I have great respect and admiration for those who have chronic illness and deal with dehabilitating pain almost non-stop. I have a friend/client that loves to garden despite the crippling Rheumatoid Arthritis and a kidney transplant. I've never once heard her complain even though it is difficult for her to walk and even handle a trowel.
I was so happy to see that our own Northwestern University has made a remarkable discovery that will no doubt give hope to those suffering from this horrible auto immune disease.
New 'Suicide' Molecule Halts Rheumatoid Arthritis
ScienceDaily (Feb. 1, 2010) — A researcher from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine has invented a novel way to halt and even reverse rheumatoid arthritis. He developed an imitation of a suicide molecule that floats undetected into overactive immune cells responsible for the disease.
See Also:
The approach, tested on mice, doesn't carry the health risks of current treatments.
"This new therapy stopped the disease cold in 75 percent of the mice," reported Harris Perlman, the lead author and an associate professor of medicine at Feinberg. "The best part was we didn't see any toxicity. This has a lot of potential for creating an entirely new treatment for rheumatoid arthritis."
The study will be published in the February issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism.
Healthy immune cells are supposed to die after they attack an invading virus or bacteria. But in rheumatoid arthritis, the immune cells called macrophages live and go rogue. They proliferate in the blood, build up in the joints and invade cartilage and bone. Currently, there is no effective, nontoxic way to stop them.
Perlman discovered that immune cells in rheumatoid arthritis are low in a critical molecule called Bim, whose job is to order the cells to self-destruct. To correct that shortage, Perlman developed an imitation of the molecule, called BH3 mimetic. When Harris injected his drug into mice with rheumatoid arthritis, it floated ghostlike into their macrophages and bam!, the misbehaving immune cells self destructed.
In his research, Harris showed the molecule could prevent the development of rheumatoid arthritis as well as trigger a remission of existing disease. After the drug was injected in animals with the disease, joint swelling was reduced and bone destruction decreased.
Current treatments for rheumatoid arthritis include low-level chemotherapy and steroids. These are not always effective, however, and they are frequently accompanied by side effects. A newer class of therapy, which is sometimes used in combination with chemotherapy and steroids, is biologic response modifiers. These are antibodies or other proteins that reduce the inflammation produced by the hyperactive immune cells. These biologics don't work for everyone, though, and can be associated with side effects including the risk of infection.
Perlman said the next step is to develop nanotechnology for a more precise method of delivering the drug. His research was supported by the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease.
Email or share this story:
Story Source:
Adapted from materials provided by Northwestern University.
Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago
All rights reserved
I'm also a gardener with RA. Who would have known that I would find out this great new information from a garden blog. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHi Rachel,
ReplyDeleteI see that you're in Batavia. Welcome and thanks for stopping by.
I dearly hope that you and others with RA will find a cure in this great new research development.