The Quest for Decent Female Viagra Continues

For most men, making love is a mere mechanical process that only requires a rigid erection. That’s why male sexual dysfunction can be effectively treated with a pill, like Viagra.

But for women, sexual dysfunction is more complicated and requires more than just a drug to deal with. Common sexual dysfunctions in women, e.g. low libido, are usually caused by psychological factors that no medication has yet been clinically proven to address effectively.

While some drugs, like the famous Viagra, are being prescribed off-label to women who suffer from sexual difficulties, there’s no medication that is approved by the FDA as a “female Viagra”.

Many pharmaceutical companies around the world are still in search for a female counterpart of Viagra, but until something is proven to solidly work (if any), women can discuss their sexual problems with their doctor and/or partner to work things out.

In the following video, Dr. Jennifer Ashton speaks to CBS HealthWatch about Flibanserin, an antidepressant drugs that could be the long-waited-for female libido booster.

STUDYING ANIMALS THAT DONT GET CANCER TO SEE WHAT WORKS IN HUMANS

Studying Animals that Dont Get Cancer to See What Works in Human Cancer

Why Don't They Get Cancer?

They won't win any beauty contests but apparently an animal called the naked mole rat does not get cancer. Or at least no one has ever detected cancer in it. A recent NYT article said "People have stronger defenses against cancer, as is necessary for a long-lived animal: the disease accounts for 23 percent of human mortality. But the mole rat has taken its anticancer defenses even further: it seems not to get the disease at all. “These animals have never been observed to develop any spontaneous neoplasms,” Vera Gorbunova and colleagues said in an article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Normally, mammalian cells stop replicating when they come into dense contact with one another, but cancer cells ignore this signal and continue to proliferate, which allows them to clump into tumors in the body. The researchers measured the growth of mole–rat cells and found that cellular growth in the animals was hypersensitive to first contact, compared to mouse cells that continued growing into a dense layer. Naked mole–rat cells forced into high-density situations arrested their growth or even died.



The authors Gorbunova and Selunov, investigated the pathways responsible for this early contact inhibition and report that two fibroblast pathways are likely responsible for the key anticancer mechanism. Their research shows that inactivating these tumor-suppressor pathways can allow the mole rats to develop cancer.

  • Lack of contact, lack of cancer
  • Hypersensitivity to contact inhibition provides a clue to cancer resistance of naked mole-rat

    How Can They Live So Long Without Oxygen?

    But wait there's more! Dr. Thomas Park and researcher John Larson report "that the brains of adult naked mole rats can withstand oxygen deprivation for a half-hour or more. That knowledge could eventually help in stroke research, Park said".

    Why 2 Cancer Protection Pathways Trump Only One

    The report in the PNAS said that the rats’ cells have a double system for inhibiting irregular (cell) proliferation (like cancer), compared with the single system in human cells. Gorbunova believes she has found the primary reason these small animals are staying cancer-free, and it appears to be a kind of overcrowding early-warning gene that the naked mole rat expresses in its cells.

    When Gorbunova and her team began specifically investigating mole rat cells, they were surprised at how difficult it was to grow the cells in the lab for study. The cells simply refused to replicate once a certain number of them occupied a space. Other cells, such as human cells, also cease replication when their populations become too dense, but the mole rat cells were reaching their limit much earlier than other animals' cells.

    "Since cancer is basically runaway cell replication, we realized that whatever was doing this was probably the same thing that prevented cancer from ever getting started in the mole rats," says Gorbunova.

    What p16 and p27 do against cancer

    Like many animals, including humans, the mole rats have a gene called p27 that prevents cellular overcrowding, but the mole rats use another, earlier defense in gene p16. Cancer cells tend to find ways around p27, but mole rats have a double barrier that a cell must overcome before it can grow uncontrollably.

    "We believe the additional layer of protection conferred by this two-tiered contact inhibition contributes to the remarkable tumor resistance of the naked mole rat," says Gorbunova in the PNAS paper.Gorbunova and Seluanov are now planning to delve deeper into the mole rat's genetics to see if their cancer resistance might be applicable to humans.

    "The findings, presented in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, show that the mole rat's cells express a gene called p16 that makes the cells "claustrophobic," stopping the cells' proliferation when too many of them crowd together, cutting off runaway growth before it can start. The effect of p16 is so pronounced that when researchers mutated the cells to induce a tumor, the cells' growth barely changed, whereas regular mouse cells became fully cancerous.

    "We show that a combination of activated Ras and SV40 LT fails to induce robust anchorage-independent growth in naked mole-rat cells, while it readily transforms mouse fibroblasts. The mechanisms responsible for the cancer resistance of naked mole-rats were unknown. Here we show that naked mole-rat fibroblasts display hypersensitivity to contact inhibition, a phenomenon we termed “early contact inhibition.” Contact inhibition is a key anticancer mechanism that arrests cell division when cells reach a high density. In cell culture, naked mole-rat fibroblasts arrest at a much lower density than those from a mouse. We demonstrate that early contact inhibition requires the activity of p53 and pRb tumor suppressor pathways."

