Archives: 7/2006

7865456SM Definition of Medgadget Continues to Expand; Now Encompasses Water SprayHypoSalix doesn’t exactly sound like a mouth-watering name, but that’s its function. This new spray is supposed to mimic saliva, for dry-mouth patients:

BioProgress PLC, the speciality pharmaceutical and healthcare company, said it has obtained registration for its Hyposalix spray for dry mouth as a medical device, and plans to launch the product in the EU within six months.
…HypoSalix is an artificial saliva spray for patients suffering dry mouth, which often occurs as a side effect from cancer radiotherapy and some drug treatments.
BioProgress said it is targeting the product for prescription use. But the device will be able to be sold over the counter.

Prescriptions! Are you kidding? Does bottled water need a prescription? Alas, maybe this is why we only write about devices instead of building them…
(Note: we couldn’t find a picture of this top-secret device; the photo above is of a competitor’s medical device, the Evian Spray).
More from BioProgress

1235615sc Scorpion Venom Shows Promise for Treatment of Malignant GliomasScientists at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in California took a synthetic version of venom of Leiurus quinquestriatus, aka the Giant Yellow Israeli scorpion, labeled it with radioactive iodine and found it to be an effective delivery vehicle for targeted radiotherapy against glioma. Investigators enrolled 18 patients in the Phase I clinical trial of TM-601:

TM-601 binds to glioma cells and has an unusual ability to pass through the blood-brain barrier that blocks most substances from reaching brain tissue from the bloodstream.
“We’re using the TM-601 primarily as a carrier to transport radioactive iodine to glioma cells, although there are data to suggest that it may also slow down the growth of tumor cells. If studies continue to confirm this, we may be able to use it in conjunction with other treatments, such as chemotherapy, because there may be a synergistic effect. In other words, TM-601′s ability to impede cancer growth could allow us to reduce the dose of chemotherapy to achieve a therapeutic effect,” said Mamelak, who serves as co-director of the Pituitary Center at Cedars-Sinai [Adam N. Mamelak, M.D. is a neurosurgeon at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -ed.]
Patients who consented to participate in the Phase I study first underwent tumor-removal surgery. Fourteen to 28 days later, a single, low dose of radioactive iodine (131I) attached to TM-601 was injected through a small tube into the cavity from which the tumor had been removed.
Although TM-601 had been tested in earlier laboratory and animal experiments, it had never been given to humans. Therefore, the primary objective of this study was to document that 131I-TM-601 could be administered to humans safely. In addition, the researchers sought to begin to assess the drug’s anti-tumor effect and dosing standards. Six patients agreed to receive additional doses at one of three different levels (.25 mg. of TM-601, .5 mg. of TM-601, and 1 mg. of TM-601, each carrying the same amount of iodine).
“In this first human trial, treatment of patients with recurrent high-grade glioma with a single intracavitary dose of 131I-TM-601 was well tolerated to the maximum dose …. Very few adverse side effects occurred during the initial 22-day observation period, suggesting the dosing level of peptide used in this study is safe and well-tolerated in humans,” the article states.
While median length of survival for all patients was 27 weeks, two patients, women in their early 40s, had a “complete radiographic response,” meaning there was no evidence of residual tumor according to magnetic resonance imaging scans. The patients were still alive beyond 33 and 35 months after surgery, despite the low dose of TM-601 and radiation levels that were below expected therapeutic levels.
Analyses also showed that most of the radioactivity delivered by the drug left the region within 24 hours of administration. That which lingered was “tightly localized to the tumor cavity and surrounding regions, suggesting discrete binding to the tumor.” The drug was eliminated primarily through the urine, with radiation doses to the thyroid and other vital organs remaining extremely low and harmless.
Mamelak said TM-601 binds to tumors other than gliomas, and this therapy will be studied in a variety of tumor types.

