Can A Tiny Fish Save Your Ears

For many people, loss of hearing is irreversible.

For scientists trying to figure out what can be done about that, one answer may lie — or swim, actually — in freshwater aquariums.

About one of every 10 Americans suffers from hearing impairment, according to a survey conducted by the Better Hearing Institute, a nonprofit advocacy group. By far the most common cause of hearing loss is damage to the so-called hair cells in the inner ear as a result of excessive noise, certain illnesses and drugs, and simple aging. The problem is that once hair cells die, humans (like other mammals) aren’t able to grow new ones.

In recent years, a research team at the University of Washington in Seattle has been working on finding a way to resolve that problem in experiments involving the zebrafish, a common aquarium denizen. The zebrafish, like many aquatic creatures, has clusters of hair cells running along the outside of its body that help sense vibrations in the water, working in a similar way to hair cells in the human inner ear. But unlike humans, zebrafish are able to regenerate their damaged hair cells. Researchers hope their work can unlock secrets to protect human hair cells from becoming damaged and to stimulate the cells to regenerate.

Hair cells, which took their name because under the microscope they look like cells with little hairs growing out of them, are an essential link in hearing. The filament hairs, or cilia, bend with vibrations caused by sound waves entering the ear. That induces the hair cell to create an electrical signal that is passed on to the auditory nerve and sent to the brain. Devices such as hearing aids, which amplify sounds, and cochlear implants, which stimulate the auditory nerve directly, help people hear, but neither restores hearing to normal.

Until the mid-1980s, researchers thought warm-blooded vertebrates, including humans, weren’t able to regenerate hair cells. Then, researchers around the country began observing that hair cells grew back in birds whose hearing was damaged either by noise or drugs. They also determined that hair-cell regeneration can result in improved hearing; in experiments, song birds that had grown new hair cells were able to resume singing their original songs with perfect pitch again.

But there is no indication that mammals can regenerate hair cells. And why some animals, even within the same species, are more vulnerable to hair-cell death, while others are more resistant to it, is a mystery. ‘I literally walked around for years wondering about this variability,’ says Ed Rubel, a professor of hearing sciences who leads part of the University of Washington research effort.

There are two main approaches to efforts aimed at inducing hair cells to regenerate. Some research groups are attempting to get stem cells — undifferentiated cells that can develop into various specialized cells — to turn into hair cells, either by transplanting them from other parts of the body, or by stimulating stem cells naturally occurring in the inner ear to transform themselves. Albert Edge, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and a researcher at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, says his team has been able to turn mouse stem cells into hair cells in a laboratory dish, though it isn’t clear whether those cells are functional or not.

Other researchers, like those at the University of Washington, are focused on understanding the molecules and genetics involved with hair-cell regeneration, and how to mimic this process in animals that don’t spontaneously regenerate hair cells. Scientists say aspects of such research, likely will be the first to have applications in humans. One encouraging angle: Dr. Rubel, in collaboration with another University of Washington scientist, David Raible, has identified chemicals that seem to protect hair cells from damage. In this experiment, zebrafish are exposed to a dye that highlights living hair cells. Then, one or two of the zebrafish — the young ones used in the lab measure just 1/8 of an inch long — are placed in each of 96 shallow holes contained on a plate. Different chemicals are administered to each fish group that might confer protection to the hair cells.

Finally, another chemical known to kill the fish hair cells is added. Under a microscope, researchers then examine the fish to look for cases where the dye is still evident, signaling that the cells are still alive and suggesting that the protective chemical appears to have done its job.

Those chemicals found to confer protection on fish hair cells are currently also being tested on mice and rats. The idea is that, once a drug is discovered that effectively protects hair cells from dying and is safe for humans, the medicine could be used to help protect the hearing of patients receiving drugs known for killing hair cells, like chemotherapeutic agents.

Dr. Rubel’s and Dr. Raible’s teams also are studying the genetics of zebrafish to identify markers that confer hair-cell protection.

Last year, their labs jointly identified several genetic mutations and drug-like compounds that seemed to protect hair cells from death, publishing their findings in the journal PLoS Genetics. In a separate study, published in 2007 in Hearing Research, they identified several drugs that also appear to be protective and were already approved for other purposes by the Food and Drug Administration. No tests have been performed on humans, however.

The teams also are working on a separate group of studies to understand the genes and other molecules that allow the regeneration of hair cells in zebrafish, birds and mice.

Surrounding cells known as support cells can both turn into hair cells or generate new hair cells. Dr. Rubel’s lab is investigating both processes. ‘If we understand the template of genes that are expressed by the cells we would want to divide, then we could tap into that template’ to mimic regeneration efforts in mammals, he says.

One finding identified a developmental protein that appears to be turned on in animals able to regenerate hair cells. In one study, a team member found a type of protein increased in a chick (which can regenerate hair cells) after its cells were damaged. But in running the same experiment in a mouse (which can’t regenerate hair cells), the protein didn’t increase, suggesting the protein could be involved in regeneration.

Scientists involved in the experiments say there could be therapeutic trials to prevent hearing loss using drugs within a decade. However, finding a cure for hearing loss using hair-cell regeneration is likely to be at least 20 years away, they say.

‘Hearing aids are Band-aids on a problem that already exists,’ says Nancy Freeman, director of the regenerative and development program in hearing loss at the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.

‘The hope with this type of [regeneration] approach is that at the end of the day you’d end up with something that natively restores function.’

