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Growth Factor May Explain Why African-Americans Are At Greater Risk Of Hypertension And Kidney Disease
Physician-scientists from NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center believe that a heightened level a certain growth factor in the blood may explain why blacks have a greater prevalence of hypertension and kidney disease compared to whites. Results from a new study are the first to show that an elevated level of a protein, called transforming growth factor B1 (TGF-B1), raises the risk of hypertension and renal disease in humans.
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Yeast 'DNA Damage Sensor' Provides Chemotherapy Resistance Clue
Cancer Research UK scientists have been part of an international collaboration that has revealed the structure of a protein found in simple yeast cells and shown how it flags up damaged DNA for repair. The results of their study are published in Nature*. The finding may provide clues as to how some cancer cells become resistant to certain chemotherapy drugs.
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Managing Patient Expectations Of Antibiotics, Australia
Health professionals are being given clear guidelines for prescribing particular antibiotics in different diagnostic scenarios in the latest National Prescribing Service (NPS) education program, Management of specific respiratory tract infections. The therapeutic program aims to address inappropriate antibiotic use, particularly for treating acute bronchitis, sore throat and other respiratory tract infections, but also gives prescribers the facts to be confident prescribing symptomatic treatments.
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Animal TB "Tracker" To Speed Drug And Vaccine Studies

Johns Hopkins researchers have developed a novel way to monitor in real time the behavior of the TB bacterium in mouse lungs noninvasively pinpointing the exact location of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The new monitoring system is expected to speed up what is currently a slow and cumbersome process to test the safety and efficacy of various TB drug regimens and vaccines in animals. Plans are already under way for developing a similar system to monitor TB disease in humans. A report on the system appears in the July 16 issue of the online journal Public Library of Science (PLoS One). "Worldwide there are some 9.2 million new infections with TB each year, and new drug combinations are needed fast to treat increasingly resistant strains of the bacterium," says senior investigator Sanjay Jain, M.D., an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins Children"s Center and director of the Center for Infection and Inflammation Imaging Research in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Hopkins. "Because virtually all drugs are tested in animals first, the TB tracker will play a critical role in such preclinical studies." "This new way to locate and study the disease and its behavior in animals should speed studies of TB"s response to experimental vaccines, to new drugs and old ones and should accelerate our assessment of whether a treatment is working or not," Jain added. TB treatment in humans and animals takes much longer than treating other bacterial infections, so compliance with lengthy and complicated regimens can often be problematic. Also, some strains are already resistant to all drugs currently available, so finding clues to how the bacterium responds to drug treatment is essential. In mice, the tracker works by infecting them with a "designer" strain of TB, developed by the Hopkins team to absorb radio-tracing chemicals. The chemicals light up the germ and any infected tissues in the lung, permitting an image captured by CT, PET and SPECT scanners. Because the new system tracks disease progression over time within the same group of live animals, fewer animals are needed than in conventional animal testing protocols. The tracker will be useful for studying TB in larger animals, including rabbits, guinea pigs and nonhuman primates, whose TB infection mimics human disease much more closely than infection in mice. Co-investigators include: Stephanie Davis, Nicholas Be, Gyanu Lamichhane, Sridhar Nimmagadda, Martin Pomper and William Bishai, all of Hopkins. Primary funding for the study came from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, with additional support from the National Institutes of Health. Johns Hopkins Medicine


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