Click on content link below to go to the news from that section: this will open a web page if you receive this by email
International News
Cheshire and Merseyside News
Cumbria and Lancashire News
Greater Manchester News
National News
Ex-NHS adviser slams cancer care lottery - The Observer 23/07/06
Professor says he got rationed treatment because of his job connections
NHS failing children on mental health - The Observer 23/07/06
Leaked Department of Health letter shows key targets are being missed
Depressed children deserve better treatment - The Observer 23/07/06
Anti-heroin project transforms towns - The Observer 23/07/06
A remarkable drugs project has transformed one of the regions worst affected by heroin addiction, it was revealed last week. Until recently, drug-related crimes made life a nightmare for people in the former pit villages of north Nottingham, with one in three families experiencing a fatal overdose, an addiction or a drug-related burglary.
Nurses ignore hygiene in superbug battle - The Observer 23/07/06
Hospital staff are failing to wash their hands after touching patients carrying the superbug MRSA, despite government initiatives aimed at curbing the spread of infection, according to a study to be published in the Journal of Hospital Infection. Doctors and nurses believe they are regularly washing their hands but researchers discovered they often forget to do so.
Sunbed curbs for teenagers - The Observer 23/07/06
Teenagers desperate for a tan will face new curbs on using sunbeds under plans to be discussed this week. The aim is to protect children from the growing risk of skin cancer.
What's in your basket? - The Observer 23/07/06
Lemmy, Motörhead's venerable frontman, needs to go easy on the cake mix, bread and Coke, reckons Dr John Briffa
Emma Mitchell: head lice - The Guardian 22/07/06
My daughter had head lice all summer term, despite me regularly combing her hair and using over-thecounter treatments. I am concerned that in the holidays we will see lots of friends out of school and she will pass on the nits. What can I do?
Seven ways to prepare for take off - The Guardian 22/07/06
Travelling by plane can be a taxing experience, but there are ways to make your journey more comfortable, says Alex Gazzola
Cadbury products 'likely source' of bug - The Guardian 22/07/06
Contaminated Cadbury products were the most likely source of a salmonella bug that made 37 people ill, with three, including a baby, needing hospital treatment, experts investigating the outbreak said last night.
Cadbury to consider payouts for victims of salmonella outbreak - The Independent 22/07/06
Cadbury's chiefs face charges over food poisoning - The Times 22/07/06
Cadbury pressed on recall cost - The Telegraph 23/07/06
Cadbury bars 'most likely cause of food poisoning' - The Telegraph 22/07/06
Cadbury's 'linked' to salmonella - BBC Health News 21/07/06
Streamlining of treatments could save billions, says Donaldson - The Guardian 22/07/06
Billions of pounds could be saved if NHS doctors stopped providing outdated treatments and medicines that no longer offer the best patient care, the government's chief medical officer for England said yesterday.
UK patients get wrong care, claims Donaldson - The Independent 22/07/06
NHS 'must act to eradicate waste' - BBC Health News 21/07/06
Drugs regime offers hope to MS sufferers - The Guardian 22/07/06
Multiple sclerosis sufferers have been offered hope of a normal life after doctors pioneered a wonder drug treatment.
The blend of drugs that can 'stop MS in its tracks' - Daily Mail 21/07/06
New Multiple Sclerosis Treatment Reduces Relapse Rate By 90% - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Pill stops 3,000 women dying from ovarian cancer each year - The Independent 23/07/06
The contraceptive pill saves the lives of up to 3,000 women a year in the UK and Europe, according to new medical research.
How well do you think you know us? - The Independent 23/07/06
What is on the minds of today's children? We asked youngsters what they really feel about their own lives and the wider world
Children on... happiness, divorce, sex, playing, heroes and depression - The Independent 23/07/06
Stop! How well do you know your children? - The Independent 23/07/06
Special hospital to close after accusations of abuse - The Times 22/07/06
A HOSPITAL for people with learning disabilities, at the centre of an investigation into patient abuse, will close.
Stalker doctor attacked his wife - The Times 22/07/06
A disgraced hospital doctor who stalked the television personality Abi Titmuss has also admitted assaulting his wife.
The healing ministry - The Times 22/07/06
Chris Patten tells Vivienne Parry how his daughter’s burns trauma inspired him to help others
Doing a ton with ease? - The Times 22/07/06
Do we really want to live for ever? It’s far too important a question to leave to scientists, says Simon Crompton
The lady is fit to bust - The Times 22/07/06
One woman went from hating her breasts to basing a career on them, says Lucy Freeman
Driving each other round the bend - The Times 22/07/06
Being in a confined space with family can test even the best relationship, so how to cope? Simon Crompton and Emma Cook open a car journey survival guide
Junk medicine: pharmacology - The Times 22/07/06
Few people who visit the doctor think that their health will get worse as a result. Yet the statistics show that is far too often the case. Up to one person in 16 admitted to hospital ends up there not because of an organic disease or injury but because of an adverse reaction to a prescribed drug. Between 5,000 and 10,000 a year die as a result of this under-reported problem.
Dr Copperfield: inside the mind of a GP - The Times 22/07/06
Talk about adding financial insult to personal injury. You twist your ankle en route to the GP for your well-person check — ha! — so you end up in A&E. You have to fork out for the casualty doc’s prescription for anti- inflammatories, cough up for the hospital parking space and, if a government health select committee has its way, hand over a fine for missing your GP appointment. Your ankle may not be broke, but you sure are.
Perfectly padded cells - The Times 22/07/06
A beauty company claims to have found the scientific key to youth, says Hannah Betts
Looking after yourself religiously - The Times 22/07/06
A herbal tea and a back massage in a rustic château was the perfect way to round off a French holiday for Paul Shearer
DIY spa: salon standard hair - The Times 22/07/06
Treatment Try to wash and condition hair, then blow-dry into smooth, shiny, salon-style.
King of the swingers - The Times 22/07/06
I'm 45 and my scrotum has become extremely droopy. When I make love my testicles bang around way too much. Is there any way to tighten them?
Is peanut butter off the menu for my boy? - The Times 22/07/06
My son is 16 months old. Is it OK to give him nuts in his diet? If so, are all nuts suitable?
Nothing can cure you - The Times 22/07/06
The placebo effect is powerful, so why aren’t we testing and using it? Toby Murcott finds the catch
Eco-worrier: summer picnics - The Times 22/07/06
How can I make my summer picnics more eco-friendly?
Cereal offenders - The Times 22/07/06
Muesli-munching may have shaken off its hippy image but with high fat and sugar levels, is it as good for us as we think
Tasty nibbles for hungry little travellers - The Times 22/07/06
Jane Clarke, The Times nutritionist suggests ways to stop them driving you crazy
Menu mentor: Little Chef - The Times 22/07/06
Jane Clarke's weekly guide to nutritious but delicious earting out
Breathing space: group exercise - The Times 22/07/06
If you find motivation a problem, then joining in with group exercise could be the answer
Cool dude on a roll - The Times 22/07/06
Surfing the perfect wave is the ultimate high for Mark Harris; yoga keeps him balanced
Letters to The Daily Telegraph - The Telegraph 23/07/06
There is a remarkably simple solution to the problem of drug errors by hospital doctors ("Young doctors' poor drugs training 'is killing patients'" report and leading article, July 19). Consultants should have a pharmacist on at least one of their weekly ward rounds.
