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SALUTE DEPRESSIONE SESSUALITA' CAPIRSI GRAFOLOGIA GOLA AMBIENTE MUSICA RIDERE MIX VIDEO CERCA


News

Notizie successive

EFSA and ECDC
issue 2008 report
on zoonoses and
foodborne outbreaks
in the EU
(30/07/2010)

Touch Affects
Impressions, 
Decisions 
(27/07/2010)

Can antidepressants
cause weight gain?
(23/07/2010)

CNR: toccare per 
vedere(22/07/2010)

Surgical Repair of Knee
Injuries Does Not 
Decrease Risk of 
Osteoarthritis 
(20/07/2010)/

FDA Approves First
Implantable Miniature
Telescope to Improve
Sight of AMD
patients
(16/07/2010)

Popular food additive
inulin can cause
stomach ache and
you may not know
you're consuming
too much of it
(15/07/2010)

Artrite reumatoide:
benefici dall'esercizio
fisico (13/07/2010)

Safety issues in the
preparation of
homeopathic
medicines
(12/07/2010)
 

ARS Study Provides
a Better
Understanding of
How Mosquitoe
 Find a Host
(11/07/2010)
 

What is Retinitis
Pigmentosa?
(10/07/2010)
 

China, nuovo
sequestro di latte
alla melamina
(09/07/2010)

Studio olandese:
nel trapianto di
fegato sono più facili
nuovi tumori se
l'antirigetto è la
ciclosporina?
(09/07/2010)

Vitamin D may be
implicated in
cognitive processes
(08/07/2010)

Bastano 7 giorni di
polveri sottili per 
modificarci il DNA
(07/07/2010)

40 Million Expired
Swine Flu Vaccine
Doses to Be
Destroyed
(06/07/2010)
 

Gelsemium
omeopatico contro
l'ansia: risultati
positivi sui topi
(05/07/2010)

Freshwater
concentrations of
mercury are far
greater, but eating
saltwater fish
poses greater
health threat
to humans
(02/07/2010)
 

Postura scorretta:
uno su quattro ne
paga le dolorose
conseguenze
(01/07/2010)

Voluntary Nationwide
Recall of Magic
Power Coffee: it
could contain
undeclared
hydroxythiohomosildenafil
similar in structure
to Sildenafil
(30/06/2010)
 

Buone notizie dalla FDA: nuova combinazione di antinfiammatori porta meno ulcere (28/06/2010)

Borse per la spesa riutilizzabili: cosa contengono in realtà? (25/06/2010)

XX CONGRESSO NAZIONALE SIUrO: 1998-2002 il tumore della prostata è stato il tumore più frequente nei maschi (24/06/2010)

Gran Bretagna secondo il NICE si devono salvare 40.000 vite all'anno eliminando grassi trans, riducendo grassi saturi e sale (23/06/2010)

Pesticidi nel piatto
2010: forse un po'
meglio, ma sarà
meglio abituarci
(21/06/2010)

Statine: il rischio di diabete è decisamente minore dei benefici del farmaco (19/06/2010)

Realizzato in Cina
test per verificare se
il latte è stato
adulterato
(16/06/2010)

Troppi detersivi negli
scarichi portano alla
formazione disostanze
cancerogene come
la nitrosammina:
vediamo come
evitarla (15/06/2010)

Olio extra vergine di
oliva: se è una frode
lo dice il laser del
CNR (13/06/2010)

Trovati legami tra
farmaci per il Morbo
di Parkinson e
comportamenti
compulsivi
(11/06/2010)

TAC: qualche numero
sulla quantità di
radiazioni a cui ci
esponiamo
(10/06/2010)

OMS: consigli per la
salute per i viaggiatori
in Sud Africa per la
Coppa del Mondo
FIFA 2010
(09/06/2010)

Staffilococco aureo
antibiotico resistente:
scoperto l'interruttore
acceso/spento
(06/06/2010)

Nuovi studi sul latte
intero, meglio di bestie
al pascolo: protegge
il cuore, previene
il cancro, il diabete ed
aiuta a controllare
il peso (01/06/2010)

