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Strong daylight may help prevent and treat heart attacks
Apr 26, 3:02 pm
London, April 26 (ANI): CU medical school researchers have revealed that intense light could be used to treat heart attacks.There are already lots of ways to treat a heart attack - CPR, aspirin
, clot-busters and more. "The study suggests that strong light, or even just daylight, might ease the risk of having a heart attack or suffering damage from one," said Tobias Eckle, MD, PhD, an associate professor of anesthesiology, cardiology, and cell and developmental biology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. "For patients, this could mean that daylight exposure inside of the hospital could reduce the damage that is caused by a heart attack," Eckle stated.What's the connection between light and a myocardial infarction, known commonly as a heart attack?The answer lies, perhaps surprisingly, in the circadian rhythm, the body's clock that is linked to light and dark. Proteins in the brain regulate the circadian clock. But the proteins are in other organs as well, including the heart.Eckle and Holger Eltzschig, MD, a CU professor of anesthesiology, found that one of those proteins, called Period 2, plays a crucial role in fending off damage from a heart attack. During a heart attack, little or no oxygen reaches the heart. Without oxygen, the heart has to switch from its usual fuel - fat - to glucose. Without that change in heart metabolism, cells die and the heart is damagedAnd here's where the circadian rhythm comes in.The study showed that the Period 2 protein is vital for that change in fuel, from fat to glucose, and therefore could make heart metabolism more efficient. In fact,
Strong daylight activated Period 2 in animals and minimized damage from a heart attack.Future studies will try to understand how light is able to change heart metabolism in humans and how this could be used to treat heart attacks in patientsThe findings were recently published in the journal Nature Medicine. (ANI)
'Exergaming' could help prevent childhood obesity
May 18, 2:35 pm
Washington, May 18 (ANI): Fewer than 50 percent of primary school-aged boys and fewer than 28 percent of girls meet the minimum levels of physical activity required to maintain health.
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Handbags may have more germs than average toilet flush
May 18, 1:39 pm
Washington, May 18 (ANI): Not many women may wash their hands after putting them inside their bag, but researchers have suggested that they perhaps should.
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Women's fertility could be linked with their immune status
May 18, 1:19 pm
Washington, May 18 (ANI): A new research has suggested that reproductive function of women may be tied to their immune status.
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Depression doubles risk of stroke in middle-aged women
May 17, 3:08 pm
Washington, May 17 (ANI): Middle-aged women suffering from depression are more than twice as likely to have a stroke, a new study has warned.
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