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Gut Microbiome May Make Chemo Drug Toxic to Patients

Albert Einstein College of Medicineresearchers report that the composition of people’s gut bacteria may explain why some of them suffer life-threatening reactions after taking a key drug for treating metastatic colorectal cancer. The findings, described online today in npj Biofilms and Microbiomes, a Nature research journal, could help predict which patients will suffer side effects and prevent complications in susceptible patients.

“We’ve known for some time that people’s genetic makeup can affect how they respond to a medication,” says study leader Libusha Kelly, Ph.D., assistant professor of systems & computational biology and of microbiology & immunology at Einstein. “Now, it’s becoming clear that variations in one’s gut microbiome–the population of bacteria and other microbes that live in the digestive tract–can also influence the effects of treatment.”

Irinotecan is one of three first-line chemotherapy drugs used to treat colorectal cancer that has spread, or metastasized, to other parts of the body. However, up to 40 percent of patients who receive irinotecan experience severe diarrhea that requires hospitalization and can lead to death. “As you can imagine, such patients are already quite ill, so giving them a treatment that causes intestinal problems can be very dangerous,” says Dr. Kelly. “At the same time, irinotecan is an important weapon against this type of cancer.”

Irinotecan is administered intravenously in an inactive form. Liver enzymes metabolize the drug into its active, toxic form that kills cancer cells. Later, other liver enzymes convert the drug back into its inactive form, which enters the intestine via bile for elimination. But some people harbor digestive-tract bacteria that use part of inactivated irinotecan as a food source by digesting the drug with enzymes called beta-glucuronidases. Unfortunately, this enzyme action metabolizes and reactivates irinotecan into its toxic form, which causes serious side effects by damaging the intestinal lining.

To minimize irinotecan-related toxicity, doctors have tried using oral antibiotics to kill bacteria that make the enzymes. But antibiotics kill protective gut microbes as well, including those that counteract disease-causing bacteria. A 2010 study in Science involving mice found that drugs that selectively target E. coli beta-glucuronidases can reduce irinotecan’s toxicity.

In the current study, Dr. Kelly and her colleagues investigated whether the composition of a person’s microbiome influenced whether irinotecan would be reactivated or not. The researchers collected fecal samples from 20 healthy individuals and treated the samples with inactivated irinotecan. Then using metabolomics (the study of the unique chemical fingerprints that cellular processes leave behind), the researchers grouped the fecal samples according to whether they could metabolize, or reactivate, the drug. Four of the 20 individuals were found to be “high metabolizers” and the remaining 16 were “low metabolizers.”

Fecal samples in the two groups were then analyzed for differences in the composition of their microbiomes, with a focus on the presence of beta-glucuronidases. The researchers found that the microbiomes of high metabolizers contained significantly higher levels of three previously unreported types of beta-glucuronidases compared to low metabolizers.

“We hypothesize that people who are high metabolizers would be at increased risk for side effects if given irinotecan, but that will require examining the microbiomes of cancer patients–something we are now doing,” says Dr. Kelly.

The findings suggest that analyzing the composition of patients’ microbiomes before giving irinotecan might predict whether patients will suffer side effects from the drug. In addition, as suggested by the 2010 mouse study, it might be possible to prevent adverse reactions by using drugs that inhibit specific beta-glucuronidases.

“Another intriguing idea is to give patients prebiotics,” says Dr. Kelly. “Beta-glucuronidases have an appetite for the carbohydrates found in the inactive form of irinotecan. If we feed patients another source of carbohydrates when we administer irinotecan, perhaps we could prevent those enzymes from metabolizing the drug.”

Beta-glucuronidases in the gut might also interact with commonly used drugs including ibuprofen and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, morphine, and tamoxifen. “In these cases, the issue for patients may not be diarrhea,” says Dr. Kelly. “Instead, if gut bacteria reactivate those drugs, then patients might be exposed to higher-than-intended doses. Our study provides a broad framework for understanding such drug-microbiome interactions.”

Bust cold, infection and increase your immunity against all pathogens

cold drink.JPG

I visited one of my clients who had to go back to the hospital for infection and brought a juice of orange, pineapple and turmeric. My mom always make a ginger hot drink with only water and fresh ginger.

Nowadays, I use all kinds of herbs to fight infection. Essential oils of lemon grass and eucalyptus are my go to oils.

 

Top aging hacks 11-6-2017

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Blood glucose increase in the brain due to lack of sleep

Sleep to lower your blood glucose level in the brain

Higher brain glucose levels may mean more severe Alzheimer’s

NIH study shows connections between glucose metabolism, Alzheimer’s pathology, symptoms.

