Monday, April 30, 2012
Teen Impulsiveness Has Different Sources in ADHD, Substance Use
Study: Heavy teens have trouble managing diabetes
New research sends a stark warning to overweight teens: If you develop diabetes, you'll have a very tough time keeping it under control.
Courtesy of Yahoo News
As America's waistline expands, costs soar
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. hospitals are ripping out wall-mounted toilets and replacing them with floor models to better support obese patients. The Federal Transit Administration wants buses to be tested for the impact of heavier riders on steering and braking. Cars are burning nearly a billion gallons of gasoline more a year than if passengers weighed what they did in 1960. The nation's rising rate of obesity has been well-chronicled. ...
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Hundreds Contract Food Poisoning At Children's Day Festival
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Sunday, April 29, 2012
Scientists find gene that inhibits pancreas cancer spread
Scientists have identified a gene that slows the spread of pancreatic cancer tumours, paving the way for targeted treatment of one of the deadliest forms of the disease, said a paper published Sunday.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Being Bullied Tied to Anxiety, Depression in Special-Needs Kids
SUNDAY, April 29 (HealthDay News) -- Special-needs youth with chronic medical conditions or developmental disabilities are at risk for anxiety and depression if they're excluded, ignored or bullied by other young people, a new small study says.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Low-Income Mothers May Overfeed Their Infants
Parents' Poor Math Skills May = Medication Errors
Friday, April 27, 2012
Report of Mexican woman expecting nine babies a hoax
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Reports that a woman in northern Mexico is pregnant with nine babies are a hoax, health authorities said on Friday. Mexico's main broadcaster Televisa and top daily newspapers ran stories about a woman expecting nonuplets late on Thursday after she provided welfare officials with supposed evidence of the multiple pregnancy, including an ultrasound video, said a spokesman for the health ministry of Coahuila state. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
The Case for Fixing Social Security Right Now
Every time I write about the financial condition of Social Security, I get incredibly angry at Congress and the White House. They should step up to the plate and apply the relatively minor financial changes that would restore the program to complete financial sustainability. Next to the truly tough issues of healthcare spending, federal deficits, and taxes, Social Security is a walk in the park.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Seizure Wristband Could Predict 'Severe' Epileptic Seizures
A simple, unobtrusive sensor ‘could gauge the severity of epileptic seizures’, reports Massachusetts Institute Of Technology (MIT) in this week’s issue of Neurology.
In a statement, researchers from MIT say early results suggest the wristband could collect clinically useful information about epilepsy patients without them being required to go into hospital, and even alerts sufferers to early signs of severe seizures.
Researchers originally designed the sensor to gauge the emotional states of children with autism, whose outward behaviour can be at odds with what they’re feeling. The sensor measures the electrical conductance of the skin, an indicator of the state of the sympathetic nervous system, which controls the human fight-or-flight response.
As many children with autism also have seizures, when Rosalind Picard, a professor of media arts and sciences at MIT, and her team reviewed their data, they found these were sometimes preceded by huge spikes in skin conductance. And so it appeared their sensors might actually be able to predict the onset of seizures.
“The realization that the wrist sensors might be of use in treating epilepsy was something of a fluke, “ said Picard in a statement.
About one person in 30 in the UK develops epilepsy at some stage, according to patient.co.uk and in people who suffer frequent seizures, it is estimated that about one in 200 dies of SUDEP (Sudden Unexpected Death In Epilepsy) each year.
Picard’s team went on design their own wristband and test them on patients with severe epilepsy. Since the patients in the hospital-based study were children, student researcher Ming-Zher Poh allowed them to choose their favourite character on their wristband.
In the same statement Stephan Schuele, director of the Epilepsy Center at Northwestern University’s Medical Faculty Foundation, who was not involved in the research, said: “I think the result is very valuable, particularly in this population, because [the wristband] doesn’t respond 20 times a day to any seizures. It only responds if you do have a very, very severe seizure. And it seems to be reliably responding to that.”
