channelnewsasia.com - Viagra helps jet-lagged hamsters, maybe humans, too study
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Health News

 
 

Viagra helps jet-lagged hamsters, maybe humans, too: study
Posted: 22 May 2007 1229 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

WASHINGTON: A shot of Viagra may one day help shift workers and flight crews recover their normal sleep cycles, according to a study on hamsters released Monday.

Viagra, otherwise known as sildenafil, could be "useful in other circadian disorders that involve poor synchronization with the environment, including delayed sleep-phase syndrome and adaptation to changing light schedules," said the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Researchers at Argentina's National University at Quilmes in Buenos Aires injected male hamsters with small amounts of the drug and switched off the lights six hours earlier, which researchers compared with taking an eastbound flight, as would occur from the Americas to Europe.

Hamsters receiving a dose of the drug adapted 20-50 percent more quickly to the new schedule than hamsters receiving a placebo, the study said, as judged by how quickly they resumed running on their exercise wheels.

However, the trick worked only when moving the schedule ahead, as on the so-called eastbound change, without helping hamsters shifted six hours in the other direction.

Mammals, such as humans and hamsters, regulate their circadian rhythms by releasing chemicals in the brain, such as melatonin. However, repeated injections of melatonin are required to achieve a shift in sleep-wake cycles, compared with the single-dose effectiveness of sildenafil.

The drug interferes with an enzyme that reduces the levels of cyclic guanine monophosphate in the brain, which helps regulate circadian rhythm, the body's inner clock.

The National Academy of Sciences was established by the US Congress in 1863 to advise the United States on science, medicine and engineering matters. - AFP/fa

 

 



Other health News
Bottling up work woes increases heart risk: study
Backaches: Women have it worse
Petrol inhalation causes road-rage rats
The Great Reaction
Alcohol helps lower heart disease risk for men: study
Being toothless is nothing to laugh about
Vitamin D deficiency linked to strokes, heart disease: study
Malaria Drugs: Artemisinin-Resistant Strain Appears
Sunbeds: 250,000 English kids at risk of cancer
Most diabetics ignorant of healthy eating
Some men go through 'the change', too
Obesity causes 100,000 US cancers every year: study
Skipping is one of the best and cheapest forms of exercise
Stay safe, give it a shot
Switzerland restricts use of GlaxoSmithKline H1N1 flu vaccine

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions