查词 | 短句 | 翻译 | 沙龙 |资讯 | 考研 | 雅思 | 四六级 | 大讲堂 | 英文歌曲 | 英语游戏 | 手机英语 | 英语电影 | VOA听力 | 英语电台 | 英语网址

[健康报道] New Drug Shows Promise Against Worm Disease

http://news.iciba.com  2008-03-26 09:33:44  来源:爱词霸资讯官网

>> Download MP3 Audio

By Jill Moss
2008-3-25

  This is the VOA Special English Health Report.
  Schistosoma mansoni one of three major kinds of worms that cause schistosomiasis
  Scientists think they are a step closer to a new drug to treat schistosomiasis. More than two hundred million people suffer from this parasitic worm disease. Most live in developing nations in tropical climates. About ten percent of victims become seriously disabled from internal bleeding, iron loss, organ damage or other effects.
  A team in the United States found that chemical compounds known as oxadiazoles can target an enzyme needed for the survival of Schistosoma. This is the group of flatworms that cause schistosomiasis.
  The scientists tested oxadiazoles on laboratory mice. They found that one compound killed the parasite at every level of development – from larva to adult. The study also showed that the compound was active against all three major species of Schistosoma worms that infect humans.
  The National Institutes of Health supported the research. Scientists from Illinois State University and the Chemical Genomics Center at N.I.H. reported their findings in the journal Nature Medicine.
  Biology professor David Williams led the research. He says the Schistosoma parasite needs oxygen to survive. Oxygen use produces oxygen-free radicals that can destroy an organism. The worm has a protective enzyme. But Professor Williams says the experimental drug disables this enzyme, causing the worm to self-destruct.
  Since the nineteen eighties, doctors in more than seventy tropical nations have used one main drug to treat schistosomiasis. Public health experts worry that the worms will become resistant to this drug, praziquantel.
  Each year, two hundred eighty thousand people die of schistosomiasis, also known as bilharzia or snail fever. The microscopic worms infect snails, which in turn lay infected eggs. Humans become infected when they enter fresh water where the snails live.
  The worms dig through skin to enter the body. They move into blood vessels that supply the intestinal and urinary systems. Then, if worm eggs in human waste enter fresh water, more snails and people become infected.
  More studies are needed on the experimental new drug. The scientists say the results in mice were better than all the targets set by the World Health Organization for new schistosomiasis compounds. They hope the drug will be ready for testing in humans in four to five years.
  And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Jill Moss. Transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our reports are at 51voa.com. I'm Steve Ember.

>>推荐:VOA慢速英语和标准英语节目介绍广播频率以及免费打包下载

相关文章
网友评论
昵称:    验证码:   匿名发表
注:以上网友留言只代表爱词霸网友个人观点,不代表官方观点;
爱词霸不对网友留言真实性作任何保证。
英语大讲堂          往期回顾>>
  爱词霸-新东方四六级备考系列访谈之首:新东方名师赵建昆、陈科23日做客爱词霸英语大讲堂,现场教考生30天冲刺四六级考试……
访谈地址>> 有奖提问>>
在线广告 - 手机词典 - 网站地图 - 实验室 - 免费工具 - 关于爱词霸 - 意见反馈
© 2005 - 2008 Kingsoft 京ICP备06025896