Friday, May 05, 2023

3.135 - AMICOR (25)

 3.135 - AMICOR (25)

#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

Mais uma visita, abrilhantando a vista das Rocky Mountains, no Canadá

#Slideshow: 105 fotos de abertura Clicar em apresentação de slides

#@Nerdbunker



#Science News

What Is Aspirin and How Does It Work?

Aspirin helps more than just your headache. Learn the history behind this staple, what aspirin is and how it works.

By Sara NovakMar 23, 2023 3:00 PM
White aspirin tablets with blue background
(Credit:Shane Maritch/Shutterstock)

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You probably have it tucked away in your medicine cabinet. Whether you're taking it to stave off the aches and pains of daily life or reduce your risk of a cardiovascular event, aspirin has been a staple for over a century. But what is it, and how does it work in the body? 

What is Aspirin?

Flowering branches of Spiraea vanhouttei in the spring garden in May
Spiraea (Credit:Diyana Dimitrova/Shutterstock)

Aspirin is made from salicylic acid, an organic compound found in a common shrub called Spiraea. The white willow tree's bark also contains the drug's natural element. It's been used naturally for thousands of years. The ancient Egyptians used it for joint pain, and Hippocrates recommended it for childbirth.

Willow Bark is Found in Nature and Used Medicinally for Various Ailments
White Willow Bark (Credit:P Maxwell Photography/Shutterstock)

In 1763, the British scientist Edward Stone conducted the first experiments to show the power of willow bark. Writing in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, he said that he had uncovered a miracle drug in the bark of an English tree. "I have found [it] by experience to be a powerful astringent and very efficacious in curing aguish and intermitting disorders."

A century later, in 1874, the British physician Thomas MacLagan used salicin, the active ingredient in aspirin, on his patients with rheumatic fever. After gradually increasing the dosage on himself to check for its safety, MacLagan began giving it to his patients. His accounts are published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

"The sudden arrest of the painful symptoms, and the coincident rapid fall of pulse and temperature, followed so immediately on the administration of the salicin that it is impossible not to attribute them to its use."

How Does Aspirin Work?

While aspirin seems like a basic remedy, its impact on the body is complex. We feel pain once trauma in the body transmits signals of that pain to the brain. Lipids produced from pain in the cells enter an enzyme called cyclooxygenase which then causes the production of prostaglandins, a group of lipids similar to hormones that create and regulate pain and inflammation at the site of tissue damage or infection.

Inside the enzyme, these lipids form pain messenger substances that fit into pain receptors on the nerve endings and then transmit pain signals to the brain. Aspirin is a member of a class of drugs known as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) that work by blocking the enzyme that causes inflammation so that it can't produce pain messengers. 

Aspirin for Blood Clots

The drug is also a powerful tool for reducing your risk of blood clots. Blood clots form when fibrin, strands of protein that form a net in the blood vessels, begin to gather, causing platelets and cells to clump and get caught in the net. In this case, aspirin interrupts the formation of clotting.

This can form a clot, but aspirin makes cells and platelets less sticky, so they don't clump together and block the arteries. However, you should not take aspirin daily unless you're at an increased risk of cardiovascular events and your doctor has recommended it. The medication can decrease the clotting ability in some people and increase their risk of bleeding.

Aspirin is a wonder drug that has been around for thousands of years naturally and in its current form for a century. And while we might not have always understood the mechanism for how it worked in the body, we've long known that it was effective. From joint pain to fever and anti-clotting, you don't have to know why it works to know that it does.

#IHME

Banner with the IHME logo and tagline, "Measuring what matters"
New findings on chronic respiratory diseases

Person wearing a yellow beanie using an inhaler

  • Nearly 80% of CRD deaths in 2019 were caused by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, according to a new eClinicalMedicine study published by IHME researchers and GBD collaborators.

  • About one in every 20 people globally suffered from CRDs in 2019. Asthma was the most common CRD.

  • This is the first GBD study to highlight the role of high body mass index as the leading risk factor for asthma mortality, especially for women.

