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Archive for General Information

“Avery’s Song” – now available for download!

Posted: June 20th, 2012 | By: Staff | 1 Commnt
Wednesday, June 20th, 2012

Nashville singer-songwriter Randy McLellan has just released a single in honor of Avery Canahuati, entitled “Avery’s Song.” McLellan has generously agreed to donate half the song’s proceeds to research for spinal muscular atrophy through FightSMA.

Download “Avery’s Song” on iTunes.

Download “Avery’s Song” on CDBaby.

From the album notes: Across the wireless web, Avery Canahuati is touching lives all over the globe. Her blog, www.averycan.blogspot.com, has reached over 5 million in page views and continues to climb daily. For songwriter and musician Randy McLellan, one of the millions who was inspired by her life, Avery’s heart-wrenching story brought on a tear, several moments of silence… and then a melody. / After receiving a rough guitar-vocal track via facebook message, Avery’s dad, Mike, asked Randy to sell the song on iTunes and donate a portion of the profits back to SMA Research (Spinal Muscular Atrophy) – the disease that brought Avery’s precious life to a close at only 5 months of age. Now, with beautiful instrumentation, and fully mastered from a professional studio in Nashville, TN (Ragtop Recording), Avery’s Song is ready for purchase, and half of the proceeds will be donated to SMA Research and awareness. Please purchase Avery’s Song today and support the research and the fight against Spinal Muscular Atrophy.

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Categories : Fighter Kids, FightSMA Articles, FightSMA News, General Information, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends

In Honor of Avery!

Posted: June 7th, 2012 | By: Staff | No Comments
Thursday, June 7th, 2012

If you plan to be in the Houston, TX area this Sunday, June 10, be sure to stop by The Harp! Friends and family of Avery Canahuati are hosting an SMA benefit in her honor, with proceeds going to SMA Research through FightSMA. It’s sure to be a fun day, with loads of food, prizes, and entertainment! The Harp is located at 1625 Richmond Avenue in Houston, and the event is scheduled to go from 1pm to 10pm. For more information, email Jenni, at missjennibrown@gmail.com.

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Categories : FightSMA News, General Information, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends

Rock’n Out For Isabella Was Last Weekend…

Posted: May 24th, 2012 | By: Staff | No Comments
Thursday, May 24th, 2012

…And it was a great success!  FightSMA Staff and Friends attended the event on Saturday, May 19, in Mechanicsville, VA.  It was a truly enjoyable evening of rock & roll music, and it was wonderful to see the local community coming together in support of the fight against spinal muscular atrophy.  Many thanks to Stephanie Jackson, for coordinating the event; a big thank you to all the event sponsors and volunteers; and a very special thanks to the musical acts, for so generously donating their time and their talent.

We are looking forward to Rock’n Out again next year!  We hope we’ll see you there.

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Categories : FightSMA News, General Information

FightSMA Annual Research Conference: Our 2012 Researchers

Posted: April 13th, 2012 | By: Staff | 1 Commnt
Friday, April 13th, 2012
FightSMA is proud to announce the attending researchers for the Annual Research Conference, April 15-17, 2012, in Washington, D.C.!
 
Scheduled:

Elliot Androphy, M.D.  -  Indiana University School of Medicine

Nicholas Boulis, M.D.  -  Emory University School of Medicine

Arthur Burghes, Ph.D.  -  Ohio State University

Barrington Burnett, Ph.D. –  National Institutes of Health

Eleanor Donnelly, Ph.D. -  Emory University School of Medicine

Allison Ebert, Ph.D. -  Medical College of Wisconsin

Faraz Farooq, Ph.D. -  Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute

Kurt Fischbeck, M.D. – National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Jacqueline Glascock  -  University of Missouri

Brian Kaspar, Ph.D. -  The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital

Rashmi Kothary, Ph.D. -  Ottawa Health Research Institute

Adrian Krainer, Ph.D  -  Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Christian Lorson, Ph.D.  -  University of Missouri-Columbia

Alex MacKenzie, M.D., Ph.D. –  Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute

Umrao Monani, Ph.D. –  Columbia University

Lyndsay Murray, Ph.D.  -  Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Nikolai Naryshkin, Ph.D.  -  PTC Therapeutics

Marco Passini, Ph.D.  - Genzyme Corporation

Sergey Paushkin, M.D., Ph.D.  -  SMA Foundation

Livio Pellizzoni, Ph.D.  - Columbia University Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease

John Porter, Ph.D. –  National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Charlotte Sumner, M.D. – Johns Hopkins University

Kathy Swoboda, M.D.  - University of Utah, School of Medicine

A.  Gary Todd, Ph.D. -   Indiana School of Medicine

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Categories : Featured, FightSMA News, General Information

Media Release: New SMA Research out of Ottawa, Funded by CIHR and MDA

Posted: March 7th, 2012 | By: Staff | 1 Commnt
Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

Staff note: Dr. Rashmi Kothary has been a frequent research contributor at FightSMA’s Annual Research Conference for many years, and is a colleague of FightSMA Science Advisory Co-Chair, Dr. Alex MacKenzie, at the University of Ottawa.

