

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) is a life-threatening disease of the blood system. The condition is caused by the presence of ultralarge multimers of the protein von Willebrand factor, which promote the formation of blood clots (thrombi) in small blood vessels throughout the body. Current treatments are protracted and associated with complications. However, a team of researchers, led by Jose Lopez, at the Puget Sound Blood Centre, Seattle, has generated data in mice that suggest that the drug N-acetylcysteine (NAC), which is FDA approved as a treatment for chronic obstructive lung disease and as an antidote for toxicity due to acetaminophen (paracetamol), might provide a rapid and effective treatment for patients with TTP through its ability to decrease the size of von Willebrand factor multimers.
In an accompanying commentary, Michael Berndt and Robert Andrews, concur with the conclusions of Lopez and colleagues, although they caution that there are a number of caveats to the view that NAC could be used to treat patents with TTP.
Discovery could lead to a new animal model for hepatitis C
Roadkill study could speed detection of kidney cancer
New stretchable electrodes created to study stresses on cardiac cells
Scientists unlock molecular origin of blood stem cells