News Release
November 13, 2007
Contact: Christopher DeFrancesco, 860-679-3914
e-mail:
cdefrancesco@uchc.edu
A New Approach to Treating, Reducing Muscle
Injury
Army Backs UConn Research That Could Benefit
Tomorrow’s Soldiers
FARMINGTON, CONN. – Researchers at the University of
Connecticut Health Center believe they have uncovered a path that
could lead to reduced vulnerability to skeletal muscle injury.
Bruce T. Liang, M.D., director of the Pat and Jim Calhoun
Cardiology Center at the UConn Health Center, led a team of
scientists who have identified a specific receptor (adenosine A3)
with protective qualities that decrease muscle injury in mice. Their
research will be published in the American Journal of Physiology -
Heart and Circulatory Physiology early next year and is currently
available online.
The Department of Defense provided funding for this research,
with the objective of determining how to reduce muscle injury in
American military personnel.
“Our soldiers suffer a high rate of skeletal muscle injury during
rapid-fire physical training as well as during combat in adverse
conditions, such as in high heat exposure and high altitude,” Liang
says. “Having a way to treat and reduce skeletal muscle injury in
soldiers has the potential to be very beneficial.”
The research team included Liang, Jingang Zheng Ph.D., Ruibo
Wang, M.D., Ph.D, and Dan Wu, Ph.D., from the UConn Health Center,
as well as Edward Zambraski, Ph.D., from the U.S. Army Research
Institute of Environmental Medicine in Natick, Mass., and Kenneth A.
Jacobson, Ph.D., from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda,
Md.
“This work describes our novel findings on establishing a mouse
model of skeletal muscle injury, and perhaps of equal importance, on
a new therapeutic target to treat skeletal muscle injury,” Liang
says. “Agents that stimulate adenosine A3 receptors represent an
attractive therapeutic target because their use is not associated
with any side effects such as changes in heart rate or blood
pressure. Our work showed that administration of such agents in
intact animals can bring about a significant reduction in the muscle
injury without any apparent ill effect. Since there is no clinically
effective drug that can reduce skeletal muscle injury, the work
opens up a new area that could lead to better treatment for muscle
injury.”
The American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory
Physiology (http://ajpheart.physiology.org/)
publishes original investigations on the physiology of the heart,
blood vessels, and lymphatics, which are vessels that carry tissue
fluid. The direct link to the abstract of Liang’s study is
http://ajpheart.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/00819.2007v1.
The
full report is available for download from this page.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of
medicine and dental medicine, the UConn Medical Group, University
Dentists, and John Dempsey Hospital, a Solucient Top 100 Hospital®
2006. Founded in 1961, the Health Center pursues a mission of
providing outstanding health care education in an environment of
exemplary patient care, research and public service. To learn more about
the UConn Health Center, visit our website at
www.uchc.edu.
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