New approach for treating genetic muscle wasting disease shows promise in mice

MARCH 6, 2012 – Scientists from the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) and the University of Ottawa (uOttawa) have discovered that a drug called fasudil can extend the average lifespan of mice with Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) from 30.5 days to more than 300 days. The study is published today in BioMed Central’s open access journal BMC Medicine, by Dr. Rashmi Kothary, his graduate student Melissa Bowerman and others.

SMA is the leading inherited cause of death in infants and toddlers, affecting approximately 25,000 people in Canada and the United States. Scientists have known for many years that this disease is caused by inherited mutations in a gene called survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1). Most early attempts at developing treatments for SMA focused on replacing this gene, however, Dr. Kothary’s group has focused on understanding and targeting the physiological defects present in certain nerve cells with SMA. These cells have a weakened internal scaffold, which hinders their ability to connect with muscle cells and contributes to the severe muscle weakness associated with SMA.

Two years ago, Dr. Kothary and his team showed that a laboratory compound called Y-27632, which targets an enzyme that is involved in maintaining the cellular scaffold, could greatly increase lifespan in a certain mouse model of SMA. In this new study, they tested a compound called fasudil, which is similar to Y-27632, but has the advantage that it has already been approved for human clinical trials for other conditions, meaning that it could possibly be re-targeted to use in clinical trials for SMA more quickly than a completely new drug.

The Kothary group found that fasudil-treated SMA mice survived for an average of more than 300 days, compared to just 30.5 days for untreated SMA mice. However, the average lifespan of fasudil-treated SMA mice was still only about half as long as that of normal mice. Fasudil-treated SMA mice also had larger muscle fibres than the untreated SMA mice, and they behaved more normally with respect to grooming and other regular activities. However, they did not perform any better in strength and balance tests and they still had low numbers of motor neurons, which is typical for SMA.

“Our study is important because it expands a new area of research into SMA, which could lead to the development of new treatments,” said Melissa Bowerman. “Of course, this research is still at the early stages and although we found that fasudil could significantly increase lifespan in a mouse model of SMA, this drug couldn’t correct all the problems in these mice, and it had serious side effects when used at higher doses.”

“A number of groups are working to develop fasudil-like compounds with fewer side effects, and we’re very excited to see how these perform in our models, and hopefully in human SMA clinical trials some day,” said Dr. Kothary “However, we continue to believe that SMA is a disease that will best be addressed using multiple strategies together, including nutrition and possibly drug, cell and gene therapies.”

“Dr. Kothary’s group has been a pioneer in SMA research, both in characterizing the impact of SMA on tissues and organs, and in discovering a novel therapeutic pathway involving enzymes that target the cell scaffold,” said Dr. Alex MacKenzie, an expert in SMA at CHEO Research Institute and the University of Ottawa, who was not involved in the study. “It has to be said that this approach was not intuitively obvious and Dr. Kothary and his team are to be commended for their creativity in its discovery. It represents an important addition to the armamentarium of experimental SMA treatments.”

Although fasudil has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in certain adult human clinical trials, it is still considered experimental, and has not been approved for the treatment of any human condition in the United States or Canada. Individuals who are interested in experimental therapies should discuss this with their health care professional.

Dr. Kothary is a Senior Scientist at OHRI and a Professor in uOttawa’s Faculty of Medicine. He also holds the University Health Research Chair in Neuromuscular Disorders. Melissa Bowerman is a PhD student in Dr. Kothary’s group and is a recipient of a Frederick Banting and Charles Best Doctoral Research Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. This research was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the U.S. Muscular Dystrophy Association. In addition, all research at OHRI is supported by The Ottawa Hospital Foundation.

 

About the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute:

The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) is the research arm of The Ottawa Hospital and is an affiliated institute of the University of Ottawa, closely associated with the University’s Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences. The OHRI includes more than 1,500 scientists, clinical investigators, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and staff conducting research to improve the understanding, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of human disease. www.ohri.ca. 

 

Media contact

Jennifer Ganton (formerly Paterson)

Director, Communications and Public Relations, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

613-798-5555 ext. 73325

613-614-5253 (cell)

jganton@ohri.ca

Comments (1)
Categories : FightSMA News, General Information, Spinal Muscular Atrophy News Stories, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research
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