The press release
The picture is from Israel Insect World website

We’ve blogged before about home-based DNA testing and how dangerously unreliable it is. The government has finally caught on, it seems. More from this AP story about new GAO warnings:

…on the Internet and in some stores, people can buy kits, costing from $99 to $1,000, that let them send in a cheek swab for DNA analysis, fill out a lifestyle questionnaire and receive nutrition advice.
Investigators bought kits from companies through four Web sites, and created 14 pretend customers. The questionnaires described “customers” of different ages and lifestyles, but were paired with DNA samples from Kurtz’s infant daughter and a male agent at the GAO.
The advice varied greatly, but mostly contained generalities such as do not smoke and that the “customers” with bad diets may risk heart disease, the GAO reported.
One company advised three of the fictitious customers to buy a “personalized” dietary supplement blend, costing more than $1,880 a year, that the company claimed could repair damaged DNA, Kurtz said.
Genetics experts told the GAO there is no pill that can repair DNA damage and that some of the blend’s mega-dose vitamins might even cause harm. Plus, the advice was not personalized because it was the same blend even though two “customers” had different DNA and all three had very different health risks, Kurtz said.

More from the US Government Accountability Office (pdf)…

If you tend to spend extra money on organic foods, then you better read this piece in the New York Times about the latest analysis by Consumer Reports. Here’s our quick summary. In addition to organic meat, poultry and baby food, the other items worth buying are included in the dirty dozen: apples, bell peppers, celery, cherries, grapes (imported), nectarines, peaches, pears, potatoes, red raspberries, spinach and strawberries.

Art

12534135bu1 The Future Home of Institute for Nanobiomedical Technology and Membrane Biology in Chengdu, ChinaDesigned to look like a cell from the outside and to contain structures that resemble intracellular organelles and molecules, the future building of biomedical research institute in Chengdu, China, was designed by Shuguang Zhang, a bioengineer and scientist at MIT, and an architecture major undergrad Sloan Kulper. In the first picture, one can see the building from the outside. In the second, endosomes and mitochondria-like pools inside. The third picture features bridges, representing X and Y chromosomes.

In the class, Zhang frequently discusses the striking similarities between architecture and biological structures, he said. “Nature has produced abundant magnificent, intricate and fine molecular and cellular structures through billions of years of molecular selection and evolution.

12534135bu2 The Future Home of Institute for Nanobiomedical Technology and Membrane Biology in Chengdu, China

“These invisible molecular and cellular structures cannot be seen by the naked eye, but can only be observed with the most sophisticated scientific tools, such as X-ray diffraction and nuclear magnetic resonance, or modeled with advanced computers. But if they can be amplified billions of times as in a building, then these molecular structures can be seen, touched and admired. At that large scale, they can also be very educational for people of all ages,” Zhang said.
According to Zhang, the pioneering design for the cell-shaped building was inspired by “elegantly folded protein structures and their simple and beautiful structural motifs. The cell-shaped building attempts to combine the architecture and the biology structures,” he said…

12534135bu3 The Future Home of Institute for Nanobiomedical Technology and Membrane Biology in Chengdu, China

Together, the international architecture team “developed sketches and models while simultaneously studying cellular structures that had formal similarities to the spaces we were designing. We worked with images of proteins, membranes and organelles alongside photos and textbook images of glazing systems and cantilevers,” Kulper said.
The final plan calls for a research and laboratory facility with six floors and a crystal-shaped lecture hall with a crystal diffraction pattern ceiling, full of various biology motifs, to be built for about $12 million – more than twice the current cost of a more traditional design in China, yet a small fraction of the cost of building in the United States…

The press release

Stanford cardiologists took a look at heart performance in athletes finishing “90 continuous hours of biking, climbing, swimming, paddling and rope work with virtually no sleep,” and found… that the heart does tire with exercise!

Link

56415416fd1 The NESS L300&trade Lifts Up a FootIsrael 21C is reporting about FDA’s approval of the NESS L300 system, “a wireless, computer-controlled device developed by Ra’anana-based NESS, (Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation Systems) that enables safe walking for people with a foot paralyzed due to stroke, brain injury, cerebral palsy, spinal cord injury or multiple sclerosis. The CE mark for use in Europe was received last month for the ailment.”
The NESS L300 system, a foot drop prevention device, is described by the company:

