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Mar 15
Breakthrough Discovery Reveals How Circadian Rhythm-Cell Energy Link Can Lead To New Treatments
UC Irvine researchers have discovered that circadian rhythms - our own body clock - regulate energy levels in cells. The findings have far-reaching implications, from providing greater insights into the bond between the body's day-night patterns and metabolism to creating new ways to treat cancer, diabetes, obesity and a host of related diseases.

In addition, Paolo Sassone-Corsi, Distinguished Professor and Chair of Pharmacology, and his colleagues found that the proteins involved with circadian rhythms and metabolism are intrinsically linked and dependent upon each other. Their study appears online in Science Express.

"Our circadian rhythms and metabolism are closely partnered to ensure that cells function properly and remain healthy," Sassone-Corsi said. "This discovery opens a new window for us to understand how these two fundamental processes work together, and it can have a great impact on new treatments for diseases caused by cell energy deficiencies."

Circadian rhythms of 24 hours govern fundamental physiological functions in almost all organisms. The circadian clocks are the essential time-tracking systems in our bodies that anticipate environmental changes and adapt to the appropriate time of day. Disruption of these rhythms can profoundly influence human health and has been linked to obesity, diabetes, insomnia, depression, coronary heart diseases and cancer.

Sassone-Corsi already had identified that the enzyme protein CLOCK is an essential molecular gear of the circadian machinery and interacts with a protein, SIRT1, which senses cell energy levels and modulates aging and metabolism.

In this study, he and his colleagues show that CLOCK works in balance with SIRT1 to direct activity in a cell pathway by which metabolic proteins send signals called the NAD+ salvage pathway. In turn, a key protein in that pathway, NAMPT, helps control CLOCK levels, creating a tightly regulated codependency between our circadian clock and metabolism.

"When the balance between these two vital processes is upset, normal cellular function can be disrupted," Sassone-Corsi said. "And this can lead to illness and disease."

The findings suggest that proper sleep and diet may help maintain or rebuild this balance, he said, and also help explain why lack of rest or disruption of normal sleep patterns can increase hunger, leading to obesity-related illnesses and accelerated aging.

The specific interaction between CLOCK and SIRT1 and the NAD+ salvage pathway also presents a starting point for drug development aimed at curbing cell dysfunction and death, thereby helping to solve major medical problems such cancer and diabetes.

Mar 15
Doctors Prescribing More Drugs And Ignoring Guidelines To Help Heart Disease Patients Lead Healthier
Young patients with heart disease are smoking more and twice as many suffer from diabetes compared to 12 years ago. Heart disease prevention in routine clinical practice is inadequate, with only a third of patients being referred to and joining prevention and rehabilitation programmes, whilst doctors are prescribing more and more drugs. Yet lifestyle programmes should be the backbone of preventive care. Saving people's lives from acute heart attacks is not sufficient, and an urgent investment in prevention is needed to address the lifestyle causes of heart disease. These are the conclusions of an Article published in this week's edition of The Lancet. The Article is one of four cardiology papers published in this edition, ahead of the American College of Cardiology meeting at the end of March.

Heart disease is preventable, yet it is the biggest killer in Europe causing 2 million deaths every year. The first (1995-96) and second (1999-2000) EUROASPIRE (European Action on Secondary and primary Prevention by Intervention to Reduce Events) surveys showed that in coronary patients cardiovascular risk factors such as smoking, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol were poorly managed in people with heart disease in Europe. Indeed, despite clear national and international guidelines on the best ways to prevent heart disease, they reported a widening gap between what is recommended and the results achieved in clinical practice.

In this study, Professor David Wood from Imperial College London, UK, and colleagues report the third (2006-7) EUROASPIRE survey outcomes*, examining more than a decade of heart disease prevention practices in 22 countries in Europe.

Findings showed a continuing and widening gap between the guidelines and patients' lifestyles in terms of stopping smoking, and reducing obesity and diabetes, and at the same time substantial increases in doctors prescribing of all of the major classes of cardioprotective drugs.

