INT7
International/
Health/ScienceHope for
heart,
cancer,
diabetes patients as scarring mystery foundBy Gurmukh SinghToronto, Sep 22 IANS In a new study with profound implications for
patients of
cardiovascular diseases,
diabetes and
cancer - which involve scarring of the tissue or fibrosis - Canadian researchers have found how scarring occurs and how to stop it from becoming life-threatening.The study, conducted by the
University of Ontario at Waterloo near here, in collaboration with Toronto's Mount Sinai
Hospital and London's
University College, has unravelled the origin of scarring and a possible
treatment for it.Andrew Leask, who is professor at the
university and led the study, said
people were unaware about the prevalence of scarring
diseases and the toll they exact each year."It's estimated about 40 percent of
all deaths and
health care costs in North
America are related to scarring or fibrosis," he said."
Cardiovascular and other
diseases including
diabetes,
cancer, and pulmonary fibrosis
all involve scarring, which affects the organs' ability to function. Another example is scleroderma, a progressive scarring
disease affecting 300,000
people in the
United States and 40,000 Canadians."During tissue
repair, the study says, specialised cells called myofibroblasts
travel to the wound to generate connective tissue to cause healing. Once their
job is done, these myofibroblasts disappear from the wound. But the problem arises when they persist and continue to make connective tissue as it can become too thick, preventing the organ from functioning properly. For instance, in the case of
diabetes, this scarring could cause the
kidney to shut down, requiring dialysis or a transplant. The researchers identified a protein called glycogen synthase kinase 3 that acts as a
brake on myofibroblasts to terminate tissue
repair after the wound has healed.But if this protein is impaired in an individual, there
will be no braking on myofibroblasts which
will keep
producing connective tissue even after normal tissue
repair, resulting in scarring after wounding. In their experiments on mice with scarring
diseases, the researchers also found elevated levels of a protein called endothelin-1. They used a
drug already on the
market to block endothelin-1 and thus prevent scarring. Leask said though the use of this
drug was still to be tested on
humans, this therapy could stop fibrosis from occurring without affecting normal tissue
repair. The study has been published in the current issue of Journal of Clinical
Investigation.--Indo-Asian
News Servicegs/jg423
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