|
April 8, 2005
PULMONOLOGY: Anatomy of an Asthma Attack
The timing and severity of an asthma attack can be a mystery to asthma sufferers.
A study published online March 16 in Nature offers a new model for
understanding the behavior of the asthmatic lung during such a crisis. The
researchers, led
by Jose Venegas (on right) and Tilo Winkler, discovered patterns of constriction
in the lung that mimic those seen in complex systems in nature. The model offers
a new way to understand how smooth muscle constriction in the lung can lead
to catastrophic changes in lung function.
|
|
GENETICS:
Gene Network Predicts Stroke Risk in Sickle Cell Anemia
A single genetic mutation causes sickle cell anemia, but a more complex array
of genetic variations controls the severity of the disease and its complications,
such as stroke. By age 20, as many as 11 percent of people with the disease will
suffer a brain attack. But current tests can predict only a fraction of those
at high risk. In the April Nature Genetics, Marco Ramoni and his colleagues report
that 25 variations in 11 genes can predict the risk of stroke with near certainty
in children and teenagers with sickle cell anemia. The researchers eventually
hope to use the model to predict stroke in the general population.
|