Posts Tagged ‘infections’

postheadericon How Psoriasis Treatment

How Psoriasis TreatmentThe psoriasis covers all or most of the body and often shows up as an emergency requiring hospitalization, since the body loses large amounts of fluid and is more susceptible to severe secondary infections, compromising internal organs and even progress to septic shock and sometimes death.

The treatment of psoriasis is primarily focused on controlling symptoms and help prevent secondary infections of the skin. At present, there is no treatment to cure psoriasis, but may use different therapeutic techniques depending on the extent and severity of psoriasis.

To treat psoriasis, used painkillers, sedatives and antibiotics, as required by each of the symptoms, it means that in most cases are mild and do not require hospitalization, so using topical medications such as:

- Corticosteroid creams or ointments, which is most used.
- Creams used to remove the scaling.
- Creams and ointments containing related substances with vitamin D or topical retinoids, which are mainly used in the plaque psoriasis.
- Anti-dandruff shampoos.
- Shampoos and ointments that contain coal tar.
- Topical antibiotics, where there is a strep infection.

Other treatments try to offer short and controlled exposure to ultraviolet light, in which, first sensitizes the skin to ultraviolet light by applying an ointment based on coal tar or orally administering special medications.

For people who suffer a more severe form of disease are indicated biologics, which are proteins that are injected rather than taken by mouth, which, interferes with the body’s inflammatory response, but they are very expensive drugs and can cause side effects, which are not used as first line therapy but is usually used when other treatments do not work.

postheadericon How Lowering cholesterol levels in the body?

How Lowering cholesterol levels in the body?Lowering cholesterol levels may help the body’s immune system to fight infections, British researchers said.

A study in mice conducted by researchers at the University of Edinburgh found a direct association between immune function and cholesterol levels.

“We discovered that a key immune hormone stimulated infection can lower cholesterol and thus depriving viral infections support they need to grow,” said Peter Ghazal, whose study was published in the journal Public Library of Science (Plops) Biology.

“Currently there are drugs to lower cholesterol levels, but the next step would be to see whether these drugs might also work to help strengthen our immune systems,” he added.
Doctors commonly prescribe stations such as Lipitor, Pfizer, Crestar, AstraZeneca and a generic called simvastatin to reduce LDL “bad” cholesterol, a risk factor for heart disease. These drugs are considered the most successful in preventing heart attacks and strokes.

Ghazal said there are still many years of research to which these results can be translated into treatments for humans, but in the future could be developed stating drugs such anti-infective purposes.

Today the fight viral infections with drugs that target the mechanism that allows the virus to multiply. Antibiotics are used to fight bacterial infections, but these manage to mutate and develop new strains that are resistant to drugs, causing a constant need for new and more powerful drugs.

Ghazal said his research team hopes to use his studies to figure out new ways to fight infections that may mimic such immune signals sent to reduce the production of cholesterol.

These treatments help to overcome the problem of drug resistance, he said, and would seek to strengthen the way the body responds to infection, rather than focusing on attacking the bacteria.

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