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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: red + boost + compound  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)


Scientific American
Smoky Home: Cleaning Up Indoor Air with Human Waste
Scientific American -
Villages not far from this one in the red sandstone mountains of Yunnan Province used to be dark in the middle of the day 30 years ago, according to local ...
Liquid assets: Moderately speaking, wine has health benefits
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Jul 31, 2008
But, added Sioris, the 1991 findings of Dr. Serge Renaud at the French National Center for Health Research -- which helped boost red wine sales by 40 ...
Reversitall(R) with Resveratrol Stimulates Anti-Aging Enzyme
MarketWatch - Jul 31, 2008
The amazing health benefits of red wine have long been known. The source of its power is a molecular compound called Resveratrol. "Reversitall Plus(R) is a ...
Amgen shares, propped by bone drug, may move higher
guardian.co.uk, UK - Aug 1, 2008
Other late-stage compounds include blood platelet booster Nplate, for which the company is awaiting US regulatory approval. ...AMGN
Inside Dish: Elledge gives Allmendinger a boost
SportingNews.com - Jul 27, 2008
"This was the same compound we raced last year, and the wear improved over the course of the day last year to the point where we could run the full stops," ...
New Film Tests Crudity?s Limits
New York Times, United States - Aug 1, 2008
A soft performance would also compound the embarrassment of ?The Love Guru,? the Mike Myers raunchfest that flopped when Paramount released it in June. ...
State fairs pitch thrift in a pricey travel year
Chicago Tribune, United States - Aug 1, 2008
"Then you compound that with a couple of family members, you know, going with their children," Jacobs said. "If we'll have a hundred-plus people going ...
Break Through to a Better You
RedOrbit, TX - Aug 2, 2008
Add other compound movements such as shoulder presses, incline presses, barbell curls and lying triceps extensions and you have a potent routine. ...
Private lenders won't cut rates even if RBA does
The Australian, Australia - Aug 1, 2008
To compound matters, Mulcahy presented his bank earnings after excluding bad debts, which led to heads being scratched because managing debts is core ...
Out with a bang
Mail & Guardian Online, South Africa - Jul 28, 2008
While taurine has received the lion's share of press coverage -- fuelled, in part, by wild urban legends claiming that the compound is extracted from bulls' ...
Source: Google News

MEDICINE: Enhanced: A Boost for Translational Neuroscience -
H Ehrenreich - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org
... Indeed, EPO's ability to boost red blood cell production (9 ... used long-term, excessive
stimulation of red blood cell ... the fact that its parent compound, EPO, is ...


US Patent 3,567,355, 1971 - Google Patents
... a considerable improvement over the weak red color obtained ... but without the presence
of the booster in the ... 0.1 to 10 weight percent of compounds selected from ...

New red phosphorus masterbatches find new application areas in thermoplastics -
N Gatti - Plastics, Additives and Compounding, 2002 - Elsevier
... a recent positive environ- mental classification of the product, has provided a
boost for P-red chemistry in new applications, such as thermoplastic compounds. ...

Searching for Medicine's Sweet Spot -
J Alper - Science, 2001 - sciencemag.org
... Top-selling protein drugs, such as the red blood cell booster erythropoietin (EPO ...
Its compound, intended to prevent damage to tissues after blood starts ...

Use of ruthenium red as immunosuppressive agents -
DS Dwyer, K Esenther - US Patent 5,238,689, 1993 - freepatentsonline.com
... Ruthenium Red can be administered in combination with other drugs to boost the
immunosuppressive effect. Compounds that can be co-administered include steroids ...

Photographic high contrast silver halide material and method of processing -
J Pich, RH Piggin, ML Magill - US Patent 6,187,520, 2001 - freepatentsonline.com
... minimize dye stain whilst achieving a boost in density. ... pelloid layer designed to
absorb red light ... the presence/absence of the amine density-enhancing compound. ...

… for Quantitative Analysis of Formononetin in Blood Plasma and Rumen Fluid of Wethers Fed Red Clover -
W Wang, Y Tanaka, Z Han, J Cheng - Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1994 - pubs.acs.org
... collected for 2 weeks after the boost to obtain ... on a thin-layer chromatogram of a
red clover extract ... Antiserum pmol needed for 50 % displacement compound of the ...

Method of processing of a photographic high contrast silver halide material -
J Pich, RH Piggin, ML Magill - EP Patent 0,969,312, 2004 - freepatentsonline.com
... minimise dye stain whilst achieving a boost in density. ... pelloid layer designed to
absorb red light ... the presence/absence of the amine density-enhancing compound. ...
-

Was Methuselah a Booze-elah?
SS Hall - ScienceNOW, 2003 - sciencenow.sciencemag.org
... The new compounds boost the activity of Sir2 in yeast and of an ... of which turned out
to be a compound called resveratrol, found in grapes and red wine ...

-
JW Harder - US Patent 4,684,604, 1987 - Google Patents
... A single compound can thus be employed in many different sites in a ... is provided which
comprises a support having thereon at least one red-sensitive silver ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Red Wine Compound Could Boost Endurance

November 16, 2006 03:58:06 PM PST
By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Nov. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Athletes and non-athletes alike may want to raise a glass to resveratrol, an ingredient in red wine that researchers say doubled the physical endurance of mice in a new study, while protecting them against diabetes and obesity.

Mice given high doses of the compound were able to run twice as far on treadmills than they normally could, French researchers reported.

