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Title: mitochondrial information resource links


pip - January 13, 2007 08:57 AM (GMT)

Bernard - January 13, 2007 01:18 PM (GMT)
Interesting. Looks like a lot of the symptoms are similar to those of epilepsy. I guess the difference would be epileptiform brainwave activity? The site doesn't really offer much insight into how Mitochondrial Disease is diagnosed.

pip - February 6, 2007 09:23 PM (GMT)
In the case of Epilepsy - The symptoms are similar and can be missed, unless you are looking specifically for them. Mitochondria disorders are not that easy to diagnose. Sorry the site doesn't really say how they do that testing, E. Com has a brief guide — or did last time I read up on this. As for epileptiform brainwave activity? Am wincing regarding that as I am typing.... Wouldn't think that good a guide really would you if trying to establish inherited Epilepsy of a Mitochondrial strain. EEG's can and do come back clean for example?

Bernard - February 7, 2007 01:09 PM (GMT)
Well, it was just a guess. I'm not an expert in the field!

There was something related to mitochondria and cancer in the news recently:
QUOTE
IT SOUNDS almost too good to be true: a cheap and simple drug that kills almost all cancers by switching off their "immortality". The drug, dichloroacetate (DCA), has already been used for years to treat rare metabolic disorders and so is known to be relatively safe. It also has no patent, meaning it could be manufactured for a fraction of the cost of newly developed drugs.

Evangelos Michelakis of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and his colleagues tested DCA on human cells cultured outside the body and found that it killed lung, breast and brain cancer cells, but not healthy cells. Tumours in rats deliberately infected with human cancer also shrank drastically when they were fed DCA-laced water for several weeks.

DCA attacks a unique feature of cancer cells: the fact that they make their energy throughout the main body of the cell, rather than in distinct organelles called mitochondria. This process, called glycolysis, is inefficient and uses up vast amounts of sugar. Until now it had been assumed that cancer cells used glycolysis because their mitochondria were irreparably damaged. However, Michelakis's experiments prove this is not the case, because DCA reawakened the mitochondria in cancer cells. The cells then withered and died.



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