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EPIDEMICS
Seaweed defense offers clues against malaria

Greek officials on alert over swine flu death toll
Athens (AFP) Feb 21, 2011 - Health officials in Greece on Monday warned the public to remain vigilant against swine flu that has so far killed 93 people, pointing to low vaccination ratios and suggesting the elderly are more at risk. "The country is going through a phase of high seasonal flu activity," the state centre for disease control (Keelpno) said in a statement, adding that the potentially deadly H1N1 virus strain was "predominant". It noted that 126 people were currently in hospital with confirmed flu symptoms and that only a small number of health staff and high risk groups had taken vaccines.

"This virus strain can cause serious illness even to young individuals without prior risk causes," the centre said. In a number of serious cases patients had apparently underestimated the symptoms and were late in taking medication, it said. The Greek interior minister was among those who caught the virus and took time off to recuperate last week according to reports. The average age of flu patients has increased to 54 years, Keelpno said, increasing the probability of high-risk elderly individuals falling ill. Some 150 people had died in Greece from swine flu last year.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 21, 2011
Seaweed emits a natural chemical response to ward off fungi that would otherwise colonize an injured plant, a process that could help the search for anti-malaria drugs, a US scientist said Monday.

Up to a million people per year die from malaria, which can be caused by the parasite Plasmodium falciparum, and new drugs are needed because the parasite is developing resistance to popular pharmaceuticals.

"There are only a couple of drugs left that are effective against malaria in all areas of the world, so we are hopeful that these molecules will continue to show promise as we develop them further as pharmaceutical leads," said scientist Julia Kubanek, an associate professor at Georgia Tech.

Researchers discovered the class of seaweed defense compounds, known as bromophycolides, by studying 800 species of seaweed off Fiji Island.

One type in particular caught their attention, Callophycus serratus, "because it seemed particularly adept at fighting off microbial infections," said the study presented Monday at an international science conference in Washington.

The molecules appeared in light-colored blotches on certain parts of the seaweed, and were visible with the help of a new technique known as desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry developed at the Georgia Tech's School of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

"The alga is marshaling its defenses and displaying them in a way that blocks the entry points for microbes that might invade and cause disease," said Kubanek.

"Seaweeds don't have immune responses like humans do. But instead, they have some chemical compounds in their tissues to protect them," she said.

"We can co-opt these chemical processes for human benefit in the form of new treatments for diseases that affect us."

However, more research needs to be done before the process can be turned into a drug for humans, and studies on mice are planned next.

"As with other potential drug compounds, however, the likelihood that this molecule will have just the right chemistry to be useful in humans is relatively small," said the study.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health as part of a long-term study of chemical signaling among organisms in coral reefs.

In January, the World Health Organization launched a global plan to halt the spread of resistance to artemisinin, a key compound of new malaria drugs, warning that not acting would be "catastrophic."

Resistance has emerged in areas on the Cambodia-Thailand border, while a spread to other areas in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam is suspected.

The WHO said more than 175 million dollars in funding would be required for research and to contain the resistance in these areas.



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Three more swine flu deaths in Hong Kong: officials
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 21, 2011
Three more people in Hong Kong have died from swine flu, bringing the death toll to at least 17 in the past month, the territory's health authority said Monday. Health officials have stepped up surveillance on the virulent strain of influenza since late last month amid concerns about more deaths in the teeming metropolis of seven million. The latest three victims, who died last week, wer ... read more







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