Yorkshire Post

University wins cash for heart research

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SCIENTISTS IN Leeds have won funding support as they seek a research breakthrou­gh that could reduce the risk of people suffering strokes and heart failure.

Prof Derek Steele and his team at the University of Leeds’s School of Biomedical Sciences have been handed a £132,000 grant from Leeds-based charity Heart Research UK to study biological gases and their effect on atrial fibrillati­on.

The condition is a dangerous form of cardiac arrhythmia, an abnormalit­y that can prevent the heart from pumping effectivel­y. Atrial fibrillati­on can be caused by disruption of ion channels within heart cells that are normally regulated by carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide – two of the gases that are produced naturally in the body.

The team in Leeds will use the Heart Research UK grant to see if artificial­ly increasing the level of those gases in the bloodstrea­m lends vital extra protection to the ion channels.

Prof Steele said: “Current treatments for atrial fibrillati­on are inadequate for many people who suffer from this dangerous type of cardiac arrhythmia.

“We hope to learn whether drugs which increase the formation of [carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide] in the bloodstrea­m can protect the ion channels from disruption which may lead to treatments to help those who suffer from atrial fibrillati­on.”

Heart Research UK chief executive Barbara Harpham said the charity’s grants were designed to “bridge the gap between laboratory-based scientific research and patient care”. She added: “This innovative research project in our own home town of Leeds has the potential to help not only those who suffer from atrial fibrillati­on in Yorkshire but across the UK to live healthier, happier and longer lives.”

Atrial fibrillati­on is thought to affect more than one million people in the UK.

 ??  ?? Devon Allen, curator volunteer at the Lotherton Hall exhibition, with a Mahakala protective power mask from Nepal and outfits for a Nepalese official and his wife.
Devon Allen, curator volunteer at the Lotherton Hall exhibition, with a Mahakala protective power mask from Nepal and outfits for a Nepalese official and his wife.

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