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Sunday, December 5, 2021

Miss. Gov: Will enforce law banning most abortions in state if Roe is overturned

 Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) on Sunday said his state will enforce a law banning most abortions if Roe v. Wade is overturned, days after the Supreme Court held a hearing on the Magnolia State’s 15-week abortion ban that could chip away at the landmark 1973 ruling.

A "snapback law" for abortion is currently in existence in Mississippi, which calls for most abortions in the state to be banned if Roe v. Wade is overturned. The only exemptions to the law would be rape and if the life of the mother is in danger.

Pressed by co-host Jake Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union” if Mississippi would start enforcing the law in the state if Roe is overturned, Reeves said yes,

“That is a yes because if you believe as I believe very strongly that that innocent, unborn child in the mother's womb is in fact a child, the most important word when we talk about unborn children is not unborn, but it’s children,” he said.

“And so yes, I'll do everything I can to protect the lives of those children,” he added.

The governor said, however, that such a move is “dependent upon how the court rules and exactly what those opinions allow us to do,” while also noting that Roe v. Wade being overturned would not completed cut off abortion access nationwide.

“I just want to make sure everyone is clear that if Roe v, Wade is overturned, that doesn't mean that no one in America is going to have access, although that might make people like me happy, but what it does mean is that all 50 states, the laboratories of democracy, are going to have the ability to enact their own laws with respect to abortion, and I think that's the way it should be in America,” he said.

The governor’s comments come after the Supreme Court held a hearing on Wednesday for Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban.

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/584392-mississippi-governor-says-he-will-enforce-law-banning-most

Fauci calls Ron Johnson's AIDS crisis overpromotion comment 'preposterous'

 Anthony Fauci on Sunday said Sen. Ron Johnson’s (R-Wis.) comments that the infectious disease expert “overhyped” the AIDS epidemic and the COVID-19 pandemic are “preposterous,” adding “I don’t have any clue of what he’s talking about.”

Asked about Johnson’s comments by co-host Jake Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Fauci said he did not know how to respond to such a remark considering the high death tolls caused by both AIDS and COVID-19.

“How do you respond to something as preposterous as that? Overhyping AIDS, its killed over 750,000 Americans and 36 million people worldwide. How do you overhype that? Overhyping COVID, It's already killed 780,000 Americans and over 5 million people worldwide,” Fauci said.

“So I don't have any clue of what he's talking about,” he added.

During an interview with Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade on "The Brian Kilmeade Show" Wednesday, Johnson said Fauci, who helped lead research into the AIDS during the 1980s, “overhyped” the epidemic and claimed that the nation's top infectious disease expert is doing the same for the COVID-19 pandemic.

Discussing the omicron variant, Johnson accused individuals in the U.S. of trying to “create a state of fear” to “maintain controls” amid the pandemic, before turning to Fauci.

“By the way, Fauci did the same exact thing with AIDS. He overhyped it. He created all kinds of fear, saying it could infect the entire population when it couldn’t, and he’s doing, he’s using the exact same playbook with COVID: ignoring therapy, pushing a vaccine,” Johnson said.

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/584388-fauci-cals-johnsons-aids-comment-preposterous-i-dont-have-any-clue

CDC head confirms FDA in talks to speed authorization of omicron-specific vaccine

 The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed on Sunday that the Food and Drug Administration was in discussions to streamline the authorization of an omicron-specific vaccine.

“You know, one of the things about a booster - about a variant-specific booster - I know Moderna, Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson say they can all do this fairly quickly within three months. But then you have FDA approval. Is there any world where you can see that moving much faster given we've already been through this?” “This Week” co-anchor Martha Raddatz asked CDC Director Rochelle Walensky on ABC.

“Yeah, you know, much of that I would have to defer to the FDA, but they're already in conversations about streamlining the authorization of this, of an omicron-specific vaccine, partially because much of the vaccine is actually exactly the same and really, it would just be that mRNA code that would have to change,” Walensky answered.

“So those conversations are ongoing, and certainly, FDA will move swiftly and CDC will move swiftly right thereafter,” she added.