    ""We think we've found the reason these mole rats don't get cancer, and it's a bit of a surprise," says Vera Gorbunova, associate professor of biology at the University of Rochester and lead investigator on the discovery. "It's very early to speculate about the implications, but if the effect of p16 can be simulated in humans we might have a way to halt cancer before it starts."

  • The Life Span of a Rodent May Aid Human Health
  • Dr. Thomas Park Research Interests: Neurobiology of Sensory Systems
  • Scientists Discover Gene that 'Cancer-Proofs' Rodent's Cells
  • Dr. V. Gorbunova Research
  • Naked mole-rat's longevity secret cloaked in mystery
  • Reduce Stress, Be Happier & Raise Healthy Children

    If you want tips on reducing stress, creating a loving partnership, dealing with children, breastfeeding or well-intentioned advice keep reading...

    Lorraine CuadroI’ve recorded some tips on reducing and preventing stress with my friend Lorraine Cuadro over at The Essence of Breastfeeding.

    Lorraine is a mum and breastfeeding counsellor who is passionate about helping people enjoy parenting and connect with their children - while looking after yourself and your relationships. We had a chat for about an hour about ways that I beat stress and anxiety using a variety of techniques to relax, change my thinking and deal with challenges.

    The audio is part of a series that Lorraine is putting together which includes a variety of topics. Some are specific to parenting but others will help you put the romance back into your relationship, run a business from home, deal with stress or difficult people. The topics include
    • Stress prevention and reduction (how I cured myself from being a frazzled burned out grump!)

    • Bedtime and toilet training for toddlers (Margaret Saunders)

    • Setting boundaries to deal with unwanted advice (Yvonne Collier)

    • Reconnect with your partner and invest in your love and intimacy (Natalia Mendez)

    • Creating a successful business from home (Emma Newman)

    • Tried and proven techniques to help minimise your pain, help you heal and sort through the emotions associated with birth (Faye Read)

    • Plus lots of advice on parenting

    You’ll get one free hour long audio, every week beginning 1st December. You’ll also get access to lots of great tips on breastfeeding.

    The whole series is valued at $497, but it's totally free if you sign up now.

    Just register your name and email address to get 8 hours of inspiration from this team of parenting experts. Be quick - after 1st December 2009, Lorraine plans to charge for all these great audios, but as a favour to her friends she's agreed to let people get free access if they sign up now.

    P.S. Lorraine is in Australia which is a day ahead of many other countries, so to be safe, sign up before 30th November to make sure you get in on this amazing free offer.

    Talia Mana


    Reduce Stress, Be Happier & Raise Healthy Children

    If you want tips on reducing stress, creating a loving partnership, dealing with children, breastfeeding or well-intentioned advice keep reading...

    Lorraine CuadroI’ve recorded some tips on reducing and preventing stress with my friend Lorraine Cuadro over at The Essence of Breastfeeding.

    Lorraine is a mum and breastfeeding counsellor who is passionate about helping people enjoy parenting and connect with their children - while looking after yourself and your relationships. We had a chat for about an hour about ways that I beat stress and anxiety using a variety of techniques to relax, change my thinking and deal with challenges.

    The audio is part of a series that Lorraine is putting together which includes a variety of topics. Some are specific to parenting but others will help you put the romance back into your relationship, run a business from home, deal with stress or difficult people. The topics include
    • Stress prevention and reduction (how I cured myself from being a frazzled burned out grump!)

    • Bedtime and toilet training for toddlers (Margaret Saunders)

    • Setting boundaries to deal with unwanted advice (Yvonne Collier)

    • Reconnect with your partner and invest in your love and intimacy (Natalia Mendez)

    • Creating a successful business from home (Emma Newman)

    • Tried and proven techniques to help minimise your pain, help you heal and sort through the emotions associated with birth (Faye Read)

    • Plus lots of advice on parenting

    You’ll get one free hour long audio, every week beginning 1st December. You’ll also get access to lots of great tips on breastfeeding.

    The whole series is valued at $497, but it's totally free if you sign up now.

    Just register your name and email address to get 8 hours of inspiration from this team of parenting experts. Be quick - after 1st December 2009, Lorraine plans to charge for all these great audios, but as a favour to her friends she's agreed to let people get free access if they sign up now.

    P.S. Lorraine is in Australia which is a day ahead of many other countries, so to be safe, sign up before 30th November to make sure you get in on this amazing free offer.

    Talia Mana


    Dr. Mok and Dr. Oz in Detroit

          Dr. Mok recently met with TV celebrity Dr. Oz to discuss medical issues and the current state of healthcare (as pictured above with Dr. Mok's wife).  What's next, the Dr. Mok Show?