Sunday, October 28, 2007

Hybrid Biotechnology Technique May be Used to Wipe Out Hepatitis, Bird Flu, Anthrax, etc.

Scientists at the Canada's Defense Department are in the process of developing hybrid technology in order to combat just some of the world's hideous health problems.

The department is currently working with ViRexx Medical Corp. in order to possibly apply the existing technology which is Chimigen that may help resolve existing problems faced by scientists in the field of microbiology.

Hepatitis, Cancer, Bird Flu, Anthrax and AIDS are the world's most deadliest diseases and ViRexx Medical Corp. is confident that the Chimigen platform will be able to deliver therapeutic vaccines that targets each disease by "retraining"the body to fight off the infection.

The Chimigen technology is still in its infancy and the medical community is hopeful that this new technology will be able to deliver its intended results in the coming years.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

R7128 Received Fast-track Status from FDA

The US Food and Drug Administration has given Pharmasset Inc.'s (NASDAQ:VRUS) R7128 a fast-track status in order to make the drug become more available to individuals who are chronically infected with Hepatitis C Virus. CNN has the story.

Vaccine for Hepatitis C is not yet available and just like Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C can cause liver damage such as cirrhosis and cancer.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that, "you may be at risk for hepatitis C and should contact your medical care provider for a blood test if you:

* were notified that you received blood from a donor who later tested positive for hepatitis C.
* have ever injected illegal drugs, even if you experimented a few times many years ago
* received a blood transfusion or solid organ transplant before July, 1992
* were a recipient of clotting factor(s) made before 1987
* have ever been on long-term kidney dialysis
* have evidence of liver disease (e.g., persistently abnormal ALT levels)

Please visit Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more information about Hepatitis C virus.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Hepatitis C Carrier, Pamela Anderson, Getting Healthier

Indeed Hepatitis C and other subtypes of Hepatitis such as Hepatitis B spares no one; even the celebrities and stars. Pamela Anderson, a Bay Watch star, was diagnosed with Hepatitis C and disclosed in March 2002 that she had the disease and claimed that she contracted the disease from her previous husband Tommy Lee but reported that her body is responding to the hepatitis c treatment she is currently on.

Hepatitis C is a serious liver disease that affects millions of people. To date more than 180 million people are infected with Hepatitis C Virus according to the World Health Organization (WHO) with numbers increasing every year (around 3 to 4 million infected per year) and more than 3 quarters of those currently infected will develop chronic liver disease (chronic hepatitis). Moreover, WHO stated that the disease is " responsible for 50–76% of all liver cancer cases, and two thirds of all liver transplants in the developed world"

Too bad there is no existing vaccine to prevent Hepatitis C infection. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there are different ways by which a person can be infected with hepatitis c virus:

  • You ever injected street drugs, as the needles and/or other drug "works" used to prepare or inject the drug(s) may have had someone else's blood that contained HCV on them.
  • You received blood, blood products, or solid organs from a donor whose blood contained HCV.
  • You were ever on long-term kidney dialysis as you may have unknowingly shared supplies/equipment that had someone else's blood on them.
  • You were ever a healthcare worker and had frequent contact with blood on the job, especially accidental needlesticks.
  • Your mother had hepatitis C at the time she gave birth to you. During the birth her blood may have gotten into your body.
  • You ever had sex with a person infected with HCV.
  • You lived with someone who was infected with HCV and shared items such as razors or toothbrushes that might have had his/her blood on them.