PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New weapon in the fight against malnutrition

New weapon in the fight against malnutrition
2015-08-04
(Press-News.org) UBC scientists have opened the doors to new research into malnutrition by creating an animal model that replicates the imbalance of gut bacteria associated with the difficult-to-treat disease.

Malnutrition affects millions of people worldwide and is responsible for one-fifth of deaths in children under the age of five. Children can also experience impaired cognitive development and stunted growth.

The problem arises when people don't have enough food to eat and their diet lacks proper nutrients. The disease also has a lot to do with environmental factors and it has been a challenge to develop treatments to reverse malnutrition.

"Everyone thought that you simply needed to feed people and they'd be fine, but it didn't work," said Brett Finlay, a professor of microbiology and biochemistry at UBC. "The gut bacteria model allows us to figure out what's going on and to think about ways to fix it."

According to Finlay and UBC PhD student Eric Brown, malnutrition can be difficult to treat because it affects the good bacteria that live in the gut. People suffering from malnutrition often show signs of a disease known as environmental enteropathy, which is an inflammatory disorder of the small intestine and is likely caused by ingesting pathogenic fecal bacteria early in life from a contaminated environment. This shifts the balance of the original healthy bacteria in the gut and leads to poor absorption of nutrients.

The study, published today in Nature Communications, explains how the research team developed a mouse model to reproduce the symptoms of environmental enteropathy and malnourishment.

"We were able to see how a malnourished diet has a strong, measurable impact on the microbes in the small intestine," said Brown. "This new model gives us the opportunity to examine the impact of malnutrition on gut microbiology and assess the role of infections."

Pathogenic bacterial infections like salmonella and E. coli are huge problems in developing countries because they are much more harmful to people suffering from malnutrition, leading to chronic diarrhea and inflammation.

"Treatments and vaccines created in developed nations and tested on healthy people often don't work in malnourished populations," said Finlay, distinguished professor at UBC's Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies. "People suffering from malnutrition respond differently."

With an animal model, Finlay said researchers will be better able to test treatments and understand how malnutrition impacts a child's development.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
New weapon in the fight against malnutrition

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

In vitro cellular response to osteopathic manipulative therapy provides proof of concept

2015-08-04
In vitro studies of the cellular effects of modeled osteopathic manipulative therapy (OMT) provide proof of concept for the manual techniques practiced by doctors of osteopathic medicine (DOs), according to researchers from the University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix. The study, published in The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, focused on modeling two common OMT techniques, myofascial release and counterstrain. Researchers subjected fibroblast matrices to various strains and employed a scratch wound strain model to test the ability of OMT ...

New strain of yeast to be helpful in toxic waste removal

New strain of yeast to be helpful in toxic waste removal
2015-08-04
A new strain of yeast called Yarrowia lipolytica Y-3492 was found to be very active in waste water treatment. The discovery was made by by microbiologists from Kazan Federal University during their research at Western Siberian peat bogs. The strain is said to be effective against nitro compounds which are used in explosives, herbicides, insecticides, polymers, dyes, and some medications. Oil refineries and military equipment plants produce especially high amounts of such waste. The research was conducted with the use of widely known trinitrotoluene (TNT). It is well-known ...

Natural cocktail used to prevent, treat disease of wine grapes

Natural cocktail used to prevent, treat disease of wine grapes
2015-08-04
COLLEGE STATION -- It's happy hour at a lab in College Station. The cocktail of choice, developed by scientists with Texas A&M AgriLife Research, is one that stops or prevents the deadly Pierce's disease on wine grapes. The discovery could turn a new leaf on the multimillion-dollar U.S. wine industry. Hear, hear. The study, published in the academic journal PLOS ONE, describes the use of four bacteriophages that were identified for their ability to attack the bacteria that causes the devastating disease in grapes and several other plants. A bacteriophage, or phage, ...

Crop pests outwit climate change predictions en route to new destinations

2015-08-04
A paper from the University of Exeter has highlighted the dangers of relying on climate-based projections of future crop pest distributions and suggests that rapid evolution can confound model results. Crop pests and pathogens are destructive organisms which pose a huge threat to food security and land management across the world. Much research has been carried out into why the pests are spreading, where they are likely to establish next, what damage they will do and what can be done to reduce their impact. In a new synthesis, published today in the Annual Review of ...

Brain infection study reveals how disease spreads from gut

Brain infection study reveals how disease spreads from gut
2015-08-04
Diagnosis of deadly brain conditions could be helped by new research that shows how infectious proteins that cause the disease spread. The study reveals how the proteins - called prions - spread from the gut to the brain after a person or animal has eaten contaminated meat. Scientists say their findings could aid the earlier diagnosis of prion diseases - which include variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) in people and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cows. In people, the disease remains very rare - 229 people have died from vCJD since it was first identified ...

