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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 2006 + web + 0.40  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)


RTT News
ScottsMiracle-Gro Announces Record Third Quarter Sales Based on ...
PR Newswire (press release), NY - Jul 31, 2008
The call will be available live on the investor relations section of the ScottsMiracle-Gro Web site, http://investor.scotts.com An archive of the Webcast, ...
Conexant Reports Financial Results for the Third Quarter of Fiscal ... Trading Markets (press release)
all 858 news articles »  CNXTD - SMG
Percutaneous Spine Biopsy: A Meta-Analysis
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (subscription) - Aug 1, 2008
Although studies involving the use of computed tomography demonstrated slightly higher rates for adequacy (92.6% compared with 90.1%, p = 0.40) and accuracy ...
CPN In-Fill & Delineation Drilling on the Rovina Porphyry, Romania ...
FOXBusiness - Jul 23, 2008
Copper is analyzed using the industry-standard method of aqua-regia digest on a 0.40 -gram sub sample with an AAS finish. Coarse blanks, pulp blanks, ...TSE:CPN - OTC:CMTX
InvestSource, Inc.: Hunt Gold Corporation Discusses Takeover
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Aug 1, 2008
The Rain Mine reportedly hosts an average grade of 0.40 oz/ton gold and Newmont estimated the resource potential at over 2.0 million ounces of gold over a ...PINK:HGLC - GG - NG
Are Dividends the Cure for Your Ailing Portfolio?
Morningstar.com, IL - Jul 29, 2008
It features a nice 3.42% yield and a 0.40% expense ratio. Vanguard also offers an exchange-traded fund, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation , that's even cheaper ...
Fraser Papers Announces Second Quarter Financial Results
MarketWatch - Jul 31, 2008
The conference call can also be accessed via web cast on the Fraser Papers web site at www.fraserpapers.com. Fraser Papers is an integrated specialty paper ...TSE:FPS

The Associated Press
Drinking games prove deadly to college students
The Associated Press - Jul 7, 2008
Some universities are trying to send the same message with Web sites and programs that feature slogans such as "Remember Last Night. ...
Canadian Oil Sands Trust raises quarterly distribution to $1.25 ...
FOXBusiness - Jul 29, 2008
Syncrude has participated in this program since inception and had its results externally verified in both 2006 and 2007. Syncrude received two awards for ...TSE:COS.UN
Banner Corporation Announces Second Quarter Results; Includes ...
MarketWatch - Jul 28, 2008
Visit Banner Bank on the Web at www.bannerbank.com. This press release contains statements that the Company believes are "forward-looking statements. ...BANR - KIDS
Outokumpu's second quarter 2008 interim report - improved ...
Ad-Hoc-News (Pressemitteilung), Germany - Jul 24, 2008
comNews conference and live web-cast today at 3.00 pm.A combined news conference, conference call and live webcastconcerning the second-quarter 2008 ...HEL:OUT1V
Source: Google News

A reference collection for web spam -
C Castillo, D Donato, L Becchetti, P Boldi, S … - ACM SIGIR Forum, 2006 - portal.acm.org
... 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70 0.80 0.90 1.00 ... C., Donato, D., Leonardi, S., and
Baeza-Yates, R. (2006). ... In Proceedings of the Workshop on Web Mining and ...

[PDF] Web searcher interaction with the Dogpile. com metasearch engine -
BJ Jansen, A Spink, S Koshman - Journal of the American Society for Information Science and …, 2007 - ist.psu.edu
... 9 5,757 0.4% ... This is similar to what was found for users of other Web search en ... (2006)
found that the most frequently used Vivisimo terms used were download, new ...
-

Detecting spam web pages through content analysis -
A Ntoulas, M Najork, M Manasse, D Fetterly - … of the 15th international conference on World Wide Web, 2006 - portal.acm.org
... WWW 2006, May 23?26, 2006, Edinburgh, Scotland. ... score 1, since 100% of the words
on the web page were ... 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35 0.40 0.45 0.50 0.55 ...

[PDF] Genre classification of web pages
B Stein, S Meyer zu Eissen - Proceedings of the 27th German Conference on Artificial …, 2004 - ling.uni-potsdam.de
Genre Classification of Web Pages Benno Stein Bauhaus University Weimar Web Technology
and IS Group ... Stein Background: How to Satisfy a Web Information Need ...

Which factors explain the web impact of scientists? personal homepages -
F Barjak, X Li, M Thelwall - Journal of the American Society for Information Science and …, 2007 - doi.wiley.com
... in the life sciences (Thelwall, Barjak, & Kretschmer, 2006). ... more organized (hence,
more interlinked) Web sites. ... All scientists 2.3 (0.3) 2.5 (0.4) 4.8 (0.6) ...

