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How to block body’s response to cold

Lowering the body’s temperature is an effective way to treat certain conditions.

Washington: In a significant finding, researchers have discovered a way to block the body’s response to cold using a drug.
The research was led by Andrej Romanovsky, MD, PhD, Director of the Systemic Inflammation Laboratory (FeverLab), which is a part of St Joseph’s Trauma Research program. Lowering the body’s temperature is an effective way to treat certain conditions because of the body’s decreased need for oxygen at low temperatures. However, natural defense mechanisms to maintain a steady temperature can make it difficult to lower body temperature in anaesthetized patients. Dr Romanovsky and his team believe they have discovered a pharmacological method to inhibit these natural defence mechanisms. Their research focuses on the TRPM8 (transient receptor potential melastatin-8 channel) receptor, a protein responsible for the sensation of feeling cold, and on M8-B, a drug that acts as a TRPM8 antagonist. Dr Romanovsky’s team discovered that M8-B inhibited multiple cold-defense mechanisms in mice and rat models. This TRPM8-antagonist-induced hypothermia is the first example of a change in the deep body temperature of an animal occurring as a result of the documented pharmacological blockade of temperature signals at the thermoreceptor level. “Humans have used the same mechanisms to defend themselves against cold since the days of the caveman,” Dr Romanovsky said. “Our study is significant because it is the first time we have been able to block the body’s natural defense mechanisms using a selective pharmacological antagonist. “We believe that this approach will be used in the future to induce mild therapeutic hypothermia in unanesthetized patients, as well as to maintain deep body temperature, and perhaps the activity of some thermoeffectors, at desired levels,” he said. Dr Romanovsky also believes that this finding is the beginning of thermopharmacology, a new discipline that uses drugs to block temperature signals that the body receives from the environment and thus to alter body temperature for treating specific conditions. The groundbreaking discovery was published in the February 8 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. It has also been highlighted in Scientific American. ANI