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

Research uncovers potential preventive for central line infection

2013-09-12
(Press-News.org) A team of researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center has developed an antibody that could prevent Candida infections that often afflict hospitalized patients who receive central lines.

Margaret Hostetter, MD, director of infectious diseases at Cincinnati Children's, and her team developed the antibody, which prevents Candida albicans from binding to heparin, thereby stopping the formation of biofilm in a rat model of catheter-associated infection. A biofilm is a multi-layered buildup of millions of microorganisms that coat the inside of the catheter

The study was published online in July in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Earlier research by Hostetter's team showed that heparin binds to Candida albicans, a yeast that resides on our skin and in our gastrointestinal tract. Candida uses its ability to bind heparin to elude the body's immune response and to form biofilms. When biofilms form on the inside of catheters, groups of microorganisms can break off into the bloodstream and cause serious infections.

"Standard anticoagulants used in catheters may facilitate biofilm formation by microbes," says Dr. Hostetter. "Understanding this process can lead to new strategies for prevention of line infections."

In hospitalized patients with central venous catheters, Candida albicans may gain entrance to the body and form a biofilm in a central venous catheter. When a biofilm disperses, the yeast will enter the bloodstream and may be carried to other organs, such as the kidneys, the liver, or the spleen.

When the antibody is modified to be compatible with humans, clinical trials of the treatment can begin in humans, says Dr. Hostetter.

Collaborators on the study included researchers from Duke University Medical Center, the University of Cincinnati and the University of Wisconsin.

###

About Cincinnati Children's

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center ranks third in the nation among all Honor Roll hospitals in U.S.News and World Report's 2013 Best Children's Hospitals ranking. It is ranked #1 for cancer and in the top 10 for nine of 10 pediatric specialties. Cincinnati Children's, a non-profit organization, is one of the top three recipients of pediatric research grants from the National Institutes of Health, and a research and teaching affiliate of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. The medical center is internationally recognized for improving child health and transforming delivery of care through fully integrated, globally recognized research, education and innovation. Additional information can be found at http://www.cincinnatichildrens.org. Connect on the Cincinnati Children's blog, via Facebook and on Twitter.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chest pain duration can signal heart attack

2013-09-12
DETROIT – Patients with longer-lasting chest pain are more likely having a heart attack than those with pain of a shorter duration, according to a study by researchers at Henry Ford Hospital. The study is published in the September issue of Critical Pathways in Cardiology. Every year, eight to 10 million people in the U.S. go to emergency departments for chest pain. But only 15󈞊 percent of them are having a heart attack. The characteristics of chest pain are important to diagnosing the cause. Researchers studied the relationship between the length of time ...

Discovery of cell division 'master controller' may improve understanding and treatment of cancer

2013-09-12
Hanover, NH – In a study to be published in the journal Nature, two Dartmouth researchers have found that the protein cyclin A plays an important but previously unknown role in the cell division process, acting as a master controller to ensure the faithful segregation of chromosomes during cell division. Cell division is the process in which cells reproduce by splitting into two identical copies. This process happens trillions of times in an average person's lifetime. To generate two identical copies, cells must separate their chromosomes precisely, an event that relies ...

Climate change may speed up forests' life cycles

2013-09-12
DURHAM, N.C. -- Many climate studies have predicted that tree species will respond to global warming by migrating via seed dispersal to cooler climates. But a new study of 65 different species in 31 eastern states finds evidence of a different, unexpected response. Nearly 80 percent of the species aren't yet shifting their geographic distributions to higher latitudes. Instead, they're staying in place -- but speeding up their life cycles. The Duke University-led study, published online Wednesday in the peer-reviewed journal Global Change Biology, is the first to show ...

Crop-raiding elephants flee tiger growls

2013-09-12
Wild Asian elephants slink quietly away at the sound of a growling tiger, but trumpet and growl before retreating from leopard growls, researchers at the University of California, Davis, have found. The work, published Sept. 11 in the journal Biology Letters, could help Indian farmers protect their crops from marauding elephants and save the lives of both people and animals. "We noticed that the elephants were more scared of tigers than of leopards," said Vivek Thuppil, who carried out the work with Richard Coss, professor of psychology at UC Davis, as part of his Ph.D. ...

Who's got guts? Young infants expect animals to have insides

2013-09-12
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A team of researchers has shown that 8-month-old infants expect objects they identify as animals to have insides. The study appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. University of Illinois professor of psychology Renée Baillargeon, who led the new study with graduate student Peipei Setoh, said that many psychologists have theorized that babies are born with core physical and psychological frameworks that help them navigate the world. For instance, when babies see a self-propelled object, their core physical framework leads them ...

