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

Colonic navigation

Nanotechnology helps deliver drugs to intestinal target

2010-11-05
(Press-News.org) Nanoparticles could help smuggle drugs into the gut, according to a study published this month in the International Journal of Nanotechnology.

There are several drugs that would have more beneficial therapeutic effects if they could be targeted at absorption by the lower intestine. However, in order to target the colon for treating colon cancer for instance, medication delivered by mouth must surmount several barriers including stomach acidity, binding to mucus layers, rapid clearance from the gut, and premature uptake by cells higher up the gastrointestinal tract. Being able to deliver a drug by mouth has several benefits over injection or suppository: ease of dosing, for instance, and better patient compliance.

Various methods have been tried, including coating drug molecules with a polymer shell. However, Kevin P. O'Donnell and Robert O. Williams III of the Division of Pharmaceutics, at The University of Texas at Austin, have reviewed the various techniques on offer and suggest that encapsulating a drug molecule within nanoparticles offers the best option for controlling drug delivery and targeting the colon.

The Texas team has reviewed the state of the art in nanotechnology for delivery of therapeutic agents to the colon. They explain that advances in particle engineering techniques have recently made it possible to made drug products on the nanoscale. Techniques such as spray drying, antisolvent methods, dialysis methods, emulsion methods and cryogenic methods are all now available for drug formulation. Converting a drug powder into nanoparticles can often render a compound that is poorly soluble in water soluble or increase bioavailability simply through an increase in the surface area to volume ratio. Smaller particles mean a bigger surface area to interact with absorbing surfaces in the gastrointestinal tract. Indeed, fatty but solid nanoparticles of the compound quercetin (a health supplement) are absorbed almost 6 times more effectively by the gut in nanoparticle form than the common drug suspension formulation.

The researchers explain that nanoparticle drug delivery could be particularly beneficial for patients suffering from inflammatory bowel diseases including Crohn's Disease, ulcerative colitis and irritable bowel syndrome, all which often require long-term treatment. However, they also add that because there are no digestive enzymes in the colon and its neutral pH it is a prime target for the delivery of therapeutic proteins, peptides, viral vectors, and nucleotides for a wide range of disease not simply those associated with the colon.

###"Nanoparticulate systems for oral drug delivery to the colon" in International Journal of Nanotechnology, 2010, 8, 1/2, 4-20

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Helical CT scans reduce lung cancer mortality by 20 percent compared to chest X-rays

2010-11-05
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — In a major new study announced today by the National Cancer Institute, researchers including Brown University biostatistian Constantine Gatsonis and his colleagues found that screening for lung cancer using helical CT scanning reduced lung cancer deaths by 20 percent compared to using chest X-rays. "The findings we're announcing today offer the first definitive evidence for the effectiveness of helical CT screening smokers for lung cancer " said Gatsonis, a lead biostatistician in the study and director of the American College of ...

Motor Neurone Disease Association study identifies MND biomarker

2010-11-05
A study funded by the Motor Neurone Disease (MND) Association, in collaboration with the Medical Research Council (MRC), has identified a common signature of nerve damage in the brains of MND patients. The study's exciting findings have been published in the prestigious journal Neurology (2 November 2010). These are the first results to be published from the ongoing Oxford Study for Biomarkers in MND/ALS (BioMOx). MND research is being held back by the lack of an early diagnostic test and predictable markers of the progression of the disease – biomarkers. Patients ...

The mind uses syntax to interpret actions

2010-11-05
Most people are familiar with the concept that sentences have syntax. A verb, a subject, and an object come together in predictable patterns. But actions have syntax, too; when we watch someone else do something, we assemble their actions to mean something, according to a new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. "There are oceans and oceans of work on how we understand languages and how we interpret the things other people say," says Matthew Botvinick of Princeton University, who cowrote the paper with his ...

AGU Journal highlights -- Nov. 4, 2010

2010-11-05
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently published in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres (JGR-D), and Journal of Geophysical Research - Earth Surface (JGR-F). 1. Exploring climate patterns linking stratosphere, lower atmosphere Roughly every 28 months, the zonal winds in the stratosphere at the equator cycle from easterly to westerly and then back to easterly. Known to atmospheric scientists as the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO), these shifting wind patterns result when the energy from ...

Discovery shows promise against severe side effects

2010-11-05
November 4, 2010 – (BRONX, NY) -- A team of scientists has found a way to eliminate a debilitating side effect associated with one of the main chemotherapy drugs used for treating colon cancer. The strategy used in their preclinical research—inhibiting an enzyme in bacteria of the digestive tract—could allow patients to receive higher and more effective doses of the drug, known as CPT-11 or Irinotecan. The study, spearheaded by scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and involving collaborators at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University ...