Giving up alcohol and caffeine is as good as IVF says doctor

Giving up alcohol and caffeine is as good as IVF says doctor

Women wanting to become pregnant are as likely to succeed by giving up alcohol and caffeine than by attending a fertility clinic, a nutrition specialist claims.

Dr Emma Derbyshire said that 32 per cent of those having trouble conceiving became pregnant by giving up stimulants compared to 33 per cent after IVF treatment. And she revealed that quitting smoking is as important as a healthy diet in improving a woman’s fertility.

Previous studies have shown that smoking can delay a woman’s chances of getting pregnant by two months. Dr Derbyshire, of Manchester Metropolitan University, said couples should tackle their unhealthy lifestyles first before choosing expensive fertility treatment. ‘Women wanting to get pregnant stand nearly the same chance of conceiving if they cut out alcohol and caffeine as if they attend an IVF clinic for fertility treatment,’ she said. Dr Derbyshire said the odds of conceiving fall from 60 per cent in women who have one to five alcoholic drinks a week to 30 per cent for those consuming more than ten.

And she warned caffeine may also reduce a woman’s chances of becoming pregnant, saying no more than 300mg - or three cups of coffee or tea - should be consumed in a day.

Research on miscarriage suggests caffeine might harm the unborn baby because it is easily passed from mother to foetus, who cannot readily metabolise it. ˜ The postcode lottery for fertility treatment on the Health Service is getting worse, a report by Tory MP Grant Shapps warns. It found eight out of ten primary care trusts are failing to give childless couples the recommended quota of three IVF cycles. And it said two trusts have refused to provide any IVF treatment in the past two years.

The Women with ADHD more impaired than men

Women with ADHD more impaired than men

Although boys with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) appear to be more impulsive and troubled than their female counterparts, in adulthood the condition seems to have more impact in women than in men. Read more »

Women can reduce the risk of breast cancer By eating walnuts

By eating walnuts, women could reduce their risk of breast cancer.

Researchers at Marshall University School of Medicine in Huntington, West Virginia, found that lab mice bred to develop breast cancer had a significantly lower risk of breast cancer if fed the human equivalent of a handful of walnuts a day. Read more »

Sleep:asthma link to behavior

Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is associated with behavior problems in children with asthma, researchers have found.

“Studies have linked asthma symptoms with both childhood behavior problems and troubled sleep,” according to the study team, and there is “growing, but limited, evidence that children with SDB may have worse behavior”.

Dr Maria Fagnano and colleagues from the University of Rochester School of Medicine, New York, studied 194 children with asthma who were between 4 and 10 years old.

A third of the children had SDB and nearly a third had significant behavioral issues, they report in the latest issue of the journal, Pediatrics.

Based on the Behavioral Problem Index (BPI), which doctors often use to spot and quantify behavior problems in kids, children with SDB had significantly worse behavior overall compared to those with no sleep difficulties.

Color-blind: those color-blindness that never see green

The color-blindness is not strictly speaking a visual pathology, but rather a particularity that modifies the perception of the colors. Transmitted genetically, this anomaly is going to last the whole life without aggravation, nor improvement.

While observing a geranium in light of a candle, the English chemist John Dalton had the feeling that he didn’t discern the colors correctly. This is how was identified, since the end of the 18th century, the anomaly of perception of the colors named color-blindness.

A masculine anomaly transmitted by the mother

This “blindness of the colors” is bound to a relatively frequent hereditary genetic anomaly, but of which the consequences are essentially masculine since 8% of the men are only reached for 0,5% of the women. This disparity is due to the fact that the gene of the color-blindness is carried by the chromosome sexual X and that it is recessive, that means that the presence of a normal gene is sufficient so that the anomaly doesn’t express itself. The woman having two X chromosomes, it is only color-blind if these two chromosomes, inherited of his two parents, carry the deficient gene, rare possibility. Read more »

Want to be young, do not divorce

Want to be young, do not divorce

If you’ve been through it, this will probably come as no surprise. Divorce can add years to a person’s face, it is claimed.

Researchers found that marriage breakdown can take a significant toll on appearance.

They looked at identical twins, who would be genetically predisposed to age at a similar pace, to determine whether certain experiences affected ageing.

“A person’s heritage may initially dictate how they age but if you introduce certain factors into your life, you will certainly age faster, and likewise, if you avoid those factors you can slow down the hands of time,” said Professor Bahaman Guyuron, who led the study. Read more »

Extreme Diets - 500 Calorie Diet Exposed

Trying to lose weight quickly can sometimes lead to extreme diet choices. The 500 calorie diet is considered an extreme diet because there are health risks involved when going on this particular diet. You need to decide now if you’re willing to take on this risk when opting for this choice.

What makes this diet so risky is that a normal person needs a lot more calories than 500, during the average day, in order for the body to function properly. The average woman needs between 1200 - 1300 calories, and the average man needs between 1500 - 1600 calories per day. So, when you’re planning on taking in only 500 calories, that’s less than half the nutritional amount that your body needs. Read more »

Gaining weight and losing hair? You may live longer

Low thyroid activity, one of the most treated conditions in the United States, may actually be a sign of longevity, researchers say.

While they said it was far too soon for people taking thyroid pills to stop, they will be looking to see if the thyroid may hold the key to a long life, at least for some people. Read more »

Acne:what are the reasons

Acne: what are the reasons

Black points, white points. To adolescence, the acne prevents to see life in rose well often. But what the reasons of this skin illness are that affects close to 80% of the young at the hour of the first agitations in love? Passage in magazine of the three main guilty parties. Read more »

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