Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Young heart can heal itself faster

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Oct, 2014 08:15 AM
    Washington- The heart holds its own pool of immune cells capable of helping it to heal after injury, finds research, adding that the harmful immune cells from the bone marrow disrupts this process in adults.
     
    These immune cells are called macrophages - whether they reside in the heart or arrive from the bone marrow.
     
    Blocking the bone marrow’s macrophages from entering the heart protects the organ’s beneficial pool of macrophages, allowing them to remain in the heart where they promote regeneration and recovery, research on mouse model showed.
     
    “This may explain why the young heart can recover while the adult heart cannot,” said Kory Lavine from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
     
    “The same macrophages that promote healing after injury in the neo-natal heart also are present in the adult heart but they seem to go away with injury,” Lavine explained.
     
    The investigators found that the helpful macrophages originate in the embryonic heart and harmful macrophages originate in the bone marrow and could be distinguished by whether they express a protein on their surface called CCR2.
     
    Macrophages without CCR2 originate in the heart; those with CCR2 come from the bone marrow, the research showed.
     
    The researchers found that a compound that inhibits the CCR2 protein could block the bone marrow’s macrophages from entering the heart.
     
    “When we did that, we found that the macrophages from the bone marrow did not come in,” Lavine said.
     
    “And the macrophages native to the heart remained. We saw reduced inflammation in these injured adult hearts, less oxidative damage and improved repair. We also saw new blood vessel growth,” Lavine added.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Brain next frontier to treat obesity

    Brain next frontier to treat obesity
    Therapies aimed at areas of the brain responsible for memory and learning could lead to better treatment of obesity and dementia, says a study...

    Brain next frontier to treat obesity

    About 13 percent new mothers avoid sex

    About 13 percent new mothers avoid sex
    Have you rejected love-making calls from your hubby after childbirth? Take heart as you have not committed a sin....

    About 13 percent new mothers avoid sex

    Monitor pulse after stroke to avoid second

    Monitor pulse after stroke to avoid second
    Regularly monitoring your pulse after a stroke or the pulse of a loved one who has experienced a stroke can prevent a second stroke....

    Monitor pulse after stroke to avoid second

    Condom that fights sexually-transmitted diseases

    Condom that fights sexually-transmitted diseases
    Imagine a condom that not only stops pregnancy but also kills germs that can lead to sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)....

    Condom that fights sexually-transmitted diseases

    Impulsive behaviour linked to brain connectivity

    Impulsive behaviour linked to brain connectivity
    In what could help better understand behavioural problems and social adaptation difficulties in children, researchers have found that patterns of brain connectivity...

    Impulsive behaviour linked to brain connectivity

    Vitamin D deficiency increases schizophrenia risk

    Vitamin D deficiency increases schizophrenia risk
    Individuals with Vitamin D deficiency are twice as likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia as compared to those who have sufficient levels of the...

    Vitamin D deficiency increases schizophrenia risk