Sunday, August 31, 2008

Study opens door to new cancer, aging treatments

Researchers at The Wistar Institute have deciphered the structure of the active region of telomerase, an enzyme that plays a major role in the development of nearly all human cancers. The landmark achievement opens the door to the creation of new, broadly effective cancer drugs, as well as anti-aging therapies.

Researchers have attempted for more than a decade to find drugs that shut down telomerase - widely considered the No. 1 target for the development of new cancer treatments - but have been hampered in large part by a lack of knowledge of the enzyme's structure.

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An international study led by Canadian researchers has found that telmisartan, a medication used to lower blood pressure, reduced the outcome of cardiovascular death, heart attack or stroke in people who are unable to tolerate a widely available and effective standard treatment.

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The fight against the liver disease hepatitis C has been at something of an impasse for years, with more than 150 million people currently infected, and traditional antiviral treatments causing nasty side effects and often falling short of a cure. Using a novel technique, medical and engineering researchers at Stanford University have discovered a vulnerable step in the virus' reproduction process that in lab testing could be effectively targeted with an obsolete antihistamine.

The new research will be published in the Aug. 31 online version of Nature Biotechnology.

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Body weight and fertility have long known to be related to each other – women who are too thin, for example, can have trouble becoming pregnant. Now, a master switch has been found in the brain of mice that controls both, and researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies say it may work the same way in humans.

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Men are more prone to - and likely to die of - heart disease compared with women of a similar age - and sex hormones are to blame, according to a new University of Leicester led study.

The findings of a study by Dr Maciej Tomaszewski, New Blood Lecturer in Cardiovascular Medicine in the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences at the University of Leicester, suggest that this "male disadvantage" may be related to the sex-specific effects of naturally occurring sex hormones.

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Researchers have discovered two new genes that increase the risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in childhood. Finding of Inflammatory Bowel Disease new genes in children may refine drug targets for personalized treatments.

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At Last, A Sinusitis Cure Brings Suffering to an End

The reason here is that, antibiotics greatly tamper with the formation of the outer cell walls of bacteria and without these cell walls, bacteria can not survive. Without bacteria present in the sinus cavities, the infection has no option but to come to an end. Other types of medicines also used here are the antihistamines. These act by stopping the work of histamine present in the body. When histamine is around the sinuses, it inflames them and makes their linings to swell and bring about the sinusitis condition.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Is It Possible To Keep Off The Bad Bacteria Types?

To add to the list of bad bacteria types are the pathogenic bacteria. They are termed to be some of the most harmful bacteria that can ever exist in a human body. This group of bacteria is believed to cause infections such as syphilis, cholera, tetanus tuberculosis, food borne illnesses and fever. Pathogens are formed whenever the bacteria get to form parasitic associations with other living organisms surrounding them hence being able to feed from the host and at the same time causing sickness to the same host.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Symptoms of Systemic Yeast Infection - How Can I Recognize a Systemic Yeast Infection?

A systemic yeast infection occurs when the fungus spores enter your bloodstream and are pumped around your body. The danger here is that they end up embedded in internal organs and can cause some serious problems here. The only way to effectively cure it, is to strengthen your body's own immune system and give it a firm helping hand to cure the underlying cause of the infection. Over the counter remedies are a waste of time here as they just relieve symptoms and don't actually fight the root cause....

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Yeast Infection Signs - The Top 4 Yeast Infection Signs to Look Out For

When it comes to spotting yeast infection signs it can be a difficult task if you don't know what you are looking for. Too many people it seems, both men and women don't seem to know what the symptoms are, or confuse them with something else. The problem with this, is that if left untreated for too long it can enter your bloodstream. Once this happens, it won't take much time to embed itself in internal organs and this can cause some long-term health problems that are best avoided...

Number Of HIV Cases Increase In Philippines

The number of HIV/AIDS cases recorded in the Philippines is increasing, Health Secretary Francisco Duque said on Tuesday, adding that the prevalence of the disease in the country remains low, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. Duque said that even though the Philippines is a low-prevalence country, it "should not be a reason to be complacent."

An average of 29 HIV cases were reported monthly in 2007 and 2008, Duque said, adding that an average of 20 cases monthly were recorded in previous years, according to AFP/Yahoo! News.