The authors report that over 12 years there has been no reduction in the proportion of patients with heart disease who smoke (20.3% in EUROASPIRE I, 21.2% in II, and 18.2% in III), but there has been a large increase in the proportion of younger female smokers. In addition, there has been a substantial increase in obesity and diabetes. In 1995-96, 25% of patients were obese and 17.4% had diabetes, this rose to 38% and 28% in 2006-7.

Further, despite large increases in the use of all classes of blood pressure lowering drugs, blood pressure management showed no improvement. Three out of five patients in all three surveys had raised blood pressure, and almost half of all patients remained above the recommended lipid targets. However, the number of patients with raised cholesterol has more than halved.

According to the authors, the results show how even when faced with a life-threatening disease it is difficult for people to change their behaviour. It is even harder when they don't have the professional support from a multidisciplinary team of nurses, dieticians, physiotherapists and doctors providing comprehensive prevention and rehabilitation programmes. They also point out that simply prescribing more cardioprotective drugs is clearly not enough and drug treatments need to be combined with professional lifestyle intervention.

They conclude by calling for comprehensive lifestyle programmes to be an integral part of health-care provision and health insurance plans for all patients with heart disease.

In an accompanying Comment, Mette Brekke and Bjørn Gjelsvik from The University of Oslo in Norway, say that the results give three messages: "First, to help patients with coronary heart disease achieve a healthy lifestyle should be mandatory and have high priority for doctors and health authorities. Second, therapeutic targets…[such as blood pressure and lipid targets] are too ambitious and might take focus away from important lifestyle issues. Finally…political action is needed to reverse the negative trends of obesity and sedentary habits, ranging from fighting against the fast food and sugar industries to safe bicycle paths and healthy school meals."

Mar 15
Food Allergies Limit Where And How Families Vacation
Families with food allergic individuals make significant lifestyle alterations when it comes to vacation planning, according to a study presented at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI).

Stephanie A. Leonard, MD, and colleagues looked at how having a food allergic family member impacts the vacation planning process using a survey that was filled out by 410 participants.

The survey results showed that food allergies limit where and how families with food allergic members vacation. Among those who vacation, 68% limit the type of destination with 90% vacationing solely in the U.S. and only 0.3% traveling to a remote location.

Thirty-six percent of respondents reported limiting the type of transportation they take for vacations with 80% avoiding ships and 65% avoiding planes. Typical travel preparations included obtaining extra epinephrine injectors (67%), packing allergen-free food (94%), requesting special airplane accommodations (53%) and researching where the closest hospital is located (48%).

Japan, India, China, Africa and beach resorts in foreign countries were among the destinations that survey responders were least likely to visit.

Once at their destination, 51% eat most of their meals in their own room and 86% arrange for special meals if the destination is equipped to make those accommodations.

Overall, medical care was found to be the most common limit on choice of vacation destination, which prompts a call for resorts to have better access to medical care and the option to ask for special arrangements for those with food allergies.

The AAAAI represents allergists, asthma specialists, clinical immunologists, allied health professionals and others with a special interest in the research and treatment of allergic disease. Established in 1943, the AAAAI has more than 6,500 members in the United States, Canada and 60 other countries.

Mar 12
Pregnancy And Asthmas: Suspending Asthma Treatment A Bad Option For Expectant Mothers
Pregnant women suffering from asthma run a greater risk of giving birth prematurely if they suspend their asthma treatments. According to a Université de Montréal study, published in Respiratory Medicine, the probability of suffering from hypertension during pregnancy also increases for women who interrupt their asthma treatment.

"Many pregnant women cease taking their asthma medication to protect the health of their child," says Faranak Firoozi, a researcher at the Université de Montréal's Department of Pharmacy. "However, they don't know that unchecked asthma can cause greater harm to the child than the medication."

According to Firoozi, there is no correlation between taking asthma medication, such as Pulmicort or Ventolin, and any congenital birth defect. In their study, Firoozi and colleagues debunk the myth that fetal gender has an affect on maternal asthma.

"Contrary to what some researchers have said, there is no difference between male and female hormones and how they impact bronchial sensitivity, which would in turn accentuate asthma symptoms when a woman carries a girl. This is good news," says Firoozi.