In a great victory for common sense, the Reidathon* began - The Telegraph 23/07/06
In a frenetic blitz of U-turns last week, John Reid finally launched some desperately needed measures to stem the tide of lawlessness engulfing Britain. More prisons, tougher sentencing, effective rehabiliation...sound familiar, asks Melissa Kite
'Prisons are not meant to be where we mop up all social ills'UK doctors' heart repair advance - The Telegraph 23/07/06
Standing in the dock at Liverpool Crown Court last week, just found guilty on five counts of indecency with a child and two of indecent assault, Robert Wilby could hardly have expected what was to happen next. Judge Sean Duncan informed him that a prison term was "inevitable", then added, with some frustration, that he was having to free Wilby on bail while he awaited sentencing because there was no available prison cell closer than Doncaster. "That is the state of our prison system," added the judge. "It is ridiculous."
Nile cruise hygiene hazards exposed by TV scientist - The Telegraph 23/07/06
Hygiene standards on board a so-called "luxury" cruise ship popular with British tourists are seriously endangering passengers' health.
Exposed: elderly care funding gap - The Telegraph 23/07/06
Tens of thousands of frail pensioners who require nursing treatment in care homes are falling victim to a National Health Service postcode lottery, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal.
75,000 'miss out on NHS funding for care homes' - The Telegraph 22/07/06
'It took three years to win free nursing for my mother, and it came too late' - The Telegraph 23/07/06
'One sheep, two sheep...' - The Telegraph 23/07/06
More and more women are having trouble sleeping. But why this insomnia epidemic? Sophie Wilson seeks an explanation and – amid all the magnetic quilts and vibrating wristbands – finds peace
Nish Joshi's Q & AUK doctors' heart repair advance - BBC Health News 22/07/06
I follow a nutrient plan based on TAO principles (no meat, chicken or milk), and practise yoga and tao exercises every day. My thyroid is not working well and I've been on tablets for a couple of years. Although I eat healthily (lots of rice and vegetables), I'm lethargic in the morning and I tire quickly. I can't lose weight, and when I'm working I get hungry very quickly and find it hard to concentrate. I'm also prone to bladder infections. Is there anything I need to consider?
Dear Vicki & Octavia - The Telegraph 23/07/06
My husband usually drinks a bottle of wine a night. It doesn't make him aggressive or grumpy. He occasionally snores and sometimes wakes up a bit groggy, but he's doing fine at work, and we get on well. My friends, however, think it's a slippery slope. Should I be concerned?
Fears over drive to cut black teenage pregnancies - The Telegraph 22/07/06
Government plans to target girls from black and ethnic minorities in an attempt to reduce teenage pregnancy rates need to be pursued "sensitively", the Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) said yesterday.
Black teen pregnancies 'warning' - BBC Health News 21/07/06
Get a life: spiritual harmony - The Telegraph 22/07/06
Part seven of self-help guru Nina Grunfeld's eight-step guide to wellbeing Spirituality comes in many shapes and forms. It certainly doesn't have to involve a formal religion, meditation or prayer, although it might. It could be that you get your spiritual wellbeing from feeling connected to music, poetry, art, nature or your loved ones.
New ager: colonic irrigation - The Telegraph 22/07/06
Colonic irrigation was regarded in the 1990s as the height of celebrity self-indulgence. Demi Moore, Goldie Hawn and Kim Basinger were among those who reportedly extolled its virtues. Nowadays, however, it is increasingly referred to as colonic hydrotherapy, and has largely shed its elitist image.
Market report: Misys bid looks likely as Tisbury buys options - The Telegraph 22/07/06
A bid for Misys looked increasingly likely as hedge fund Tisbury Capital took a 2.6pc stake in the software group.
Cancer fear over new tooth whitener - Daily Mail 23/07/06
Dentists are warning the public over the proposed sale of super-strength tooth whitener linked to cancer.
Revitalising drinks 'don't boost alertness' - Daily Mail 21/07/06
Championed by Daley Thompson, Lucozade claims to revitalise both the body and brain. But those anxious to avoid nodding off might be just as well to drink glass of water, research shows.
UK doctors' heart repair advance - BBC Health News 22/07/06
UK doctors have been able to repair heart attack damage without using open-heart surgery, they have revealed.
Heavy drinkers helped by computer - BBC Health News 22/07/06
Researchers say they have created a new training technique which can help hard drinkers ignore alcohol.
'Ignorance' on diabetes treatment - BBC Health News 21/07/06
Two-thirds of the two million people with diabetes in the UK do not take their medication as prescribed, research suggests.
Call for new baby jaundice checks - BBC Health News 21/07/06
All newborn babies should be checked for jaundice to prevent unnecessary deaths from a related brain disease, says England's Chief Medical Officer.
Troubled NHS trust sells office - BBC Health News 21/07/06
A hospital trust which is £28m in debt is to sell off its headquarters to help balance the books.
Minister Announces Taskforce For Electronic Records, UK - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Lord Warner today confirmed the arrangements for the NHS Summary Care Record Taskforce.
A New Generation Of EHealth Services Are Set To Disrupt The Healthcare Market - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The market for wireless based ehealth monitoring and diagnostics services is currently being driven by the incumbent healthcare provider desire to push key elements of the care process out towards the edge of their healthcare network. According to a report published this week by Cambridge based analysts Wireless Healthcare, health provider's attempts to cut costs by treating the patient remotely, rather than within a bricks and mortar hospital, have provided the basis for a number of ehealth trials and contributes to the revenues of ehealth service providers such as Card Guard and Vitaphone.
Tygacil - Much Needed New Antibiotic In Fight Against ‘superbugs' Now Available In The UK - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Tygacil (tigecycline), a new, expanded broad-spectrum IV antibiotic for the treatment of a wide range of infections including those caused by antibiotic resistant bacteria such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), 1 will be available in the UK from today. Availability of this new antibiotic comes at a time when the need for effective new treatments is greater than ever and clinicians are running out of options.2, 3
UK Hospitals Can Benefit From Partnerships With Developing World Hospitals - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Partnerships between UK hospitals and developing world hospitals can be mutually beneficial, according to an Public Health article published Online today by The Lancet. In the article, Andy Leather and colleagues from King's College Hospital and the Tropical Health and Education Trust (THET) in London, UK, describe the benefits of their partnership with hospitals in post-conflict Somaliland.
General Dental Council Calls For Views On Exam For Overseas Dentists, UK - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The General Dental Council (GDC) is calling for views on its proposal for a new exam to assess the competence of dentists from outside the European Economic Area (EEA) who wish to practise in the UK.
Women Show 47 Percent Greater Persistence With Osteoporosis Drugs If Offered Monthly Tablet, Support - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Women who took an osteoporosis drug once a month and received extra telephone support from trained nurses showed 47 per cent greater persistence with their drug treatment than those who took a weekly tablet, according to a study in the August issue of IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical Practice.
Oral Rehydration Works As Well As Intravenous Rehydration For Diarrhoea - Medical News Today 22/07/06
In wealthy countries it is fashionable to prefer intravenous therapy (IVT) over oral rehydration therapy (ORT). A Cochrane Review however, shows that ORT is just as effective as IVT.
Telephone Quitlines Help People Stop Smoking - Medical News Today 21/07/06
This conclusion comes from an updated Cochrane Systematic Review that considered the evidence of 48 trials that met stringent inclusion criteria.
Impaired Quality Of Life For Children With Eczema Similar To Those With Kidney Disease - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Children with serious skin conditions feel their quality of life is impaired to the same extent as those with chronic illnesses such as epilepsy, renal disease and diabetes, according to research published in the July issue of British Journal of Dermatology.
Inyx Selected By U.K. Client To Produce Novel HFA Aerosol Urological Product For U.S. Phase III Trial - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Inyx, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IYXI), a specialty pharmaceutical company focused on niche drug delivery technologies and products, announced today that its wholly owned subsidiary, Inyx USA Ltd., has been selected by an emerging U.K. specialty pharmaceutical company to manufacture a novel urological product as a topical HFA (hydrofluroalkane) aerosol spray for Phase III trial in the U.S.