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The U.S. should shift its policy on fighting HIV/AIDS to a "fight for basic human equality, providing a basis for more realistic outreach," a Daytona Beach News Journal editorial says. According to the editorial, HIV/AIDS is "reclaiming a foothold" around the world among younger populations "who don't want to admit they may be vulnerable" or think of the virus "as something treatable." It adds that nearly half of new HIV cases globally occur among people between ages 15 and 24.

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Increased access to no-cost antiretroviral drugs has contributed to a 75% decrease in AIDS-related deaths in Malawi in the last four years, a senior government official said Monday, Reuters reports. According to Reuters, HIV/AIDS has been linked to 59% of deaths among people between ages 15 and 59 in the country of 13 million. However, Malawi has made progress since 2004, when it started offering no-cost antiretrovirals to thousands of HIV-positive people, Reuters reports.

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HIV/AIDS advocates in Stamford, Conn., are expressing concern about HIV/AIDS cases among Hispanics and how to effectively target outreach efforts toward the community, the Stamford Advocate reports.

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Turning pancreatic cells to insulin making cells can lead to ways to generate new pancreatic beta cells that could be used as a treatment for diabetes.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute researchers have converted adult pancreatic cells into insulin-producing beta cells in living mice. This is a first because the researchers directly changed the functional identity of adult cells without using embryonic stem cells or relying on techniques that reverse a cell's genetic programming to its earliest stages.

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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Human Rights Should Focus On HIV/AIDS Fight

Human Rights Should Focus On HIV/AIDS Fight

The U.S. should shift its policy on fighting HIV/AIDS to a "fight for basic human equality, providing a basis for more realistic outreach," a Daytona Beach News Journal editorial says. According to the editorial, HIV/AIDS is "reclaiming a foothold" around the world among younger populations "who don't want to admit they may be vulnerable" or think of the virus "as something treatable." It adds that nearly half of new HIV cases globally occur among people between ages 15 and 24.

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Pancreatic Cells Turned To Insulin Making, Leading To Diabetes Treatment

Turning pancreatic cells to insulin making cells can lead to ways to generate new pancreatic beta cells that could be used as a treatment for diabetes.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute researchers have converted adult pancreatic cells into insulin-producing beta cells in living mice. This is a first because the researchers directly changed the functional identity of adult cells without using embryonic stem cells or relying on techniques that reverse a cell's genetic programming to its earliest stages.

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Malawi Reduces AIDS-Related Deaths

Increased access to no-cost antiretroviral drugs has contributed to a 75% decrease in AIDS-related deaths in Malawi in the last four years, a senior government official said Monday, Reuters reports. According to Reuters, HIV/AIDS has been linked to 59% of deaths among people between ages 15 and 59 in the country of 13 million. However, Malawi has made progress since 2004, when it started offering no-cost antiretrovirals to thousands of HIV-positive people, Reuters reports.

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Connecticut Officials Concerned About HIV/AIDS Among Hispanics

HIV/AIDS advocates in Stamford, Conn., are expressing concern about HIV/AIDS cases among Hispanics and how to effectively target outreach efforts toward the community, the Stamford Advocate reports.

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Number Of HIV Cases Increase In Philippines

The number of HIV/AIDS cases recorded in the Philippines is increasing, Health Secretary Francisco Duque said on Tuesday, adding that the prevalence of the disease in the country remains low, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. Duque said that even though the Philippines is a low-prevalence country, it "should not be a reason to be complacent."

An average of 29 HIV cases were reported monthly in 2007 and 2008, Duque said, adding that an average of 20 cases monthly were recorded in previous years, according to AFP/Yahoo! News.

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Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation Partners With Extreme Athlete Mike Monroe

Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation Partners With Extreme Athlete Mike Monroe
The Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF), a public charity founded by the Estee Lauder family in 2004, is pleased to announce an exciting partnership with extreme athlete, former Marine, and elite personal trainer Mike Monroe. Mike will be raising money for the ADDF in the 25th anniversary Furnace Creek 508 (The 508) bicycle race on October 4-6, 2008, http://www.the508.com.

Did You Know That There is a Homemade Yeast Infection Remedy Cure?

Using a homemade yeast infection remedy cure can be a great alternative for people with Candida infection. Yeast infection is a disease that has a high rate of recurrence. Most people who suffer from yeast infection do not like to be all the time on drugs, and some of them can even make the condition worsen, or even not work at all, so it is advisable to find a long-term, non-aggressive, alternative solution to use on a regular basis to alleviate the symptoms such as itching and burning sensation.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

AMAG Pharmaceuticals Receives Fast Track Designation For Ferumoxytol For Vascular-Enhanced MRI

AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMAG) announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Fast Track designation to ferumoxytol for its development as a diagnostic agent for Vascular-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (VE-MRI) to improve the assessment of peripheral arterial disease in patients with known or suspected chronic kidney disease (CKD). Continue reading ...

