Curonz Holdings Company Limited Patent applications |
Patent application number | Title | Published |
20160015771 | METHOD OF TREATING OPTIC NERVE DAMAGE, OPHTHALMIC ISCHEMIA OR OPHTHALMIC REPERFUSION INJURY - The invention relates to a method of treating optic nerve damage, ophthalmic ischemia or ophthalmic reperfusion injury including the step of administering an effective amount of a peptide comprising the sequence: GlyArgArgAlaAlaProGlyArgAibGlyGly (SEQ ID NO:1) or the sequence GlyArgArgAlaAlaProGlyArgAibGlyGly-HN2 (SEQ ID NO:2) to a subject in need thereof. | 01-21-2016 |
20130231289 | SYNTHETIC ANALOGUES OF NEURAL REGENERATION PEPTIDES - Embodiments of this invention include synthetic compounds (NRP analogues) of peptides termed neural regeneration peptides (NRPs). NRP analogues are made by substituting amino acids in the native peptide sequence, modifying amino acids chemically, by replacing amino acids with synthetic moieties, by stabilizaing β-turns, acetylation of terminal glycine residues or by cyclization. NRP analogues can be used to treat a variety of conditions involving degeneration of neural cells, and includes treating disorders of the nervous system, including peripheral neuropathy, multiple sclerosis, diabetic peripheral neuropathy, neurotoxin-induced neurodegeneration, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. | 09-05-2013 |
20110306557 | NEURAL REGENERATION PEPTIDES AND METHODS FOR THEIR USE IN TREATMENT OF BRAIN DAMAGE - The invention discloses a family of neuronal migration-inducing, proliferation-promoting and neurite outgrowth promoting factors, termed NRP compounds, and provides compositions and methods for the use of NRP compounds in the treatment of brain injury and neurodegenerative disease. NRP-1 compounds induce neurons and neuroblasts to proliferate and migrate into areas of damage caused by acute brain injury or chronic neurodegenerative disease, such as stroke, trauma, nervous system infections, demyelinating diseases, dementias, and metabolic disorders. NRP compounds may be administered directly to a subject or to a subject's cells by a variety of means including orally, intraperitoneally, intravascularly, and directly into the nervous system of a patient. | 12-15-2011 |