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Tag: kidney disease

Why the test to predict preeclampsia is hailed as a great news?

Teachable moment in classrooms:

  1. blood vessel chapter – layers of the wall of arteries
  2. blood vessel chapter — blood pressure regulation through vasoconstriction and vasodilation
  3. urinary system chapter – filtering membrane of the glomerulus in the renal corpuscle
  4. development chapter – blood vessels in the placenta

The news item:  Recently the following news item appeared online:

FDA approves groundbreaking blood test for early preeclampsia detection in pregnant women

The FDA has approved a new blood test that can detect whether a mother will potentially get preeclampsia within 30 minutes.

The report describes preeclampsia as high blood pressure in pregnant women, and that in the state of Georgia hypertensive disorders are the leading cause of maternal death. The article describes the name of the test: BRAHMS sFlt1/PlGF KRYPTOR.

So, Why Do I Care??  The death of pregnant mothers is a tragic event that could cause the death of their unborn child as well.  When pregnancy-related high blood pressure appears, the medical response depends on how high the blood pressure is. Once a test predicts that preeclampsia will appear in a pregnant woman, the obstetrician can make preparations for monitoring and further possible actions. When the medical professionals are ready to make treatment choices, it is more  likely that the intervention will be successful, and both mother and baby will survive.

Plain English, Please!!!  First, let’s talk about why high blood pressure appears in pregnant women who had normal blood pressure before the pregnancy. By the end of the first month of pregnancy the fetus builds a placenta, an organ that incorporates a layer of the mother’s uterus as well. The purpose of the placenta to provide a place for exchange of oxygen and nutrients from the blood of the mother to the blood of the fetus, and for the exchange of carbon dioxide and other waste products from the blood of the fetus to the blood of the mother. This can be achieved only if a large number of fetal blood vessels and maternal blood vessels are part of the placenta. In the fetuses where the number of blood vessels is low in the placenta, the fetus will be deficient in oxygen, and the blood vessels release stress factors such as placenta growth factor (PlGF), and soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt1). Those stress factors reprogram the blood vessels of the mother to contract, and the contracting blood vessels increase blood pressure. Imagine a balloon filled with water. If you squeeze the balloon the force will increase water pressure to the point that balloon may burst. Smooth muscle cells in the wall of arteries do the squeezing (vasoconstriction) that increases blood pressure.

Second, let’s talk about why is preeclampsia harmful. High blood pressure in the mother can cause strokes by dislodging clots from large blood vessels and moving them to the brain where the clots block

Can peeing out blood sugar possibly save us from kidney disease?

TeachableMedicalNews article 10132019

Teachable moment in classrooms:

  1. urinary system chapter – glucose reabsorption from filtrate
  2. urinary system chapter – filtration by small blood vessels in glomerulus
  3. endocrine system chapter – insulin and insulin receptor in type 2 diabetes

 

Can peeing out blood sugar possibly save us from kidney failure?

The news item:  Recent news reports wrote about the unexpected health benefit of the type 2 diabetes drug, Invokana.

https://www.seattletimes.com/business/study-finds-diabetes-drug-may-prevent-slow-kidney-disease/

The article mentions that deaths from kidney failure, the need for dialysis, the need of kidney transplant were reduced by 30% in treated patients.

How gene editing may cure kidney disease?

TeachableMedicalNews article 09112019

Teachable moment in classrooms:

  1. cellular basis of life chapter – concept of exons within a gene
  2. cellular basis of life chapter – concept of gene mutation leading to protein malfunction
  1. urinary system chapter – damage to nephrons causes kidney disease

 

 Can gene editing cure kidney disease?

 The news item:  Recent news hinted at a possible genetic treatment to halt kidney diseases.   The article mentioned Joubert syndrome, and gene editing technology.

Gene editing possible for kidney disease

For the first time scientists have identified how to halt kidney disease in a life-limiting genetic condition, which may pave the way for personalised treatment in the future.

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