Volcanic eruptions affect rainfall over Asian monsoon region

Volcanic eruptions affect rainfall over Asian monsoon region
2010-11-05
Scientists have long known that large volcanic explosions can affect the weather by spewing particles that block solar energy and cool the air. Some suspect that extended "volcanic winters" from gigantic eruptions helped kill off dinosaurs and Neanderthals. In the summer following Indonesia's 1815 Tambora eruption, frost wrecked crops as far away as New England, and the 1991 blowout of the Philippines' Mount Pinatubo lowered average global temperatures by 0.7 degrees F--enough to mask the effects of greenhouse gases for a year or so. Now, in research funded by the ...

UC doctoral student presents research at international conference

2010-11-05
Clement Loo, a University of Cincinnati doctoral student in the philosophy program, was one of the featured researchers at the biennial meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association Nov. 4-6 in Montreal, Quebec. The association promotes research, teaching and free discussion of issues in the philosophy of science. Loo presented research themed around a Nov. 4 session on biology, evolution and selection. His paper was titled, "Invasive Species and Evaluating the Relative Significance of the Shifting Balance Theory." The paper focused on the R.A. Fisher and Sewall ...

National Science Foundation launches "Innovation Nation"

2010-11-05
The National Science Foundation (NSF) today released the first in a series of video programs called Innovation Nation, hosted by veteran science and technology correspondent Miles O'Brien and currently airing nationally on the the Science Channel. Innovation Nation is a quick look at what happens when genius meets possibility: stories about some of the NSF-funded inventions and research shaping our world. The 26-part video series is produced by CBS News Productions, in partnership with the National Science Foundation and Discovery Science. Each episode is one minute ...

Food-allergy fears drive overly restrictive diets

2010-11-05
Many children, especially those with eczema, are unnecessarily avoiding foods based on incomplete information about potential food-allergies, according to researchers at National Jewish Health. The food avoidance poses a nutritional risk for these children, and is often based primarily on data from blood tests known as serum immunoassays. Many factors, including patient and family history, physical examination, and blood and skin tests, should be used when evaluating potential food allergies. The oral food challenge, in which patients consume the suspected allergenic food, ...

MU grad student simulates 100 years of farming to measure agriculture's impact on land and water quality

2010-11-05
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Estimating the long-term impact of agriculture on land is tricky when you don't have much information about what a field was like before it was farmed. Some fields in Missouri started producing crops more than a century ago—long before anyone kept detailed records about the physical and chemical properties of the soil in a field. Researchers can't go back in time to revisit old fields in their pristine state, but a University of Missouri graduate student did perhaps the next best thing, using a detailed computer model to simulate, year-by-year, the effects ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Students with multiple marginalized identities face barriers to sports participation

Purdue deep-learning innovation secures semiconductors against counterfeit chips

Will digital health meet precision medicine? A new systematic review says it is about time

Improving eye tracking to assess brain disorders

Hebrew University’s professor Haitham Amal is among a large $17 million grant consortium for pioneering autism research

Scientists mix sky’s splendid hues to reset circadian clocks

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Outstanding Career and Research Achievements

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Early Career Scientists’ Achievements and Research Awards

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Education and Outreach Awards

Society for Neuroscience 2024 Promotion of Women in Neuroscience Awards

Baek conducting air quality monitoring & simulation analysis

Albanese receives funding for scholarship grant program

Generative AI model study shows no racial or sex differences in opioid recommendations for treating pain

New study links neighborhood food access to child obesity risk

Efficacy and safety of erenumab for nonopioid medication overuse headache in chronic migraine

Air pollution and Parkinson disease in a population-based study

Neighborhood food access in early life and trajectories of child BMI and obesity

Real-time exposure to negative news media and suicidal ideation intensity among LGBTQ+ young adults

Study finds food insecurity increases hospital stays and odds of readmission 

Food insecurity in early life, pregnancy may be linked to higher chance of obesity in children, NIH-funded study finds

NIH study links neighborhood environment to prostate cancer risk in men with West African genetic ancestry

New study reveals changes in the brain throughout pregnancy

15-minute city: Why time shouldn’t be the only factor in future city planning

Applied Microbiology International teams up with SelectScience

Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center establishes new immunotherapy institute

New research solves Crystal Palace mystery

Shedding light on superconducting disorder

Setting the stage for the “Frankfurt Alliance”

Alliance presents final results from phase III CABINET pivotal trial evaluating cabozantinib in advanced neuroendocrine tumors at ESMO 2024 and published in New England Journal of Medicine

X.J. Meng receives prestigious MERIT Award to study hepatitis E virus

[Press-News.org] Colonic navigation
Nanotechnology helps deliver drugs to intestinal target