interventions(干预)...(拔罐可以作为一项涉及其他锻炼方式、营养品的选择和生活方式干预的综合治疗计划的一部分)"可知,拔罐可以和其他的治疗方式一起使用。
For decades, public health officials have puzzled over a surprising fact about HIV:only about 10-20 percent of infants who are breastfed by infected mothers catch the virus. Tests show,though,that HIV is indeed present in breast milk,so these children are exposed to the virus multiple times daily for the first several months of their lives.
Now,a group of scientists and doctors from Duke University have figured out why these babies don't get infected. Human breast milk naturally contains a protein called Tenascin C that neutralizes HIV and,in most cases,prevents it from being passed from mother to child. Eventually,they say,the protein could potentially be valuable as an HIVfighting tool for both infants and adults that are either HIVpositive or at risk of contracting the infection.
The research,published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, was inspired by previous work done by other researchers showing that,both in tissue cultures(组织培养) and live mice,breast milk from HIVnegative mothers was naturally endowed with HIVfighting properties. Scientists suggested that a few different proteins in the milk could potentially be responsible,but no one knew which one.
As part of the study,the researchers divided breast milk into smaller fractions(部分) made up of specific proteins via a number of filters(过滤器)-separating the proteins by size,electrical charge and other characteristics-and tested which of these fractions,when added to a tissue culture,prevented the cells from being infected by HIV.Eventually,they found that one particular protein was present in all the HIVresistant fractions but in none of the others: Tenascin C.
Tenascin C works by blocking a key protein on HIV's envelope that normally ties up to a receptor on a T cell's membrane called CCR5.In doing so,Tenascin C prevents HIV from mixing with the T cell and injecting its RNA inside.
Still,the researchers say that other natural elements in milk might play a role in fighting HIV as well."It's clearly not the whole story,because we do have samples that have low amounts of this protein but still have HIVneutralizing activity," the study's lead author Permar says."So it may be acting in concert with other antiviral and antimicrobial factors in the milk."
Whatever those other factors are,though,the finding vindicates(证明) recent changes to UN guidelines that recommend even HIVpositive mothers in resourcepoor countries should breastfeed,if they're taking antiretroviral drugs to combat their own infection.
The next steps,Permar says,are determining which area of Tenascin C is active and whether it can effectively prevent transmission in a live animal. If it works,it could potentially be