HHAL MEDICAL NEWS DECEMBER 2013
2000 Steps a Day May Keep the Doctor Away
Walking
2000 steps a day — about 20 minutes of moderate-intensity walking — can lower the odds of cardiovascular events
among high-risk adults, according to an analysis from the NAVIGATOR trial published in the Lancet.
Researchers studied some 9300 adults aged 50 and older with existing cardiovascular disease or impaired
glucose tolerance and at least one additional cardiovascular risk factor. Ambulatory activity was measured with a pedometer
for 7 days at baseline and 1 year.
During roughly
6 years' follow-up, 531 cardiovascular events occurred. Each 2000-step/day increment in ambulatory activity at baseline
was associated with a roughly 10% lower risk for cardiovascular events. Similarly, each 2000-step increase in activity from
baseline to 1 year was associated with an 8% lower risk, while each 2000-step decreaseconferred an 8% higher risk.
Commentators say the trial "adds compelling and reassuring evidence for the benefits of physical
activity on cardiovascular health."
Lancet article
Long Walks Lower Stroke Risk
Walks of an
extended duration may help to reduce the odds of stroke, among older men.
Walking is a popular form of physical activity, one that can be conducted by older adults who live independently.
Barbara J. Jefferis, from the University College London (United Kingdom), and colleagues studied 3,435 healthy men, ages 60
to 80 years, who were enrolled in the British Regional Heart Study. Following the subjects for an average of 10.9 years, the
investigators tracked cardiovascular blood markers including C-reactive protein (CRP), D-dimer, and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic
peptide (NT-proBNP). The team observed that men who walked 8 to 14 hours per week were at one-third lower risk of stroke,
compared to men who walked no more than three hours a week or did not walk at all. The stroke risk was about two-thirds lower
for men who walked more than 22 hours per week. The association was found to be independent of walking pace and activity level.
Reporting that: “Time spent walking was associated with reduced risk of onset of stroke in dose-response fashion,”
the study authors submit that: "Walking could form an important part of stroke-prevention strategies in older people.”
http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/Strokes/42919
Exercise Lowers Key Marker of Inflammation
People who engage
in vigorous-intensity physical activity reduced their risks of exhibiting elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP).
C-reactive protein (CRP) is a key marker of inflammation, with a number of studies linking elevated
CRP to cardiovascular disease. Michael Richardson, from the University of North Florida (Florida, USA), and colleagues
examined data collected on 6,242 subjects enrolled in the 1999-2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).
WThe researchers found that people who exercise vigorously for 500 MET (metabolic equivalents) per week, displayed a 27% reduction
in the odds of having elevated C-reactive protein levels, as compared to people who did not exercise. As well, the team
observed that people who exercised vigorously but did not reach the recommended levels also showed lower odds ratio for being
in the high C-reactive protein level when compared with individuals who did not exercise vigorously during the week.
http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/WCIR/42804
Exercise Interventions Can Prevent Injurious
Falls in Elders
Khoury F et al., BMJ 2013 Oct 29; 347:f6234
Most exercise programs included balance training.
Falls cause substantial morbidity among elders and are costly. Although exercise interventions can prevent falls in
older adults, whether such interventions also prevent fall-associated injuries is unclear. To determine the effects of fall-prevention
exercise interventions on fall-related injuries, investigators in France conducted a meta-analysis of 17 randomized trials
that involved 4300 community-dwelling elders (mean age, 77).
Most exercise programs
included gait-, balance-, and strength-training components. Four outcomes were assessed: all injurious falls, falls resulting
in medical care, severe injurious falls, and falls resulting in fractures. Compared with no intervention or placebo intervention
(e.g., general health education class), exercise interventions significantly lowered the number of falls resulting in any
injury (ranging from minor bruises to serious injuries such as fractures or head trauma; rate ratio, 0.6), falls resulting
in medical care (RR, 0.7), falls resulting in serious injuries (RR, 0.6), and falls resulting in fractures (RR, 0.4). The
interventions were effective regardless of baseline fall risk.
This meta-analysis convincingly shows that exercise interventions prevent falls and
fall-related injuries — both minor and major — in elders. Elders should be encouraged to participate in such programs,
because one in three elders falls every
year, falls are a leading cause of nonfatal and fatal injuries, and falls are associated with US$30 billion in direct medical
costs annually.
Dietary Fiber Is Still Good for You
Dietary
fiber's salutary effects on health — specifically in preventing cardiovascular disease — are reaffirmed in
a BMJ meta-analysis.
Researchers examined 22 cohort studies in predominantly Westernized countries that looked at the relation
between fiber intake and cardiovascular risk. Most data were from food-frequency questionnaires. The analysis presents risks
based on dose-response curves rather than simple "high" or "low" intakes.
Overall, total fiber intake was inversely associated with cardiovascular risk. Specifically, each 7
grams a day of fiber intake was associated with a risk ratio of 0.9 for both coronary heart disease and cardiovascular disease.
Only insoluble fiber (wheat bran, brown rice, and other whole grains) had a significant lowering of risk.
Both the researchers and an editorialist acknowledge the limitations of dietary-recall studies. The
editorialist writes that despite this, "clinicians should enthusiastically and skillfully recommend" more fiber
in their patients' diets.
BMJ article
Health Effects of Nut Consumption Bao Y
et al., N Engl J Med 2013
Nov 21; 369:2001 In large cohort studies, nut consumption was associated inversely with 30-year mortality. |
Nuts contain a variety of potentially
healthful nutrients. To determine whether nut consumption is associated with longer life, researchers analyzed data from two
prospective American cohort studies with 30 years of follow-up — the Nurses' Health Study (76,000 women) and the
Health Professionals Follow-up Study (42,000 men). Cumulative long-term nut consumption was calculated from food-frequency
questionnaires that participants returned every few years. In both men and
women, nut consumption was associated significantly with lower total mortality after extensive adjustment for potentially
confounding variables. Compared with no nut consumption, nut consumption less than once weekly, once weekly, 2 to 4 times
weekly, 5 to 6 times weekly, and >7 times weekly was associated with adjusted hazard ratios for death of 0.93, 0.89, 0.87,
0.85, and 0.80, respectively. The authors performed a variety of sensitivity and subgroup analyses that supported these results. Because nut consumption was correlated
strongly with other indicators of health (e.g., not smoking, more physical activity, more consumption of fruits and vegetables),
this study's credibility — and the likelihood that its findings represent cause and effect — is contingent
on successful adjustment for confounding variables. However, the findings are consistent with a recent randomized trial in
which a Mediterranean diet with substantial nut intake was associated with lower risk for adverse cardiovascular events |
Eating Nuts While Pregnant May Protect Offspring
Against Allergies
Frequent
nut consumption during pregnancy could protect offspring against nut allergies, according to a JAMA Pediatrics study.
Researchers studied physician-confirmed tree nut and peanut allergies among roughly 8200 children (ages
10 to 14 years) whose mothers had completed food-frequency questionnaires around the time they were pregnant.
Mothers who ate five or more servings of nuts per week had reduced risk for nut allergy among their
offspring (adjusted odds ratio, 0.58), compared with those who ate less than one serving per month. Risk reductions were observed
with just one to four weekly servings. For mothers with existing allergies to tree nuts, high consumption of peanuts (or vice
versa) was associated with a nonsignificantly increased allergy risk in their children.
An editorialist concludes: "Pregnant women should not eliminate nuts from their diet as peanuts
are a good source of protein and also provide folic acid, which could potentially prevent both neural tube defects and nut
sensitization."
JAMA Pediatrics article
Antihypertensive
Effect of Flaxseed: From Lab to Clinic
Rodriguez-Leyva D et al., Hypertension 2013 Dec 62:1081
In a
small, randomized trial, increased flaxseed consumption was associated with substantial reductions in blood pressure.
In animal studies, flaxseed has demonstrated antiatherogenic and anti-inflammatory properties and beneficial effects
on vascular contractile function. To examine the effects of flaxseed ingestion on systolic and diastolic blood pressure
(BP) in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD), investigators conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized
trial supported by several Canadian agricultural-industry initiatives. For 6 months, 110 PAD patients received various food
products containing 30 g of milled flaxseed or placebo for daily consumption. Mean baseline BP was similar in both groups.
By 6 months, 13 patients from the flaxseed group and 11 from the placebo group had dropped out of the study. Body weight,
waist circumference, and body mass index did not differ significantly between the two groups. At 1 month, plasma levels of
the omega-3 fatty acid alpha-linolenic acid and enterolignans — used as biomarkers of dietary compliance — had
doubled and increased tenfold, respectively, in the flaxseed group; these increases persisted through 6 months. At 6 months,
systolic and diastolic BPs were lower in the flaxseed group than in the placebo group by 10 mm Hg and 7 mm Hg, respectively.
Reductions in systolic and diastolic BP in the flaxseed group were greater in patients with baseline systolic BP ≥140 mm
Hg than in the cohort as a whole (15/7 mm Hg vs. 7/5 mm Hg).
Omega-3s May Combat Degenerative Vision Condition
Dietary supplementation of omega-3 fatty acids may combat inflammation in the eye and improve vision, among people
with dry age-related macular degeneration.
Age-related
macular degeneration (AMD) is the primary cause of blindness in individuals ages 50 years and older. Tassos Georgiou,
from the Ophthalamos Research & Educational Institute (Cyprus), and colleagues administered 3.4 g of eicosapentaenoic
acid (EPA) and 1.6 g of.docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) on a daily basis for 6 months, to patients with dry AMD. The team
observed: "significant improvement in vision acuity occurred in 100% of patients … within four and half
months after omega-3 supplementation.”
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Research/Omega-3-may-have-benefits-for-dry-AMD-Pilot-Study/
Fish oil in recent onset rheumatoid arthritis: a randomised, double-blind controlled trial within algorithm-based
drug use
Conclusions FO was associated with benefits additional to those achieved by combination ‘treat-to-target’
DMARDs with similar MTX use. These included reduced triple DMARD failure and a higher rate of ACR remission
Abstract
Background The effects of fish oil (FO) in rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) have not been examined in the context of contemporary treatment of early RA. This study examined the effects of high
versus low dose FO in early RA employing a ‘treat-to-target’ protocol of combination disease-modifying anti-rheumatic
drugs (DMARDs).
Methods Patients with RA <12 months’ duration and who were DMARD-naïve were enrolled and
randomised 2:1 to FO at a high dose or low dose (for masking). These groups, designated FO and control, were given 5.5 or
0.4 g/day, respectively, of the omega-3 fats, eicosapentaenoic acid + docosahexaenoic acid. All patients received methotrexate
(MTX), sulphasalazine and hydroxychloroquine, and DMARD doses were adjusted according to an algorithm taking disease activity
and toxicity into account. DAS28-erythrocyte sedimentation rate, modified Health Assessment Questionnaire (mHAQ) and remission
were assessed three monthly. The primary outcome measure was failure of triple DMARD therapy.
Results In the FO group, failure of triple
DMARD therapy was lower (HR=0.28 (95% CI 0.12 to 0.63; p=0.002) unadjusted and 0.24 (95% CI 0.10 to 0.54; p=0.0006) following
adjustment for smoking history, shared epitope and baseline anti–cyclic citrullinated peptide. The rate of first American
College of Rheumatology (ACR) remission was significantly greater in the FO compared with the control group (HRs=2.17 (95%
CI 1.07 to 4.42; p=0.03) unadjusted and 2.09 (95% CI 1.02 to 4.30; p=0.04) adjusted). There were no differences between groups
in MTX dose, DAS28 or mHAQ scores, or adverse events.
Conclusions FO was associated with benefits additional to those achieved by combination ‘treat-to-target’ DMARDs
with similar MTX use. These included reduced triple DMARD failure and a higher rate of ACR remission.
http://www.mdlinx.com/internal-medicine/news-article-exit-page.cfm/4945742
Spearmint & Rosemary in the Battle Against Alzheimer’s
Enhanced extracts made from
special antioxidants in spearmint and rosemary improve learning and memory, suggests data from a laboratory animal model.
Oxidative damage is considered one of the hallmarks
of the aging process, with a number of previous studies demonstrating that the structural and functional damage to mitochondria
characteristic in Alzheimer’s Disease. Susan Farr, from St. Louis University (Missouri, USA), and colleagues administered
enhanced extracts made from special antioxidants found in spearmint and rosemary, to a mouse model of age-related cognitive
decline. The team found that a higher-dose rosemary extract compound was effective for improving memory and learning in three
tested behaviors. The lower-dose rosemary extract, as well as the compound made from spearmint extract, improved memory in
two behavioral tests. As well, the researchers observed that the enhanced herb extracts reduce the markers of oxidative stress.
The study authors conclude that: “The current results indicate that the extracts from spearmint (carnosic acid)
and rosemary (rosmarinic acid) have beneficial effects on learning and memory and brain tissue markers of oxidation that occur
with age in [a laboratory animal model].
http://www.slu.edu/x89155.xml
Effects of disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs on subclinical
atherosclerosis and endothelial dysfunction which has been detected in early rheumatoid arthritis: 1-year follow-up study
Abstract
Objective
The study was designed to explore the effect of disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) on synovial inflammation
as well as on atherosclerotic indices in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Methods
The study included 35 early RA patients (disease duration <12 months). Inflammatory
variables, like erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) were measured. Carotid
intima-media thickness (cIMT) and endothelial dependent flow-mediated vasodilatation (ED-FMD) were measured by high-resolution
ultrasonography. Disease activity of RA was assessed by disease activity score (DAS28) and quality of life was determined
by Health Assessment Questionnaire-Disability Index (HAQ-DI) Score. All the above parameters were assessed both at baseline
and follow-up after 1 year. Patients were treated with methotrexate (MTX), hydroxycholoroquine (HCQ) and sulfasalazine (SSZ)
depending on their disease activity.
Results
After a year of treatment,
variables like ESR, hsCRP, DAS28 and HAQ-DI showed significant improvement (p <
0.0001 for each variable). However, there was no such significant change observed in the lipid profile after 1 year from the
baseline. Average body mass index (BMI) of patients remained same at the one year follow-up. The cIMT values after 1 year
decreased significantly [0.43 ± 0.08 mm]
from the baseline [0.50 ± 0.16 mm]
[p = 0.002]. Similarly, in case of FMD%, the post-1-year treatment values [7.57 (4.04–13.03)] improved
significantly from the baseline [5.26 (2.9–10.6)] [p =
0.041].
Conclusion
Subclinical atherosclerosis and endothelial dysfunction are demonstrable
features even in early RA which improved after therapy. Early intervention of RA with DMARDs not only controls the disease
but also retards the atherosclerotic progression
Vitamin D Supplementation
Increases Lower Limb Muscle Strength
SAN DIEGO, CA—Vitamin D supplementation has a
positive effect on global muscle strength; specifically, lower limb muscle strength, a meta-analysis presented at the 2013
ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting has found.
Citing evidence
that vitamin D plays a role in tissue that includes skeletal muscle and previous studies have suggested a deficiency of vitamin
D is associated with low muscular strength, Charlotte Beaudart, PhD Candidate, of the Department of Public Health, Epidemiology
and Health Economics at the University of Liège, Liège, Belgium, and colleagues examined systematic research
of randomized controlled trials that assessed the effect of vitamin D supplementation on muscle strength conducted between
1966 and February 2013.
Data sources included Medline,
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, a manual review of the literature
and congressional abstracts. The quality of the randomized controlled trials was evaluated using Jadad criteria.
“All forms and doses of vitamin D supplementation, with or without calcium supplementation, compared
with placebo or control were included,” Beaudart reported. “Muscle strength was assessed either by grip strength
and/or lower limb muscle strength.”
Of 214 articles,
19 randomized controlled trials met the inclusion criteria, with a mean quality Jadad score of 3.8 (of 5) points. A total
of 4,824 individuals were included; mean age was 66 years.
“Results
reveal a significant positive effect of vitamin D supplementation on global muscle strength with a standardized mean difference
(SMD) of 0.096 (95% CI 0.007–0.184; P=0.034),” the investigators reported.
No significant between-study heterogeneity (Q-value 23.6; P=0.21; I²=19.6%) or publication bias were found.
Sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus
Cochrane Reviews, 11/04/2013 Evidence Based Medicine
Clinical Article
Ooi CP, et al. – Sweet
potato (Ipomoea batatas) is among the most nutritious subtropical and tropical vegetables. It is also used in traditional
medicine practices for type 2 diabetes mellitus. Research in animal and human models suggests a possible role of sweet potato
in glycaemic control. To assess the effects of sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus. There is insufficient evidence about
the use of sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus. In addition to improvement in trial methodology, issues of standardization
and quality control of preparations – including other varieties of sweet potato – need to be addressed. Further
observational trials and RCTs evaluating the effects of sweet potato are needed to guide any recommendations in clinical practice.
Sweet potato (Ipomoea
batatas) is a plant found in the tropical and subtropical belts and is one of the most nutritious tropical and
subtropical vegetables. As well as being popular in cooking in countries in Asia-Pacific, Africa and North America, sweet
potato is also used in traditional medicine for the treatment of diabetes mellitus. We decided to investigate whether there
is enough evidence from medical trials to show whether sweet potato works as a treatment for diabetes. This review of randomised
controlled trials found only three studies (with a total of 140 participants) that evaluated the effects of sweet potato for
type 2 diabetes mellitus compared with a fake medicine (placebo). All these trials were of very low quality. Two studies with
122 participants showed improved long-term metabolic control of blood sugar levels as measured by glycosylated haemoglobin
A1c (HbA1c) which was moderately lowered by 0.3% in participants who were given 4 g sweet potato tablets a day for three to
five months. The duration of treatment ranged from six weeks to five months. No study investigated diabetic complications,
death from any cause, health-related quality of life, well-being, functional outcomes or costs. Adverse effects were mostly
mild, and included abdominal distension and pain. There are many varieties of sweet potatoes and sweet potato preparations.
More trials are needed to assess the quality of the various sweet potato preparations as well as to evaluate further the use
of different varieties of sweet potato in the diet of diabetic people.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD009128.pub3/abstract
Metformin is associated with survival benefit in cancer patients with concurrent type 2 diabetes: A systematic
review and meta-analysis Full
Yina M, et al. – Patients
with type 2 diabetes have increased cancer risk and cancer–related mortality, which can be reduced by metformin treatment.
However, it is unclear whether metformin can also modulate clinical outcomes in patients with cancer and concurrent type 2
diabetes. These results suggest that metformin is the drug of choice in the treatment of patients with cancer and concurrent
type 2 diabetes.
Diatetes
and cancer are not two separate irrelavant diseases, but are biologically related. There is evidence that diabetic patients
have increased cancer risk and cancer-related mortality. (2). If there is no contraindications, cancer patients with concurrent
type 2 diabetes should be advised to use metformin or metformin-containing regimen for their diabetic control, except lung
cancer. This is because metformin or metformin-containing diabetic treatment is associated with increased overall survival
and cancer-specific survival. (3). There is insufficient evidence to suggest metformin use in lung cancer patient with concurrent
type 2 diabetes. (4). The mechanisms of survival benefit associated with metformin is mediated by direct effect of tumor inhibition
and indirect effect of not inducing hyperinsulinemia, compared with other diabetic medications. (5). Metformin treatment is
relatively safe in cancer patients. It is not carciongenic and does not promote tumor growth.
Conclusion. These results
suggest that metformin is the drug of choice in the treatment of patients with cancer and concurrent type 2 diabetes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24258613
Extended-release niacin
therapy and risk of ischemic stroke in patients with cardiovascular disease
Stroke, 09/24/2013 Clinical Article
Teo KK et al. – In Atherothrombosis Intervention
in Metabolic Syndrome with low HDL/High Triglycerides: Impact on Global Health Outcomes (AIM–HIGH) trial, addition of
extended–release niacin (ERN) to simvastatin in participants with established cardiovascular disease, low high–density
lipoprotein cholesterol, and high triglycerides had no incremental benefit, despite increases in high–density lipoprotein
cholesterol. Preliminary analysis based on incomplete end point adjudication suggested increased ischemic stroke risk among
participants randomized to ERN. Although there were numerically more ischemic strokes with addition of ERN to simvastatin
that reached nominal significance, the number was small, and multivariable analysis accounting for known risk factors did
not support a significant association between niacin and ischemic stroke risk.
Conclusions—Although
there were numerically more ischemic strokes with addition of ERN to simvastatin that reached nominal significance, the number
was small, and multivariable analysis accounting for known risk factors did not support a significant association between
niacin and ischemic stroke risk.
http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/44/10/2688.abstract
Green
Coffee Extract: A Weight-Loss Aid?
Green coffee is simply coffee that has not been "cooked." Green coffee products are made from unroasted
coffee beans, usually from the plant Coffea arabica.1 Most
of the world enjoys coffee products that are manufactured from roasted coffee beans.
The most widely known natural component of coffee is caffeine but, in reality, coffee contains hundreds of bioactive
chemicals, many of which are more significant than caffeine.1 Green coffee products have become
widely popular as a potential weight-loss aid.
Background
Green
coffee extract contains chlorogenic acid, which is derived from a major group of phenolic compounds.2 Green
coffee beans contain nearly twice the concentration of chlorogenic acid as do roasted beans. Chlorogenic acid is a major component
of many OTC weight-loss products and acts independently of caffeine.2
The theorized mechanism of action by which green coffee produces weight loss is through the inhibition of the enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase.3 In
vitro, glucose-6-phosphatase induces the enzymatic process of glucose production in the liver.3 It
is this step in the metabolic pathway that researchers attribute to the known reduction of glycemic disorders in long-term
coffee-drinkers.4
Science
Green
coffee extract is believed to aid weight loss. One trial evaluated the responses of 16 overweight adults who had been randomized
to high-dose extract, low-dose extract, or placebo in a 22-week study.5 Body weight decreased by a mean of
8 lbs, with a mean drop in body fat of more than 4%.5
In another study, 50 volunteers with body mass indices
>25 were randomized to placebo or to treatment with green coffee extract.6 After 60 days, members of the treatment
group had lost an average of 5.7% of their body weight, with a shift in the muscle-mass-to-fat-mass ratio of +4.1%/-0.7% from
baseline.6
In a trial designed to compare the effect of green coffee
vs. roasted coffee on BP measurements, researchers randomized more than 200 subjects to either a placebo coffee drink or a
drink with low, medium, or high chlorogenic-acid content.7
Each
participant drank one cup of the treatment coffee per day and recorded BP readings for one month. At the end of the trial,
not only were the BP readings of the placebo group higher than the BP readings of the treatment group, but a definite dose-response
curve for the three treatment dose levels also was seen.
This indicates that
the beneficial effect of coffee intake on BP has nothing to do with caffeine, but rather with the chlorogenic acid content.
These findings have been validated by multiple studies examining different green coffee extract concentrations and populations.8,
9 In each trial, a statistically significant reduction of systolic BP was seen with no documented adverse
effects.
Researchers looking at human vasoreactivity monitored nitric
oxide activity in individuals after daily intake of a measured amount of green coffee extract. For four months, parameters
indicative of endothelial function were monitored daily. At the end of the test period, the vasodilatory response was found
to be significantly higher in the test group than in the placebo group, and total plasma homocysteine levels were also lower
than at baseline.10
A small lab study using human cell culture lines focused on the chemoprotective and antigenotoxic activities of green
coffee extract.11 Human colon and liver cells were treated with a dose-calculated solution of chlorogenic acid and cultured
under the same conditions as the placebo cell cultures. Both cell lines were then tested for levels of oxidative stress, such
as membrane disruption, DNA damage, and cell death.
This article originally appeared on Clinical Advisor.
Insulin
Sensitizers Linked With Reduced Risk of Cancer in Women
(HealthDay
News) – Insulin sensitizers, particularly thiazolidinedione use, may reduce the risk of cancer in female patients with
type 2 diabetes, according to research published online Dec. 5 in Diabetes,
Obesity and Metabolism.
Grace E. Ching Sun, DO, from the Cleveland Clinic, and colleagues retrospectively analyzed the electronic health
record-based Cleveland Clinic Diabetes Registry (25,613 patients) and cross-indexed it with the histology-based tumor registry
(48,051 cancer occurrences) over an eight-year period (1998–2006).
The researchers found that over the study period there were 892 incident cancer cases. Prostate and breast cancers
were the most common (14.5% and 11.7%, respectively). The cancer risk in women was decreased 32% with thiazolidinedione use
compared with sulphonylurea use (hazard ratio [HR], 0.68). The cancer risk was reduced 21% with insulin sensitizers (biguanides
and thiazolidinediones) compared to insulin secretagogues (sulphonylureas and meglitinides) (HR, 0.79). In men there were
no differences in oral diabetes therapies and risk of cancer.
"Oral insulin sensitizers are associated with decreased malignancy risk in women with type 2 diabetes mellitus,"
Sun and colleagues conclude.
One author disclosed financial
ties to the pharmaceutical industry; the diabetes registry was supported by funds from the pharmaceutical industry.