'Womb' Service For Student Midwives - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A pregnant robot will offer a helping hand to student midwives, as they learn to cope with the most complex of births before ever meeting a real mother.
International News
Sex, sand and sugar mummies in a Caribbean beach fantasy - The Observer 23/07/06
A controversial new West End play will explore sex tourism in Jamaica, where lonely women flock for flings with young black men. But are these holiday romances sleazy or simply harmless?
Go on, just jump in - The Times 22/07/06
Stories behind the news: an asthma link to swimming pools is simply never going to float
Spoilt for choice - The Times 22/07/06
FREEDOM of choice may be consumer society’s great promise, but it doesn’t make you any happier, Cornell University investigators say.
Children must exercise more to beat heart disease - Daily Mail 21/07/06
Children should be doing at least 90 minutes of physical activity a day to stave off heart disease in later life, say scientists.
No end to German doctors' strike - BBC Health News 22/07/06
Talks aimed at ending more than three weeks of industrial action by doctors in Germany have broken down.
Eye test 'could spot Alzheimer's' - BBC Health News 22/07/06
Early dementia could be detected with a simple eye test, similar to those used to test for high blood pressure and diabetes, US scientists believe.
Genetic Cause For Atrial Fibrillation Discovered By Mayo Clinic Researchers - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Mayo Clinic investigators have discovered a gene mutation causing chaotic electrical activation of the heart muscle and atrial fibrillation (AF), a common heart-rhythm disturbance affecting millions of Americans. Atrial fibrillation can lead to heart failure and stroke.
Genetic Code For Organizing DNA Within The Nucleus Discovered By Scientists - Medical News Today 23/07/06
DNA - the long, thin molecule that carries our hereditary material - is compressed around protein scaffolding in the cell nucleus into tiny spheres called nucleosomes. The bead-like nucleosomes are strung along the entire chromosome, which is itself folded and packaged to fit into the nucleus. What determines how, when and where a nucleosome will be positioned along the DNA sequence? Dr. Eran Segal and research student Yair Field of the Computer Science and Applied Mathematics Department at the Weizmann Institute of Science have succeeded, together with colleagues from Northwestern University in Chicago, in cracking the genetic code that sets the rules for where on the DNA strand the nucleosomes will be situated. Their findings appeared today in Nature.
Breast Stem Cells Have Features Similar To "basal" Tumours - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The most aggressive form of breast cancer may originate from breast stem cells that have undergone genetic mishaps.
Diabetes Disease-management Programs Improve Quality Of Care Research Finds - Medical News Today 23/07/06
With diabetes disease-management programs becoming more commonly used among physician groups, the question arises: Just how effective are they at improving patient care? The answer, according to UCLA researchers, is that they lead to better examination and testing--but not to better control of key factors associated with diabetes complications, such as blood pressure, cholesterol or blood sugar levels.
Seniors Who Stay Behind The Wheel Are Less Likely To Enter Nursing Homes - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Although the slower driving habits of some seniors often steam impatient younger motorists, researchers at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine have found that elders who stay behind the wheel are less likely to enter nursing homes or assisted living centers than those who have never driven or who have given up driving altogether.
Women Leading Medical Research Studies: Percentage Rises, But Still Lags Behind Men - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The number of women with leadership roles in research studies published in major medical journals has increased significantly over the past three decades, but women remain under-represented among medical science investigators. In the July 20 New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), a group from the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) reports that, among U.S. physician-researchers leading original studies published in some of the country's most prestigious medical journals, the proportion who are women increased almost fivefold from 1970 to 2004.
New Disorder That Causes Chronic Diarrhea In Children Discovered By UCLA Researchers - Medical News Today 23/07/06
UCLA researchers have unraveled a mysterious condition that causes congenital diarrhea and intestinal failure in children which may help further stem cell research for type I diabetes and intestinal disorders.
Emergence Of New Most Common Form Of Heart Failure Suggested By Mayo Clinic Study - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Data from a 15-year period show that the prevalence of a particular type of heart failure -- heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, also known as diastolic heart failure -- is increasing. This type of heart failure now accounts for more than half of heart failure cases, according to Mayo Clinic research published in the July 19 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. An editorial accompanies this research, as well as another study on the same topic.
Research Confirms Ability Of Stem Cells To Repair Acute Spinal Cord Damage Without Causing Further Injury - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Transplanting human embryonic stem cells does not cause harm and can be used as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of acute spinal cord injury, according to a recent study by UC Irvine researchers.
Results Of New Anti-rejection Protocol To Be Presented By Children's Surgeon At World Transplant Congress - Medical News Today 23/07/06
A Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh surgeon and researcher will present study results that show intestinal transplant recipients had significantly improved outcomes due to a new low-dose, anti-rejection protocol.
Periodontal Bacteria May Be Linked To Heart Disease: Findings Supported By New Study - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The presence of specific bacteria and combinations of bacteria in periodontal pockets might be an explanation for the relationship between periodontal disease and acute coronary syndrome (ACS), according to a new study published in the Journal of Periodontology.
Researchers At The University Of Granada Collaborate In The Creation Of Multilingual Information System On Oncology - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The research group OncoTerm, made up by researchers from the Universities of Granada, Malaga and Valladolid, and Virgen de las Nieves de Granada hospital, have designed an Internet-based information system specialised in oncology. The result is a database with hierarchical data consisting of 1896 concepts related to cancer and 4033 words in Spanish, English, and German. According to the project's leading researcher, Pamela-Blanchard Faber Benitez from the Department of Translation and Interpreting of the University of Granada, ‘these terminological entries are very rich in information, apart from general contents, as they include other information like web links, articles, etc'.
Green Light For The Marketing Of The First Superconductive Cyclotron For Hadrontherapy - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The agreement between the Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics and the Belgian firm Iba for the marketing, in biomedical field, of the first superconductive cyclotron producing protons and carbon ions as well, has been made official today. The innovative project, that will developed by the Infn Southern National Laboratories and realized with the contribution of the Iba specific twenty-year experience in the field of cyclotrons for medical applications, was conceived for the hospital centres of oncological hadrontherapy.
Lilly And Alcon Sign Marketing Collaboration For Potentially The First Oral Medication For Diabetic Retinopathy - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) and Alcon, Inc. (NYSE: ACL) today announced that they have signed a long-term agreement to co-promote ruboxistaurin mesylate (proposed brand name, Arxxant (TM), pronounced ark-ZONT) in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Arxxant is an investigational oral drug for the treatment of moderate to severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy, a diabetic eye disease. The co-promotion agreement is subject to U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of Arxxant, which is currently under regulatory review.
CardiacAssist Places TandemHeart(R) PTVA(R) System At Three New Medical Centers - Medical News Today 23/07/06
CardiacAssist, Inc., announced that it has placed the TandemHeart(R) PTVA(R) System percutaneous left ventricular assist device (LVAD) at three new medical centers. More than 60 hospitals across the U.S. and more than 70 worldwide now use the TandemHeart System for critical ventricular support.
Patent Issued For Method To Manufacture Immtech's Drug Candidate Compounds - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Immtech Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Amex: IMM) announced today that The United States Patent and Trademark Office issued a patent related to the manufacturing of Immtech's drug candidate compounds. Immtech has an exclusive, worldwide license under this patent, based on Immtech's license agreement with the Company's consortium of scientists. The patent, entitled "Process for the synthesis of bis-aryl diamidoxime compounds," claims a method for making drug candidate compounds, such as Immtech's pafuramidine maleate (DB289). The patent names scientists from both the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Georgia State University as inventors.
