this loss can lead to osteopenia or low bone density. The precursor to osteoporosis, osteopenia affects 40.4% of people globally.

Developed by Bone Health Technologies (BHT), Osteoboost is a novel wearable belt device that delivers vibrations to the lumbar spine and hips to encourage bone growth. The FDA recently approved the device to treat osteopenia, making it the first non-drug prescription medical device to receive such approval.
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EU plan for medicine stockpile could worsen UK’s record shortages
Thu 25 Jan 2024 21.05 GMT

The EU is to stockpile key medicines that will worsen the record drug shortages in the UK, with experts warning that the country could be left “behind in the queue”.

The EU is seeking to safeguard its supplies by switching to a system in which its 27 members work together to secure reliable supplies of 200 commonly used medications, such as antibiotics, painkillers and vaccines.

But the bloc’s move to insulate itself from growing drug shortages threatens to exacerbate the increasing scarcity of medicines facing the NHS, posing serious problems for doctors.

“Europe is securing access to key drugs and vaccines as a single region, with huge influence and buying power. As a result of Brexit the UK is now isolated from this system, so our drug supplies could be at risk in the future,” said Dr Andrew Hill, an expert on the pharmaceutical trade.

Britain is experiencing a record level of drug shortages, with more than 100 – including treatments for cancer, type 2 diabetes and motor neurone disease – scarce or impossible to obtain.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/202 ... -shortages
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Time_Traveller
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Pharmacists to prescribe drugs for minor illnesses in England
3 hours ago

People with seven common ailments such as sore throat and earache can go into a chemist to be assessed, rather than making an appointment with their GP.

Under the Pharmacy First scheme, pharmacists in England can carry out consultations and issue antibiotics when appropriate.

The aim is to make it easier for people to get the help they need and free up millions of GP appointments.

Similar services already exist in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Pharmacy groups have welcomed the move but there is concern about funding and recent chemist closures.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-68139870
"We all have our time machines, don't we. Those that take us back are memories...And those that carry us forward, are dreams."

-H.G Wells.
weatheriscool
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Researchers discover an effective non-opioid treatment for nerve pain
By Paul McClure
February 01, 2024
https://newatlas.com/medical/neuropathy ... -compound/
Researchers have discovered a non-opioid compound that, in mice, effectively reduced the pain hypersensitivity associated with chronic and often debilitating nerve pain caused by diabetes or chemotherapy drugs. It’s opened the door to developing a drug to treat the condition for which existing painkillers do little.

Diabetes, chemotherapy drugs, multiple sclerosis, injuries and amputations have all been associated with neuropathic pain, usually caused by damage to nerves in various body tissues, including the skin, muscles and joints. Mechanical hypersensitivity – or mechanical allodynia – is a major symptom of neuropathic pain, where innocuous stimuli like light touch cause severe pain.

Many available pain medications aren’t effective in reducing this often-debilitating type of chronic pain. However, researchers at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), in collaboration with UT Dallas and the University of Miami, may have advanced the treatment of neuropathic pain by discovering a molecule that reduces mechanical hypersensitivity in mice.
firestar464
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Study finds Schwann cells play a vital role in pain and touch sensations

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-02- ... -role.html
weatheriscool
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Scientists code ChatGPT to design new medicine
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-02- ... icine.html
by Chapman University
Generative artificial intelligence platforms, from ChatGPT to Midjourney, grabbed headlines in 2023. But GenAI can do more than create collaged images and help write emails—it can also design new drugs to treat disease.

Today, scientists use advanced technology to design new synthetic drug compounds with the right properties and characteristics, also known as "de novo drug design." However, current methods can be labor-, time-, and cost-intensive.

Inspired by ChatGPT's popularity and wondering if this approach could speed up the drug design process, scientists in the Schmid College of Science and Technology at Chapman University in Orange, California, decided to create their own GenAI model, detailed in a new paper, "De Novo Drug Design using Transformer-based Machine Translation and Reinforcement Learning of Adaptive Monte-Carlo Tree Search," appearing in the journal Pharmaceuticals.

Dony Ang, Cyril Rakovski, and Hagop Atamian coded a model to learn a massive dataset of known chemicals, how they bind to target proteins, and the rules and syntax of chemical structure and properties writ large.
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