English | Italian | French | German | Spanish | Portuguese  
Spring Health Insurance Quote
  Volume 9, Issue 36 - May 07, 2008
 
  Free Health Information and More for You and Your Family, Updated Weekly
Global Health
Personally Yours
Healthy Lifestyle
Cutting Edge
Mental Health
Healthy Pets
Healthy Business
Healthy Recipes
Healthy Resources
Super Search
E-mail Story
 

Nitric oxide useful in fighting bacteria

CHAPEL HILL, N.C., Feb. 26 (UPI) -- As concerns about drug-resistant bacteria increase, U.S. scientists are developing a way to fight bacteria without the use of drugs.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Associate Professor Mark Schoenfisch and colleagues have created nanoscale scaffolds made of silica and nitric oxide -- a molecule in mammals that plays a role in regulating blood pressure, neurotransmission and fighting bacterial infections, among other functions.

"There was evidence that nitric oxide kills bacteria but the difficult part involved storing it in a manner such that it could be delivered to bacterial cells," said doctoral student Evan Hetrick, lead author of the research.

While the body constantly produces nitric oxide, often not enough is produced to effectively fight bacterial infection.

"With silica scaffolds, nitric oxide stores easily and we could very carefully control the release," said Schoenfisch.

The research is published in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano.

--
Copyright 2008 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.

--

Free Newsletter
Sign Up

Email Address*
ribbon
Cick here to see our Awards!
 
HON
We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the Health On the Net Foundation.
  Applesforhealth.com is rated by
ICRA
 
Contact Us About Us Privacy Statement & Policies