Popular Articles

Evidence Linking Agent Orange, Parkinson's, Heart Disease "Limited Or Suggestive", Report
Writers of a new report found "limited or suggestive evidence" that exposure to Agent Orange and other chemicals used in the Vietnam War is

Poorly Performing IVF Clinics Should Be Closed
BioNews publishes a controversial editorial by Dr Gedis Grudzinskas, Director of Fertility Focus Professional Services. If the same standards were applied to ivf centres as cardiac surgery, one in five ivf centres in the uk would be closed immediately.
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Lexicon Initiates Phase 2 Clinical Trial Of LX2931 In Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis
Lexicon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: LXRX), a biopharmaceutical company focused on discovering and developing breakthrough treatments for human disease, announced that it has initiated a Phase 2 clinical trial of LX2931 in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. LX2931 is an orally-delivered, small molecule drug candidate that has recently completed Phase 1 testing in normal volunteers. Lexicon also successfully completed a drug-drug interaction (DDI) study of LX2931 with methotrexate in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, with no clinically significant drug-drug interactions observed.
Cardiovascular

Fountain Of Youth? Cutting Calories May Add Years To Your Life

Growing scientific evidence indicates that people who adhere to a special calorie-restricted diet can improve their health and could potentially add years to their lifespan, according to an article in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News, ACS" weekly newsmagazine. C&EN contributing editor Laura Cassiday notes in the article that researchers have known for decades that calorie restriction - reducing calorie intake without compromising nutrition - slows aging, extends lifespan, and fights disease in animals. Mice fed a calorie-restricted diet, for example, had a 30 percent increase in lifespan, while calorie-restricted monkeys were healthier and had a three-times lower rate of death from age-related causes than controls, the article notes. Recent studies suggest that people on these diets may gain similar benefits. But scientists are unclear exactly why or how caloric restriction works. Scientists believe, however, that it may work by blocking an important chemical signaling pathway in the body, called the TOR pathway, that helps control cell growth. Other signaling pathways may also be involved, researchers say. For those who can"t adhere to a strict low-calorie diet, some pharmaceutical companies are attempting to develop drugs that mimic the effects of caloric-restriction without requiring drastic changes in eating habits. Scientists appear to be moving ever closer to the elusive Fountain of Youth, the article suggests. Chemical & Engineering News


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