New clinical practice guidelines address temperature management during heart surgery

2015-08-04
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, and the American Society of ExtraCorporeal Technology have released a set of clinical practice guidelines to address management of a patient's temperature during open heart surgery. The guidelines appear in the August issue of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery and were published simultaneously in two other journals. Numerous strategies are currently used to optimally manage the practice of cooling the blood, temperature maintenance (control of body temperature during surgery), and rewarming ...

From pluripotency to totipotency

2015-08-04
This news release is available in French. While it is already possible to obtain in vitro pluripotent cells (ie, cells capable of generating all tissues of an embryo) from any cell type, researchers from Maria-Elena Torres-Padilla's team have pushed the limits of science even further. They managed to obtain totipotent cells with the same characteristics as those of the earliest embryonic stages and with even more interesting properties. Obtained in collaboration with Juanma Vaquerizas from the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine (Münster, Germany), these ...

Exercise during teen years linked to lowered risk of cancer death later

2015-08-04
Women who exercised during their teen years were less likely to die from cancer and all other causes during middle-age and later in life, according to a new study by investigators at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the Shanghai Cancer Institute in China. The study was published online July 31 in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association of Cancer Research. Lead author Sarah Nechuta, Ph.D., MPH, assistant professor of Medicine in the Vanderbilt Epidemiology Center, said understanding the long-term impact of modifiable ...

New Medicaid health care program for disabled adults improves aspects of patients' care

2015-08-04
GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- UF Health researchers have found that care linked to heart attacks and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, among disabled adults covered by Medicaid has improved with the expansion of a new health care program in Texas over the last decade. This approach to health care delivery is growing in popularity across the country, with the number of states implementing similar programs increasing from eight in 2004 to 18 in 2014. These programs have two components: managed care and home- and community-based health services. Managed care is reputed ...

Seagrass thrives surprisingly well in toxic sediments -- but still dies all over the world

Seagrass thrives surprisingly well in toxic sediments -- but still dies all over the world
2015-08-04
Toxic is bad. Or is it? New studies of seagrasses reveal that they are surprisingly good at detoxifying themselves when growing in toxic seabed. But if seagrasses are stressed by their environment, they lose the ability and die. All over the world seagrasses are increasingly stressed and one factor contributing to this can be lack of detoxification. Seagrass meadows grow along most of the world's coasts where they provide important habitats for a wide variety of life forms. However in many places seagrass meadows have been lost or seriously diminished and in several places, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cancer is a disease of aging, but studies of older adults sorely lacking

Dietary treatment more effective than medicines in IBS

Silent flight edges closer to take off, according to new research

Why can zebrafish regenerate damaged heart tissue, while other fish species cannot?

Keck School of Medicine of USC orthopaedic surgery chair elected as 2024 AAAS fellow

Returning rare earth element production to the United States

University of Houston Professor Kaushik Rajashekara elected International Fellow of the Engineering Academy of Japan

Solving antibiotic and pesticide resistance with infectious worms

Three ORNL scientists elected AAAS Fellows

Rice bioengineers win $1.4 million ARPA-H grant for osteoarthritis research

COVID-19 booster immunity lasts much longer than primary series alone, York University-led study shows

Bentham Science joins United2Act

When thoughts flow in one direction

Scientists identify airway cells that sense aspirated water and acid reflux

China’s major cities show considerable subsidence from human activities

Drugs of abuse alter neuronal signaling to reprioritize use over innate needs

Mess is best: disordered structure of battery-like devices improves performance

Skyrmions move at record speeds: a step towards the computing of the future

A third of China’s urban population at risk of city sinking, new satellite data shows

International experts issue renewed call for Global Plastics Treaty to be grounded in robust science

Novel material supercharges innovation in electrostatic energy storage

A common pathway in the brain that enables addictive drugs to hijack natural reward processing has been identified by Mount Sinai

China’s sinking cities indicate global-scale problem, Virginia Tech researcher says

Study finds potential new treatment path for lasting Lyme disease symptoms

Metabolic health before vaccination determines effectiveness of anti-flu response

Department of Energy announces $16 million for traineeships in accelerator science & engineering

MRE 2024 Publication of Enduring Significance Awards

UCalgary researchers quantify the connection between homelessness and mental health disorders

Fourteen years after the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, endemic fishes face an uncertain future

For more open and equitable public discussions on social media, try “meronymity”

[Press-News.org] New weapon in the fight against malnutrition