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

Fighting cancer at your local Indian restaurant

Tel Aviv University says turmeric might be 'the right spice' to fight colon cancer

Fighting cancer at your local Indian restaurant
2011-03-03
(Press-News.org) Turmeric, a bright yellow spice from south Asia belonging to the ginger family, is the main ingredient in curries — and ancient wisdom suggests that it's also good for your health. Taking this wisdom to the laboratory, Tel Aviv University researchers have discovered that turmeric's active ingredient called curcumin amplifies the therapeutic activity of highly toxic anti-inflammatory drugs used to fight colon cancer when used at high doses.

Dr. Shahar Lev-Ari of Tel Aviv University's School of Public Health at the Sackler Faculty of Medicine and his colleagues have found that curcumin can fight cancer when used in combination with a popular anti-inflammatory drug, alleviating the inflammatory response caused when cancer takes root in the body. A treatment based on this finding has already had promising results in human clinical trials.

"Although more testing will be needed before a possible new drug treatment is developed," says Dr. Lev-Ari, "one could combine curcumin with a lower dose of a cancer anti-inflammatory drug, to better fight colon cancer." The results of the new study have been published in the journal Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology.

Alleviating unwanted side effects

Research in the last few decades has shown that cancer is linked to inflammation. Several lines of evidence demonstrate that chronic inflammation in the stomach can cause gastric cancer and that inflammation in the liver from hepatitis can lead to liver cancer.

Dr. Lev-Ari and his colleagues found that Celecoxib, a popular anti-inflammatory drug commonly used to treat arthritis, also inhibits proliferation of colon cancer in laboratory settings. Curcumin increases the anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory effects of Celecoxib while reducing its dose, thus reducing its toxic side-effects, including the rate of heart attack and stroke.

The effect of using a curcumin concentrate to improve the effects of cancer drugs was first proposed by Dr. Lev-Ari when he was a graduate student at Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine under the supervision of Prof. Nadir Arber and Prof. Dov Lichtenberg.

Both co-supervisors were eager to test the possible health benefits described in folk medicine but were looking for hard evidence. "We would like to use this treatment for patients with all types of cancers," says Prof. Arber. "It has the promise of being an important life-extending therapy, particularly for non-curable pancreatic cancer, suggested by the very promising results we achieved for 20 pancreatic cancer patients."

Putting shelved cancer drugs back into circulation

Previous in vitro and in vivo experiments conducted by the Tel Aviv University team show that curcumin inhibits an enzyme known as COX-2 (cyclooxygenase-2), believed to cause inflammation. The team's research demonstrates that curcumin neutralizes oxygen free radicals, which are believed to play an important role in carcinogenesis.

These effects may be the basis for drug treatment of both inflammation and cancer through the combination of curcumin and Celecoxib. And it may also help return previously shelved potent anticancer drugs –– taken out of use due to high toxicity –– back to the market under lower dosage indications.



INFORMATION:

American Friends of Tel Aviv University (www.aftau.org) supports Israel's leading, most comprehensive and most sought-after center of higher learning. Independently ranked 94th among the world's top universities for the impact of its research, TAU's innovations and discoveries are cited more often by the global scientific community than all but 10 other universities.

Internationally recognized for the scope and groundbreaking nature of its research and scholarship, Tel Aviv University consistently produces work with profound implications for the future.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Fighting cancer at your local Indian restaurant

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Women's Voices Now Presents: Women's Voices from the Muslim World: a Short-Film Festival in Hollwood, March 17-19th - Opening Night Honoring "Women Warriors" Hosted by Author Christina Asquith

Womens Voices Now Presents: Womens Voices from the Muslim World: a Short-Film Festival in Hollwood, March 17-19th - 
Opening Night Honoring Women Warriors Hosted by Author Christina Asquith
2011-03-03
In a decisive move to honor women whose courage and heroism have brought attention the plight of women in Muslim-majority countries, New York based non-profit Women's Voices Now will honor journalist Lara Logan and the Egyptian women who saved her, Iranian political martyr Neda Agha-Soltan and author and former political prisoner in Iran - Roxana Saberi at the opening night celebration of Women's Voices from the Muslim World: A Short-Film Festival. "We were so moved by the rescue of journalist Lara Logan by the Egyptian women and soldiers that we had to honor her and those ...

New national study finds boxing injuries on the rise; youth head injury rates also concerning

2011-03-03
VIDEO: The Center for Injury Research and Policy released a study of boxing injuries and found the number of injuries has increased over the 19-year study period. Click here for more information. The risk and nature of injury in the sport of boxing has generated a great deal of controversy in the medical community, especially in relation to youth boxing. A new study, conducted by researchers in the Center for Injury Research and Policy of The Research Institute at Nationwide ...

Sustaining the biodiversity of the western Great Plains

2011-03-03
Fire, cattle and even prairie dogs all could play a role in sustaining the biodiversity of the western Great Plains, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) researcher. As large grazers, cattle now perform the historical role of buffalo on the Great Plains. Ecologist David Augustine and his colleagues-in collaboration with state, federal, and university researchers-have results from several studies over the past 13 years showing that fire, cattle and prairie dogs together maintain a mosaic of diverse vegetation, with varying vegetation heights, that supports ...

Good fungi might prove even better for plant, human health

Good fungi might prove even better for plant, human health
2011-03-03
COLLEGE STATION — Researchers have come closer to understanding how a common fungus "makes its living in the soil," which could lead to its possible "career change" as a therapeutic agent for plant and human health. That's according to Dr. Charles Kenerley, Texas AgriLife Research plant pathologist, and a team of scientists from the U.S., India and France, whose study on Trichoderma virens is in February's Journal of Biological Chemistry. T. virens already enjoy a good reputation in the plant world. The fungi is found throughout the world in all types of soil, Kenerley ...

