New! Sign up for our email newsletter on Substack.

Two mood drugs combat virus implicated in birth defects

Two mood-stabilizing drugs provide protection against a potentially dangerous virus implicated in birth defects as well as disease in people with compromised immune systems, Yale School of Medicine researchers have found.

The related drugs, valnoctamide and valpromide, are approved for treatment of neurologic and psychiatric brain disorders such as epilepsy and bipolar disorder; both inhibit cytomegalovirus (CMV), one of the major causes of birth defects in infected fetuses, the researchers report Sept. 21 in the journal Virology.

“It is our hope that these existing drugs might ultimately help limit damage of fetal CMV infection, for which there is no treatment,” said Anthony van den Pol, professor of neurosurgery at Yale and senior author of the paper.

Survival rates and overall health of mice infected with CMV improved dramatically when the drugs were administered, the researchers report.  Also, the virus was inhibited in human cells infected with CMV.

Congenital CMV is the major infectious cause of birth defects and neuro-developmental disabilities, including microcephaly, hearing loss, blindness, and mental retardation.

Sara Ornaghi is the lead author of the paper and primary funding for the research came from the National Institutes of Health.


Quick Note Before You Read On.

ScienceBlog.com has no paywalls, no sponsored content, and no agenda beyond getting the science right. Every story here is written to inform, not to impress an advertiser or push a point of view.

Good science journalism takes time — reading the papers, checking the claims, finding researchers who can put findings in context. We do that work because we think it matters.

If you find this site useful, consider supporting it with a donation. Even a few dollars a month helps keep the coverage independent and free for everyone.


Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.