Blue dye might help paralysis in the future

Paralysis is one of those injuries that can be disheartening to a person.  His body will not be able to function properly anymore if he has such condition.  Normal or daily activities are lessened because of this.

Paralysis can be caused by serious brain or nervous system damage.  Several conditions like trauma, stroke, botulism, multiple sclerosis to name a few may also cause paralysis.  Even poison can trigger it because it interferes with nerve function in the body.

Recently, according to CBS news medical correspondent Dr. Jennifer Ashton, there is a new treatment that might become a possible cure for acute spinal injuries. Each year in America, there are about 12,000 new paralysis cases.

Surprisingly she said during CBS’ The Early Show that the coating used by blue M&Ms and, yes, the blue Gatorade might be it.  The University of Rochester researchers said the non-toxic blue food dye (or BBG) can “stop the cascade of molecular events that causes secondary damage to the spinal cord in the hours following an injury—and the interruption could prevent paralysis.”

It can also help reduce secondary injuries around the primary spinal cord injury. With spinal cord injury, the swelling is the major cause of the problem.  And according to Rochester University’s research, it can cause “less waste and less zone of injury” on the spinal cord.

When a patient has a spinal cord injury, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is highly produced.  It binds to receptors thus triggering irreversible cell death.  And as a result leads to swelling.

But the research showed the dye’s temporary side effect.  When it was injected on the rats, they had slight bluish tints on their white fur and paws.  Although they were able to recover most of their limb functions and even began walking again—albeit limping.

It might bring hope to patients in the future once it is perfected.  Another limit is it should be done within hours of the injury.

Paralysis injury claim

Paralysis injury claims usually involve accidents such as slip and fall, elevator accidents or a car crash.   What are the legal steps or way to claim compensation for paralysis?

1. Injury should be diagnosed by a qualified doctor (MRI or CT scan)
2. Know if the paralysis injury is:
• Contusion
• Compression
• Direct injury / Laceration
• Loss of sensation
• Loss of reflex
• Sensitivity to touch
• Pain

3. Undergo a physical or occupational injury; respiratory therapy; have a speech language pathologist and a nutritionist; talk to a psychologist or a psychiatrist.

You do have legal rights… Remember that!

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Those extra helpings of gravy and dessert at the holiday table are even less of a help to your waistline than previously thought. According to a new research report recently appearing online in The FASEB Journal, a diet that is high in fat and in sugar actually switches on genes that ultimately cause our bodies to store too much fat. This means these foods hit you with a double-whammy as the already difficult task of converting high-fat and high-sugar foods to energy is made even harder because these foods also turn our bodies into “supersized fat-storing” machine.


In the research report, scientists show that foods high in fat and sugar stimulate a known opioid receptor, called the kappa opioid receptor, which plays a role in fat metabolism. When this receptor is stimulated, it causes our bodies to hold on to far more fat than our bodies would do otherwise.

According to Traci Ann Czyzyk-Morgan, one of the researchers involved in the work, “the data presented here support the hypothesis that overactivation of kappa opioid receptors contribute to the development of obesity specifically during prolonged consumption of high-fat, calorically dense diets.”

To make this discovery, Czyzyk-Morgan and her colleagues conducted tests in two groups of mice. One group had the kappa opioid receptor genetically deactivated (“knocked out”) and the other group was normal. Both groups were given a high fat, high sucrose, energy dense diet for 16 weeks. While the control group of mice gained significant weight and fat mass on this diet, the mice with the deactivated receptor remained lean. In addition to having reduced fat stores, the mice with the deactivated receptor also showed a reduced ability to store incoming nutrients.

Although more work is necessary to examine what the exact effects would be in humans, this research may help address the growing obesity problem worldwide in both the short-term and long-term. Most immediately, this research provides more proof that high-fat and high-sugar diets should be avoided. In the long-term, however, this research is even more significant, as it provides a new drug target for developing therapies for preventing obesity and helping obese people slim down.

“In times when food was scarce and starvation an ever-present threat, an adaptation that allows our bodies to store as much energy as possible during plentiful times was probably a lifesaver,” said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal. “By taking that opioid receptor off the table, researchers may have found a way to keep us from eating ourselves to death.”

More information: Traci A. Czyzyk, Ruben Nogueiras, John F. Lockwood, Jamie H. McKinzie, Tamer Coskun, John E. Pintar, Craig Hammond, Matthias H. Tschöp, and Michael A. Statnick -Opioid receptors control the metabolic response to a high-energy diet in mice. FASEB J. doi:10.1096/fj.09-143610

Source: Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (news : web)





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