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

Researchers report advances vs. preeclampsia, including potential prediction

2010-10-15
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — In as many as 8 percent of pregnancies worldwide, women who seem fine for months develop preeclampsia, a serious complication causing symptoms including high blood pressure, severe swelling, and problems with placental development. The untreatable and unpredictable condition, with no known cause, often requires premature delivery, and can sometimes kill the mother and the fetus.

In a new study, researchers led by a team at Brown University and Women & Infants Hospital describe two major advances: a well-defined animal model of preeclampsia and a potential lab test for diagnosing the disease in people.

"Our model is the first pregnancy-specific animal model," said Surendra Sharma, professor of pediatrics at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University and a research scientist at Women & Infants, "and our predictive assay is the first one where we can go back to the first trimester and predict problems."

Sharma is a senior author on the study, published online this month in The American Journal of Pathology. In addition to pediatrics researchers, the study also involved scientists at the Lifespan Center for International Health Research, Harvard Medical School in Boston, and Linkoping University and Helsingborg Hospital in Sweden.

Model mice

Building on research linking the presence of the immune system secretion Interleukin-10 (IL-10) to a successful course of pregnancy, the researchers started experimenting with mice genetically engineered to lack IL-10. They hypothesized that if they isolated blood serum from human patients with preeclampsia and gave a dose of it to the mice, the rodents would develop preeclampsia symptoms. That is exactly what happened.

Just to be sure, the researchers gave the preeclampsia serum to mice that were not pregnant. Nothing happened, confirming that the onset of preeclampsia symptoms in the engineered mice was a consequence of their pregnancy. Meanwhile, the researchers gave the preeclampsia serum to wild mice who were pregnant and found that they did not experience all the preeclampsia symptoms of mice without IL-10. That confirmed that pregnant mice lacking IL-10 provide a unique and dependable model of the disease.

The significance of having an animal model for preeclampsia is that it will allow for experiments that can shed light on the cause of the disease and its progression, Sharma said. That has already occurred in his research. For example, the team was able to observe something in the mice that is also observed in human preeclampsia patients: a disruption in the development of "spiral arteries," which bring nutrients to the fetus from the placenta.

Toward a diagnostic lab test

After observing how preeclampsia serum caused disruption to the spiral arteries, the team reasoned that preeclampsia serum might also disrupt the formation of vasculature in the lab. They created an in vitro culture of two key cell types involved in spiral artery development — endothelial cells and trophoblasts — and then exposed some to serum from women with normal pregnancies and some to preeclampsia serum from women taken at various stages of their pregnancies.

The researchers found that vasculature developed normally in the presence of serum from women with normal pregnancies. But they also found that preeclampsia serum taken from women as early as 12 to 14 weeks into their pregnancies, about 10 to 12 weeks before they were diagnosed with preeclampsia, was able to disrupt vascular formation.

Sharma has filed a patent application for the test and has continued to refine it for eventual clinical use, a process that will require FDA approval.

"The idea is that we can predict preeclampsia ahead of time and women can be treated," Sharma said. Researchers, for example, are looking at dysregulated proteins in preeclampsia serum for their causative effects and as one avenue of managing preeclampsia. The idea is that normal counterparts of these proteins will rescue normal pregnancy and protect against the onset of preeclampsia disease. "Hopefully, hopefully preeclampsia can be controlled," Sharma said.

INFORMATION: In addition to Sharma, other authors include Satyan Kalkunte, Wendy Norris, Zhongbin Lai, and James Padbury of the Department of Pediatrics at Brown and Women & Infants, Jennifer Friedman and Jonathan Kurtis of the Lifespan Center for International Health Research, Kee-Hak Lim of Harvard Medical School, Roland Boij of Linkoping University and Leif Matthiesen of Helsingborg Hospital.

Funding for the research came from the National Institutes of Health, the Rhode Island Research Alliance Collaborative Research Award, and the American Diabetes Association Terry and Louise Gregg Diabetes in Pregnancy Award.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researcher find fats galore in human plasma

Researcher find fats galore in human plasma
2010-10-15
Human blood is famously fraught with fats; now researchers have a specific idea of just how numerous and diverse these lipids actually are. A national research team, led by scientists at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, has created the first "lipidome" of human plasma, identifying and quantifying almost 600 distinct fat species circulating in human blood. "Everybody knows about blood lipids like cholesterol and triglycerides," said Edward A. Dennis, PhD, distinguished professor of pharmacology, chemistry and biochemistry at UC San Diego and ...

Need a study break to refresh? Maybe not, say Stanford researchers

2010-10-15
It could happen to students cramming for exams, people working long hours or just about anyone burning the candle at both ends: Something tells you to take a break. Watch some TV. Have a candy bar. Goof off, tune out for a bit and come back to the task at hand when you're feeling better. After all, you're physically exhausted. But a new study from Stanford psychologists suggests the urge to refresh (or just procrastinate) is – well – all in your head. In a paper published this week in Psychological Science, the researchers challenge a long-held theory that willpower ...

'Incoherent excitations' govern key phase of superconductor behavior: UBC research

2010-10-15
New research by University of British Columbia physicists indicates that high-temperature superconductivity in copper oxides is linked to what they term 'incoherent excitations'--a discovery that sheds light on the electronic response of these materials before they become superconducting. The study marks the first time researchers have been able to directly measure when electrons in a super conductor behave as independent well-defined particles, and when they evolve into ill-defined many-body entities. "We've never been able to directly quantify the nature of electron ...