Research On Cancer Survivorship Urgently Needed - Medical News Today 23/07/06
The following is a statement of Ritva Butrum, Ph.D., Senior Science Advisor to the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR): Spurred by a new scientific review that reveals how the study of diet in cancer survivorship has been woefully overlooked and underfunded, AICR is issuing an urgent call to the nation's cancer researchers and those who fund them.
Invitrogen Adds Genetix ClonePixFL Technology To Process Development Services - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Genetix Group plc (LSE: GTX) and Invitrogen Corporation (Nasdaq:IVGN) announced today an agreement which allows Invitrogen to utilize the Genetix ClonePixFL technology in process development services offered through PD-Direct(TM). The Genetix ClonePixFL is an instrument that automatically images, selects and picks mammalian cell colonies based upon a number of parameters such as size, roundness and proximity to neighbors or far more specific information such as quantitative protein secretion or specific protein production.
Berlex Issues Nationwide Recall Of A Single Lot Of Ultravist(R) Injection 370 MgI/mL, 125 ML In The U.S. - Medical News Today 23/07/06
Bingle Lot Of Ultravist(R) Injection 370 MgI/mL, 125erlex, Inc. has initiated a nationwide recall of a single lot (No. 41500A) of its intravenous X-ray contrast agent, Ultravist(R) Injection 370 mgI/mL, 125 mL, (iopromide injection) NDC 50419-346-12, EXP 01/2007, due to the presence of particulate matter in conjunction with crystallization. Berlex is undertaking this recall in consideration of the potential for serious safety problems if the product is administered to patients, including thrombosis of blood vessels, thromboembolism, and injury or infarction of end organs such as heart, kidney, and brain.
Shire Announces Filing Of SPD465 For The Treatment Of Adult ADHD - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Shire plc (LSE: SHP, NASDAQ: SHPGY, TSX: SHQ) announced today that it has submitted a new drug application (NDA) to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for SPD465, an investigational amphetamine compound for the treatment of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in the adult population. The application is subject to a 12-month FDA review period. SPD465 has the same active ingredient as ADDERALL XR(R) (mixed salts of a single-entity amphetamine product), but is designed to provide ADHD symptom control for up to 16 hours. Upon approval, this novel product will be the first and only ADHD stimulant product that controls inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity for up to 16 hours.
Researchers At Columbia University Discover On-off Switch For Chronic Pain - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Chronic pain affects approximately 48 million people in the U.S. and current medications are either largely ineffective or have serious side effects. But researchers from Columbia University Medical Center have discovered a protein in nerve cells that acts as a switch for chronic pain, and have applied for a patent to develop a new class of drugs that will block chronic pain by turning this switch off. The discovery is published on the website of the journal Neuroscience, and will appear in the publication's August issue.
Nipple Piercing And Breastfeeding - Are They Compatible? - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Until recently, the option to breastfeed after birth was not offered to women with nipple piercings. While there may have been assumed implications to breastfeeding when pierced, limited documentation exists.
New Guidelines For Antiepileptic Drugs Announced - ILAE Sets International Treatment Standards - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The International League Against Epilepsy has set new treatment guidelines for antiepileptic drugs, as published in the journal Epilepsia. The guidelines call for more thorough and specific studies before a treatment is decided upon for a patient with newly diagnosed or untreated epilepsy.
Early Fetal Gender Test Demands Rapid Ethical Policymaking - Medical News Today 22/07/06
This alert highlights the research published this week in a special issue of Prenatal Diagnosis entitled, Fetal Sexing: Global Perspectives on Practices, Ethics and Policy. The special issue arose out of a workshop organized as part of the SAFE network of excellence.
Magnetism And Mimicry Of Nature Hold Hope For Better Medicine, Environmental Safety - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Critical advances in medicine and environmental protection promise to emerge from a new method for biochemical analysis of fluids developed by an international science team led in part by Arizona State University researchers.
Exelon Patch, The First Transdermal Therapy For Alzheimer's Disease, May Provide Promising New Approach To Treatment Of Dementia - Medical News Today 22/07/06
An international study of the first transdermal patch for patients with Alzheimer's - a degenerative brain disease estimated to affect more than 15 million people worldwide - has shown that it may provide a promising new treatment approach1.
Pseudomonas Needs Neuraminidase For Pulmonary Infection - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Therapeutics targeting a surface-bound enzyme encoded by the influenza virus neuraminidase are highly effective antiviral treatments. Although many bacterial pathogens, including the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, also encode neuraminidases, whether these enzymes are important for bacterial pathogenesis such that they would be appropriate antibacterial targets has not been clear, until now.
Too Old, Too Soon: Potential Treatment For Progeria - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is a rare pediatric syndrome causing physical changes that resemble greatly accelerated aging in sufferers. These symptoms include slow growth, wrinkled skin, hair loss, small face and jaw, pinched nose, osteoporosis, and atherosclerotic vascular disease. Currently, there are less than 50 known cases of HGPS in the world and most progeria patients die at around 13 years of age. HGPS is caused by a mutation in the Lamin A gene (LMNA) that results in the synthesis of a mutant prelamin A (also called progerin). Progerin undergoes farnesylation but cannot be further processed to mature lamin A, a key structural component of the cell nucleus. In HGPS cells, progerin accumulates at the rim of the nucleus, causing misshapen nuclei.
Tackling Tumor-associated Macrophages Beats Breast And Other Cancers In Mice - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Tackling tumor-associated macrophages beats breast and other cancers in mice Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) can promote the growth and spread of tumor cells. In a study appearing online on July 20 in advance of print publication in the August issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Rong Xiang and colleagues from The Scripps Research Institute have designed a cancer vaccine to specifically target these cells.
One-third In High-risk Hurricane Areas Say They May Ignore Evacuation Order - Medical News Today 22/07/06
According to a new survey of high-risk hurricane areas in eight states--Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas--conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health Project on the Public and Biological Security, one-third (33%) of residents said if government officials said they had to evacuate due to a major hurricane this season, they would not or are unsure if they would leave. Homeowners (39%), whites (41%) and long-term residents (45%) are the groups most likely to ride out a major hurricane. People with children under 18 are less likely to remain in their homes (26%). Mobile home owners are no more likely to evacuate than the general public.
Facial Rejuvenation, Including Facelift, Browlift, And Laser Surgery - Medical News Today 22/07/06
There's been huge progress made in facial rejuvenation techniques since the days of the old stretched-out sort of facelift. We can now have a customized combination of procedures, some done at the same time, some done at different times.
‘Creatinine Is The New Cholesterol' For Detecting Vascular Risks Of Kidney Disease - Medical News Today 22/07/06
In the same way that blood cholesterol became widely recognised in the 1980s and 1990s as a marker indicating a major risk of vascular disease, so blood levels of creatinine - a normal breakdown product of muscle metabolism - will tell doctors who is developing kidney disease, now also recognised as a risk for heart disease.
Study Establishes Safety Of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Transplantation - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Transplanting human embryonic stem cells does not cause harm and can be used as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of acute spinal cord injury, according to a recent study by UC Irvine researchers.
The American Liver Foundation Issues Warning On Dangers Of Excess Acetaminophen - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The American Liver Foundation (ALF), a national nonprofit organization that provides education, advocacy and research on behalf of the 30 million Americans affected by liver disease, today issued a warning based on a recent study on the effects of high doses of the popular pain reliever acetaminophen on the liver.
Review Examines Failed Hypospadias Repair Presenting In Adults - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Hypospadias is a congenital abnormality occurring in 1 of 300 live births with the current standard of care to repair the anomaly with a one-stage procedure in the first year of life on an outpatient basis. Long-term success rates approaching 90% in the modern era are commonly reported and are much improved over those from earlier times. Complications of hypospadias repair are well documented with stricture, fistula, diverticulum, retrusive urethral meatus and residual chordee being the most common.