Abstract
Full Text
Lower Blood Pressure in
Patients with CKD Is Associated with Fewer Adverse Cardiovascular Events Paul S. Mueller,
MD, MPH, FACP Reviewing Blood Pressure Lowering Treatment Trialists' Collaboration., BMJ 2013 Oct 3; 347:f5680 The benefits were more pronounced
in patients with chronic kidney disease than in patients without. |
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with hypertension
and risk for cardiovascular (CV) disease. Whether drug therapy to lower blood pressure (BP) in patients with CKD lowers CV
risk is unclear. In this meta-analysis of 25 randomized trials (152,000 participants, 30% with CKD), investigators determined
the CV effects of BP-lowering drug therapy in people with CKD (glomerular filtration rate [GFR], <60 mL/minute/1.73m2)
or without CKD. Compared with placebo, angiotensin-converting–enzyme (ACE) inhibitors
lowered risk for major adverse CV events by 19%, and calcium-channel blockers (CCBs) lowered risk by 28%, regardless of patients'
baseline GFRs. Compared with placebo, ACE inhibitors or CCBs reduced adverse CV events by 17% for every reduction of 5 mm
Hg in systolic BP. However, the absolute benefit of BP lowering was more pronounced for patients with low GFRs (number needed
to treat [NNT] to prevent 1 major adverse CV event, 35) than for patients with normal GFRs (NNT, 53). Finally, no particular
BP-lowering drug regimen was obviously more effective than any other in preventing adverse CV outcomes. COMMENT In this meta-analysis, blood pressure lowering with ACE inhibitors or calcium-channel blockers lessened risk for major
adverse cardiovascular events, regardless of glomerular filtration rate. However, absolute benefit was higher for patients
with chronic kidney disease, because their baseline CV risk was higher. These results are important because an estimated 10%
to 15% of the adult population has CKD. However, the researchers did not assess whether a threshold exists, below which further
BP lowering would confer no additional benefits and might confer risk. Indeed, a recent large observational study suggests
such a threshold occurs in patients with CKD . Treatment
of Anemia in Patients With Heart Disease: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the American College of Physicians AbstractAbstract | Methods | Benefits of Treatment of Anemia With RBC Transfusions | Harms of Treatment of Anemia With RBC Transfusions | Benefits of Treatment of Anemia With ESAs |Harms of Treatment of Anemia With ESAs | Influence of Hemoglobin Target Levels on Outcomes | Benefits of Using Intravenous Iron to Treat Iron Deficiency With or Without Anemia |Harms of Using Intravenous Iron to Treat Iron Deficiency With or Without Anemia | Summary |Inconclusive Areas of Evidence | ACP High-Value Care | References This article has
been corrected. The original version (PDF) is appended to this article as a supplement. Description: The American College of Physicians (ACP) developed this guideline
to present the evidence and provide clinical recommendations on the treatment of anemia and iron deficiency in adult patients
with heart disease. Methods: This guideline is based on published literature in the English language on anemia and iron deficiency from 1947 to
July 2012 that was identified using MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library. Literature was reassessed in April 2013, and additional
studies were included. Outcomes evaluated for this guideline included mortality; hospitalization; exercise tolerance; quality
of life; and cardiovascular events (defined as myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure exacerbation, arrhythmia, or
cardiac death) and harms, including hypertension, venous thromboembolic events, and ischemic cerebrovascular events. The target
audience for this guideline includes all clinicians, and the target patient population is anemic or iron-deficient adult patients
with heart disease. This guideline grades the evidence and recommendations using the ACP's clinical practice guidelines
grading system. Recommendation 1: ACP recommends using a restrictive red blood
cell transfusion strategy (trigger hemoglobin threshold of 7 to 8 g/dL compared with higher hemoglobin levels) in hospitalized
patients with coronary heart disease. (Grade: weak recommendation; low-quality evidence) Recommendation 2: ACP recommends against the use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in patients with mild to moderate anemia and
congestive heart failure or coronary heart disease. (Grade: strong recommendation; moderate-quality evidence) http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=1784292 |
Compression Stockings After
DVT Don't Prevent Post-Thrombotic Syndrome Kahn SR et al., Lancet 2013 Dec 6; Results of this large placebo-controlled
trial conflict with those of earlier studies. |
Post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS) develops in 25% to 50% of
patients after deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and causes chronic symptoms such as pain, edema, skin changes, and leg ulcers.
Two prior small randomized studies showed a benefit for elastic compression stockings in preventing PTS, but neither trial
was placebo-controlled. Now, researchers in Canada have conducted a multicenter, placebo-controlled trial in which 806 patients
with first symptomatic proximal DVTs (i.e., DVTs affecting the popliteal vein or above) were randomized to wear either active
knee-high compression stockings or placebo stockings during waking hours for 2 years. Placebo stockings were identical in
appearance to active compression stockings but delivered negligible compression. Strictly defined PTS occurred in 14.2% of patients in the active-compression stocking group and in 12.7% of those in
the placebo group — a nonsignificant difference. When more-inclusive criteria for PTS were employed, incidence was about
52% in each group. No between-group differences were found in syndrome severity, DVT recurrence rates, venous ulcer incidence,
quality-of-life scores, or mortality. COMMENTThese unexpected results suggest that the benefit of elastic
compression stockings shown in earlier, open-label trials might be attributable to other helpful actions taken by compression
stocking users or to some benefit of stockings that is unrelated to measurable compression. In any case, the best strategy
for preventing post-thrombotic syndrome probably is preventing DVTs in the first place. |
Combination in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus and Acute Coronary
Syndrome
Acute coronary syndromes (ACS) in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are associated with a high risk
for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) despite statin treatment. The impact of combined bezafibrate and statin therapy
in patients with DM and ACS has not been specifically investigated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association
of combined therapy with 30-day MACEs in patients with DM participating in the nationwide Acute Coronary Syndrome Israeli
Surveys (ACSIS). The study population comprised 3,063 patients with DM from the ACSIS 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, and 2010
enrollment waves who were alive at discharge and received statins. Of these, 225 (7.3%) received on discharge combined bezafibrate
and statin therapy, and 2,838 (92.7%) were treated with statins alone. MACEs were defined as a composite measure of death,
recurrent myocardial infarction, recurrent ischemia, stent thrombosis, ischemic stroke, and urgent revascularization. The
development of 30-day MACEs was recorded in 8% patients receiving combination therapy and 14.2% of those receiving statins
alone (p = 0.01). Crude 1-year mortality and 30-day rehospitalization rates were also significantly lower in patients
receiving combination therapy: 4.0% versus 8.1% (p = 0.03) and 13.3% versus 21.6% (p = 0.003), respectively.
Multivariate analysis identified combined therapy as an independent predictor of reduced risk for 30-day MACEs, with an odds
ratio of 0.56 (95% confidence interval 0.34 to 0.92), corresponding to a 44% relative risk reduction. In conclusion, a
significantly lower risk for 30-day MACEs was observed in statin-treated patients with DM who also received bezafibrate after
ACS. Signals regarding improvement of 30-day rehospitalization and 1-year mortality rates emerged as wel
http://www.ajconline.org/article/S0002-9149(13)01917-6/abstract?rss=yes
Colorectal Cancer Associated with Decreased Variety
in Gut Microbiota
Patients with colorectal cancer
have a narrower range of fecal bacteria, according to a study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Editorialists express enthusiasm for the results, but caution that "a lot more research" is needed before the findings
can be used clinically.
Researchers analyzed bacterial
DNA from fecal samples that were collected roughly 25 years ago in a case-control study of patients with colorectal cancer;
the controls were patients undergoing elective surgery. Fecal samples were collected after confirmation of the diagnosis,
but before therapy.
Patients with cancer had decreased
overall diversity of bacteria in their gut relative to the controls. For example, they had a lower relative abundance of Clostridia
species, but an increased presence ofFusobacterium.
The editorialists write that the "exciting" findings echo similar observations that have
suggested a role for the microbiota in colorectal cancer.
JNCI article
Wider Role for HDL in Controlling Inflammation?
You may have wondered how HDL
plays its "good cholesterol" role. According to a Nature Immunology study, HDL increases the activity of a transcriptional
regulator, ATF3, which limits the inflammatory responses in macrophages.
The study authors think that this action of HDL "may be beneficial in other chronic inflammatory diseases."
Nature Immunology article
At Least Half of Cardiovascular
Risk Associated with Adiposity Is Mediated by Metabolic Risk Factors
The Global Burden of Metabolic
Risk Factors for Chronic Diseases Collaboration (BMI Mediated Effects)., Lancet 2013 Nov 22;
Blood
pressure alone accounted for one third of excess risk for coronary heart disease.
HbA1c and Severe Hypoglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes
Lipska KJ et al., Diabetes Care 2013 Nov 36:3535
Hypoglycemia appears to be more common at both the lowest
and highest glycosylated hemoglobin levels.
Exposure to Arsenic
and Incident Cardiovascular Disease
Moon KA et al., Ann Intern Med 2013 Nov 19; 159:649
Even low to moderate exposure is associated
with elevated risk for heart disease and stroke.
Should We Lower Blood
Pressure in Acute Ischemic Stroke?
He J et al., JAMA 2013 Nov 17;
In a randomized trial, outcomes were neither
better nor worse with early antihypertensive therapy.
Duration of Diabetes
Impacts Outcomes at Any Age
(HealthDay
News) – Type 2 diabetes morbidity and mortality are associated with disease duration and advancing age, according to a study
published online Dec. 9 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
Elbert S. Huang, MD, MPH, from the University of Chicago, and colleagues compared rates of diabetes
complications and mortality across age categories (60–69 years, 70–79 years, ≥80 years) and diabetes duration
categories (0–9 years and ≥10 years) using data from 72,310 older patients with type 2 diabetes.
The researchers found that for older adults with shorter diabetes duration the most common nonfatal
complications were cardiovascular complications and hypoglycemia. For example, among 70- to 79-year-olds with short duration
of diabetes, coronary artery disease and hypoglycemia rates were higher (11.47 and 5.03 per 1,000 person-years, respectively)
than end-stage renal disease, lower limb amputation, and acute hyperglycemic events (2.6, 1.28, and 0.82 per 1,000 person-years,
respectively). Patients in the same age group with a long duration of diabetes had a similar pattern (rates of 18.98 and 15.88,
compared with 7.64, 4.26, and 1.76, respectively). For a given age group, longer disease duration was associated with a considerable
increase in the rates of each outcome, especially hypoglycemia and microvascular complications. The rates of hypoglycemia,
cardiovascular complications, and mortality increased with advancing age for a given duration of diabetes, while the rates
of microvascular complications remained stable or decreased.
"The data from this study may inform the design and scope of public policy interventions that meet the unique
needs of elderly patients with the disease," the authors write.
Abstract
What You Need to Know About the New ACC/AHA Guideline
Diet Influences Cancer
Men with prostate cancer who consumr a low-fat fish oil diet
show beneficial changes in their cancer tissue.
Prostate cancer is a leading cause of death among men in the United States. University of California/Los Angeles (UCLA;
California, USA) researchers have previously found that a low-fat diet with fish oil supplements eaten for four to six
weeks prior to prostate removal slowed the growth of cancer cells in human prostate cancer tissue compared to a traditional,
high-fat Western diet. Led by William Aronson, that study also found that the men on the low-fat fish oil diet
were able to change the composition of their cell membranes in both the healthy cells and the cancer cells in the prostate.
They had increased levels of omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil and decreased levels of the more pro-inflammatory omega-6
fatty acids from corn oil in the cell membranes, which may directly affect the biology of the cells. The present
study reports that men with prostate cancer who ate a low-fat diet and took fish oil supplements have lower levels of pro-inflammatory
substances in their blood and a lower cell cycle progression (CCP) score, which may help prevent prostate cancers from becoming
more aggressive.
Soy and Tomato Combo Best For Prostate Cancer Prevention
Study results suggest that eating a combination
of tomatoes and soy foods offers the most effective protection against prostate cancer.
New research suggests that men could help to protect themselves
from prostate cancer by eating a combination of tomatoes and soy foods. John Erdman, a professor of food science and nutrition
at the University of Illinois, and colleagues studied the effect of diet on mice genetically engineered to develop an aggressive
form of prostate cancer. Between the age of 4 and 18-weeks old the mice were fed 1 of 4 diets: 10% whole tomato powder;
2% soy germ; 10% whole tomato powder and 2% soy germ; or a control diet containing neither tomato nor soy. Results showed
that only 45% of mice fed a combination of tomato and soy had developed prostate cancer by the end of the study, whereas 66%
of mice who received tomato or soy developed the disease. In contrast, 100% of mice in the control group developed prostate
cancer. "Eating tomato, soy, and the combination all significantly reduced prostate cancer incidence. But the combination
gave us the best results,” said Professor Erdman. Study co-author Krystle Zuniga added: "The results of the mouse
study suggest that 3 to 4 servings of tomato products per week and 1 to 2 servings of soy foods daily could protect against
prostate cancer." The researchers recommend eating whole tomatoes and drinking soy milk instead of taking lycopene and
soy isoflavones supplements.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/uoic-sat050813.php
Coffee Compounds Assist Heart Health
Polyphenols in coffee may improve the function
of the cells lining blood vessels among healthy men.
The cells that line blood vessels, known as the endothelium, perform many functions including to maintain elasticity
of blood vessels and regulate the activity of immune cells. Endothelial function is measured by detecting transient increases
in blood flow, a marker known as the reactive hyperemia index (RHI). Japanese researchers enrolled a group of healthy, non-diabetic
men in a study in which each was randomly assigned to consume = a 75 g glucose load either with or without green coffee bean
polyphenols. The team observed that blood glucose and insulin levels increased after both interventions, and there were no
differences between the groups. However, the reactive hyperemia index rose significantly in the polyphenol group, as compared
to their starting levels. The study authors conclude that: "These findings suggest that a single ingestion of [coffee
polyphenols] improves peripheral endothelial function after glucose loading in healthy subjects.”
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Research/Coffee-polyphenols-show-heart-health-potential-for-healthy-men-Study/
Chelation Therapy Reduces
Heart Attacks & Death
The treatment that is utilized to detoxify the body is shown to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events and death
in people with diabetes.
Chelation therapy reduces cardiovascular events for older
patients with diabetes
Chelation treatments reduced cardiovascular events, such
as heart attacks, and death in patients with diabetes but not in those who did not have diabetes, according to analyses of
data from the National Institutes of Health-funded Trial to Assess Chelation Therapy (TACT). However, researchers say more
studies are needed before it’s known whether this promising finding leads to a treatment option.
Chelation is a chemical process in which a substance is delivered intravenously (through the veins)
to bind atoms of metals or minerals, and hold them tightly so that they can be removed from the body. Chelation is conventionally
used as a treatment for heavy metal (like lead) poisoning, although some people use chelation as an unapproved and unproven
treatment for conditions like heart disease.
Chelation
therapy is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat heart disease. However, use of chelation therapy
to treat heart disease and other health problems grew in the United States between 2002 and 2007 by nearly 68 percent to 111,000
people, according to the 2008 National Health Statistics Report.
The diabetes subgroup analysis of TACT was published today in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes
and presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2013. TACT is a study supported by NIH’s
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
TACT’s initial report was published in the March 27, 2013, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association. This
previous report showed that infusions of a form of chelation therapy using disodium ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA)
produced a modest but statistically significant reduction in cardiovascular events in all EDTA-treated participants. However,
further examination of the data showed that patients with diabetes were significantly impacted by chelation therapy while
patients without diabetes were not.
The patients with
diabetes, which made up approximately one third of 1,708 participants, demonstrated a 41 percent overall reduction in the
risk of any cardiovascular event; a 40 percent reduction in the risk of death from heart disease nonfatal stroke, or nonfatal
heart attack; a 52 percent reduction in recurrent heart attacks; and a 43 percent reduction in death from any cause. In contrast,
there was no significant benefit of EDTA treatment in the subgroup of 1,045 participants who did not have diabetes.
“These are striking results that, if supported by future research, could point the way towards
new treatments to prevent complications of diabetes,” said Gervasio A. Lamas, M.D., the study’s principal investigator
and chairman of medicine and chief of the Columbia University Division of Cardiology at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami
Beach.
From 2003 to 2010, 1,708 adults aged 50 and older were
enrolled in TACT, of whom 633 had diabetes. Study participants had suffered a heart attack 6 weeks or more before enrollment
(on average, the heart attack occurred about 4.5 years earlier). The participants were assigned randomly to receive 40 infusions
of disodium EDTA chelation solution or a placebo solution. Patients also were randomly assigned to receive high doses of oral
vitamins and minerals or an identical oral placebo. Most participants also took standard medicines for heart attack survivors,
such as aspirin, beta blockers, and statins. They were followed for a minimum of 1 year and up to 5 years, with followup ending
in October 2011.
TACT was not designed to discover how or why chelation
might benefit patients with diabetes.
“Although
subgroup analyses of clinical trials do not provide definitive answers, they are very useful in identifying future research
questions,” said Josephine Briggs, M.D., Director of NCCAM. “The effects seen in this population are large and
very intriguing. This analysis suggests strongly that more research is needed to examine possible benefits of chelation in
diabetics and the potential mechanisms.”
“We
share Dr. Briggs’s interest in these compelling findings,” said Michael Lauer, M.D., Director of the NHLBI’s
Division of Cardiovascular Sciences. “Additional studies are needed before we can determine the potential place of EDTA
chelation therapy, if any, in the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease and diabetes.”
TACT was supported by grants from the NIH’s NCCAM (U01AT001156) and NHLBI (U01HL092607).
For more information or to arrange an interview with an NIH spokesperson, please contact the NCCAM
Communications Office at 301-496-7790 or nccampress@mail.nih.gov. To schedule an interview with Dr. Lamas,
contact Robert Alonso at 305-674-2600 or Robert.Alonso@msmc.com. Follow Dr. Lamas on Twitter .
Part of the National Institutes of Health, the mission of The National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) is to define, through rigorous scientific investigation, the usefulness and safety of complementary
and alternative medicine interventions and their roles in improving health and health care. For additional information, call
NCCAM’s Clearinghouse toll free at 1-888-644-6226, or visit the NCCAM website at http://nccam.nih.gov. Follow us onTwitter , Facebook , and YouTube .
Part of the National Institutes of Health, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) plans,
conducts, and supports research related to the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of heart, blood vessel, lung,
and blood diseases; and sleep disorders. The Institute also administers national health education campaigns on women and heart
disease, healthy weight for children, and other topics. NHLBI press releases and other materials are available online atwww.nhlbi.nih.gov.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research
agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is
the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating
the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visitwww.nih.gov.
New
JNC 8 Hypertension Guidelines: What Does the Panel Recommend Now?
The
Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) has released new guidelines on the management of
adult hypertension.
RELATED: Cardiovascular
Disease Resource Center
The authors formed nine recommendations
which are discussed in detail along with the supporting evidence. Evidence was taken from randomized controlled trials,
the gold standard for establishing efficacy and effectiveness. Some of the new major recommendations include:
1. In patients aged ≥60 years, initiate pharmacologic treatment in systolic BP ≥150mmHg
or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal systolic BP <150mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg. (Strong Recommendation–Grade
A)
2. In patients aged <60 years, initiate pharmacologic
treatment at diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal <90mmHg. (For ages 30–59 years, Strong Recommendation–Grade
A; For ages 18–29 years, Expert Opinion–Grade E)
3. In patients aged <60 years, initiate pharmacologic treatment at systolic BP ≥140mmHg and treat to
a goal <140mmHg. (Expert Opinion–Grade E)
4. In patients aged ≥18 years with chronic kidney disease, initiate pharmacologic treatment at systolic BP
≥140mmHg or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to goal systolic BP <140mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg. (Expert
Opinion–Grade E)
5. In patients aged ≥18
years with diabetes, initiate pharmacologic treatment at
systolic BP ≥140mmHg or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal systolic BP <140mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg.
(Expert Opinion–Grade E)
6. In the general nonblack
population, including those with diabetes, initial antihypertensive treatment should include a thiazide-type diuretic, CCB, ACE inhibitor, or ARB.
(Moderate Recommendation–Grade B) This recommendation is different from the JNC 7 in which the panel recommended thiazide-type
diuretics as initial therapy for most patients.
7.
In the general black population, including those with diabetes, initial antihypertensive treatment should include a
thiazide-type diuretic or CCB. (For general black population: Moderate Recommendation - Grade B; for black patients with
diabetes: Weak Recommendation–Grade C)
8.
In the population aged ≥18 years with chronic kidney disease, initial (or add-on) antihypertensive treatment
should include an ACE inhibitor or ARB to improve kidney outcomes. (Moderate Recommendation–Grade B)
9. If goal BP is not reached within a month of treatment, increase the dose of the initial
drug or add a second drug from one of the classes in Recommendation 6. If goal BP cannot be reached with two drugs, add and
titrate a third drug from the list provided. Do not use an ACEI and an ARB together in the same patient. If goal BP cannot
be reached using only the drugs in Recommendation 6 because of a contraindication or the need to use more than 3 drugs to
reach goal BP, antihypertensive drugs from other classes can be used. (Expert Opinion–Grade E)
The full guidelines have been published online
at JAMA.
Risk of Developing
Diverticulitis Lower Than Thought
(HealthDay News) – Only about 4% of patients with an incidental finding of diverticulosis progress to
acute diverticulitis in the long term, according to research published in the December issue ofClinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Kamyar Shahedi, MD, of the University of California in Los Angeles, and colleagues retrospectively analyzed data
from the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System from January 1996 through January 2011 to measure the long-term
risk of acute diverticulitis among patients with diverticulosis discovered incidentally during colonoscopy.
The researchers found that 95 of 2,222 patients with diverticulosis (4.3%) developed diverticulitis
during the 11-year follow-up period. Among these patients, 23 (1%) met the rigorous definition of diverticulitis. The median
time-to-event for the development of diverticulitis was 7.1 years. For each additional decade of age at the time of diagnosis
of diverticulosis, the risk of developing diverticulitis was reduced by 24% (hazard ratio, 0.76).
"These results question the traditional teaching about the rate of progression from incidental
diverticulosis to acute diverticulitis," the authors write. "Moreover, they also suggest that patients who are diagnosed
with diverticulosis at a younger age may incur more risk of developing diverticulitis."
Shire Development funded the study; several authors disclosed financial ties to pharmaceutical companies,
including Shire Pharmaceuticals.
Abstract
Full Text
Metformin Leads to Modest Reductions in BMI
Among Nondiabetic Children
Adding
metformin to lifestyle interventions in nondiabetic children leads to modest reductions in BMI, but the clinical benefit is
uncertain, according to a review in JAMA Pediatrics.
Researchers examined data from
14 randomized trials comparing metformin with a control intervention in some 950 overweight or obese children aged 10 to 16
years without diabetes. For the most part, participants received metformin plus a lifestyle intervention or a lifestyle intervention
alone.
In studies lasting 6 to 12 months, metformin plus lifestyle
interventions conferred a 1.4-unit greater reduction in BMI than lifestyle interventions alone. Gastrointestinal events were
the most common side effects.
The researchers
write: "Although these findings are based on statistically significant, moderate-strength evidence, the clinical benefit
of such a small reduction in BMI is certainly questionable." They call for larger trials to "determine whether there
are specific patients who may have a clinical, and not just statistical, benefit from treatment."
JAMA Pediatrics article
Some ARBs May Outperform Others in Lowering
CV Risk in Diabetes
The
angiotensin-receptor blockers telmisartan and valsartan might help prevent major cardiovascular events better than other ARBs
in patients with diabetes, according to a CMAJ study.
Using Canadian databases,
researchers identified 54,000 older adults with diabetes who were first-time users of ARBs. After multivariable adjustment,
both telmisartan
and valsartan were associated with about a 15% reduction in risk for hospital admission for acute myocardial infarction, heart
failure, or stroke, compared with irbesartan. The risk was not significantly reduced for candesartan or losartan.
The authors
conclude that "a class effect may not be assumed when using angiotensin-receptor blockers for the prevention of diabetes-related
macrovascular complications or heart failure, and that telmisartan and valsartan may be the preferred drugs for this indication."
Meanwhile, a commentator concludes, "without appropriately designed randomized controlled trials, there is scant evidence
to support preferring one drug in this class over another for patients with type 2 diabetes."
CMAJ article
ACE-Inhibitors and ARBs Associated with Reduced
Need for Dialysis in Advanced CKD
Use of either angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs)
— but not the two together — may reduce the need for dialysis in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease,
a JAMA Internal Medicine study
finds.
Researchers in Taiwan studied antihypertensive use among
roughly 28,000 patients who had predialysis stage 5 CKD, hypertension, and anemia.
During a median 7 months' follow-up, patients taking ACE-inhibitors or ARBs had a lower likelihood
of long-term dialysis (hazard ratio, 0.94) and the composite outcome of dialysis or death (HR, 0.94), compared with nonusers.
Concomitant ACE-inhibitor/ARB use wasn't associated with risk reduction. Hospitalization for hyperkalemia was more common
among ACE-inhibitor/ARB users than nonusers (9.2% vs. 6.7%).
Commentators write: "For selected patients with no history of severe hyperkalemia or prior repeated episodes
of acute kidney injury and with good adherence to laboratory monitoring, clinicians may elect to continue [renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
system] blockade even in advanced CKD in an effort to delay the onset of end-stage renal disease."
JAMA Internal Medicine article
Optimal
Testosterone Levels Predict Better Survival in Older Men
Optimal testosterone
levels are a biomarker for better survival in older men, according to a new study.
The study of 3,690 community-dwelling men aged 70-89 years showed that those with midrange levels of
testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) had the lowest all-cause mortality and those with higher DHT had lower mortality
from ischemic heart disease (IHD). Estradiol levels did not predict all-cause or IHD mortality.
Of the 3,690 men, 974 (26.4%) died, including 325 who died from IHD. Men who died had significantly
lower mean baseline total testosterone levels (12.8 vs. 13.2 nmol/L), DHT levels (1.4 vs. 1.5 nmol/L), and estradiol (71.6
vs. 74.0 pmol/L), Bu Beng Yeap, MBBS, PhD, of Fremantle Hospital in Fremantle, Western Australia, and colleagues reported
online ahead of print in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
After controlling for other risk
factors, men in the second and third quartiles of total testosterone had a significant 18% and 22% decreased risk of death
from any cause, respectively, compared with those in the first quartile. Men in the third quartile of DHT had a significant
24% decreased risk of death from any cause compared with men in the first quartile. Death risk was not significantly lower
among men in the fourth quartile of total testosterone or DHT compared with the first quartile.
Additionally, results showed that men in the third or fourth quartiles of DHT had a significant 42%
and 31% decreased risk of death from IHD, respectively, compared with men in the first quartile.
Association of testosterone therapy with mortality, myocardial infarction, and stroke in men with low testosterone
levels.
IMPORTANCE:
Rates of testosterone therapy are increasing and the effects of testosterone therapy on cardiovascular outcomes and
mortality are unknown. A recent randomized clinical trial of testosterone therapy in men with a high prevalence of cardiovascular
diseases was stopped prematurely due to adverse cardiovascular events raising concerns about testosterone therapy safety.
OBJECTIVES:
To assess the association between
testosterone therapy and all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction (MI), or stroke among male veterans and to determine whether
this association is modified by underlying coronary artery disease.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS:
A retrospective national cohort study of men with low
testosterone levels (<300 ng/dL) who underwent coronary angiography in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system between 2005 and
2011.
MAIN OUTCOMES
AND MEASURES:
Primary outcome was a composite of all-cause mortality, MI, and ischemic stroke.
RESULTS:
Of the 8709 men with a total testosterone
level lower than 300 ng/dL, 1223 patients started testosterone therapy after a median of 531 days following coronary angiography.
Of the 1710 outcome events, 748 men died, 443 had MIs, and 519 had strokes. Of 7486 patients not receiving testosterone therapy,
681 died, 420 had MIs, and 486 had strokes. Among 1223 patients receiving testosterone therapy, 67 died, 23 had MIs, and 33
had strokes. The absolute rate of events were 19.9% in the no testosterone therapy group vs 25.7% in the testosterone therapy
group, with an absolute risk difference of 5.8% (95% CI, -1.4% to 13.1%) at 3 years after coronary angiography. In Cox proportional
hazards models adjusting for the presence of coronary artery disease, testosterone therapy use as a time-varying covariate
was associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes (hazard ratio, 1.29; 95% CI, 1.04 to 1.58). There was no significant
difference in the effect size of testosterone therapy among those with and without coronary artery disease (test for interaction,
P = .41).
