New mechanism of action of Aspirin discovered
Main Category: Biology / BiochemistryArticle Date: 02 Oct 2005 - 0:00 PDT
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Dr. Derek W. Gilroy from the Centre for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics in London is the winner of the 10th International Aspirin® Award. The British scientist has unearthed a hitherto unknown mechanism of action of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) which explains how the active ingredient of Aspirin® inhibits inflammation. Dr. Gilroy's research is unusual in that his studies into the anti-inflammatory mode of action or, in other words, the inhibition of inflammation by ASA, are completely novel. He has shown that the substance has the unique ability to trigger the formation of nitric oxide. With the aid of this, white blood cells are better able to fight infection.
"Dr. Gilroy has demonstrated a biological effect of ASA, providing new insight into the mechanisms of action of acetylsalicylic acid in terms of inflammation and congenital immunity," said Kurt Soland, Head of the Region Europe in Bayer HealthCare's Consumer Care Division, in recognition of the Award Advisory Board's decision. Added Soland, "Dedicated young scientists like Dr. Gilroy are gradually eliciting more and more of ASA's secrets. The International Aspirin® Award motivates them to study the substance and provides impetus for further research."
Dr. Gilroy discovered in a series of experiments that ASA exerts its full anti-inflammatory effect in acute inflammation through the production of nitric oxide (NO). ASA was already known to inhibit the formation within the body of prostaglandins or "pain amplifiers" but that is not all that it does. The substance also produces inflammation-inhibiting hormones known as lipoxins, which in turn form nitric oxide (NO) and increase the nitric oxide levels in the blood. This phenomenon plays a prominent role in particular in acute inflammation, as NO regulates the transport of white blood cells to sites of infection and injury. If ASA is taken, it is easier for white blood cells to leave the blood system so that they can fight infection or repair injuries to tissues. As a result, warmth, redness, swelling and pain are reduced.
In his laudation to the British scientist, Professor Dr. Karsten Schrör, Head of the Institute of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology at the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf and a member of the Aspirin® Award Scientific Advisory Board, again clearly stressed the special significance of Dr. Gilroy's experiments. "Dr. Gilroy's discovery considerably broadens the known spectrum of the biological actions of the active ingredient of Aspirin® and demonstrates that only some of the numerous biological activities of ASA have been investigated to date."
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Re Gilroy
posted by Dr.G.R. Fryers on 4 Oct 2005 at 10:09 pmI was the founder president of the UK and then European Aspirin Foundations. I would be grateful for the full paper but if that is not available then please give me information on whether the effect seen was in vitro or in vivo and is the effect only an aspirin one or does salicylate also do it. At what concentration is it effective. Is any of the work in humans?
Why Is This New?
posted by Michael Vasiliadis on 13 Apr 2008 at 7:53 amPLEASE TRY THIS from 1995...
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/92/17/7926
The mode of action of aspirin-like drugs: Effect on inducible
nitric oxide synthase
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
Vol. 92, pp. 7926-7930, August 1995
Medical Sciences
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