Recent stories on Highlight HEALTH
Stories tagged: HIV
by NIH Newsbot on Friday, May 11, 2012
The National Institutes of Health recently unveiled a collaborative program that will match researchers with a selection of pharmaceutical industry compounds to help scientists explore new treatments for patients. NIH’s new National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) has partnered initially with Pfizer, AstraZeneca, and Eli Lilly and Company which have agreed to make dozens of their compounds available for this initiative’s pilot phase.
Tags:
aids,
AstraZeneca,
azidothymidine,
AZT,
drug,
drug companies,
drug compound,
drug development,
drug safety,
Eli Lilly,
HIV,
Pfizer
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by Walter Jessen on Monday, July 25, 2011
Each year, nearly one billion people around the world lack access to safe, clean water [1]. Water is essential for life, yet less than 1% of water on the planet is safe to drink. This is especially a problem in developing countries or during natural disasters. Take Hurricane Katrina: back in 2005 when it hit the Gulf Coast, one of the biggest needs for storm victims was access to clean drinking water.
In the United States and Europe, people take it for granted that when they turn on the faucet, clean water will flow out. Indeed, a single flush of a toilet in the West uses more water than most Africans have to perform an entire day’s washing, cleaning, cooking and drinking [2].
Securing access to safe water worldwide is vitally important. Clean water is essential for agriculture, food and energy production, recreation and reduction of poverty. More than 2 million people, most of them children, die every year from water-borne diseases. And time is of the essence: by 2020, more people could die of water-related diseases than those that have died due to HIV/AIDS [2].
Tags:
aids,
cellular respiration,
clean water,
diarrhea,
disinfecting water,
drinking water,
energy,
germs,
handwashing,
HIV,
safe water,
SODIS,
solar water disinfection,
sunlight,
UV radiation,
UVA,
water
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by Diana Gitig on Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Antibiotic resistance is an ever-growing clinical problem. Four years ago, a study found that antibiotics are overprescribed for sinus infections. Compounding the issue is the fact that as bacteria are learning to tolerate and even circumvent existing classes of antibiotics, not enough work is being done to discover new ones. Combinations or cocktails of antibiotics are often used to broaden the antimicrobial spectrum of each and to achieve synergistic effects; this approach has successfully been applied to combat tuberculosis, leprosy, malaria, and famously, HIV. Yet the discovery of effective combinations has usually been almost fortuitous, most often resulting from trial and error rather than a systematic analysis.

In the current study, researchers systematically examined combinations of 1,057 compounds previously approved as drugs to find those that exhibited synergy with the antibiotic minocycline. Their work is reported in the April 24, 2011 issue of the journal Nature Chemical Biology [1]. The compounds were chosen because they have already been approved as drugs, they are known to have activity in vivo and are known to be relatively safe. Many approved drugs are known to have utility for clinical indications other than those for which they initially received approval. Moreover, using pre-approved compounds also reduces the time and cost associated with developing new compounds for therapeutic use.
Tags:
alcoholism,
antibiotic,
bacteria,
bacterial infection,
benserazide,
chemotherapy,
chloroxine,
dandruff,
diarrhea,
disulfiram,
drugs,
Escheria coli,
HIV,
Imodium,
irritable bowel syndrome,
leprosy,
loperamide,
malaria,
methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus,
minocycline,
mitomycin C,
MRSA,
p aeruginosa,
Parkinson's disease,
pathogens,
s aureus,
Salmonella enterica,
tegaserod,
tetracycline,
tuberculosis
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by NIH Newsbot on Friday, December 18, 2009
The death rates of children with HIV have decreased ninefold since doctors started prescribing cocktails of antiretroviral drugs in the mid-1990s, concludes a large-scale study of the long-term outcomes of children and adolescents with HIV in the United States. In spite of this improvement, however, young people with HIV continue to die at 30 times the rate of youth of similar age who do not have HIV, found researchers from the National Institutes of Health and other institutions.
Read the full news release ...
Tags:
antiretroviral,
antiretroviral drugs,
death,
HIV,
mid,
mid 1990s,
National Institutes of Health,
spite,
study,
United States
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by Walter Jessen on Friday, October 10, 2008
The 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was announced earlier this week. The prize was awarded to three europeans for the discoveries of two viruses that cause severe human disease; the cancer-causing human papilloma virus (HPV) and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Two French scientists, Luc Montagnier, age 76, at the University of Paris in Paris, France and Francoise Barré-Sinoussi, age 61, at the Institut Pasteur in Garches, France will split half the prize for their discovery of the HIV virus. Barré-Sinoussi is the 8th woman to receive the Nobel award for Physiology or Medicine.
A German researcher, Harald zur Hausen, age 72, at the University of Dusseldorf, Germany, will receive the other half of the $1.3 million prize for establishing that most cervical cancers are caused by two types of human papilloma virus.
Tags:
aids,
cervical cancer,
HIV,
HIV-1,
HPV,
medicine,
nobel prize,
virus
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