Researchers move endangered mussels to save them

2013-09-12
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Researchers have transported two endangered freshwater mussel species from Pennsylvania to Illinois in an attempt to re-establish their populations in the western part of the Ohio River Basin. The team of biologists, led by Jeremy Tiemann, of the Illinois Natural History Survey (INHS), traveled to the site of a bridge-replacement project on Pennsylvania's Allegheny River to collect northern riffleshell (Epioblasma rangiana) and clubshell (Pleurobema clava) mussels. The INHS is a division of the Prairie Research Institute at the University of Illinois. The ...

2 NASA satellites analyze Hurricane Humberto's clouds and rainfall

2013-09-12
VIDEO: In this satellite flyby animation, NASA's TRMM satellite passed over Humberto on Sept. 10 and measured rainfall rates of up to 2 inches/50 mm per hour (red) in the large... Click here for more information. Two NASA satellites passed over the hurricane in the Eastern Atlantic on Sept. 10 gathering information about the environment of Hurricane Humberto. NASA's Aqua satellite gathered infrared and visible data on Humberto's clouds while NASA's TRMM satellite measured ...

Plants in space: A novel method for fixing plant tissue samples maximizes time, resources, and data

2013-09-12
At work on the International Space Station, researchers studying plant and cell growth in space encountered a challenge. Imaging revealed interesting spaceflight-associated root morphologies. They needed to fix the tissues for further study back on Earth, but conventional fixation methods require separate fixatives depending on whether the sample is intended for molecular or morphological study. If the scientists wanted to study how spaceflight affected patterns of gene expression central to morphological patterns of cell growth, they needed a fixation method that would ...

The eyes have it

2013-09-12
More than one billion people worldwide rely on fish as an important source of animal protein, states the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. And while fish provide slightly over 7 per cent of animal protein in North America, in Asia they represent about 23 per cent of consumption. Humans consume low levels of methylmercury by eating fish and seafood. Methylmercury compounds specifically target the central nervous system, and among the many effects of their exposure are visual disturbances, which were previously thought to be solely due to methylmercury-induced ...

Study provides insights on protecting world's poor from climate change

2013-09-12
The worst impacts of climate change on the world's poorest fishing communities can likely be avoided by careful management of the local environment and investing in the diversification of options for local people, according to the Wildlife Conservation Society and James Cook University. Climate change is already putting pressure on fishers who depend on nature for their livelihoods. In a new study, scientists found large differences in the potential to adapt based on the local mixture of social and environmental characteristics, requiring a variety of management approaches ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Your fingers wrinkle in the same pattern every time you’re in the water for too long

ChatGPT helps pinpoint precise locations of seizures in the brain, aiding neurosurgeons

Addressing hearing loss may reduce isolation among the elderly

CAR-T cell therapy for cancer causes “brain fog,” Stanford Medicine-led study shows

First evidence of mother-offspring attachment types in wild chimpanzees

Mental distress among females following 2021 abortion restrictions in Texas

First-generation and low-income students in the national medical student body

U.S. children living with a parent with substance use disorder

Changes in physical and mental health after the end of SNAP emergency allotments

Drug to slow Alzheimer’s well tolerated outside of clinical trial setting

Exposome Moonshot launching in Washington D.C.

Universe decays faster than thought, but still takes a long time

City of Hope opens the largest outpatient cancer center in its national system

Astrophysicist searches for gravitational waves in new way

Must-know facts for women about heart, kidney and metabolic health

The how and why of the brain’s division across hemispheres

Wily parasite kills human cells and wears their remains as disguise

Uncovering the evolution of Hezbollah’s political communication strategy

Cell death discovery could lead to next-gen drugs for neurodegenerative conditions

The kids are hungry: Juvenile European green crabs just as damaging as adults, WSU study finds

Helping birds and floating solar energy coexist

Microbial ‘phosphorus gatekeeping’ found at center of study exploring 700,000 years of iconic coastline

Extended reality boccia shows positive rehabilitation effects

Detecting vibrational sum-frequency generation signals from molecules confined within a nanoscale gap using a tightly confined optical near-field

Opioid prescribing standards changed practices in BC, but with caveats

AI could be the future for preserving marginalized cultures, say experts

Researchers from The University of Warwick warn marginalized young adults in low- and middle-income countries face “growing online abuse”

Credit ratings are a key check on CEO overconfidence in corporate acquisitions

Can the U.S. develop a strong national science diplomacy strategy?

Failure to focus on covid suppression led to avoidable UK deaths, says expert

[Press-News.org] Research uncovers potential preventive for central line infection