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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: talcum powder + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Do-It-Yourself Q&A
Modesto Bee, CA - Aug 2, 2008
It sometimes helps to lubricate the boards in squeaky areas by sweeping talcum powder into the cracks. Carefully clean up any powder on the surface to ...
Mineral cosmetics mined for help with good looks
Waterbury Republican American, CT - Jul 23, 2008
Popularized via television infomercials, mineral makeup products ? foundation, blush, translucent powder, eye shadow ? have worked their way from upscale ...
Eirik Omlie column ? Testing instruments from around the globe
The Stamford Times, CT - Jul 16, 2008
Beginning tabla players need to invest in some talcum powder, a hammer, a metronome and a tuner in addition to the two drums. It looks like beginners can ...
Celebrating Dr. Carver
Culpeper Star Exponent, VA - Jul 11, 2008
... mayonnaise, shaving cream and talcum powder, just to name a few. In spite of his intellectual richness, Dr. Carver did not care for material wealth. ...
Sand Eliminator removes moisture between skin, sand
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - Jul 21, 2008
It was developed with a dermatologist and has the consistency of baby powder, but uses cornstarch instead of talc. Sand Eliminator is enhanced with ...
Source: Google News

Baby powder--a hazard! -
HC Mofenson, J Greensher, A DiTomasso, S Okun - Pediatrics, 1981 - Am Acad Pediatrics
... http://www.pediatrics.org the World Wide Web at: The online version of ... talcum powder
aspiration with a mortality of 20%.? These cases represent only the most ...

Treatment of pneumothorax with VATS and bullectomy under local anesthesia -
M de la Torre Bravos, JJ Rivas de Andres Rivas de … - The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1999 - Soc Thorac Surgeons
... org/cgi/content/full/68/6/2383 on the World Wide Web at: The ... Cincinnati, OH), completing
the operation with pulverization of 5g purified talcum powder [3] and ...

The role of depilation and deodorants in hidradenitis suppurativa -
WP Morgan, G Leicester - Archives of Dermatology, 1982 - Am Med Assoc
... this message because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards ... Shaving
and the use of chemical depilatories, deodorants, and talcum powder have been ...

Talc pleurodesis for the treatment of pneumothorax and pleural effusion -
L Kennedy, SA Sahn - Chest, 1994 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... services can be found online on the World Wide Web at: The ... Further, use of powder
has resulted in talcum embolism with hemiplegia both in man and experimental ...

Powder and microcapsule fragrance enhanced sampler -
C Tararuj, CK Schaab? - US Patent 4,952,400, 1990 - freepatentsonline.com
... of particles, are severed from the web by cutter ... The fragranced powder layer consists
of a suspended lose mixture of fragranced powders such as talc or of ...

-
PC Simpson, LM Smith? - US Patent 5,023,130, 1991 - Google Patents
... An external pump was used to force talc powder out of the box and through the ... Thejets
impart to the web a total impact-energy product ("IxE") of at least 0.7 ...

-
US Patent 2,852,795, 1958 - Google Patents
... This long vegetable tain finely ground facial powder or talc, is to provide
a fiber web has wet strength properties and is covered on ...

Fragrance enhanced powder sampler and method of making the same -
C Tararuj, CK Schaab - US Patent 4,940,584, 1990 - freepatentsonline.com
... is not limited to bath powders, eye shadows, talcum powders etc ... to form the solid
dried fragrance powder layer ... at high speed and low cost from a continuous web. ...

Prognosis of Childhood Leukemia -
RC Stein, AR Ablin, JH Kushner, S Zoger - Pediatrics, 1969 - Am Acad Pediatrics
... http://www.pediatrics.org the World Wide Web at: The online version of this article,
along with updated information and services, is located on ...

Bacterial and fungal dynamics and their contribution to microbial biomass in desert soil -
S Vishnevetsky, Y Steinberger - Journal of Arid Environments, 1997 - Elsevier
... by scattered rainfall events, significant differences in detritus food web composition
will ... was prepared as follows: (1) control = 67 mg talcum powder + 33 mg ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Talcum powder stunts growth of lung tumors

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Talcum powder has been used for generations to soothe babies’ diaper rash and freshen women’s faces. But University of Florida researchers report the household product has an additional healing power: The ability to stunt cancer growth by cutting the flow of blood to metastatic lung tumors.

The study, published in the European Respiratory Journal in April, reveals that talc stimulates healthy cells to produce endostatin, a hormone considered the magic bullet for treating metastatic lung cancer. The UF researchers say talc is an exciting new therapeutic agent for a cancer largely considered incurable.

“We found, to our surprise, that talc causes tumor growth to slow down and actually decreases the tumor bulk,” said Veena Antony, M.D., a professor of pulmonary medicine and chief of pulmonary and critical care medicine at UF’s College of Medicine. “Talc is able to prevent the formation of blood vessels, thereby killing the tumor and choking off its growth. The tumors appeared to grow much slower and in some cases completely disappeared.”

Scientists have only recently discovered that talcum powder stunts tumor growth, though the mineral has been used for almost 70 years to treat the respiratory problems that accompany metastatic lung cancer. About half of all patients accumulate fluid around the surface of the lungs, a condition known as malignant pleural effusion.

“That fluid can press down upon the lung, impair the breathing of the patient and cause the patient to feel very short of breath,” said Antony.

Pleural effusions indicate that the cancer, which might have started in the breast, lung or gastrointestinal tract, has spread throughout the body. The prognosis for the roughly 200,000 patients afflicted with this condition is poor: Many die within six months.

