(Press-News.org) Brain damage caused by oxygen deficiency at birth is one of the main causes of death in newborns worldwide. Using a small animal model, researchers from the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and DZNE tested treatment with 25 different active agents. Seven substances proved to be more effective than the standard therapy of artificial cooling: caffeine performed best. The results, published in the scientific journal Scientific Reports, could pave the way for new treatment options for newborns.
Children, who experience oxygen deprivation during birth – a condition known as “birth asphyxia” –, must be treated immediately, because this situation causes brain damage and poses an imminent life threat. In Germany, such issues are rare, but on a global level, birth asphyxia is one of the main causes of death among newborns. Globally, 1 million newborns die due to birth asphyxia per year. To address this, so-called therapeutic hypothermia has been used for several years. This involves lowering the babies’ body temperature to around 33 degrees Celsius for several days and then gradually raising it again. “The cooling slows down the metabolism and gives the brain the opportunity to regenerate. This increases the chances of survival and reduces the risk of late effects,” explains Prof. Hemmen Sabir. The scientist and physician is a research group leader at DZNE and a senior physician in the Department of Neonatology and Pediatric Intensive Care at UKB. “In high-income countries, the procedure is well established, however, about 40 percent of treated children do not benefit from it. And in low- and middle-income countries, the success rate is even much lower. The reasons for this are not entirely clear. However, they could be related to the fact that the newborns there have worse conditions than in high-income countries due to the health status of their mothers and possibly unnoticed infections. In view of this, there is an urgent need for alternative therapies. That’s where our study came in.”
Study with 25 Active Agents
To date, hypothermia is the only established therapy for treating the consequences of oxygen shortage during childbirth. Drug alternatives have been tested worldwide – mostly in animal studies. However, the results of these investigations are difficult to compare with each other because they were done by different research groups and mostly in unequal settings. Therefore, Hemmen Sabir and his team aimed to test a whole range of compounds under identical conditions. Based on studies performed by other research groups, they identified a total of 25 promising agents, which they then tested in a small animal model under oxygen deprivation. The animals were treated for up to six days: depending on the particular agent and its usage conditions, which were derived from previous studies. Of some agents, a first dose was administered shortly before oxygen deprivation. “Transferred to humans, this means that these agents are given while the mother is still giving birth. This may happen, for example, in the case of obvious risks or complications,” Sabir said. “However, only substances that can cross the placenta and therefore pass from the mother’s bloodstream to the unborn child are suitable for this. We sort of simulated this situation in our study.”
Caffeine Was Most Effective
Seven days after oxygen deprivation, the animal brains were examined for damage. “Treatment with caffeine was the most effective, the loss of brain matter was lowest here and also significantly less than with hypothermic treatment,” Sabir said. “Caffeine is known to have anti-inflammatory effects. Our study proves that caffeine is also extremely neuroprotective.” Six other agents also performed better than standard therapy. These comprise the hormone melatonin, a medicine against gout, an anti-allergy drug and fish oil. The total of seven particularly effective agents includes both ones that were administered before oxygen deprivation – such as caffeine – and ones whose application occurred only afterwards.
Starting Point for Follow-Up Studies
“The advantage of drug treatment is that it does not require complex medical equipment. If caffeine does indeed turn out to be the drug of choice, we would also have an agent that is cheap and readily available. This form of therapy would be particularly well suited to developing countries. But certainly it could also be used in high-income nations if it is superior to hypothermic treatment,” Sabir said. Before testing on humans, however, additional studies in animal models would be necessary, and the mechanisms of action of the various substances would have to be investigated in greater detail in order to identify the best possible agent or any possible combinations. The Bonn researchers are in contact with international partners for this purpose. “If further laboratory studies produce positive results, I am confident that we can expect clinical trials in humans very shortly from now,” Sabir said.
Funding
This study was funded by the “Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation”.
--
About the Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen, DZNE (German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases): DZNE is a research institute funded by the German federal and state governments, comprising ten sites across Germany. It is dedicated to diseases of the brain and nervous system, such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS, which are associated with dementia, movement disorders and other serious health impairments. To date, there are no cures for these diseases, which represent an enormous burden for countless affected individuals, their families, and the healthcare system. The aim of DZNE is to develop novel strategies for prevention, diagnosis, care, as well as treatment, and to transfer them into practice. To this end, DZNE cooperates with universities, university hospitals, research centers and other institutions in Germany and abroad. The institute is a member of the Helmholtz Association and belongs to the German Centers for Health Research. https://www.dzne.de/en
About the University Hospital Bonn: The UKB cares for about 500,000 patients per year, employs 9,000 people and has a balance sheet total of 1.6 billion euros. In addition to the more than 3,300 medical and dental students, a further 585 people are trained each year in numerous healthcare professions. The UKB is ranked number one among university hospitals in NRW in the science ranking as well as in the Focus clinic list and has the third highest case mix index (case severity index) in Germany. https://www.ukbonn.de/patient_innen/international/english
END
A new online platform to explore computationally calculated chemical reaction pathways has been released, allowing for in-depth understanding and design of chemical reactions.