Resveratrol might even help the rodents live longer, they say.

"The compound resveratrol, found in the skin of red grapes and cranberries, was known to activate SIRT1, an enzyme known to be involved in lifespan extension," explained lead researcher Dr. Johan Auwerx, from the Institute of Genetics and Molecular and Cellular Biology in Illkirch, France.

These results, published in the Nov. 16 issue of Cell, add to findings from a recent study that showed that resveratrol improved health and lengthened survival of mice placed on a high-calorie diet.

While studies have so far been limited to mice, the French team said they had also found a genetic link to energy expenditure in humans that looks like it might be similarly affected by resveratrol.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

"Our study shows that activation of SIRT1 by resveratrol is a very promising and well-tolerated approach to treat common metabolic diseases, such as obesity and type 2 diabetes," Auwerx said.

The study involved obese mice with a condition that mimicked type 2 diabetes.

Auwerx's team found that resveratrol activated the SIRT1 gene, inducing the activity of mitochondria, the tiny energy factories within cells. By activating mitochondria, resveratrol causes the cells to burn more energy than they normally could.

Burning more energy protects against fat accumulation and type 2 diabetes, the research team explained. Increasing mitochondria activity also improves the performance of certain tissues, most especially skeletal muscles.

"That is why we saw a spectacular increase in endurance in the mice, which doubled the distance they run," Auwerx explained.

"We showed this not only in cultured cells and mice, but also, more importantly, the first time in humans, where we linked the SIRT1 gene with energy expenditure," Auwerx said.

Resveratrol or its analogs could prove useful in treating several diseases that are characterized by abnormal mitochondrial activity, Auwerx said. "In the first case, you can think about applications in the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes," he said. "Many more diseases could benefit from increased mitochondrial activity, most notably neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson's disease and Huntington's," he added.

This study was paid for by Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, which developed the compound used in the experiments.

But if you think that drinking more wine or taking resveratrol supplements might turn you into a super-athlete, think again, said Sirtris CEO Dr. Christoph Westphal.

"Native resveratrol from red wine or nutraceuticals cannot reach therapeutic levels in man," he said. "You would need to drink hundreds of glasses of red wine or take hundreds of nutraceutical pills in a day to get a therapeutic dose."

According to Westphal, the company has completed two phase 1 studies with 85 human volunteers of an improved formulation of resveratrol which reaches therapeutic levels in man and is safe.

In addition, Sirtris has started giving diabetic patients its resveratrol compound in a 28-day phase 1 trial to test the safety of the drug and to see how it affects glucose levels.

"We are also initiating a phase 1 study in a rare, very severe mitochondrial disorder called MELAS," Westphal said. The condition -- "mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactacidosis, stroke" (MELAS) -- is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder.

One expert was cautious about the findings.

"This is an important addition to the body of work that is showing that you can activate anti-aging genetic pathways," said David Sinclair, an associate professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School, and a cofounder of Sirtris.

He called the study an important sep in the development of new drugs to fight heart disease, Alzheimer's and age-relate other woes. "In five years, we should know if the results obtained in mice can be achieved in people," he said.

The compound's usefulness against diabetes remains unproven, Sinclair said. "A mouse is not a human," he said. "It would be amazing if it worked in humans. But we will have to wait and see."

Another expert expressed similar skepticism.

"It's clear that the authors of the Cell paper want to strongly argue that their data show a causal link between activation of SIRT1 and the effects of resveratrol," said Matt Kaeberlein, an assistant professor of pathology at the University of Washington. "While all of their data is consistent with this model, and the data is compelling, there really is no causal evidence that the effects of resveratrol in mice require SIRT1 activation," he said.

Kaeberlein suggested that to really test their theory, the researchers should have experimented with mice that did not have the SIRT1 gene, to see whether these mice would respond to resveratrol when fed a high-fat diet.

"Also, there is abundant evidence that resveratrol acts on proteins other than SIRT1, so it's premature to conclude that everything seen in this paper is due to effects on SIRT1," he said.

More information

There's more on resveratrol at Oregon State University.

 

Smoking Quadruples Kids' Asthma Risk

November 16, 2006 03:58:06 PM PST

THURSDAY, Nov. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Adolescents who smoke are about four times more likely to develop asthma during their teen years than those who don't smoke, researchers warn.

"The results of our study provide clear evidence that regular smoking increases the risk for asthma and that important chronic adverse consequences of smoking are not restricted to individuals who have smoked for many years," Dr. Frank D. Gilliland, of the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, said in a prepared statement.

His team published the findings in the November issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Gilliland's group collected five to eight years of data on over 2,600 children with no prior history of wheezing or asthma. The children were recruited from the fourth and seventh grades in 12 California communities as part of the Children's Health Study, which tracked the respiratory health of school-aged children during the 1990s.

The team uncovered 255 cases of new-onset asthma. Children who smoked 300 or more cigarettes a year were nearly four times more likely to develop asthma than nonsmokers.

Surprisingly, the researchers found that this increased asthma risk in smokers was stronger in children with no history of allergies than in those who had allergies.

"The clinical and public health implications of our findings are far-reaching. Effective tobacco control efforts focusing on the prevention of smoking in children, adolescents and women of childbearing age are urgently needed to reduce the number of these preventable cases of asthma," Gilliland said.

More information

The Nemours Foundation has more about smoking and asthma.

 
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