Popular Articles

GeoVax Labs, Inc. Provides Clinical Studies Update
GeoVax Labs, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: GOVX), an Atlanta-based HIV/AIDS vaccine development company announced updates on its ongoing and planned human clinical trials.
generic viagra online
RCN Responds To New Report Into Nursing Regulation
Responding to the annual report from the Council for Healthcare Regulatory Excellence (CHRE), Dr. Peter Carter, Chief Executive & General Secretary of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), said:
News of the day
Ortho Clinical Diagnostics Launches 24-Hour Remote Monitoring Center
Ortho Clinical Diagnostics announced the launch of its Remote Monitoring Center, the first 24-7 central command center in the in vitro diagnostic industry that continuously tracks the condition of laboratory instrument performance. Using proprietary remote diagnostic tools leveraging more than 30 years of field engineering experience, the Remote Monitoring Center helps customers identify specific service needs up to 30 days in advance. This innovative service detects and predicts potential instrument problems before they interrupt the ability of the laboratory to deliver quality test results. With the Remote Monitoring Center, Ortho Clinical Diagnostics fundamentally changes the way laboratories manage and maintain instruments so they can deliver timely and accurate results to physicians and patients.
Mental Health

Researchers Make Progress Toward Early Identification Of Muscular Dystrophy

The saying "Knowing is half the battle" is never more true than when discussing early treatment of disease. Muscular dystrophy is one such disease where patients can benefit from early treatment. Now, new research is moving doctors and scientists closer to disease diagnosis in advance of patient symptoms. A team of University of Birmingham researchers used mice as model animals to study the key proteins involved in two types of muscular dystrophy (MD): the most severe MD form, Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), and a more mild form, Limb Girdle MD (LGMD-1c). As described in their new report published in Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM), dmm.biologists.org, the researchers found disrupted stem cell function and delays of skeletal muscle formation in embryos of MD-like mice. .The severity of these embryonic abnormalities closely corresponded to the severity of symptoms seen in DMD or Limb Girdle MD. This study demonstrates that there are prenatal signs for muscular dystrophy, and suggests that both types of MD might be detected in utero or shortly after birth. This work has the potential to create a better quality of life for DMD children. It is now clear that early treatment significantly improves life expectancy and quality of life for DMD children. However, diagnosis is often delayed until the disease is well under way, around ages 3-5 years, and treatment thus often begins between ages 4-8 years, when the disease is already established. This new research indicates that understanding these MD-associated proteins can lead to earlier diagnoses and treatment for DMD/LGMD patients. This in turn leads to longer life and enhanced quality of life for individuals affected by these diseases. Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy is not only the most severe but also the most common form of muscular dystrophy. It is more commonly found in boys, at a rate of 1 in 3500. DMD causes progressive weakness in the skeletal muscles, and most DMD children require a wheelchair by age 11. DMD later results in respiratory muscle and heart muscle failure. This eventually leads to death sometime between the teenage years and early 30s, largely depending on the age that treatment is started. Whereas untreated children die around 17-18 years of age, children who are treated early live longer. The report, "Muscular dystrophy begins early in embryonic development and derives from stem cell loss and disrupted skeletal muscle formation" was authored by Deborah Merrick, Lukas Kurt Josef Stadler, Dean Larner, and Janet Smith of the School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. The report is published in the July/August issue of Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM), a research journal published by The Company of Biologists, a non-profit based in Cambridge, UK. Sarah Sharpe The Company of Biologists


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):