CONCLUSIONS
AND RELEVANCE:
Among a cohort of men in the VA health care system who underwent coronary angiography
and had a low serum testosterone level, the use of testosterone therapy was associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes.
These findings may inform the discussion about the potential risks of testosterone therapy.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24193080
BMD Testing Every 2 Years May Not Improve Fracture
Risk Prediction
The current
practice of testing bone mineral density every 2 years in older adults may be too frequent, suggests a JAMA study.
Roughly 800 adults (mean age, 75) underwent two femoral neck BMD tests an average of 3.7 years apart
as part of the Framingham Osteoporosis Study. After 10 years of follow-up, the addition of BMD change to a model predicting
fracture risk did no better than use of baseline BMD alone. With a second BMD test, the percentage of patients with a hip
fracture reclassified as high risk increased only 3.9%, while those with a major osteoporotic fracture who were upgraded to
high risk increased 9.7%.
The authors conclude: "The
current clinical practice of repeating a BMD test every 2 years to improve fracture risk stratification may not be necessary
in all adults 75 years or older untreated for osteoporosis. Further study is needed to determine an appropriate rescreening
interval and to identify individuals who might benefit from more frequent rescreening intervals."
JAMA article
Effect
of Soy Protein Isolate Supplementation on Biochemical Recurrence of Prostate Cancer After Radical ProstatectomyA Randomized Trial
Importance Soy consumption has been suggested to reduce risk or recurrence
of prostate cancer, but this has not been tested in a randomized trial with prostate cancer as the end point.
Objective To determine whether daily consumption of a soy protein isolate
supplement for 2 years reduces the rate of biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy or delays
such recurrence.
Design, Setting, and Participants Randomized, double-blind trial conducted from July 1997 to May
2010 at 7 US centers comparing daily consumption of a soy protein supplement vs placebo in 177 men at high risk of recurrence
after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. Supplement intervention was started within 4 months after surgery and continued
for up to 2 years, with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements made at 2-month intervals in the first year and every
3 months thereafter.
Intervention Participants were randomized to receive a daily serving of a beverage powder
containing 20 g of protein in the form of either soy protein isolate (n=87) or, as placebo, calcium caseinate (n=90).
Main Outcomes and Measures Biochemical recurrence rate of prostate cancer (defined as development of a PSA
level of ≥0.07 ng/mL) over the first 2 years following randomization and time to recurrence.
Results The trial was stopped early for lack of treatment effects at
a planned interim analysis with 81 evaluable participants in the intervention group and 78 in the placebo group. Overall,
28.3% of participants developed biochemical recurrence within 2 years of entering the trial (close to the a priori predicted
recurrence rate of 30%). Among these, 22 (27.2%) occurred in the intervention group and 23 (29.5%) in the placebo group. The
resulting hazard ratio for active treatment was 0.96 (95% CI, 0.53-1.72; log-rank P = .89).
Adherence was greater than 90% and there were no apparent adverse events related to supplementation.
Conclusion
and Relevance Daily consumption of a beverage powder supplement containing
soy protein isolate for 2 years following radical prostatectomy did not reduce biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer in
men at high risk of PSA failure.
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=1710457&utm_source=Silverchair%20Information%20Systems&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=MASTER%3AJAMALatestIssueTOCNotification07%2F09%2F2013
FDA warns of renal
failure with Byetta
The FDA has notified healthcare professionals that the Prescribing Information
for Byetta (exenatide injection, from Amylin and Lilly) has been revised to include information on post-marketing reports
of altered kidney function, including acute renal failure and insufficiency.
Fiber intake and heart disease risk
Low dietary fiber intake from 1999 to 2010 in the US, and
associations between higher dietary fiber and a lower prevalence of cardiometabolic risks, suggest the need to develop new
strategies and policies to increase dietary fiber intake. The American Journal of Medicine
Antibiotics overprescribed for
skin infections
Approximately half of uncomplicated skin infections involved
avoidable antibiotic exposure. Antibiotic use could be reduced through treatment approaches using short courses of a single
antibiotic. The American Journal of Medicine
Metformin has different cardiac effects on men and women
Metformin treatment alone was associated with lower fat metabolism
and increased cardiac glucose uptake in women, but it had negative effects on heart metabolism in men, according to a study
in the American Journal of Physiology -- Heart and Circulatory Physiology. Researchers said the findings shed light on why
diabetes drug trials show conflicts and also underscore the need to determine optimal treatments for men and women. HealthDay News(12/16), RedOrbit
Older women spend a majority of their day being sedentary
Among more than 7,200 older women, the average amount of time
spent in sedentary behavior was 9.7 hours each day, or 65.5% of their waking hours, according to a study published in JAMA.
Researchers noted that about one-third of sedentary periods lasted approximately 30 minutes. Family Practice News
Handgrip predicts hip surgery outcome
In older patients with hip fractures, early grip strength
evaluation might provide important prognostic information regarding the patient's future functional trajectory. The American Journal of Medicine
High-density lipoprotein function in heart failure
This study concluded that high-density lipoprotein function
is significantly impaired, and oxidation products of arachidonic and linoleic acids are markedly elevated, in patients with
heart failure compared to non-heart failure controls. The American Journal of Cardiology(12/15/2013)
Cholesterol, statins and longevity from age 70 to 90
The debate over cholesterol and statins is even more controversial
when talking about the elderly. A research study out of Israel found that statin use from age 85 to 90 was actually associated
with decreased mortality. Also surprisingly, survival was significantly increased in those treated with statins versus no
statins aged 78 to 85. The noninterventional nature of the study may limit conclusions that can be drawn from it, but it will
certainly stimulate debate, and, hopefully, further studies. (Free abstract only.) Journal of the American Medical Directors Association(12/2013)
Age, disease duration affect morbidity in type 2 diabetes
A report in JAMA Internal Medicine revealed that age and disease
duration played key roles in hypoglycemia and other complications in type 2 diabetes patients. Researchers examined 72,310
patients and found hypoglycemic events ranged between 3 per 1,000 person-years in youngest patients with the shortest disease
duration to 19.6 per 1,000 person-years among the oldest patients with the longest disease duration, which suggest that intensive
glucose control may not yield benefits in the latter group. Family Practice News
Narrow- and broad-spectrum antibiotics work equally well in pneumonia
U.S. researchers looked at nearly 500 patients with pneumonia
aged 2 months to 18 years and found no substantial differences in readmission rates, fever duration and length of oxygen time
between those treated with narrow-spectrum antibiotics and those given broad-spectrum drugs. However, the study published
in the journal Pediatrics showed that the length of stay in the narrow-spectrum group was 10 hours shorter than the broad-spectrum
patients.DailyRx.com
Fiber intake and heart disease risk
Low dietary fiber intake from 1999 to 2010 in the US, and
associations between higher dietary fiber and a lower prevalence of cardiometabolic risks, suggest the need to develop new
strategies and policies to increase dietary fiber intake. The American Journal of Medicine
Dietary Supplements Blamed for Sharp Rise in
Drug-Related Liver Injuries
Dietary
supplements, including many marketed for muscle-building and weight loss, account for a spike in drug-related liver injuries
over the past decade, according to a front-page story in Sunday's New York Times. Many patients ultimately
recover, but some end up requiring transplants or dying from liver failure.
Supplements accounted for nearly 20 percent of drug-related liver injuries that led to hospitalization in 2010-2012,
the Times reports,
up from 7 percent in 2004. The data, from the NIH's National Liver Network, showed that many of the products were bodybuilding
supplements that contained steroids not listed on the label. Use of green tea extract was also frequently reported. The extract
contains catechins, which are said to increase metabolism; in high doses, they can cause liver toxicity.
Of over 50,000 supplements sold in the U.S., less than 1% have been examined well enough to determine
their adverse effect profile, one expert told the Times.
New York Times story
Early Doses of Warfarin
Paradoxically Associated with Higher Stroke Risk
Patients
with atrial fibrillation seem to be at increased risk for ischemic stroke when starting warfarin prophylaxis, according to
a case-control study in the European Heart Journal.
The study was undertaken after
trials of both apixaban and rivaroxaban noted increased stroke risks among patients transitioning to open-label warfarin.
This study was funded by the makers of apixaban.
Using
a U.K. database, researchers examined a cohort of some 70,000 patients with AF; they matched 5500 cases of ischemic stroke
with 55,000 controls. AF patients initiating warfarin therapy had a 71% increased risk for ischemic stroke within the first
30 days of therapy, compared with those on no anticoagulants. The risk was highest in the first week. However, the warfarin
group had half the stroke risk after 30 days.
The
authors say the observed "paradoxical procoagulant effect" may be due to warfarin's effect in blocking some
endogenous anticoagulants.
European Heart Journal article
* ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Enzyme
BACE1 may be important in predicting onset of Alzheimer disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jxV
Older Native-Americans and African-Americans with diabetes at increased risk for dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jvk
Risk for Alzheimer's disease doubled by rare gene variants
http://mnt.to/l/4jtQ
Making dementia friendly neighbourhoods
http://mnt.to/l/4jtq
New IMI project to revolutionise clinical trials for Alzheimer's drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jsQ
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News
**
High levels of maternal care has life-long impact on vulnerability to
stress
http://mnt.to/l/4jxQ
Sniffing out danger: Rutgers scientists say fearful memories can trigger heightened sense of smell
http://mnt.to/l/4jx2
High rates of PTSD, depression suffered by contractors who worked in conflict zones
http://mnt.to/l/4jsC
Symptoms of combat-related psychological trauma eased by new brief therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jst
Fear conditioning likely cause of acute stress related to prolonged viewing of media coverage of Boston Marathon bombings
http://mnt.to/l/4jrB
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY
News **
Experimental compound dramatically reduces joint inflammation
http://mnt.to/l/4jtK
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News
**
Temperature-sensitive gelling scaffolds developed to regenerate craniofacial
bone
http://mnt.to/l/4jvb
Evidence-based recommendations for platelet-rich plasma
http://mnt.to/l/4jsF
In murine osteoporosis, choloroquine reduces formation of bone resorbing cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jrG
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
Scientists halt first step of breast cancer spread in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jzP
Myriad's HRD™ test significantly predicts response to cisplatin treatment in triple negative breast cancer
patients in second research study
http://mnt.to/l/4jzy
New drug combination delayed disease progression for subgroup of women with metastatic breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jy6
First in-human trial of endoxifen shows promise as breast cancer treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jxC
Younger, early breast cancer patients often undergo unnecessary staging, imaging procedures at time
http://mnt.to/l/4jxz
Everolimus added to exemestane boosts overall response in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyZ
Certain advanced breast cancer patients may benefit from surgery before other treatment, UPMC-advised study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jwH
New models of drug-resistant breast cancer point to better treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4jwD
Deep sequencing of breast cancer tumors to predict clinical outcomes after single dose of therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jwB
Breast cancer drug halves cases in high-risk women
http://mnt.to/l/4jwq
In lower-risk breast cancer patients, Herceptin plus Taxol highly effective
http://mnt.to/l/4jv3
Genetic signature identifies patients with more aggressive triple-negative cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jtW
Identifying aggressive breast cancers in black women
http://mnt.to/l/4jtJ
Novel Agent Set for Unique Clinical Test in Inflammatory Breast Cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtF
Exercise protects against aggressive breast cancer in black women
http://mnt.to/l/4jtD
Event-free and overall survival results from NeoALTTO trial
http://mnt.to/l/4jtC
Identifying breast cancer patients most likely to benefit from trastuzumab
http://mnt.to/l/4jtB
Highly effective treatment option identified for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtz
Some older patients with breast cancer may avoid radiotherapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jty
Breast cancer screening: benefit more consistent across studies than previously understood
http://mnt.to/l/4jtx
Older breast cancer survivors benefit from exercise programs
http://mnt.to/l/4jsG
Association between oncometabolite accumulation and breast cancer prognosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jrH
Biomarker linked to aggressive breast cancers, poor outcomes in African-Americans
http://mnt.to/l/4jr6
Guideline-recommended breast cancer treatment affected by economic factors
http://mnt.to/l/4jr3
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News
**
'Breakthrough' may lead to new treatment for fatal childhood
cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jzq
Partially blocking blood vessels' energy source may stop cancer growth, blindness & other conditions
http://mnt.to/l/4jy3
Cancer diagnosis more likely to limit careers for patients from rural areas
http://mnt.to/l/4jxf
Helping cancer researchers make sense of the deluge of genetic data
http://mnt.to/l/4jwQ
Childhood cancer survivors suffer symptoms in adulthood
http://mnt.to/l/4jwr
Magnetic nanoparticles to cure cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jwg
Mechanism of cancer spread identified
http://mnt.to/l/4jvV
FDA-approved lung cancer medication shrinks chordoma in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jvS
Improved cooling cap for chemotherapy hair loss 'more effective'
http://mnt.to/l/4jwf
Researchers refute cancer 'avalanche effect'
http://mnt.to/l/4jvB
Defending medical oncology to assure quality care for cancer patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jwh
One step closer to understanding a deadly childhood brain cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtP
Finnish research unveils novel cancer cell DNA damage repair mechanism
http://mnt.to/l/4jtt
Scientists shed new light on the fight against cancer - They have discovered how the anti-tumor activity of immune
cells can be restored
http://mnt.to/l/4jtc
Drugs identified that enhance oxidative stress as possible weapon against most common pediatric soft tissue tumor
http://mnt.to/l/4jsy
New method devised to measure life's tugs and nudges
http://mnt.to/l/4jsn
New technique could help bring cancer biomarkers to clinic
http://mnt.to/l/4jr2
Gene discovered that plays a part in one per cent of all cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jqZ
Mechanism identified that is implicated in brain cancer and a drug that decreases brain tumor growth
http://mnt.to/l/4jqY
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY
News **
Medtronic announces first human implant of world's smallest,
minimally invasive cardiac pacemaker
http://mnt.to/l/4jwS
Repairing human hearts with biomaterials
http://mnt.to/l/4jvx
After placing carotid stent, surgeons suggest skipping the balloon
http://mnt.to/l/4jvw
Younger women more likely to have and die from acute myocardial infarction
http://mnt.to/l/4jvg
Optimal framework for heartbeats
http://mnt.to/l/4jvd
----------------------------------------------
** CHOLESTEROL News **
HDL finding may lead to molecular approach for treating inflammation
http://mnt.to/l/4jrT
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News
**
MRI assessment of rectal cancer provides crucial prognostic information
to improve survival for patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jw9
6-million-euro European study to combat bowel cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtM
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Peripheral immune system may regulate vulnerability to depression
http://mnt.to/l/4jxP
FDA approves first generic versions of antidepressant drug Cymbalta
http://mnt.to/l/4jwy
Exercise may increase libido among women taking antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jvX
Seasonal affective disorder: could you spot the signs?
http://mnt.to/l/4jvr
Gene discovered that may predict human responses to specific antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jss
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
New FDA cleared Theradome™ Laser Therapy Helmet hair loss treatment created
by former NASA scientist
http://mnt.to/l/4jsc
New ways to repair wounds and reduce impact of aging on the skin
http://mnt.to/l/4jvj
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Illinois institute of technology works to develop artificial pancreas systems for
use during and after exercise
http://mnt.to/l/4jxx
New study shows link between perfluorinated compounds and diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jxn
Diabetes drugs affect hearts of men, women differently
http://mnt.to/l/4jx7
Outcomes of care for children and young people with diabetes is improving, yet overall diabetes control remains poor
in 1 in 4, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jx6
Wayne State discovers potential treatment for skin and corneal wound healing in diabetics
http://mnt.to/l/4jwP
SIRT5 regulation has dramatic effect on mitochondrial metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jts
Risk factor for liver cancer increased by diabetes across ethnic groups
http://mnt.to/l/4jr5
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Fatty acids crucial to embryonic development
http://mnt.to/l/4jxT
Ethical concerns about marketing loans for fertility treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4js7
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News
**
Goji berries protect against the flu in new study
http://mnt.to/l/4jww
Effectiveness of influenza vaccines may be significantly improved by brief laser-light treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jtT
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES /
BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
epic3: National evidence-based guidelines for
preventing healthcare-associated infections in NHS hospitals in England
http://mnt.to/l/4jzm
From friend to foe: How benign bacteria evolve to virulent pathogens
http://mnt.to/l/4jy2
Salmonella jams signals from bacteria-fighting mast cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jxW
Collaborating proteins allow Nipah virus to 'break into' cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jzn
Reservoirs of staph can lurk deep within the nose
http://mnt.to/l/4jvh
Scientists reveal choreographed stages of salmonella infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jtX
Scientists explore the mechanisms of viruses' shells
http://mnt.to/l/4jtv
New findings reveal protein structure in rubella virus
http://mnt.to/l/4jtm
Recycled plastic turned into 'nanofibers' to attack fungal infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jsR
Comparing penicillin and 'big gun' antibiotics for treating less severe childhood pneumonia
http://mnt.to/l/4jsj
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Civilians trained by American mental health professionals bring healing to trauma
victims of Libya's civil war, Baylor study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jwN
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE
News **
Scientists discover way to enhance self-control
http://mnt.to/l/4jwJ
Faulty receptor in the brain 'muddles memories'
http://mnt.to/l/4jwn
Discovery of mechanism controlling Tourette Syndrome tics
http://mnt.to/l/4jvy
New app measures battery life for brain stimulation patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jwd
Schools raise test scores, but not abstract reasoning skills
http://mnt.to/l/4jwc
Sleep problems due to traumatic brain injury improved by dietary amino acids in mouse model
http://mnt.to/l/4jvc
Nonconcussion head impacts in contact sports linked to brain changes and lower test scores
http://mnt.to/l/4jv7
Early brain development influenced by poverty
http://mnt.to/l/4jtV
Observing the brain's cellular response to concussion
http://mnt.to/l/4jtG
Prolonged disorders of consciousness - new RCP guidance to help healthcare staff and families
http://mnt.to/l/4jtk
Embolic material at site of fatal hemorrhage occurring days after flow-diversion aneurysm treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jt2
Realistic hands-on models created for neurosurgical training using multimaterial 3D printers
http://mnt.to/l/4jsZ
A concussion can lead to depression years later
http://mnt.to/l/4jsq
Blows to the head could affect brain, memory and thinking
http://mnt.to/l/4jrw
How the brain learns new skills while retaining old ones
http://mnt.to/l/4jsg
Athletes experience fewer concussions at higher elevations
http://mnt.to/l/4js2
Initial consensus recommendations for studies of neurofibromatosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jrW
Zinc supplementation and aluminum-induced neurotoxicity
http://mnt.to/l/4jrK
Prion protein can trigger spongiform encephalopathy and neurodegeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jrJ
In rat model researchers use neural prosthesis to restore behavior after brain injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jrz
We each live in a unique odor world
http://mnt.to/l/4jqX
Scientists film early concussion damage and describe brain's response to injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jqW
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News
**
What are the health benefits of coffee?
http://mnt.to/l/4jym
What are the health benefits of carrots?
http://mnt.to/l/4jy7
Vitamin supplements a waste of money?
http://mnt.to/l/4jwv
What are the benefits of cod liver oil?
http://mnt.to/l/4jvG
Young women 'need better support' for healthy eating
http://mnt.to/l/4jt9
Aspartame 'safe' at current levels, says European food regulator
http://mnt.to/l/4jt3
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS
/ FITNESS News **
Study links sleep to mood disturbance and poor quality
of life in obese
http://mnt.to/l/4jzw
Exercise counters effect of Christmas excess on metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jz2
Ear acupuncture 'boosts weight loss'
http://mnt.to/l/4jxs
Burger consumption in restaurants associated with higher obesity risk in African-American women
http://mnt.to/l/4jvW
Kids' movies guilty of mixed messages about eating habits
http://mnt.to/l/4jth
Important role may be played by tumor-suppressing genes in obesity, diabetes, heart disease and cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jvm
Pediatric obesity patients like telehealth services
http://mnt.to/l/4jv9
€4.9m project to help Europeans manage their weight
http://mnt.to/l/4jrv
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL
PRACTICE News **
Clinical Commissioning Groups in England serve too many
masters
http://mnt.to/l/4jxj
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER
News **
Tracking zinc in cells for prostate cancer diagnosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jsN
Experts cite new drug therapies as rationale for improvements in prostate cancer guidelines, coordination
http://mnt.to/l/4js6
Finding may lead to new prevention and treatment methods for prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jrZ
Researchers reveal potential biological factor contributing to racial disparities in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jr4
----------------------------------------------
** SENIORS / AGING News
**
Reconceptualizing the study of population aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jxp
'Significant minority' of Dutch public backs euthanasia for elderly
http://mnt.to/l/4jwZ
Technology could revolutionize gaming, fall detection among the elderly, and more
http://mnt.to/l/4jw2
Dramatic rise expected in hip fractures as Hong Kong's over 70s population increases
http://mnt.to/l/4jtS
Researchers seek a unified theory of aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jrQ
----------------------------------------------
** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS
News **
Using novel method, study resolves 50-year 'chlamydial anomaly'
http://mnt.to/l/4jvL
Recent reproductive coercion associated with unintended pregnancy, says Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC
expert
http://mnt.to/l/4jtj
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS
/ INSOMNIA News **
Sleep deprivation and increasing age linked to diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jwG
How sleep-deprivation affects the body
http://mnt.to/l/4jvf
** ALLERGY News
**
Dogs in the house protect against asthma, infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jDs
Allergy increase in rural Poland likely related to EU membership
http://mnt.to/l/4jB2
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
In Alzheimer's,
the brain area attacked links learning and rewards
http://mnt.to/l/4jDF
Complex and intricate ways water behaves in cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jDB
The nanomaterial of tomorrow may be found in Alzheimer-substance
http://mnt.to/l/4jB9
Massive neuron death in Alzheimer's may be caused by raw ingredients of plaques & tangles working in concert
http://mnt.to/l/4jz7
Regenstrief and IU investigators identify first biomarker linked to delirium duration
http://mnt.to/l/4jBt
Brain blood vessel cells may be therapeutic targets for Alzheimer's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jyG
Next-generation whole exome sequencing sheds more light on Alzheimer's risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jyC
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Hair analysis found elevated
stress hormone concentrations in obese children as young as 8
http://mnt.to/l/4jDX
Journal of Experimental Biology: Coping with stress in a changing world
http://mnt.to/l/4jDJ
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Postmenopausal
women: higher mortality linked to RA, antibodies
http://mnt.to/l/4jH8
AUC for non-arthroplasty treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee approved by AAOS
http://mnt.to/l/4jCt
New mechanism revealed for arthritis progression
http://mnt.to/l/4jBf
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Glass specialists help
create new generation of joint and bone treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4jFY
Nearly 8% of hip implants not backed by safety evidence
http://mnt.to/l/4jFq
Fetal stem cell grafts successfully help brittle-bone babies
http://mnt.to/l/4jCN
Combating muscle wasting and obesity by tweaking energy consumption
http://mnt.to/l/4jzR
Cause, not result, of inherited muscle diseases may be nuclei in wrong place
http://mnt.to/l/4jzG
Increased mortality following second hip fracture
http://mnt.to/l/4jyX
Exercise in middle age protects against sarcopenia and helps maintain muscle strength and physical performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jyW
Increased risk of hip fracture following wrist fracture
http://mnt.to/l/4jyL
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
A tomato-rich diet may reduce
breast cancer risk, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jG4
Task Force recommends BRCA mutation screening for high-risk women
http://mnt.to/l/4jFV
For women with chemo-resistant breast cancer, bisphosphonate treatment fails to improve outcomes
http://mnt.to/l/4jyT
Adding drug to standard chemo shows promise for women with triple-negative breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyS
Promising breast cancer drugs put on fast track
http://mnt.to/l/4jyQ
Metastatic breast cancer patients with elevated circulating tumor cells do not benefit from changing chemo
http://mnt.to/l/4jyB
Improved outcomes for women with triple-negative breast cancer with new pre-surgery combination therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jyz
Progression of advanced breast cancer not delayed by new combination therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jyy
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
New data for engineering
immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jJp
Different stem cells responsible for muscle-invasive and non-muscle invasive bladder cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jDn
Radiation therapy to treat uterine cancer linked with increased risk of bladder cancer later in life
http://mnt.to/l/4jD5
Regulation of Cancer-Causing Protein Could Lead to New Therapeutic Targets
http://mnt.to/l/4jBw
New therapies for cancer likely following discovery of ancient chemical bond
http://mnt.to/l/4jzV
Promising results for personalized brain tumor vaccine
http://mnt.to/l/4jC6
Blocking tumor-associated macrophages decreased glioblastoma's growth & extended survival in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jz8
Spontaneous fusion with macrophages empowers cancer cells to spread
http://mnt.to/l/4jz5
Evidence of Savings in Accountable Care Organizations and Cancer Care
http://mnt.to/l/4jyq
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
In the first
30 days of warfarin use, risk of stroke increases among atrial fibrillation patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jDT
Atrial fibrillation, a growing global health concern
http://mnt.to/l/4jDq
Atrial fibrillation is a 'growing global health problem,' WHO says
http://mnt.to/l/4jFZ
High-fiber diet linked to lower risk of heart disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jCW
Stress-sensitivity gene linked to heart attacks, death
http://mnt.to/l/4jDL
Pre-participation screening to prevent cardiovascular complications in sports
http://mnt.to/l/4jyR
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
European Commission approves
update of Erbitux metastatic colorectal cancer labeling to patients with RAS wild-type tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jJw
EGF receptor ecto-domain mutations: When to screen and when not to screen
http://mnt.to/l/4jDr
Decoding the link between calcium deficiency and colon cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyN
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Data highlight glial sensitivity
to stress
http://mnt.to/l/4jCB
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
New discoveries could lead to
hair and skin regeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jFM
Antioxidant supplements reduce levels of oxygen radicals within chronically infected wounds & weaken biofilm sealing
these wounds
http://mnt.to/l/4jCq
Bedside Pressure Mapping helps reduce pressure ulcers
http://mnt.to/l/4jBy
Breakthrough study sheds light on skin cell migration in wound healing process
http://mnt.to/l/4jyD
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Oramed announces successful results
of its oral insulin for the treatment of type 1 diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jJm
Researchers develop new strategy for potential 'insulin pill'
http://mnt.to/l/4jGc
Family centred approach reduces weight in South Asians
http://mnt.to/l/4jGQ
Walking 2,000 more steps each day reduces cardiovascular risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jFP
Diagnosed diabetes, pre-diabetes, and gestational diabetes on the rise among privately insured Americans
http://mnt.to/l/4jzg
----------------------------------------------
** EATING DISORDERS News **
When young teens are afraid
of gaining weight
http://mnt.to/l/4jB7
----------------------------------------------
** ENDOCRINOLOGY News **
Endocrine-disrupting activity
linked to birth defects, infertility near fracking sites
http://mnt.to/l/4jzT
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Freezing sperm Improves the chances
of fatherhood after treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma
http://mnt.to/l/4jCZ
IVF success could double with new way of detecting faulty egg cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jG2
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Nyack hospital implements
procedures to protect patients during flu season
http://mnt.to/l/4jJs
Flu and cold top the 2013 chart of medical search terms
http://mnt.to/l/4jJn
A step closer to developing a 'universal' flu vaccine
http://mnt.to/l/4jBT
Will we have a flu-free Christmas? UK reporting half the number of flu cases compared to this time last year
http://mnt.to/l/4jFh
Reducing flu viruses' glucose supply weakens the microbes' ability to infect mammalian cells in lab cultures
http://mnt.to/l/4jz6
Scientists find first definitive proof of MERS coronavirus in dromedary camels
http://mnt.to/l/4jBn
----------------------------------------------
** HYPERTENSION News **
New high blood pressure guidelines
released by committee
http://mnt.to/l/4jC7
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
Virus
'hijacks' immune response in host cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jGL
Scientists look to tackle bacterium that is major cause of diarrhea, vomiting
http://mnt.to/l/4jGn
Antimicrobial option offered by pecan shell extracts for preventing listeria in organic meats
http://mnt.to/l/4jC3
Spaceflight has profound effects on fungal pathogen
http://mnt.to/l/4jBZ
Using air transportation data to predict pandemics
http://mnt.to/l/4jxM
Researchers create method to target and kill harmful bacteria
http://mnt.to/l/4jCv
Pathogen is possible source of pandemic
http://mnt.to/l/4jBG
French National Health Authority recommends routine vaccination with Zostavax® to protect seniors against
shingles
http://mnt.to/l/4jCR
Virus grows 'temporary tail' to attack E. Coli, researchers discover
http://mnt.to/l/4jBN
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Gene involved in adolescent
brain development may play a role in mental health vulnerability
http://mnt.to/l/4jCf
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Neurexin2 identified
as a novel target for potential therapy of neurodegeneration in Spinal Muscular Atrophy patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jDM
Diagnosis of myopathy improved by new gene mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jD7
The brain's data compression mechanisms
http://mnt.to/l/4jCx
Potential new therapeutic approach to promote tissue regeneration & repair of broken cell connections
http://mnt.to/l/4jCs
Stem cell therapy for spinal cord injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jCm
Patients in vegetative state able to recognize loved ones' faces
http://mnt.to/l/4jDt
With nearly a million variations on 400 smell receptors, everyone senses smell differently
http://mnt.to/l/4jyc
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News **
Girls, Hispanic children
have higher malnutrition rates in US
http://mnt.to/l/4jJk
Nutritionally unhealthy foods in ads for kids
http://mnt.to/l/4jDx
Understanding how dietary habits are connected through the generations could have valuable benefits for community
health
http://mnt.to/l/4jDm
Small rewards encourage children to eat fruit and veg
http://mnt.to/l/4jBY
What are the health benefits of avocados?
