Wednesday, 24 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS A big jolt to the BJP in Jalandhar! Young leader Robin Sampla joins the AAP Aam Aadmi Party thanks the court for the order to form a panel of AIIMS doctors for Arvind Kejriwal's health check-ups In Haryana, notification for the Lok Sabha elections will be issued on April 29 : Anurag Agarwal ‘Voter-in-Queue’ App to provide information on queues at polling centers - Anurag Agarwal Will Quit Politics If Aap Secures 13 Seats In Punjab : Amarinder Singh Raja Warring CGC Landran sets up IPR cell VIT-AP University Honoured with Prestigious CSR Outstanding University in Education Excellence Award for 2024 DC Aashika Jain Reviews the Checks imposed on the sale, supply and stock of Methanol/Industrial Spirit and Distilleries/Bottling Plants/ENA/Liquor Vends in the District BJP's good days became a dream, now Congress will bring happy days - Gurjit Aujla Two independents file nomination papers for 02-Srinagar Lok Sabha Seat Returning Officer Jammu PC assesses election preparedness ahead of polling CS assesses progress on development of youth Employment & Skilling portal Shinda Shinda No Papa: Gippy Grewal And Shinda Grewal Steal The Show In Hilarious Trailer Lt Governor conducts on-site inspection of SASB’s Office & Yatri Niwas at Pantha Chowk Lt Governor meets family members of the victims of Srinagar Boat Tragedy Lok Sabha Elections 2024 : DEO Reasi assesses election related arrangements in Mahore Lok Sabha Elections 2024 : General, Police Observers for Anantnag-Rajouri PC visit Shopian Arrangements for annual Kheer Bhawani Mela reviewed at Ganderbal Dish TV Revolutionizes Entertainment with ‘Dish TV Smart+’ Services Kia unveils unique camouflage for its first-ever Tasman pickup truck What Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has done for the country, no one else could have done," -Anil Vij

 

'Kidney on a chip' device enables safer drug dosing: Study

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

New York , 05 May 2016

Using a "kidney on a chip" device that mimics the flow of medication through human kidneys and measure its effect on the ongan's cells can lead to safer drug dosing which is particularly critical for patients in intensive care units (ICUs), says a study."When you administer a drug, its concentration goes up quickly and it's gradually filtered out as it flows through the kidneys," said one of the researchers Shuichi Takayama, professor at University of Michigan in the US."A kidney on a chip enables us to simulate that filtering process, providing a much more accurate way to study how medications behave in the body," Takayamanoted.Precise dosing in intensive care units is critical, as up to two-thirds of patients in the ICU experience serious kidney injury. Medications contribute to this injury in more than 20 percent of cases, largely because many intensive care drugs are potentially dangerous to the kidneys.Determining a safe dosage, however, can be surprisingly difficult. Today, doctors and drug developers rely mainly on animal testing to measure the toxicity of drugs and determine safe doses. 

But animals process medications more quickly than humans, making it difficult to interpret test results and sometimes leading researchers to underestimate toxicity.

The new technique offers a more accurate way to test medications, closely replicating the environment inside a human kidney. It uses a microfluidic chip device to deliver a precise flow of medication across cultured kidney cells. "Even the same dose of the same drug can have very different effects on the kidneys and other organs, depending on how it's administered," Sejoong Kim, associate professor at Seoul National University Bundang Hospital in South Korea. "This device provides a uniform, inexpensive way to capture data that more accurately reflects actual human patients," Kim noted.In the study, the team tested their approach by comparing two different dosing regimens for gentamicin, an antibiotic that is commonly used in intensive care units. They found that a once-daily dose of the medication is significantly less harmful than a continuous infusion--even though both cases ultimately delivered the same dose of medication.The findings appeared in the journal Biofabrication.

 

Tags: HEALTH , STUDY

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD