ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Science

Researchers find way to stop vision loss among elderly

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 28 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have found the trigger for macular degeneration, the leading cause of vision loss among the elderly.

ANI Nov 28, 2017 06:49 IST googleads

Researchers find way to stop vision loss among elderly

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 28 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have found the trigger for macular degeneration, the leading cause of vision loss among the elderly.

The finding may allow doctors to halt the inflammation early on, potentially saving patients from blindness.

"Almost 200 million people in the world have macular degeneration. If macular degeneration were a country, it would be the eighth most populated nation in the world. That's how large a problem this is," said Jayakrishna Ambati, MD, vice chairman for research of UVA's Department of Ophthalmology and the founding director of UVA's Center for Advanced Vision Science.

"For the first time, we know in macular degeneration what is one of the very first events that triggers the system to get alarmed and start, to use an anthropomorphic term, hyperventilating. This overdrive of inflammation is what ultimately damages cells, and so, potentially, we have a way of interfering very early in the process."

-Potential New Treatment for Macular Degeneration

Ambati and Nagaraj Kerur, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology, and their laboratories have determined that the culprit is an enzyme called cGAS.

The enzyme plays an important role in the body's immune response to infections by detecting foreign DNA. But the molecule's newly identified role in the "dry" form of age-related macular degeneration comes as wholly unexpected.

"It's really surprising that in macular degeneration, which, as far as we know, has nothing to do with viruses or bacteria, that cGAS is activated, and that this alarm system is turned on," Ambati said. "This is what leads to the killing of the cells in the retina, and, ultimately, vision loss."

The researchers noted that cGAS may be an alarm not just for pathogens but for other harmful problems that warrant responses from the immune system. The enzyme may also play important roles in conditions such as diabetes, lupus and obesity, and researchers already are working to create drugs that could inhibit its function.

"Because the target we're talking about is an enzyme, we could develop small molecules that could block it," Kerur said. "There are many drugs already on the market that target specific enzymes, such as the statins [which are used to lower cholesterol levels.]"

The promising new lead comes as good news for researchers seeking to develop new treatments for dry macular degeneration, as clinical trials in recent years have come to dead end after dead end.

The UVA researchers expect the development of a drug to inhibit cGAS will take several years, and that drug would then need to go through extensive testing to determine its safety and effectiveness for combating macular degeneration.

The researchers also hope to develop a way to detect the levels of the enzyme in patients' eyes. That would let them determine when best to administer a treatment that blocks cGAS.

"If they have high levels of this enzyme in their eye, they might be a wonderful candidate for this sort of treatment," Ambati said. "This is really precision medicine at the single-molecule level."

The findings have been published in the journal Nature Medicine. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Study finds new ways to prevent, treat type 2 diabetes

Study finds new ways to prevent, treat type 2 diabetes

Pancreatic cells, like human cells, have a limit to how much stress they can handle before they start to break down. Through overstimulation of these cells, certain stresses like inflammation and hyperglycemia lead to the onset of type 2 diabetes.

Read More
Science

Fever promotes increased activity, mitochondrial damage

Fever promotes increased activity, mitochondrial damage

Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Centre showed that fever temperatures increase immune cell metabolism, proliferation, and activity, but they also promote mitochondrial stress, DNA damage, and cell death in a specific subgroup of T cells.

Read More
Science

Study finds new source of cardiac inflammation

Study finds new source of cardiac inflammation

Globally, ischemic heart disease is the leading cause of death. A myocardial infarction (MI), commonly referred to as a "heart attack," is the first event in which insufficient coronary blood flow results in the death of a portion of the heart. Heart failure, heart wall remodelling, and severe inflammation result from this.

Read More
Science

Liver inflammation linked with poor cancer outcomes

Liver inflammation linked with poor cancer outcomes

Liver inflammation, a typical side effect of malignancies elsewhere in the body, has long been associated with poor cancer outcomes and, more recently, with poor response to immunotherapy. A team of researchers from the University of Pennsylvania's Abramson Cancer Centre and Perelman School of Medicine has now discovered a major cause for this.

Read More
Science

Researchers discover new approach to treat allergic asthma

Researchers discover new approach to treat allergic asthma

Researchers revealed that a protein known as Piezo1 stops allergens from hyperactivating a kind of immune cell in the lungs. The work implies that activating Piezo1 could be a new therapeutic approach to lowering lung inflammation and treating allergic asthma.

Read More
Science

Self-monitoring improves physical activity of elderly 

Self-monitoring improves physical activity of elderly 

Self-monitoring of physical activity with an accelerometer and feedback is an effective method for improving physical activity in the elderly who need long-term care.

Read More
Science

Researchers give more insight into bone diseases

Researchers give more insight into bone diseases

Diseases affecting the bones and joints are becoming more widespread in today's elderly populations. For example, in Japan alone, approximately 12 million people suffer from osteoporosis, a disorder that significantly weakens and fragilizes bones. Understanding the biological processes involved in the maintenance of bone and joint tissue is an important first step toward developing effective therapies for these illnesses.

Read More
Science

Study finds novel therapeutic method for cytokine storm

Study finds novel therapeutic method for cytokine storm

Researchers at Osaka University have developed a new therapy technique for cytokine storm, a devastating inflammatory disease caused by an infection or severe burn.

Read More
Science

Stress has tendency to increase inflammation in body

Stress has tendency to increase inflammation in body

Lifestyle and genetics, as well as a range of other factors both within and outside of our control, have all been connected to the development of metabolic syndrome, a set of conditions that increase the risk of serious health problems.

Read More
Science

Loss of cells in pancreas in elderly linked to diabetes

Loss of cells in pancreas in elderly linked to diabetes

Researchers at Tokyo Metropolitan University looked at pancreatic islet cell loss (ICL) in people who had no previous pancreatic disorders

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.