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Posts Tagged ‘TNF’

Is M. avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) the cause of multiple “autoimmune” and “inflammatory” diseases in man? Inferences from the anti-MAP activity of methotrexate, 6-MP, 5-ASA and thalidomide, on MAP in culture.

December 16th, 2007 alank Comments off

Another piece of research which establishes the anti-paratuberculosis antibiotic activity of molecules which are currently thought to have an immuno-suppressant effect in Crohn’s Disease.

http://www.paratuberculosis.org/pubs/proc9/abst185f_o4.htm

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BACKGROUND:

We have shown that the “immuno-modulators” methotrexate and 6-MP and the “anti-inflammatory” 5-ASA inhibit MAP growth (www.PLoSONE.org) and concluded that their most plausible mechanism of action in several idiopathic diseases is as antiMAP antibiotics. Thalidomide is an “immunomodulator” used in multiple “auto-immune” and “inflammatory” diseases and the mycobacterial diseases leprosy and tuberculosis. We now test the hypothesis that thalidomide inhibits MAP growth.

METHODS

Thalidomide (+-) and (+) and (-) and its two components, phthalimide and 1-hydroxy 2,6 piperidine dione (HPD) were evaluated in culture of two strains each of MAP (ATCC 19698 [bovine] & Dominic [human]) and M. avium subspecies avium (ATCC 25291 & 101.) We used a radiometric (14CO2 Bactec(R)) detection system. Inhibition is indicated by “percent decrease in cumulative Growth Index” (%-DcGI) from control.

RESULTS:

Phthalimide has no dose dependent inhibition on any strain. There was no dose dependent inhibition on either M. avium strain with thalidomide or its components. With the two MAP strains, there is dose dependent inhibition with thalidomide (+1); Dominic (31%-DcGI) and ATCC 19698 (26%-DcGI) at 64microg/ml. Thalidomide (+) is more inhibitory than (-). HPD is, on a weight for weight basis, the most inhibitory agent evaluated; Dominic (46%-DcGI) and ATCC 19698 (44%-DcGI at 64microg/ml)

CONCLUSIONS:

We show in vitro heretofore-undescribed inhibition of MAP growth by racaemic thalidomide. Thalidomide (+) is more potent than (-). Of thalidomide’s two moieties, phthalimide has no antiMAP activity and HPD is the active component in inhibiting MAP growth. We suggest that since 1942, initially with 5-ASA, the medical profession has unknowingly been treating MAP infections. These data are compatible with our concern that MAP is zoonotic. We conclude that all idiopathic “autoimmune” and “inflammatory” diseases, empirically treated with medications that we show are active against MAP, should now be evaluated for MAP as the etiological agent.

Crohn’s Disease, Leprosy and Thalidomide

May 25th, 2006 alank Comments off

Leprosy is caused a member of genus Mycobacteria, M. leprae, and some forms of leprosy are treated by “tamping down the immune system” with anti-TNF agents, such as thalidomide. Steroids are also used for the treatment of leprosy[1].

FDA approves Thalidomide for Hansen’s disease side effect, imposes unprecedented restrictions on distribution.
http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/ANSWERS/ANS00887.html

Redeeming thalidomide
http://pubs.acs.org/hotartcl/mdd/00/jun/mddkling.html

Remicade’s anti-TNF activity might also be useful for leprosy (a known mycobacterial disease), but there haven’t been any trials of remicade/infliximab for Leprosy (Hansen’s Disease), presumably because the manufacturers know that the average third-world leper can’t afford $30K+ a year to be maintained on remicade, and thus won’t spend the huge money necessary for the relevant clinical trials.

But Thalidomide, the poor man’s anti-TNF drug, is long out of patent, and is cheap, and so gets used for the poor lepers. But there is a fightback in the leprosy medical community, primarily because of the nasty birth defects that Thalidomide causes.

No Role for Thalidomide in Leprosy
http://www.paho.org/English/AD/DPC/CD/thalidomide.htm

Thalidomide has been trialled for Crohn’s Disease.

Thalidomide reduces tumour necrosis factor {alpha} and interleukin 12 production in patients with chronic active Crohn’s disease
http://gut.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/abstract/50/2/196

Thalidomide: New uses for notorious drug
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/thalidomide/HQ01507

So the relative success of treatment of Crohn’s Disease with Remicade is NOT an argument against a mycobacterial cause. In fact, if the Crohn’s Disease to Leprosy analogy that has been made by some researchers[2,3] is true, then Remicade treatment in Crohn’s could be an argument FOR a mycobacterial cause.

1. Steroid prophylaxis for prevention of nerve function impairment in leprosy: randomised placebo controlled trial.
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/abstract/328/7454/1459

2. Comparisons with leprosy, tuberculosis and Johne’s disease: is Crohn’s disease caused by a mycobacterium?
http://www.paratuberculosis.org/proc7/abst6_p6.htm

3. Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis in the causation of Crohn’s disease
http://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/6/630.asp

News: Drug May Save Sight in Behcet’s Disease Patients

August 3rd, 2001 alank Comments off

Behcet’s disease is a disease that can be confused with Crohn’s Disease, since it exhibits a spectrum of symptoms which overlaps with the spectrum of symptoms displayed in CD.

Check the references below.

The bit I find most interesting is the reliance on human opinion and experience to differentiate between the diseases. The reason for this is because we’re dealing with diseases that are classified by the damage that results from having them, not by what causes them.

Personal opinion: The vast majority of “autoimmune” diseases are caused by infections with one or more of a range of bacteria, and where the symptoms can be extremely similar.

Research into all of these diseases needs a fundamental shift in paradigm. Looking solely at the body, its reactions, and how those reactions result in tissue damage is incapable of delivering a cure.

Consider if you drove your car home every day along a road that was covered in shards of glass. When you get home, you see that you have flat tyres. You examine the car, you examine the tyres, you work out the weight distribution on the wheels, trying to imagine a situation where the car tyres “spontaneously” blow out. You spend a fortune, getting an army of “experts” to try to figure out why your tyres keep blowing out. They spend a fortune in money and time trying to figure the huge range of parameters that can affect the car, even going so far as to revisit the production process for the car, watching how it is constructed in the factory, and trying to discover the “design flaw” that results in the tyres spontaneously bursting.

And you still keep getting flat tyres everyday.

Until you look at the surface of the road you’re driving on, and realise that it’s covered in glass, which damages your rubber tyres, you’re not going to have the faintest clue as to why your tyres are flat everyday.

1. An unusual presentation of Behcet’s disease: intestinal perforation.
Pirildar T, Keser G, Tunc E, Alkanat M, Tuncyurek M, Doganavsargil E.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11254244

2. Crohn’s disease with Behcet’s syndrome like appearance: a case report.
Kallinowski B, Noldge G, Stiehl A.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7886973

3. Pathology of chronic inflammatory bowel disease in children.
Domizio P.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8003743

4. Bechet’s colitis: a differential diagnosis in inflammations of the large intestine.
Kyle SM, Yeong ML, Isbister WH, Clark SP.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1859318

5. Prerequisites for therapy of inflammatory bowel diseases. Pathophysiology–symptomatology–diagnosis
Haag K, Scholmerich J.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1855748