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Scientists","slideshow_id":"213729","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1430939","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/17\/sugar-drinks-warning_n_1430939.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/209625\/slide_209625_876735_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/209625\/slide_209625_876735_small.jpg","title":"People Underestimate Sugar Levels In 'Healthy' Drinks, Experts Warn","slideshow_id":"209625","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1444946","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/23\/fruit-veg-hayfever_n_1444946.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/218744\/slide_218744_841623_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/218744\/slide_218744_841623_small.jpg","title":"Fruit And Veg Make Hayfever 'Worse' Say 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Men","slideshow_id":"196848","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1428362","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/16\/chin-jobs-rates-rise_n_1428362.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/206768\/slide_206768_648336_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/206768\/slide_206768_648336_small.jpg","title":"\u2018Chin Jobs' On The Rise, Say Plastic Surgeons","slideshow_id":"206768","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1451209","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/25\/aspirin-bowel-cancer-risk_n_1451209.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/196007\/slide_196007_456609_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/196007\/slide_196007_456609_small.jpg","title":"Aspirin 'Can Cut Cancer Risk'","slideshow_id":"196007","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1423700","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/13\/tree-nuts-weight-loss-health-benefits_n_1423700.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/207545\/slide_207545_660924_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/207545\/slide_207545_660924_small.jpg","title":"\u2018Tree Nuts' Stave Off Heart Disease, Diabetes And Obesity, Claims Study","slideshow_id":"207545","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1421058","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/12\/children-food-poisoning-bacteria_n_1421058.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/193951\/slide_193951_865003_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/193951\/slide_193951_865003_small.jpg","title":"One In Five Chickens Are Contaminated With Food Poisoning Bacteria","slideshow_id":"193951","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1435010","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/18\/gum-disease-heart-attack-risk-myth_n_1435010.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/206195\/slide_206195_780139_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/206195\/slide_206195_780139_small.jpg","title":"Gum Disease And Heart Attack Risk 'A Myth' Claim Experts","slideshow_id":"206195","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"},{"entry_id":"1427865","entry_url":"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.co.uk\/2012\/04\/16\/cancer-spread-discovery_n_1427865.html","content_type":"image","image_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/199667\/slide_199667_728830_small.jpg","thumbnail_url":"gadgets\/slideshows\/199667\/slide_199667_728830_small.jpg","title":"'Pop Out' Cells Could Aid Fight Against Cancer Spread","slideshow_id":"199667","vertical":"uk-lifestyle"}]
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Toward a Drug-Free Burger: Ruling May Curb Antibiotics in Meat
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Eating Berries Might Help Preserve Your Memory
Fruit, veggies tied to lower diabetes risk
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who get a range of fruits and vegetables in their diets may have a somewhat decreased risk of type 2 diabetes, a new study suggests. The findings, reported in the journal Diabetes Care, do not prove that eating your fruits and veggies will ward off type 2 diabetes -- a disease closely associated with obesity and old age. But researchers say the findings should give people yet more incentive to eat the way our mothers always told us. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Do You Know What The Best Fish Oil on The Market Always Contains?
AstraZeneca CEO quits as drug sales tumble
LONDON (Reuters) - AstraZeneca Chief Executive David Brennan is to step down on June 1 in an abrupt exit after six years in the top job, following rising investor discontent at the company's performance. Britain's second-biggest drugmaker has suffered repeated drug development setbacks, stoking fears about its long-term prospects given a complete reliance on prescription medicines at a time when rivals have diversified. ...
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Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Donor Kidney Re-Used in Second Patient After Failing in First
WEDNESDAY, April 25 (HealthDay News) -- In a groundbreaking medical report, U.S. doctors describe a case where a kidney transplanted into one patient had to be removed but was then successfully transplanted into another patient.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Mixed evidence on acupuncture for irritable bowels
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The research on whether acupuncture helps ease irritable bowel syndrome has so far been a mixed bag, according to a new review of past clinical trials. The review, published in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, found that in some trials, acupuncture seemed to work better than certain medications for irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS. Yet in others, acupuncture was no better than a "sham" version of acupuncture used for comparison. ...