The following summarizes recent efforts and initiatives that seek to reduce racial health disparities. Charles County, Md.: Ministers Alliance of Charles County and Vicinity; local health officials; Claudia Baquet, a doctor and specialist in health disparities at the University of Maryland School of Medicine; and state Sen. Continue reading ...

Royal Philips Electronics announced that it will lead a new European Union (EU) funded research project called 'euHeart', which is aimed at improving the diagnosis, therapy planning and treatment of cardiovascular disease - one of the biggest causes of mortality in the western world. Continue reading ...

Biogen Idec (Nasdaq: BIIB) announced the initiation of a Phase III clinical trial of intravenous (IV) ADENTRI® (BG9928), an adenosine A1 receptor antagonist, for acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) patients with renal insufficiency. The trial will evaluate ADENTRI, which is being developed under a licensing agreement with CV Therapeutics (Nasdaq: CVTX), or placebo in addition to standard of care in approximately 900 patients in 21 countries globally, including the United States. Continue reading ...

It is the very early hours of the morning and you awake with a tightness in your chest. This uncomfortable pressure is making it difficult to breathe, and you feel lightheaded and nauseous. Your first instinct is to shrug off the fear that you might be having a heart attack and attribute your pain to heartburn from overindulging the night before or even food poisoning. Yet if you continue to avoid taking your pain and symptoms seriously, your life is at risk - and the clock is ticking. Continue reading ...

Women may safely discontinue oral anticoagulants (blood thinners) after 6 months of treatment following a first unprovoked venous blood clot (thromboembolism) if they have no or one risk factor, concludes a study of 646 participants in a multicentre prospective cohort study. Blood clots are common and a potentially fatal condition. Continue reading ...

Anthera Pharmaceuticals Inc., a privately held biopharmaceutical company developing anti-inflammatory drugs, announced the initiation of the FRANCIS (Fewer Recurrent Acute coronary events with Near-term Cardiovascular Inflammation Suppression) clinical trial designed to examine the impact of varespladib when administered to patients within 96 hours of an Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) event. Continue reading ...

Misdiagnosis of Cancer

There must be nothing worse for women to be told you have breast cancer and the only option is a mastectomy which involves the removal of a breast. Imagine how you would feel if you were told that you never had cancer in the first place and the mastectomy was completely unnecessary. Just the though of loosing a breast is scary in itself, but the thought of going through the emotional trauma of loosing a breast because of misdiagnosis is totally imaginable but must be must be completely horrendous.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Rush For Coliform Bacteria Test And Rescue Yourself

The membrane filter method is an approved coliform bacteria test that is performed to check out for the presence of coliform bacteria in water. Here, the water sample is collected and kept inside a sterilized bag which contains a solution known as sodium thiosulfate so as to clear away any presence of chlorine found in the water. This water is then carefully transferred inside a clean glass bottle in order to avoid any contamination from our hands. Thereafter, the sample is to be kept overnight before the test begins.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Are These Key Treatments For Gout Missing From Your Diet

If you are tired of suffering from this painful condition, here are four key treatments for gout you can use to help you not only reduce the pain caused during an ongoing attack, but also to help you decrease the incidence and severity of this painful disease in the future. Eat Foods Loaded With Vitamin C Vitamin C is a great preventative measure against this disease, because it aids the renal system in getting rid of uric acid. Vitamin C also prevents purines from metabolizing into uric acid crystals.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

What You Need to Know About the Symptoms of Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis is known as a silent disease. What is meant by this is that the symptoms of osteoporosis stay hidden as they develop, and only make themselves known when these symptoms of osteoporosis are in more advanced stages. In other words, until your bones give way under small taps, or something so simple and common as a fall or a trip-up causes fractures, the symptoms of osteoporosis keep quiet. Another of the symptoms of osteoporosis, stooped posture and severe back pain, also remain shy until very late in its development.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Compression Stockings Incorrectly Used In 29 Percent Of Patients AJN Study Reveals

An original study, published in the September issue of the American Journal of Nursing (AJN), revealed that graduated compression stockings were used incorrectly in 29% of the patients and sized incorrectly in 26% of the patients. These stockings play an important role in preventing the formation of deep vein clots that can result in pulmonary complications and death. More at...