For the first time, scientists have found a connection between abnormalities in how the brain breaks down glucose and the severity of the signature amyloid plaques and tangles in the brain, as well as the onset of eventual outward symptoms, of Alzheimer’s disease. The study was supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health, and appears in the Nov. 6, 2017, issue of Alzheimer’s & Dementia: the Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

Led by Madhav Thambisetty, M.D., Ph.D., investigator and chief of the Unit of Clinical and Translational Neuroscience in the NIA’s Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience, researchers looked at brain tissue samples at autopsy from participants in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA), one of the world’s longest-running scientific studies of human aging. The BLSA tracks neurological, physical and psychological data on participants over several decades.

Researchers measured glucose levels in different brain regions, some vulnerable to Alzheimer’s disease pathology, such as the frontal and temporal cortex, and some that are resistant, like the cerebellum. They analyzed three groups of BLSA participants: those with Alzheimer’s symptoms during life and with confirmed Alzheimer’s disease pathology (beta-amyloid protein plaques and neurofibrillary tangles) in the brain at death; healthy controls; and individuals without symptoms during life but with significant levels of Alzheimer’s pathology found in the brain post-mortem.

They found distinct abnormalities in glycolysis, the main process by which the brain breaks down glucose, with evidence linking the severity of the abnormalities to the severity of Alzheimer’s pathology. Lower rates of glycolysis and higher brain glucose levels correlated to more severe plaques and tangles found in the brains of people with the disease. More severe reductions in brain glycolysis were also related to the expression of symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease during life, such as problems with memory.

“For some time, researchers have thought about the possible links between how the brain processes glucose and Alzheimer’s,” said NIA Director Richard J. Hodes, M.D. “Research such as this involves new thinking about how to investigate these connections in the intensifying search for better and more effective ways to treat or prevent Alzheimer’s disease.”

While similarities between diabetes and Alzheimer’s have long been suspected, they have been difficult to evaluate, since insulin is not needed for glucose to enter the brain or to get into neurons. The team tracked the brain’s usage of glucose by measuring ratios of the amino acids serine, glycine and alanine to glucose, allowing them to assess rates of the key steps of glycolysis. They found that the activities of enzymes controlling these key glycolysis steps were lower in Alzheimer’s cases compared to normal brain tissue samples. Furthermore, lower enzyme activity was associated with more severe Alzheimer’s pathology in the brain and the development of symptoms.

Next, they used proteomics – the large-scale measurement of cellular proteins – to tally levels of GLUT3, a glucose transporter protein, in neurons. They found that GLUT3 levels were lower in brains with Alzheimer’s pathology compared to normal brains, and that these levels were also connected to the severity of tangles and plaques. Finally, the team checked blood glucose levels in study participants years before they died, finding that greater increases in blood glucose levels correlated with greater brain glucose levels at death.

“These findings point to a novel mechanism that could be targeted in the development of new treatments to help the brain overcome glycolysis defects in Alzheimer’s disease,” said Thambisetty.

The researchers cautioned that it is not yet completely clear whether abnormalities in brain glucose metabolism are definitively linked to the severity of Alzheimer’s disease symptoms or the speed of disease progression. The next steps for Thambisetty and his team include studying abnormalities in other metabolic pathways linked to glycolysis to determine how they may relate to Alzheimer’s pathology in the brain.

About the National Institute on Aging: The NIA leads the federal government effort conducting and supporting research on aging and the health and well-being of older people. It provides information on age-related cognitive change and neurodegenerative disease specifically at its Alzheimer’s Disease Education and Referral (ADEAR) Center at www.nia.nih.gov/alzheimers. For additional information about cognitive health and older adults, go to NIA’s cognitive aging portal at www.nia.nih.gov/health/cognitive-health.

 

 

Searches related to sleep and blood glucose

Police found missing disabled knowing that he is right-handed

Medical Alert Enrollment Form

Using the Medical Alert Enrollmen Form, health info helped the police find wandering disabled.

med alert info formThe Union Police department (Union City CA) designed a Medical Alert Enrollment Form which helps train policemen find wandering patients who had memory problems and other health issues.
In particular, knowing if the person is right-handed or left-handed shortens the time to search for him/her.
An incident that occurred where a disabled person was located within 15 minutes as they searched for each right turn from where he was last seen.
Kudos to the Unition City Police department for designing the Medical Alert Enrollment Form. All cities must have a similar one and families can use this info to be kept together with other medical health data.
Connie Dello Buono

By 2020, the 3:1 ratio of three people needing care, one person to provide it

By 2020, the 3:1 ratio of three people needing care, one person to provide it

We need to train more caregivers and empower each person to take control of their health. Many caregivers are between 60 to 90 yrs of age. Some are even taking care of their disabled children.