The NESS L300™ is intended to provide ankle dorsiflexion in individuals with foot drop following an upper motor neuron injury or disease. During the swing phase of gait, the NESS L300&trade electrically stimulates muscles in the affected leg to provide dorsiflexion of the foot; thus, it may improve the individual’s gait. The NESS L300&trade may also facilitate muscle re-education, prevent/retard disused atrophy, maintain or increase joint range of motion and increase local blood flow.
Central nervous system injuries often cause Foot Drop which results in dragging of the foot while walking and therefore, instability and increased effort during gait. The NESS L300&trade is an advanced Neuroprosthesis designed to improve gait in people suffering from foot drop as a result of a central nervous system injury or disease. It is comprised of an Electronic Orthosis, Foot Sensor and Control Unit that communicate wirelessly, thus enabling easy and comfortable use without cumbersome wires.
The NESS L300 delivers electrical pulses to the Common Peroneal Nerve which controls the movement of the Dorsiflexors, causing them to dorsiflex the foot in the swing phase of gait and therefore prevents foot drop. The unique ergonomic design of the Orthosis allows it to be used single-handedly and ensures constant and snug contact between the user’s limb and its integrated electrodes. While walking, the Foot Sensor detects whether the foot is in the air or on the ground and transmits this information to the rest of the system, which implements algorithms to synchronize the activation of the foot accordingly.
56415416fd2 The NESS L300&trade Lifts Up a FootThe wireless Control Unit displays on-line information regarding the system’s status and manages the various components.
The incorporated therapeutic training mode can assist in facilitation of muscle re-education, prevention of disuse atrophy of the calf muscles, maintenance or improvement of range of motion in the ankle joint and improvement of local blood circulation, while the patient is resting in a sitting or supine position. This device is intended to assist in getting the most out of this cutting edge rehabilitative technology in order to optimise patient’s gait and improve his quality of life.

The product page
Flashback: NESS H200™ System
(hat tip: The DesignDirectory)

images565 New Imaging Method Using HeliumResearchers at the University of Oregon discovered that helium atoms with X-ray-like waves can be distributed on randomly shaped surfaces using a newly devised nozzle fitted with a pinhole-sized capillary. Researchers claim that this new technique could advance the development of a new microscope for nanotechnology, providing a high-resolution and non-invasive approach towards studying both organic and inorganic materials. Here’s the scoop from the university’s site:

The research, funded by the National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Education, was the first to capture speckle diffraction patterns using atomic de Broglie waves. The Nobel Prize in physics went to France’s Louis de Broglie in 1929 for his work on the properties of matter waves.
All that is needed is a camera-like detector, which is now being pursued, to quickly capture images that offer nanometer resolution, said principal investigator Stephen Kevan, a physics professor at the University of Oregon. If successful, he said, the approach would build on advances already achieved with emerging X-ray-diffraction techniques.
The nozzle used in the experiments is similar to one on a garden hose. However, it utilizes a micron-sized glass capillary, borrowed from patch-clamp technology used in neuroscience. The capillary, smaller than a human hair, provides very small but bright-source atoms that can then be scattered from a surface. This distribution of scattered atoms is measured with high resolution using a field ionization detector.
The helium atoms advance with de Broglie wavelengths similar to X-rays, but are neutral and non-damaging to the surface involved. Kevan’s team was able to measure single-slit diffraction patterns as well as speckle patterns made on an irregularly shaped object.

Link..

5645134av1 In the Works: Contrast Agents for Alzheimers
The press release by Schering AG of Germany and Avid Radiopharmaceuticals Inc. of Philadelphia, PA talks about the joint collaboration by these companies “to develop novel diagnostic imaging agents for Alzheimer’s disease.” The future contrast agents will be based on proprietary technology from Avid:

The compounds made by Avid directly bind to the amyloid plaques in the brain thought to cause Alzheimer’s disease. They can be used with a variety of common, non-invasive imaging technologies such as positron emission tomography (PET) scanning. The potential of this compound class to accumulate preferentially in brain structures of Alzheimer’s patients with high amyloid beta load has already been demonstrated in pilot human studies.

From Avid technology page (see pictures above and below):

Avid’s Alzheimer’s disease program is based on the hypothesis that in vivo detection of amyloid plaques by positron emission computed tomography (PET) or single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging would provide useful biomarkers for monitoring and diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. To test this hypothesis, we have developed novel radiolabeled compounds that specifically and sensitively bind A b (the chief constituent of amyloid plaques), and are testing these compounds as molecular imaging agents in preclinical and clinical trials.

5645134av2 In the Works: Contrast Agents for Alzheimers
Press release
Technology page at Avid…
(hat tip: MTB Europe)