If you have a heart attack while on vacation, your chances for a positive outcome are better if you seek treatment in a hospital that tends to spend more. While previous research comparing high and low-spending areas in the U.S. More at...

CMS on Wednesday for the first time released mortality rates for Medicare beneficiaries at individual hospitals on its Hospital Compare Web site, More at...

A new, pre-specified analysis of the landmark Phase III head-to-head TRITON-TIMI 38 study showed patients who took prasugrel for acute coronary syndromes (ACS) managed with an artery-opening procedure known as percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and had survived their first cardiov More at...

Causes of Heartburn - Drill Down to the Real Reasons For Heartburn

Notwithstanding the many popular texts that point to aspects of lifestyle and eating particular foods, the real underlying reasons for heartburn encompass a larger selection of factors with genetic, lifestyle and dietary elements. Just like other chronic illnesses, heartburn is a result of overlapping and multiple causes. Although people in good health may experience heartburn once per week or less, if heartburn happens twice per week or more, this may indicate a graver medical condition known as acid reflux disease, and also referred to as GERD (Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disease).

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Cholesterol Lowering Statins Do Not Affect Cancer Risk

Cholesterol Lowering Statins Do Not Affect Cancer Risk

It was previously thought that cholesterol-lowering drugs - statins - increase cancer risk, but this new large study says that statins neither increase, nor decrease cancer risk.

A year ago a team of researchers from Tufts Medical Center in Boston analyzed 13 studies involving participants taking statins. They reported that people taking statins for lowering low-density lipoprotein (LDL - bad cholesterol) are at increased cancer risk, although the increase was not significant - only one case out of 1000.

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Goals and Objectives in the management of Brain Arteriovenous Malformations

Decisions pertaining to endovascular treatment of brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) require complete information with respect to the clinical circumstances and the imaging characteristics including the angioarchitecture of the AVM as well as the brain. With these factors in mind a clinico-morphological analysis can be made to formulate the best plan for therapy, which might include embolization as well as other modalities.

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Fighting HIV-Aids - Many Means, One Goal

Amidst the pessimism springing from the recent failure of about 150 prevention trials that failed to shield subjects against HIV infection, there's the resolve to continue research on developing a vaccine, and battle through all the challenges the process poses. On a pessimistic note, hope of a vaccine in the short term isn't anywhere in sight as France's National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (ANRS) has expressed. Though not in the short run, the Scripps Research Institute expressed optimism with a possibility of a vaccine in about 10 years.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Looking For Relief? Acid Reflux Remedy Options For Children

GERD can frequently begin as early as infancy, though most infants do stop showing the symptoms as grow into childhood. Unfortunately though, a small number of children ranging from 5 to 17 years of age do indeed suffer from GERD and require relief acid reflux remedies can provide. If you suspect that your child is suffering from GERD, it is very important that you take him or her to see the doctor as relief acid reflux treatments are different for children than they are for adults - if only in the dosage.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Caribbean To Launch Regional HIV/AIDS Workplace Policy

Caribbean To Launch Regional HIV/AIDS Workplace Policy

Caribbean nations will establish national HIV/AIDS workplace policies as soon as a regional policy modeled after International Labour Organization guidelines is ready, the Jamaica Observer reports. According to Carl Browne, director of the Pan Caribbean Partnership Against HIV/AIDS who spoke at the XVII International AIDS Conference earlier this month, the organization will work with individual countries to implement national workplace policies tailored to specific needs with the goal of benefitting employees and their families.

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Washington Prime Example Of Ineffective Youth HIV/AIDS Education

A recent Washington Times opinion piece "highlights important statistics about the AIDS epidemic" in Washington, D.C., as well as the "need for more prevention education," Richard Urban of Urban Life Training and Reality Assessment Teen Choice writes in a Times letter to the editor. However, although the authors of the opinion piece "offer no prevention plan, it is clear where they are coming from: Abstinence programs are 'ineffective'; prevention programs must be 'evidence-based,' which is code language for 'programs that ...

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Can Eggplant Cure Skin Cancer?

There is new hope for skin cancer treatment, says internationally known scientist in his book The Eggplant Cancer Cure.

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HIV/AIDS Advocates In Georgia To Improve Outreach Efforts

HIV/AIDS advocates in Georgia have become concerned that "[o]ld messages geared to urban, white, gay men simply don't resonate with many" black, rural, women and young people, who now are the "new face" of HIV/AIDS in the state, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. According to the Journal-Constitution, it is becoming more difficult to reach such high-risk groups with prevention, testing and treatment services.

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Coping with Cancer - Easily Remove This Source of Stress

It was dinner time and lots of things were bothering me. My wife was in bed recovering from surgery for breast cancer, the surgeon said that he could not get the entire tumor which meant more surgery and who-knows-what-else, my business was in bad shape and so were our finances, I had a house full of animals each of which needed to be walked, fed, or picked-up after, and I was tired and hungry. "Overwhelm" is a good start, but it doesn't even begin to describe my state of mind.

Biomedical Foundation Supports Technology Aimed At Destroying Cancer Cells

A new technology, using electric pulses to destroy cancer tissue and named by NASA Tech Briefs as one of seven key technological breakthroughs of 2007, is receiving additional support aimed at moving the procedure to the marketplace. One of its lead developers, Rafael V. Davalos, a faculty member of the Virginia Tech-Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences (SBES) http://www.sbes.vt. Read more ...

FDA issued warning on Amylin's diabetes drug Byetta as the agency found that Byetta has a potential risk for pancreatitis. FDA says 2 patients have died.

Zacks's analyist Mark Vickery realizing the implications for Amylin's stock owners immediate recommended to Sell the stock and avoid the name Amylin. You can already realize how serious is the FDA warning is on Byetta diabetes drug.

Here is what Vickery writes at Zacks.com:

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Monday, August 18, 2008

Initiatives Seek To Reduce Salt Intake Among Blacks, Offer Health Benefits Assistance To Hispanics, Examine Caring For People With Alzheimer's Disease

Baltimore: The city in September will launch a six-month awareness campaign about salt intake associated with high blood pressure, particularly among blacks, the Baltimore Sun reports. According to the Sun, "In a city that is nearly 65% black, the risks of hypertension, which can lead to heart attack, kidney failure and stroke, are especially high. Read more ...

It all started because of failure, a missing person who couldn't be located in time. It was and still is a story that happens monthly, if not weekly all across our nation. For families and caregivers exploring options of how to protect a loved one who wanders away from the safety of their home due to Alzheimer's, Dementia, Autism, Intellectual Disabilities or other wandering conditions, there is hope. Read more ...

Cancer Research

Today the boundaries between medical and biological disciplines have vanished. . . . In an anatomy department, biologists, chemists, and physicists can present the human body to medical students as an uninterrupted ascent from atoms to man: from the tens of atoms that make a small molecule, to the thousands of molecules that make a polymer (such as a protein or a nucleic acid), to the millions of such polymers that make a cell, to the billions of cells that make a tissue, and the trillions of specialized cells that create a body.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Alternative Nonsteroidal Antiandrogen Therapy For Advanced Prostate Cancer That Relapsed After Initial Maximum Androgen Blockade

UroToday.com - In the September, 2008 issue of the Journal of Urology, Dr. Hiroyoshi Suzuki and Japanese collaborators reported that following maximum androgen blockade (MAB) for prostate cancer (CaP), the use of alternative nonsteroidal antiandrogens is effective for treating relapsed disease. A total of 232 CaP patients treated with MAB and disease progression made up the study cohort. Upon disease relapse they were treated with an alternative antiandrogen. Continue reading ...

UroToday.com - The practice of lymphadenectomy during radical cystectomy for muscle invasive bladder cancer is not standardized. There is a wide variation in the number of nodes retrieved. Recent studies suggest that both the number of nodes removed and the method of submission of lymph node specimens affect the treatment outcome. Continue reading ...

Cell Therapeutics, Inc.'s (CTI) (NASDAQ and MTA: CTIC) subsidiary Systems Medicine (SM) has announced that planned enrollment is complete in the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) randomized phase II clinical trial of brostallicin in patients with newly diagnosed advanced or metastatic soft tissue sarcoma who have had no prior chemotherapy. The primary endpoint of the trial is progression-free survival at six months. Continue reading ...