How can we address this without using robots but only human touch?

Isolated seniors need hugs and kisses.

Caregivers are not paid enough or given healthcare benefits.

Government is asking for so much money to get a license in in home caregiving agency.

Seniors are burdened by home upkeep or paying their rentals or mortgage.

And many other issues.

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

 

Bacterial pathogens must acquire iron in order to replicate and cause disease

We take our iron rich foods in the morning and calcium, magnesium and potassium rich foods in the afternoon. Iron and calcium cancel each other out. To reduce iron, we have to eat more whole foods rich in calcium, magnesium and potassium.

This is especially true this cold season when allergies, pneumonia, asthma and other chronic health issues are prevalent with less exposure to sunshine, Vitamin D.

Eat your citrus fruits and add more onions and garlic in your soup of seeds, clams and other colorful whole foods.

Connie Dello Buono


The Battle for Iron between Bacterial Pathogens and Their Vertebrate Hosts

Hiten D. Madhani, Editor

Iron is a vital nutrient for virtually all forms of life. The requirement for iron is based on its role in cellular processes ranging from energy generation and DNA replication to oxygen transport and protection against oxidative stress. Bacterial pathogens are not exempt from this iron requirement, as these organisms must acquire iron within their vertebrate hosts in order to replicate and cause disease.

Vertebrates Sequester Iron from Invading Pathogens

One of the first lines of defense against bacterial infection is the withholding of nutrients to prevent bacterial outgrowth in a process termed nutritional immunity. The most significant form of nutritional immunity is the sequestration of nutrient iron [1]. The vast majority of vertebrate iron is intracellular, sequestered within the iron storage protein ferritin or complexed within the porphyrin ring of heme as a cofactor of hemoglobin or myoglobin. Further, the aerobic environment and neutral pH of serum ensures that extracellular iron is insoluble and hence difficult to access by invading pathogens. This difficulty is enhanced by the serum protein transferrin, which binds iron with an association constant of approximately 1036 [2]. Taken together, these factors ensure that the amount of free iron available to invading bacteria is vastly less than what is required to replicate and cause disease (Figure 1A).

Figure 1

A representative battle during the war for iron.

The importance of nutritional immunity as it pertains to iron is exemplified by the increased susceptibility to infection of individuals with iron overload due to thalassemia and primary hemochromatosis, two of the most common genetic diseases of humans [3]. The degree to which transferrin is iron saturated can vary from 25% to 30% in a healthy individual to 100% in patients with hemochromatosis, negating the antimicrobial properties of transferrin-mediated iron sequestration [2]. The impact of this iron overload is perhaps best demonstrated by the enhanced susceptibility of hemochromatosis patients to Vibrio vulnificusinfections [4]. Whereas V. vulnificus is killed by normal blood and rarely causes infection in healthy individuals, it grows rapidly in blood from patients with hemochromatosis, leading to a high risk of fatal infections in this cohort [4]. Moreover, the administration of excess iron increases the virulence of numerous pathogens in animal models, further highlighting the protection provided by nutritional immunity [2][5].

Many Bacterial Pathogens Sense Iron Depletion as a Signal That They Are within a Vertebrate Host

Vertebrates are devoid of free iron, ensuring that all bacterial pathogens encounter a period of iron starvation upon entering their hosts. In keeping with this, bacterial pathogens have evolved to sense iron depletion as a marker of vertebrate tissue. This sensing typically involves transcriptional control mediated by the iron-dependent repressor known as Fur (ferric uptake regulator) [6]. Fur binds to target sequences in the promoters of iron-regulated genes and represses their expression in the presence of iron. In the absence of iron, Fur-mediated repression is lifted and the genes are transcribed. Fur orthologs have been identified in numerous genera from both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria and contribute to the virulence of both animal and plant pathogens [7].

A number of genes encoding for proteins involved in iron utilization have been reported to be positively regulated by Fur during iron-replete conditions [8]. This positive regulation occurs through Fur-mediated repression of a small RNA that represses genes encoding iron utilization proteins. This second level of regulation prevents the use of iron by non-essential enzymes during times of iron starvation. RNA-dependent regulation of iron utilization is a conserved process that has been identified in multiple bacterial pathogens, including Vibrio sp., Pseudomonas aeruginosaEscherichia coliShigella flexneri, and Bacillus subtilis [8].

Many high G+C content Gram-positive bacteria express an additional iron-dependent repressor belonging to the DtxR family. The DtxR family was named for its founding member, the diphtheria toxin repressor. In fact, one of the first iron-dependent virulence factors described was diphtheria toxin produced by Corynebacterium diphtheria [2]. DtxR family members negatively regulate genes involved in processes ranging from iron acquisition to virulence factor expression [5].

In addition to sensing alterations in iron levels, bacterial pathogens can also sense heme as a marker of vertebrate tissue. Heme-responsive activators have been identified in Serratia marcescens, the pathogenic BordetellaC. diphtheriaeBacillus anthracis, and Staphylococcus aureus [5][9][10][11]. Heme-sensing systems presumably alert bacterial pathogens when they are in contact with vertebrate tissues rich in heme, triggering the expression of systems involved in heme-iron acquisition and metabolism.

All Bacterial Pathogens Can Circumvent Iron Withholding

In order to thrive within vertebrates, bacteria must possess mechanisms to evade nutritional immunity. Perhaps the most elegant mechanism to circumvent iron withholding is employed by Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease. B. burgdorferi has evolved to not require iron for growth by substituting manganese in its metal-requiring enzymes [12]. Most pathogens have not evolved this simple defense strategy and instead circumvent iron withholding through high-affinity iron uptake mechanisms that compete against host-mediated sequestration. These uptake systems can be divided into three main categories: siderophore-based systems, heme acquisition systems, and transferrin/lactoferrin receptors (Figure 1C).

Siderophores are low molecular weight iron-binding complexes that are secreted from bacteria. Siderophores bind iron with an association constant that can exceed 1050, enabling bacteria to compete with iron sequestration by transferrin and lactoferrin [2]. Upon removing iron from host proteins, iron-loaded siderophores are bound by cognate receptors expressed at the bacterial surface. The siderophore–iron complex is then internalized into the bacterium and the iron is released for use as a nutrient source. The importance of siderophores to bacterial virulence is demonstrated by the decreased fitness of siderophore-defective strains in animal models of infection [2][7].

Heme acquisition systems typically involve surface receptors that recognize either heme or heme bound to hemoproteins such as hemoglobin or hemopexin. Heme is then removed from hemoproteins and transported through the envelope of bacteria into the cytoplasm. Once inside the cytoplasm, the iron is released from heme through the action of heme oxygenases or reverse ferrochelatase activity [13][15]. Bacterial pathogens can also elaborate secreted heme-scavenging molecules that remove heme from host hemoproteins. These molecules, known as hemophores, are functionally analogous to siderophores but are proteins that target heme, whereas siderophores are small molecules that target iron atoms [16]. As is the case with siderophore transport systems, genetic defects in heme acquisition systems reduce bacterial fitness in many animal models of infection [2][7].

In addition to acquiring iron from transferrin and lactoferrin through siderophore-based mechanisms, some bacteria are capable of direct recognition of these host proteins. The most well-studied transferrin and lactoferrin receptors are present in pathogenic members of the Neisseriaceae and Pasteurellaceae [7]. These proteins are modeled to recognize human transferrin or lactoferrin, leading to iron removal and subsequent transport into the bacterial cytoplasm. Human challenge models with Neisseria gonorrhoeae suggest that gonococci expressing both lactoferrin and transferrin receptors exhibit a selective advantage within the host, underscoring the importance of this iron acquisition strategy to these organisms [5][17].

Targeting Bacterial Iron Acquisition as a Second Layer of Defense against Infection

A second layer of nutritional immunity employed by vertebrates is to combat siderophore-mediated iron acquisition through the production of siderocalin [18]. Siderocalin, also referred to as lipocalin-2 or neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), is a protein that is secreted by neutrophils in response to infection. Siderocalin binds enterobactin, the primary siderophore of many enteric bacteria, and sequesters the siderophore–iron complex, preventing bacterial uptake. Mice lacking siderocalin exhibit increased sensitivity to enterobactin-expressing bacteria, demonstrating the pathophysiological relevance of this anti-siderophore defense system [19].

The requirement for iron by bacterial pathogens ensures that iron acquisition systems are expressed and surface exposed during infection. This fact has established surface-exposed iron receptors as viable vaccine candidates for the prevention of bacterial infection. The enterobactin receptor FetA from Neisseria meningitidis [20], the siderophore receptor IroN from Escherichia coli [21], the hemoglobin receptor HgbA from Haemophilus ducreyi [22], surface proteins of the S. aureus Isd heme uptake machinery [23], and a combination of E. coli iron acquisition proteins [24] are examples of iron utilization systems that have been proposed as candidate vaccines.

