Friday, September 14, 2007

Just fer Today,





So today was a grey day but the sun has made an appearence after all.temp is still only 14 or 15 so it is kinda cool out,but its a great fall day & we live in the most exciting time to be alive in this world.We can do anything or be anything,or at least we are told we can.In real life its alot harder,as theres addictionns & behaviours that have to maintain a social norm,or your classed as a junkie,boozer,homeless,poverty,mental sickness, & all those other terms of endearment we like to use on other less fortunate peoples?>.But just for now,just for today,i am gratefull to my maker,& my saviour,Jehova & Jesus & the Holy Spirit,& i know we are living in what the Holy bible terms as The End Times,& we are going to freak when the real stuff starts,bigger earthquakes,& klasting longer & longer as well.But if there is going to be a new world out of old,then we must withstand the firestorm that it will take to cleans the earth of all its filth.I pray that the holy spirits decends to earth & to everyone,to share in the love of GOD,& to spread that Glory & love outwards AS WELl as inwards.healing man is his ill's & pains,forever & ever AMEN!!Folks what a marvoulous day that will be,When the saints come marchin in,with Jesus at the head!& its comin sooner then most think it is!!anyways i know i will be screwed as i'm on the methadone,but i give my problems to GOD,& live each day as it comes.Never planning to far ahead,because i feel dazed & confused,unsure,when it should be contentment & sure of self & mind.Well at times i feel both,& none,depending onb the mood i guess.For now i am content & have all i need excpt the love of a woman,& i miss snugleing up to her on a cold winters night,& feeling her body next to mine,smelling her perfumed body...yaya ok enough already....sheesh eh folks?GODBLESS U ALL & peace n ;love not wars n walls eh folks?

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

HIV MEDS GOOD TREATING CANCER AS WELL-STUDIES SHOW!





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HIV Protease Inhibitors Show AntiCancer Potential

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Past Highlights






HIV Protease Inhibitors Show Potential as Cancer Treatments in Preclinical Studies

Several protease inhibitors that are used in combination with other drugs to treat Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection may also be effective against certain types of cancer, according to researchers from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health. Nelfinavir (Viracept®), Ritonavir (Norvir®), and Saquinavir (Invirase®) inhibited growth of several types of cancer cells, with Nelfinavir being the most effective. These results appear in the September 1, 2007 issue of Clinical Cancer Research.

The NCI research team investigated HIV protease inhibitors because these drugs are known to inhibit the activation of Akt, a protein that has been implicated in the development of many types of cancer, including non-small cell lung cancer. Using lab studies (called in vitro studies) and mouse models, the researchers tested six different protease inhibitors against non-small cell lung cancer as well as a panel of 60 human cancer cell types, in cultures (called cell lines) derived from nine different kinds of malignant tissue. When given in doses that were previously proven to be safe in HIV-infected patients, three of the six protease inhibitors (nelfinavir, ritonavir and saquinavir) inhibited growth of non-small cell lung cancer and every cell type in the set of 60 kinds of cancer cells.

“There are many common threads between cancer and HIV/AIDS, and this research underscores the value of NCI’s involvement in HIV/AIDS research,” said NCI Director John E. Niederhuber, M.D.

In this study, nelfinavir and saquinavir were more potent than the other HIV protease inhibitors examined. They each had similar abilities to prevent tumor growth, and induce programmed cell death, or apoptosis, which is a normal process that rids the body of old or damaged cells. The molecular structures of these two drugs share a trait that is not found in the other drugs that were tested, and the researchers speculate that this trait might provide an explanation for the relatively higher potency of these two drugs. Nelfinavir was the most effective of all the protease inhibitors tested, and was able to cause two different types of cancer cell death - apoptosis and non-apoptotic cell death.

In this study, non-apoptopic cell death was related to induction of stress on part of the cell that synthesizes proteins called the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which subsequently led to autophagy, a normal process of self digestion that generates energy for the cell under conditions of stress. In the past, other anti-cancer agents have been shown to induce either ER stress or autophagy in a test tube, but in this study nelfinavir was also able to initiate this process in cells that had been transplanted into mice. Other studies have also shown that nelfinavir could induce apoptosis, but non-apoptopic cell death via nelfinavir was a new discovery.

“ER stress and autophagy are cellular processes that are gaining importance in cancer research because we suspect that impaired autophagy may contribute to cancer development,” said Niederhuber. “Markers of ER stress and autophagy will be useful biomarkers for nelfinavir as its clinical development proceeds.”

Nelfinavir was successful in inhibiting growth of both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant breast cancer cells, indicating that this drug could be useful against cancer cells that have acquired resistance to common anti-cancer therapies, such as tamoxifen and trastuzumab. There is also evidence that use of nelfinavir may be able to overcome resistance to radiation.

Based on the results of this study, senior investigator, Phillip A. Dennis, M.D., Ph.D., from the Medical Oncology Branch of the NCI Center for Cancer Research, and his colleagues have just begun a new clinical trial to test nelfinavir in cancer patients. This trial will determine how much of the drug can be tolerated by cancer patients (toxicity), and how the drug behaves in the body and reacts with the tumors (pharmacokinetics).

The process of identifying new indications for already approved drugs, called repositioning, takes advantage of existing data on toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and potential side effects. There are several successful examples of this approach, indicating that drug repositioning could complement new drug development, with decreased risks and reduced costs.

“The need for expedited development of effective cancer therapies is critical,” said Dennis. “Repositioning drugs that are already FDA-approved for use in humans could greatly accelerate the development of new cancer therapies. Our data suggest that, given its wide spectrum of activity and ability to be administered through two different transmission routes [oral and intraperitoneal], nelfinavir could be successfully repositioned as a cancer therapeutic.”

Monday, September 3, 2007

songs


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Sunday, September 2, 2007

cool stuff

will we find a cure for HIV-AIDS?