http://mnt.to/l/4jDw
Government's voluntary approach to improving hospital food is not working, argues expert
http://mnt.to/l/4jFs
What are the health benefits of chocolate?
http://mnt.to/l/4jzM
Multivitamins 'waste of money,' say medical experts
http://mnt.to/l/4jCg
Parents approve of nutrition report cards
http://mnt.to/l/4jyd
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Beverage
sugar tax targets minorities' health
http://mnt.to/l/4jBV
Increase in body mass relates to increase in health care costs
http://mnt.to/l/4jBC
Body mass index 'in and of itself' increases risk of developing chronic kidney disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jyj
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL PRACTICE News **
Hospital
C-suite survey projects ACO participation to double in 2014
http://mnt.to/l/4jFS
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER News **
Scientists unlock
prostate cancer protein in move which could lead to improved cancer vaccines
http://mnt.to/l/4jCz
----------------------------------------------
** SENIORS / AGING News **
GRU researcher develops
moisturizing lozenges for dry mouth
http://mnt.to/l/4jGf
DNA unravels in aging cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jzS
Evaluating potential age-promoting compounds
http://mnt.to/l/4jzJ
Older women spend almost 10 hours a day sedentary
http://mnt.to/l/4jBB
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS / INSOMNIA News **
Study
confirms narcolepsy as an autoimmune disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jG3
Timing important when putting toddlers to bed
http://mnt.to/l/4jBD
In men with sleep apnea, CPAP therapy improves golf performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jyM
----------------------------------------------
** STATINS News **
An apple a day keeps vascular mortality
at bay, study suggests
http://mnt.to/l/4jBj
----------------------------------------------
** STROKE News **
Stroke risks increase with high levels
of anxiety
http://mnt.to/l/4jGp
----------------------------------------------
** TROPICAL DISEASES News **
Exploring evolution of
bacteria that may be useful in the fight against dengue
http://mnt.to/l/4jBL
Scientists discover genetic marker of drug-resistant malaria
http://mnt.to/l/4jDD
New discovery could help combat the spread of sleeping sickness
http://mnt.to/l/4jzb
Mechanism by which fungus kills mosquito larvae - verdict of accidental death
http://mnt.to/l/4jBp
Climate change likely to lead to decline in snail fever in Africa
http://mnt.to/l/4jyK
Protection against what can be a fatal rickettsial infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jyr
----------------------------------------------
** WOMEN'S HEALTH / GYNECOLOGY News **
Non-significant
reduction in the amount of candida in women who were taking oral garlic tablets
http://mnt.to/l/4jBX
**
ALLERGY News **
Microscopic hazards in your home
this winter
http://mnt.to/l/4jmy
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Five healthy behaviors lower
dementia risk, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jsm
Some cognitive impairment of Alzheimer's disease may be due progesterone
changes
http://mnt.to/l/4jqt
Researchers use reprogrammed patient neurons to test Alzheimer's drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jqm
Protein delivered across blood-brain barrier to degrade Alzheimer's
plaques
http://mnt.to/l/4jq4
Why promising dementia drugs failed in clinical trials
http://mnt.to/l/4jpP
Alzheimer's disease prevented by pre-moxibustion and moxibustion
http://mnt.to/l/4jpz
Origin of inherited gene mutation causing early-onset Alzheimer's
http://mnt.to/l/4jnp
Dementia treatment: understanding how memories form
http://mnt.to/l/4jmM
Enzyme activity bolstered by gene therapy to combat Alzheimer's disease
in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jmr
Omega-3s cross blood-brain barrier in Alzheimer's patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jmQ
Global dementia set to treble by 2050, says G8 briefing
http://mnt.to/l/4jmm
Blood pressure drug could double up as first treatment for common form of
dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jky
A step towards development of drugs for neurodegenerative diseases
http://mnt.to/l/4jks
Alzheimer's-related changes in the brains of those with risk gene may
begin showing effects in childhood
http://mnt.to/l/4jkn
New survival mechanism found for stressed mitochondria
http://mnt.to/l/4jkk
Exercise is beneficial for dementia patients, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jjC
New screening method can predict Alzheimer's disease within 2 years
http://mnt.to/l/4jjq
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Cell phone use linked to lower college
grades, anxiety
http://mnt.to/l/4jqP
Discovery has implications for a number of conditions related to anxiety
and trauma
http://mnt.to/l/4jnd
PTSD increases risk for cardiac ischemia
http://mnt.to/l/4jjp
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Bone destruction in diseases
such as arthritis and cancer: new target identified for prevention
http://mnt.to/l/4jn2
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Novel tissue engineered bone graft
achieves successful repair of bone defects
http://mnt.to/l/4jnm
Comparison of side effects, efficacy of osteoporosis drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jkd
New biomechanical study measures the anatomical restoration of vertebrae
with the SpineJack® compared to balloon kyphoplasty
http://mnt.to/l/4jjs
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
New trial to help healthy women avoid unnecessary
breast operations, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jrj
Genetic breast cancer screening may benefit those at intermediate risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jnq
Researchers unravel important role of Rb tumor suppressor in aggressive
form of breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jmD
Breast cancer prognosis may be affected by mammography screening intervals
http://mnt.to/l/4jm5
Hope for noninvasive treatment for breast cancer using MR-guided ultrasound
http://mnt.to/l/4jm4
3D mammography 'significantly increases breast cancer detection'
http://mnt.to/l/4jkX
Risk of serious complications after immediate breast reconstruction with
implants increased by obesity, smoking
http://mnt.to/l/4jkC
As women age, changes in breast density relate to breast cancer risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jkb
Breast cancer detection increased and recall rates reduced by DBT
http://mnt.to/l/4jk6
Algorithm helps identify breast cancer type
http://mnt.to/l/4jjd
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
Racial differences in head and neck
cancers may be explained by genetic mutations and molecular alterations
http://mnt.to/l/4jqB
How tumour cells solve the problems linked to the replication of their unstable
DNA
http://mnt.to/l/4jpY
Tumor cells temporarily lose mutation to evade drugs targeting mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jpT
Novel mechanism described by which glioblastoma tumors resist targeted therapies
http://mnt.to/l/4jpR
Brain cancer treatment may lie in reactivating immune cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jr7
PKM2 controls mitosis, saving cancer cells from death and promoting brain
tumor growth
http://mnt.to/l/4jqJ
Drug induces morphologic, molecular and clinical remissions in myelofibrosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jnT
Why combination drug treatment ineffective in cancer clinical trials
http://mnt.to/l/4jnZ
Fundamental differences identified between human cancers and genetically
engineered mouse models of cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jnY
How brain cancer cells hide from drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jnx
Cigarette smoking after cancer diagnosis increases risk of death
http://mnt.to/l/4jmN
Tumor suppressor turned into anti-cancer target
http://mnt.to/l/4jmK
Improved screening methods likely following new insights into Barrett's
esophagus, cancer evolution
http://mnt.to/l/4jmp
Cancer mutation likely trigger of scleroderma
http://mnt.to/l/4jkT
Kancera announces the discovery of a new class of compounds against cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jjK
Cancer patients to travel to UF Proton Therapy Institute from Norway
http://mnt.to/l/4jjn
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
Norfolk Islanders' genes
yield Bounty of insight into heart disease: study
http://mnt.to/l/4jrc
Cardiac patients benefit from home-based high intensity training
http://mnt.to/l/4jpn
One-third of patients who receive stents and have evidence of arterial dysfunction
at high risk for major cardiovascular events, study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jnc
NIH workshop report urges new focus on pulseless electrical activity
http://mnt.to/l/4jkS
----------------------------------------------
** CHOLESTEROL News **
Plant sterols naturally found in corn oil
linked to heart health benefits
http://mnt.to/l/4jqq
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
Microbes in gut may increase risk for
colorectal cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jqr
Why a certain mutation contributes to the development of a certain cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jj3
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Taiwanese study finds death of an adult son
increases depressive symptoms in mothers, but not fathers
http://mnt.to/l/4jn3
Maternal depression may influence fetal brain development
http://mnt.to/l/4jmP
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
The skin "talks" to the liver
http://mnt.to/l/4jqn
Growth in dormant hair follicles could be restarted by activating pathway
http://mnt.to/l/4jp8
Clinical trial tests insecticide-treated underwear to ward off body lice
in shelters
http://mnt.to/l/4jjz
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Type 2 diabetics 'have better glucose control'
with exercise game
http://mnt.to/l/4jrr
Cardiovascular complications, hypoglycemia common in older patients with
diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jq8
Added benefit of saxagliptin as monotherapy is not proven
http://mnt.to/l/4jpp
Insulin sensitizers reduce risk of cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jnK
Vitamin D 'reduces pain and depression' in type 2 diabetic women
http://mnt.to/l/4jkR
Regions in drought and famine may become future hotspots for type 2 diabetes
in the future
http://mnt.to/l/4jk5
IDegLira demonstrates superior glycaemic control and weight loss with a
low rate of hypoglycaemia for patients uncontrolled on basal insulin*
http://mnt.to/l/4jjJ
Potential new treatment for diabetes following discovery of humanin
http://mnt.to/l/4jhX
----------------------------------------------
** ENDOCRINOLOGY News **
Estrogen not just produced by the ovaries
http://mnt.to/l/4jnj
----------------------------------------------
** ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION / PREMATURE EJACULATION News **
The link
between erectile dysfunction and heart disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jqh
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Real world estimates of out-of-pocket costs
for infertility treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jqd
IVF improving but fertility treatments keep multiple births high
http://mnt.to/l/4jmC
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Genetic defect protects mice from infection
with influenza viruses
http://mnt.to/l/4jpX
Effectiveness of Marinomed's antiviral nasal spray confirmed in clinical
trial for common cold
http://mnt.to/l/4jnC
New test uses sugar and gold to detect flu strains
http://mnt.to/l/4jmb
Researchers predict seasonal flu outbreaks in 108 cities across the US
http://mnt.to/l/4jkm
----------------------------------------------
** HYPERTENSION News **
Use of CPAP for sleep apnea reduces blood
pressure for patients with difficult to treat hypertension
http://mnt.to/l/4jq6
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
New insights
may explain difficulty of finding drugs for infectious disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jpN
CDC report: measles 'eliminated' in US but still poses threat
http://mnt.to/l/4jpx
Adults at risk from C. difficile that resides harmlessly in infants
http://mnt.to/l/4jm3
New receptor discovered that may be instrumental in the body's response
to sepsis
http://mnt.to/l/4jkh
Earlier identification of pathogens in patient samples using new technique
http://mnt.to/l/4jjN
Tackling rabies in Latin America by culling vampire bats can backfire
http://mnt.to/l/4jjr
----------------------------------------------
** MEN'S HEALTH News **
Low folate in male diet linked to risk
of offspring birth defects
http://mnt.to/l/4jr8
Male contraceptive pill 'possible in next 10 years'
http://mnt.to/l/4jkr
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Study links mental disorders to increased
heart disease risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jjY
Youth suicide attempts associated with mental health problems later in life
http://mnt.to/l/4jjw
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Decreased hippocampal synaptophysin
accompanies the aging process
http://mnt.to/l/4jqv
Researchers find that propagated sensation along the meridian exists objectively
http://mnt.to/l/4jqc
A person's 'will to persevere' may be evoked by electrical brain
stimulation
http://mnt.to/l/4jpZ
The culprit that causes memory impairment during brain aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jpB
Random fluctuations in brain cell activity may determine toss-up decisions
http://mnt.to/l/4jpt
New insights into the functioning of the brain from recurring memory traces
http://mnt.to/l/4jph
'Stomach clock' limits food intake to specific times, study suggests
http://mnt.to/l/4jp7
Increased risk of serious sleep breathing disorder in quadriplegics
http://mnt.to/l/4jnR
Identification of gene crucial for formation of certain brain circuitry
http://mnt.to/l/4jp2
Baicalin effectively inhibits neurotoxicity of colistin sulfate
http://mnt.to/l/4jmT
Ultrafast recycling of neurotransmitter-filled bubbles keep our nerves firing
http://mnt.to/l/4jmB
What tongue twister-induced speech errors may tell us about our brains
http://mnt.to/l/4jmv
Researcher studies pediatric brain stem tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jkZ
Sports concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy
http://mnt.to/l/4jkD
Brain 'wired differently' in men and women
http://mnt.to/l/4jk7
Low vitamin D levels may damage the brain
http://mnt.to/l/4jjZ
Assessing autonomic nerve functions in patients with spinal cord injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jjW
After 2 weeks of NSCs neural differentiation, potassium current density
increased sharply
http://mnt.to/l/4jjT
Recognition memory in young adults predicted by aerobic fitness and hormones
http://mnt.to/l/4jjB
Molecular imaging tracer aids in creation of treatment plans for brain metastases
http://mnt.to/l/4jjf
Study investigates the role of the motor system in conceptualization
http://mnt.to/l/4jj4
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News **
Healthy eating during the holiday season
http://mnt.to/l/4jhB
Caffeine and alcohol can change a part of DNA linked to aging and cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jpc
Hummingbird metabolism burns glucose and fructose equally: finding has implications
for human metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jnS
Healthy diet costs $550 more per year than unhealthy one
http://mnt.to/l/4jnG
Doubts cast over benefits of vitamin D supplements
http://mnt.to/l/4jnv
Food poverty in the UK "has all the signs of a public health emergency,"
warn experts
http://mnt.to/l/4jk3
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Parental stress linked
to childhood obesity
http://mnt.to/l/4jqj
Association between exercise, weight loss and better glucose control
http://mnt.to/l/4jpW
Study increases understanding of the development of obesity and insulin
resistance
http://mnt.to/l/4jmY
The obesity-cancer link: even with healthy BMI, greater visceral fat may
put older men at risk for cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jm7
US mothers watch more TV, do less housework than they did in 1965
http://mnt.to/l/4jjk
In the overweight and obese an abnormal amount of an inflammatory protein
is present on abdominal fat tissues
http://mnt.to/l/4jhW
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL PRACTICE News **
Patients urged to heed
doctors' follow-up advice, Australia
http://mnt.to/l/4jmc
Senior medic argues A&E crisis is in fact one of recruitment, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jk2
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER News **
Hints of added benefit of enzalutamide
in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jqk
Inflammation in prostate biopsies 'indicates reduced cancer risk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jpq
Prostate cancer biomarker may predict patient outcomes
http://mnt.to/l/4jnN
Compound in grape seed extract 'kills prostate cancer cells'
http://mnt.to/l/4jnD
Therapeutic benefits of carbon monoxide for prostate, lung cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jn6
Protein in prostate tissue 'indicates increased cancer risk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jmh
Targeting evolving cancer stem cells in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jmn
Increased cancer risk signaled by protein in prostate biopsies
http://mnt.to/l/4jkB
Risk of lethal prostate cancer in overweight patients increased by genetic
mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jjv
----------------------------------------------
** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS News **
Lower-dose IUDs prove safe and effective
http://mnt.to/l/4jp9
New understanding of chlamydial disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jmw
Male contraceptive pill may be available within ten years
http://mnt.to/l/4jjQ
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS / INSOMNIA News **
When it comes to teen
sleep problems, social ties may be more important than biology
http://mnt.to/l/4jnr
Sleep linked to mood disturbance and poor quality of life in the obese
http://mnt.to/l/4jnf
----------------------------------------------
** STATINS News **
Frequently asked questions: Statins and cardiovascular
disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jrh
Guidelines recommend wider statin use among adults with chronic kidney disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jkW
----------------------------------------------
** STROKE News **
Improved prevention, treatment leads to decline
in U.S stroke deaths
http://mnt.to/l/4jpL
Subarachnoid hemorrhage and cognitive dysfunction
http://mnt.to/l/4jjV
Policy makers and advocates appeal for European governments to adopt a national
focus on stroke prevention
http://mnt.to/l/4jjR
----------------------------------------------
** TROPICAL DISEASES News **
Report hails recent progress in reducing
malaria illnesses and deaths but warns new tools needed
http://mnt.to/l/4jpF
How mosquitoes are attracted to humans
http://mnt.to/l/4jpD
Re-purposing mobile phone camera into mini-microscope for low-cost diagnostics
http://mnt.to/l/4jpy
----------------------------------------------
** WOMEN'S HEALTH / GYNECOLOGY News **
Menstrual cramps relieved
by erectile dysfunction drug
http://mnt.to/l/4jrf
Menstrual cramping may be alleviated by vaginally administered sildenafil
citrate
http://mnt.to/l/4jnM
* ALLERGY News **
'More likely to be murdered' than die from food allergies
http://mnt.to/l/4jf8
How probiotics could affect hay fever
http://mnt.to/l/4jdK
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Brain research provides new
clues to Pavlovian conditioning and may improve treatment of dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jfB
Good news about the global epidemic of dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jfz
UK postcode lottery: time to stop treating people with dementia as second
class citizens
http://mnt.to/l/4jgH
Progression towards Alzheimer's disease indicated by an abnormal resting-state
functional brain network
http://mnt.to/l/4jdL
Misfolded proteins are capable of forming tree-like aggregates in Alzheimer's
disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jdt
Tentative molecular link between head injury and Alzheimer's
http://mnt.to/l/4jfc
Problems in clock genes contribute to neurodegeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jcH
Vascular changes in the neck may play role in Alzheimer's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jcD
Keeping astrocytes' phagocytic process from slowing has implications
for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jc7
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
a greater risk for children whose mothers are afflicted
http://mnt.to/l/4jf2
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Disability, distress in rheumatoid
arthritis patients cut in half over last 20 years
http://mnt.to/l/4jh6
New treatment hope for children as young as two suffering from a debilitating
form of juvenile arthritis
http://mnt.to/l/4jgM
Marijuana treatments for autoimmune disorders
http://mnt.to/l/4jdD
Shortage of rheumatologists - in some U.S. regions closest doctor may be
200 miles away
http://mnt.to/l/4jcb
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Most osteoporotic fractures have the
potential to reduce life expectancy
http://mnt.to/l/4jft
Measuring the value and impact of orthopaedic care
http://mnt.to/l/4jdB
Bone grafts may be better with new sea coral material
http://mnt.to/l/4jgg
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
New breast cancer study: Results of the
TARGIT-A clinical trial
http://mnt.to/l/4jhy
Cyclin D1 controls cell cycle progression and microRNA biogenesis through
Dicer - a new mechanism promoting breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jgx
Growth and spread of breast cancer may be fueled by high cholesterol
http://mnt.to/l/4jgv
Enzyme intervenes when cancer-fighting PTEN is bound for cell's protein-destroying
machinery
http://mnt.to/l/4jfQ
Women who test negative for BRCA may not be at reduced risk of breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jfC
High-fat diets in puberty linked to breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jdP
Potential cause found for deadly breast cancer relapse
http://mnt.to/l/4jcQ
BRCA-negative results may not reduce cancer risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jcV
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
Scientists describe new proteins linked
to cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jhm
Angiogenesis and cancer growth controlled by methylation signaling
http://mnt.to/l/4jgm
Successful oral delivery of nanoparticle therapeutics
http://mnt.to/l/4jfD
Brain cancer 'diagnosed in 30 minutes' with new test
http://mnt.to/l/4jdG
Untreated cancer pain a 'scandal of global proportions,' survey
shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jdC
Aging cells could be to blame for late-life cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jdw
Novel new immuno-therapy for malignant brain tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jct
Oncology nurse navigators help cancer patients cope early in care
http://mnt.to/l/4jbL
Brain cancer destroyed by killer cocktail in mouse model
http://mnt.to/l/4jbF
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
Energy drinks alter heart
function, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jhr
Reference values determined for children's heart rate variability
http://mnt.to/l/4jbR
Transcatheter therapies for mitral regurgitation: key guidance document
released
http://mnt.to/l/4jbP
Understanding how blood vessels develop may provide new way to fight cancer
in the future
http://mnt.to/l/4jbK
Effervescent medicines may contain harmful amounts of salt
http://mnt.to/l/4jbs
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
Targeting colon cancer stem cells show
clinical potential
http://mnt.to/l/4jgR
New colorectal cancer target found in stem cell gene
http://mnt.to/l/4jgP
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Depression's severity reduced by modafinil
when taken with antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jfT
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
Highly effective treatment for excessive scars
http://mnt.to/l/4jfJ
Nanoscale 'patches' sensitize targeted cell receptors
http://mnt.to/l/4jcv
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
FDA requires removal of certain restrictions
on the diabetes drug Avandia
http://mnt.to/l/4jcM
Cell surface molecules involved in intra-islet communication may represent
important clinical targets in type 1 diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jch
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Linking transfer of fewer embryos to reimbursing
6 IVF cycles doesn't reduce delivery rates
http://mnt.to/l/4jdR
Early embryo changes shape with its first hug
http://mnt.to/l/4jbv
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Respiratory expert warns that staff
who refuse flu vaccine 'risk patient lives'
http://mnt.to/l/4jhw
----------------------------------------------
** GOUT News **
Gout runs strongly in families, suggests large-scale
study
http://mnt.to/l/4jhz
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
Induced hypothermia
does not improve outcomes for patients with severe bacterial meningitis; may be harmful
http://mnt.to/l/4jhh
Improving disease monitoring in remote locations: American Chemical Society
podcast
http://mnt.to/l/4jfR
New method found to increase survival in sepsis
http://mnt.to/l/4jdv
The effects of transplanted fecal microbiota
http://mnt.to/l/4jdh
Destroying contaminants in baby formula with a touch of garlic
http://mnt.to/l/4jdc
Treatment target identified for a public health risk parasite
http://mnt.to/l/4jdz
Improving understanding of the long term co-evolution among retroviruses
and host species
http://mnt.to/l/4jbJ
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** MENTAL HEALTH News **
People with mental health problems still
waiting over a year for talking treatments, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jf9
Improved safety measures by mental health service providers help to reduce
suicide rates, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jdk
Study examines delivery of outpatient mental health treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jcJ
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** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Spontaneous recall of a memory
activates its neural geotag
http://mnt.to/l/4jgq
Hippocampal neuron apoptosis inhibited by active component from wine-processed
Fructus corni
http://mnt.to/l/4jfv
Occludin and connexin 43 expression in the pathogenesis of traumatic brain
edema
http://mnt.to/l/4jfs
Key protein identified that is responsible for controlling communication
between brain cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jfh
Locusts provide clues to how the brain processes smells
http://mnt.to/l/4jd8
Improved brain injury outcomes linked to mood improvement
http://mnt.to/l/4jcP
New treatment 'could help spine injury patients walk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jcf
Controlling our circadian rhythms
http://mnt.to/l/4jbM
Neuronal cell function maintained by circadian clock proteins
http://mnt.to/l/4jbx
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** NUTRITION / DIET News **
What are the health benefits of green
tea?
http://mnt.to/l/4jgN
What are the health benefits of almonds?
http://mnt.to/l/4jfn
Fast food consumed by majority of very young children in California at least
once a week
http://mnt.to/l/4jdn
What are the health benefits of popular foods?
http://mnt.to/l/4j6K
Eating sushi can increase risk of cardiovascular disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jc9
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** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Short-term energy deficits
increase factors related to muscle degradation
http://mnt.to/l/4jhS
Implants aid weight loss in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jfP
Portion size influenced by personality traits
http://mnt.to/l/4jdb
Childhood exercise 'may reduce effects of maternal obesity'
http://mnt.to/l/4jcC
Weight loss surgery: do the benefits really outweigh the risks?
http://mnt.to/l/4jfL
Study: turn up heating to fight fat this holiday season
http://mnt.to/l/4jdY
A brain reward gene influences food choices in the first years of life
http://mnt.to/l/4jdF
Weight loss aided by embolization procedure
http://mnt.to/l/4jbD
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** SENIORS / AGING News **
Hormone-replacement therapy may prevent
age-related declines in cognitive functioning
http://mnt.to/l/4jhD
The presence of male roundworms may shorten females' lifespan
http://mnt.to/l/4jgp
Winter is not the concern for A&E it's the elderly, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jg8
EORTC Cancer in the Elderly Task Force: appropriate treatment for elderly
patients with cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jd6
Chemical banned by the US 3 decades ago still affecting seniors' cognitive
performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jbG
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** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS News **
Can sexual frustration be bad for
your health?
http://mnt.to/l/4jgr
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** STATINS News **
Statin use significantly impacted by drug interactions
http://mnt.to/l/4jcK
Dietary Fiber Is Still Good for You
Dietary
fiber's salutary effects on health — specifically in preventing cardiovascular disease — are reaffirmed in
a BMJ meta-analysis.
