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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 0.29 + 2006 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

Anadarko Announces Second-Quarter Results
WELT ONLINE, Germany -
A replay of the call will also be available on the Web site for approximately 30 days following the conference call. ANADARKO OPERATIONS REPORT For more ...APC - BOM:500312 - WAR:CFL
Stewart Reports Operating Results for the Second Quarter 2008
Earthtimes (press release), UK - Jul 30, 2008
We remain on track for site conversions of legacy production systems to our new, but proven, web-based production systems this year. ...STC
Bank of Hawaii Corporation Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Jul 28, 2008
Net charge-offs during the second quarter of 2008 were $4.7 million or 0.29 percent annualized of total average loans and leases. Net charge-offs increased ...BOH
Are Dividends the Cure for Your Ailing Portfolio?
Morningstar.com, IL - Jul 29, 2008
It recently got a new manager, Michael Reckmeyer, but its ultralow 0.29% expense ratio means that it's still one of our favorites. ...
Soapstone Networks Reports Second Quarter 2008 Results
FOXBusiness - Jul 17, 2008
Replay of this call is also available on Soapstone's Web site, www.soapstonenetworks.com, along with a copy of this release. Soapstone is a trademark of ...SOAP - OTC:CMTX

WELT ONLINE
Heritage Financial Group Posts Higher Second Quarter Net Income
MarketWatch - Jul 21, 2008
For more information about the Company, visit HeritageBank of the South on the Web at www.eheritagebank.com, and see Investor Relations under About Us. ...
Sovereign Bancorp, Inc. Announces Second Quarter 2008 Results MSN Money
all 1,034 news articles »  HBOS - SOV
Consumer Portfolio Services, Inc. Reports 2008 Second Quarter Earnings
MarketWatch - Jul 15, 2008
A broadcast of the conference call will also be available live and for 30 days after the call via the Company's web site at www.consumerportfolio.com and at ...CPSS
Progress Energy Increases 2008 Production Guidance
istockAnalyst.com, OR - Jul 31, 2008
This information is also accessible on the Trust's web site at www.progressenergy.com. We remain firmly focused on our goal of maintaining or modestly ...
ProEx Reports Second Quarter Results Canada NewsWire (press release)
all 34 news articles »  TSE:PXE - TSE:PGX.UN
Canwest Global Communications Corp. Reports Third Quarter 2008 Results
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Jul 11, 2008
Since November 30, 2006, revenues have increased on average more than 10% each quarter including 15% for the period ending May 31, 2008. ...CWG
Samuel Manu-Tech Inc. - Second quarter results
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Jul 30, 2008
Omega is a recognized leader in the design, engineering, manufacturing and supply of open web steel joists used primarily in the commercial and industrial ...TSE:SMT
Source: Google News

A Computational Trust Model for Semantic Web Based on Bayesian Decision Theory
X Zheng, H Chen, Z Wu, Y Zhang - … of the 8 thAsia-Pacific Web Conference (APWeb 2006), Harbin …, 2006 - Springer
... Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006 ... Page 5. A Computational Trust Model for Semantic
Web Based on Bayesian Decision Theory 749 ... m(x b ) = 0.29,} and 15 . ...

[PDF] Names and similarities on the web: Fact extraction in the fast lane -
M Pasca, D Lin, J Bigham, A Lifchits, A Jain - Procs. of ACL/COLING, 2006 - acl.ldc.upenn.edu
... c 2006 Association for Computational Linguistics ... of candidate facts collected from
noisy Web documents ... Missy Elliott 0.30, Aretha Franklin 0.29, Jennifer Lopez ...
-

[PDF] New Rock Stars Use Web Videos to Win Fans
Y Adegoke - 2006 - msl1.mit.edu
... RELATED QUOTES ^IXIC 2140.29 +3.18 ^IXK 927.94 +2.57 ^DJUSS 456.10 +0.29 ... Page 2.
08/26/2006 04:48 PM New rock stars use Web videos to win fans - Yahoo! News ...

[PDF] Web Presence and Impact Factors for Middle-Eastern Countries Alireza Noruzi -
A Noruzi - eprints.rclis.org
... Qatar 0.91 9470 3040 7470 10400 0.29 Lebanon 0.96 90500 25800 64200 94600 0.27 ... Noruzi,
A. (2006). Web Presence and Impact Factors for Middle-Eastern Countries. ...