2 new crustaceans discovered in Iberian Peninsula

2 new crustaceans discovered in Iberian Peninsula
2011-03-03
A team of scientists has described two cladocerous crustaceans, which could be endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, and which were found in two lagoons, one in the lower basin of the Guadalquivir river, and the other in the grasslands of Extremadura. Both of these arthropods may today inhabit more areas in the Mediterranean region. "These two new crustaceans (Leydigia) are a species of living fossil and are very powerful bio-geographic and historical indicators", Miguel Alonso, one of the authors of the study, and a researcher in the Department of Ecology of the University ...

Improved lesion detection with time-of-flight PET scans affirmed

2011-03-03
For the first time, quantitative—not qualitative—data analysis has demonstrated that time-of-flight (TOF) positron emission tomography (PET) scans can improve cancer detection. Research published in the March issue of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine shows that oncologic TOF fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET scans yielded significant improvements in lesion detection of lung and liver cancers over all contrasts and body mass indexes. Conventional PET scans create images by detecting gamma rays produced by radioisotopes that are injected into the body. Although these conventional ...

'A little off the top' helps NIST map cells with submicrometer resolution

A little off the top helps NIST map cells with submicrometer resolution
2011-03-03
To determine if a tissue biopsy reveals the presence of cancer, a histologist often screens for cells with an abnormal appearance or a specific visible trait such as a larger-than-usual nucleus. However, by the time a cancer is physically noticeable, the disease may be in its later stages and more difficult to treat. In an effort to identify the earlier-onset, more subtle chemical changes occurring in a cell heading toward malignancy, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) have developed a technique ...

JAMIA: Evaluating clinical information systems, patients who use PHRs, how clinicians use EHRs

2011-03-03
The current edition of JAMIA, today's top-ranked journal in biomedical and health informatics, features new scientific research—in print and online—on some of healthcare's most hotly discussed HIT-related topics, written by prominent experts working in health and biomedicine: "The case for randomized controlled trials to assess the impact of clinical information systems" Joseph L. Y. Liu of The University of Dundee and The University of Edinburgh, UK; and Jeremy C. Wyatt of University of Warwick and The University of Dundee, UK, provide a perspective on the critical ...

Using artificial, cell-like 'honey pots' to entrap deadly viruses

2011-03-03
Researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the Weill Cornell Medical College have designed artificial "protocells" that can lure, entrap and inactivate a class of deadly human viruses—think decoys with teeth. The technique offers a new research tool that can be used to study in detail the mechanism by which viruses attack cells, and might even become the basis for a new class of antiviral drugs. A new paper* details how the novel artificial cells achieved a near 100 percent success rate in deactivating experimental analogs of Nipah ...

Heirloom Caribbean Real Estate Fund Launched

Heirloom Caribbean Real Estate Fund Launched
2011-03-03
Bruce Ramsey, CEO of Heirloom Fund Management Ltd. (the "Manager") is pleased to announce the launch of the Heirloom Caribbean Real Estate Fund (the "Fund"). The Fund's principal investment objective is to provide investors with capital appreciation and income by investing in a diversified portfolio of real estate projects and assets in the Caribbean Region and in Latin American countries whose shores are bounded on the Caribbean Sea. The Fund focuses on investing in a diversified portfolio of income properties and development properties of varying risk profiles and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Targeted alpha therapy: a breakthrough in treating refractory skin cancer

Transforming thymic carcinoma treatment with a dual approach

Wrong on skin cares: keratinocytes, not fibroblasts, make collagen for healthy skin

Delhi air pollution worse than expected as water vapour skews figures

First radio pulses traced to dead-star binary

New membrane discovery makes possible cleaner lithium extraction

Entwined dwarf stars reveal their location thanks to repeated radio bursts

Landscape scale pesticide pollution detected in the Upper Rhine region, from agricultural lowlands to remote areas

Decoding nanomaterial phase transitions with tiny drums

Two-star system explains unusual astrophysical phenomenon

Minimal TV viewing may be protective for heart diseases linked to Type 2 diabetes

Mass General Brigham study finds relationship between doomsday clock and patterns of mortality and mental health in the united states

Signs of ‘tipping point’ to electric vehicles in UK used car market

A new name for one of the world's rarest rhinoceroses

Why do children use loopholes? New research explains the development of intentional misunderstandings in children

How satisfied are you with your mattress? New research survey aims to find out

Democracy first? Economic model begs to differ

Opening a new chapter in 3D microprinting with the dream material 'MXene'!

Temperature during development influences connectivity between neurons and behavior in fruit flies

Are you just tired or are you menopause tired?

Fluorescent dope

Meningococcal vaccine found to be safe and effective for infants in sub-Saharan Africa

Integrating stopping smoking support into talking therapies helps more people quit – new study

Breast cancer death rates will rise in elderly EU patients but fall for all other ages

Routine asthma test more reliable in the morning and has seasonal effects, say doctors

Yearly 18% rise in ADHD prescriptions in England since COVID-19 pandemic

Public health advice on safety of glycerol-containing slush ice drinks likely needs revising

Water aerobics for more than 10 weeks can trim waist size and aid weight loss

New study in the Lancet HIV highlights gaps in HPV-related cancer prevention for people living with HIV

Growth rates of broilers contribute to behavior differences, shed light on welfare impacts

[Press-News.org] Fighting cancer at your local Indian restaurant
Tel Aviv University says turmeric might be 'the right spice' to fight colon cancer