Firoozi used data collected by the Régie de l'assurance maladie, the Ministère de la santé et des services sociaux and the Institut de la statistique du Québec, on 13,000 pregnant women who consulted a physician for asthma between 1990 and 2002. The researcher analyzed the medication used by these women and their rate of hospitalization following their visit to the ER.

"Yes, asthma can have an important impact on pregnancy," says Firoozi. "Asthmatic women must be closely followed during pregnancy given the risks they pose to their own health and the health of their child. But the sex of the fetus has nothing to do with the asthmatic condition of pregnant women.

Mar 12
ADA Informs Patients About Osteoporosis Medications And Oral Health
Dental patients who have been alarmed or confused by recent news reports about how osteoporosis medications might affect their oral health now have a brochure to help them separate fact from fiction. The American Dental Association (ADA) collaborated with the National Osteoporosis Foundation to create the brochure, "Osteoporosis Medications and Your Dental Health," which will be available in dental offices this month.

The brochure explains that some patients who have taken bisphosphonates, a common class of drugs taken by those with osteoporosis or low-bone density, have developed bisphosphonate-associated osteonecrosis of the jaw. Osteonecrosis of the jaw is a rare but serious condition that can cause severe damage to the jawbone. This condition is diagnosed in patients who have an area of exposed bone in the jaw that persists for more than eight weeks, who have no history of radiation therapy to the head and neck and who are taking, or have taken, a bisphosphonate medication.

The chance of developing osteonecrosis of the jaw for patients who take bisphosphonates is unknown; however researchers agree that the chance appears to be very small. In fact, 94 percent of people diagnosed with osteonecrosis of the jaw are cancer patients who are or have received repeated high doses of bisphosphonates intravenously. The remaining 6 percent diagnosed with osteonecrosis of the jaw took oral bisphosphonates.

"Patients who take bisphosphonates for osteoporosis are encouraged to talk to their dentist so that their dentist can show them good oral hygiene practices as well as monitor their oral health," says Matthew Messina, D.D.S., ADA Consumer Advisor and a general dentist based in Ohio. "Patients should not stop taking their osteoporosis medications without speaking with their physicians."

According to the ADA, the benefits of osteoporosis medications greatly outweigh the risks of developing osteonecrosis of the jaw.

Osteoporosis is a serious condition that causes 2 million bone fractures a year, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation. Half of women and 20 percent of men older than 50 will break a bone due to osteoporosis. Bisphosphonates are commonly prescribed to prevent broken bones. Common bisphosphonate medications include alendronate (Fosamax(R)), ibandronate (Boniva(R)), risedonate (Actone(R)) and zoledronic acid (Reclast(R)).

Mar 12
Close Relationships Can Perpetuate Individual Health Problems
Human problems rarely occur in a vacuum, but persist as part of ongoing social interaction in which causes and effects are interwoven. One person's behavior can set the stage for what another does. A new study in the journal Family Process reveals that smoking can promote emotional connection for couples when both partners smoke. Health-compromising behaviors, such as smoking or weight gain, may sometimes persist because they preserve stability in a vital close relationship.

Researchers led by Michael J. Rohrbaugh and Varda Shoham of the University of Arizona had 25 couples discuss a health-related disagreement before and during a period of actual smoking, then use joysticks to rate how they had felt from moment to moment (from very positive to very negative) while watching themselves on video. One partner in each couple smoked despite having a heart or lung problem, and in some couples the other partner was a smoker as well.

The joy-stick ratings of partners in dual-smoker couples became more positive and more synchronous contingent upon lighting up - as if they were dancing to the same emotional tune. In single-smoker couples, however, both partners (smokers and non-smokers alike) report decreased positive emotions and less affective synchrony.

While most people think of health-compromising habits like smoking as a purely individual matter of motivation or addiction, this study shows that social factors beyond the smoker are important as well.

Having a partner who also smokes makes a huge difference in how smoking fits the couple's relationship (e.g. as an irritant or an ally), which in turn has implications for helping one or both partners quit.

"Looking beyond the patient can help to predict health outcomes, and relational processes are an important focus for intervention," the authors conclude. "Although prevailing conceptualizations cast nicotine addiction almost exclusively as an 'individual problem,' (findings such as ours) add credence to alternative, more contextual avenues of intervention."

Mar 12
Interactive Science Publishing Gives Researchers A Closer Look At A New Way To Spot Leaky Blood Vess
A group of scientists in California is trying to develop a cheaper, less invasive way to spot the early stages of retinal damage from diabetic retinopathy, the leading cause of blindness in American adults, before it leads to blindness. As described in the special Interactive Science Publishing (ISP) issue of Optics Express, the Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal, the scientists are using beams of light to measure blood flow in the back of the eye.

"The more severe the retinopathy, the lower the blood flow to the retina," says David Huang of the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. This observation may lead to better ways to diagnose the condition early.

Diabetic retinopathy is caused by damage to blood vessels in the eye's retina. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 5.5 million people over the age of 40 suffered from this condition in 2005, and this number is expected to triple by 2050 as the number of people with diabetes continues to increase. But there's hope; vision loss is preventable if retinal damage is detected early enough.

Affecting everyone who has type 1 diabetes and most people with type 2, diabetic retinopathy progresses in two stages. It begins when the small vessels that carry blood to and from the eye swell and leak, which can lead to slow vision loss as the health of the retina degenerates. In 20 percent of patients, the disease then progresses to advanced "proliferative" retinopathy. The oxygen-starved retina calls out to the circulatory system for help, which responds by forming new, abnormal blood vessels. These fragile vessels have thin walls that tend to scar and hemorrhage, causing sudden vision loss.

Huang and colleagues have adapted a spectroscopic technology called optical coherence tomography (OCT) -- normally used take cross-sectional pictures of the retina -- to directly detect the amount of blood flowing through retinal blood vessels. A diode on the OCT instrument beams infrared light into the blood vessel of interest. The frequency of light that bounces back is shifted slightly by the fast-moving blood, a Doppler effect similar to the pitch shift in the sound of a train as it rushes by.

Using this technique, the team estimated the total amount of blood flow in the retinal veins of two people with diabetes, to within 10 percent. They detected less blood flowing in the person who had advanced proliferative retinopathy. Further unpublished results in six more patients support this finding, but the next step, according to Huang, will be a larger clinical trial to verify this observation with statistical significance.

The most common method currently used by ophthalmologists to detect retinopathy is a fluorescein angiography, an injection of dye into retinal veins used to spot leaks. This moderately invasive technique can cause nausea and vomiting and, in rare cases, severe allergic reactions.

OCT may provide a more quantitative, less invasive way to diagnose the condition, says Huang. It may also cut costs by circumventing the expensive equipment required for flourescein angiography. "It just requires special scanning software that could easily be put on the OCT machines that most retinal specialists have," he says. He hopes that this combination of factors will give ophthalmologists an easy way to check for problems early and often.

Detecting leaky blood vessels early helps patients choose between different treatment options. "People with poor blood flow don't respond well to some of the laser treatments used for retinopathy, and they are at a higher risk for proliferative retinopathy," says Huang.

Mar 12
Long Term Ozone Pollution Linked To Respiratory Deaths
A new 18-year nationwide study of US cities found that long term exposure to high levels of ground ozone, a main component of smog, was linked to significantly higher risk of dying from respiratory diseases.

The study was the work of Dr George Thurston, a professor in the Department of Environmental Medicine at New York University School of Medicine (NYU) School of Medicine, a part of NYU Langone Medical Center, and colleagues, and is published online on 12 March in the New England Journal of Medicine, NEJM.

Many studies have linked atmospheric ozone to poor health, and others have shown that a high-ozone day, for example as a result of city smog, is linked to an increased risk of acute health problems the next day, such as more asthma and heart attacks. However, until this study, the effect of long term exposure to ozone in air pollution (the summertime haze) on health and deaths in particular was somewhat uncertain.