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Body Scrub Recipes That Effectively Treat Your Cellulite Problems
Although cellulite is not a life threatening disease, it can affect the overall texture of a woman's skin and that's why so many women these days are looking for ways on how to effectively treat their dimpled skin. Here are the body scrub recipes that are proven to cure your dimpled skin without spending a lot.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Katharine McPhee: World Malaria Day: The Faces Behind The Numbers
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Prescription drug abuse abetted by family, friends: study
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 70 percent of people who abuse prescription pain relievers obtain the drugs from friends or relatives, usually with permission and for free, according to a government study to be released on Wednesday. The study, based on data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, underscores the public education challenge that law enforcement officials face in persuading legitimate prescription drug users to dispose of their medications properly before they fall into the wrong hands. The U.S. ...
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Mad cow disease found in California; no human threat seen
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
USDA Confirms Case of Mad Cow Disease in California
Texts prime parents to get kids a flu shot: study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Research in New York City suggests that sending parents educational text messages about the flu vaccine and where to get it could increase the number of kids and teens protected during flu season. Researchers following more than 9,000 mostly low-income kids found that when parents got a series of text messages starting early in the 2010-2011 flu season, their kids were more likely to have gotten a flu shot by the end of that season than children of parents who didn't receive the texts. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Mad Cow Case Confirmed In California
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Amgen founding CEO George Rathmann dies at 84
Amgen founding CEO George Rathmann dies at 84
Monday, April 23, 2012
Maintain Your Youth With Microdermabrasion and Other Treatments
Non-invasive cosmetic treatments such as microdermabrasion help keep your youthful glow without surgery. Learn about some of the most popular procedures your dermatologist offers. Know their benefits and evaluate whether they are ideal solutions for you.
Source: EzineArticles.com
U.S. watchdog blasts Medicare quality insurance project
Healthy Skin Is Within Your Reach
Good Skin Care is important if you want to keep your skin healthy and youthful looking. We are bombarded daily with the latest skin care creams and treatments. All of this information can be confusing and overwhelming for most. It's hard to know which products to buy and what the right things to do are to protect your skin. In this article we will focus on dietary and lifestyle issues that can affect the health and quality of your skin. This approach addresses healing the skin from the inside out. Additionally there are various simple techniques you can incorporate to care for your skin externally as well.
Source: EzineArticles.com
U.S. Gives Green Light to Publish Controversial Bird Flu Research
FRIDAY, April 20 (HealthDay News) -- The U.S. government is giving the go-ahead for publication of two controversial studies into the H5N1 avian (bird) flu virus, a top federal health official announced Friday.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Auditors call for end to Medicare bonus program
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Exclusive: Amylin explores sale, hires bankers: sources
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc , which spurned a $3.5 billion takeover bid from Bristol-Myers Squibb Co and is fending off a lawsuit from activist investor Carl Icahn, started reaching out to potential buyers last week, sources familiar with the situation said on Sunday. Amylin, maker of diabetes drugs Byetta and Bydureon, has hired Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs as its financial advisers and Skadden Arps as its legal adviser, the sources said. Amylin and its advisers declined to comment. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
'Lucky man' Muamba hopes to play on despite mystery
LONDON (Reuters) - Fabrice Muamba hopes to play soccer again after his remarkable recovery from an unexplained cardiac arrest that struck him down on the pitch last month despite feeling fitter than ever, the 24-year-has said. The Bolton Wanderers midfielder shocked the soccer world went he collapsed with no one around him in an English FA Cup quarter-final at Tottenham Hotspur. "It would be great to play football again and I hope that it will happen," he told Britain's Sun on Sunday newspaper in his first interview since his heart stopped working on its own for 78 minutes. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
'Lucky man' Muamba hopes to play on despite mystery
LONDON (Reuters) - Fabrice Muamba hopes to play soccer again after his remarkable recovery from an unexplained cardiac arrest that struck him down on the pitch last month despite feeling fitter than ever, the 24-year-has said. The Bolton Wanderers midfielder shocked the soccer world went he collapsed with no one around him in an English FA Cup quarter-final at Tottenham Hotspur. "It would be great to play football again and I hope that it will happen," he told Britain's Sun on Sunday newspaper in his first interview since his heart stopped working on its own for 78 minutes. ...
