Infection With Roundworm Quells Obesity And Related Metabolic Disorders

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Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, have shown in a mouse model that infection with nematodes (also known as roundworms) can not only combat obesity but ameliorate related metabolic disorders. Their research is published ahead of print online in the journal Infection and Immunity.

Gastrointestinal nematodes infect approximately 2 billion people worldwide, and some researchers believe up until the 20th century almost everyone had worms. In developed countries there is a decreasing incidence of nematode infection but a rising prevalence of certain types of autoimmunity, suggesting a relationship between the two. Nematode infection has been purported to have therapeutic effects and currently clinical trials are underway to examine worms as a treatment for diseases associated with the relevant cytokines, including inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis, and allergies.

In the study researchers tested the effect of nematode infection on mice fed a high-fat diet. Infected mice of normal girth gained 15 percent less weight than those that were not infected. Mice that were already obese when infected lost roughly 13 percent of their body weight within 10 days. Infection also drastically lowered fasting blood glucose, a risk factor for diabetes, and reduced fatty liver disease, decreasing liver fat by ~25 percent, and the weight of the liver by 30 percent.

The levels of insulin and leptin also dropped, "indicating that the mice restored their sensitivities to both hormones," says corresponding author Aiping Zhao of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore. Leptin moderates appetite. As with too much insulin, too high a level of leptin results in insensitivity, thus contributing to obesity and metabolic syndrome, Zhao explains.

The mechanism of the moderation of these hormones "was associated with a parasite-induced reduction in glucose absorption in the intestine, reduced liver triglycerides, and an increase in the population of cells called "alternatively activated macrophages," which regulate glucose metabolism and inflammation," says coauthor Joe Urban of the United States Department of Agriculture. Some of these changes involved "a protein called interleukin-13 and related intracellular signaling mechanisms," he says. "This suggests that there are immune related shifts in metabolism that can alter expression of obesity and related metabolic syndrome."

The incidence of obesity has been climbing dramatically, worldwide. It is a key risk factor for many metabolic diseases, including diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. Recent studies indicate that it is accompanied by chronic low-grade inflammation in adipose tissues, causing the release of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines that contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndrome.

Parasitic nematode infection induces a marked elevation in host immune Th2-cells and related type 2 cytokines which, besides combating the infection, also have potent anti-inflammatory activity, according to the report.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/259710.php
 
I suppose this is similar to the whipworms theory. I am not quite sure how they would act as an anti-inflammatory agent. Wouldn't a parasite trigger the immune system to create inflammation around the invading parasite?
 
this is very interesting because this is not the first time something like this has been reported. Like the poster above me stated, whipworms have been shown to induce remission in ibd, and they are also a form of nematodes.

raises some interesting question on the theory that it is the bacteria that is involve din obesity and ibd, and provides a good supportive argument for using the whole fecal flora to treat these disease which may have been caused by something that damages all these bugs that live inside us. it could take another 30 years for us to figure exactly which organisms are contributing to the dysfunction of our bodies.
 
As I see in article, gastrointestinal nematodes infection could be Trichuris suis.

About human infection Trichus suis and impact for CD there are so many information in Internet:

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00436-006-0416-4
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1097/00054725-200502000-00012/abstract
http://gut.bmj.com/content/53/1/7.extract
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.0269-2813.2004.01803.x/abstract
http://gut.bmj.com/content/54/1/87.abstract
http://gut.bmj.com/content/54/1/6.extract

For more information you can find company in UK. But I think they work illegal:
http://autoimmunetherapies.com/helminthic_therapy_news.html

On our web was Helminthic he is one who promote this nematode for treatment of CD
 
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