Asthma drug help restore lost
Lung Cancer ~ Lung Cancer ~ Breast Cancer ~ Heart attack
Home / Health News / 2008 / April 2008 / April 17, 2008
Asthma drug may help restore lost sense of smell
Asthma

Aussies turning in droves to alternative therapies

Researchers develop effective computer-controlled inhaler

Junk food diet fuelling obesity epidemic in Brit pets

UK health chiefs ask carpenters to ditch the broom over asthma fears

More on Asthma

Top News

Karnataka High Court orders Ramoji Rao to appear in Ballari Court

CCEA approves scheme on National Mission on Medicinal Plants

Magnets could keep sharks at bay!

Pammie was first choice for X-Files lead role!

Chidambaran says government to speed up reforms

ICC chief Haroon Lorgat to meet the media in Colombo

Bossy parents cause older teens to indulge in more sex

Aussies turning in droves to alternative therapies

Asthma drug may help restore lost sense of smell

A medicine prescribed to asthmatics may help restore the sense of smell among people with hyposmia, a reduced ability to detect and recognise odours, according to a new study.

London, April 17 : A medicine prescribed to asthmatics may help restore the sense of smell among people with "hyposmia", a reduced ability to detect and recognise odours, according to a new study.

Robert Henkin and his colleagues at the Center for Molecular Nutrition and Sensory Disorders in Washington DC say that their study builds on a previous study, which showed that people with hyposmia have low levels of two proteins in the nasal lining called cAMP and cGMP.

The researcher studied 369 people, 314 of whom were suffering from hyposmia.

They administered to the subjects various doses of theophylline, a drug used to treat asthma that is known to inhibit the breakdown of cAMP and cGMP.

Standard trials conducted at the end of the study showed that the sense of smell had improved in 70 per cent of the participants receiving the treatment.

"They wanted to become completely normal," New Scientist magazine quoted Henkin as saying.

The researcher further revealed that the improvements disappeared when people stopped taking the drug.

The study was presented at a meeting of the American Physiological Society in San Diego this week.

ANI

July 24, 2008

July 23, 2008

July 22, 2008

July 21, 2008

July 20, 2008

July 19, 2008