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Saturday, April 21, 2012
Nanotechnology In Food?
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FDA says focused on tracking drugs after approval
ATLANTA (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Saturday it now spends as much effort and resources on surveilling a drug after it is approved as it does in the pre-approval process. The FDA was responding to critics who say the agency is toothless when it comes to tracking the safety of drugs already on the market, when industry funds that supported pre-approval reviews tend to dry up. "We think we've really balanced this," Dr. ...
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GE profit, revenue top Wall Street forecasts
(Reuters) - General Electric Co topped Wall Street's profit and revenue forecasts for the first quarter, helped by strong demand for energy equipment and railroad locomotives. The largest U.S. conglomerate said on Friday industrial orders had risen 20 percent in the quarter and that selling prices had improved in most of its businesses. This should help Chief Executive Officer Jeff Immelt achieve his goal of boosting profit margins this year. "Global markets are improving, but volatility remains," Immelt told investors on a conference call. ...
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Vietnam seeks foreign help after skin disease kills 19
Friday, April 20, 2012
Watch: Woman's Scalp Reattached With Microsurgery
After machinery accident, docs repair blood vessels with help of a microscope.
Source: feeds.abcnews.com
A Natural Facial Serum Is Full of Nutrients
EU agency endorses Bristol, Astra diabetes drug
LONDON (Reuters) - European regulators on Friday backed approval of a new diabetes drug from AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb that was rejected last year in the United States. Dapagliflozin belongs to a new class of diabetes drugs designed to allow more sugar to be excreted with urine and has the potential to be the first to treat the disease independent of the hormone insulin. The European Medicines Agency also endorsed new drugs from Novartis and Takeda. (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing Kate Kelland)
Source: news.yahoo.com
EU agency endorses Bristol, Astra diabetes drug
LONDON (Reuters) - European regulators on Friday backed approval of a new diabetes drug from AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb that was rejected last year in the United States. Dapagliflozin belongs to a new class of diabetes drugs designed to allow more sugar to be excreted with urine and has the potential to be the first to treat the disease independent of the hormone insulin. The European Medicines Agency also endorsed new drugs from Novartis and Takeda. (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing Kate Kelland)
Source: news.yahoo.com
Thursday, April 19, 2012
GSK pounces on Human Genome with $2.6 billion bid
LONDON (Reuters) - Human Genome Sciences has rejected an unsolicited bid worth around $2.6 billion from long-time partner GlaxoSmithKline, marking a new takeover battle in a drugs sector recently swept by M&A activity. The U.S. pioneer of gene-based drug discovery, which sells a new drug for lupus with GSK, said on Thursday the offer of $13 per share, made in a letter on April 11, did not reflect the value inherent in the company. It has hired Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse to help explore strategic alternatives, including a possible sale. GSK has been invited to participate in that process. ...
