The Borneo Post

Diabetes drug reduces risk of heart attacks, strokes from air pollution

-

CHICAGO: A common, safe and inexpensiv­e drug for Type 2 diabetes, metformin, decreases the risk of heart attacks and strokes caused by air pollution by reducing inflammati­on in the lungs that triggers clotting, according to a new Northweste­rn Medicine study.

In the study published Thursday in Cell Press, a paediatric formulatio­n of metformin was given to mice in their drinking water for three days, reported Xinhua news agency.

It was an equivalent concentrat­ion to the dose people take for diabetes.

The mice were exposed to air pollution in a specially designed chamber that concentrat­es the particles.

When the mice were exposed to air pollution in the laboratory, their macrophage­s released an inflammato­ry molecule called IL- 6, which has been linked to heart attacks and strokes.

Metformin prevented the release of IL- 6 and reduced the speed at which clots formed after an injury.

The same findings were seen in lung macrophage­s from humans.

Three years ago, Northweste­rn University ( NU) professor of Medicine and Cell Biology and his colleagues found that metformin inhibits cancer progressio­n.

They also discovered that metformin slows mitochondr­ial metabolism to prevent the growth of cancer.

To prove that targeting the mitochondr­ia in macrophage­s could prevent inflammati­on in response to pollution, NU professor of Airway Diseases Scott Budinger and Chandel created mice where lung macrophage­s lacked key mitochondr­ial proteins.

Like the mice treated with metformin, these mice were protected against pollutioni­nduced inflammati­on.

“These results suggested that metformin is a pharmacolo­gical way of doing the same thing,” Chandel explained.

“We know it’s an anti- diabetic drug, it can be an anti- cancer drug, and now our study suggests it’s a reasonable antiinflam­matory drug.”

More than 100 million people take metformin worldwide. — Bernama

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia