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Running interference: fresh approach to fighting inflammation.


The more scientists learn about inflammation, the less they like it. Although this bodily process speeds wound healing wound healing Physiology The repair of a wound Steps Inflammation, repair and closure, remodeling, final healing; repair of incisions may be either simple–'clean' wounds with little loss of tissue heal by 'primary intention', or 'dirty' wounds heal by  and corrals microbes, it can also do plenty of harm, as seen in people with arthritis, asthma, and a host of other ailments. Unfortunately, today's anti-inflammatory drugs Anti-inflammatory drugs
A class of drugs that lower inflammation and that includes NSAIDs and corticosteroids.

Mentioned in: Antirheumatic Drugs
 pose their own problems. They cause stomach distress in many people, and some drugs seem to hike the risk of heart attacks. So, the search for a safe inflammation fighter goes on.

Bruce D. Hammock hammock, suspended bed, usually of netting, canvas, or leather. The hammock and its name were introduced to Europeans by Christopher Columbus, who learned of them from Native Americans. , a biochemist at the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. , and his colleagues now report that two experimental drugs shield lab mice from extreme inflammation. The findings appear in an upcoming Proceedings o f the National Academy of Sciences.

Earlier research had suggested that a troublesome enzyme, called soluble epoxide hydrolase, degrades natural inflammation inhibitors known as epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs). The experimental drugs in the new study bind to and inactivate in·ac·ti·vate
v.
1. To render nonfunctional.

2. To make quiescent.



in·acti·va
 the enzyme. The study is the first to show that inhibiting the enzyme can benefit an animal, Hammock says.

Hammock and his colleagues first injected mice with molecules from the surface of Escherichia coli Escherichia coli (ĕsh'ərĭk`ēə kō`lī), common bacterium that normally inhabits the intestinal tracts of humans and animals, but can cause infection in other parts of the body, especially the urinary tract.  bacteria. Although not infective, these molecules provoke a severe inflammatory response.

The mice then received an injection of one of the two enzyme-inhibiting drugs or of an inert substance. Mice getting the drugs survived, whereas within 4 days, plummeting blood pressure had killed all the mice that received placebo shots. Also, mice with unchecked inflammation showed extensive kidney and liver damage.

A flood of inflammatory cells and proteins apparently overwhelmed these mice in a process similar to that caused by blood infection, or sepsis, in people, Hammock says.

The researchers are "controlling the level of EET imp. 1.

imp. os> of Eat.

EET n abbr (= Eastern European Time) → hora de Europa oriental

EET abbr (= Eastern European Time) → HEO (
 indirectly by controlling its degradation," says J. Russell Falck, an organic chemist at the University of Texas--Southwestern in Dallas. "This is a novel approach, and one that's quite effective," he says.

"EETs have been largely ignored in medicine," Hammock says. Instead, drug companies have concentrated on aspirin, ibuprofen ibuprofen (ī`byprō'fən), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) that reduces pain, fever, and inflammation. , cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors, and other antiinflammatory drugs that block a single biochemical pathway but don't protect EETs.

Hammock predicts that the new drugs, which are currently called AUDA-BE and Compound 950, will be tested as oral medicines in people within 18 months.

"We envision these as general antiinflammatory drugs," Hammock says. But the new drugs may also counter sepsis, he says.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 2, 2005
Words:387
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