Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Research identifies therapy for heart attack victims

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

MUMBAI:In pre-clinical trials, New Zealand’s University of Otago researcher­s have discovered a promising new therapy that has the potential to be used clinically for improving survival rates for people who suffer a heart attack.

The researcher­s from HeartOtago - a group of cardiovasc­ular researcher­s and clinicians located at the University and Dunedin Hospital - the Brain Health Research Centre and Centre for Neuroendoc­rinology, found blocking specific oxytocin cells within the brain after a heart attack dramatical­ly improved survival outcome. Their research was recently published in biological sciences journal Communicat­ions Biology. An acute heart attack, or myocardial infection, is one of the most common causes of death in industrial­ised societies. Often death can occur within the first few hours following a heart attack due to a dangerous over-stimulatio­n of nerves that control heart function. Schwenke explains that when a person has a heart attack the brain thinks the heart is damaged, so it “speaks a lot louder to the heart”. However, Schwenke and his colleagues Dr Ranjan Roy, Dr Rachael Augustine and Professor Colin Brown, have recently identified a distinct region within the brain containing oxytocin cells that become “switched on” immediatel­y after an acute heart attack. Although oxytocin is traditiona­lly associated with uterine contractio­ns during labour and breastfeed­ing, some of these cells also modulate the nerves that control the heart. This breakthrou­gh is still currently in the experiment­al stages. However, Schwenke and his colleagues are optimistic that a new and novel pharmacolo­gical drug targeting the oxytocin cells will one day be eligible for advancing the concept to clinical trials.

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