25 research outputs found
Tracking a Medically Important Spider: Climate Change, Ecological Niche Modeling, and the Brown Recluse (Loxosceles reclusa)
Most spiders use venom to paralyze their prey and are commonly feared for their potential to cause injury to humans. In North America, one species in particular, Loxosceles reclusa (brown recluse spider, Sicariidae), causes the majority of necrotic wounds induced by the Araneae. However, its distributional limitations are poorly understood and, as a result, medical professionals routinely misdiagnose brown recluse bites outside endemic areas, confusing putative spider bites for other serious conditions. To address the issue of brown recluse distribution, we employ ecological niche modeling to investigate the present and future distributional potential of this species. We delineate range boundaries and demonstrate that under future climate change scenarios, the spider's distribution may expand northward, invading previously unaffected regions of the USA. At present, the spider's range is centered in the USA, from Kansas east to Kentucky and from southern Iowa south to Louisiana. Newly influenced areas may include parts of Nebraska, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, South Dakota, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. These results illustrate a potential negative consequence of climate change on humans and will aid medical professionals in proper bite identification/treatment, potentially reducing bite misdiagnoses
Whole organisms or pure compounds? entourage effect versus drug specificity
As the therapeutic use of sacred plants and fungi becomes increasingly accepted by Western medicine, a tug of war has been taking place between those who advocate the traditional consumption of whole organisms and those who defend exclusively the utilization of purified compounds. The attempt to reduce organisms to single active principles is challenged by the sheer complexity of traditional medicine. Ayahuasca, for example, is a concoction of at least two plant species containing multiple psychoactive substances with complex interactions. Similarly, cannabis contains dozens of psychoactive substances whose specific combinations in different strains correspond to different types of therapeutic and cognitive effects. The “entourage effect” refers to the synergistic effects of the multiple compounds present in whole organisms, which may potentiate clinical efficacy while attenuating side effects. In opposition to this view, mainstream pharmacology is adamant about the need to use purified substances, presumably more specific and safe. In this chapter, I will review the evidence on both sides to discuss the scientific, economic, and political implications of this controversy. The evidence indicates that it is time to embrace the therapeutic complexity of psychedelics.2019-07-3
The Endocannabinoid System: A Dynamic Signalling System at the Crossroads Between Metabolism and Disease
The discovery of the endocannabinoid system (ECS) in the early 1990s of last century generated high expectations of new therapeutic opportunities. Its central role and pleiotropic character seemed to offer promising indications in the fields of pain, inflammation, CNS disorders, weight management and metabolic diseases. However, around 2007 the tide began to turn when several cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1) antagonists/inverse agonists failed as therapeutics against overweight and its complications. More recently, the development of FAAH (Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase) inhibitors against pain has also faced serious setbacks. In retrospect the much greater complexity of the ECS than originally assumed has played a fundamental role in these difficulties. Although there is no doubt that endocannabinoids and their receptors are of great (patho-)physiological relevance, it has become clear that the ECS is intimately intertwined with other biological systems. Endocannabinoids exist in equilibrium with fatty acids and their metabolic derivatives, including eicosanoids and prostamides. Furthermore, there are several biologically active analogues of endocannabinoids, in particular fatty acid amides, with metabolic pathways overlapping those of the ECS. Finally, endocannabinoids per se and their congeners show “promiscuous” behaviour going beyond interactions with CB1 and CB2 receptors. It has become clear that the complexity of what may be called the “endocannabinoidome” demands for pharmacological approaches that take into account these dynamics. Targeting the “endocannabinoidome” continues to offer opportunities for prevention and therapy, in particular for chronic diseases. However, chances for success are more likely to come from “multiple-target” than from “single-target” approaches
Cenomanian-Turonian transition in a shallow water sequence of the Sinai, Egypt
Environmental and depositional changes across the Late Cenomanian
oceanic anoxic event (OAE2) in the Sinai, Egypt, are examined based on
biostratigraphy, mineralogy, delta(13)C values and phosphorus analyses.
Comparison with the Pueblo, Colorado, stratotype section reveals the
Whadi El Ghaib section as stratigraphically complete across the late
Cenomanian-early Turonian. Foraminifera are dominated by high-stress
planktic and benthic assemblages characterized by low diversity,
low-oxygen and low-salinity tolerant species, which mark shallow-water
oceanic dysoxic conditions during OAE2. Oyster biostromes suggest
deposition occurred in less than 50 m depths in low-oxygen, brackish,
and nutrient-rich waters. Their demise prior to the peak delta(13)C
excursion is likely due to a rising sea-level. Characteristic OAE2
anoxic conditions reached this coastal region only at the end of the
delta(13)C plateau in deeper waters near the end of the Cenomanian.
Increased phosphorus accumulations before and after the delta(13)C
excursion suggest higher oxic conditions and increased detrital input.
Bulk-rock and clay mineralogy indicate humid climate conditions,
increased continental runoff and a rising sea up to the first delta(13)C
peak. Above this interval, a dryer and seasonally well-contrasted
climate with intermittently dry conditions prevailed. These results
reveal the globally synchronous delta(13)C shift, but delayed effects of
OAE2 dependent on water depth