Thurston, who directed the air pollution exposure assessment part of the study, said in a separate press statement that:

"What this study says is that to protect the public's health, we can't just reduce the peaks, we must also reduce long-term, cumulative exposure."

For this study, Thurston and colleagues looked at the potential contribution of exposure to ozone to the risk of death from cardiopulmonary or heart and lung related causes and specifically to death from respiratory causes. It is the first study to separate the effect of ozone from that of fine particulate matter, the tiny particles of pollutant material that cars, factories and power plants release into the atmosphere.

They used data from the American Cancer Society Cancer Prevention Study II and correlated it with air pollution figures for 96 metropolitan areas of the US. They analyzed study records from 448,850 people, including 118,777 deaths over an 18 year period from 1982 to 2000.

The study records included cause of death (where relevant), and things like age, smoking status, body mass index, and diet, plus where the subjects lived, so these potential confounding factors could be taken into account in the statistical analysis.

They were able to find data on daily maximum ozone levels from April 1 to September 30 from 1977 to 2000, and data on fine particles in the air (2.5 microns or smaller in diameter, called PM2.5) for 1999 and 2000.

The researchers found that:

* When they used a single pollutant model, increased levels of either PM2.5 or ozone were significantly linked to increased risk of death from cardiopulmonary causes.

* When they used a two pollutant model, increased PM2.5 was linked to increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease, while ozone was linked to increased risk of death from respiratory causes.

* The risk of dying from respiratory disease was more than 30 per cent higher in metropolitan areas with the highest ozone levels than those with the lowest.

* The estimated risk of dying from respiratory disease went up by 4 per cent for each increase in 10 parts per billion (ppb) of ozone.

* The city with the highest mean daily maximum ozone concentration over the 18 years of the study was Riverside, California (104 ppb).

* This corresponded to about 50 per cent higher risk of dying from lung disease compared to no exposure to ozone.

* Los Angeles came a close second, with an estimated 43 per cent increased risk of dying from lung disease.

* Northeast cities were generally lower in ozone than California.

* For example, Washington DC and New York City, showed a 27 and 25 increased risk of death from respiratory causes linked to ozone exposures.

* The lowest ozone levels were in San Francisco with a 33 ppb long term average daily maximum that was linked to a 14 per cent estimated increase of death from respiratory causes.

* The link between ozone and risk of death from respiratory causes did not change when confounders were taken into account, and neither did it change when they used different statistical models.

The researchers concluded that:

"In this large study, we were not able to detect an effect of ozone on the risk of death from cardiovascular causes when the concentration of PM2.5 was taken into account. We did, however, demonstrate a significant increase in the risk of death from respiratory causes in association with an increase in ozone concentration."

When it is high in the atmosphere, ozone protects us against the harmful UV (ultraviolet) rays of the sun. But at ground level, inhaled ozone causes inflammation of respiratory tissue, according to the Canadian Center for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS). Here it is primarily a byproduct of pollution, a secondary pollutant created when nitrogen dioxide from cars, power plants and factories meets with oxygen in the presence of sunshine.

This type of ozone takes time to form and is more likely to found downwind of cities in suburbs and rural areas, unlike fine particulate matter, a primary pollutant which hangs around where it is produced, in the inner cities, near roads and industrial sites.

Lead author Dr Michael Jerrett, associate professor, Division of Environmental Health Sciences, at the University of California, Berkeley, said that in line with rising death rates from respiratory disease, "background levels of ozone have at least doubled since pre-industrial-revolution times".

Thurston said that even though New Yorkers were breathing air with ozone levels very nearly in compliance with the Environmental Protection Agency short term ozone limit of 75 ppb, their estimates showed they were at a significant 25 per cent higher risk of dying from respiratory causes compared to non exposure.

The researchers said that San Francisco has low levels of ozone pollution because the city is often covered with a blanket of fog that stops the sun coming through to catalyze the photochemical reaction between nitrogen dioxide and oxygen. And Los Angeles, which has high levels, sits in a basin which stops the air pollution from dispersing as rapidly as it does in other cities like San Francisco.