Read the research
Top stories
two young people communicate using sign language

Deciphering hearing loss

One in five people worldwide experience hearing loss, according to an IHME study published in 2021. Lead author and former IHME fellow Lydia Haile discussed the study’s findings and how to address the concept of disability. Read the interview

IHME in the news
Three COVID rapid tests
What to know about XBB.1.16, the ‘Arcturus’ variant (NBC News)
» Ali Mokdad, a professor of global health at the University of Washington, said it’s still too early to predict what XBB.1.16 will do. But what he’s seen so far has been reassuring. “We haven’t seen an increase in hospitalizations, we haven’t seen an increase in any of the indicators that make us worry,” Mokdad said.
Healthcare professional examining lung x-ray
The silent threat: Women and heart disease in India (The Times of India)
» According to the Global Burden of Disease Study, heart disease is the leading cause of death among women in India, accounting for almost 18% of all female deaths.
LinkedIn post from Sara Momtazmanesh
LinkedIn post of the week LinkedIn logo

I am thrilled to share that our latest paper on the burden of chronic respiratory diseases (CRDs) has been published in The Lancet’s journal eClinicalMedicine. Our team's efforts and contributions were invaluable in making this study possible. I am grateful for the unwavering support and guidance my mentors and colleagues provided at the Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center (NCDRC) and Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation throughout this project. It is an absolute honor to be a part of such a collaborative effort.
 
What we're reading
UN: Protecting Indigenous health also protects the environment
» A recent report, “Indigenous Determinants of Health,” is a culmination of 20 years of work that the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues has been doing. (Grist)

Supplies running out at Sudan’s remaining hospitals as healthcare disaster looms
» In the capital, Khartoum, only 16% of health facilities are still functioning, according to the World Health Organization. (The Guardian)
New datasets published

#TV5MONDE

Le ministre australien de la Santé a annoncé mardi des mesures strictes pour limiter le vapotage, accusant l'industrie du tabac de vouloir rendre les adolescents de la prochaine "génération accros à la nicotine"
Le ministre australien de la Santé a annoncé mardi des mesures strictes pour limiter le vapotage, accusant l'industrie du tabac de vouloir rendre les adolescents de la prochaine "génération accros à la nicotine"
afp.com - EVA HAMBACH

Présentée comme la plus grande réforme contre le tabagisme du pays depuis une décennie, Canberra va interdire les cigarettes électroniques à usage unique, cesser les importations des versions délivrables sans ordonnance et restreindre la quantité de nicotine dans les e-cigarettes.

L'Australie mène depuis longtemps une politique volontariste d'éradication du tabagisme et, en 2012, elle est devenue le premier pays à imposer le paquet de cigarettes "neutre", une politique copiée depuis par de nombreux pays./.../

#NATURE briefing

#
My Bookmarks

ORIGINS OF LIFE | ALL TOPICS

 

A New Idea for How to Assemble Life

By PHILIP BALL

If we want to understand complex constructions, such as ourselves, assembly theory says we must account for the entire history of how such entities came to be.

Read the article

GRAPH THEORY

 

A Very Big Small Leap Forward in Graph Theory

By LEILA SLOMAN

Four mathematicians have found a new upper limit to the “Ramsey number,” a crucial property describing unavoidable structure in graphs.

Read the article


Related: 
Undergraduate Math Student
Pushes Frontier of Graph Theory

By Kevin Hartnett (2020)

SMELL

 

How a Human Smell Receptor Works Is Finally Revealed

By WYNNE PARRY

Researchers have determined how an airborne scent molecule links to the corresponding human smell receptor.

Read the blog


Related: 
Secret Workings of Smell Receptors Revealed for First Time

By Jordana Cepelewicz (2021)

ALGORITHMS

 

Alan Turing's Most Important Machine Was Never Built

By SHEON HAN

At 23 years old, Alan Turing wrote a seminal paper that helped define computation, algorithms and what came to be known as Turing machines — the theoretical foundation for modern computing.

Read the explainer

THE JOY OF WHY

 

Is Perpetual Motion Possible at the Quantum Level?

Podcast hosted by STEVEN STROGATZ

A new phase of matter called a “time crystal” plays with our expectations of thermodynamics. The physicist Vedika Khemani talks with Steven Strogatz about its surprising quantum behavior.

Listen to the podcast

Read the transcript

Around the Web

Powerful Emptiness
An abandoned mine on the island of Sardinia will be the site of a new experiment called Archimedes, in which physicists will attempt to measure the energy of empty space, reports Manon Bischoff for Scientific American. This vacuum energy is thought to be tied to dark energy, which accelerates the expansion of the universe. When physicists estimate the vacuum energy by inferring it from quantum fluctuations of fields, they find a 120 order-of-magnitude discrepancy between the calculated value and the force speeding up the universe’s expansion. Natalie Wolchover reported on efforts to resolve this tension for Quanta in 2018.

