plus 2 more, “Transplants for asthma patients? - Omaha World-Herald” |
- Transplants for asthma patients? - Omaha World-Herald
- Breathless: New study looks at asthma in rural Midwest - LimaOhio.com
- Smoking pregnant increases baby's asthma risk: Study - canada.com
| Transplants for asthma patients? - Omaha World-Herald Posted: 05 Apr 2010 09:59 PM PDT LOS ANGELES -- Cases of severe, therapy-resistant asthma are on the rise worldwide, and new strategies are needed to treat the estimated 100,000 people who die of asthma every year. Researchers from the National Institutes of Health and their colleagues are exploring a radical solution bone marrow transplants. Scientists know the transplants have the potential to reset the immune system and calm an overactive inflammatory response. They are already used to treat patients who develop acute graft-versus-host disease following an organ transplant. Asthma also involves excessive inflammation, prompting the airways to constrict and the lungs to secrete mucus. Why not reboot the immune systems with a bone marrow transplant? To test their theory, the researchers gave the transplants to asthmatic mice that were allergic to ragweed. Then, when the mice were exposed to ragweed, their allergic and asthmatic symptoms (measured by chemical levels in their blood) decreased significantly. The scientists concluded that the bone marrow transplants helped the mice by restoring a healthy balance of immune system cells known as Th1 and Th2. The results were published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Dr. Eva Mezey, who heads the adult stem cell research section at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research in Bethesda, Md., told HealthDay that "it's very likely that the intervention would work in humans." But she emphasized that more research is needed before bone marrow transplants could be tested in people with severe asthma. For instance, although the mice got their bone marrow through an intravenous injection, human patients might do better with an aerosol because it could deliver the cells directly to the lungs, she said.
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| Breathless: New study looks at asthma in rural Midwest - LimaOhio.com Posted: 05 Apr 2010 09:24 PM PDT Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Smoking pregnant increases baby's asthma risk: Study - canada.com Posted: 05 Apr 2010 07:36 PM PDT VIENNE - Smoking during pregancy increases the risk of a baby developing asthma up to sixfold, said a Swedish study published at the European Respiratory Society's annual congress on Monday. The study by Professeur Anders Bjerg of the Sunderby central hospital in Norrbotten and his specialists showed that smoking leads to babies being born underweight, a fact that has an impact on the development of asthma. The Swedish doctors studied asthma in about 3,400 children between 1996 and 2008. The study found that babies of smoking mothers had an average weight of 211 grammes (7.44 ounces) less than those of mothers who do not smoke. Nearly a quarter (24.3 percent) of smoking mothers' babies weighed less than 2.5 kilogrammes at birth against 4.1 percent for those of non-smoking women. In underweight children of women who smoked throughout their pregnancy the asthma risk was at 23.5 percent, against 7.7 percent in children of non-smoking mothers who were born with an average weight. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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