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Technology


A big fat idea

Virginia Business
January 2005

If you’re carrying more pounds than you should, take heart. The extra weight might not be all your fault. A fledgling company in Richmond is marketing a blood test to detect a virus that could be the real culprit.

That’s a controversial idea but it’s not without supporting evidence, says Dr. Richard Atkinson. He launched Obetech in the Virginia Biotechnology Research Park in mid-2004 based on the blood test he developed. The test detects the antibodies of a common and otherwise harmless adenovirus — AD-36 — that Atkinson and fellow researcher Nikhal Dhurandhar identified as an obesity trigger.

Studies done while Atkinson was on the faculty of the University of Wisconsin showed that animals injected with the virus became fat. Screenings of humans found that about 30 percent of obese people had the virus, while just 10 percent of normal-weight subjects did. “Obese people get so beat up by the world. They’re told, ‘This is your fault,’” Atkinson says. “This says you’re not a bad person; you’re an unlucky person.”

Atkinson, a Petersburg native, has been studying obesity for 30 years. He has been on the faculties of the University of Virginia School of Medicine and the Eastern Virginia Medical School. He left Wisconsin last year to start the company and chose Richmond because he wanted to get closer to his grandchildren.

Right now the company is just Atkinson and an assistant doing the tests, which are marketed via the company’s obesityvirus.com Web site for $100.

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