Psoriasis Club
  • Forum
  • Home
  • Portal
  • Member List
  • Psoriasis Score
  • PQOLS
  • What is psoriasis
  • Search
  • Help
Hello Guest, Welcome To The Psoriasis Club Forum. We are a self funded friendly group of people who understand.
Never be alone with psoriasis, come and join us. (Members see a lot more than you)
wave
Login Register
Login
Username:
Password:
Lost Password?
 
Psoriasis Club › HealthHealth Boards › Psoriasis In The News v
« Previous 1 … 29 30 31 32 33 … 54 Next »

Could anti-angiogenesis be used to treat psoriasis

Threaded Mode
Could anti-angiogenesis be used to treat psoriasis
Fred Online
I Wanted To Change the World But Got Up Far Too Late.
Moderator
Posts: 66,944
Threads: 3,888
Joined: Aug 2011
Gender: Male
Location: France
Psoriatic Arthritis Score: 1
PQOLS: 1
Treatment: Bimzelx / Coconut Oil
#1
News  Sun-10-01-2016, 12:05 PM
Here is a small study that looked at anti-angiogenesis for the treatment of psoriasis. (Anti angiogenic drugs are treatments that stop tumours from growing their own blood vessels)

Quote:
Background:
Recent experimental studies revealed that angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis are closely related to psoriasis. Our microarray analysis suggested that the pro-angiogenic genes platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM1), facio-genital dysplasia-5 (FGD5), prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase-1 (PTGS1), melanoma cell adhesion molecule (MCAM), vasohibin-2 (VASH2), and stabilin-1 (STAB1) are differentially expressed in dermal mesenchymal stem cells in psoriasis.

Objectives:
The aim of this study was to investigate the mRNA and protein expression of PECAM1, FGD5, PTGS1, MCAM, VASH2, and STAB1 for angiogenesis and the possible mechanisms in psoriasis.

Methods:
We studied 12 patients with plaque psoriasis and 14 healthy controls matched for age and sex. Dermal mesenchymal stem cells were expanded, passaged, and identified by cellular morphology, immunophenotyping, and multipotential differentiation. The mRNA and protein expression of the above-mentioned six genes were confirmed by quantitative real-time reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting.

Results:
The significantly decreased expression of PECAM1, PTGS1, FGD5, and MCAM at both mRNA and protein level (except VASH2 and STAB1) were demonstrated in mesenchymal stem cells from psoriatic skin lesions compared with non-lesional from healthy controls.

Conclusions:
We provide the first report that pro-angiogenic genes PECAM1, PTGS1, FGD5, and MCAM rather than VASH2 and STAB1 may be play a vital role in pathological dermal angiogenesis disorders of psoriasis. Therefore, anti-angiogenesis is attractive and offers future potential for application in patients with psoriasis.

Source: onlinelibrary.wiley.com

Funding: National Nature Science Foundation of China
Quote
jiml Offline
100 + Member I Just Cant Stop !

100 + Member I Just Cant Stop !
Posts: 47,972
Threads: 357
Joined: Oct 2013
Gender: Male
Location: Norwich England
Psoriasis Score: 3
Treatment: Skilarence 5x120mg a day
#2
Sun-10-01-2016, 12:14 PM
(Sun-10-01-2016, 12:05 PM)Fred Wrote: Here is a small study that looked at anti-angiogenesis for the treatment of psoriasis. (Anti angiogenic drugs are treatments that stop tumours from growing their own blood vessels)

Quote:
Background:
Recent experimental studies revealed that angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis are closely related to psoriasis. Our microarray analysis suggested that the pro-angiogenic genes platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM1), facio-genital dysplasia-5 (FGD5), prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase-1 (PTGS1), melanoma cell adhesion molecule (MCAM), vasohibin-2 (VASH2), and stabilin-1 (STAB1) are differentially expressed in dermal mesenchymal stem cells in psoriasis.

Objectives:
The aim of this study was to investigate the mRNA and protein expression of PECAM1, FGD5, PTGS1, MCAM, VASH2, and STAB1 for angiogenesis and the possible mechanisms in psoriasis.

Methods:
We studied 12 patients with plaque psoriasis and 14 healthy controls matched for age and sex. Dermal mesenchymal stem cells were expanded, passaged, and identified by cellular morphology, immunophenotyping, and multipotential differentiation. The mRNA and protein expression of the above-mentioned six genes were confirmed by quantitative real-time reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting.

Results:
The significantly decreased expression of PECAM1, PTGS1, FGD5, and MCAM at both mRNA and protein level (except VASH2 and STAB1) were demonstrated in mesenchymal stem cells from psoriatic skin lesions compared with non-lesional from healthy controls.

Conclusions:
We provide the first report that pro-angiogenic genes PECAM1, PTGS1, FGD5, and MCAM rather than VASH2 and STAB1 may be play a vital role in pathological dermal angiogenesis disorders of psoriasis. Therefore, anti-angiogenesis is attractive and offers future potential for application in patients with psoriasis.

Source: onlinelibrary.wiley.com

Funding: National Nature Science Foundation of China

Wow that's a new approach and an exciting one, more research on this could possibly find an even better way of controlling psoriasis .
I find it exciting that scientists are not blindly following one another but are looking at different things to treat us with, and how to deal with it....... this is great news for the future in my opinion
Quote
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
News Three amino acids could help psoriasis Fred 2 424 Tue-15-04-2025, 11:43 AM
Last Post: Fred
News Could c-reactive protein predict psoriatic arthritis Fred 7 1,131 Mon-07-04-2025, 13:15 PM
Last Post: Forest Walker
News Living bioelectronics could possibly help psoriasis Fred 6 3,347 Sun-02-06-2024, 18:22 PM
Last Post: Caroline
News Could an automated PASI score soon be here Fred 2 3,146 Wed-20-10-2021, 13:01 PM
Last Post: Fred
News Stelara aiming to treat children with psoriatic arthritis Fred 0 1,867 Fri-08-10-2021, 20:01 PM
Last Post: Fred



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
    About | Contact us | Login | Register | Home | Cookies/GDPR | RSS Syndication | Portal | Types Of Psoriasis | Psoriasis Score | Members Only Boards
    Copyright © 2010 - 2025 Psoriasis Club | All Rights Reserved | Founded May 2010 | Psoriasis Club Is Self Funded Without Sponsors Or Donations | Software by MyBB | Social
Linear Mode
Threaded Mode