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Value of screening for kidney disease unclear
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Screening people to catch early kidney disease may sound like a good idea, but there is no research to prove that it's worthwhile, according to a new review. In the U.S., about 11 percent of adults have chronic kidney disease, the vast majority of whom have early-stage disease. The disease is very common among older adults -- more than 44 percent of Americans older than 70 have it -- and high blood pressure and diabetes are the main risk factors. In its early stages, chronic kidney disease usually has no symptoms. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Actelion sees data on big drug hope in coming weeks
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Roche says data in hepatitis treatment encouraging
ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Roche said on Thursday initial data on a protease inhibitor, danoprevir, is encouraging against Hepatitis C. "The high sustained viral response rates and encouraging safety data show danoprevir is potent and well-tolerated," Roche development head Hal Barron said in a statement. "Roche's HCV portfolio includes multiple investigational drugs with different modes of action, allowing us to develop tailored treatments that aim to address the future needs of patients with chronic hepatitis C," Barron said. (Reporting By Katharina Bart)
Source: news.yahoo.com
Health Tip: Seniors Need Their Nutrients
(HealthDay News) -- Everyone should eat a healthy, balanced and nutrient-rich diet, especially seniors, who have special nutritional needs.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Skin Care Cleansers and Their Ingredients
It is important to educate yourself a bit what ingredients is in your cleanser. Read the label and know what the ingredients are that make up your cleanser. In this article we give you a list of the most widely used cleansing ingredients found in today's natural market.
Source: EzineArticles.com
"Five S's" ease babies' pain during vaccinations
American CEO quits Nippon Sheet after "disagreements"
'My Last Drink Was With Parents', UK Kids Reveal
The average age at which UK parents allow their children to have an alcoholic drink is 13, a new study has found.
Half (50%) of 10 to 17-year-olds who have had a drink say it was their parents who supplied the alcohol, the poll for charity Drinkaware found, making adults the most common source.
Almost three-quarters of children (72%) said they would turn to their parents first for advice about alcohol, while 43% of parents worried that their child's friends have a greater influence on drinking behaviour than they do.
In those families where the child had drunk alcohol, the average age at which parents allowed them to have the first drink was 13.8 years old, according to the study.
Of the 10 to 17-year olds polled who had drunk alcohol, the majority (55%) had been with their parents the last time they had a drink.
The study found that while 83% of parents said it was important to talk to their children about alcohol, 32% admitted shortcomings in their understanding about its effects.
It also revealed that 67% of teens questioned had never felt encouraged to drink alcohol.
The charity is launching a 'Mumtank' panel of mothers, with experience ranging from health and child psychology to education, to help parents tackle issues around alcohol.
Drinkaware chief executive Chris Sorek said: "These findings will help to reassure parents that their children are more likely to go to them for advice about alcohol than their peers.
"So it's really important that they have the right advice, information and support to talk to their kids. Evidence shows that the earlier children start drinking, the more likely they are to drink more and more frequently as they grow up.
"Parents are key to tackling the UK's drinking culture in the long term, and we want to help them ensure their kids don't grow up to be the next generation of binge drinkers.
"Drinkaware's Mumtank aims to bring the debate about children and alcohol to life and spark lively discussion by increasing awareness of the issues, providing expert advice and questioning pre-conceived ideas about children and alcohol."
Carrie Longton, the co-founder of Mumsnet and a member of the Mumtank panel, said: "Talking to children about alcohol can be a complex and tricky issue, and we know from Mumsnetters that there is concern about when and how to best tackle the subject.
"Mumtank is all about raising awareness amongst parents of the importance of opening up a dialogue about alcohol with their children earlier rather than later as well as arming parents with useful factual information tips and advice."
Superintendent Julie Whitmarsh Devon and Cornwall Police and a member of the ACPO Group on reducing alcohol-related harm said: "As a police officer on the frontline, I regularly witness firsthand the negative effects of underage drinking.
"Preventing the sale of alcohol to anyone under 18 is part of any police officer's role, but a more pressing problem that's harder to police is that of 'parent dealers' - parents supplying their children with drinks.
"I believe that we need to do more to help parents understand the importance of the role they have to play in educating their children about alcohol. The Mumtank is the ideal forum for this and I'm very pleased to be involved."