Food Aid Running Out For Millions In Need In Kenya - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The United Nations World Food Programme warned today that it was fast running out of emergency food aid for millions of people in Kenya affected by drought, and appealed for urgent new contributions to prevent malnutrition rates rising as the long dry season sets in.
All Cells Age The Same, Whether In Mice Or Men Stanford Study Finds - Medical News Today 22/07/06
We can dye gray hair, lift sagging skin or boost lost hearing, but no visit to the day spa would be able to hide a newly discovered genetic marker for the toll that time takes on our cells. "We've found something that is at the core of aging," said Stuart Kim, PhD, professor of developmental biology and of genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
It Can Be Dangerous To Drink - Medical News Today 22/07/06
People who drink alcohol are up to four times more likely than non-drinkers to be hurt from physical injuries such as a fall or punch, new research shows.
Obesity Experts Back Abbott Initiative - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Two of Australia's leading obesity experts have rejected as "nonsense" criticism by the AMA and Labor Party of the $3 million obesity study initiative announced yesterday by Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott.
Sorafenib In Renal Cell Carcinoma: Results Of The Phase II Placebo-Controlled Randomized Discontinuation Trial - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Sorafenib was recently approved by the FDA as a systemic therapy option for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) in part due to the data from this phase II placebo-controlled randomized discontinuation trial. In this trial design, all enrolled patients were given a 12 week “run in” course of sorafenib and were then evaluated for evidence of response. Those patients that demonstrated a response to therapy (>25% tumor shrinkage) were continued on therapy. Those patients that demonstrated greater than 25% tumor growth were taken off therapy, considered treatment failures, and moved on to other systemic therapy options. Those patients with stable disease or less than 25% tumor shrinkage were randomized to either continuing sorafenib or placebo, the idea being that if their disease stability was due to sorafenib, disease progression would be seen in the placebo group. This trial design allows for a placebo control while minimizing the exposure of patients to the placebo. Here, the results of this trial are reported by Ratain and colleagues.
Pain From Circumcision Being Treated More Seriously By Doctors - Medical News Today 22/07/06
One of the first things most little boys in the U.S. experience is something they'll never remember - circumcision - but that doesn't mean it isn't a painful experience. The debate over whether infants feel pain has ended, and the positive conclusion is catching up with obstetrical, pediatric and family physician training programs, 97 percent of which now learn effective pain relief techniques for circumcision. Just 10 years ago, only 71 percent learned how to ease pain during the brief surgical procedure.
Diagenic Asa Presents Breakthrough Data On Development Of The First Early Blood Test For Alzheimer's Disease At ICAD - Medical News Today 22/07/06
DiaGenic ASA today announced that it has achieved important milestones in the development of a diagnostic test for Alzheimer's disease. New scientific data based on gene expression analysis confirms that the development of a simple blood-based test for diagnosing Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is a realistic possibility in the near future, thereby enabling earlier therapeutic intervention. DiaGenic presented its findings at the 10th International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders (ICAD) in Madrid. ICAD, which is organized by the Alzheimer's Association, is one of the largest gatherings of Alzheimer's disease researchers in the world.
AstraZeneca Submits An NDA For Sustained Release Formulation Seroquel SRTM For The Treatment Of Schizophrenia - Medical News Today 22/07/06
AstraZeneca today announced the submission of a New Drug Application (NDA) to the US Food and Drug Administration for a sustained release (SR) once-daily formulation of SEROQUEL for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia.
Neandertal Genome To Be Deciphered - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and 454 Life Sciences Corporation, in Branford, Connecticut, have announced an ambitious plan to complete a first draft of the Neandertal genome within the next two years. Prof Svante PAoAobo, Director of the InstituteTMs Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, and Dr. Michael Egholm, Vice-President of Molecular Biology for 454 Life Sciences will jointly direct the project, made possible by financing from the Max Planck Society. 454 Life Sciences-TM newly developed sequencing technology has made it possible to extract and sequence nuclear DNA from Neandertal fossils, a hopeless task using traditional techniques. As a trial, the collaborators have already sequenced approximately one million base pairs of nuclear Neandertal DNA from a 38,000-year-old Croatian fossil.
New Study Shows How Worms Can Help Screen For New Drugs - Medical News Today 22/07/06
The humble nematode worm could prove invaluable in screening new compounds for active drugs, new research published today suggests.
Anti-histamines Cannot Be Recommended As A General Therapy For Non-specific Coughs In Children - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Children with a cough that lasts more than 3-4 weeks and is not associated with an identifiable illness are sometimes given anti-histamines. In adults with chronic cough, anti-histamines are recommended as an empirical treatment, but a systematic review of research failed to find evidence that it works for children. Anti-histamines do, however, have well known side-effects.
Driving Nanoscale Microelectronics Production - Medical News Today 22/07/06
MEDEA+ partners are involved in the development of the basic fabrication techniques required for integrated circuits (ICs) to meet the demands for ever smaller electronic systems - from domestic multimedia equipment and effective automotive electronics, through improved medical diagnostic devices to digital cameras and mobile phones. This collaboration between chipmakers, equipment suppliers, research institutes and academia is helping to ensure Europe maintains its global position in microelectronics - enabling European companies to develop a wide range of new equipment. Moreover, receiving the EUREKA label has been significant in bringing these projects to market faster.
Acupuncture Can Help Clear A Chronic Pain In The Neck - Medical News Today 22/07/06
There is moderate evidence that acupuncture can relieve chronic neck pain. Between 26 - 71 percent of the adult population claims to have had at least one episode of neck pain or stiffness during their life. In many cases, this can last for months and has a large impact on life style, work and health care expenditure.
Some Spinal Cord Patients May Benefit From Aggressive Heart Pacing - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Patients with recurring problems with the heart slowing or stopping after a neck injury damages their cervical spinal cord may need aggressive therapy to avoid further cardiovascular problems and even death, Medical College of Georgia researchers say.
Bubbles Go High-tech To Fight Tumors - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Bubbles: You've bathed in them, popped them, endured bad song lyrics about them. Now, University of Michigan researchers hope to add a more sophisticated application to the list---gas bubbles used like corks to block oxygen flow to tumors, or to deliver drugs.
Kidney Donors Often Suffer Financially - Medical News Today 22/07/06
People who donate a kidney to help someone else often suffer financially to do so, according to a study done in part by the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.
OHSU Scientists Say FreeCell Can Be Adapted To Spot Early Signs Of Dementia - Medical News Today 22/07/06
A popular, computer-based card game is helping Oregon Health & Science University researchers monitor cognitive changes in the elderly, a new study shows.
Enhanced Breast MRI System Shows Great Promise In The Early Detection And Treatment Of Breast Cancer - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Researchers from Florida Atlantic University, the Center for Breast Care at the Women's Center at Boca Raton Community Hospital, and MeVis, The Center for Diagnostic Systems and Visualization at the University of Breman, Germany have developed new techniques to aid clinicians in the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer. They have developed and piloted a unique software platform utilizing computational clinical imaging techniques for the analysis and display of serial-time MRI, which is showing great promise in the early detection and treatment of breast cancer.
Aridol Marketing Application Filed In Switzerland - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Specialty pharmaceutical company Pharmaxis Ltd (ASX: PXS; Nasdaq: PXSL) today announced that it has lodged the registration documents for marketing approval of its asthma management product, Aridol, with the Swiss regulatory agency for therapeutic products, Swissmedic. Aridol will be distributed by Trimedal AG, a specialist respiratory and allergy pharmaceutical company based in Zurich.
Abt Associates To Be Major Presenter At 16th International AIDS Conference In Toronto - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Abt Associates researchers will present the results of 17 diverse studies at the 16th International AIDS Conference in Toronto, August 13-18. The conference, with 20,000 attendees and over 400 sessions, meetings, and workshops is expected to be the largest in the history of the event.
Carrington And Brookwood Pharmaceuticals Expand GelSite(R) Drug Delivery Technology Development - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Carrington Laboratories, Inc. (Nasdaq: CARN) announced today that its subsidiary, DelSite Biotechnologies, Inc., formed a joint development initiative with Brookwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The goal of this effort is to carry out an expanded evaluation of GelSite(R), a DelSite patented drug-delivery technology, as a matrix for injectable applications and for selected classes of drugs.
Snapple Introduces 'Good For You' Premium Green Teas - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Snapple, makers of The Best Stuff on Earth, today launches Snapple Green Teas, a collection of authentic green teas that contain the natural antioxidant EGCG and helps boost metabolism. Snapple's new Green Tea has the most EGCG, with 55mg per bottle, compared to leading ready-to-drink green teas, and is the second in a line of new products that support a "good for you" platform from which the brand will inform and inspire consumers about the health benefits of tea.
ARUP Laboratories To Expand Client Outreach Services - Medical News Today 22/07/06
ARUP Laboratories, a leading national clinical and anatomic pathology reference laboratory, believes that community health care systems best provide laboratory services to physician offices. In keeping with that philosophy, ARUP Laboratories has announced it is expanding its outreach program to include a comprehensive suite of services that will enable its clients to have a positive impact on their local health community.
Abbott Reminds U.S. FreeStyle(R) And FreeStyle Flash(R) Blood Glucose Meter Users To Verify Units Of Measure When They Test - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Abbott (NYSE: ABT) is reminding users of its FreeStyle(R) and FreeStyle Flash(R) blood glucose meters in the United States to check to make sure their meter is displaying the correct unit of measure (milligrams per deciliter, mg/dL) and strip calibration code each time they test.
YM BioSciences Reports Anti-EGFr Drug Nimotuzumab Approved In India For Treatment Of Head And Neck Cancer - Medical News Today 22/07/06
YM BioSciences Inc. (AMEX:YMI, TSX:YM, AIM:YMBA), a company engaged in the acquisition, development and commercialization of oncology and acute care products, today reported that India's Drug Controller General has granted marketing approval to nimotuzumab, an anti-EGFr monoclonal antibody, for the treatment of head & neck cancer. Biocon Biopharmaceuticals Ltd, a joint venture between Biocon (NSE:BIOCON) and CIMAB SA (Havana, Cuba), has rights to the drug from CIMAB for the Indian subcontinent. Nimotuzumab is also licensed to YM's majority owned subsidiary CIMYM BioSciences Inc. by CIMAB for the major market countries including Europe, North America, Japan and the Pacific Rim countries excluding China.
GSK Announces U.S. Government Purchase Of Relenza(R) For State Stockpiles - Medical News Today 22/07/06
GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK) today announced an agreement with the U.S. Government to provide states with the anti-viral Relenza(R) (zanamivir for inhalation) as they prepare for a potential influenza pandemic.
Y's Therapeutics Clinical-Stage Compound YSPSL Granted Orphan Status In U.S. And Europe - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Y's Therapeutics, Inc. said today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Evaluation Agency (EMEA) have granted Orphan Drug Designation and Orphan Medicinal Product Designation, respectively, for its investigational drug YSPSL (rPSGL-Ig) in the prevention of graft dysfunction in kidney transplantation.
UCI Study With Rats Shows Why Nicotine Affects Auditory Processing In The Brain - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Scientists know that children of women who smoke during pregnancy can develop hearing-related cognitive deficits. For the first time, researchers believe they have evidence that not only implicates nicotine as the culprit, but also shows what the substance does to the brain to cause these deficits.
Males With Autism Have Fewer Neurons In The Amygdala UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute Researchers Find - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Researchers at the University of California, Davis, M.I.N.D. Institute have discovered that the brains of males with autism have fewer neurons in the amygdala, a part of the brain involved in emotion and memory. The study, published in the July 19 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, is the first neuroanatomical study to quantify a key difference in the autistic amygdala.
Males/females Use Different Parts Of Brain In Language & Visuospatial Tasks Study Confirms - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Differences in the way men and women perform verbal and visuospatial tasks have been well documented in scientific literature, but findings have been inconsistent as to whether men and women actually use different parts of their brains. This inconsistency has been attributed to many factors, including variability in the tasks used in studies and failure to match study participants on performance equivalency. But a new study published in the journal Brain and Language, which accounted for and corrected these methodological factors, confirmed that men and women do indeed use different parts of their brains when processing both language and visuospatial information.
Cruise Ship Virus - Medical News Today 21/07/06
You're on vacation, having fun sailing the seven seas, when your stomach starts rolling worse than the waves. Before you know it, nausea and vomiting have replaced shuffle board and sun-bathing.
All Men With ED Should Be Monitored For Heart And Vascular Disease Say Researchers - Medical News Today 21/07/06
An Italian study of men with erectile dysfunction and coronary artery disease (CAD) has shown for the first time that the rates of dysfunction differ according to the type and severity of the disease.
School-based Prevention Programs For Aggressive Children Improve Behavior - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Aggressive behavior in children and teenagers is a serious problem, and having violent behavior early in life is strongly associated with injury, later criminal conduct and poorer health as an adult.
Telephone Quitlines Help People Stop Smoking - Medical News Today 21/07/06
This conclusion comes from an updated Cochrane Systematic Review that considered the evidence of 48 trials that met stringent inclusion criteria.
Nexavar Receives FDA Fast Track Designation For Skin Cancer - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation (NYSE: BAY) and Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: ONXX) announced today that Nexavar(R) (sorafenib) tablets has been granted Fast Track designation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of advanced (including locally unresectable and metastatic) melanoma, a form of skin cancer. Nexavar was approved by the FDA in December 2005 for the treatment of patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
Migraines With Aura Associated With Increased Risk For Cardiovascular Disease - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Women age 45 years or older who experience migraines with aura (associated neurologic symptoms such as temporary visual disturbances) are at a higher risk for heart attack, ischemic stroke, angina and death due to ischemic cardiovascular disease compared to women who do not report a migraine history, according to a study in the July 19 issue of JAMA. In contrast, migraine without aura, the most common form of migraine, was not associated with increased risk of any cardiovascular event.
Lupin Announces Approval Of Meloxicam Tablets - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Lupin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted final approval for its Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) for Meloxicam Tablets, 7.5 mg and 15 mg. The Company intends to initiate shipments immediately.
SmartPill Wins 510(k) Release From FDA - Medical News Today 21/07/06
SmartPill Corp., a leading developer of capsule-based medical devices based in Buffalo, N.Y., is proud to announce today that its SmartPill GI Monitoring System has received 510(k) release from the federal Food and Drug Administration, granting the company a "green light" for the sale and use of its SmartPill GI Monitoring System and SmartPill pH.p Capsule in the United States.
Cancer Patients May Not Benefit From Dietary Modifications - Medical News Today 21/07/06
One study, a meta-analysis of 59 trials, found little evidence that diet is associated with survival or prognosis. The other study suggests that neither use of garlic nor vitamin supplements delays the progression of precancerous gastric lesions to cancer.
