Chlamydia pnuemoniae - page two
Antibiotic slows atherosclerosis in people with Chlamydia pneumonia antibodies
Oct 16 (American Heart Association) - Long-term antibiotic treatment may slow the progress of early atherosclerosis in stroke patients who have antibodies to a pneumonia-causing bacteria in their bloodstream. Scientists reported these findings in yesterday's rapid access issue of Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
"Our data imply for the first time to our knowledge that antibiotic treatment in patients over age 55 with Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cp) antibodies and prevalent cerebrovascular disease is associated with a reduced progression of early stages of carotid atherosclerosis," says study author Dirk Sander, M.D., a researcher with the neurology department at Technical University of Munich.
Chlamydia pneumoniae - the bacteria that causes pneumonia - has been associated with atherosclerosis. Studies have also associated the Cp antibody with heart attack and stroke. Other research has corroborated the association of Cp with atherosclerosis based on the organism's presence in atherosclerotic lesions and its absence in healthy artery tissue.
Other researchers have also described the benefits of antibiotics on vessel disease.
Sander's team evaluated the effect of the antibiotic roxithromycin on progressive thickening of the carotid (neck) artery in 272 stroke patients (average age 64) for two years. Of the 125 that tested positive for the Cp antibody, 62 received a twice-daily, 150-milligrams dose of roxithromycin, while 63 got twice-daily placebo for 30 days. Of the 147 Cp-negative patients, 74 were assigned to the drug and 73 to placebo.
Researchers measured intima to media thickness (IMT) of the common carotid artery with ultrasound. Increased IMT indicates atherosclerosis. Each patient had undergone both IMT and blood tests for Cp antibodies at least three years before the start of the study's antibiotic regimen. Patients infected with Cp in the past have antibodies that react when their blood is exposed to the microorganism in the laboratory.
C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were also established for each patient. CRP is a marker of general systemic inflammation, including irritation of vascular walls.
In the baseline period, IMT progressed in Cp patients at a rate of 0.12 millimeters a year (mm/year) compared to 0.07 mm/year in patients without the antibody, regardless of other cardiovascular risk factors. After two years of antibiotic treatment, progression was significantly reduced Cp positive patients compared to Cp-positive patients who did not receive roxithromycin. The progression was 0.07 mm/year in patients taking antibiotics versus 0.11 mm/year in untreated patients.
Treatment significantly decreased CRP levels in treated Cp-positive patients but not in the placebo Cp-positive group, an effect that remained unchanged even after adjusting for smoking, age, diabetes, blood pressure or cholesterol levels.
However, researchers observed no significant difference between the groups in subsequent cardiovascular events at follow-up, and saw no change in IMT in Cp-negative patients who received antibiotic therapy.
Roxithromycin therapy was associated with an average reduction of IMT progression of 0.04 mm a year, which equals about a 1.5 percent to 2 percent reduction in heart risk, Sander says. This small risk reduction requires clinical trials with long-term follow-up to demonstrate the probable benefits of antibiotic therapy in patients testing positive for Cp antibodies, he says.
Co-authors include Kerstin Winbeck, M.D.; Jurgen Klingelhofer, M.D.; Thorleif Etgen, M.D. and Bastian Conrad, M.D.
Copyright 2000 - 2002 American Heart Association. All rights
reserved.
Publish Date: October 16, 2002
Pneumonia Organism May Play Role in MS Development
An agent that causes respiratory tract infections such as community-acquired pneumonia, called chlamydia pneumonia, may be a factor in the development of multiple sclerosis (MS) in some patients, according to a study released during the American Academy of Neurology 51st Annual Meeting April 17-24 in Toronto.
4/23/99
Toronto (April 23, 1999) -- An agent that causes respiratory tract infections such as community-acquired pneumonia, called chlamydia pneumonia, may be a factor in the development of multiple sclerosis (MS) in some patients, according to a study released during the American Academy of Neurology 51st Annual Meeting April 17-24 in Toronto.
These results suggest that infection of the central nervous system with chlamydia pneumonia is an early event in MS, and may directly or indirectly be responsible for the development of the disease," said study author and neurologist Subramaniam Sriram, MD, of Vanderbilt Medical Center, in Nashville, TN. "What is not clear is whether C. pneumonia is the cause of MS, a fortuitous bystander, or whether it in some way triggers an autoimmune response which causes the disease."
The cause of MS is not known. In MS, the insulating material of the nerves, myelin, is destroyed. This leads to problems in vision, balance, gait, and other neurologic functions. Current theories suggest that a poorly regulated immune response against common infectious agents may be responsible for the disease.
Chlamydial species are well-known pathogens involved in a number of human diseases. Chlamydia pneumonia was discovered about 10 years ago and is now thought to be responsible for many cases of community- acquired pneumonia. The association between C. pneumonia and MS has not been previously noted.
