Document of bibliographic reference 289383

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book/Monograph
Type of document
Summary
BibLvlCode
M
Title
The pathophysiological mechanism of ciguatera
Abstract
Ciguatera is a form of ichthysarcotoxism caused by consumption of many species of tropical and subtropical fishes from the lndo-Pacific Oceans and Caribbean Sea that have become contaminated by ciguatoxins, orally effective polyether sodium channel activator toxins that cause characteristic neurological, gastrointestinal and cardiovascular symptoms in humans. Arguably, ciguatera is the most significant form of fish toxicoses in terms of the number and severity of poisoning episodes. Theincreased harvesting of tropical marine resources together with an increase in incidence, has meant that fish consumption is associated with an increasing incidence of human intoxication, making ciguatera the most common non-bacterial seafood poisoning and a significant health concern globally.Although it is knowns that the ciguatoxins are the most potent sodium channel activators known, the effect on the nine known isoforms of human voltage-gated sodium channels has never been assessed. Using cone snail venom-derived peptides, we determined the molecular basis of ciguatoxin-induced sodium channel dysfunction, which is expected to lead to improved treatment approaches for ciguatera.
Bibliographic citation
Vetter, I. (2017). The pathophysiological mechanism of ciguatera. University of Queensland: Oostende.
Topic
Marine
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Irina Vetter
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3594-9588

Links

referenced creativework
type
Additional info
accessURL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fScTPwdW05g&index=1&list=PLIFvvLeEE2QSiSIW7-V2rsGT9yWOc_Mnk

thesaurus terms

term
Ciguatera (term code: 1564 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

Document metadata

date created
2017-09-19
date modified
2017-10-03