Bacterial Pathogens Are Leading the Arms Race for Nutrient Iron

Resistance to siderocalin is a conserved strategy across multiple pathogenic microbes. A primary bacterial defense against siderocalin involves the production of stealth siderophores. These molecules represent structurally modified enterobactin-type siderophores that are resistant to siderocalin binding. The Gram-positive pathogen B. anthracis produces the siderophore petrobactin, which incorporates a 3,4-dihydroxybenzoyl chelating subunit that prevents siderocalin binding [25]. Similarly, SalmonellaTyphimurium produces salmochelin, a glycoslyated derivative of enterochelin that is not targeted by siderocalin [26]. The production of stealth siderophores is the most recently uncovered layer in the arms race for nutrient iron during host–pathogen interactions. Undoubtedly, we have not yet discovered the complete armamentarium in this battle that has tremendous implications for the outcome of bacterial infections.

Help Help Help Senior

The government , IHSS, pays $13 per hour minus some deductions, netting $11 to the caregiver. The caregiver is at times shouted at or hurt by the client who had a brain surgery and stroke.

Caregiving takes a lot of love and patience. One time, the client shouted 2 inches away from my ear as I changed her diapers on the bed. And another time, her long nails scratched my skin or my fingers being squeezed whenever she is angry.

How do we help teams of caregivers and agencies supplying caregivers? The government must not ask for $5400 for license but support more companies helping seniors. The government must give free health care to all caregivers not only those who applied for IHSS but anyone working or helping a senior.

homehero closed down and other residential home care who only had 2 clients in a 6-bed care home with a mortgage of $5000 per month.

Help the caregivers, help them live with affordable housing and health care and help them with their meager paycheck so that we can help more seniors.

Our future in senior care depends on all caregivers, the foot workers who ensure that seniors are fed, cleaned, massaged, exercised and their living condition cleaned and free from clutter. Caregivers can prevent emergencies and decrease hospital costs.

 

Sarah Huckabee Sanders

True, she hasn’t told a lie as tidy as Spicer’s ludicrousness about Donald Trump’s inauguration crowds. But her briefings are breathtaking — certainly this week’s were. For some 20 minutes every afternoon, down is up, paralysis is progress, enmity is harmony, stupid is smart, villain is victim, disgrace is honor, plutocracy is populism and Hillary Clinton colluded with Russia if anyone would summon the nerve to investigate her (because, you know, that never, ever happens). I watch and listen with sheer awe.

With despair, too, because Sanders doesn’t draw nearly the censure or ridicule that Spicer did, and the reason isn’t her. It’s us. More precisely, it’s what Trump and his presidency have done to us. Little more than nine months in, we’ve surrendered any expectation of honesty. We’re inured.

Addressing Falls In Our Senior Population

Addressing Falls In Our Senior Population

Dr. Dhira Khosla

“My balance is terrible.”

 “I feel unsteady when I close my eyes in the shower.”

 “When I fall down I have a hard time getting up without help.”

 “I fall a lot but I haven’t been seriously injured.”

 These are just some of the many statements I hear when patients present with balance difficulty. As a person ages, balance tends to worsen and falls begin to occur. A single fall may or may not result in a serious injury. But once an elderly patient falls, he or she is at a much higher risk for more falls in the future. Falls which do result in serious injury, such as hip fracture, place the patient at significant risk of complications from that injury.

These injuries can lead to prolonged hospitalizations as well as decline in activity level after they have recovered from the acute injury. In many cases, after such devastating falls, patients need to be moved from their home into a nursing home environment. All too often, patients receive treatment for the fall-related injuries, but not enough attention is paid to whether there are underlying causes for the fall. Because repeated falls can lead to such dramatic and often permanent changes in a person’s quality of life, it can be very beneficial to gain a better understanding of potential root causes of poor balance.

 There are many factors that can lead to impaired balance, and often patients suffer from more than one issue. Some of the common neurological reasons for poor balance and frequent falls in the elderly are peripheral neuropathy affecting the feet, movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, and weakness and spasticity of the limbs due to stroke. Visual impairment and vertigo resulting from strokes or tumors can also lead to falls. Dizziness from inner ear dysfunction and inability to maintain blood pressure control can greatly impair balance as well.

Balance related issues in the older population tend to go under-reported or under-diagnosed. People tell themselves “It was only a minor fall, I didn’t get injured” or “I don’t want to walk around with a cane so I’ll just be more careful.” Unfortunately, all too often, physicians find there isn’t enough time during visits to discuss a patient’s gait. Set aside time with your physician for a detailed discussion if you or a loved one suffers from poor balance and repeated falls. If there is an underlying cause for the falls and it is identified in a timely manner, it could help avoid significant complications and disability.