In a study of 17 patients with newly diagnosed relapsing remitting MS and 13 patients without the disease, researchers found evidence of the chlamydia pneumonia organism in the spinal fluid of all 17 MS patients. In 47 percent of newly diagnosed MS patients, the organism was directly cultured from cerebrospinal fluid. Using sophisticated genetic tests, researchers found the DNA of chlamydia pneumonia in the cerebrospinal fluid of all the MS patients. In contrast, the organism was not found in the cultures of any of the 13 control patients, and only two had evidence of C. pneumonia DNA.
"There is a possibility that these two patients may develop MS in the future since their symptoms were suggestive of an initial attack," Sriram said.
Also, a majority of the MS patients had an antibody response to chlamydial antigens in the cerebrospinal fluid, indicating evidence of a chronic immune activation to chlamydia pneumonia.
In earlier studies, the researchers had established that a large number of patients with chronic progressive MS had evidence of C. pneumonia infection in the cerebrospinal fluid. However, it was unclear whether the infection was a secondary event following long-standing inflammatory injury or was directly involved in the immune process, Sriram said.
"It's clear from this study that the association between MS and the presence of C. pneumonia infection is extremely high--much higher than any other organism people have looked at in the past," he said.
"Since a number of currently available antibodies prevent the replication of C. pneumonia, a therapeutic trial is likely to answer the question of cause and effect between C. pneumonia and multiple sclerosis," Sriram said.
This study was supported by the National MS Society.
Improving care for patients with neurological disorders through
education and research is the goal of the American Academy of Neurology,
an association of more than 15,000 neurologists and neuroscience
professionals.
Editor's Note: Dr. Sriram will present the study at a platform
presentation session during the American Academy of Neurology's 51st
Annual Meeting in Toronto on Friday, April 23, at 2:15 pm in Room 206
ACE of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.
Upcoming Book
"A Cure for Asthma? What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You - and Why"
| is a book being published by Dr. David Hahn |
Recent news ..
(June 2011) Good article from The Grand Rapids Allergy Examiner:
Asthma cure found in Zithromax: hope for the future
More News ..
(July 2010) Wilmore Webley PH.D. sent us some interesting research he was a part of:
Infectious Chlamydia pneumoniae is Associated With Elevated Interleukin-8 and Airway Neutrophilia in Children With Refractory Asthma
Occurrence of Chlamydia trachomatis and Chlamydia pneumoniae in paediatric respiratory infections
Science Daily News
(May 25, 2010)Scientists from the University of Massachusetts have developed an animal model that shows how an early childhood lung infection can cause asthma later in life.
What are Biofilms?
To educate yourself more on biofilms and why vitamin "D" may be bad when trying to eradicate Chlamydia pneumoniae or Mycoplasma, read this interesting article by Dr. Randall Wolcott, bacterial biofilm wound specialist
and also
The Marshall protocol for biofilms in wound treatment. Highly technical but somewhat related in that it addresses why eradicating bacteria like Chlamydia pneumoniae and mycoplasma can be so difficult.
Clinical Trials
The University of Wisconsin, American Academy of Family Physicians, Wisconsin Academy of Family Physicians (WAFP),The Dean Foundation for Health, Research and Education (Dean Foundation) and Pfizer corporationis sponsoring a study and recruiting volunteers for a study called AZMATICS to determine the effectiveness of Azithromycin as Adjunctive Treatment for Adult Asthma.
Important notice: At this time, the study is no longer recruiting subjects.
If you are interested in learning more about azithromycin treatment for asthma, you may email Dr. Hahn at:
Dean Foundation
Follow this link to learn more about Dr. David Hahn and the Dean Foundation.
If you are interested in making a donation to The Dean Foundation you can specify that it be used towards infectious asthma research
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First off, I would like to apologize for abruptly shutting down the support forum several years ago. Besides dealing with hackers, trolls and rude people, I was going through an extremely stressful time in life that resulted in the loss of our youngest son.
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I know this upset some people so I hope they can accept this apology
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The St. Petersburg times ran a story about AsthmaStory just before I started my Appalachian trail journey
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ASTHMA AND INFECTION
Recommendations for interested Physicians by DAVID L. HAHN, MD. MS.
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For the past 12 years the pharmaceuticals and health products industry represent the top industry when it comes to financing lobbiest that influence our laws and federal policies (FDA).
No wonder this research still hasn't made it mainstream while drugs like oxycodone / oxycontin are freely dispensed. Killing and addicting millions.
Then again, it's all about money isn't it?
Click here to view drug industry lobbiest rankings for past 12 years
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With so much information exploding all around us, finding a nugget of knowledge is not nearly as important as what we do with it. |
The National Lung Association reports that
The annual direct health care cost of asthma is approximately $15.6 billion; indirect costs (e.g. lost productivity) add another $5.1 billion, for a total of $20.7 billion dollars. Prescription drugs represented the largest single direct cost, at $5.6 billion.
In 2008, it was estimated that 23.3 million Americans currently have asthma. Of these, 12.7 million Americans (4.1 million children under 18) had an asthma attack
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