Researchers examined 22 cohort studies in predominantly Westernized countries that looked at the relation
between fiber intake and cardiovascular risk. Most data were from food-frequency questionnaires. The analysis presents risks
based on dose-response curves rather than simple "high" or "low" intakes.
Overall, total fiber intake was inversely associated with cardiovascular risk. Specifically, each 7
grams a day of fiber intake was associated with a risk ratio of 0.9 for both coronary heart disease and cardiovascular disease.
Only insoluble fiber (wheat bran, brown rice, and other whole grains) had a significant lowering of risk.
Both the researchers and an editorialist acknowledge the limitations of dietary-recall studies. The
editorialist writes that despite this, "clinicians should enthusiastically and skillfully recommend" more fiber
in their patients' diets.
BMJ article
Health Effects of Nut Consumption Bao Y et al., N Engl J Med 2013 Nov 21; 369:2001 In large cohort studies, nut consumption was
associated inversely with 30-year mortality. |
Nuts contain
a variety of potentially healthful nutrients. To determine whether nut consumption is associated with longer life, researchers
analyzed data from two prospective American cohort studies with 30 years of follow-up — the Nurses' Health Study
(76,000 women) and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (42,000 men). Cumulative long-term nut consumption was calculated
from food-frequency questionnaires that participants returned every few years. In both men and women, nut
consumption was associated significantly with lower total mortality after extensive adjustment for potentially confounding
variables. Compared with no nut consumption, nut consumption less than once weekly, once weekly, 2 to 4 times weekly, 5 to
6 times weekly, and >7 times weekly was associated with adjusted hazard ratios for death of 0.93, 0.89, 0.87, 0.85, and
0.80, respectively. The authors performed a variety of sensitivity and subgroup analyses that supported these results. Because nut consumption was correlated strongly with
other indicators of health (e.g., not smoking, more physical activity, more consumption of fruits and vegetables), this study's
credibility — and the likelihood that its findings represent cause and effect — is contingent on successful adjustment
for confounding variables. However, the findings are consistent with a recent randomized trial in which a Mediterranean diet
with substantial nut intake was associated with lower risk for adverse cardiovascular events |
Eating Nuts While Pregnant May Protect Offspring
Against Allergies
Frequent
nut consumption during pregnancy could protect offspring against nut allergies, according to a JAMA Pediatrics study.
Researchers studied physician-confirmed tree nut and peanut allergies among roughly 8200 children (ages
10 to 14 years) whose mothers had completed food-frequency questionnaires around the time they were pregnant.
Mothers who ate five or more servings of nuts per week had reduced risk for nut allergy among their
offspring (adjusted odds ratio, 0.58), compared with those who ate less than one serving per month. Risk reductions were observed
with just one to four weekly servings. For mothers with existing allergies to tree nuts, high consumption of peanuts (or vice
versa) was associated with a nonsignificantly increased allergy risk in their children.
An editorialist concludes: "Pregnant women should not eliminate nuts from their diet as peanuts
are a good source of protein and also provide folic acid, which could potentially prevent both neural tube defects and nut
sensitization."
JAMA Pediatrics article
Antihypertensive Effect
of Flaxseed: From Lab to Clinic
Rodriguez-Leyva D et al., Hypertension 2013
Dec 62:1081
In a small, randomized
trial, increased flaxseed consumption was associated with substantial reductions in blood pressure.
In animal studies, flaxseed has demonstrated antiatherogenic and anti-inflammatory properties and beneficial effects
on vascular contractile function. To examine the effects of flaxseed ingestion on systolic and diastolic blood pressure
(BP) in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD), investigators conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized
trial supported by several Canadian agricultural-industry initiatives. For 6 months, 110 PAD patients received various food
products containing 30 g of milled flaxseed or placebo for daily consumption. Mean baseline BP was similar in both groups.
By 6 months, 13 patients from the flaxseed group and 11 from the placebo group had dropped out of the study. Body weight,
waist circumference, and body mass index did not differ significantly between the two groups. At 1 month, plasma levels of
the omega-3 fatty acid alpha-linolenic acid and enterolignans — used as biomarkers of dietary compliance — had
doubled and increased tenfold, respectively, in the flaxseed group; these increases persisted through 6 months. At 6 months,
systolic and diastolic BPs were lower in the flaxseed group than in the placebo group by 10 mm Hg and 7 mm Hg, respectively.
Reductions in systolic and diastolic BP in the flaxseed group were greater in patients with baseline systolic BP ≥140 mm
Hg than in the cohort as a whole (15/7 mm Hg vs. 7/5 mm Hg).
Omega-3s May Combat Degenerative Vision Condition
Dietary supplementation of omega-3 fatty acids may combat inflammation in the eye and improve vision, among people
with dry age-related macular degeneration.
Age-related
macular degeneration (AMD) is the primary cause of blindness in individuals ages 50 years and older. Tassos Georgiou,
from the Ophthalamos Research & Educational Institute (Cyprus), and colleagues administered 3.4 g of eicosapentaenoic
acid (EPA) and 1.6 g of.docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) on a daily basis for 6 months, to patients with dry AMD. The team
observed: "significant improvement in vision acuity occurred in 100% of patients … within four and half
months after omega-3 supplementation.”
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Research/Omega-3-may-have-benefits-for-dry-AMD-Pilot-Study/
Fish oil in recent onset rheumatoid arthritis: a randomised, double-blind controlled trial within algorithm-based
drug use
Conclusions FO was associated with benefits additional to those achieved by combination ‘treat-to-target’
DMARDs with similar MTX use. These included reduced triple DMARD failure and a higher rate of ACR remission
Abstract
Background The effects of fish oil (FO) in rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) have not been examined in the context of contemporary treatment of early RA. This study examined the effects of high
versus low dose FO in early RA employing a ‘treat-to-target’ protocol of combination disease-modifying anti-rheumatic
drugs (DMARDs).
Methods Patients with RA <12 months’ duration and who were DMARD-naïve were enrolled and
randomised 2:1 to FO at a high dose or low dose (for masking). These groups, designated FO and control, were given 5.5 or
0.4 g/day, respectively, of the omega-3 fats, eicosapentaenoic acid + docosahexaenoic acid. All patients received methotrexate
(MTX), sulphasalazine and hydroxychloroquine, and DMARD doses were adjusted according to an algorithm taking disease activity
and toxicity into account. DAS28-erythrocyte sedimentation rate, modified Health Assessment Questionnaire (mHAQ) and remission
were assessed three monthly. The primary outcome measure was failure of triple DMARD therapy.
Results In the FO group, failure of triple
DMARD therapy was lower (HR=0.28 (95% CI 0.12 to 0.63; p=0.002) unadjusted and 0.24 (95% CI 0.10 to 0.54; p=0.0006) following
adjustment for smoking history, shared epitope and baseline anti–cyclic citrullinated peptide. The rate of first American
College of Rheumatology (ACR) remission was significantly greater in the FO compared with the control group (HRs=2.17 (95%
CI 1.07 to 4.42; p=0.03) unadjusted and 2.09 (95% CI 1.02 to 4.30; p=0.04) adjusted). There were no differences between groups
in MTX dose, DAS28 or mHAQ scores, or adverse events.
Conclusions FO was
associated with benefits additional to those achieved by combination ‘treat-to-target’ DMARDs with similar MTX
use. These included reduced triple DMARD failure and a higher rate of ACR remission.
http://www.mdlinx.com/internal-medicine/news-article-exit-page.cfm/4945742
Spearmint & Rosemary in the Battle Against Alzheimer’s
Enhanced extracts made from
special antioxidants in spearmint and rosemary improve learning and memory, suggests data from a laboratory animal model.
Oxidative damage is considered one of the hallmarks
of the aging process, with a number of previous studies demonstrating that the structural and functional damage to mitochondria
characteristic in Alzheimer’s Disease. Susan Farr, from St. Louis University (Missouri, USA), and colleagues administered
enhanced extracts made from special antioxidants found in spearmint and rosemary, to a mouse model of age-related cognitive
decline. The team found that a higher-dose rosemary extract compound was effective for improving memory and learning in three
tested behaviors. The lower-dose rosemary extract, as well as the compound made from spearmint extract, improved memory in
two behavioral tests. As well, the researchers observed that the enhanced herb extracts reduce the markers of oxidative stress.
The study authors conclude that: “The current results indicate that the extracts from spearmint (carnosic acid)
and rosemary (rosmarinic acid) have beneficial effects on learning and memory and brain tissue markers of oxidation that occur
with age in [a laboratory animal model].
http://www.slu.edu/x89155.xml
Effects of disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs on subclinical atherosclerosis and endothelial dysfunction
which has been detected in early rheumatoid arthritis: 1-year follow-up study
Abstract
Objective
The study was designed to explore
the effect of disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) on synovial inflammation as well as on atherosclerotic indices
in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Methods
The study included 35 early RA patients (disease duration <12 months). Inflammatory variables, like erythrocyte
sedimentation rate (ESR) and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) were measured. Carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT)
and endothelial dependent flow-mediated vasodilatation (ED-FMD) were measured by high-resolution ultrasonography. Disease
activity of RA was assessed by disease activity score (DAS28) and quality of life was determined by Health Assessment Questionnaire-Disability
Index (HAQ-DI) Score. All the above parameters were assessed both at baseline and follow-up after 1 year. Patients were treated
with methotrexate (MTX), hydroxycholoroquine (HCQ) and sulfasalazine (SSZ) depending on their disease activity.
Results
After a year of treatment, variables like ESR, hsCRP, DAS28 and HAQ-DI showed significant improvement
(p < 0.0001 for each variable). However,
there was no such significant change observed in the lipid profile after 1 year from the baseline. Average body mass index
(BMI) of patients remained same at the one year follow-up. The cIMT values after 1 year decreased significantly [0.43 ±
0.08
mm] from the baseline [0.50 ±
0.16 mm] [p = 0.002]. Similarly, in case of FMD%, the post-1-year treatment values [7.57 (4.04–13.03)] improved
significantly from the baseline [5.26 (2.9–10.6)] [p =
0.041].
Conclusion
Subclinical atherosclerosis and endothelial dysfunction are demonstrable
features even in early RA which improved after therapy. Early intervention of RA with DMARDs not only controls the disease
but also retards the atherosclerotic progression
Vitamin D Supplementation
Increases Lower Limb Muscle Strength
SAN DIEGO, CA—Vitamin D supplementation has a
positive effect on global muscle strength; specifically, lower limb muscle strength, a meta-analysis presented at the 2013
ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting has found.
Citing evidence
that vitamin D plays a role in tissue that includes skeletal muscle and previous studies have suggested a deficiency of vitamin
D is associated with low muscular strength, Charlotte Beaudart, PhD Candidate, of the Department of Public Health, Epidemiology
and Health Economics at the University of Liège, Liège, Belgium, and colleagues examined systematic research
of randomized controlled trials that assessed the effect of vitamin D supplementation on muscle strength conducted between
1966 and February 2013.
Data sources included Medline,
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, a manual review of the literature
and congressional abstracts. The quality of the randomized controlled trials was evaluated using Jadad criteria.
“All forms and doses of vitamin D supplementation, with or without calcium supplementation, compared
with placebo or control were included,” Beaudart reported. “Muscle strength was assessed either by grip strength
and/or lower limb muscle strength.”
Of 214 articles,
19 randomized controlled trials met the inclusion criteria, with a mean quality Jadad score of 3.8 (of 5) points. A total
of 4,824 individuals were included; mean age was 66 years.
“Results
reveal a significant positive effect of vitamin D supplementation on global muscle strength with a standardized mean difference
(SMD) of 0.096 (95% CI 0.007–0.184; P=0.034),” the investigators reported.
No significant between-study heterogeneity (Q-value 23.6; P=0.21; I²=19.6%) or publication bias were found.
Sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus
Cochrane Reviews, 11/04/2013 Evidence Based Medicine
Clinical Article
Ooi CP, et al. – Sweet
potato (Ipomoea batatas) is among the most nutritious subtropical and tropical vegetables. It is also used in traditional
medicine practices for type 2 diabetes mellitus. Research in animal and human models suggests a possible role of sweet potato
in glycaemic control. To assess the effects of sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus. There is insufficient evidence about
the use of sweet potato for type 2 diabetes mellitus. In addition to improvement in trial methodology, issues of standardization
and quality control of preparations – including other varieties of sweet potato – need to be addressed. Further
observational trials and RCTs evaluating the effects of sweet potato are needed to guide any recommendations in clinical practice.
Sweet potato (Ipomoea
batatas) is a plant found in the tropical and subtropical belts and is one of the most nutritious tropical and
subtropical vegetables. As well as being popular in cooking in countries in Asia-Pacific, Africa and North America, sweet
potato is also used in traditional medicine for the treatment of diabetes mellitus. We decided to investigate whether there
is enough evidence from medical trials to show whether sweet potato works as a treatment for diabetes. This review of randomised
controlled trials found only three studies (with a total of 140 participants) that evaluated the effects of sweet potato for
type 2 diabetes mellitus compared with a fake medicine (placebo). All these trials were of very low quality. Two studies with
122 participants showed improved long-term metabolic control of blood sugar levels as measured by glycosylated haemoglobin
A1c (HbA1c) which was moderately lowered by 0.3% in participants who were given 4 g sweet potato tablets a day for three to
five months. The duration of treatment ranged from six weeks to five months. No study investigated diabetic complications,
death from any cause, health-related quality of life, well-being, functional outcomes or costs. Adverse effects were mostly
mild, and included abdominal distension and pain. There are many varieties of sweet potatoes and sweet potato preparations.
More trials are needed to assess the quality of the various sweet potato preparations as well as to evaluate further the use
of different varieties of sweet potato in the diet of diabetic people.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD009128.pub3/abstract
Metformin is associated with survival benefit in cancer patients with concurrent type 2 diabetes: A systematic
review and meta-analysis Full
Yina M, et al. – Patients
with type 2 diabetes have increased cancer risk and cancer–related mortality, which can be reduced by metformin treatment.
However, it is unclear whether metformin can also modulate clinical outcomes in patients with cancer and concurrent type 2
diabetes. These results suggest that metformin is the drug of choice in the treatment of patients with cancer and concurrent
type 2 diabetes.
Diatetes
and cancer are not two separate irrelavant diseases, but are biologically related. There is evidence that diabetic patients
have increased cancer risk and cancer-related mortality. (2). If there is no contraindications, cancer patients with concurrent
type 2 diabetes should be advised to use metformin or metformin-containing regimen for their diabetic control, except lung
cancer. This is because metformin or metformin-containing diabetic treatment is associated with increased overall survival
and cancer-specific survival. (3). There is insufficient evidence to suggest metformin use in lung cancer patient with concurrent
type 2 diabetes. (4). The mechanisms of survival benefit associated with metformin is mediated by direct effect of tumor inhibition
and indirect effect of not inducing hyperinsulinemia, compared with other diabetic medications. (5). Metformin treatment is
relatively safe in cancer patients. It is not carciongenic and does not promote tumor growth.
Conclusion. These results suggest that metformin
is the drug of choice in the treatment of patients with cancer and concurrent type 2 diabetes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24258613
Extended-release niacin therapy and risk of ischemic stroke in patients with cardiovascular disease
Stroke, 09/24/2013 Clinical Article
Teo KK et al. – In Atherothrombosis Intervention
in Metabolic Syndrome with low HDL/High Triglycerides: Impact on Global Health Outcomes (AIM–HIGH) trial, addition of
extended–release niacin (ERN) to simvastatin in participants with established cardiovascular disease, low high–density
lipoprotein cholesterol, and high triglycerides had no incremental benefit, despite increases in high–density lipoprotein
cholesterol. Preliminary analysis based on incomplete end point adjudication suggested increased ischemic stroke risk among
participants randomized to ERN. Although there were numerically more ischemic strokes with addition of ERN to simvastatin
that reached nominal significance, the number was small, and multivariable analysis accounting for known risk factors did
not support a significant association between niacin and ischemic stroke risk.
Conclusions—Although
there were numerically more ischemic strokes with addition of ERN to simvastatin that reached nominal significance, the number
was small, and multivariable analysis accounting for known risk factors did not support a significant association between
niacin and ischemic stroke risk.
http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/44/10/2688.abstract
Green
Coffee Extract: A Weight-Loss Aid?
Green coffee is simply coffee that has not
been "cooked." Green coffee products are made from unroasted coffee beans, usually from the plant Coffea arabica.1 Most
of the world enjoys coffee products that are manufactured from roasted coffee beans.
The most widely known natural component of coffee is caffeine but, in reality, coffee contains hundreds of bioactive
chemicals, many of which are more significant than caffeine.1 Green coffee products have become
widely popular as a potential weight-loss aid.
Background
Green
coffee extract contains chlorogenic acid, which is derived from a major group of phenolic compounds.2 Green
coffee beans contain nearly twice the concentration of chlorogenic acid as do roasted beans. Chlorogenic acid is a major component
of many OTC weight-loss products and acts independently of caffeine.2
The theorized mechanism of action by which green coffee produces weight loss is through the inhibition of the enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase.3 In
vitro, glucose-6-phosphatase induces the enzymatic process of glucose production in the liver.3 It
is this step in the metabolic pathway that researchers attribute to the known reduction of glycemic disorders in long-term
coffee-drinkers.4
Science
Green
coffee extract is believed to aid weight loss. One trial evaluated the responses of 16 overweight adults who had been randomized
to high-dose extract, low-dose extract, or placebo in a 22-week study.5 Body weight decreased by a mean of
8 lbs, with a mean drop in body fat of more than 4%.5
In another study, 50 volunteers with body mass indices
>25 were randomized to placebo or to treatment with green coffee extract.6 After 60 days, members of the treatment
group had lost an average of 5.7% of their body weight, with a shift in the muscle-mass-to-fat-mass ratio of +4.1%/-0.7% from
baseline.6
In a trial designed to compare the effect of green coffee
vs. roasted coffee on BP measurements, researchers randomized more than 200 subjects to either a placebo coffee drink or a
drink with low, medium, or high chlorogenic-acid content.7
Each
participant drank one cup of the treatment coffee per day and recorded BP readings for one month. At the end of the trial,
not only were the BP readings of the placebo group higher than the BP readings of the treatment group, but a definite dose-response
curve for the three treatment dose levels also was seen.
This indicates that
the beneficial effect of coffee intake on BP has nothing to do with caffeine, but rather with the chlorogenic acid content.
These findings have been validated by multiple studies examining different green coffee extract concentrations and populations.8,
9 In each trial, a statistically significant reduction of systolic BP was seen with no documented adverse
effects.
Researchers looking at human vasoreactivity monitored nitric
oxide activity in individuals after daily intake of a measured amount of green coffee extract. For four months, parameters
indicative of endothelial function were monitored daily. At the end of the test period, the vasodilatory response was found
to be significantly higher in the test group than in the placebo group, and total plasma homocysteine levels were also lower
than at baseline.10
A small lab study using human cell culture lines focused on the chemoprotective and antigenotoxic activities of green
coffee extract.11 Human colon and liver cells were treated with a dose-calculated solution of chlorogenic acid and cultured
under the same conditions as the placebo cell cultures. Both cell lines were then tested for levels of oxidative stress, such
as membrane disruption, DNA damage, and cell death.
This article originally appeared on Clinical Advisor.
Insulin Sensitizers
Linked With Reduced Risk of Cancer in Women
(HealthDay
News) – Insulin sensitizers, particularly thiazolidinedione use, may reduce the risk of cancer in female patients with
type 2 diabetes, according to research published online Dec. 5 in Diabetes,
Obesity and Metabolism.
Grace E. Ching Sun, DO, from the Cleveland Clinic, and colleagues retrospectively analyzed the electronic health
record-based Cleveland Clinic Diabetes Registry (25,613 patients) and cross-indexed it with the histology-based tumor registry
(48,051 cancer occurrences) over an eight-year period (1998–2006).
The researchers found that over the study period there were 892 incident cancer cases. Prostate and breast cancers
were the most common (14.5% and 11.7%, respectively). The cancer risk in women was decreased 32% with thiazolidinedione use
compared with sulphonylurea use (hazard ratio [HR], 0.68). The cancer risk was reduced 21% with insulin sensitizers (biguanides
and thiazolidinediones) compared to insulin secretagogues (sulphonylureas and meglitinides) (HR, 0.79). In men there were
no differences in oral diabetes therapies and risk of cancer.
"Oral insulin sensitizers are associated with decreased malignancy risk in women with type 2 diabetes mellitus,"
Sun and colleagues conclude.
One author disclosed financial
ties to the pharmaceutical industry; the diabetes registry was supported by funds from the pharmaceutical industry.
Abstract
Full Text
Lower Blood Pressure in Patients with CKD Is
Associated with Fewer Adverse Cardiovascular Events Paul S. Mueller, MD, MPH, FACP Reviewing Blood
Pressure Lowering Treatment Trialists' Collaboration., BMJ 2013 Oct 3; 347:f5680 The benefits were more pronounced in patients with chronic
kidney disease than in patients without. |
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with hypertension and risk for cardiovascular (CV) disease.
Whether drug therapy to lower blood pressure (BP) in patients with CKD lowers CV risk is unclear. In this meta-analysis of
25 randomized trials (152,000 participants, 30% with CKD), investigators determined the CV effects of BP-lowering drug therapy
in people with CKD (glomerular filtration rate [GFR], <60 mL/minute/1.73m2) or without CKD. Compared with
placebo, angiotensin-converting–enzyme (ACE) inhibitors lowered risk for major adverse CV events by 19%, and calcium-channel
blockers (CCBs) lowered risk by 28%, regardless of patients' baseline GFRs. Compared with placebo, ACE inhibitors or CCBs
reduced adverse CV events by 17% for every reduction of 5 mm Hg in systolic BP. However, the absolute benefit of BP lowering
was more pronounced for patients with low GFRs (number needed to treat [NNT] to prevent 1 major adverse CV event, 35) than
for patients with normal GFRs (NNT, 53). Finally, no particular BP-lowering drug regimen was obviously more effective than
any other in preventing adverse CV outcomes. COMMENT In this meta-analysis, blood pressure lowering with ACE
inhibitors or calcium-channel blockers lessened risk for major adverse cardiovascular events, regardless of glomerular filtration
rate. However, absolute benefit was higher for patients with chronic kidney disease, because their baseline CV risk was higher.
These results are important because an estimated 10% to 15% of the adult population has CKD. However, the researchers did
not assess whether a threshold exists, below which further BP lowering would confer no additional benefits and might confer
risk. Indeed, a recent large observational study suggests such a threshold occurs in patients with CKD . Treatment
of Anemia in Patients With Heart Disease: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the American College of Physicians AbstractAbstract | Methods | Benefits of Treatment of Anemia With RBC Transfusions | Harms of Treatment of Anemia With RBC Transfusions | Benefits of Treatment of Anemia With ESAs |Harms of Treatment of Anemia With ESAs | Influence of Hemoglobin Target Levels on Outcomes | Benefits of Using Intravenous Iron to Treat Iron Deficiency With or Without Anemia |Harms of Using Intravenous Iron to Treat Iron Deficiency With or Without Anemia | Summary |Inconclusive Areas of Evidence | ACP High-Value Care | References This
article has been corrected. The original version (PDF) is appended to this article as a supplement. Description: The American College of Physicians (ACP) developed this guideline to present the evidence
and provide clinical recommendations on the treatment of anemia and iron deficiency in adult patients with heart disease. Methods: This guideline is based on published literature in the English language on anemia
and iron deficiency from 1947 to July 2012 that was identified using MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library. Literature was reassessed
in April 2013, and additional studies were included. Outcomes evaluated for this guideline included mortality; hospitalization;
exercise tolerance; quality of life; and cardiovascular events (defined as myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure
exacerbation, arrhythmia, or cardiac death) and harms, including hypertension, venous thromboembolic events, and ischemic
cerebrovascular events. The target audience for this guideline includes all clinicians, and the target patient population
is anemic or iron-deficient adult patients with heart disease. This guideline grades the evidence and recommendations using
the ACP's clinical practice guidelines grading system. Recommendation 1: ACP recommends using a restrictive red blood cell transfusion strategy
(trigger hemoglobin threshold of 7 to 8 g/dL compared with higher hemoglobin levels) in hospitalized patients with coronary
heart disease. (Grade: weak
recommendation; low-quality evidence) Recommendation 2: ACP recommends against the use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in patients with mild
to moderate anemia and congestive heart failure or coronary heart disease. (Grade: strong recommendation; moderate-quality
evidence) http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=1784292 |
Compression Stockings After DVT Don't Prevent
Post-Thrombotic Syndrome Kahn SR et al., Lancet 2013 Dec 6; Results
of this large placebo-controlled trial conflict with those of earlier studies. |
Post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS) develops in 25% to 50% of patients after deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and causes chronic
symptoms such as pain, edema, skin changes, and leg ulcers. Two prior small randomized studies showed a benefit for elastic
compression stockings in preventing PTS, but neither trial was placebo-controlled. Now, researchers in Canada have conducted
a multicenter, placebo-controlled trial in which 806 patients with first symptomatic proximal DVTs (i.e., DVTs affecting the
popliteal vein or above) were randomized to wear either active knee-high compression stockings or placebo stockings during
waking hours for 2 years. Placebo stockings were identical in appearance to active compression stockings but delivered negligible
compression. Strictly defined PTS occurred in 14.2% of patients in the active-compression stocking
group and in 12.7% of those in the placebo group — a nonsignificant difference. When more-inclusive criteria for PTS
were employed, incidence was about 52% in each group. No between-group differences were found in syndrome severity, DVT recurrence
rates, venous ulcer incidence, quality-of-life scores, or mortality. COMMENTThese unexpected results suggest
that the benefit of elastic compression stockings shown in earlier, open-label trials might be attributable to other helpful
actions taken by compression stocking users or to some benefit of stockings that is unrelated to measurable compression. In
any case, the best strategy for preventing post-thrombotic syndrome probably is preventing DVTs in the first place. |
Combination in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus and Acute Coronary
Syndrome
Acute coronary syndromes (ACS) in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are associated with a high risk
for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) despite statin treatment. The impact of combined bezafibrate and statin therapy
in patients with DM and ACS has not been specifically investigated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association
of combined therapy with 30-day MACEs in patients with DM participating in the nationwide Acute Coronary Syndrome Israeli
Surveys (ACSIS). The study population comprised 3,063 patients with DM from the ACSIS 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, and 2010
enrollment waves who were alive at discharge and received statins. Of these, 225 (7.3%) received on discharge combined bezafibrate
and statin therapy, and 2,838 (92.7%) were treated with statins alone. MACEs were defined as a composite measure of death,
recurrent myocardial infarction, recurrent ischemia, stent thrombosis, ischemic stroke, and urgent revascularization. The
development of 30-day MACEs was recorded in 8% patients receiving combination therapy and 14.2% of those receiving statins
alone (p = 0.01). Crude 1-year mortality and 30-day rehospitalization rates were also significantly lower in patients
receiving combination therapy: 4.0% versus 8.1% (p = 0.03) and 13.3% versus 21.6% (p = 0.003), respectively.
