Recensioni verificate Soddisfatta del servizio.
Personale disponibile e gentile. Lo consiglio a tutti ...
Cliente Sorgente Genetica
logomysorgente

02  4948  5291

  • Cos'è AURORA

    Aurora è il test di screening prenatale di ultima generazione 
    sicuro, affidabile,
    veloce e precoce

  • Sicuro

    Grazie a un semplice prelievo di sangue materno
    eviti il rischio di aborto di tecniche invasive come amniocentesi o villocentesi

  • Affidabile

    Oltre il 99,9% di affidabilità nel rilevare
    la trisomia 21, responsabile
    della Sindrome di Down

  • Precoce e veloce

    icona svegliaIndividuare precocemente la presenza di anomalie cromosomiche è fondamentale:
    puoi effettuare Aurora dalla 10ª settimana

    icona documentoIl test è veloce: risultati in 7-10 giorni lavorativi con la percentuale di test da ripetere più bassa del mercato: 0,1%

  • La serenità della mamma
    in 3 semplici passi

    icotelefona

    Prenota il test

    icoesami

    Fai un prelievo di sangue

    icoginecologo

    Leggi i risultati

  • Test diagnosi prenatale non invasivo
  • 151126 banner Aurora mobile 01
  • 151126 banner Aurora mobile 02
  • 151126 banner Aurora mobile 03
  • slide mobile03
cover cartoon
cover venturetti

Ultime notizie dal mondo della genetica


Identify the possible causes of coronary heart disease

Professor Jonathan Schisler's team has discovered the possible causes of coronary heart disease. This opens the doors to the creation of new diagnostic tools for those who have family cases. In the future, perhaps, this might even lead to the creation of ad hoc prenatal tests.

According to the study, subjects with clean arteries exhibit higher levels of CXCL5 protein. It seems that this acts as a protective agent against coronary heart disease. This suggests that there is a genetic predisposition to the underlying problem and that acting on CXCL5 levels could prevent it.

The researchers analyzed blood samples and ultrasounds of 143 people over 65 years of age. All those involved were at the UNC Medical Center for cardiovascular screening. The analyzes revealed that people with clean arteries had genetic variants near the coding gene CXCL5.

Previous studies had linked the CXCL5 protein to inflammation, which had led researchers to consider it dangerous. Recent research suggests instead that it helps to limit fatty and cholesterol sores in the arteries. Schisler's study tests for the first time its protective role against coronary heart disease.

The search has a limit: it did not involve healthy subjects acting as a control group. Nonetheless, if the discovery was proven it would have an invaluable tool for early diagnosis of the disease. With time, you might even think of genetic testing for those who have family cases.

Source: news.unchealthcare.org

Link social

Link social