Lipid headgroup superlattice modulates the activity of surface-acting cholesterol oxidase in ternary … -
KH Cheng, B Cannon, J Metze, A Lewis, J Huang, MW … - Biochemistry, 2006 - pubs.acs.org
... 10.1021/bi060937y S0006-2960(06)00937-8 Web Release Date ... Revised Manuscript Received
June 21, 2006. ... COD activity changed abruptly at X CHOL 0.40, whereas major ...

A comparison of implicit and explicit links for web page classification -
D Shen, JT Sun, Q Yang, Z Chen - … of the 15th international conference on World Wide Web, 2006 - portal.acm.org
... World Wide Web Conference Com- mittee (IW3C2). Distribution of these papers is limited
to classroom use, and personal use by others. WWW 2006, May 23?26, 2006 ...

Finding near-duplicate web pages: a large-scale evaluation of algorithms -
M Henzinger - Proceedings of the 29th annual international ACM SIGIR …, 2006 - portal.acm.org
... Copyright 2006 ACM 1-59593-369-7/06/0008 ... 569 pages and is mostly due to two data
bases on the web. ... 0.47 0.37 0.16 (0.10) 382 > C-sim = 379 407 0.40 0.37 0.23 ...

A Task-Based Approach to User Interface Design for a Web-Based Hydrologic Information Systems -
LK Soh, J Zhang, A Samal - Transactions in GIS, 2006 - Blackwell Synergy
... Journal compilation ? 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd Research Article A Task-Based
Approach to User Interface Design for a Web-Based Hydrologic ...

Web Release Date: October 20, 2006 -
MD Hurley, JC Ball, TJ Wallington, MPS Andersen, … - J. Phys. Chem. A, 2006 - pubs.acs.org
... 10.1021/jp064029m S1089-5639(06)04029-1 Web Release Date: October 20 ... In Final Form:
August 17, 2006. ... 10 -17 , (1.90 ? 0.17) ? 10 -19 , (5.04 ? 0.40) ? 10 -20 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Heart Risk Tool May Be Failing Kidney Patients

November 18, 2006 08:43:08 PM PST

SATURDAY, Nov. 18 (HealthDay News) -- The Framingham Score -- a standard tool for predicting cardiovascular disease -- greatly underestimates the actual rate of heart disease in patients receiving dialysis for end-stage renal (kidney) disease, a new report finds.

"This (underestimation) may lead to inadequate or delayed initiation of treatments to prevent CVD in a group of patients for whom heart disease is the main cause of death," study authors Dr. Darshan S. Dalal and Dr. Rulan S. Parekh, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, said in a prepared statement.

They and their colleagues compared predicted and actual rates of heart disease in more than 4,200 patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD).

They found that the Framingham Score greatly underestimated cardiovascular risk for men ages 30 to 75. The median estimated risk was 2.2 percent but the actual risk over an average of two years' follow-up was 35 percent.

Among women in the same age group, the median estimated risk of cardiovascular disease was 2 percent while the actual risk was 37 percent.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The findings suggest that for 60 percent of ESRD patients who are initially free of heart disease, their risk of cardiovascular illness is much higher than that predicted by the Framingham Score, the researchers said.

"Newer and more comprehensive risk equations are needed to assess and predict cardiovascular risk in ESRD patients," Dalal and Parekh said.

The study findings were presented Friday at the American Society of Nephrology's annual meeting in San Diego.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about ESRD.

 

Potency of U.S. Avian Flu Vaccine Supply is Deteriorating

Not that there is all that much vaccine to protect against a major outbreak of avian flu, but the U.S. supply of about 3.75 million doses is losing its potency.

Bloomberg News reports U.S. government officials saying the original batch of 3.75 million doses against H5N1 avian influenza has started to deteriorate. The revelation came after the vaccine's maker, Sanofi-Aventis SA, discovered the reduction in strength after routine testing.

There are now fewer than 3 million full strength doses, Bloomberg News quotes Bill Hall, an HHS spokesman, as saying. Nevertheless, if a major outbreak of avian flu were to occur in the U.S., the wire service quotes Hall as saying, it "would still most likely be used if we needed it tomorrow or next week. We would use the full- potency vaccine first."

While concern about an worldwide human pandemic of bird flu -- which has infected tens of millions of fowl -- has eased somewhat, World Health Organization statistics show that H5N1 has killed 153 people and infected a total of 258. So far, there have been no confirmed cases of avian flu being transmitted from human to human.