Multivariate analysis identified combined therapy as an independent predictor of reduced risk for 30-day MACEs, with an odds
ratio of 0.56 (95% confidence interval 0.34 to 0.92), corresponding to a 44% relative risk reduction. In conclusion, a
significantly lower risk for 30-day MACEs was observed in statin-treated patients with DM who also received bezafibrate after
ACS. Signals regarding improvement of 30-day rehospitalization and 1-year mortality rates emerged as wel
http://www.ajconline.org/article/S0002-9149(13)01917-6/abstract?rss=yes
Colorectal Cancer Associated with Decreased Variety
in Gut Microbiota
Patients with colorectal cancer
have a narrower range of fecal bacteria, according to a study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Editorialists
express enthusiasm for the results, but caution that "a lot more research" is needed before the findings can be
used clinically.
Researchers analyzed bacterial
DNA from fecal samples that were collected roughly 25 years ago in a case-control study of patients with colorectal cancer;
the controls were patients undergoing elective surgery. Fecal samples were collected after confirmation of the diagnosis,
but before therapy.
Patients with cancer had decreased
overall diversity of bacteria in their gut relative to the controls. For example, they had a lower relative abundance of Clostridia
species, but an increased presence ofFusobacterium.
The editorialists write that the "exciting" findings echo similar observations that have
suggested a role for the microbiota in colorectal cancer.
JNCI article
Wider Role for HDL in Controlling Inflammation?
You may have wondered how HDL
plays its "good cholesterol" role. According to a Nature Immunology study, HDL increases the activity of a transcriptional
regulator, ATF3, which limits the inflammatory responses in macrophages.
The study authors think that this action of HDL "may be beneficial in other chronic inflammatory diseases."
Nature Immunology article
At Least Half of Cardiovascular
Risk Associated with Adiposity Is Mediated by Metabolic Risk Factors
The Global Burden of Metabolic
Risk Factors for Chronic Diseases Collaboration (BMI Mediated Effects)., Lancet 2013 Nov 22;
Blood
pressure alone accounted for one third of excess risk for coronary heart disease.
HbA1c and Severe Hypoglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes
Lipska KJ et al., Diabetes Care 2013 Nov 36:3535
Hypoglycemia appears to be more common at both the lowest
and highest glycosylated hemoglobin levels.
Exposure to Arsenic
and Incident Cardiovascular Disease
Moon KA et al., Ann Intern Med 2013 Nov 19; 159:649
Even low to moderate exposure is associated
with elevated risk for heart disease and stroke.
Should We Lower Blood
Pressure in Acute Ischemic Stroke?
He J et al., JAMA 2013 Nov 17;
In a randomized trial, outcomes were neither
better nor worse with early antihypertensive therapy.
Duration of Diabetes
Impacts Outcomes at Any Age
(HealthDay
News) – Type 2 diabetes morbidity and mortality are associated with disease duration and advancing age, according to a study
published online Dec. 9 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
Elbert S. Huang, MD, MPH, from the University of Chicago, and colleagues compared rates of diabetes
complications and mortality across age categories (60–69 years, 70–79 years, ≥80 years) and diabetes duration
categories (0–9 years and ≥10 years) using data from 72,310 older patients with type 2 diabetes.
The researchers found that for older adults with shorter diabetes duration the most common nonfatal
complications were cardiovascular complications and hypoglycemia. For example, among 70- to 79-year-olds with short duration
of diabetes, coronary artery disease and hypoglycemia rates were higher (11.47 and 5.03 per 1,000 person-years, respectively)
than end-stage renal disease, lower limb amputation, and acute hyperglycemic events (2.6, 1.28, and 0.82 per 1,000 person-years,
respectively). Patients in the same age group with a long duration of diabetes had a similar pattern (rates of 18.98 and 15.88,
compared with 7.64, 4.26, and 1.76, respectively). For a given age group, longer disease duration was associated with a considerable
increase in the rates of each outcome, especially hypoglycemia and microvascular complications. The rates of hypoglycemia,
cardiovascular complications, and mortality increased with advancing age for a given duration of diabetes, while the rates
of microvascular complications remained stable or decreased.
"The data from this study may inform the design and scope of public policy interventions that meet the unique
needs of elderly patients with the disease," the authors write.
Abstract
What You Need to Know About the New ACC/AHA Guideline
Diet Influences Cancer
Men with prostate cancer who consumr a low-fat fish oil diet
show beneficial changes in their cancer tissue.
Prostate cancer is a leading cause of death among men in the United States. University of California/Los Angeles (UCLA;
California, USA) researchers have previously found that a low-fat diet with fish oil supplements eaten for four to six
weeks prior to prostate removal slowed the growth of cancer cells in human prostate cancer tissue compared to a traditional,
high-fat Western diet. Led by William Aronson, that study also found that the men on the low-fat fish oil diet
were able to change the composition of their cell membranes in both the healthy cells and the cancer cells in the prostate.
They had increased levels of omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil and decreased levels of the more pro-inflammatory omega-6
fatty acids from corn oil in the cell membranes, which may directly affect the biology of the cells. The present
study reports that men with prostate cancer who ate a low-fat diet and took fish oil supplements have lower levels of pro-inflammatory
substances in their blood and a lower cell cycle progression (CCP) score, which may help prevent prostate cancers from becoming
more aggressive.
Soy and Tomato
Combo Best For Prostate Cancer Prevention
Study results suggest that eating a combination
of tomatoes and soy foods offers the most effective protection against prostate cancer.
New research suggests that men could help to protect themselves
from prostate cancer by eating a combination of tomatoes and soy foods. John Erdman, a professor of food science and nutrition
at the University of Illinois, and colleagues studied the effect of diet on mice genetically engineered to develop an aggressive
form of prostate cancer. Between the age of 4 and 18-weeks old the mice were fed 1 of 4 diets: 10% whole tomato powder;
2% soy germ; 10% whole tomato powder and 2% soy germ; or a control diet containing neither tomato nor soy. Results showed
that only 45% of mice fed a combination of tomato and soy had developed prostate cancer by the end of the study, whereas 66%
of mice who received tomato or soy developed the disease. In contrast, 100% of mice in the control group developed prostate
cancer. "Eating tomato, soy, and the combination all significantly reduced prostate cancer incidence. But the combination
gave us the best results,” said Professor Erdman. Study co-author Krystle Zuniga added: "The results of the mouse
study suggest that 3 to 4 servings of tomato products per week and 1 to 2 servings of soy foods daily could protect against
prostate cancer." The researchers recommend eating whole tomatoes and drinking soy milk instead of taking lycopene and
soy isoflavones supplements.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/uoic-sat050813.php
Coffee Compounds Assist Heart Health
Polyphenols in coffee may improve the function
of the cells lining blood vessels among healthy men.
The cells that line blood vessels, known as the endothelium, perform many functions including to maintain elasticity
of blood vessels and regulate the activity of immune cells. Endothelial function is measured by detecting transient increases
in blood flow, a marker known as the reactive hyperemia index (RHI). Japanese researchers enrolled a group of healthy, non-diabetic
men in a study in which each was randomly assigned to consume = a 75 g glucose load either with or without green coffee bean
polyphenols. The team observed that blood glucose and insulin levels increased after both interventions, and there were no
differences between the groups. However, the reactive hyperemia index rose significantly in the polyphenol group, as compared
to their starting levels. The study authors conclude that: "These findings suggest that a single ingestion of [coffee
polyphenols] improves peripheral endothelial function after glucose loading in healthy subjects.”
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Research/Coffee-polyphenols-show-heart-health-potential-for-healthy-men-Study/
Chelation Therapy Reduces
Heart Attacks & Death
The treatment that is utilized to detoxify the body is shown to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events and death
in people with diabetes.
Chelation therapy reduces cardiovascular events for older patients
with diabetes
Chelation treatments reduced cardiovascular events, such
as heart attacks, and death in patients with diabetes but not in those who did not have diabetes, according to analyses of
data from the National Institutes of Health-funded Trial to Assess Chelation Therapy (TACT). However, researchers say more
studies are needed before it’s known whether this promising finding leads to a treatment option.
Chelation is a chemical process in which a substance is delivered intravenously (through the veins)
to bind atoms of metals or minerals, and hold them tightly so that they can be removed from the body. Chelation is conventionally
used as a treatment for heavy metal (like lead) poisoning, although some people use chelation as an unapproved and unproven
treatment for conditions like heart disease.
Chelation
therapy is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat heart disease. However, use of chelation therapy
to treat heart disease and other health problems grew in the United States between 2002 and 2007 by nearly 68 percent to 111,000
people, according to the 2008 National Health Statistics Report.
The diabetes subgroup analysis of TACT was published today in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes
and presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2013. TACT is a study supported by NIH’s
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
TACT’s initial report was published in the March 27, 2013, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association. This
previous report showed that infusions of a form of chelation therapy using disodium ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA)
produced a modest but statistically significant reduction in cardiovascular events in all EDTA-treated participants. However,
further examination of the data showed that patients with diabetes were significantly impacted by chelation therapy while
patients without diabetes were not.
The patients with
diabetes, which made up approximately one third of 1,708 participants, demonstrated a 41 percent overall reduction in the
risk of any cardiovascular event; a 40 percent reduction in the risk of death from heart disease nonfatal stroke, or nonfatal
heart attack; a 52 percent reduction in recurrent heart attacks; and a 43 percent reduction in death from any cause. In contrast,
there was no significant benefit of EDTA treatment in the subgroup of 1,045 participants who did not have diabetes.
“These are striking results that, if supported by future research, could point the way towards
new treatments to prevent complications of diabetes,” said Gervasio A. Lamas, M.D., the study’s principal investigator
and chairman of medicine and chief of the Columbia University Division of Cardiology at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami
Beach.
From 2003 to 2010, 1,708 adults aged 50 and older were
enrolled in TACT, of whom 633 had diabetes. Study participants had suffered a heart attack 6 weeks or more before enrollment
(on average, the heart attack occurred about 4.5 years earlier). The participants were assigned randomly to receive 40 infusions
of disodium EDTA chelation solution or a placebo solution. Patients also were randomly assigned to receive high doses of oral
vitamins and minerals or an identical oral placebo. Most participants also took standard medicines for heart attack survivors,
such as aspirin, beta blockers, and statins. They were followed for a minimum of 1 year and up to 5 years, with followup ending
in October 2011.
TACT was not designed to discover how or why chelation
might benefit patients with diabetes.
“Although
subgroup analyses of clinical trials do not provide definitive answers, they are very useful in identifying future research
questions,” said Josephine Briggs, M.D., Director of NCCAM. “The effects seen in this population are large and
very intriguing. This analysis suggests strongly that more research is needed to examine possible benefits of chelation in
diabetics and the potential mechanisms.”
“We
share Dr. Briggs’s interest in these compelling findings,” said Michael Lauer, M.D., Director of the NHLBI’s
Division of Cardiovascular Sciences. “Additional studies are needed before we can determine the potential place of EDTA
chelation therapy, if any, in the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease and diabetes.”
TACT was supported by grants from the NIH’s NCCAM (U01AT001156) and NHLBI (U01HL092607).
For more information or to arrange an interview with an NIH spokesperson, please contact the NCCAM
Communications Office at 301-496-7790 or nccampress@mail.nih.gov. To schedule an interview with Dr. Lamas,
contact Robert Alonso at 305-674-2600 or Robert.Alonso@msmc.com. Follow Dr. Lamas on Twitter .
Part of the National Institutes of Health, the mission of The National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) is to define, through rigorous scientific investigation, the usefulness and safety of complementary
and alternative medicine interventions and their roles in improving health and health care. For additional information, call
NCCAM’s Clearinghouse toll free at 1-888-644-6226, or visit the NCCAM website at http://nccam.nih.gov. Follow us onTwitter , Facebook , and YouTube .
Part of the National Institutes of Health, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) plans,
conducts, and supports research related to the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of heart, blood vessel, lung,
and blood diseases; and sleep disorders. The Institute also administers national health education campaigns on women and heart
disease, healthy weight for children, and other topics. NHLBI press releases and other materials are available online atwww.nhlbi.nih.gov.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research
agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is
the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating
the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visitwww.nih.gov.
New
JNC 8 Hypertension Guidelines: What Does the Panel Recommend Now?
The
Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) has released new guidelines on the management of
adult hypertension.
RELATED: Cardiovascular
Disease Resource Center
The authors formed nine recommendations
which are discussed in detail along with the supporting evidence. Evidence was taken from randomized controlled trials,
the gold standard for establishing efficacy and effectiveness. Some of the new major recommendations include:
1. In patients aged ≥60 years, initiate pharmacologic treatment in systolic BP ≥150mmHg
or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal systolic BP <150mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg. (Strong Recommendation–Grade
A)
2. In patients aged <60 years, initiate pharmacologic
treatment at diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal <90mmHg. (For ages 30–59 years, Strong Recommendation–Grade
A; For ages 18–29 years, Expert Opinion–Grade E)
3. In patients aged <60 years, initiate pharmacologic treatment at systolic BP ≥140mmHg and treat to
a goal <140mmHg. (Expert Opinion–Grade E)
4. In patients aged ≥18 years with chronic kidney disease, initiate pharmacologic treatment at systolic BP
≥140mmHg or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to goal systolic BP <140mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg. (Expert
Opinion–Grade E)
5. In patients aged ≥18
years with diabetes, initiate pharmacologic treatment at
systolic BP ≥140mmHg or diastolic BP ≥90mmHg and treat to a goal systolic BP <140mmHg and goal diastolic BP <90mmHg.
(Expert Opinion–Grade E)
6. In the general nonblack
population, including those with diabetes, initial antihypertensive treatment should include a thiazide-type diuretic, CCB, ACE inhibitor, or ARB.
(Moderate Recommendation–Grade B) This recommendation is different from the JNC 7 in which the panel recommended thiazide-type
diuretics as initial therapy for most patients.
7.
In the general black population, including those with diabetes, initial antihypertensive treatment should include a
thiazide-type diuretic or CCB. (For general black population: Moderate Recommendation - Grade B; for black patients with
diabetes: Weak Recommendation–Grade C)
8.
In the population aged ≥18 years with chronic kidney disease, initial (or add-on) antihypertensive treatment
should include an ACE inhibitor or ARB to improve kidney outcomes. (Moderate Recommendation–Grade B)
9. If goal BP is not reached within a month of treatment, increase the dose of the initial
drug or add a second drug from one of the classes in Recommendation 6. If goal BP cannot be reached with two drugs, add and
titrate a third drug from the list provided. Do not use an ACEI and an ARB together in the same patient. If goal BP cannot
be reached using only the drugs in Recommendation 6 because of a contraindication or the need to use more than 3 drugs to
reach goal BP, antihypertensive drugs from other classes can be used. (Expert Opinion–Grade E)
The full guidelines have been published online
at JAMA.
Risk of Developing
Diverticulitis Lower Than Thought
(HealthDay News) – Only about 4% of patients with an incidental finding of diverticulosis progress to
acute diverticulitis in the long term, according to research published in the December issue ofClinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Kamyar Shahedi, MD, of the University of California in Los Angeles, and colleagues retrospectively analyzed data
from the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System from January 1996 through January 2011 to measure the long-term
risk of acute diverticulitis among patients with diverticulosis discovered incidentally during colonoscopy.
The researchers found that 95 of 2,222 patients with diverticulosis (4.3%) developed diverticulitis
during the 11-year follow-up period. Among these patients, 23 (1%) met the rigorous definition of diverticulitis. The median
time-to-event for the development of diverticulitis was 7.1 years. For each additional decade of age at the time of diagnosis
of diverticulosis, the risk of developing diverticulitis was reduced by 24% (hazard ratio, 0.76).
"These results question the traditional teaching about the rate of progression from incidental
diverticulosis to acute diverticulitis," the authors write. "Moreover, they also suggest that patients who are diagnosed
with diverticulosis at a younger age may incur more risk of developing diverticulitis."
Shire Development funded the study; several authors disclosed financial ties to pharmaceutical companies,
including Shire Pharmaceuticals.
Abstract
Full Text
Metformin Leads to Modest Reductions in BMI
Among Nondiabetic Children
Adding
metformin to lifestyle interventions in nondiabetic children leads to modest reductions in BMI, but the clinical benefit is
uncertain, according to a review in JAMA Pediatrics.
Researchers examined data from
14 randomized trials comparing metformin with a control intervention in some 950 overweight or obese children aged 10 to 16
years without diabetes. For the most part, participants received metformin plus a lifestyle intervention or a lifestyle intervention
alone.
In studies lasting 6 to 12 months, metformin plus lifestyle
interventions conferred a 1.4-unit greater reduction in BMI than lifestyle interventions alone. Gastrointestinal events were
the most common side effects.
The researchers
write: "Although these findings are based on statistically significant, moderate-strength evidence, the clinical benefit
of such a small reduction in BMI is certainly questionable." They call for larger trials to "determine whether there
are specific patients who may have a clinical, and not just statistical, benefit from treatment."
JAMA Pediatrics article
Some ARBs May Outperform Others in Lowering
CV Risk in Diabetes
The
angiotensin-receptor blockers telmisartan and valsartan might help prevent major cardiovascular events better than other ARBs
in patients with diabetes, according to a CMAJ study.
Using Canadian databases, researchers identified 54,000 older adults with diabetes who were first-time
users of ARBs. After multivariable adjustment, both telmisartan and valsartan were associated with about a 15% reduction in risk for hospital
admission for acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, or stroke, compared with irbesartan. The risk was not significantly
reduced for candesartan or losartan.
The authors conclude that "a class effect may not be assumed when using angiotensin-receptor blockers
for the prevention of diabetes-related macrovascular complications or heart failure, and that telmisartan and valsartan may
be the preferred drugs for this indication." Meanwhile, a commentator concludes, "without appropriately designed
randomized controlled trials, there is scant evidence to support preferring one drug in this class over another for patients
with type 2 diabetes."
CMAJ article
ACE-Inhibitors and ARBs Associated with Reduced
Need for Dialysis in Advanced CKD
Use of either angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs)
— but not the two together — may reduce the need for dialysis in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease,
a JAMA Internal Medicine study
finds.
Researchers in Taiwan studied antihypertensive use among
roughly 28,000 patients who had predialysis stage 5 CKD, hypertension, and anemia.
During a median 7 months' follow-up, patients taking ACE-inhibitors or ARBs had a lower likelihood
of long-term dialysis (hazard ratio, 0.94) and the composite outcome of dialysis or death (HR, 0.94), compared with nonusers.
Concomitant ACE-inhibitor/ARB use wasn't associated with risk reduction. Hospitalization for hyperkalemia was more common
among ACE-inhibitor/ARB users than nonusers (9.2% vs. 6.7%).
Commentators write: "For selected patients with no history of severe hyperkalemia or prior repeated episodes
of acute kidney injury and with good adherence to laboratory monitoring, clinicians may elect to continue [renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
system] blockade even in advanced CKD in an effort to delay the onset of end-stage renal disease."
JAMA Internal Medicine article
Optimal
Testosterone Levels Predict Better Survival in Older Men
Optimal testosterone
levels are a biomarker for better survival in older men, according to a new study.
The study of 3,690 community-dwelling men aged 70-89 years showed that those with midrange levels of
testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) had the lowest all-cause mortality and those with higher DHT had lower mortality
from ischemic heart disease (IHD). Estradiol levels did not predict all-cause or IHD mortality.
Of the 3,690 men, 974 (26.4%) died, including 325 who died from IHD. Men who died had significantly
lower mean baseline total testosterone levels (12.8 vs. 13.2 nmol/L), DHT levels (1.4 vs. 1.5 nmol/L), and estradiol (71.6
vs. 74.0 pmol/L), Bu Beng Yeap, MBBS, PhD, of Fremantle Hospital in Fremantle, Western Australia, and colleagues reported
online ahead of print in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
After controlling for other risk
factors, men in the second and third quartiles of total testosterone had a significant 18% and 22% decreased risk of death
from any cause, respectively, compared with those in the first quartile. Men in the third quartile of DHT had a significant
24% decreased risk of death from any cause compared with men in the first quartile. Death risk was not significantly lower
among men in the fourth quartile of total testosterone or DHT compared with the first quartile.
Additionally, results showed that men in the third or fourth quartiles of DHT had a significant 42%
and 31% decreased risk of death from IHD, respectively, compared with men in the first quartile.
Association of testosterone therapy with mortality, myocardial infarction, and stroke in men with low testosterone
levels.
IMPORTANCE:
Rates of testosterone therapy are increasing and the effects of testosterone therapy on cardiovascular outcomes and
mortality are unknown. A recent randomized clinical trial of testosterone therapy in men with a high prevalence of cardiovascular
diseases was stopped prematurely due to adverse cardiovascular events raising concerns about testosterone therapy safety.
OBJECTIVES:
To assess the association between
testosterone therapy and all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction (MI), or stroke among male veterans and to determine whether
this association is modified by underlying coronary artery disease.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS:
A retrospective national cohort study of men with low
testosterone levels (<300 ng/dL) who underwent coronary angiography in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system between 2005 and
2011.
MAIN OUTCOMES
AND MEASURES:
Primary outcome was a composite of all-cause mortality, MI, and ischemic stroke.
RESULTS:
Of the 8709 men with a total testosterone
level lower than 300 ng/dL, 1223 patients started testosterone therapy after a median of 531 days following coronary angiography.
Of the 1710 outcome events, 748 men died, 443 had MIs, and 519 had strokes. Of 7486 patients not receiving testosterone therapy,
681 died, 420 had MIs, and 486 had strokes. Among 1223 patients receiving testosterone therapy, 67 died, 23 had MIs, and 33
had strokes. The absolute rate of events were 19.9% in the no testosterone therapy group vs 25.7% in the testosterone therapy
group, with an absolute risk difference of 5.8% (95% CI, -1.4% to 13.1%) at 3 years after coronary angiography. In Cox proportional
hazards models adjusting for the presence of coronary artery disease, testosterone therapy use as a time-varying covariate
was associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes (hazard ratio, 1.29; 95% CI, 1.04 to 1.58). There was no significant
difference in the effect size of testosterone therapy among those with and without coronary artery disease (test for interaction,
P = .41).
CONCLUSIONS
AND RELEVANCE:
Among a cohort of men in the VA health care system who underwent coronary angiography
and had a low serum testosterone level, the use of testosterone therapy was associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes.
These findings may inform the discussion about the potential risks of testosterone therapy.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24193080
BMD Testing Every 2 Years May Not Improve Fracture
Risk Prediction
The current
practice of testing bone mineral density every 2 years in older adults may be too frequent, suggests a JAMA study.
Roughly 800 adults (mean age, 75) underwent two femoral neck BMD tests an average of 3.7 years apart
as part of the Framingham Osteoporosis Study. After 10 years of follow-up, the addition of BMD change to a model predicting
fracture risk did no better than use of baseline BMD alone. With a second BMD test, the percentage of patients with a hip
fracture reclassified as high risk increased only 3.9%, while those with a major osteoporotic fracture who were upgraded to
high risk increased 9.7%.
The authors conclude: "The
current clinical practice of repeating a BMD test every 2 years to improve fracture risk stratification may not be necessary
in all adults 75 years or older untreated for osteoporosis. Further study is needed to determine an appropriate rescreening
interval and to identify individuals who might benefit from more frequent rescreening intervals."
JAMA article
Effect
of Soy Protein Isolate Supplementation on Biochemical Recurrence of Prostate Cancer After Radical ProstatectomyA Randomized Trial
Importance Soy consumption has been suggested to reduce risk or recurrence of prostate cancer,
but this has not been tested in a randomized trial with prostate cancer as the end point.
Objective To determine whether daily consumption of a soy protein isolate
supplement for 2 years reduces the rate of biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy or delays
such recurrence.
Design, Setting, and Participants Randomized, double-blind trial conducted from July 1997 to May
2010 at 7 US centers comparing daily consumption of a soy protein supplement vs placebo in 177 men at high risk of recurrence
after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. Supplement intervention was started within 4 months after surgery and continued
for up to 2 years, with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements made at 2-month intervals in the first year and every
3 months thereafter.
Intervention Participants were randomized to receive a daily serving of a beverage powder
containing 20 g of protein in the form of either soy protein isolate (n=87) or, as placebo, calcium caseinate (n=90).
Main Outcomes and Measures Biochemical recurrence rate of prostate cancer (defined as development of a PSA
level of ≥0.07 ng/mL) over the first 2 years following randomization and time to recurrence.
Results The trial was stopped early for lack of treatment effects at
a planned interim analysis with 81 evaluable participants in the intervention group and 78 in the placebo group. Overall,
28.3% of participants developed biochemical recurrence within 2 years of entering the trial (close to the a priori predicted
recurrence rate of 30%). Among these, 22 (27.2%) occurred in the intervention group and 23 (29.5%) in the placebo group. The
resulting hazard ratio for active treatment was 0.96 (95% CI, 0.53-1.72; log-rank P = .89).
Adherence was greater than 90% and there were no apparent adverse events related to supplementation.
