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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: improve + treatments + flu  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Top-Line Results of Boceprevir Phase II Study Showed High Rate of ...
CNNMoney.com (press release) -
In a 48-week treatment regimen, the SVR rate at 12 weeks after the end of treatment (SVR 12) was 74 percent (ITT) in patients who received 4 weeks of ...SGP
Life Expectancy: Why Nigeria is Not Improving
This Day, Nigeria - Jul 31, 2008
A reduction in flu-related deaths, due to a mild flu season in 2005, also helped boost the 2006 statistics. Demographers say Americans may be catching up on ...
Lonza wins EPA approval to test EEE-fighting formula
Portsmouth Herald News, NH -
"Lonza is continually researching ways to improve the health and well-being of humans, animals and plants through the detection, measurement, treatment and ...VTX:LONN
Business Briefcase
Tampa Tribune, FL - Aug 3, 2008
Flu shots will be offered for $25 each (Medicare and most insurances will be accepted). Current presenting sponsors include Oak Hill Hospital, ...

Vanguard
Wellness & Beauty: Wrinkle Anatomy
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Topical treatments aimed at improving the dermis are available to boost collagen production and these include copper peptide and Vitamin C containing ...
Wonder Drugs Are Giving Sufferers Hope
Glasgow Daily Record, UK - Jul 30, 2008
DUBBED the holy grail of flu treatments, the vaccine Accamflu-A could be used to treat everything from common winter viruses to bird flu. ...
Renowned Immunologists Join Medical Center
Media Newswire (press release), NY - Aug 1, 2008
Combined, their research touches upon conditions such as flu, bird flu, and other infections; respiratory ailments like asthma; and autoimmune diseases like ...
FLC Predictions and Guide Part 2: Positions 13-18.
The Offside, Oregon -
To stave off the relegation flu, they must hope either Dr. Steve Brooker or Nurse Lee Trundle rediscover the goal-scoring remedies they had at Cheltenham ...
Sirnaomics Starts Setting Up Chinese Unit, Aims for Up to Three ...
RNAi News (subscription), NY - Jul 31, 2008
Dubbed STP-702, the drug is being developed as a treatment for seasonal and pandemic flu, and it targets multiple, undisclosed viral genes using a ...
Marcial: Clinical Data Is a Biotech to Watch
MSNBC -
Another deal involved a company that Kirk co-founded, in 1984, called General Injectibles and Vaccines, which developed flu and hepatitis B vaccines. ...CLDA
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Dehydroepiandrosterone Treatment Is Not Beneficial to the Immune Response to Influenza in Elderly … -
HD Danenberg, A Ben-Yehuda, Z Zakay-Rones, DJ … - Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1997 - Endocrine Soc
... highly effective in aged rodents, a short course of DHEA treatment did not improve
the age-related declined response to immunization against influenza in human ...

Nonablative treatment of rhytids with intense pulsed light -
DJ Goldberg, KB Cutler - Lasers in Surgery and Medicine, 2000 - doi.wiley.com
... Parameters of treatment included a flu- ence of 2.5 ... sites were evaluated 32 weeks
after treatment for skin ... dye laser, have been shown to improve dermal collagen ...

[PDF] Improving the Validity of Measures of Patient Satisfaction With Psychiatric Care and Treatment -
M Elbeck, G Fecteau - ps, 1990 - Am Psychiatric Assoc
... ShearMK, Frances A,Weiden P: Suicide associated with akathisia and depot flu- phenazine
treatment ... Improving the Validity of ... With Psychiatric Care and Treatment ...

Potential impact of antiviral drug use during influenza pandemic. -
R Gani, H Hughes, D Fleming, T Griffin, J Medlock, … - Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2005 - origin.cdc.gov
... The use of NIs for treatment of pandemic influenza remains an option since they
may improve individual disease outcomes and the effect of the disease in the ...

Cost Effectiveness of Zanamivir for the Treatment of Influenza in a High Risk Population in … -
JA Mauskopf, SC Cates, AD Griffin, DM Neighbors, … - PharmacoEconomics, 2000 - pharmacoeconomics.adisonline.com
... a theoretical point-of-contact patient diagnostic did not improve the cost ... zanamivir
is a cost-effective intervention in the treatment of influenza in the ...

[PDF] Systematic review and economic decision modelling for the prevention and treatment of influenza A … -
D Turner, A Wailoo, K Nicholson, N Cooper, A … - Health Technol Assess, 2003 - nice.org.uk
... hospitalisations, QALY values, the probability that influenza like illness is influenza,
and the probability that patients receive treatments if presenting ...