Check out the news of the day in pictures below
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Source: www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Skincare in Spring
Two times a week, have a warm, relaxing bath with 150 grams of pink himalayan salt added. This will serve to help expel the toxins in your body that have built up over winter. After your bath, vigorously dry yourself with a rough towel to stimulate your blood circulation. This will also help to produce a gentle peeling effect.
Source: EzineArticles.com
New Method to Reveal Alzheimer's Marker Shows Promise
TUESDAY, April 17 (HealthDay News) -- New research adds to the growing pile of scientific strategies aimed at revealing beta-amyloid (protein) plaques, the brain-clogging fragments that have been associated with Alzheimer's disease.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Role of Screening, Monitoring in Early Kidney Disease Unclear
TUESDAY, April 17 (HealthDay News) -- At least one in 10 U.S. adults is estimated to have chronic kidney disease, but whether screening and monitoring people in the earlier stages of the disease provides a benefit just isn't clear, a new review of the available clinical trials revealed.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Could This Soundwave Therapy 'Zap' Prostate Cancer For Good?
A new prostate cancer treatment could provide more effective treatment with fewer side effects according to a new report.
The study was the first to use an experimental treatment known as HIFU (high-intensity focused ultrasound) to treat areas of cancer which are only a few millimetres in size, a technique known as focal therapy.
Focal therapy is similar in principle to the 'lumpectomy' operation commonly used as an alternative to a full mastectomy in breast cancer.
One year after treatment none of the 41 men in the trial had incontinence, and just one in 10 suffered from poor erections - both common side effects of conventional treatment. The majority (95%) were also cancer-free after a year.
Researchers concluded that: "focal therapy of individual prostate cancer lesions, whether multifocal or unifocal, leads to a low rate of genitourinary side-effects and an encouraging rate of early absence of clinically significant prostate cancer".
The results of the phase 1 study, funded by the Medical Research Council and conducted by researchers at University College London, are published in the journal Lancet Oncology.
Dr Hashim Ahmed, who led the study at University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and UCL, said: "Our results are very encouraging. We're optimistic that men diagnosed with prostate cancer may soon be able to undergo a day case surgical procedure, which can be safely repeated once or twice, to treat their condition with very few side-effects. That could mean a significant improvement in their quality of life.
"This study provides the proof-of-concept we need to develop a much larger trial to look at whether focal therapy is as effective as the current standard treatment in protecting the health of the men treated for prostate cancer in the medium and long term."
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men. In the UK, more than 37,000 men are diagnosed each year and the condition leads to approximately 10,000 deaths.
Standard therapy currently involves treating the whole prostate, either with radiotherapy or surgery to remove it completely.
Both methods cause damage to surrounding healthy tissue and can lead to side effects such as urinary incontinence requiring one or more pads a day (5-25%), erections insufficient for sexual intercourse (30-70%) and rectal problems (diarrhoea, bleeding, pain; 5-10%).
Owen Sharp, Chief Executive of The Prostate Cancer Charity told HuffPost Lifestyle: "We welcome the development of any prostate cancer treatment which limits the possibility of damaging side effects such as incontinence and impotence. These early results certainly indicate that focal HIFU has the potential to achieve this in the future.
"However, we need to remember that this treatment was given to fewer than 50 men, without follow up over a sustained period of time.
"We look forward to the results of further trials, which we hope will provide a clearer idea of whether this treatment can control cancer in the long term whilst ridding men of the fear that treating their cancer might mean losing their quality of life".
Other prostate cancer news:
Life-Changing Medical Breakthroughs
1 of 17
Life-Changing Medical Breakthroughs
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Source: www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
Monday, April 16, 2012
Tattoos, Piercings Tied to Heavier Drinking in French Study
Fire Weather Warning for New York
The lack of snow during the winter and the lack of rain in the spring is setting the stage for fire weather in much of southeastern New York as well as upstate. The National Weather Service issued a fire weather warning this morning for Orange, Putnam, Rockland and northern Westchester counties. An enhanced fire weather statement has been issued for Delaware and Sullivan counties.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Don't Be Fooled - Read This To Learn How To Naturally Promote Collagen Growth
If you are like me you would be shocked what the skin care industry is allowed to get away with and how misleading they are allowed to be when they market a product. Products are created that prey on the assumptions of the average consumer and are little more than attempts to take advantage of the different buzz words being used to market skincare products. If you want to want to really know how to naturally promote collagen growth then keep reading and avoid getting a product that does not work.