From handwritten CAPTCHAs to 'smart rooms,' tech solutions start with pattern recognition

2010-10-15
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Buy something online, enter your credit card number and mailing address. Simple. Then you come to the box with the CAPTCHA, the Completely Automated Public Turing Test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart. Here, the website attempts to confirm that you're a human, not some robot about to commit a cybercrime. You dutifully copy down the warped, watery-looking letters. Incorrect. Another captcha appears. You try again. Also incorrect. A third captcha appears. You start rethinking your purchase. University at Buffalo computer scientist Venu Govindaraju, ...

Astronomer leverages supercomputers to study black holes, galaxies

Astronomer leverages supercomputers to study black holes, galaxies
2010-10-15
Columbus, Ohio (Oct. 14, 2010) – An Ohio State University astronomer is working to unlock some of the mysteries surrounding the formation of vast galaxies and the evolution of massive black holes with his own large constellation of silicon wafers. Over the last year, two research teams led by Stelios Kazantzidis, a Long-Term Fellow at the Center for Cosmology and Astro-Particle Physics (CCAPP) at The Ohio State University, have used what would average out to nearly 1,000 computing hours each day on the parallel high performance computing systems of the Ohio Supercomputer ...

UCSB physicists detect and control quantum states in diamond with light

2010-10-15
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Physicists at UC Santa Barbara have succeeded in combining laser light with trapped electrons to detect and control the electrons' fragile quantum state without erasing it. This is an important step toward using quantum physics to expand computing power and to communicate over long distances without the possibility of eavesdropping. The work appears online today at Science Express. The research, led by David Awschalom, professor of physics, electrical and computer engineering, and director of UCSB's Center for Spintronics and Quantum Computation, ...

Young children are especially trusting of things they're told

2010-10-15
Little kids believe the darnedest things. For example, that a fat man in a red suit flies through the air on a sleigh pulled by reindeer. A new study on three-year-olds, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that they aren't just generally trusting. They're particularly trusting of things people say to them. Previous research has found that three-year-olds are a credulous bunch; they believe most things they're told, and skepticism doesn't kick in until later. Vikram K. Jaswal, of the University of Virginia, ...

Gene identified that prevents stem cells from turning cancerous

2010-10-15
Stem cells, the prodigious precursors of all the tissues in our body, can make almost anything, given the right circumstances. Including, unfortunately, cancer. Now research from Rockefeller University shows that having too many stem cells, or stem cells that live for too long, can increase the odds of developing cancer. By identifying a mechanism that regulates programmed cell death in precursor cells for blood, or hematopoietic stem cells, the work is the first to connect the death of such cells to a later susceptibility to tumors in mice. It also provides evidence of ...

Low beta blocker dose can put patients at risk for subsequent heart attacks

2010-10-15
CHICAGO –For nearly 40 years a class of drugs known as beta blockers have been proven to increase patients' survival prospects following a heart attack by decreasing the cardiac workload and oxygen demand on the heart. In a breakthrough study released in the American Heart Journal, Northwestern Medicine cardiologist Jeffrey J. Goldberger found the majority of patients are frequently not receiving a large enough dose of these drugs, which can put their recovery from heart attacks and overall health into peril. "Only 46% of patients studied were taking 50% or more of the ...

Carbon dioxide controls Earth's temperature

2010-10-15
NEW YORK -- Water vapor and clouds are the major contributors to Earth's greenhouse effect, but a new atmosphere-ocean climate modeling study shows that the planet's temperature ultimately depends on the atmospheric level of carbon dioxide. The study, conducted by Andrew Lacis and colleagues at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York, examined the nature of Earth's greenhouse effect and clarified the role that greenhouse gases and clouds play in absorbing outgoing infrared radiation. Notably, the team identified non-condensing greenhouse gases -- ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Crohn's & Colitis Congress® spotlights key IBD research findings

Vanilla farmers search for a crop and conservation sweet spot

Global “sisterhood” seeks to understand what makes a healthy vaginal microbiome

Announcing the winners of the 5th annual Rising Black Scientists Awards

Food: Cracking the method for the ‘perfect’ boiled egg

Cannabis use disorder emergency department visits and hospitalizations and 5-year mortality

COVID-19 pandemic and rates of common ophthalmic procedures among Medicare beneficiaries

Updated drug information handout outdoes FDA’s version

Gemini North teams up with LOFAR to reveal largest radio jet ever seen in the early universe

Researchers discover a major driver of inflammatory pathology in autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases

Research in fruit flies pinpoints brain pathways involved in alcohol-induced insomnia

Cancer diagnoses and deaths are declining in Appalachia but remain significantly higher compared to other US regions

Why some heavy drinkers develop advanced liver disease, while others do not

OmicsFootPrint: Mayo Clinic’s AI tool offers a new way to visualize disease

New genetic mutation linked to drug resistance in non-small cell lung cancer patient

Single-photon LiDAR delivers detailed 3D images at distances up to 1 kilometer

Fear of breast cancer recurrence: Impact and coping with being in a dark place

Korea University researchers analysis of income-related disparities in mortality among young adults with diabetes

Study shows link between income inequality and health and education disparities may drive support for economic reform

HonorHealth Research Institute’s Chief Medical Officer is recognized by the world’s leading organization for cancer doctors

InsectNet technology identifies insects around the world and around the farm

Restoring predators, restoring ecosystems: Yellowstone wolves and other carnivores drive strong trophic cascade

Corn’s ancient ancestors are calling

Mass General Brigham’s Kraft Center Announces the 2025 Kraft Prize for Excellence and Innovation in Community Health

Whale poop contains iron that may have helped fertilize past oceans

Mercury content in tuna can be reduced with new packaging solution

Recycling the unrecyclable

Alien ocean could hide signs of life from spacecraft

Research unveils new strategies to tackle atrial fibrillation, a condition linked to stroke and dementia risks

Research spotlight: Researchers identify potential drug targets for future heart failure therapeutics

[Press-News.org] Researchers report advances vs. preeclampsia, including potential prediction