[PDF] Diagnostic testing for influenza: review of current status and implications of newer treatment … -
P Cram, SG Blitz, A Monto, AM Fendrick - Am J Manag Care, 1999 - ajmc.com
... other hand, as the likelihood of influenza ill- ness increases (such as in major
outbreaks), the effectiveness and tolerability of treatment improve, or the ...

Treatment of port-wine stain birthmarks using the 1.5-msec pulsed dye laser at high fluences in … -
KM Kelly, VS Nanda, JS Nelson - Dermatol Surg, 2002 - ingentaconnect.com
... PDL without cryogen spray cooling used at significantly lower flu- ences. ... Cryogen
spray cooling and higher fluence pulsed dye laser treatment improve port wine ...

Fluoxetine versus sertraline and paroxetine in major depression: tolerability and efficacy in … -
M Fava, JF Rosenbaum, SL Hoog, RG Tepner, JB Kopp, … - Journal of Affective Disorders, 2000 - Elsevier
... for patients who could improve during treatment ... with one statistically significant
difference among treatments. ?Flu syndrome? was reported by 5.7% of ...

A controlled trial of intratumoral ONYX-015, a selectively-replicating adenovirus, in combination … -
FR Khuri, J Nemunaitis, I Ganly, J Arseneau, IF … - Nature Medicine, 2000 - nature.com
... with chemotherapy does not substantially improve survival rates 16 ... or after treatment
and efficacy of treatment. Flu-like symptoms (fever and chills) during the ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

"Virus Sponge" Could Improve Flu Treatments, Diabetes Care, Vaccine Development

Influenza virus H5N1, which caused the recent outbreak of avian flu, may have a new enemy.

Researchers at the University of Maryland's A. James Clark School of Engineering have created a "virus sponge" that could filter a patient's blood in a process similar to kidney dialysis, removing the virus from the patient's body. The concept could also be used to make vaccine production more efficient and in a pill to reduce glucose levels in diabetics, among other applications.

The virus sponge is based on a technology called molecular imprinting. In molecular imprinting, researchers stamp a molecule's shape into a substance (in this case, a hydrogel—a sponge-like material). When the specific molecule filters through the hydrogel, it fits in the imprint hole and is trapped.

The research group of Peter Kofinas, a professor in the Clark School's Fischell Department of Bioengineering, is the first to apply molecular imprinting to the capture of viruses, and to show that this approach is possible using an inexpensive hydrogel.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Kofinas' team has so far used this technique on plant viruses and Human Parvovirus B19, which causes "fifth disease" in babies, and has now begun work on the H5N1 influenza virus.

"This new technology could be integrated into hospitals and healthcare centers at minimal cost," according to Kofinas. Modifying existing dialysis machines to include the virus sponge technology would be relatively simple, he said.

"This virus removal device can be used the same way as a kidney dialysis machine," Kofinas continued. "If you have a viral infection, you can go to the hospital and have your blood cleaned of that virus."

While a new vaccine must be developed each year for the strain of influenza that is expected to be the most potent, a hydrogel can be imprinted as a universal filter for all flu strains. However, to achieve better performance, a hydrogel filter can also be produced to catch a particular strain of the virus.

The molecular imprinting process has many applications beyond trapping viruses.

"Applying the technology to a drug or food additive could contribute to the dietary freedom of those who suffer from type II diabetes," Kofinas said.

A pill containing the hydrogels could be developed to remove excess sugars when taken with food, thus helping diabetics regulate their diet, Kofinas explained. The hydrogels would work within the small intestine to remove glucose prior to absorption into the blood stream.

Drug manufacturers could use the hydrogel filters in vaccine production. Pharmaceutical companies use viruses to create the vaccines that fight them. Hydrogels could be used to strip the virus out of the finished medication—a process that is currently very time-consuming and expensive.

Another potential application is to use the material as a filter in masks for those needing protection in case of biological warfare or other harmful biological agent exposure.

Kofinas has filed a patent on this technology. Currently, he is collaborating with researchers at the National Institutes of Health on how to use the hydrogels to clean human viruses out of blood. Advances in this area could help ensure a safer blood supply by allowing for the low-cost removal of viruses like hepatitis and HIV from donor blood.

Kofinas is also associate chair and director of graduate studies in the Fischell Department of Bioengineering. His graduate students, Linden Bolisay, Brendan Casey, Angela Fu and Daniel Janiak, continue to contribute to this research.

