Johns Hopkins Medicine
By
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Published: March 4, 2015, 10:37 p.m.·
Tags:
Scientific research
The cascade of events leading to bacterial infection and the immune response is mostly understood. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the immune response to the bacteria that causes tuberculosis have remained a mystery — until now. Researchers at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have now uncovered how a bacterial molecule controls the body’s response to TB infection and suggest that adjusting the level of this of this molecule may be a new way to treat the disease. The report appears this week as an advance online publication of Nature Medicine.
Read More →
By
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Published: Aug. 30, 2013, 12:29 p.m.·
Tags:
None
Infectious disease experts at Johns Hopkins have found, in studies in mice, that a drug better known as a treatment for high blood pressure and headaches effectively speeds up treatment of TB when added to the standard, daily antibiotic regimen. Test animals were cured in four months instead of the usual six.
Read More →
By
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Published: Oct. 26, 2012, 9:01 p.m.·
Tags:
None
Researchers at Johns Hopkins have figured out the three-dimensional shape of the protein responsible for creating unique bonds within the cell wall of the bacteria that cause tuberculosis. The bonds make the bacteria resistant to currently available drug therapies, contributing to the alarming rise of these super-bacteria throughout the world.
Read More →
Page 1 of 1 · Total posts: 4
1