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Heart drug derails algal toxin. (Biomedicine).


A drug for treating high cholesterol Cholesterol, High Definition

Cholesterol is a fatty substance found in animal tissue and is an important component to the human body. It is manufactured in the liver and carried throughout the body in the bloodstream.
 might someday find use relieving the debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing
adj.
Causing a loss of strength or energy.


Debilitating
Weakening, or reducing the strength of.

Mentioned in: Stress Reduction
 symptoms of poisoning from some algal algal

pertaining to or caused by algae.


algal infection
is very rare but systemic and udder infections are recorded. See protothecosis.

algal mastitis
the algae Prototheca trispora and P.
 toxins, animal data suggest.

Algal toxins accumulate in fish and shellfish, which, when eaten, can cause symptoms ranging from muscular weakness and pain to death. After heating anecdotes of physicians easing symptoms of such poisonings with the cholesterol-lowering drug cholestyramine cholestyramine /cho·le·sty·ra·mine/ (ko?le-sti´rah-men) see cholestyramine resin, under resin.

cho·le·styr·a·mine
n.
, John S. Ramsdell of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  in Charleston, S.C., decided to test it in mice.

He laced the rodents' food with the drug for a week and then exposed the animals to brevetoxin, the poison made by Florida's red tide algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that  (SN: 11/30/02, p. 344). Mice usually respond to this toxin with a quick drop in body temperature. However, temperatures remained normal in animals treated with cholestyramine. Ramsdell reported the finding in April at Experimental Biology 2003, in San Diego.

Although he initially suspected the drug was removing the toxin from the animals' blood, subsequent tests showed that blood brevetoxin was just as high in animals that received cholestyramine as in those that didn't. Those tests used the first diagnostic blood test for brevetoxin, which Ramsdell and his colleagues describe in an upcoming Environmental Health Perspectives.

Now, the team is testing an alternative hypothesis for cholestyramine's efficacy. Lowering cholesterol reduces the body's production of cholesterol-carrying molecules known as low-density lipoproteins. Ramsdell suspects those same molecules are responsible for transporting the fat-soluble brevetoxin from the blood into tissues where the poison can do its worst.
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Title Annotation:cholestyramine
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 7, 2003
Words:250
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