Kerrie tegen diabetes.*
Een professor in Australië gaat na goede resultaten bij muizen nu starten met onderzoek bij mensen met diabetes type 2. Kerrie is een prima ontstekingsremmer die bij dit onderzoek op een speciale manier ingebracht wordt om direct op de lever te kunnen werken.
Curry
Colouring And Fat Mix Could Help Diabetics
Brisbane
immunologist Dr Brendan O'Sullivan hopes to put a dent in skyrocketing rates of diabetes
in Australia by creating a new treatment for Type 2 diabetes.
The Senior Research Officer and his team at UQ's
Centre for Immunology and Cancer Research (CICR)
are developing a drug that targets liver cells to prevent their inflammation in
obesity - a common precursor to diabetes.
Dr O'Sullivan has received a three-year $150,000 Smart State Fellowship from the
State Government to explore potential diabetes treatments.
Arthritis Queensland and the CICR will also contribute a further $150,000 each
during the project.
People with Type 2 diabetes cannot produce enough insulin or do not use the
insulin they produce properly.
Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas which moves sugar from the food we
eat into the body's cells.
Dr O'Sullivan said his technique involved coating treatment drugs in absorbable
fat which formed an injectable dose that could last up to one week.
“One of the drugs we're using is curcumin, which is basically the yellow
compound that you see in curries, which is an anti-inflammatory compound,” Dr
O'Sullivan said.
“The idea is to encapsulate that compound and then deliver it to the liver
cells to prevent them from producing all these inflammatory compounds.”
Early results show his method works in mice but he said his grant would validate
the best method to use in human trials.
The 36-year-old from Kedron said that, if successful, the treatment could combat
other diseases such as heart disease, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and
lupus, an autoimmune disease against the skin.
His Fellowship will pay for staff, lab and research work.
UQ`s Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Professor David Siddle said Dr
O'Sullivan's project was one of many leading-edge CICR projects.
“Our determined immunologists are tackling some of society's worst diseases
with great science,” Professor Siddle said.
(april 2006)