Positivi i risultati
dell'uso dell'agopuntura
nel trattamento per il
recupero della funzione
olfattiva in pazienti con
persistente disfunzione
olfattiva post-virale
(PVOD) (31/05/2010)

Possible Increased
Risk of Bone Fractures
With Certain Antacid
Drugs (27/05/2010)
 

Pesticidi legati ai disturbi
dell'attenzione ed
iperattività ADHD dei
bambini (20/05/2010)

Allerta HIV Aids: contagi
nelle Filippine in forte
aumento (17/05/2010)

Degenerazione Maculare
Legata all'Età:
fondamentale
riconoscerla subito
(15/05/2010)

Diabete:nuovo pancreas
artificiale in prova su
11 pazienti (13/05/2010)

Un composto naturale
accelera la crescita
delle ossa (10/05/2010)

L'allattamento protegge
il nascituro anche
dall'asma? (07/05/2010)

Pensate di essere
intolleranti al lattosio?
Potreste sbagliarvi
(06(05/2010)

Dottori iracheni hanno
usato l'agopuntura
quando scarseggiavano
i farmaci (04/05/2010)

USA: i cambiamenti
climatici potrebbero
aumentare il costo delle
allergie (30/04/2010)

L'EFSA pubblica
valutazioni sulla
Sicurezza di tre coloranti
alimentari: novità
dall' EFSA (28/04/2010)

I bimbi nati in inverno
potrebbero essere più 
acilmente soggetti ad
allergie alimentari
(26/04/2010)

Cura del cancro, studio:
speranze da un comune
farmaco antimicotico
(22/04/2010)

Additivo antibatterico di
saponi e dentifrici, tiroide
e sistema riproduttivo: la
FDA riesamina le possibili
interferenze (20/04/2010)

Dal San Raffaele di Milano
una tecnica non invasiva
per riparare la valvola
mitralica (19/04/2010)

Trieste, Convegno
internazionale:
“La Voce. Un microcosmo
alimentato dalle correnti
vitali” 17-18 aprile 2010
(16/04/2010)

Ospedale Rizzoli di
Bologna: si testa la
Rosa Canina come
antinfiammatorio ed
antidolorifico nell'artrosi
(15/04/2010)

Notizie precedenti

Chi è il
Dr. Antonio Turetta
Cerca nel sito

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e-mail

 

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Italiano - English

What is Retinitis Pigmentosa? (10/07/2010)


 

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is the name given to a group of inherited eye diseases that affect the retina (the light-sensitive part of the eye). RP causes the breakdown of photoreceptor cells (cells in the retina that detect light). Photoreceptor cells capture and process light helping us to see. As these cells breakdown and die, patients experience progressive vision loss.
The most common feature of all forms of RP is a gradual breakdown of rods (retinal cells that detect dim light) and cones (retinal cells that detect light and color). Most forms of RP first cause the breakdown of rod cells. These forms of RP, sometimes called rod-cone dystrophy, usually begin with night blindness. Night blindness is somewhat like the experience normally sighted individuals encounter when entering a dark movie theatre on a bright, sunny day. However, patients with RP cannot adjust well to dark and dimly lit environments.

What are the symptoms of Retinitis Pigmentosa?

As the disease progresses and more rod cells breakdown, patients lose their peripheral vision (tunnel vision). Individuals with RP often experience a ring of vision loss in their periphery, but retain clear central vision. Others report the sensation of tunnel vision, as though they see the world through a straw. Many patients with retinitis pigmentosa retain a small degree of central vision throughout their life.

Other forms of RP, sometimes called cone-rod dystrophy, first affect central vision. Patients first experience a loss of central vision that cannot be corrected with glasses or contact lenses. With the loss of cone cells also comes disturbances in color perception. As the disease progresses, rod cells degenerate causing night blindness and peripheral vision.

Symptoms of RP are most often recognized in children, adolescents and young adults, with progression of the disease continuing throughout the individual's life. The pattern and degree of visual loss are variable.

What causes Retinitis Pigmentosa?