Let Us Join Hands In Fighting Against Bacteria Infection

Infectious diarrhea is also a bacteria infection that is proving to be a common problem to many people. The condition is mainly caused by bacteria such as Salmonella, E. Coli and the Shingella type of bacteria. These bacteria usually stick to the food staff that we ingest and pass through to the digestive system together with it. Once they reach inside the intestines,the bacteria become active and then start to cause improper functioning of the system. Ingested food is then not properly digested and a possible diarrhea condition occurs.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

CTI Announces That The EORTC Completes Enrollment In Phase II Clinical Trial Of Brostallicin

CTI Announces That The EORTC Completes Enrollment In Phase II Clinical Trial Of Brostallicin
Cell Therapeutics, Inc.'s (CTI) (NASDAQ and MTA: CTIC) subsidiary Systems Medicine (SM) has announced that planned enrollment is complete in the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) randomized phase II clinical trial of brostallicin in patients with newly diagnosed advanced or metastatic soft tissue sarcoma who have had no prior chemotherapy. The primary endpoint of the trial is progression-free survival at six months.

Bacteria In Urine Could Be A Starting Point To Your Misery

After treatment, it is advisable to always regularly undergo urine testing with your doctor. This will help you and the doctor to always know whether the amount of bacteria in your urine is per what is recommended or not. What usually happens is that,urine samples are asked for by the doctor weekly and then tested to see whether they contain bacteria or not. When the doctor notices that there is are growing pattern, proper medication is then prescribed to you. If the pattern is normal, nothing is then done.

Friday, August 15, 2008

A Diet Plan to Combat Acid Reflux

Acid reflux is a condition that affects thousands of Americans. For some people the condition is rare and doesn't interfere too frequently in their day to day activities, but for other people it is almost constant. Some of the symptoms can include heartburn, bitter fluid in the mouth, chest discomfort, hoarseness, coughing fits, and even shortness of breath. The symptoms can become so painful that they lead to insomnia, loss of appetite and trouble concentrating. However, the right diet can ease these symptoms even for people with the worst acid reflux.

NPR Program Profiles HIV/AIDS Advocates

NPR Program Profiles HIV/AIDS Advocates

NPR's "Tell Me More" on Wednesday profiled two HIV-positive advocates in the black community. According to a recent report from the Black AIDS Institute, nearly 600,000 blacks in the U.S. are living with HIV/AIDS, and more than 20,000 blacks contract the virus annually. HIV/AIDS also is the leading cause of death for black women ages 25 to 34, according to "Tell Me More."

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Elite Controller Could Help In HIV/AIDS Vaccine Development

An HIV-positive woman who has never shown symptoms of the virus might provide insights into HIV/AIDS vaccine development, researchers from Johns Hopkins University said in a study recently published in the Journal of Virology, Reuters reports.

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Uganda Male Circumcision Drive To Help Curb Spread Of HIV

Uganda has launched a male circumcision drive in an effort to curb the spread of HIV in the country, Reuters reports. According to Reuters, the campaign -- which aims to circumcise more than 3,000 local young men between ages 12 and 18 -- aligns with a month-long traditional "circumcision season" practiced by some tribes in Uganda. Male circumcision is socially "uniting," and it is "gratifying" that the procedure has been shown to reduce a man's risk of HIV, Kibale Wambi, chair of the Sironko district in eastern Uganda, said.

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

Yeast Infection Remedies - Stop Candidiasis Now

Candidiasis or commonly known as yeast infection is a fungal infection caused by candida albicans fungus. This fungus is normally present in our body along with other naturally occurring bacteria in our body. The fungus thrives in moist warm areas of the body like the skin, mouth and genital area. In most cases, the fungus does not cause any harm but infection occurs when there is over population or rapid multiplication of the fungus. At the onset of the infection, it is important that you know how to stop candidiasis to prevent other health issues.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Hope Lodge

The siren of summer lured me off my writer's path and I went willingly to sit on the ocean's edge and contemplate. Stretched before me was the Atlantic, so far into the horizon that even squinting did not allow me to see its end. When these moments came there was no choice but to stop and raise a hand to shield the sun from my eyes, to pause for the solar rising or setting. All thoughts passed away and my mind was relieved of burdens and bundles of musts and must-nots.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Adhesions and ARD Awareness - It's No Hoax!

For the many people who suffer from abdominal adhesions or have lost years of their life due to this medical malady, the recent Internet hoax about Subway spokesman, Jared Fogel's death (due to abdominal adhesions), is less than humorous. However, since it is best to look on the bright side of life, perhaps Jared's faked death will help bring awareness to the plight and very dismal world of the adhesion sufferer. (As a token of thanks, I'm hoping Jared will write me so I can send him an ARD awareness pin!

