Asthma attack treatment ‘find’ – BBC News


BBC News

Asthma attack treatment 'find'
BBC News
Scientists have stumbled on a potential new treatment for delayed asthma attacks which can occur several hours after exposure to allergens, a study shows. A team from Imperial College London found that blocking sensory nerve functions stopped a "late
Study sheds light on late phase of asthma attacksEurekAlert (press release)

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Poorly Controlled Asthma Can Boost Chances of Pregnancy Complications – U.S. News & World Report

Poorly Controlled Asthma Can Boost Chances of Pregnancy Complications
U.S. News & World Report
11 (HealthDay News) — Pregnant women with poorly controlled asthma are at increased risk for pregnancy complications and for having a low-birth weight or premature baby, a new study warns. Researchers reviewed data from 1975 to 2009 on more than 1
Uncontrolled asthma can affect children's schooling, family incomeModernMedicine

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Factors Before Birth Can Determine Child’s Risk of Allergies: Study – U.S. News & World Report


Eureka! Science News

Factors Before Birth Can Determine Child's Risk of Allergies: Study
U.S. News & World Report
IgE is associated with the development of allergies and asthma; higher levels indicate increased risk. The study found that IgE levels during infancy were 28 percent lower in children whose mothers were exposed to indoor pets during pregnancy (indoor
Factors that up asthma risk in kidsTimes of India
Prenatal exposure to pets may reduce allergy riskNetdoctor
Prenatal exposure to pets may lower early allergy risksScope (blog)
News-Medical.net
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Asthma, pain end woman’s bid to swim from Cuba to Florida – AHN | All Headline News


Globe and Mail

Asthma, pain end woman's bid to swim from Cuba to Florida
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A 61-year-old woman's bid to swim from Cuba to Florida ended Tuesday after she suffered shoulder pain and asthma nearly halfway through the 103-mile solo journey. Diana Nyad had swum for 29 hours since Sunday when she called it quits at 12:45 am
Asthma, injured shoulder end Nyad's bid to swim from Cuba to Key WestMilwaukee Journal Sentinel (blog)
Nyad Puts Early End to Cuba-to-Florida SwimNew York Times
Diana Nyad: Ocean Swells, Shoulder Pain and Asthma End Swim After 29 HoursNational Ledger
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Molecular Pathway, Asthma Inflammation and Future Treatment Options

Researchers Identify Molecular Pathway that leads to Inflammation in Asthma

Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine have identified a molecular pathway that helps explain how an enzyme elevated in asthma patients can lead to increased mucus production and inflammation that is characteristic of the lung condition. Their findings, reported online in this week’s Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveal unique interactions between biological molecules that could be targeted to develop new asthma treatments.

An enzyme called epithelial 15-lipoxygenase 1 (15LO1) metabolizes fatty acids to produce an eicosanoid known as 15 hydroxyeicosaetetranoic acid (15 HETE) and is elevated in the cells that line the lungs of asthma patients, explained Sally E. Wenzel, M.D., professor of medicine, Pitt School of Medicine, and director of the Asthma Institute at UPMC and Pitt School of Medicine. Her team showed in 2009 that the enzyme plays a role in mucus production.

“In this project, we found out 15 HETE is conjugated to a common phospholipid,” she said. “That complex, called 15HETE-PE, and 15LO1 behave as signaling molecules that appear to have a powerful influence on airway inflammation.”

By examining lung cells obtained by bronchoscopy from 65 people with asthma, the researchers found that both 15LO1 and 15HETE-PE displace an inhibitory protein called PEBP1 from its bond with another protein called Raf-1, which when freed can lead to activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase(ERK). Activated ERK is commonly observed in the epithelial, or lung lining, cells in asthma, but until now the reason for that was not understood.

“This is an important study as it directly explores the important role of 15-lipoxygenase 1 in the airway epithelial cells of patients with asthma, which immediately establishes the relevance to human disease,” said Mark T. Gladwin, M.D., chief, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, UPSOM.

Other experiments showed that knocking down 15LO1 decreased the dissociation of Raf-1 from PEBP1, which in turn reduced ERK activation. The pathway ultimately influences the production of factors involved in inflammation and mucus production.

“These results show us on both a molecular and mechanistic level and as mirrored by fresh cells from the patients themselves that the epithelial cells of people with asthma are very different from those that don’t have it,” Dr. Wenzel said. “It also gives us a potential treatment strategy: If we can prevent Raf-1 displacement, we might have a way of stopping the downstream consequences that lead to asthma.”

Co-authors include Jinming Zhao, Ph.D., Silvana Balzar, M.D., Claudette M. St. Croix, Ph.D., and John B. Trudeau, B.S., of UPSOM and the Asthma Institute; and Valerie B. O’Donnell Ph.D., of Cardiff University, United Kingdom. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.

Contact: Anita Srikameswaran
SrikamAV@upmc.edu
412-578-9193
University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences
Pitt team finds molecular pathway that leads to inflammation in asthma
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