Conclusion
and Relevance Daily consumption of a beverage powder supplement containing
soy protein isolate for 2 years following radical prostatectomy did not reduce biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer in
men at high risk of PSA failure.
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=1710457&utm_source=Silverchair%20Information%20Systems&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=MASTER%3AJAMALatestIssueTOCNotification07%2F09%2F2013
FDA warns of renal
failure with Byetta
The FDA has notified healthcare professionals that the Prescribing Information
for Byetta (exenatide injection, from Amylin and Lilly) has been revised to include information on post-marketing reports
of altered kidney function, including acute renal failure and insufficiency.
Fiber intake and heart disease risk
Low dietary fiber intake from 1999 to 2010 in the US, and
associations between higher dietary fiber and a lower prevalence of cardiometabolic risks, suggest the need to develop new
strategies and policies to increase dietary fiber intake. The American Journal of Medicine
Antibiotics overprescribed for
skin infections
Approximately half of uncomplicated skin infections involved
avoidable antibiotic exposure. Antibiotic use could be reduced through treatment approaches using short courses of a single
antibiotic. The American Journal of Medicine
Metformin has different cardiac effects on men and women
Metformin treatment alone was associated with lower fat metabolism
and increased cardiac glucose uptake in women, but it had negative effects on heart metabolism in men, according to a study
in the American Journal of Physiology -- Heart and Circulatory Physiology. Researchers said the findings shed light on why
diabetes drug trials show conflicts and also underscore the need to determine optimal treatments for men and women. HealthDay News(12/16), RedOrbit
Older women spend a majority of their day being sedentary
Among more than 7,200 older women, the average amount of time
spent in sedentary behavior was 9.7 hours each day, or 65.5% of their waking hours, according to a study published in JAMA.
Researchers noted that about one-third of sedentary periods lasted approximately 30 minutes. Family Practice News
Handgrip predicts hip surgery outcome
In older patients with hip fractures, early grip strength
evaluation might provide important prognostic information regarding the patient's future functional trajectory. The American Journal of Medicine
High-density lipoprotein function in heart failure
This study concluded that high-density lipoprotein function
is significantly impaired, and oxidation products of arachidonic and linoleic acids are markedly elevated, in patients with
heart failure compared to non-heart failure controls. The American Journal of Cardiology(12/15/2013)
Cholesterol, statins and longevity from age 70 to 90
The debate over cholesterol and statins is even more controversial
when talking about the elderly. A research study out of Israel found that statin use from age 85 to 90 was actually associated
with decreased mortality. Also surprisingly, survival was significantly increased in those treated with statins versus no
statins aged 78 to 85. The noninterventional nature of the study may limit conclusions that can be drawn from it, but it will
certainly stimulate debate, and, hopefully, further studies. (Free abstract only.) Journal of the American Medical Directors Association(12/2013)
Age, disease duration affect morbidity in type 2 diabetes
A report in JAMA Internal Medicine revealed that age and disease
duration played key roles in hypoglycemia and other complications in type 2 diabetes patients. Researchers examined 72,310
patients and found hypoglycemic events ranged between 3 per 1,000 person-years in youngest patients with the shortest disease
duration to 19.6 per 1,000 person-years among the oldest patients with the longest disease duration, which suggest that intensive
glucose control may not yield benefits in the latter group. Family Practice News
Narrow- and broad-spectrum antibiotics work equally well in pneumonia
U.S. researchers looked at nearly 500 patients with pneumonia
aged 2 months to 18 years and found no substantial differences in readmission rates, fever duration and length of oxygen time
between those treated with narrow-spectrum antibiotics and those given broad-spectrum drugs. However, the study published
in the journal Pediatrics showed that the length of stay in the narrow-spectrum group was 10 hours shorter than the broad-spectrum
patients.DailyRx.com
Fiber intake and heart disease risk
Low dietary fiber intake from 1999 to 2010 in the US, and
associations between higher dietary fiber and a lower prevalence of cardiometabolic risks, suggest the need to develop new
strategies and policies to increase dietary fiber intake. The American Journal of Medicine
Dietary Supplements Blamed for Sharp Rise in
Drug-Related Liver Injuries
Dietary
supplements, including many marketed for muscle-building and weight loss, account for a spike in drug-related liver injuries
over the past decade, according to a front-page story in Sunday's New York Times. Many patients ultimately recover, but some
end up requiring transplants or dying from liver failure.
Supplements accounted for nearly 20 percent of drug-related liver injuries that led to hospitalization in 2010-2012,
the Times reports,
up from 7 percent in 2004. The data, from the NIH's National Liver Network, showed that many of the products were bodybuilding
supplements that contained steroids not listed on the label. Use of green tea extract was also frequently reported. The extract
contains catechins, which are said to increase metabolism; in high doses, they can cause liver toxicity.
Of over 50,000 supplements sold in the U.S., less than 1% have been examined well enough to determine
their adverse effect profile, one expert told the Times.
New York Times story
Early Doses of Warfarin Paradoxically Associated
with Higher Stroke Risk
Patients
with atrial fibrillation seem to be at increased risk for ischemic stroke when starting warfarin prophylaxis, according to
a case-control study in the European Heart Journal.
The study was undertaken after
trials of both apixaban and rivaroxaban noted increased stroke risks among patients transitioning to open-label warfarin.
This study was funded by the makers of apixaban.
Using
a U.K. database, researchers examined a cohort of some 70,000 patients with AF; they matched 5500 cases of ischemic stroke
with 55,000 controls. AF patients initiating warfarin therapy had a 71% increased risk for ischemic stroke within the first
30 days of therapy, compared with those on no anticoagulants. The risk was highest in the first week. However, the warfarin
group had half the stroke risk after 30 days.
The
authors say the observed "paradoxical procoagulant effect" may be due to warfarin's effect in blocking some
endogenous anticoagulants.
European Heart Journal article
* ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Enzyme
BACE1 may be important in predicting onset of Alzheimer disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jxV
Older Native-Americans and African-Americans with diabetes at increased risk for dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jvk
Risk for Alzheimer's disease doubled by rare gene variants
http://mnt.to/l/4jtQ
Making dementia friendly neighbourhoods
http://mnt.to/l/4jtq
New IMI project to revolutionise clinical trials for Alzheimer's drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jsQ
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News
**
High levels of maternal care has life-long impact on vulnerability to
stress
http://mnt.to/l/4jxQ
Sniffing out danger: Rutgers scientists say fearful memories can trigger heightened sense of smell
http://mnt.to/l/4jx2
High rates of PTSD, depression suffered by contractors who worked in conflict zones
http://mnt.to/l/4jsC
Symptoms of combat-related psychological trauma eased by new brief therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jst
Fear conditioning likely cause of acute stress related to prolonged viewing of media coverage of Boston Marathon bombings
http://mnt.to/l/4jrB
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY
News **
Experimental compound dramatically reduces joint inflammation
http://mnt.to/l/4jtK
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News
**
Temperature-sensitive gelling scaffolds developed to regenerate craniofacial
bone
http://mnt.to/l/4jvb
Evidence-based recommendations for platelet-rich plasma
http://mnt.to/l/4jsF
In murine osteoporosis, choloroquine reduces formation of bone resorbing cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jrG
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
Scientists halt first step of breast cancer spread in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jzP
Myriad's HRD™ test significantly predicts response to cisplatin treatment in triple negative breast cancer
patients in second research study
http://mnt.to/l/4jzy
New drug combination delayed disease progression for subgroup of women with metastatic breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jy6
First in-human trial of endoxifen shows promise as breast cancer treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jxC
Younger, early breast cancer patients often undergo unnecessary staging, imaging procedures at time
http://mnt.to/l/4jxz
Everolimus added to exemestane boosts overall response in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyZ
Certain advanced breast cancer patients may benefit from surgery before other treatment, UPMC-advised study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jwH
New models of drug-resistant breast cancer point to better treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4jwD
Deep sequencing of breast cancer tumors to predict clinical outcomes after single dose of therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jwB
Breast cancer drug halves cases in high-risk women
http://mnt.to/l/4jwq
In lower-risk breast cancer patients, Herceptin plus Taxol highly effective
http://mnt.to/l/4jv3
Genetic signature identifies patients with more aggressive triple-negative cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jtW
Identifying aggressive breast cancers in black women
http://mnt.to/l/4jtJ
Novel Agent Set for Unique Clinical Test in Inflammatory Breast Cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtF
Exercise protects against aggressive breast cancer in black women
http://mnt.to/l/4jtD
Event-free and overall survival results from NeoALTTO trial
http://mnt.to/l/4jtC
Identifying breast cancer patients most likely to benefit from trastuzumab
http://mnt.to/l/4jtB
Highly effective treatment option identified for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtz
Some older patients with breast cancer may avoid radiotherapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jty
Breast cancer screening: benefit more consistent across studies than previously understood
http://mnt.to/l/4jtx
Older breast cancer survivors benefit from exercise programs
http://mnt.to/l/4jsG
Association between oncometabolite accumulation and breast cancer prognosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jrH
Biomarker linked to aggressive breast cancers, poor outcomes in African-Americans
http://mnt.to/l/4jr6
Guideline-recommended breast cancer treatment affected by economic factors
http://mnt.to/l/4jr3
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News
**
'Breakthrough' may lead to new treatment for fatal childhood
cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jzq
Partially blocking blood vessels' energy source may stop cancer growth, blindness & other conditions
http://mnt.to/l/4jy3
Cancer diagnosis more likely to limit careers for patients from rural areas
http://mnt.to/l/4jxf
Helping cancer researchers make sense of the deluge of genetic data
http://mnt.to/l/4jwQ
Childhood cancer survivors suffer symptoms in adulthood
http://mnt.to/l/4jwr
Magnetic nanoparticles to cure cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jwg
Mechanism of cancer spread identified
http://mnt.to/l/4jvV
FDA-approved lung cancer medication shrinks chordoma in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jvS
Improved cooling cap for chemotherapy hair loss 'more effective'
http://mnt.to/l/4jwf
Researchers refute cancer 'avalanche effect'
http://mnt.to/l/4jvB
Defending medical oncology to assure quality care for cancer patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jwh
One step closer to understanding a deadly childhood brain cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtP
Finnish research unveils novel cancer cell DNA damage repair mechanism
http://mnt.to/l/4jtt
Scientists shed new light on the fight against cancer - They have discovered how the anti-tumor activity of immune
cells can be restored
http://mnt.to/l/4jtc
Drugs identified that enhance oxidative stress as possible weapon against most common pediatric soft tissue tumor
http://mnt.to/l/4jsy
New method devised to measure life's tugs and nudges
http://mnt.to/l/4jsn
New technique could help bring cancer biomarkers to clinic
http://mnt.to/l/4jr2
Gene discovered that plays a part in one per cent of all cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jqZ
Mechanism identified that is implicated in brain cancer and a drug that decreases brain tumor growth
http://mnt.to/l/4jqY
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY
News **
Medtronic announces first human implant of world's smallest,
minimally invasive cardiac pacemaker
http://mnt.to/l/4jwS
Repairing human hearts with biomaterials
http://mnt.to/l/4jvx
After placing carotid stent, surgeons suggest skipping the balloon
http://mnt.to/l/4jvw
Younger women more likely to have and die from acute myocardial infarction
http://mnt.to/l/4jvg
Optimal framework for heartbeats
http://mnt.to/l/4jvd
----------------------------------------------
** CHOLESTEROL News **
HDL finding may lead to molecular approach for treating inflammation
http://mnt.to/l/4jrT
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News
**
MRI assessment of rectal cancer provides crucial prognostic information
to improve survival for patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jw9
6-million-euro European study to combat bowel cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jtM
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Peripheral immune system may regulate vulnerability to depression
http://mnt.to/l/4jxP
FDA approves first generic versions of antidepressant drug Cymbalta
http://mnt.to/l/4jwy
Exercise may increase libido among women taking antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jvX
Seasonal affective disorder: could you spot the signs?
http://mnt.to/l/4jvr
Gene discovered that may predict human responses to specific antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jss
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
New FDA cleared Theradome™ Laser Therapy Helmet hair loss treatment created
by former NASA scientist
http://mnt.to/l/4jsc
New ways to repair wounds and reduce impact of aging on the skin
http://mnt.to/l/4jvj
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Illinois institute of technology works to develop artificial pancreas systems for
use during and after exercise
http://mnt.to/l/4jxx
New study shows link between perfluorinated compounds and diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jxn
Diabetes drugs affect hearts of men, women differently
http://mnt.to/l/4jx7
Outcomes of care for children and young people with diabetes is improving, yet overall diabetes control remains poor
in 1 in 4, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jx6
Wayne State discovers potential treatment for skin and corneal wound healing in diabetics
http://mnt.to/l/4jwP
SIRT5 regulation has dramatic effect on mitochondrial metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jts
Risk factor for liver cancer increased by diabetes across ethnic groups
http://mnt.to/l/4jr5
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Fatty acids crucial to embryonic development
http://mnt.to/l/4jxT
Ethical concerns about marketing loans for fertility treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4js7
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News
**
Goji berries protect against the flu in new study
http://mnt.to/l/4jww
Effectiveness of influenza vaccines may be significantly improved by brief laser-light treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jtT
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES /
BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
epic3: National evidence-based guidelines for
preventing healthcare-associated infections in NHS hospitals in England
http://mnt.to/l/4jzm
From friend to foe: How benign bacteria evolve to virulent pathogens
http://mnt.to/l/4jy2
Salmonella jams signals from bacteria-fighting mast cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jxW
Collaborating proteins allow Nipah virus to 'break into' cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jzn
Reservoirs of staph can lurk deep within the nose
http://mnt.to/l/4jvh
Scientists reveal choreographed stages of salmonella infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jtX
Scientists explore the mechanisms of viruses' shells
http://mnt.to/l/4jtv
New findings reveal protein structure in rubella virus
http://mnt.to/l/4jtm
Recycled plastic turned into 'nanofibers' to attack fungal infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jsR
Comparing penicillin and 'big gun' antibiotics for treating less severe childhood pneumonia
http://mnt.to/l/4jsj
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Civilians trained by American mental health professionals bring healing to trauma
victims of Libya's civil war, Baylor study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jwN
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE
News **
Scientists discover way to enhance self-control
http://mnt.to/l/4jwJ
Faulty receptor in the brain 'muddles memories'
http://mnt.to/l/4jwn
Discovery of mechanism controlling Tourette Syndrome tics
http://mnt.to/l/4jvy
New app measures battery life for brain stimulation patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jwd
Schools raise test scores, but not abstract reasoning skills
http://mnt.to/l/4jwc
Sleep problems due to traumatic brain injury improved by dietary amino acids in mouse model
http://mnt.to/l/4jvc
Nonconcussion head impacts in contact sports linked to brain changes and lower test scores
http://mnt.to/l/4jv7
Early brain development influenced by poverty
http://mnt.to/l/4jtV
Observing the brain's cellular response to concussion
http://mnt.to/l/4jtG
Prolonged disorders of consciousness - new RCP guidance to help healthcare staff and families
http://mnt.to/l/4jtk
Embolic material at site of fatal hemorrhage occurring days after flow-diversion aneurysm treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jt2
Realistic hands-on models created for neurosurgical training using multimaterial 3D printers
http://mnt.to/l/4jsZ
A concussion can lead to depression years later
http://mnt.to/l/4jsq
Blows to the head could affect brain, memory and thinking
http://mnt.to/l/4jrw
How the brain learns new skills while retaining old ones
http://mnt.to/l/4jsg
Athletes experience fewer concussions at higher elevations
http://mnt.to/l/4js2
Initial consensus recommendations for studies of neurofibromatosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jrW
Zinc supplementation and aluminum-induced neurotoxicity
http://mnt.to/l/4jrK
Prion protein can trigger spongiform encephalopathy and neurodegeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jrJ
In rat model researchers use neural prosthesis to restore behavior after brain injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jrz
We each live in a unique odor world
http://mnt.to/l/4jqX
Scientists film early concussion damage and describe brain's response to injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jqW
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News
**
What are the health benefits of coffee?
http://mnt.to/l/4jym
What are the health benefits of carrots?
http://mnt.to/l/4jy7
Vitamin supplements a waste of money?
http://mnt.to/l/4jwv
What are the benefits of cod liver oil?
http://mnt.to/l/4jvG
Young women 'need better support' for healthy eating
http://mnt.to/l/4jt9
Aspartame 'safe' at current levels, says European food regulator
http://mnt.to/l/4jt3
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS
/ FITNESS News **
Study links sleep to mood disturbance and poor quality
of life in obese
http://mnt.to/l/4jzw
Exercise counters effect of Christmas excess on metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jz2
Ear acupuncture 'boosts weight loss'
http://mnt.to/l/4jxs
Burger consumption in restaurants associated with higher obesity risk in African-American women
http://mnt.to/l/4jvW
Kids' movies guilty of mixed messages about eating habits
http://mnt.to/l/4jth
Important role may be played by tumor-suppressing genes in obesity, diabetes, heart disease and cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jvm
Pediatric obesity patients like telehealth services
http://mnt.to/l/4jv9
€4.9m project to help Europeans manage their weight
http://mnt.to/l/4jrv
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL
PRACTICE News **
Clinical Commissioning Groups in England serve too many
masters
http://mnt.to/l/4jxj
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER
News **
Tracking zinc in cells for prostate cancer diagnosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jsN
Experts cite new drug therapies as rationale for improvements in prostate cancer guidelines, coordination
http://mnt.to/l/4js6
Finding may lead to new prevention and treatment methods for prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jrZ
Researchers reveal potential biological factor contributing to racial disparities in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jr4
----------------------------------------------
** SENIORS / AGING News
**
Reconceptualizing the study of population aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jxp
'Significant minority' of Dutch public backs euthanasia for elderly
http://mnt.to/l/4jwZ
Technology could revolutionize gaming, fall detection among the elderly, and more
http://mnt.to/l/4jw2
Dramatic rise expected in hip fractures as Hong Kong's over 70s population increases
http://mnt.to/l/4jtS
Researchers seek a unified theory of aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jrQ
----------------------------------------------
** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS
News **
Using novel method, study resolves 50-year 'chlamydial anomaly'
http://mnt.to/l/4jvL
Recent reproductive coercion associated with unintended pregnancy, says Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC
expert
http://mnt.to/l/4jtj
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS
/ INSOMNIA News **
Sleep deprivation and increasing age linked to diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jwG
How sleep-deprivation affects the body
http://mnt.to/l/4jvf
** ALLERGY News
**
Dogs in the house protect against asthma, infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jDs
Allergy increase in rural Poland likely related to EU membership
http://mnt.to/l/4jB2
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
In Alzheimer's,
the brain area attacked links learning and rewards
http://mnt.to/l/4jDF
Complex and intricate ways water behaves in cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jDB
The nanomaterial of tomorrow may be found in Alzheimer-substance
http://mnt.to/l/4jB9
Massive neuron death in Alzheimer's may be caused by raw ingredients of plaques & tangles working in concert
http://mnt.to/l/4jz7
Regenstrief and IU investigators identify first biomarker linked to delirium duration
http://mnt.to/l/4jBt
Brain blood vessel cells may be therapeutic targets for Alzheimer's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jyG
Next-generation whole exome sequencing sheds more light on Alzheimer's risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jyC
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Hair analysis found elevated
stress hormone concentrations in obese children as young as 8
http://mnt.to/l/4jDX
Journal of Experimental Biology: Coping with stress in a changing world
http://mnt.to/l/4jDJ
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Postmenopausal
women: higher mortality linked to RA, antibodies
http://mnt.to/l/4jH8
AUC for non-arthroplasty treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee approved by AAOS
http://mnt.to/l/4jCt
New mechanism revealed for arthritis progression
http://mnt.to/l/4jBf
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Glass specialists help
create new generation of joint and bone treatments
http://mnt.to/l/4jFY
Nearly 8% of hip implants not backed by safety evidence
http://mnt.to/l/4jFq
Fetal stem cell grafts successfully help brittle-bone babies
http://mnt.to/l/4jCN
Combating muscle wasting and obesity by tweaking energy consumption
http://mnt.to/l/4jzR
Cause, not result, of inherited muscle diseases may be nuclei in wrong place
http://mnt.to/l/4jzG
Increased mortality following second hip fracture
http://mnt.to/l/4jyX
Exercise in middle age protects against sarcopenia and helps maintain muscle strength and physical performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jyW
Increased risk of hip fracture following wrist fracture
http://mnt.to/l/4jyL
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
A tomato-rich diet may reduce
breast cancer risk, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jG4
Task Force recommends BRCA mutation screening for high-risk women
http://mnt.to/l/4jFV
For women with chemo-resistant breast cancer, bisphosphonate treatment fails to improve outcomes
http://mnt.to/l/4jyT
Adding drug to standard chemo shows promise for women with triple-negative breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyS
Promising breast cancer drugs put on fast track
http://mnt.to/l/4jyQ
Metastatic breast cancer patients with elevated circulating tumor cells do not benefit from changing chemo
http://mnt.to/l/4jyB
Improved outcomes for women with triple-negative breast cancer with new pre-surgery combination therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jyz
Progression of advanced breast cancer not delayed by new combination therapy
http://mnt.to/l/4jyy
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
New data for engineering
immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jJp
Different stem cells responsible for muscle-invasive and non-muscle invasive bladder cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jDn
Radiation therapy to treat uterine cancer linked with increased risk of bladder cancer later in life
http://mnt.to/l/4jD5
Regulation of Cancer-Causing Protein Could Lead to New Therapeutic Targets
http://mnt.to/l/4jBw
New therapies for cancer likely following discovery of ancient chemical bond
http://mnt.to/l/4jzV
Promising results for personalized brain tumor vaccine
http://mnt.to/l/4jC6
Blocking tumor-associated macrophages decreased glioblastoma's growth & extended survival in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jz8
Spontaneous fusion with macrophages empowers cancer cells to spread
http://mnt.to/l/4jz5
Evidence of Savings in Accountable Care Organizations and Cancer Care
http://mnt.to/l/4jyq
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
In the first
30 days of warfarin use, risk of stroke increases among atrial fibrillation patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jDT
Atrial fibrillation, a growing global health concern
http://mnt.to/l/4jDq
Atrial fibrillation is a 'growing global health problem,' WHO says
http://mnt.to/l/4jFZ
High-fiber diet linked to lower risk of heart disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jCW
Stress-sensitivity gene linked to heart attacks, death
http://mnt.to/l/4jDL
Pre-participation screening to prevent cardiovascular complications in sports
http://mnt.to/l/4jyR
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
European Commission approves
update of Erbitux metastatic colorectal cancer labeling to patients with RAS wild-type tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jJw
EGF receptor ecto-domain mutations: When to screen and when not to screen
http://mnt.to/l/4jDr
Decoding the link between calcium deficiency and colon cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jyN
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Data highlight glial sensitivity
to stress
http://mnt.to/l/4jCB
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
New discoveries could lead to
hair and skin regeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jFM
Antioxidant supplements reduce levels of oxygen radicals within chronically infected wounds & weaken biofilm sealing
these wounds
http://mnt.to/l/4jCq
Bedside Pressure Mapping helps reduce pressure ulcers
http://mnt.to/l/4jBy
Breakthrough study sheds light on skin cell migration in wound healing process
http://mnt.to/l/4jyD
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Oramed announces successful results
of its oral insulin for the treatment of type 1 diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jJm
Researchers develop new strategy for potential 'insulin pill'
http://mnt.to/l/4jGc
Family centred approach reduces weight in South Asians
http://mnt.to/l/4jGQ
Walking 2,000 more steps each day reduces cardiovascular risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jFP
Diagnosed diabetes, pre-diabetes, and gestational diabetes on the rise among privately insured Americans
http://mnt.to/l/4jzg
----------------------------------------------
** EATING DISORDERS News **
When young teens are afraid
of gaining weight
http://mnt.to/l/4jB7
----------------------------------------------
** ENDOCRINOLOGY News **
Endocrine-disrupting activity
linked to birth defects, infertility near fracking sites
http://mnt.to/l/4jzT
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Freezing sperm Improves the chances
of fatherhood after treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma
http://mnt.to/l/4jCZ
IVF success could double with new way of detecting faulty egg cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jG2
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Nyack hospital implements
procedures to protect patients during flu season
http://mnt.to/l/4jJs
Flu and cold top the 2013 chart of medical search terms
http://mnt.to/l/4jJn
A step closer to developing a 'universal' flu vaccine
http://mnt.to/l/4jBT
Will we have a flu-free Christmas? UK reporting half the number of flu cases compared to this time last year
http://mnt.to/l/4jFh
Reducing flu viruses' glucose supply weakens the microbes' ability to infect mammalian cells in lab cultures
http://mnt.to/l/4jz6
Scientists find first definitive proof of MERS coronavirus in dromedary camels
http://mnt.to/l/4jBn
----------------------------------------------
** HYPERTENSION News **
New high blood pressure guidelines
released by committee
http://mnt.to/l/4jC7
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
Virus
'hijacks' immune response in host cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jGL
Scientists look to tackle bacterium that is major cause of diarrhea, vomiting
http://mnt.to/l/4jGn
Antimicrobial option offered by pecan shell extracts for preventing listeria in organic meats
http://mnt.to/l/4jC3
Spaceflight has profound effects on fungal pathogen
http://mnt.to/l/4jBZ
Using air transportation data to predict pandemics
http://mnt.to/l/4jxM
Researchers create method to target and kill harmful bacteria
http://mnt.to/l/4jCv
Pathogen is possible source of pandemic
http://mnt.to/l/4jBG
French National Health Authority recommends routine vaccination with Zostavax® to protect seniors against
shingles
http://mnt.to/l/4jCR
Virus grows 'temporary tail' to attack E. Coli, researchers discover
http://mnt.to/l/4jBN
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Gene involved in adolescent
brain development may play a role in mental health vulnerability
http://mnt.to/l/4jCf
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Neurexin2 identified
as a novel target for potential therapy of neurodegeneration in Spinal Muscular Atrophy patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jDM
Diagnosis of myopathy improved by new gene mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jD7
The brain's data compression mechanisms
http://mnt.to/l/4jCx
Potential new therapeutic approach to promote tissue regeneration & repair of broken cell connections
http://mnt.to/l/4jCs
Stem cell therapy for spinal cord injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jCm
Patients in vegetative state able to recognize loved ones' faces
http://mnt.to/l/4jDt
With nearly a million variations on 400 smell receptors, everyone senses smell differently
http://mnt.to/l/4jyc
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News **
Girls, Hispanic children
have higher malnutrition rates in US
http://mnt.to/l/4jJk
Nutritionally unhealthy foods in ads for kids
http://mnt.to/l/4jDx
Understanding how dietary habits are connected through the generations could have valuable benefits for community
health
http://mnt.to/l/4jDm
Small rewards encourage children to eat fruit and veg
http://mnt.to/l/4jBY
What are the health benefits of avocados?