Monday, August 11, 2008

Watch Out - Coliform Bacteria Symptoms Could Be Deadly

Another one of the coliform bacteria symptoms is for you to continuously have episodes of food poisoning every time you eat. Food poisoning is an abnormal condition that is experienced whenever you ingest food substances that have been contaminated with the coliform bacteria belonging to the E. coli bacteria family. The bacteria stick to the food substance and are ingested together with the food substance. Once in the digestive system, the bacteria become active and are able to produce toxins from the serotype strain that contaminate the food bolus even further.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

The History Of HIV

In July 1981, the New York Times reported an outbreak of a rare form of cancer among gay men in New York and California, first referred to as the "gay cancer"; but medically know as Kaposi Sarcoma. About the same time, Emergency Rooms in New York City began to see a rash of seemingly healthy young men presenting with fevers, flu like symptoms, and a pneumonia called Pneumocystis. About a year later, the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) link the illness to blood and coins the term AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome).

Friday, August 8, 2008

Will Treating Acid Reflux Cure Your Bad Breath?

The chances are that if you suffer from acid reflux, you may also be aware that your breath isn't quite as fresh as those non-GERD sufferers around you. The fact is that when acid refluxes into your esophagus, that horrible sensation and taste is also accompanied by a not-so-pleasant smell. If you're simply sitting at home alone watching television, it's uncomfortable, but your breath doesn't really bother anyone but you. However, if there's anyone around you, the chances are that they'll soon be taking a step back, scrunching their noses, or handing you a mint.

Alzheimers Disease

Alzheimers disease robs you of intellectual and social
abilities and interferes with regular life. About 4.5
million Americans have Alzheimers Disease. The disease
usually affects seniors over the age of 65. As the
population ages this number is expected to quadruple.

There is no cure for Alzheimers disease. There is progress
being made by researchers to improve the quality of life
for those who have Alzheimers. Drugs are being discovered
and studied which may lead to treatments of the disease.

If you have been a caretaker of a loved one with Alzheimers
disease, or have a loved one suffering with it, you know
that it takes patience and love to keep you and them going.

If you think a loved one may be showing early signs of
Alzheimers Disease, what should you look for? One of the
most prominent signs of Alzheimers Disease is
forgetfulness. It starts out with occasional forgetting
simple directions or recent events. It progressively gets
worse until the patient may forget even family names and
objects they see every day. They also may repeat things
they've already told someone, and put objects down and
forget where they placed them. On the other hand, they
might put something away so they will remember where they
put it, and put it in such an illogical place that no one
can find it.

Early Alzheimers Disease patients have trouble conducting
conversation and finding the right words to say. They may
have a hard time following conversations or expressing
their feelings. Eventually their reading and writing
ability will also be affected.

Abstract thinking is something else that these patients
with Alzheimers disease have. They may suddenly be able to
deal with numbers, especially in balancing the checkbook.
Disorientation causes them to lose track of time, and it is
easier for them to get lost. They may feel they are in
unfamiliar surroundings even if they are home.

They have trouble with everyday problems, such as knowing
that food has been on the stove too long. Patients with
Alzheimers disease eventually have problems dealing with
planning, judgment, and decision-making. Familiar tasks
become a struggle, even the basic activities like dressing
or remembering to bathe.

One of the most distressing symptoms of Alzheimers disease
is the personality changes that affect them. It is not
uncommon for a patient with Alzheimers disease to have
extreme mood swings and often accompanied by depression.
They may begin distrusting those around them, be
increasingly stubborn, and withdraw from family and
friends. As their Alzheimers disease get progressively
worse, they may become defiant, stubborn, aggressive, and
take part in inappropriate behavior.

One report tells of a wonderful woman, whom was a good
mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother that had been
afflicted with Alzheimers disease. When her family was
forced to put her in a nursing home due to the Alzheimers
disease, she became aggressive to other patients and began
using language she never would have dreamed of using before
she fell victim to Alzheimers disease. The staff had a hard
time in restraining her in the nursing home. They found she
was sneaking in to other patient's rooms, uncovering them,
and leaving them. This was so unlike the mother and
grandmother they knew before the affliction of Alzheimers
disease, they had a hard time even visiting. Most of the
time, she wouldn't remember her daughter being there that
morning. Finally, her family put an erasable board in her
room so her visitors could write their name and the date
they visited allowing the family to know who was there and
when.

Unfortunately, families don't often recognize the onset of
Alzheimers disease because it starts out so slow. There
usually are no sudden changes in the personality to alert
family members there is a problem. As the symptoms
gradually get worse, or they realize memory is fleeting for
their loved one, they may not realize until the patient is
far into the advanced stages of Alzheimers disease.

