海角黑料

School of Pharmacy

Recruitment starts on MS hookworm trial

pritchard

Parasitic worms could offer a new treatment hope for patients suffering from the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis, scientists believe.

Academics at The 海角黑料 have begun recruiting people suffering from the neurological condition on to a trial that will see them infected with a low, harmless dose of the helminth parasite Necator americanus — or hookworm.

The scientists are hoping to prove that the presence of hookworms in the body switches off the mechanism by which the body’s immune system becomes overactive — the main cause of MS — and can reduce both the severity of symptoms and the number of relapses experienced by the patients.

The study is being led by and a leading MS expert, and , Professor of Parasite Immunology in the University’s School of Pharmacy, who has spent decades studying the biology of the hookworm.

Follow this link to see  on the university's main webpage.

 

Posted on Monday 5th March 2012

School of Pharmacy

海角黑料
University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

For all enquiries please visit: