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Article: Spice May Treat Cystic Fibrosis

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I figured some folks might find this interesting :)

 

*Smile*

Chris (list mom)

 

http://www.alittleolfactory.com

The Spring Newsletter Has Sprung

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http://www.khou.com/news/health/stories/khou040422_trj_Cystic_Fibrosis.1

4eabc5ee.html

 

Spice may treat Cystic Fibrosis

 

03:03 PM CDT on Thursday, April 22, 2004

Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A bright yellow spice common in curry might hold a

key to treating deadly cystic fibrosis.

Eating large doses of a substance found in the spice turmeric

significantly cut deaths among mice with the genetic disease, and

scientists soon will begin studying the effects in people.

 

But with the release of the Yale University research in Friday's edition

of the journal Science, cystic fibrosis specialists are trying to spread

the word that patients shouldn't self-medicate with the substance,

called curcumin.

 

It would be hard to get very high curcumin doses from food, but it is

sold as a dietary supplement. Among the concerns: No one yet knows if

curcumin pills could interact dangerously with the myriad other

medicines cystic fibrosis patients take.

 

Still, the findings are very promising, said Dr. Peter Mogayzel Jr.,

director of the Cystic Fibrosis Center at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins

Hospital. " This is research that really has the potential, I think, to

benefit patients down the road. "

 

Cystic fibrosis afflicts about 30,000 American children and young

adults. It attacks patients' lungs with a thick mucus, causing

life-threatening infections. CF also harms digestion and vitamin

absorption as the mucus clogs other organs.

 

Treatments to fight lung infections and improve nutrition have

dramatically improved care and lengthened survival into the 30s. But

they treat only symptoms. The curcumin research aims at an underlying

cause of those symptoms.

 

In most patients, CF's damage stems from a single genetic defect. It

skews a protein called CFTR that is balances the salt content of cells

lining the lungs and certain other organs.

 

CFTR is supposed to travel to a cell's surface to create openings, or

channels, for chloride ions to exit that cell. But cells police protein

quality, trapping mutated CFTR and shuttling it to a holding bin for

later destruction. Thus, chloride can't escape, and an eventual salt

buildup inside cells leads to the dangerous mucus formation.

 

Scientists have long studied chemicals-including the drug phenylbutyrate

and a caffeine relative-that might block the cellular police long enough

for CFTR to escape, because even a mutated version opens some chloride

channels.

 

Enter Yale's Dr. Michael Caplan. That cellular holding bin also stores

calcium, which many of the cell's protein policemen need to function. He

wondered if inhibiting the bin's release of calcium would in turn let

mutated CFTR escape.

 

Experiments with a calcium-inhibiting chemical showed the plan worked.

But that chemical spurs cancer, so Caplan hunted a safer drug

candidate-and learned curcumin might inhibit calcium the same way.

 

Derived from turmeric, the yellow spice used to flavor curries and color

mustard, curcumin has long been used in folk remedies. And while human

studies haven't yet proved a medical use, they do suggest people

tolerate fairly high doses.

 

In a series of elegant experiments, Caplan and Yale CF specialist Dr.

Marie Egan showed:

.. Daily curcumin slashed the death rates of CF-stricken mice.

 

The mice had the same genetic defect that causes the human disease, but

they quickly die of a mucus-blocked digestive tract instead of lung

damage. Only 10 percent of curcumin-treated mice died within 10 weeks,

compared with 60 percent of untreated mice- and the survivors gained

weight.

 

.. Electrical measurements of how well nasal tissue could secrete ions

also showed " a dramatic effect, " Caplan said. Curcumin-treated mice

improved from very poor levels to almost normal.

 

.. Additional test-tube studies, performed with the University of

Toronto, showed CFTR got to the cell surface and functioned after

addition of curcumin.

The next step: The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation is funding a first-stage

study in two dozen CF patients this summer to hunt for an appropriate

dose and check for side effects.

 

But both Caplan and the CF Foundation stress not to try curcumin

treatment on your own.

Aside from possible drug interactions, treatments that help mice don't

always help people-and because dietary supplements are largely

unregulated, there's no proof supplies are pure, they caution.

 

Countries like India, where turmeric consumption is high, happen to have

less cystic fibrosis, because that genetic defect is most common in

people of European descent. Curcumin has no genetic effect.

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