Advances in computational chemistry have proven a great boon in the field of reaction design, leading to the discovery of new reaction pathways for the synthesis of high-value compounds. Computational chemistry generates much data, and the process of organizing and visualizing this data is vital to be able to utilize it for future research.
A team of researchers from Hokkaido University, led by Professor Keisuke Takahashi at the Faculty of Chemistry and Professor Satoshi ...
Recurrent cystitis (RC) is a frequent infection of the urinary tract and bladder, which is highly prevalent among postmenopausal women. Under healthy circumstances, the human vagina is home to a host of beneficial intestinal bacteria, such as Lactobacilli. However, in the case of urinary tract infections (UTIs), there is a decrease in the abundance of Lactobacilli and an increase in pathogenic bacteria, such as Escherichia coli (E. coli).
Previous studies have shown that changes in vaginal microbiota are a key underlying reason for the development of UTIs. Further, a few clinical trials have demonstrated the utility of Lactobacillus-containing vaginal ...
Amazon river dolphins are under threat from fishing and proposed new dams and dredging, research shows.
Scientists used satellite tags to track eight dolphins in the Peruvian Amazon, to discover where they went in relation to fishing areas and proposed dams and dredging sites.
On average, 89% of the dolphins’ home “range” (the area they live in) was used for fishing.
Dolphins were found to be an average of 252km from the nearest proposed dam and 125km from the nearest proposed dredging site.
While these are significant distances, the dolphins’ ranges ...
A study involving more than 745,000 adolescents from 41 countries across Europe and North America identified an increase in the amount of teenagers who underestimate their body weight.
Tracking data from 2002 to 2018, the peer-reviewed findings, published today in Child and Adolescent Obesity, demonstrate a noticeable decrease in those who overestimate their weight too.
The team of international experts, who carried out the research, warn these shifting trends in body weight perception could reduce the effectiveness of public health interventions aimed at weight reduction in young people.
“During this impressionable age, body weight perception ...
Professor Ian Wong has been appointed as Regius Professor of Pharmacy at Aston University
A Regius Professorship is a rare award bestowed on a university by the monarch - a mark of exceptionally high standards of research and teaching
Aston University’s Pharmacy School can trace its roots back to 1847.
Under embargo until 00:01 hrs BST 3 July 2023| Birmingham, UK
Aston University has appointed Professor Ian Wong as its new Regius Professor of Pharmacy.
Professor Wong is a pharmacoepidemiologist. His research focuses on the application ...
Babies and puppies have at least two things in common: aside from being newborns, they promote a positive emotional state in human mothers, leading them to articulate better when they speak. This finding is the result of research by an international team1 that included Alejandrina Cristia, a CNRS Researcher at the Laboratoire de sciences cognitives et psycholinguistique (LSCP) (CNRS/EHESS/ENS-PSL). Scientists studied the vocal behaviour of ten mothers to better understand why mothers articulate more when speaking to infants. Participants were asked to ...
COVID-19 vaccination helped reduce disparities in disease incidence between low- and high-income communities, according to a new analysis led by Cedars-Sinai investigators.
While lower-income communities had lower vaccination rates than higher-income communities, the impact of vaccination on disease incidence was larger in lower-income communities. As a result, investigators say, vaccination led to reduced income-related disparities in COVID-19 incidence.
The findings were published today in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a publication of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
“This study is a unique demonstration ...
Scientists have successfully tested a novel way of boosting honey bees’ immune systems to help them fend off deadly viruses, which have contributed to the major losses of the critical pollinator globally.
In a new study, the research team, which includes entomologists with the University of Florida, the Agricultural Research Service-USDA, Louisiana State University and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, showed that prompting honey bees’ cells to produce free radicals helped the bees weather a host of viruses. In fact, the treatment greatly reduced, and in some cases, nearly eliminated virus ...
ATLANTA — Dr. Jun Zou, a research assistant professor in the Institute for Biomedical Sciences at Georgia State University, has received a five-year, $2.67 million federal grant to study the link between gut dysbiosis, an imbalance in the microbiota, and cardiac disease in diabetes.
The grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute will be used to explore the role of diabetes-induced alteration of gut microbiota ...
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released a plan to ensure the Department’s Federally funded research is more open and accessible to the public, researchers, and journalists as part of a broader effort by the Biden-Harris Administration to make government data more transparent. With 17 National Laboratories and scores of programs that fund university and private research, DOE directly supports thousands of research papers per year, and, when this plan goes into effect, those findings will be available ...