Walensky’s comments follow a report by The Wall Street Journal last week that indicated the Food and Drug Administration was eyeing steps for a rapid review of drugs and vaccines specific to the omicron variant in the event that new variant-specific tools were needed.

Among some of the considerations that FDA is reportedly eyeing would be allowing drugmakers for studies, in the case of vaccines, to examine hundreds of people and their immune responses in comparison to COVID-19 test trials that rely on waiting for COVID-19 to be detected and include thousands of participants, according to the newspaper.

In response to an inquiry about the report by the Journal, the FDA pointed to a statement last week by the acting commissioner Janet Woodcock for the “​​FDA’s latest thinking on vaccine development to address variants” in addition to the agency’s vaccine emergency use authorization guidance last updated in February.

"Historically, the work to obtain the genetic information and patient samples for variants and then perform the testing needed to evaluate their impact takes time. However, we expect the vast majority of this work to be completed in the coming weeks," Woodcock said last week.

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/584387-cdc-director-confirms-fda-in-discussion-to-streamline

Unique brain channel combats epileptic seizures

 Epilepsy, a chronic brain disorder that causes seizures, affects around 50 million people worldwide.

New research from the lab of Department of Biomedical Sciences Professor Susan Tsunoda that was recently featured in the Journal of Neuroscience showed for the first time that a channel in the brain called dSlo2 suppresses .

Epilepsy, caused by excessive activity in certain , is characterized by episodes of involuntary movement that can sometimes lead to loss of consciousness. Epileptic seizures vary in frequency and can range from brief muscle spasms to lengthy convulsions. People with epilepsy may be physically injured while having seizures, tend to experience higher rates of anxiety and depression, and face an increased risk of premature death.

Put to the test for the first time

For decades it has been thought that the dSlo2 channel might play a role in reducing the hyperactivity that causes seizures, but it had not been tested until now. Using a fly model (Drosophila) and CRISPR technology, Tsunoda's lab discovered that the dSlo2 channel actually does play a preventative and protective role during seizures.

In epilepsy and other  conditions, neurons in the brain become overexcited resulting in high levels of sodium ions. The research, led by recent biomedical sciences Ph.D. graduate Nathan Byers, found that the dSlo2 channel, which is activated by excessive levels of sodium ions, quiets this hyperactivity during seizures by releasing potassium ions from neurons. And when the channel is missing, seizures worsen and become more frequent.

"Whenever there's too much sodium coming in, these channels are present and get activated immediately," Tsunoda said. "Now that we know this, next we are going to look more closely at the regulatory sites of the channel to see which ones are most important for seizure suppression."

Genetic mutations that alter this key  have been associated with different types of epilepsy and could be contributing to the severity of symptoms experienced by those with epilepsy. Better understanding how it works is crucial to informing future research and the development of therapies that could help improve quality of life for people suffering from certain types of  and other neurological disorders.


Explore further

Focused ultrasound may help prevent seizures in some patients with epilepsy

More information: Nathan Byers et al, Slo2/KNa Channels in Drosophila Protect against Spontaneous and Induced Seizure-like Behavior Associated with an Increased Persistent Na+ Current, The Journal of Neuroscience (2021). DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0290-21.2021
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-12-unique-brain-channel-combats-epileptic.html

ALS therapy should target brain, not just spine

 The brain is indeed a target for treating ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), Northwestern Medicine scientists have discovered. This flips a long-standing belief that the disease starts in the spinal motor neurons and any therapy would need to target the spine as the key focus.

A new Northwestern study shows the degeneration of brain motor neurons (the nerve cells in the brain that control movement of the limbs) is not merely a byproduct of the spinal motor neuron degeneration, as had been previously thought.

"We have discovered that the brain degenerates early in diseases like ALS, sends us warning signals and shows defects very early in the disease," said lead study author Hande Ozdinler, an associate professor of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "Therefore, we need to repair the brain motor neurons if we want long-term and effective treatment strategies. The brain is important in ALS."

The paper will be published Dec. 2 in Gene Therapy.

ALS is a swift and fatal neurodegenerative disease that paralyzes its victims.