To make life more bearable for these patients, doctors close the extra space between the lung and the chest wall, where the troublesome fluid collects. The trick is gluing the two surfaces together. Talc is blown into the patients’ chest cavity to irritate the tissue and create tiny abrasions. When the lung tissue heals, it becomes permanently adhered to the chest wall without impairing the patients’ breathing. The effects of the procedure, called medical thoracoscopy with talc pleurodesis, are immediate and last a lifetime.

“Shortness of breath is a horrible way to die,” Antony said. “The procedure spares the patient and the family the misery of watching their loved one suffer. It’s been used very extensively in Europe but it’s had slower acceptance (in the United States), perhaps because of the need to learn a new technology.”

The Food and Drug Administration approved talc for use in medical thoracoscopy in 2003, but UF is one of just a handful of U.S. institutions that perform the outpatient procedure on a routine basis.

Doctors have noticed that patients who undergo medical thoracoscopy with talcum powder live up to 18 months longer than expected. To figure out why, Antony compared lung fluid from 16 patients with malignant pleural effusions before and after doctors dusted their lungs with talc. The results were startling.

“We were surprised to find that talc has added benefits besides causing scarring and taking away the fluid that surrounds the lung,” Antony said. “The cells that cover the lining of the lung are stimulated by the presence of talc to produce a factor that inhibits the growth of blood vessels and kills the tumor cells themselves.”

Less than one day after treatment with talc, patients began producing 10-fold higher levels of endostatin, a hormone released by healthy lung cells. Endostatin prevents new blood vessels from forming, slows cell growth and movement, and even induces nearby tumor cells to commit suicide. All of these make it hard for tumors to grow and spread into healthy lung tissue.

When endostatin was first discovered in 1997, doctors hoped its tumor-fighting properties would lead to a cure for cancer. But clinical trials have been disappointing, possibly because most clinicians have injected the hormone directly into patients. The hormone breaks down in the body before it has a chance to slow the spread of cancer, Antony said.

“It was there, it had a very short half life, it was gone,” Antony said. “What we’ve done is caused the normal pleural mesothelial cells to continue to produce endostatin. Talc doesn’t go away. Talc stays in the chest cavity, constantly causing the normal cells to produce this factor that inhibits the growth of the tumor.”

The antitumor effects of talc appear to be long-lasting, said Antony, who is continuing to investigate the long-term outcomes of patients who have undergone talc pleurodesis.

“It surprised us that such a cheap, easily available product, such an old-fashioned product, can have benefits to the patient and perhaps prolong the patient’s life,” Antony said.

Yossef Aelony, M.D., a clinical professor of respiratory and critical care medicine at the Harbor-University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center, said the UF findings are an important milestone.

“This work will undoubtedly have a significant influence on future clinical trials dealing with the treatment of pleural malignancies, including lung cancer, mesothelioma and metastatic adenocarcinoma involving the pleural surfaces,” Aelony said.

 

Study shows big power of small RNAs, not just proteins, in halting cancer

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory finds cancer gene pathway triggers micro RNAs to suppress tumors

Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. – Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) researchers led by Lin He, Xingyue He, and Professor and Howard Hughes Medical Investigator (HHMI) Greg Hannon have identified a family of micro RNAs (miRNAs) that enable a critical tumor suppressor network, called the p53 pathway, to fight cancer growth. “At CSHL, we are moving simultaneously on several fronts to understand the p53 pathway because damage to this pathway is something that almost all cancers have in common,” said CSHL Cancer Center Deputy Director and HHMI Scott Lowe.

“Collaboration among different CSHL research laboratories has not only found that p53 can arrest the growth and even eradicate cancers, but we’ve revealed something very surprising about what makes this pathway so powerful,” said Hannon. CSHL research published by Nature earlier this year, concluded that even in the latest stages of cancer, reactivation of a previously damaged p53 pathway caused cancer tumors to stop growing and even eliminate themselves by activating an immune response in surrounding healthy cells. Most suspected that proteins would be revealed as key to the power of p53, but this latest research published June 6 by Nature now identifies miRNAs as a critical force behind the anti-proliferation potential of p53.

Expression of most miRNAs is reduced in tumors, suggesting that some miRNAs act to prevent tumor formation. By comparing levels of miRNAs in cells with a variety of pre-cancerous genetic lesions, CSHL researchers found a connection between changes in the p53 pathway and the loss of a specific family of miRNAs, known as miR-34. The fact that p53 uses miRNAs to stop tumor cell growth reveals a completely new dimension of this critical cancer fighting pathway and its ability to trigger the genetic death of cancer cells. “Our findings certainly lead to a deeper understanding of a critical tumor suppression mechanism but also may provide insight into how to best engage the p53 pathway to treat cancer by killing tumor cells,” said He.

###

“A microRNA component of the p53 tumour suppressor network” was published on-line today by Nature ahead of print publication and can be accessed using DOI: 10.1038/nature05939 at www.nature.com/nature. The complete citation is as follows: Lin He, Xingue He, Lee P. Lim, Elisa de Stanchina, Zhenyu Xuan, Yu Liang, Wen Xue, Lars Zender, Jill Magnus, Dana Ridzon, Aimee L. Jackson, Peter s. Linsley, Caifu Chen, Scott W. Lowe, Michele A. Cleary and Gregory J. Hannon.

CSHL is a private, non-profit research and education institution dedicated to exploring molecular biology and genetics in order to advance the understanding and ability to diagnose and treat cancers, neurological diseases, and other causes of human suffering.

For more information visit www.cshl.edu

 
 
 
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