How Alzheimers disease progresses and what the average
survival rate will be depends on the individual. The
average survival rate is eight years. Some live fewer
years, and some could live up to 20 years with the disease.
People with Alzheimers disease eventually will no longer be
able to take care of themselves. This leaves loved ones
with the burden of deciding whether to place the patient in
a long-term care facility or try to take care of them at
home. It's a difficult decision and everyone must realize
that it takes considerable attention, love, and patience to
deal with the problems that come with Alzheimers disease.

About the Author:

Steven Godlewski is a self-made millionaire and is
currently working with the staff at PillFreeVitamins.com He
has an extensive background in nutrition as well as other
health related fields. For more health-related articles or
2 FREE bottles of Liquid Vitamins see their website at:
http://www.pillfreevitamins.com SEE Video at:
http://www.emii-dcf.org

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Albinism Prevention - A Way For Albinism Treatment

When you see a person with awkward white skin color then do you know what the problem is? This happens due to albinism that is an inherited disorder of having little or no pigment in skin, hair, and eyes. Due to the altered genes of the parents, this disorder passes onto the next generation. The level of pigment loss varies, as it is completely absent in some patients whereas in some cases there is minimal pigment loss. Some patients suffer from loss of eye pigment and even vision due to ocular albinism.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

7 Deadly Toxins You Can't Live Without!

Dangerous toxins are polluting our homes and families on a daily basis. Most of us are not even aware this is happening, and we may not know exposure to these toxins is linked with serious diseases such as Cancer, Parkinson's, and Alzheimer's. The United States government, before they will ban harmful Substances, tries to be absolutely certain of the causal factors between a dangerous substance and disease. This certainty can be quite elusive, since disease sometimes takes decades to develop after exposure to toxins. Meanwhile, the evidence of our exposure is frightening.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Russian Doctors - Only Tissue Hypoxia Can Trigger Bad Genes and Diseases

How and why bad genes are triggered is one of the greatest puzzles of modern physiology and medicine. Why do some modern people develop gene-related health problems, like asthma, heart disease, diabetes, and cancer, but others do not? Why do almost all children, who are genetically predisposed to, for example, asthma (about 20% of all children on the West), have it these days? Why did children living a century ago not develop asthma, as well as many other disorders? This article is based on clinical experience of 200 Russian MDs who practice the Buteyko oxygentaion medical therapy in Russia.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Winning the Battle Against Cancer

Almost 260,000 new cases of cancer are diagnosed in the UK each year, but despite the rates of incidence being on the rise, the good news is that less people are actually dying from cancer, thanks to advances in treatment and also early detection. The trend is the same in both the USA and UK, with figures that trace incidence of and deaths caused by cancer over a period of 30 years from 1975 to 2005 showing that mortality rates for all cancers have decreased steadily over the last ten years, with stomach and prostate cancer displaying...

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Worried About Dining Out? What to Eat If You Have Acid Reflux

Knowing what to eat if you have acid reflux at restaurants can be a very challenging experience. However, as long as you are dedicated to watching what you eat, you will most certainly be able to get through this challenge and enjoy eating out with your family and friends. The hard part can be accepting that you are suffering from acid reflux as an ongoing condition and you will need to practice a bit of discipline if you want to avoid unpleasant symptoms. This discipline will involve changes to both your diet and your overall lifestyle.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Irritable Bowel Syndrome Treatment

Irritable bowel syndrome, IBS is a chronic situation mainly affecting the gut area. IBS is really a great threat to the smooth digestion process of human beings. Indigestion, bloating, abdominal pain, intermittent constipation or diarrhea, urgent need to defecate, loose or watery or hard or lumpy stools, feeling of incomplete, bowel movement, abdominal fullness, wind, abdominal soreness, fatigue, backache, passing mucus during defecation, abdominal swelling are the main symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome, which makes the life very complicated. However, this can be prevent to a certain extend with the help of irritable bowel syndrome treatments.

Friday, August 1, 2008

What Are the Symptoms of a Yeast Infection - How to Easily Spot the Symptoms of a Yeast Infection

People are asking 'What are the Symptoms of a Yeast Infection' all the time, in fact it is surprising at just how many people don't know how to diagnose a yeast infection and don't even realise they have one. This can cause a real problem, because if you leave a yeast infection untreated for a long period of time, then it can spread around your body via the bloodstream. In fact, there have been cases of it lodging itself in internal organs and even in the brain - this one causes personality changes and other undesirable effects.