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By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID : Associated Press Writer
Jun 2, 2003 : 8:07 pm ET
WASHINGTON -- Antioxidants, already widely
promoted as cancer-fighters, also may help protect the brain from
chronic alcohol damage.
Chronic alcoholism damages parts of the brain
used in learning and memory, but giving rats an antioxidant
protected them from the damage, according to researchers working in
the United States and Spain.
The findings are reported in Tuesday's online
issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
Antioxidants are chemicals that inhibit the
oxidation of a substance to which they are added. Oxidation can
stress or damage cells.
The team, led by Dr. Daniel G. Herrera of
Weill Medical College of Cornell University, fed rats a liquid diet
containing alcohol for six weeks.
They found a 66 percent decrease in the
number of new cells in crucial parts of the brain and an increase in
cell death of more than 227 percent.
But in rats that also received injections of
the antioxidant ebselen, the damage to developing cells did not
occur, the researchers said. Those rats had the same brain
characteristics as a group that received no alcohol.
Alcohol also kills liver cells, and the
researchers knew that this can be reduced with the use of
antioxidants, Herrera said. They decided to see if the same held for
the brain.
The antioxidant ebselen was used because it
is known to have protective effects in the liver and digestive tract
and has few side effects in humans.
Finding ways to improve mental function in
people, particularly the elderly, might increase positive results of
alcohol treatment programs, Herrera said in a statement.
Dr. Antonio Noronha, chief of the
neuroscience and behavior branch of the National Institute of
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said this is the first study to show
the effects of antioxidants on chronic alcohol damage.
Noronha, who was not part of the research
team, said similar findings have been reported in studies at the
University of North Carolina, but those focused on binge drinking
and used a different antioxidant.
The mechanism by which alcohol damages
portions of the brain is still not fully understood, he said.
Oxidative stress seems to be part of it, and the antioxidants appear
to be protective.
Other reports in the same issue of
Proceedings included:
--RU-486, the chemical used to induce
abortions, may extend the life of brain cells. Abdel Ghoumari, of
the National Institute of Health and Medical Research in France, and
colleagues collected brain cells from mice in a laboratory
experiment. The cells normally undergo a programmed cell death in
culture. But when RU-486 was added to the culture, the life of the
cells was extended. The team said the finding may lead to future
treatments for brain-damaging diseases.
--A team of English and American researchers
has engineered tobacco plants to produce the human antibodies that
are used to prevent rabies. The group, led by Hilary Koprowski of
Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, developed a genetic
insert to the tobacco plants that codes them to produce the human
antibody. The antibody administered to prevent rabies now can be
obtained from horses and humans, but some people have adverse
reactions to horse proteins, and isolating the material from humans
is expensive. The tobacco-produced antibodies prevented development
of rabies in hamsters exposed to the disease.
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