Potential Treatment for Chronic Diseases and Cancer: Understanding Chronic Inflammation, Study Provides Insights
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A recently published study led by Wayne State University on a new approach to understanding chronic inflammation could lead to new advancements in the treatment of many debilitating medical conditions, including cancer.
The study, "Distinct etiology of chronic inflammation -- implications on degenerative diseases and cancer therapy," was published in Frontiers in Immunology by Krishna Rao Maddipati, Ph.D., professor of pathology in the School of Medicine and director of the Lipidomics Core Facility.
Maddipati's research suggests that chronic inflammation is not merely a continuation of acute inflammation, which results from injury or disease, but that the two may have different origins within the body.
"This new hypothesis is called unalamation," said Maddipati.
"The compounds that lead to inflammation in our body are always present in everyday healthy physiology, but they are under the control of anti-inflammatory compounds. Acute inflammation results from an increase of the inflammatory compounds at the site of an injury. However, chronic inflammation, according to my studies, comes from a decrease of the anti-inflammatory compounds in a normal healthy physiological state. Because the balance of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory compounds helps maintain a normal health state, the goal of treatment for chronic inflammation may not be to decrease inflammatory compounds but to find a way to increase anti-inflammatory compounds."
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