Saturday, April 25, 2020

Natural-born painkiller found in human saliva



Natural-born painkiller found in human saliva

Saliva from humans has yielded a natural painkiller up to six times more powerful than morphine, researchers say.

The substance, dubbed opiorphin, may spawn a new generation of natural painkillers that relieve pain as well as morphine but without the addictive and psychological side effects of the traditional drug.

When the researchers injected a pain-inducing chemical into rats’ paws, 1 milligram of opiorphin per kilogram of body weight achieved the same painkilling effect as 3 milligrams of morphine.

The substance was so successful at blocking pain that, in a test involving a platform of upended pins, the rats needed six times as much morphine as opiorphin to render them oblivious to the pain of standing on the needle points.

Anti-depressive angle
“Its pain-suppressive effect is like that of morphine,” says Catherine Rougeot at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France, who led the research. “But we have to test its side effects as it is not a pure painkiller,” she says. “It may also be an anti-depressive molecule.”

Rougeot and colleagues discovered that opiorphin works in nerve cells of the spine by stopping the usual destruction of natural pain-killing opiates there, called enkephalins.

Opiorphin is such a simple molecule that it should be possible to synthesise it and produce large quantities without having to isolate it from saliva, Rougeot explains. Alternatively, it might be possible to find drugs which trigger patients’ bodies to produce more of the molecule themselves.

Journal reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (vol 103, p 17979)

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

TEARS OF JOY To the WORLD as RESEARCHERS finally find relief over CORONAVIRUS epidemic





Over 38 companies and academic institutions are racing to create a vaccine for the coronavirus. At least four have candidates they have been testing on animals. The first produced by Boston-based biotech firm Modern.

What types of drugs might work?

1.Antiviral drugs that directly affect the. coronavirus' ability to thrive inside the body.

2. Drugs that can calm the immune system - patients become seriously I'll when their immune system overreacts and starts causing collateral damage to the body.

3. Antibodies either from survivors' blood or made in the lab that can attack the virus

Other countries that have made breakthrough in the vaccines are India, China (which started the epidemic), Glaxo Smith Kline in the UK, Johnson and Johnson in the US.

Australia's national government science agency will test two vaccine candidates over the next three months. It is part of the global race to make sure they stop the epidemic that has put a halt to the world. Crippling the world at large with no means to adequately fight.

Maryland based Novamax, has now repurposed vaccines for SARS-COV-2(A vaccine recently created) and has proved to start working. They have candidates ready for try outs this spring.