NOTE TO EDITORS:
The hydrogel material can be seen on camera. Images are available for this release here: http://www.eng.umd.edu/media/pressreleases/pr050807_virus-sponge.html

More Information:
Peter Kofinas' Research Projects: http://www.glue.umd.edu/~kofinas/projects.html

About the A. James Clark School of Engineering
The Clark School of Engineering, situated on the rolling, 1,500-acre University of Maryland campus in College Park, Md., is one of the premier engineering schools in the U.S.

The Clark School's graduate programs are collectively the fastest rising in the nation. In U.S. News & World Report's annual rating of graduate programs, the school is 15th among public and private programs nationally, 9th among public programs nationally and first among public programs in the mid-Atlantic region. The School offers 13 graduate programs and 12 undergraduate programs, including degree and certification programs tailored for working professionals.

The school is home to one of the most vibrant research programs in the country. With major emphasis in key areas such as communications and networking, nanotechnology, bioengineering, reliability engineering, project management, intelligent transportation systems and space robotics, as well as electronic packaging and smart small systems and materials, the Clark School is leading the way toward the next generations of engineering advances.

Visit the Clark School homepage at http://www.eng.umd.edu.

 

Enhanced MR-Guided Focused Ultrasound Guidelines Demonstrate Improved Efficacy and Durability for Uterine Fibroids

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MR-GUIDED FOCUSED ULTRASOUND, UTERINE FIBROIDS

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Data released today show that MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a more effective option for a broader population of uterine fibroid sufferers. In a poster presented today at the ACOG annual meeting in San Diego, Phyllis Gee showed that women undergoing MRgFUS experience rapid and sustained relief from their condition and have a reduced need for alternative, invasive treatments in the future.

Newswise — Data released today show that MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a more effective option for a broader population of uterine fibroid sufferers.

In a poster presented today at the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) annual meeting in San Diego, Phyllis Gee, M.D. of the North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute in Plano, Texas, showed that women undergoing MRgFUS experience rapid and sustained relief from their condition and have a reduced need for alternative, invasive treatments in the future.

GE and InSightec, a company that develops non-invasive therapy systems, developed the world’s first magnetic resonance (MR) image guided focused ultrasound system. InSightec’s ExAblate 2000 system, approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in October 2004, works exclusively in combination with GE’s Signa MR system to non-invasively treat symptomatic uterine fibroids.
"These findings further underscore the utility of MRgFUS as a long-lasting, non-invasive option for the millions of women suffering from uterine fibroids,” said Dr. Gee. “With these expanded treatment guidelines, we are able to successfully treat more of the tumor and virtually eliminate the need for future hysterectomies.”

Additional data presented at ACOG this week by David Lee, Ph.D., Senior Director, Health Economics and Outcomes Research, GE Healthcare, showed that clinically significant uterine fibroids are common among women in their prime working years and are associated with several debilitating co-morbid conditions. The research also showed that uterine fibroid treatments impose substantial direct and indirect costs on employers, and that nearly one in three women treated surgically for uterine fibroids experiences an adverse event.

“These new data suggest that uterine fibroids impose a substantial clinical burden on women, and a tremendous economic burden on employers. MRgFUS holds the promise of lessening this burden by offering women a non-invasive treatment option for this debilitating condition,” said Dr. Lee.

UTERINE FIBROIDS – A NON-INVASIVE TREATMENT WITH DURABLE RESULTS

According to NIH, uterine fibroids are the most common, non-cancerous tumors in women of childbearing age and the second most common reason reproductive women undergo surgery. Uterine fibroids, the cause of more than 200,000 hysterectomies every year, have no known cause and only a few treatment options, also according to NIH.

According to a report by RAND Corporation, an international non-profit research organization, direct costs associated with treating uterine fibroids are more than $1 billion annually.

Traditionally, treatment options for uterine fibroids have included invasive and minimally invasive procedures such as hysterectomy, myomectomy or uterine artery embolization (UAE). Hormonal therapy, the only non-invasive treatment available, offers only temporary relief of symptoms, and fibroids frequently grow back once therapy is terminated.

Summary of Data

*Dr. Gee’s Poster: “Enhanced MR guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS) Guidelines Demonstrates Improved Efficacy and Durability for the Treatment of Uterine Myoma”
• Patients treated under expanded and commercial treatment guidelines achieved greater nonperfused myoma volumes and greater symptom relief than those treated under the pivotal study guidelines. The symptom severity score (SSS) was used to quantify the results.
o 86% of patients treated with commercial treatment guidelines sustained a 10-point or greater improvement in SSS by 12 months compared with 84% of patients treated with expanded treatment guidelines and 71% of patients treated with pivotal guidelines.
o Expanded and commercial treatment guidelines resulted in greater reduction in symptom severity score at three, six, 12 and 24 months. Durable and sustained symptom relief lasted up to 36 months.
*Dr. Lee’s posters: “Incidence, Prevalence, and Treatment of Uterine Fibroids in Insured Women”, “Surgical Treatment for Uterine Fibroids: Adverse Events and One-Year Re-Treatment Rates”, and “What Does Surgical Treatment for Uterine Fibroids Really Cost?”
• 1 in 100 (~450,000) women with employer-provided insurance have clinically significant uterine fibroids
o These women have a high comorbidity burden
o Nearly one-half were treated with hysterectomy
• Nearly one in three women treated surgically for uterine fibroids had an adverse event
o Approximately 7% of women treated surgically for uterine fibroids were re-treated within a year. Treatment failures were most common for endometrial ablation.
• Total (direct and indirect) short-term treatment costs were highest for hysterectomy ($17,373), followed by myomectomy, ($16,460), UAE ($14,064), and endometrial ablation ($6,825)
o Lost work and disability accounted for 18.0% of total costs for UAE, compared to 28.7% for endometrial ablation, 40.5% for hysterectomy, and 42.1% for myomectomy

ABOUT GE HEALTHCARE:
GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies and services that are shaping a new age of patient care. Our expertise in medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, performance improvement, drug discovery, and biopharmaceutical manufacturing technologies is helping clinicians around the world re-imagine new ways to predict, diagnose, inform, treat and monitor disease, so patients can live their lives to the fullest.

GE Healthcare's broad range of products and services enable healthcare providers to better diagnose and treat cancer, heart disease, neurological diseases and other conditions earlier. Our vision for the future is to enable a new "early health" model of care focused on earlier diagnosis, pre-symptomatic disease detection and disease prevention. Headquartered in the United Kingdom, GE Healthcare is a $17 billion unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE). Worldwide, GE Healthcare employs more than 46,000 people committed to serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more than 100 countries. For more information about GE Healthcare, visit our website at http://www.gehealthcare.com.

About InSightec

InSightec is a privately held company owned by Elbit Medical Imaging (EMI), General Electric, private investors, and employees. It was founded in 1999 to develop the breakthrough MR guided Focused Ultrasound technology and transform it into the next generation operating room. Headquartered near Haifa, Israel, the company has over 135 employees and has invested more than $100 million in research, development, and clinical investigations. Its US headquarters are located in Dallas, Texas. For more information, please go to: http://www.insightec.com.

About North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute
North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute is a group of prominent Obstetrician-Gynecologists with extensive experience treating uterine fibroids by multiple modalities. These physicians will evaluate and screen patients for treatment of their uterine fibroids with Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery. This innovative new technology is making a difference in the lives of many women worldwide. For more information about North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute, please visit: http://www.ntxfibroid.com

 
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Green Tea May Protect Against Breast Cancer

While tea has been used as an alternative medicine in China for the last several thousand years, it is only recently that the Western hemisphere started to take notice of the beverage¹s potential health benefits, according to University of Southern California researchers. Now, tea is being hailed as a miracle elixir with the power to do everything from lower stress hormones and sooth the symptoms of PMS to protect against disease.

Although many of the claims are unproven, tea has been shown to reduce the risk of certain kinds of cancer, says Carol Koprowski, Ph.D., R.D., assistant professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.

³The tea that has been studied the most is green tea,² she notes. ³It¹s one of the few teas out there that has been shown to have antioxidants that may protect against cell damage Epidemiologist Anna Wu, Ph.D., professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School, is studying the relationship between green tea consumption and breast cancer risk. An earlier study about breast cancer risk among Asian-American women showed that green tea intake had a strong protective effect, while the more commonly consumed black tea had no effect at all, she says.

While both green and black teas come from the same Camellia sinensis plant native to Asia, the leaves are processed differently. Black tea leaves go through a fermentation process that strips the plant of its natural polyphenol compounds, which are believed to give the tea its antioxidant properties, Wu says.

Results from a small pilot study suggest that regular green tea drinkers had lower blood estrogen levels, while regular black tea drinkers had higher blood estrogen levels. Higher levels of estrogen are associated with breast cancer risk, Wu explains.

While green tea is gaining in popularity around the world in part due to reports of its disease fighting properties, consumption still lags far behind black tea in most cultures. Regardless of whether the benefits are as widespread as some reports claim, a few cups of either green or black tea is a smart addition to a diet as a replacement for high-calorie sodas and fruit drinks.

Wu, a life-long black tea drinker, says she hasn¹t given it up but now drinks at least one cup of green tea a day as well.

University of Southern California
http://www.usc.edu
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