Combined effect of fluconazole and thymosin alpha 1 on systemic candidiasis in mice immunosuppressed by morphine treatments.
di Francesco. P P; Gaziano. R R; Casalinuovo. I A IA; Belogi. L L; Palamara. A T AT; Favalli. C C; Garaci. E E
Key Findings
- Fluconazole worked less well in mice made immunosuppressed by morphine
- Adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 to fluconazole extended survival and lowered kidney fungal counts
- The combo restored natural killer cell activity and neutrophil killing more than either agent alone
Practical Outcomes
- The results hint that thymosin‑alpha‑1 could boost antifungal treatment in people with weakened immunity, but the evidence is only in mice and involves morphine‑induced suppression. Biohackers should view this as an interesting clue, not a ready‑to‑use protocol, and wait for human studies before adding it to personal regimens.
Summary
In a mouse study, giving the immune‑boosting peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 together with the antifungal drug fluconazole helped mice that were weakened by morphine survive longer and clear a Candida infection better than either treatment alone.
Abstract
Treatment of systemic infection with Candida albicans with a combination of an antifungal agent (i.e. fluconazole) and a thymus-derived immunostimulant (i.e. thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1)) in mice immunosuppressed by morphine treatments was investigated. In normal mice, fluconazole given after infection with 10(6) C. albicans cells was more effective than in mice treated with morphine. Combination treatment with fluconazole and T alpha 1 prolonged survival and reduced the fungal burden in the kidneys of immunosuppressed mice. We also investigated the influence of this combined treatment on killing properties of polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMN) and natural killer (NK) cell activity, inhibited by morphine administrations. Treatment with T alpha 1 or fluconazole as single agents promoted a recovery of normal NK cell activity and intracellular killing of C. albicans by PMN, while the combination significantly increased both of these responses, probably through the modulation of lymphokine production. Our data suggest that the additive effect of T alpha 1 and fluconazole is due to a direct antifungal action and activation of the immunocompetence.
Study Information
pubmed
1994
1994-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2249.1994.tb06093.x
18
40