- Malaria Developing Resistance to Drug That Saves Children’s Lives
- ICYMI, Txt Abbreviations Cn Make U Seem Insincere, Study Finds
- E. Coli Illnesses Linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounders Climb to 104
- New U.S. Overdose Death Numbers Show ‘Sustained’ Decline
- 1 in 3 Surgery Patients Suffer Complications
- More Than 800 Million People Worldwide Now Have Diabetes
- These Are the 3 Big Factors Driving Strokes
- New Therapeutic Vaccine Gives Hope Against an Aggressive Breast Cancer
- Telling Your Doctor About a Health Issue Doesn’t Mean It Enters Medical Record
- Many Cases of Dementia Go Undiagnosed in Poorer Communities
No-Fridge Nasal Vaccines on the Horizon
Nasal-spray vaccines that don’t require refrigeration — which are still in the experimental stage — could help protect people in remote regions from future disease outbreaks, according to a researcher.
Most current vaccines require needles, refrigeration and booster shots, which can complicate their use. Refrigeration isn’t available in some poor areas of the world, which means many people most in need of vaccinations aren’t getting them.
New, easy-to-use vaccines are being developed that don’t need to be kept cold, a researcher said at an American Chemical Society meeting this week in Dallas.
“Our nanovaccines can be stored at room temperature for as long as six to 10 months and still work,” Balaji Narasimhan, a professor of chemical engineering at Iowa State University, said in a society news release.
“Also, we’re designing them so they get delivered in one dose through a nasal spray, which could potentially allow patients to give the vaccine to themselves,” said Narasimhan, the project’s lead researcher.
The new nanovaccines affect a different part of the immune system than current vaccines. They could also prove more effective in fighting emerging and re-emerging diseases, such as whooping cough, according to the news release.
They have been shown to be effective in rodents, and the researchers are moving on to tests in larger animals, Narasimhan said. Experts note, however, that results achieved in animal studies often aren’t able to be replicated in humans.
“Our nanovaccine approach could be instrumental for containing future outbreaks of recently emerged and re-emerging diseases, such as SARS, new flu strains and multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis,” Narasimhan said.
Data and conclusions presented at meetings typically are considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has more about vaccines.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.