Another Way to Tweet
Researchers didn’t know whether birds could get social gratification through video. But a new study found that parrots making video calls to one another responded as they would to real birds and seemed less lonely, reports Hannah Devlin for The Guardian. Parrots, known for their linguistic abilities, are very social creatures. In a 2018 interview with Jordana Cepelewicz for Quanta, the neuroscientist Erich Jarvis discussed birdsong, what it teaches us about language and the social motivation behind speech.
#RISCO E LIMITE 
Nota: como dentro de pouco mais de uma semana AMICOR estará celebrando 26 anos,
 pensei em republicar alguns de meus artigos, a maioria publicados na Zero Hora...
Aloyzio Achutti. Médico.(publicado no Jornal Zero Hora, no dia 20/07/2007)Prevenir significa evitar danos, antecipando-se ao desastre. O conceito de risco e o conhecimento de sua presença são fundamentais para poder prevenir e chegar antes que o mal aconteça. A sabedoria popular já nos ensina: “é preferível prevenir que remediar”, “antes que o mal cresça, corte-se-lhe a cabeça”, porém não basta o conhecimento. Uma atitude favorável é necessária, e mais do que isso, uma cultura de proteção aos bens e valores fundamentais.
Dizem que nossa cultura é da catástrofe, que só nos movemos depois que um grande mal acontece, e não nos choca mais o comportamento paradoxal de massa, atraída para a contemplação e a comunicação do desastre e da violência, esperando pelo herói do último minuto...
Tudo pode estar relacionado com o desejo de onipotência, com o impulso de ignorar limites, a voracidade de acumular, e o mito da eternidade. As conquistas e o desenvolvimento da ciência contribuem para estimular estas fantasias, reforçadas pela propaganda, corrupção política, e interesses de mercado.
Estamos vivendo momentos de competição desportiva, onde bater recordes é a meta, distorcendo o valor do exercício físico para a saúde. Se a atividade física faz bem, ninguém provou até hoje que seu extremo traga benefícios, a não ser para os interessados na mobilização de multidões e nos negócios daí resultantes.
O limite está geralmente associado a risco e deve ser abordado com muita cautela, somente quando necessário, e com redobrada segurança. Entretanto nossa cultura foi construída cultuando o mais alto, o mais rico, o mais poderoso, o mais veloz, o mais violento, o som mais forte, os esportes radicais e a droga mais excitante, o que é capaz de comer e beber mais, quem mais se arrisca.
A virtude está no meio porque o abuso do limite se encontra nos extremos, em geral por irresponsabilidade, loucura ou incompetência. Também operar no limite inferior ou abaixo dos custos, pagar mal pelo serviço, por clientelismo, por lucratividade, ou para desviar recursos, só pode aumentar o risco de acidentes ou de má prática e deteriorar a qualidade. Na saúde, ou em qualquer outro setor de serviço, no transporte, na indústria, no comércio e na agricultura, é preciso observar os limites e cuidar dos riscos, planejar e avaliar constantemente, investir em manutenção, suporte e infra-estrutura.
A lei é o estabelecimento de limites visando o bem comum. Uma cultura que não respeita os limites, ou que cultua a transgressão em busca de vantagens ou situações de estresse e de risco, favorece a criminalidade e a corrupção.
A final, tudo tem limites e tem riscos, até nossa existência e o meio ambiente no qual vivemos. Para preservá-los, para gozá-los por mais tempo, para não sofrer danos é preciso respeitar os limites e agir dentro de uma margem razoável de segurança. Os extremos são para uso excepcional, e a consciência de limite deve-nos servir antes como alarme de alto risco e estímulo na busca de soluções e alternativas melhores, raramente como provocação a ser enfrentada.
If you had a magic wand to make the world more heart-healthy, what would you do? 🪄 Join the #WorldHeartSummit as we unite top leaders & experts from various sectors to tackle the global burden of #CVD 💔 and create a healthier, more equitable world: worldheartsummit.org

#MEDSCAPE
May 5, 2023
Covid-19: OMS declara fim da emergência global
"Isso não significa que a pandemia acabou. Este vírus está aqui para ficar. Ele ainda está matando e ainda está mudando”, disse diretor-geral da entidade, acrescentando que é hora de os países fazerem a transição do modo de emergência para o gerenciamento da covid-19 ao lado de outras doenças infecciosas.
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