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M.D. Affiliated With Anti-Contraception Group Named to Head U.S. Family Planning Agency

A Massachusetts doctor who is the medical director of an organization that opposes abortion, contraception and most family planning methods is President Bush's choice to head the federal department that finances most of the programs the doctor's organization opposes.

The appointment of Dr. Eric Keroack to head the U.S. Office of Population Affairs, whose annual $283 million budget is used to fund family planning programs, met with Congressional criticism and angered one of the nation's largest family planning groups. Keroack is affiliated with A Woman's Concern, a Marblehead, Mass. Organization that the Associated Press quotes from its statement of faith as designed "help women escape the temptation and violence of abortion." The organization also opposes contraception, according to the wire service.

The Office of Family Planning, one of the Office of Population Affairs' divisions, "is designed to provide access to contraceptive supplies and information to all who want and need them," according to its statement of purpose.

Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.) and the Planned Parenthood Federation of America have called for the President to withdraw Keroack's appointment, which does not need Congressional approval.

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Dioxin May Affect Male Reproductive System

Exposure to TCDD, the most toxic dioxin in the herbicide Agent Orange, may disrupt the male reproductive system in a number of ways, says a study of 2,000 U.S. Air Force veterans who served in the Vietnam War.

Researchers at the UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas found evidence that TCDD may lower testosterone levels and limit the growth of the prostate gland. The study appears in the November issue of the journal Environmental Health.

"Until now, we did not have very good evidence whether or not dioxins affect the human reproductive system," urologist and lead author Dr. Amit Gupta said in a statement. "Now we know that there is a link between dioxins and the human prostate leading us to speculate that dioxins might be decreasing growth of the prostate in humans like they do in animals."

The study found that veterans exposed to TCDD had lower rates of an enlarged prostate disorder called benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH).

"It may be construed that a decrease in the risk of BPH is not a harmful effect, but the larger picture is that dioxins are affecting the normal growth and development of the reproductive system. Moreover, several effective treatments are available for BPH and thus reduction of BPH by a toxic compound is not a desirable effect," Gupta said.

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Chocolate Milk May Boost Exercise Stamina

Chocolate milk may boost athletic endurance, suggests an Indiana University study that was partly funded by the Dairy and Nutrition Council.

Researchers had a small group of fit athletes do hard workouts on a stationary bike, then drink either low-fat chocolate milk, a fluid replacement drink (Gatorade), or a carbohydrate replacement drink (Endurox R4). A few hours later, the athletes were told to ride the bike again until they were exhausted, the Associated Press reported.

The test was repeated three times, once with each type of beverage. The study found participants exercised up to 54 percent longer after drinking chocolate milk than when they drank the carbohydrate drink. There was no significant difference between the milk and the fluid-replacement drink.

The findings that chocolate milk may help boost endurance are not conclusive, but do suggest that it's worth doing a larger study, dietician Mary Lee Chin (who does public relations work for the Western Dairy Council) told the AP.

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U.K. Bans Junk Food Ads on Kids' TV Shows

In an effort to fight childhood obesity, officials in the United Kingdom have announced a ban on all junk food advertising on children's television programs.

The Ofcom broadcasting regulator said Friday that no ads for foods and beverages with high fat, salt, or sugar content will be shown during shows aimed at children younger than 16, Agence France Presse reported.

Some health and consumer groups said the measures didn't go far enough. Junk food ads should be prohibited from all television shows before 9 p.m., whether the programs are for children or adults, the groups said, noting that many children watch adult programs.

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FDA Expands Use of Herceptin for Breast Cancer

The approved use of the cancer drug Herceptin has been expanded to include treatment of early-stage HER2-positive breast cancer along with chemotherapy after a woman has a lumpectomy or mastectomy, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced Thursday.

Herceptin was first approved by the FDA in 1998 to treat metastatic breast cancer (cancer that's spread to other areas of the body). This latest approval means it can also be used to treat women with cancer that was detected only in the breast or lymph nodes and was surgically removed. The drug should only be given to women with HER2-positive breast cancer, the FDA said.

This expanded use is based on the findings of two studies sponsored by the U.S. National Cancer Institute. The studies, which included nearly 4,000 women, found that 87 percent of women who received the drug and chemotherapy after surgery were cancer-free after three years, compared to 75 percent of those who received chemotherapy alone.

It's too early to determine whether Herceptin combined with chemotherapy will increase the cure rate or lower the risk of death from breast cancer, the FDA said.

 
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