http://mnt.to/l/4jDw
Government's voluntary approach to improving hospital food is not working, argues expert
http://mnt.to/l/4jFs
What are the health benefits of chocolate?
http://mnt.to/l/4jzM
Multivitamins 'waste of money,' say medical experts
http://mnt.to/l/4jCg
Parents approve of nutrition report cards
http://mnt.to/l/4jyd
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Beverage
sugar tax targets minorities' health
http://mnt.to/l/4jBV
Increase in body mass relates to increase in health care costs
http://mnt.to/l/4jBC
Body mass index 'in and of itself' increases risk of developing chronic kidney disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jyj
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL PRACTICE News **
Hospital
C-suite survey projects ACO participation to double in 2014
http://mnt.to/l/4jFS
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER News **
Scientists unlock
prostate cancer protein in move which could lead to improved cancer vaccines
http://mnt.to/l/4jCz
----------------------------------------------
** SENIORS / AGING News **
GRU researcher develops
moisturizing lozenges for dry mouth
http://mnt.to/l/4jGf
DNA unravels in aging cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jzS
Evaluating potential age-promoting compounds
http://mnt.to/l/4jzJ
Older women spend almost 10 hours a day sedentary
http://mnt.to/l/4jBB
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS / INSOMNIA News **
Study
confirms narcolepsy as an autoimmune disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jG3
Timing important when putting toddlers to bed
http://mnt.to/l/4jBD
In men with sleep apnea, CPAP therapy improves golf performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jyM
----------------------------------------------
** STATINS News **
An apple a day keeps vascular mortality
at bay, study suggests
http://mnt.to/l/4jBj
----------------------------------------------
** STROKE News **
Stroke risks increase with high levels
of anxiety
http://mnt.to/l/4jGp
----------------------------------------------
** TROPICAL DISEASES News **
Exploring evolution of
bacteria that may be useful in the fight against dengue
http://mnt.to/l/4jBL
Scientists discover genetic marker of drug-resistant malaria
http://mnt.to/l/4jDD
New discovery could help combat the spread of sleeping sickness
http://mnt.to/l/4jzb
Mechanism by which fungus kills mosquito larvae - verdict of accidental death
http://mnt.to/l/4jBp
Climate change likely to lead to decline in snail fever in Africa
http://mnt.to/l/4jyK
Protection against what can be a fatal rickettsial infection
http://mnt.to/l/4jyr
----------------------------------------------
** WOMEN'S HEALTH / GYNECOLOGY News **
Non-significant
reduction in the amount of candida in women who were taking oral garlic tablets
http://mnt.to/l/4jBX
**
ALLERGY News **
Microscopic hazards in your home
this winter
http://mnt.to/l/4jmy
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Five healthy behaviors lower
dementia risk, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jsm
Some cognitive impairment of Alzheimer's disease may be due progesterone
changes
http://mnt.to/l/4jqt
Researchers use reprogrammed patient neurons to test Alzheimer's drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jqm
Protein delivered across blood-brain barrier to degrade Alzheimer's
plaques
http://mnt.to/l/4jq4
Why promising dementia drugs failed in clinical trials
http://mnt.to/l/4jpP
Alzheimer's disease prevented by pre-moxibustion and moxibustion
http://mnt.to/l/4jpz
Origin of inherited gene mutation causing early-onset Alzheimer's
http://mnt.to/l/4jnp
Dementia treatment: understanding how memories form
http://mnt.to/l/4jmM
Enzyme activity bolstered by gene therapy to combat Alzheimer's disease
in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jmr
Omega-3s cross blood-brain barrier in Alzheimer's patients
http://mnt.to/l/4jmQ
Global dementia set to treble by 2050, says G8 briefing
http://mnt.to/l/4jmm
Blood pressure drug could double up as first treatment for common form of
dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jky
A step towards development of drugs for neurodegenerative diseases
http://mnt.to/l/4jks
Alzheimer's-related changes in the brains of those with risk gene may
begin showing effects in childhood
http://mnt.to/l/4jkn
New survival mechanism found for stressed mitochondria
http://mnt.to/l/4jkk
Exercise is beneficial for dementia patients, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jjC
New screening method can predict Alzheimer's disease within 2 years
http://mnt.to/l/4jjq
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Cell phone use linked to lower college
grades, anxiety
http://mnt.to/l/4jqP
Discovery has implications for a number of conditions related to anxiety
and trauma
http://mnt.to/l/4jnd
PTSD increases risk for cardiac ischemia
http://mnt.to/l/4jjp
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Bone destruction in diseases
such as arthritis and cancer: new target identified for prevention
http://mnt.to/l/4jn2
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Novel tissue engineered bone graft
achieves successful repair of bone defects
http://mnt.to/l/4jnm
Comparison of side effects, efficacy of osteoporosis drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jkd
New biomechanical study measures the anatomical restoration of vertebrae
with the SpineJack® compared to balloon kyphoplasty
http://mnt.to/l/4jjs
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
New trial to help healthy women avoid unnecessary
breast operations, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jrj
Genetic breast cancer screening may benefit those at intermediate risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jnq
Researchers unravel important role of Rb tumor suppressor in aggressive
form of breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jmD
Breast cancer prognosis may be affected by mammography screening intervals
http://mnt.to/l/4jm5
Hope for noninvasive treatment for breast cancer using MR-guided ultrasound
http://mnt.to/l/4jm4
3D mammography 'significantly increases breast cancer detection'
http://mnt.to/l/4jkX
Risk of serious complications after immediate breast reconstruction with
implants increased by obesity, smoking
http://mnt.to/l/4jkC
As women age, changes in breast density relate to breast cancer risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jkb
Breast cancer detection increased and recall rates reduced by DBT
http://mnt.to/l/4jk6
Algorithm helps identify breast cancer type
http://mnt.to/l/4jjd
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
Racial differences in head and neck
cancers may be explained by genetic mutations and molecular alterations
http://mnt.to/l/4jqB
How tumour cells solve the problems linked to the replication of their unstable
DNA
http://mnt.to/l/4jpY
Tumor cells temporarily lose mutation to evade drugs targeting mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jpT
Novel mechanism described by which glioblastoma tumors resist targeted therapies
http://mnt.to/l/4jpR
Brain cancer treatment may lie in reactivating immune cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jr7
PKM2 controls mitosis, saving cancer cells from death and promoting brain
tumor growth
http://mnt.to/l/4jqJ
Drug induces morphologic, molecular and clinical remissions in myelofibrosis
http://mnt.to/l/4jnT
Why combination drug treatment ineffective in cancer clinical trials
http://mnt.to/l/4jnZ
Fundamental differences identified between human cancers and genetically
engineered mouse models of cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jnY
How brain cancer cells hide from drugs
http://mnt.to/l/4jnx
Cigarette smoking after cancer diagnosis increases risk of death
http://mnt.to/l/4jmN
Tumor suppressor turned into anti-cancer target
http://mnt.to/l/4jmK
Improved screening methods likely following new insights into Barrett's
esophagus, cancer evolution
http://mnt.to/l/4jmp
Cancer mutation likely trigger of scleroderma
http://mnt.to/l/4jkT
Kancera announces the discovery of a new class of compounds against cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jjK
Cancer patients to travel to UF Proton Therapy Institute from Norway
http://mnt.to/l/4jjn
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
Norfolk Islanders' genes
yield Bounty of insight into heart disease: study
http://mnt.to/l/4jrc
Cardiac patients benefit from home-based high intensity training
http://mnt.to/l/4jpn
One-third of patients who receive stents and have evidence of arterial dysfunction
at high risk for major cardiovascular events, study finds
http://mnt.to/l/4jnc
NIH workshop report urges new focus on pulseless electrical activity
http://mnt.to/l/4jkS
----------------------------------------------
** CHOLESTEROL News **
Plant sterols naturally found in corn oil
linked to heart health benefits
http://mnt.to/l/4jqq
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
Microbes in gut may increase risk for
colorectal cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jqr
Why a certain mutation contributes to the development of a certain cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jj3
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Taiwanese study finds death of an adult son
increases depressive symptoms in mothers, but not fathers
http://mnt.to/l/4jn3
Maternal depression may influence fetal brain development
http://mnt.to/l/4jmP
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
The skin "talks" to the liver
http://mnt.to/l/4jqn
Growth in dormant hair follicles could be restarted by activating pathway
http://mnt.to/l/4jp8
Clinical trial tests insecticide-treated underwear to ward off body lice
in shelters
http://mnt.to/l/4jjz
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
Type 2 diabetics 'have better glucose control'
with exercise game
http://mnt.to/l/4jrr
Cardiovascular complications, hypoglycemia common in older patients with
diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jq8
Added benefit of saxagliptin as monotherapy is not proven
http://mnt.to/l/4jpp
Insulin sensitizers reduce risk of cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jnK
Vitamin D 'reduces pain and depression' in type 2 diabetic women
http://mnt.to/l/4jkR
Regions in drought and famine may become future hotspots for type 2 diabetes
in the future
http://mnt.to/l/4jk5
IDegLira demonstrates superior glycaemic control and weight loss with a
low rate of hypoglycaemia for patients uncontrolled on basal insulin*
http://mnt.to/l/4jjJ
Potential new treatment for diabetes following discovery of humanin
http://mnt.to/l/4jhX
----------------------------------------------
** ENDOCRINOLOGY News **
Estrogen not just produced by the ovaries
http://mnt.to/l/4jnj
----------------------------------------------
** ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION / PREMATURE EJACULATION News **
The link
between erectile dysfunction and heart disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jqh
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Real world estimates of out-of-pocket costs
for infertility treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jqd
IVF improving but fertility treatments keep multiple births high
http://mnt.to/l/4jmC
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Genetic defect protects mice from infection
with influenza viruses
http://mnt.to/l/4jpX
Effectiveness of Marinomed's antiviral nasal spray confirmed in clinical
trial for common cold
http://mnt.to/l/4jnC
New test uses sugar and gold to detect flu strains
http://mnt.to/l/4jmb
Researchers predict seasonal flu outbreaks in 108 cities across the US
http://mnt.to/l/4jkm
----------------------------------------------
** HYPERTENSION News **
Use of CPAP for sleep apnea reduces blood
pressure for patients with difficult to treat hypertension
http://mnt.to/l/4jq6
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
New insights
may explain difficulty of finding drugs for infectious disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jpN
CDC report: measles 'eliminated' in US but still poses threat
http://mnt.to/l/4jpx
Adults at risk from C. difficile that resides harmlessly in infants
http://mnt.to/l/4jm3
New receptor discovered that may be instrumental in the body's response
to sepsis
http://mnt.to/l/4jkh
Earlier identification of pathogens in patient samples using new technique
http://mnt.to/l/4jjN
Tackling rabies in Latin America by culling vampire bats can backfire
http://mnt.to/l/4jjr
----------------------------------------------
** MEN'S HEALTH News **
Low folate in male diet linked to risk
of offspring birth defects
http://mnt.to/l/4jr8
Male contraceptive pill 'possible in next 10 years'
http://mnt.to/l/4jkr
----------------------------------------------
** MENTAL HEALTH News **
Study links mental disorders to increased
heart disease risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jjY
Youth suicide attempts associated with mental health problems later in life
http://mnt.to/l/4jjw
----------------------------------------------
** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Decreased hippocampal synaptophysin
accompanies the aging process
http://mnt.to/l/4jqv
Researchers find that propagated sensation along the meridian exists objectively
http://mnt.to/l/4jqc
A person's 'will to persevere' may be evoked by electrical brain
stimulation
http://mnt.to/l/4jpZ
The culprit that causes memory impairment during brain aging
http://mnt.to/l/4jpB
Random fluctuations in brain cell activity may determine toss-up decisions
http://mnt.to/l/4jpt
New insights into the functioning of the brain from recurring memory traces
http://mnt.to/l/4jph
'Stomach clock' limits food intake to specific times, study suggests
http://mnt.to/l/4jp7
Increased risk of serious sleep breathing disorder in quadriplegics
http://mnt.to/l/4jnR
Identification of gene crucial for formation of certain brain circuitry
http://mnt.to/l/4jp2
Baicalin effectively inhibits neurotoxicity of colistin sulfate
http://mnt.to/l/4jmT
Ultrafast recycling of neurotransmitter-filled bubbles keep our nerves firing
http://mnt.to/l/4jmB
What tongue twister-induced speech errors may tell us about our brains
http://mnt.to/l/4jmv
Researcher studies pediatric brain stem tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jkZ
Sports concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy
http://mnt.to/l/4jkD
Brain 'wired differently' in men and women
http://mnt.to/l/4jk7
Low vitamin D levels may damage the brain
http://mnt.to/l/4jjZ
Assessing autonomic nerve functions in patients with spinal cord injury
http://mnt.to/l/4jjW
After 2 weeks of NSCs neural differentiation, potassium current density
increased sharply
http://mnt.to/l/4jjT
Recognition memory in young adults predicted by aerobic fitness and hormones
http://mnt.to/l/4jjB
Molecular imaging tracer aids in creation of treatment plans for brain metastases
http://mnt.to/l/4jjf
Study investigates the role of the motor system in conceptualization
http://mnt.to/l/4jj4
----------------------------------------------
** NUTRITION / DIET News **
Healthy eating during the holiday season
http://mnt.to/l/4jhB
Caffeine and alcohol can change a part of DNA linked to aging and cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jpc
Hummingbird metabolism burns glucose and fructose equally: finding has implications
for human metabolism
http://mnt.to/l/4jnS
Healthy diet costs $550 more per year than unhealthy one
http://mnt.to/l/4jnG
Doubts cast over benefits of vitamin D supplements
http://mnt.to/l/4jnv
Food poverty in the UK "has all the signs of a public health emergency,"
warn experts
http://mnt.to/l/4jk3
----------------------------------------------
** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Parental stress linked
to childhood obesity
http://mnt.to/l/4jqj
Association between exercise, weight loss and better glucose control
http://mnt.to/l/4jpW
Study increases understanding of the development of obesity and insulin
resistance
http://mnt.to/l/4jmY
The obesity-cancer link: even with healthy BMI, greater visceral fat may
put older men at risk for cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jm7
US mothers watch more TV, do less housework than they did in 1965
http://mnt.to/l/4jjk
In the overweight and obese an abnormal amount of an inflammatory protein
is present on abdominal fat tissues
http://mnt.to/l/4jhW
----------------------------------------------
** PRIMARY CARE / GENERAL PRACTICE News **
Patients urged to heed
doctors' follow-up advice, Australia
http://mnt.to/l/4jmc
Senior medic argues A&E crisis is in fact one of recruitment, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jk2
----------------------------------------------
** PROSTATE / PROSTATE CANCER News **
Hints of added benefit of enzalutamide
in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jqk
Inflammation in prostate biopsies 'indicates reduced cancer risk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jpq
Prostate cancer biomarker may predict patient outcomes
http://mnt.to/l/4jnN
Compound in grape seed extract 'kills prostate cancer cells'
http://mnt.to/l/4jnD
Therapeutic benefits of carbon monoxide for prostate, lung cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jn6
Protein in prostate tissue 'indicates increased cancer risk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jmh
Targeting evolving cancer stem cells in prostate cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jmn
Increased cancer risk signaled by protein in prostate biopsies
http://mnt.to/l/4jkB
Risk of lethal prostate cancer in overweight patients increased by genetic
mutation
http://mnt.to/l/4jjv
----------------------------------------------
** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS News **
Lower-dose IUDs prove safe and effective
http://mnt.to/l/4jp9
New understanding of chlamydial disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jmw
Male contraceptive pill may be available within ten years
http://mnt.to/l/4jjQ
----------------------------------------------
** SLEEP / SLEEP DISORDERS / INSOMNIA News **
When it comes to teen
sleep problems, social ties may be more important than biology
http://mnt.to/l/4jnr
Sleep linked to mood disturbance and poor quality of life in the obese
http://mnt.to/l/4jnf
----------------------------------------------
** STATINS News **
Frequently asked questions: Statins and cardiovascular
disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jrh
Guidelines recommend wider statin use among adults with chronic kidney disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jkW
----------------------------------------------
** STROKE News **
Improved prevention, treatment leads to decline
in U.S stroke deaths
http://mnt.to/l/4jpL
Subarachnoid hemorrhage and cognitive dysfunction
http://mnt.to/l/4jjV
Policy makers and advocates appeal for European governments to adopt a national
focus on stroke prevention
http://mnt.to/l/4jjR
----------------------------------------------
** TROPICAL DISEASES News **
Report hails recent progress in reducing
malaria illnesses and deaths but warns new tools needed
http://mnt.to/l/4jpF
How mosquitoes are attracted to humans
http://mnt.to/l/4jpD
Re-purposing mobile phone camera into mini-microscope for low-cost diagnostics
http://mnt.to/l/4jpy
----------------------------------------------
** WOMEN'S HEALTH / GYNECOLOGY News **
Menstrual cramps relieved
by erectile dysfunction drug
http://mnt.to/l/4jrf
Menstrual cramping may be alleviated by vaginally administered sildenafil
citrate
http://mnt.to/l/4jnM
* ALLERGY News **
'More likely to be murdered' than die from food allergies
http://mnt.to/l/4jf8
How probiotics could affect hay fever
http://mnt.to/l/4jdK
----------------------------------------------
** ALZHEIMER'S / DEMENTIA News **
Brain research provides new
clues to Pavlovian conditioning and may improve treatment of dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jfB
Good news about the global epidemic of dementia
http://mnt.to/l/4jfz
UK postcode lottery: time to stop treating people with dementia as second
class citizens
http://mnt.to/l/4jgH
Progression towards Alzheimer's disease indicated by an abnormal resting-state
functional brain network
http://mnt.to/l/4jdL
Misfolded proteins are capable of forming tree-like aggregates in Alzheimer's
disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jdt
Tentative molecular link between head injury and Alzheimer's
http://mnt.to/l/4jfc
Problems in clock genes contribute to neurodegeneration
http://mnt.to/l/4jcH
Vascular changes in the neck may play role in Alzheimer's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jcD
Keeping astrocytes' phagocytic process from slowing has implications
for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jc7
----------------------------------------------
** ANXIETY / STRESS News **
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
a greater risk for children whose mothers are afflicted
http://mnt.to/l/4jf2
----------------------------------------------
** ARTHRITIS / RHEUMATOLOGY News **
Disability, distress in rheumatoid
arthritis patients cut in half over last 20 years
http://mnt.to/l/4jh6
New treatment hope for children as young as two suffering from a debilitating
form of juvenile arthritis
http://mnt.to/l/4jgM
Marijuana treatments for autoimmune disorders
http://mnt.to/l/4jdD
Shortage of rheumatologists - in some U.S. regions closest doctor may be
200 miles away
http://mnt.to/l/4jcb
----------------------------------------------
** BONES / ORTHOPEDICS News **
Most osteoporotic fractures have the
potential to reduce life expectancy
http://mnt.to/l/4jft
Measuring the value and impact of orthopaedic care
http://mnt.to/l/4jdB
Bone grafts may be better with new sea coral material
http://mnt.to/l/4jgg
----------------------------------------------
** BREAST CANCER News **
New breast cancer study: Results of the
TARGIT-A clinical trial
http://mnt.to/l/4jhy
Cyclin D1 controls cell cycle progression and microRNA biogenesis through
Dicer - a new mechanism promoting breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jgx
Growth and spread of breast cancer may be fueled by high cholesterol
http://mnt.to/l/4jgv
Enzyme intervenes when cancer-fighting PTEN is bound for cell's protein-destroying
machinery
http://mnt.to/l/4jfQ
Women who test negative for BRCA may not be at reduced risk of breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jfC
High-fat diets in puberty linked to breast cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jdP
Potential cause found for deadly breast cancer relapse
http://mnt.to/l/4jcQ
BRCA-negative results may not reduce cancer risk
http://mnt.to/l/4jcV
----------------------------------------------
** CANCER / ONCOLOGY News **
Scientists describe new proteins linked
to cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jhm
Angiogenesis and cancer growth controlled by methylation signaling
http://mnt.to/l/4jgm
Successful oral delivery of nanoparticle therapeutics
http://mnt.to/l/4jfD
Brain cancer 'diagnosed in 30 minutes' with new test
http://mnt.to/l/4jdG
Untreated cancer pain a 'scandal of global proportions,' survey
shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jdC
Aging cells could be to blame for late-life cancers
http://mnt.to/l/4jdw
Novel new immuno-therapy for malignant brain tumors
http://mnt.to/l/4jct
Oncology nurse navigators help cancer patients cope early in care
http://mnt.to/l/4jbL
Brain cancer destroyed by killer cocktail in mouse model
http://mnt.to/l/4jbF
----------------------------------------------
** CARDIOVASCULAR / CARDIOLOGY News **
Energy drinks alter heart
function, study shows
http://mnt.to/l/4jhr
Reference values determined for children's heart rate variability
http://mnt.to/l/4jbR
Transcatheter therapies for mitral regurgitation: key guidance document
released
http://mnt.to/l/4jbP
Understanding how blood vessels develop may provide new way to fight cancer
in the future
http://mnt.to/l/4jbK
Effervescent medicines may contain harmful amounts of salt
http://mnt.to/l/4jbs
----------------------------------------------
** COLORECTAL CANCER News **
Targeting colon cancer stem cells show
clinical potential
http://mnt.to/l/4jgR
New colorectal cancer target found in stem cell gene
http://mnt.to/l/4jgP
----------------------------------------------
** DEPRESSION News **
Depression's severity reduced by modafinil
when taken with antidepressants
http://mnt.to/l/4jfT
----------------------------------------------
** DERMATOLOGY News **
Highly effective treatment for excessive scars
http://mnt.to/l/4jfJ
Nanoscale 'patches' sensitize targeted cell receptors
http://mnt.to/l/4jcv
----------------------------------------------
** DIABETES News **
FDA requires removal of certain restrictions
on the diabetes drug Avandia
http://mnt.to/l/4jcM
Cell surface molecules involved in intra-islet communication may represent
important clinical targets in type 1 diabetes
http://mnt.to/l/4jch
----------------------------------------------
** FERTILITY News **
Linking transfer of fewer embryos to reimbursing
6 IVF cycles doesn't reduce delivery rates
http://mnt.to/l/4jdR
Early embryo changes shape with its first hug
http://mnt.to/l/4jbv
----------------------------------------------
** FLU / COLD / SARS News **
Respiratory expert warns that staff
who refuse flu vaccine 'risk patient lives'
http://mnt.to/l/4jhw
----------------------------------------------
** GOUT News **
Gout runs strongly in families, suggests large-scale
study
http://mnt.to/l/4jhz
----------------------------------------------
** INFECTIOUS DISEASES / BACTERIA / VIRUSES News **
Induced hypothermia
does not improve outcomes for patients with severe bacterial meningitis; may be harmful
http://mnt.to/l/4jhh
Improving disease monitoring in remote locations: American Chemical Society
podcast
http://mnt.to/l/4jfR
New method found to increase survival in sepsis
http://mnt.to/l/4jdv
The effects of transplanted fecal microbiota
http://mnt.to/l/4jdh
Destroying contaminants in baby formula with a touch of garlic
http://mnt.to/l/4jdc
Treatment target identified for a public health risk parasite
http://mnt.to/l/4jdz
Improving understanding of the long term co-evolution among retroviruses
and host species
http://mnt.to/l/4jbJ
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** MENTAL HEALTH News **
People with mental health problems still
waiting over a year for talking treatments, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jf9
Improved safety measures by mental health service providers help to reduce
suicide rates, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jdk
Study examines delivery of outpatient mental health treatment
http://mnt.to/l/4jcJ
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** NEUROLOGY / NEUROSCIENCE News **
Spontaneous recall of a memory
activates its neural geotag
http://mnt.to/l/4jgq
Hippocampal neuron apoptosis inhibited by active component from wine-processed
Fructus corni
http://mnt.to/l/4jfv
Occludin and connexin 43 expression in the pathogenesis of traumatic brain
edema
http://mnt.to/l/4jfs
Key protein identified that is responsible for controlling communication
between brain cells
http://mnt.to/l/4jfh
Locusts provide clues to how the brain processes smells
http://mnt.to/l/4jd8
Improved brain injury outcomes linked to mood improvement
http://mnt.to/l/4jcP
New treatment 'could help spine injury patients walk'
http://mnt.to/l/4jcf
Controlling our circadian rhythms
http://mnt.to/l/4jbM
Neuronal cell function maintained by circadian clock proteins
http://mnt.to/l/4jbx
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** NUTRITION / DIET News **
What are the health benefits of green
tea?
http://mnt.to/l/4jgN
What are the health benefits of almonds?
http://mnt.to/l/4jfn
Fast food consumed by majority of very young children in California at least
once a week
http://mnt.to/l/4jdn
What are the health benefits of popular foods?
http://mnt.to/l/4j6K
Eating sushi can increase risk of cardiovascular disease
http://mnt.to/l/4jc9
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** OBESITY / WEIGHT LOSS / FITNESS News **
Short-term energy deficits
increase factors related to muscle degradation
http://mnt.to/l/4jhS
Implants aid weight loss in mice
http://mnt.to/l/4jfP
Portion size influenced by personality traits
http://mnt.to/l/4jdb
Childhood exercise 'may reduce effects of maternal obesity'
http://mnt.to/l/4jcC
Weight loss surgery: do the benefits really outweigh the risks?
http://mnt.to/l/4jfL
Study: turn up heating to fight fat this holiday season
http://mnt.to/l/4jdY
A brain reward gene influences food choices in the first years of life
http://mnt.to/l/4jdF
Weight loss aided by embolization procedure
http://mnt.to/l/4jbD
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** SENIORS / AGING News **
Hormone-replacement therapy may prevent
age-related declines in cognitive functioning
http://mnt.to/l/4jhD
The presence of male roundworms may shorten females' lifespan
http://mnt.to/l/4jgp
Winter is not the concern for A&E it's the elderly, UK
http://mnt.to/l/4jg8
EORTC Cancer in the Elderly Task Force: appropriate treatment for elderly
patients with cancer
http://mnt.to/l/4jd6
Chemical banned by the US 3 decades ago still affecting seniors' cognitive
performance
http://mnt.to/l/4jbG
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** SEXUAL HEALTH / STDS News **
Can sexual frustration be bad for
your health?
http://mnt.to/l/4jgr
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** STATINS News **
Statin use significantly impacted by drug interactions
http://mnt.to/l/4jcK