Source: EzineArticles.com
China suspends sale of drugs in unsafe capsules
China's State Food and Drug Administration has suspended the sale of 13 drugs that it says are believed to have been made with capsules that contain excessive chromium.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Certain Genetic Regions May Be Tied to Osteoporosis
8 Tips to See Your Doctor Quickly
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Singer Robin Gibb of Bee Gees fame in coma: reports
Singer Robin Gibb, a founding member of the disco-era hit machine the Bee Gees, is in a coma surrounded by members of his family in a London hospital, British media reported on Saturday. A spokesman for the 62-year-old, who has been battling cancer and recently contracted pneumonia, was not immediately available to comment on the reports. "Our prayers are with Robin," an unnamed family friend told the Sun newspaper, which first reported the news. "He has kept so positive and always believed he could beat this. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Exercise May Boost Breast Cancer Patients' Quality of Life
SATURDAY, April 14 (HealthDay News) -- Exercise can help improve breast cancer patients' quality of life while they undergo treatment, a new study indicates.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Tuna linked to salmonella outbreak in 20 states
Friday, April 13, 2012
Home Remedies for Skin - General Information
Even Preschoolers View the Overweight Negatively
FRIDAY, April 13 (HealthDay News) -- Many preschool children have a negative impression of overweight children, a Canadian study suggests.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Many tests follow surgery for early breast cancer: study
Bayer to pay at least $110 million in settlement: report
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Bayer has agreed to pay at least $110 million to settle the first 500 lawsuits over claims that its Yasmin group of birth-control pills caused blood clots, Bloomberg reported on Friday, citing two people familiar with the agreement. Bayer had said in February that 170 Yasmin/Yaz cases in the U.S. had been settled out of court. A company spokeswoman said on Friday that Bayer would continue to consider settlements, declining to comment further. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Stretch Mark Removal - Say Goodbye to Stretch Marks
Seniors upset following Arkansas town's bingo ban
The routine for Joyce Landers is the same every Tuesday: The 71-year-old packs up snacks and her lucky markers, heads to an old fire station that now houses a senior center and gets ready to try her chances at bingo.
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Stretch Mark Removal - Say Goodbye to Stretch Marks
Sexual side effects added to Merck drug labels
(Reuters) - Prescribing labels for Merck & Co's drugs for baldness and enlarged prostate will add reports of sexual side effects that continued after use of the medicines was stopped, U.S. health regulators said. Labels will be revised for Proscar, which treats symptoms of enlarged prostate, and hair-loss treatment Propecia, the Food and Drug Administration said. The active ingredient in both drugs is finasteride. The Propecia label will now include notification of problems with libido, ejaculation and orgasms that continued after use of the drug was ended. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Stanton Peele: Is 'Almost Alcoholic' a Useful Concept?
Based on a post in The Atlantic -- "Are You Almost Alcoholic? Taking a New Look at an Old Problem" -- Gizmodo has helpfully(?) declared: "Is Everyone You Know an Alcoholic?" These posts are based on the widely publicized release of the book, Almost Alcoholic: Is My (or My Loved One's) Drinking a Problem? by Robert Doyle, M.D., clinical instructor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Joseph Nowinski. See, for example, Brian Lehrer's interview with Dr. Doyle on NPR/WNYC.
At first, I thought the Gizmodo title was sarcastic, reflecting on the inherent ridiculousness of the idea it expressed. But it wasn't. Both The Atlantic and Gizmodo pieces point out that, prior to becoming alcoholics, people display drinking problems, that alcohol abuse occurs along a spectrum of which alcoholism is only an end state.