Women With Certain Types Of Migraines Have Higher Risk Of Heart Disease; Many Study Authors Did Not Report Ties To Pharmaceutical Companies - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Women who have migraines with visual problems have increased risk for heart disease, according to a study published on Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Long Island Newsday reports. For the study, researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital analyzed the records of 27,800 women older than age 45 who participated in the Women's Health Initiative.
Protein Associated With Brain Cell Death Found By Case Western Reserve University Researchers - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Neuroscientists at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine have found evidence of which protein in the brain's immune cells triggers a cascade of reactions that produces unregulated free radical production that eventually leads to the neural cell death found in Alzheimer's disease.
G8 Leaders Fail To Adopt Vaccine Purchase Plan For Diseases Such As HIV/AIDS, TB, Malaria - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations at their summit did not act on an opportunity to adopt an advance market commitment plan aimed at funding the development of vaccines for diseases — including HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria — that largely affect developing nations, pharmaceutical companies said on Tuesday, Reuters Health reports (Reuters Health, 7/18).
HO-1 In Sickle Cell Disease: Friend Or Foe? - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Researchers have unexpectedly shown that sickle cell-associated kidney injury may be reduced by inhibiting the enzyme activity of a protein that commonly confers protection in other diseased states. The paper by Juncos et al., "Anomalous renal effects of tin protoporphyrin in a murine model of sickle cell disease," appears in the July issue of The American Journal of Pathology.
Enzyme Inhibitor May Provide Strategy To Treat Some GI Disorders, Jefferson Researchers Find - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Drugs that block the activity of an enzyme might hold a key to treating chronic and severe disorders such as certain forms of constipation, hemorrhoids, anal fissures, Hirschsprung's disease and other similar gastrointestinal problems.
Pessimism And Your Outlook In Life Is Forged In Childhood - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A new study published in the recent issue of the Journal of Personality finds a correlation between adult pessimism and childhood in a low socioeconomic status (SES) family. By connecting socioeconomic status to pessimism, which in turn has in earlier studies shown to be related to physical and mental health, the current study provides critical information for policy makers and parents concerned with preventing the development of less adaptive coping strategies of children
Malawi Begins Weeklong Nationwide HIV Testing Campaign - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Malawi on Monday launched a weeklong HIV testing campaign that is expected to reach more than 50,000 people ages 14 to 49, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. Nicholas Chitimba, chair of the National AIDS Commission, said that more than 240 sites and roughly 1,000 counselors have been designated to conduct HIV tests throughout the week. Health Minister Marjorie Ngaunje said the country's HIV/AIDS prevention efforts could be undermined if people do not determine their HIV status. About 15% of the country's 12 million people have been tested for HIV, according to AFP/Yahoo! News. The campaign is part of a larger goal to test one million Malawians by the end of 2007, Chitimba said. By the end of 2005, about 930,000 people in the country were reported to be HIV-positive, AFP/Yahoo! News reports (AFP/Yahoo! News, 7/17).
Exercise Improves Physical Health, Quality Of Life For Breast Cancer Survivors - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center have found that exercise decreases pain and helps breast cancer survivors feel healthier and increase participation in daily activities.
Pioneering Invention Has Commercial Applications In Medical Diagnostics - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A new study, published today in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has significant implications for the design of disease markers and the development of chemoreceptors used in human biomedical research. The groundbreaking study, entitled, "A Mechanism to Signal Receptor-Substrate Interactions with Luminescent Quantum Dots", demonstrates that quantum dots can one day replace conventional organic dyes in biomedical applications.
Knee Replacements Designed For Women :UT Southwestern Orthopaedic Surgeons First - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Orthopaedic surgeons at UT Southwestern Medial Center are the first in North Texas to use knee implants specifically designed to fit a woman's anatomy.
Digital Mammography Results In Technologists' Time Savings But Physician Time Loss - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Digital mammography saves technologists' time, but increases physician time compared to film screen mammography, a new study shows.
Amnesia-inducing Drug Has Shed Light On How We Form New Memories - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A study conducted by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh involving an amnesia-inducing drug has shed light on how we form new memories.
Impaired Quality Of Life For Children With Eczema Similar To Those With Kidney Disease - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Children with serious skin conditions feel their quality of life is impaired to the same extent as those with chronic illnesses such as epilepsy, renal disease and diabetes, according to research published in the July issue of British Journal of Dermatology.
Revealed: Inflammatory Processes In Arteriosclerosis - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Revolutionary new results concerning substances that play major roles in the inflammatory response have been published in the American scientific journal PNAS in two articles from Karolinska Institutet. Inflammation is important in, for example, cardiovascular disease. The results open the way for the development of new drugs both for prevention and for treatment.
GTx, Inc. Completes Enrollment Of Phase II Ostarine Trial - Medical News Today 21/07/06
GTx, Inc. (Nasdaq: GTXI), the Men's Health Biotech Company, today announced completion of recruitment of its proof of concept Phase II clinical trial of its first- in-class drug candidate, ostarine, a selective androgen receptor modulator (SARM). GTx expects to report data from the trial in the fourth quarter.
Third-Party Audit Firm Confirms Lilly Has Kept Its Promise To Disclose Clinical Trial Data - Medical News Today 21/07/06
An independent, third- party audit firm has confirmed that Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) has followed through on its commitment to post clinical trial information on its website.
Inyx Selected By U.K. Client To Produce Novel HFA Aerosol Urological Product For U.S. Phase III Trial - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Inyx, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: IYXI), a specialty pharmaceutical company focused on niche drug delivery technologies and products, announced today that its wholly owned subsidiary, Inyx USA Ltd., has been selected by an emerging U.K. specialty pharmaceutical company to manufacture a novel urological product as a topical HFA (hydrofluroalkane) aerosol spray for Phase III trial in the U.S.
New Study In Journal Of Urology Shows UroVysion(TM) DNA Test Superior To Standard Cytology In Diagnosing Bladder Cancer In At-Risk Patients - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A study published in the July 2006 edition of Journal of Urology has shown that UroVysion(TM), a DNA-based urine test that detects important genetic changes in bladder cells, has almost twice the sensitivity of conventional urine cytology tests, the current gold standard, as an aid for the initial diagnosis of bladder cancer in patients with hematuria (blood in urine) suspected of having bladder cancer. Sensitivity refers to the likelihood that a patient with bladder cancer will have a positive test result and is a standard indicator of the predictive value of a diagnostic test.
AGA Medical Announces Enrollment Of First Patients In U.S. Migraine Study - Medical News Today 21/07/06
AGA Medical Corporation today announced that it has enrolled the first patients in its PREMIUM clinical trial, a study examining the connections between certain types of migraine headaches and a heart defect found in more than 20 percent of all adults. The first patient was enrolled at Abbott Northwestern Hospital.
Sekisui Chemical, Two Others Develop Centrifugation-free Vacuum Blood Drawing Tube - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Sekisui Chemical, Nitto Boseki, and I-DESIGN have jointly developed Tube 21-S, a plastic vacuum blood drawing tube.
Hitachi, University Of Tokyo Co-develop Contrast Agent Technology For Ultra-sonic Diagnostic Equipment - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Hitachi's Central Research Laboratory and Schools of Engineering and Medicine, University of Tokyo, have jointly developed a contrast agent technology for ultra-sonic diagnostic equipment.
'Womb' Service For Student Midwives - Medical News Today 21/07/06
A pregnant robot will offer a helping hand to student midwives, as they learn to cope with the most complex of births before ever meeting a real mother.