Upper motor neuron diseases, such as ALS, hereditary spastic paraplegia and primary lateral sclerosis affect more than 250,000 people a year in the U.S. alone. There is no cure and no effective long-term treatment strategy.

This is the first study to clearly reveal the brain motor neuron degeneration is not a consequence of spinal motor neuron degeneration but is independent of the spinal motor neuron degeneration.

The research also is the first to show that the gene UCHL1 is important for maintaining the health of brain motor neurons that are diseased due to two independent underlying causes. One is the accumulation of badly folded proteins and the other is the accumulation of sticky protein clumps inside the cells. These problems are observed in more than 90% of all ALS cases and also in other cases of upper motor neuron diseases.

"Our findings not only give legitimacy for targeting brain motor neuron health in ALS as a therapeutic intervention, it also reveals the first target gene that can help these neurons be revitalized," Ozdinler said.

"This has huge clinical implications," Ozdinler said. "Being able to modulate gene expression in diseased brain motor neurons in upper motor neuron disease patients is mind boggling. Since movement starts in the brain, if we can make the brain motor neurons happy and healthy, if we can boost their health and integrity with directed gene delivery, we may begin to develop personalized treatment options especially for patients with upper motor neuron disease, who currently have no effective treatment options.

Northwestern University scientists have previously identified NU-9, the first compound that eliminates the ongoing degeneration of upper motor neurons that become diseased and are a key contributor to ALS. Now, this study reveals the importance and significance of treating upper motor neurons in ALS and identifies the first genetic target.

The next step is to determine the best dose and the best site of injection with respect to improvement of movement and reduction of disease conditions in at least two different ALS disease models. After preclinical toxicology studies, scientists will move to translate these results into a clinical trial, a process that likely will take several years.

Northwestern co-authors include Barış Genç, Javier Jara, Santana Sanchez, Amiko Lagrimas, Oge Gozutok, Nuran Kocak and Yongling Zhu.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health grants RO1-NS085161 and R21-NS085750. The Ozdinler lab was also supported by the Les Turner ALS Foundation, ALS Association, A Long Swim, Spastic Paraplegia Foundation and Brain Foundation.


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ALS neuron damage reversed with new compound
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-12-als-therapy-brain-spine.html

Eucalyptus compound effective at treating lung damage in animal model

 University of Melbourne-led research has shown the flavonoid pinocembrin, derived from Australian eucalyptus trees, has strong anti-inflammatory properties and could be safe and effective at treating lung fibrosis in sheep, a large animal model for human lung disease.

Pinocembrin, a flavonoid found in several different type of trees including pine trees and eucalyptus, has been reported to have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial and anti-cancer properties.

Researchers from the University of Melbourne, Monash University, Swinburne University of Technology and industry partner Gretals Australia, set out to test the anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrosis properties of pinocembrin in 10 sheep, to see whether the compound could be effective at treating .

In the study, published today in PLOS One, the fibrosis was induced in two localized lung segments in each of the sheep. One of the segments was treated with 7mg of pinocembrin once weekly for four weeks, while the other segment was left untreated.

Co-lead author on the study, Dr. Habamu Derseh, from the Melbourne Veterinary School in the Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences at the University of Melbourne said the results were "striking."

"We found that pinocembrin improved lung function, attenuated lung inflammation, and decreased overall pathology scores compared to damaged lungs that were untreated," Dr. Derseh said.

"We saw striking anti-inflammatory effects and modest anti-fibrotic remodeling after four weeks of administering pinocembrin."

Co-lead author Professor Ken Snibson, also from the Melbourne Veterinary School, explained there was a 50 percent reduction in certain inflammatory cells in the lungs.

"In lung fluid samples,  called neutrophils dropped from 7.4 percent of total cells to 3.7 percent in the pinocembrin-treated bleomycin-injured lung segments."

The chemical for this trial was isolated from the leaves of eucalyptus saplings at the University of Melbourne's Dookie campus by Dr. Jason Goodger, from the School of BioSciences at the University of Melbourne.