There are two ways of considering this perspective. Alcoholics Anonymous -- coming from the temperance model -- sees all such problems as progressing to alcoholism. The data supporting the spectrum model, however, come from an entirely different perspective -- epidemiological research. The recent embodiment of this perspective is the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism's NESARC (National Epidemiologic Survey of Alcohol and Related Conditions) study of 43,000 Americans' drinking over their life spans.
NESARC reveals startling information -- albeit information that every large-scale epidemiological survey has repeatedly found. About a third of Americans encounter a drinking problem in their lives. Not to worry, most outgrow them. Indeed, NESARC finds, of the 10 percent of people who sometime in their lives achieve the more serious diagnostic status of "alcohol dependence" (read as "alcoholism"), three-quarters fully recover, and three-quarters of those who fully recover do so without any form of treatment. Moreover, a majority of these fully recovered alcoholics don't abstain.
Shocking, I know. This violates the American perception of alcoholism as a binary disease, which derives from AA and temperance notions. Instead, it turns out that alcohol problems occur along a spectrum with people moving back and forth on that spectrum -- most often back, especially when they leave their 20s, get married, and have children -- only occasionally forward.
How do we regard this information? Comments on the Atlantic piece fall into two categories: that recognizing alcohol abuse early is helpful, and that this is more Puritanical bullshit. Ideally, the awareness behind the Atlantic piece would lead people to more mindful drinking, where they were aware when they use alcohol in ways that aren't helpful, and that can hurt them, just as we seek to be mindful of our eating.
On the downside, identifying many people who have drinking problems -- say a third of Americans -- could inflate our health care system beyond any reasonable boundaries. And, per NESARC, it wouldn't be a helpful step for the individuals involved, who would tend to be regarded -- and regard themselves -- as alcoholics.
There is a tradition in America of expanding a problem further down the spectrum, a name for which is "problem inflation." One way this is done is to link any signs that people have an incipient problem with the cases of people who suffer the worst forms of that problem.
I fear that the Atlantic article follows the inflation methodology by opening with the Whitney Houston case. We don't have to expand existing diagnostic categories and alarms to encompass Houston -- she was sufficiently dependent on, taken individually and together, medications, illicit drugs (cocaine), and alcohol to have warranted attention due to existing criteria. And, in fact, she had repeatedly received such attention, including intensive treatment.
I also fear that the American habit -- which has grown exponentially in the last decades -- of regarding every type of problem people encounter as suitable for medical care has not made us a happier nation, one that is less depressed, mentally ill, substance abusing, or subject to any one of a number of emotional-behavioral problems that we face.
Let's take the first three criteria from the Atlantic/Gizmodo list of 10 alcohol-related problem criteria -- with which I generally agree -- to consider the list's inflationary diagnostic tendencies:
- You drink to relieve stress.
- You often drink alone.
- You look forward to drinking.
Take me. I am 66 years old, and have not yet been diagnosed as a substance abuser or been treated for it, although I did develop an addiction treatment program called the Life Process Program(c).
- I sometimes have a shot in my coffee at tense moments (I'm involved in a lawsuit over my treatment program).
Reasons for not enrolling me at Betty Ford or in the Life Process Program (aside from not being able to afford them): I am a highly productive person, and continue to be into my senior years. I don't take any psychiatric medications for tension or depression -- thank you, that occasional shot and some beer or wine are good enough for me.
- I live alone -- so I do a good portion of my drinking alone.
Off-setting criteria. I never get drunk. I drink moderately when I'm both alone or with others -- I can barely count the number of times I have had more than two drinks on one occasion, alone or socially. It's just not my habit.
- At the end of a work day, I look forward to a shot or a beer (my father did too).
I'm done defending myself. You tell me if I should be worried.
For more by Stanton Peele, click here.
For more on addiction and recovery, click here.
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Source: www.huffingtonpost.com