Retinitis pigmentosa is an inherited disorder, and therefore not caused by injury, infection or any other external or environmental factors. People suffering from RP are born with the disorder already programmed into their cells. Doctors can see the first signs of retinitis pigmentosa in affected children as early as age 10. Research suggests that several different types of gene mutations (changes in genes) can send faulty messages to the retinal cells which leads to their progressive degeneration. In most cases, the disorder is linked to a recessive gene, a gene that must be inherited from both parents in order to cause the disease. But dominant genes and genes on the X chromosome also have been linked to retinitis pigmentosa. In these cases, only one parent has passed the disease gene. In some cases, a new mutation causes the disease to occur in a person who does not have a family history of the disease. The disorder also can show up as part of other syndromes, such as Bassen-Kornzweig disease or Kearns-Sayre syndrome.

How is Retinitis Pigmentosa treated?

There is no known cure for retinitis pigmentosa. However, there are few treatment options such as light avoidance and/or the use of low-vision aids to slow down the progression of RP. Some practitioners also consider vitamin A as a possible treatment option to slow down the progression of RP. Research suggests taking high doses of vitamin A (15,000 IU/day) may slow progression a little in some people, but the results are not strong. Taking too much vitamin A can be toxic and the effects of vitamin A on the disease is relatively weak. More research must be conducted before this is a widely accepted form of therapy.

Research is also being conducted in areas such as gene therapy research, transplant research, and retinal prosthesis. Since RP is usually the result of a defective gene, gene therapy has become a widely explored area for future research. The goal of such research would be to discover ways healthy genes can be inserted into the retina. Attempts at transplanting healthy retinal cells into sick retinas are being made experimentally and have not yet been considered as clinically safe and successful. Retinal prosthesis is also an important area of exploration because the prosthesis, a man-made device intended to replace a damaged body part, can be designed to take over the function of the lost photoreceptors by electrically stimulating the remaining healthy cells of the retina.Through electrical stimulation, the activated ganglion cells can provide a visual signal to the brain. The visual scene captured by a camera is transmitted via electromagnetic radiation to a small decoder chip located on the retinal surface. Data and power are then sent to a set of electrodes connected to the decoder. Electrical current passing from individual electrodes stimulate cells in the appropriate areas of the retina corresponding to the features in the visual scene.

What do we know about heredity and Retinitis Pigmentosa?

Since RP is an inherited disorder, it can potentially affect another member of the family. With retinal cells being among the most specialized cells in the human body, they depend on a number of unique genes to create vision. A disease-causing mutation in any one of these genes can lead to vision loss. Researchers have discovered over 100 genes that can contain mutations leading to retinitis pigmentosa. Approximately 50 percent of RP cases are isolated and have no previous family history. The cause of these cases cannot be explained. Other cases of RP, where family history has been determined, fall into three main categories: autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant, and X-linked recessive.

Autosomal recessive RP occurs when both parents are unaffected carriers of the same defective gene. The chances of a child being affected is one in four. This means the affected child must inherit the defective gene from each parent. The chances of a parent having an unaffected child who would be a carrier of the defective gene is one in two. The chance of parents having a child completely free of the RP gene is one in four.

In autosomal dominant RP, the disease is present in males or females only when a single copy of the gene is defective. Typically, one of the parents is affected by the disease. The chance is one in two of any given offspring being affected by the disease, if the affected parent has one normal and one defective gene.

X-linked recessive RP may occur in offspring in two ways. The fathers can be affected or mothers can be carriers of the defective gene. If the father is affected, all sons will be unaffected and all daughters will be carriers. If the mother is the carrier, 1 in 2 sons will be affected and 1 in 2 daughters will be carriers. In families with the X-linked type, only males are affected, while females carry the genetic trait but do not experience serious vision loss.

Source
National Institutes of Health - National Human Genome Research Institute

(MDN)

 


L'armadietto omeopatico casalingo
(del Dott. Turetta)
Quali sono i problemi o le disfunzioni che possono giovarsi di un intervento omeopatico d'urgenza e, di conseguenza, come dovrebbe essere un ideale armadietto medicinale omeopatico casalingo.


A cura di: Dott.ssa S.Cavalli, Dott. L. Colombo, Dott. U. Zuccardi Merli

 

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