Gretals Australia CEO and study co-author Alistair Cumming said this was a Victorian biotechnology success story in the making, made possible thanks to the collective expertise of forestry experts, plant biochemists and medical researchers working with industry and with government support.

"This started with an ARC Linkage Grant between Gretals Australia and Professor Ian Woodrow (School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences) and Dr. Goodger to identify and isolate pinocembrin from native eucalyptus trees, and now we have progressed to the stage where we are preparing for human trials in 2022," Mr Cumming said.

In humans, pulmonary fibrosis involves scarring and thickening of lung tissue with  transplantation the only known cure.


Explore further

A new target for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

More information: Habtamu B. Derseh et al, The efficacy and safety of pinocembrin in a sheep model of bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis, PLOS ONE (2021). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260719
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-12-eucalyptus-compound-effective-lung-sheep.html

Digital therapy for prenatal insomnia may prevent postpartum depression

 A digital version of cognitive behavioral therapy, or dCBT, that previously had been shown to reduce insomnia during pregnancy may also prevent postpartum depression and reduce insomnia and anxiety in women up to six months after they give birth, according to a new study by researchers at UC San Francisco.

The study, which appears in the current issue of the journal Sleep, is unique in showing that non- who received dCBT for insomnia during pregnancy also slept better and had less  several months into the postpartum period. The study is a follow-up to research that appeared January 2020 in JAMA Psychiatry showing the treatment reduced insomnia, depression, and anxiety symptoms during pregnancy.

"We were curious to see whether the benefits of dCBT for insomnia would maintain after the birth of the child, especially given the demands of having a young infant," said Jennifer Felder, PhD, assistant professor of Psychiatry and core research faculty at the UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Health at UCSF, who led the study. "We were particularly excited to see the benefits lasted to six months not just for insomnia, but for mental health more broadly."

Insomnia in pregnancy is common, yet understudied

About 38 percent of  experience insomnia during pregnancy, which in turn is associated with a 30 percent increased risk of pre-term birth. Yet there has not been a great deal of research on whether sleep interventions are effective for .

Studies on how to prevent postpartum depression, which affects up to 15 percent of women, have focused on women with a history of depression or sub-clinical depression symptoms. No research has studied whether treating insomnia may prevent .

"I've heard patients say, over and over, that their post-partum mental health began to suffer when their insomnia started, suggesting there is a link," Felder said. "We know that postpartum can be a vulnerable time for becoming depressed, and it is possible that this intervention may prevent that."

The current study involved 208 participants, 105 of whom were randomized to the dCBT treatment – a self-paced sleep app called Sleepio that patients used for 20 minutes at a time for up to six sessions. At three months postpartum, 4 percent of women who used the app were rated as likely depressed, compared to 18 percent of the women who got usual care.

Digital therapy: More affordable, more scalable

Usual care included medication or general sleep hygiene tips from physicians and others. dCBT may work better because it's more individualized and addresses the factors known to perpetuate insomnia, Felder said.

"Participants can set their own goals, and their treatment recommendations are tailored based on what their previous week's sleep looked like," Felder said. "The magic of the treatment is what happens between sessions, the tactics the participants put into practice, such as keeping a sleep diary, stabilizing their wake time, spending less time in bed tossing and turning, and prioritizing an adequate wind down before bed."

Given the shortage of  clinicians who are trained to deliver , it's important to test treatments that women can actually access, Felder added: "This is a scalable intervention with a low risk profile – and it works."

Felder said she and her colleagues plan to conduct a large-scale study in the near future to determine conclusively whether dCBT for  prevents  depression. Additionally, she is currently piloting a mindfulness-based intervention to help pregnant people cope with sleep disturbances caused by discomfort, pain, or an active mind.


Explore further

Study shows treating insomnia with cognitive behavioral therapy can prevent major depression in older adults

More information: Jennifer N Felder et al, Randomized controlled trial of digital cognitive behavior therapy for prenatal insomnia symptoms: Effects on postpartum insomnia and mental health, Sleep (2021). DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsab280
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-12-digital-therapy-prenatal-insomnia-postpartum.html