Thurston said the current EPA air quality standards only address the health effects of short-term daily peaks in ozone exposure and do not protect against the long-term cumulative effects. The current EPA level for short term (8-hour) ozone exposure is 75 ppb, which is higher than the 60 ppb recommended by the agency's own scientific advisors, the American Lung Assocation and several other public health bodies. The EPA is going to review the standard in the next 12 months.

Mar 09
Former Smoker Tells Of Losing Battle With Lung Cancer - Utah
As part of its adult cessation efforts within the Hispanic community, the Utah Department of Health's (UDOH) Tobacco Prevention and Control Program (TPCP) recently launched a series of TV spots that focus on the serious physical and emotional impact of tobacco on users and their families.

The campaign features 59-year-old Gerardo Ozorio, a former smoker who quit in June 2008 after smoking for 46 years. Two months later, Ozorio was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. Gerardo passed away on January 1, 2009, shortly after recording the ads. He will never know the immense impact his story will have on the Hispanic community.

"Gerardo's story puts a face on tobacco-related diseases and their tangible negative effects," said David Neville, TPCP media coordinator. "The ads are incredibly powerful - we hope the Ozorio family's story will motivate tobacco users to quit for good."

Gerardo, his wife Adolfina, and sons Gustavo and Ramón were all interviewed for the campaign. The message is that tobacco addiction impacts not only the smoker but everyone else around them, especially loved ones. As stated by Gustavo, "…nothing can prepare you in life to see your father sick this way. Nothing prepares you in life for something as horrible as cancer."

"We're very grateful to the Ozorio family - especially Gerardo-- for sharing their story in hopes it will encourage others to quit," Neville said.

The TRUTH campaign is part of Utah's comprehensive and proven approach to reducing the health and financial burdens tobacco use has on communities. The TRUTH and its partners provide programs to: prevent youth from starting to use tobacco; help tobacco users quit; protect Utahns from secondhand smoke; and eliminate tobacco-related disparities.

Mar 09
'Holy Powder' Ingredient Makes Membranes Behave For Better Health
Revered in India as "holy powder," the marigold-colored spice known as turmeric has been used for centuries to treat wounds, infections and other health problems. In recent years, research into the healing powers of turmeric's main ingredient, curcumin, has burgeoned, as its astonishing array of antioxidant, anti-cancer, antibiotic, antiviral and other properties has been revealed.

Yet little has been known about exactly how curcumin works inside the body.

Now, University of Michigan researchers led by Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy have discovered that curcumin acts as a disciplinarian, inserting itself into cell membranes and making them more orderly, a move that improves cells' resistance to infection and malignancy.

"The membrane goes from being crazy and floppy to being more disciplined and ordered, so that information flow through it can be controlled," said Ramamoorthy, a professor of chemistry and biophysics. The findings were published online March 3 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

The research project melds Ramamoorthy's past with his current scientific interests. As a child in India, he was given turmeric-laced milk to drink when he had a cold, and he breathed steam infused with turmeric to relieve congestion. Now as researcher he is fascinated with proteins that are associated with biological membranes, and he uses a technique called solid-state NMR spectroscopy to reveal atom-level details of these important molecules and the membranous milieu in which they operate.

"Probing high-resolution intermolecular interactions in the messy membrane environment has been a major challenge to commonly-used biophysical techniques," Ramamoorthy said. His research group recently developed the two-dimensional solid-state NMR technique that they used to probe curcumin-membrane communication in this study.

Scientists have speculated that curcumin does its health-promoting work by interacting directly with membrane proteins, but the U-M findings challenge that notion. Instead, the researchers found that curcumin regulates the action of membrane proteins indirectly, by changing the physical properties of the membrane.

Ramamoorthy's group now is collaborating with chemistry professor Masato Koreeda and U-M Life Sciences Institute researcher Jason Gestwicki to study a variety of curcumin derivatives, some of which have enhanced potency. "We want to see how these various derivatives interact with the membrane, to see if the interactions are the same as what we have observed in the current study," Ramamoorthy said. "Such a comparative study could lead to the development of potent compounds to treat infection and other diseases."

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