Quigley Pharma Announces Continued Progress In Natural Broad Spectrum Anti-Viral For Use In Preventing Spread Of Avian Flu In Poultry Stocks - Medical News Today 21/07/06
Quigley Pharma, a wholly-owned subsidiary of The Quigley Corporation (Nasdaq: QGLY), announced today that it has obtained positive results that support Quigley Pharma's continued progress in developing the natural broad spectrum anti-viral QR-441(a) for use in preventing the spread of avian flu in poultry stocks. The results of the healthy chicken medical feed study confirm that food or water dose forms provide an opportunity for potential commercialization if the compound demonstrates efficacy within these dose forms.
Asthma And Pollution At Home - Medical News Today 21/07/06
The Physical Chemistry of the Atmosphere Laboratory (1) of the University Louis Pasteur will soon publish some very novel results, obtained from asthmatic patients, which question the recommended level of formaldehyde regarding human health in the domestic environment. This air-born gaseous substance is classified as a pollutant at high concentrations.
Gates Foundation Funds Major New Collaboration To Accelerate HIV Vaccine Development - Medical News Today 21/07/06
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation today announced 16 grants totaling $287 million to create an international network of highly collaborative research consortia focused on accelerating the pace of HIV vaccine development.
Age-related Macular Degeneration And Genetic Variation Linked - Medical News Today 21/07/06
The combination of a certain genetic variation, along with inflammatory factors and smoking, significantly increases the risk of the vision disorder age-related macular degeneration, according to a study in the July 19 issue of JAMA.
Cancer drug Gleevec may damage heart: study - Reuters 23/07/06
Gleevec, the pill that transformed cancer treatments by offering an easy way to target a difficult type of leukemia, may cause serious heart damage, researchers cautioned on Sunday.
Togo says halves HIV/AIDS rate - Reuters 22/07/06
The small West African state of Togo has almost halved its HIV/AIDS infection rate in the past year, but less than a third of those needing life prolonging treatment are getting it, a cabinet statement said on Saturday.
Share of doctors using digital records up a bit - Reuters 22/07/06
Nearly a quarter of U.S. physicians used some form of electronic patient record in 2005, a report said on Friday, as officials try to meet a presidential goal of having digital health data for every American by 2014.
J&J says FDA cancels review of antipsychotic drug - Reuters 21/07/06
Johnson & Johnson said on Friday that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has canceled a planned advisory committee review its experimental drug paliperidone ER, a continuous release pill for treatment of schizophrenia.
Growing number of allergy suffers poorly served - Reuters 21/07/06
The growing number of allergy sufferers in Britain are poorly served by the lack of specialists and local doctors need better training to help alleviate the shortage, according to a government review.
Living with dirty air may boost heart attack risk - Reuters 21/07/06
Fatal heart attacks may be more likely among people who spend decades living in heavily polluted areas, Swedish researchers report.
Lyme disease compound is harmful, US FDA warns - Reuters 21/07/06
An unapproved compound mixed by pharmacists to treat Lyme disease should not be used, U.S. health officials warned on Friday, after one person died and another was hospitalized earlier this year.
Europe swelters in heatwave, 20 dead in France - Reuters 21/07/06
A heatwave in France has probably killed more than 20 people, including a 15-month-old baby, officials said on Friday, and the rest of Europe also sweltered with no sign of temperatures dropping.
Europe swelters in heatwave - Reuters 21/07/06
A heatwave in France has probably killed 21 people, including a 15-month-old baby, officials said on Friday, and the rest of Europe also sweltered with no sign of temperatures dropping.
Cheshire and Merseyside News
Abortion rates soar in district - Midweek Visiter 19/07/06
ABORTION rates have risen across Merseyside and Cheshire at a rate 13 times the national average, shock new figures have revealed.
Staff protest over job cuts - Midweek Visiter 19/07/06
DOZENS of staff gathered outside Southport Hospital in protest at plans to axe jobs as part of a £14m package of savings.
Sad loss inspired me to beat the odds and qualify - Southport Visiter 21/07/06
A WOMAN who is due to start work at Southport Hospital said she qualified as a nurse thanks to the belief that her late husband was looking down on her - and would be proud.
Petition demands return of casualty - Midweek Advertiser 19/07/06
A CAMPAIGNER has launched a petition to re-instate a casualty unit at Ormskirk Hospital - and it has already been signed by more than 500 supporters.
Free travel planned to Southport hospital - Midweek Advertiser 19/07/06
FREE bus travel will soon be available to Southport Hospital from anypart of West Lancashire for those with concessionary bus pass.
Bus travel to hospital free - Ormskirk Advertiser 20/07/06
Mental health consultation exercise - Ellesmere Port Pioneer 20/07/06
PROPOSALS to redesign adult and older people's mental health services across Cheshire and Wirral are the subject of a new consultation exercise.
Hospital times below average - Ellesmere Port Pioneer 20/07/06
ALMOST 30% of patients waiting for hospital tests to diagnose diseases in Cheshire and Merseyside have to wait more than three months, figures reveal.
Elderly will be hit hard in shake-up - Runcorn Weekly News 21/07/06
THE head of one of Halton's biggest heart patient groups fears lives could be at risk following the planned restructuring of hospital services.
Call for rethink over hospital changes - Widnes Weekly News 20/07/06Further ambulance strikes planned - Chester Chronicle 21/07/06
STRIKING ambulance technicians stepped up their campaign on Tuesday and more action is planned for Sunday following a pay row.
Emergency workers walk out over pay - Runcorn Weekly News 20/07/06
New era in mental health - Chester Chronicle 21/07/06
CHESHIRE County Council chairman Neville Price has officially opened the Northgate Locks Mental Health Resource Centre in Chester.
Drugs regime offers hope to MS sufferers - The Guardian 22/07/06
Multiple sclerosis sufferers have been offered hope of a normal life after doctors pioneered a wonder drug treatment.
New Multiple Sclerosis Treatment Reduces Relapse Rate By 90% - Medical News Today 22/07/06
Cumbria and Lancashire News
Old will have greater say on services - Ormskirk Advertiser 20/07/06
OLDER people will have a greater say in how services in the area are run following the launch of the new West Lancashire District Partnership Board for Older People.
Filling the dental gap - Preston Citizen 22/07/06
Hundreds of new NHS dental places have been filled as part of a campaign spearheaded by Chorley and South Ribble Primary Care Trust (PCT).
Chief’s ‘sorry’ to baby-loss mum - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 21/07/06
A HOSPITAL boss has apologised to a woman who stormed out of casualty after waiting four hours for treatment when she suffered a miscarriage.
The boy with crumbling bones who dreams of swimming with dolphins - Carlisle News & Star 22/07/06
BRAVE youngster Russell May dreams of swimming with dolphins and one day even being able to walk again.
Hour’s trip in labour if maternity is closed - Carlisle News & Star 21/07/06
THREE women a day could be forced to travel for more than an hour while in labour if plans to scrap Whitehaven’s maternity ward go ahead.
Greater Manchester News
Critically ill babies moved out of town - Bolton Evening News 22/07/06
CRITICALLY ill babies from Bolton have had to be moved to hospitals as far away as Leeds and Liverpool because of a chronic shortage of beds in their home town.
Nationwide baby care in a sick state - Bolton Evening News 22/07/06
Hospital mini accident unit working well - Bolton Evening News 21/07/06
A NEW mini accident and emergency unit at the Royal Bolton Hospital treated 16 patients in its first two days.
Staff sickness up in heatwave - Manchester Evening News 22/07/06
MOST firms have seen absenteeism increase during the current heatwave, new research showed today.
Cancer man's brain damage death after raid - Manchester Evening News 22/07/06
A CANCER sufferer who tackled two masked burglars later died from brain damage brought on by a heart attack, a post mortem has revealed.
Troubled NHS trust sells office - BBC Health News 21/07/06
A hospital trust which is £28m in debt is to sell off its headquarters to help balance the books.
0 comments:
Post a Comment