[PDF] … of a web-based teaching module and gender on accounting students? ethical judgements Copyright 2006
W James, L McManus, N Subramaniam - eprints.qut.edu.au
Page 1. 1 A study on the effect of a web-based teaching module and gender on accounting
students? ethical judgements Copyright 2006 (The authors) ...
-

[PDF] … Annual Report September 30, 2006 NARRATIVE Scientific Report Project Title and:? SiMErgency: A Web
CPIWLR Heinrichs - NARRATIVE, 2006 - simergency.stanford.edu
... NARRATIVE Scientific Report Project Title and: ?SiMErgency: A Web-Based Simulation
of Medical Emergencies for ... SE after F 5 6.0 0.5 0.2 0.29 ... July 11, 2006 ...

Structural and Electrochemical Properties of Li [Cr 0.29 Li 0.24 Mn 0.47] O 2 Nanocomposite … -
CW Park, J Kim - Chemistry Letters, 2006 - J-STAGE
... Li 0:24 Mn 0:47 ]O 2 between 2.4 and 4.7 V. Chemistry Letters Vol.35, No.8 (2006)
887 Published on the web (Advance View) July 1, 2006; doi:10.1246/cl.2006.886

[PDF] WEB-RESOURCES IN NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY -
BS Kademani, A Kumar, A Sagar, G Surwase, V Kumar - Malaysian Journal of Library & Information Science, 2007 - majlis.fsktm.um.edu.my
... 28. http://www.physicsweb.org 295 0.29 29. ... 6: 51-73. Horlesberger, M. and Schiebel,
E. 2006. Web networks of the Science System: Weighted hubs and authorities. ...
-

Generating maps of web pages using cellular automata
H Azzag, D Ratsimba, D Da Costa, G Venturini, C … - … of the 15th international conference on World Wide Web, 2006 - portal.acm.org
... Keywords: Web pages, visualization, unsupervised clustering, cel- lular ... WWW 2006,
May 23?26, 2006, Edinburgh, Scotland. ... 3.6 [0.9] 0.27 [0.10] 0.36 3,00 0.29 ...
-

A new look at evidence of scholarly citation in citation indexes and from web sources -
L Vaughan, D Shaw - Scientometrics, 2008 - Springer
... Conference paper 432 0.16 0.29 0.80 ... times when one citing work appears on several
web pages ... now the dominant data source of research evaluation [M EHO , 2006]. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Blood Pressure Often Higher in Boys Than Girls

December 4, 2006 03:56:10 PM PST

MONDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Boys are much more likely than girls to have higher systolic blood pressure, which could explain why men have higher rates of hypertension than women, Canadian researchers report. The five-year study of more than 1,200 students in Montreal found that the risk of higher systolic blood pressure increased 19 percent a year for boys, but remained stable for girls. Systolic blood pressure, the larger of the two numbers in a blood pressure reading, represents pressure when the heart is fully contracted.

The researchers began tracking the students when they were in Grade 7. This is the first study to document gender differences in blood pressure in adolescents and could help in the development of new strategies to reduce rates of hypertension in young male adults, the researchers said. The findings are published in the current issue of the journal Circulation.

"It is important to document that, as the boys got older, they were more likely to have higher systolic blood pressure readings. It suggests that, as young adults, they may be more likely to develop hypertension," study lead author Dr. Kaberi Dasgupta, a physician at McGill University Health Centre and assistant professor of medicine at McGill University, said in a prepared statement.

He and his colleagues also found that a sedentary lifestyle and lack of exercise increased the risk of higher SBP in both boys and girls. "Even after adjusting for differences in body weight, the more frequently a child engaged in active behavior, the lower the likelihood of developing higher systolic blood pressure levels," Dasgupta said.

"Perhaps more interesting, the more hours that the kids spent in sedentary behaviors -- sitting at a computer, playing video games, being on the Internet, watching television -- the more risk of having higher systolic blood pressure," Dasgupta said.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about blood pressure.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Doctors Divided Over Loss of Experimental Cholesterol Drug

December 4, 2006 03:56:10 PM PST
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- While some heart experts are calling Pfizer Inc.'s decision to halt development of a promising new cholesterol drug a major disappointment, other experts note that existing medicines offer significant benefits.

Pfizer announced on Saturday that an independent board monitoring the developmental drug torcetrapib had recommended the clinical trial be stopped due to a disproportionately large number of deaths and cardiovascular problems among patients receiving the drug. Unlike traditional cholesterol drugs, called statins, that work by lowering levels of LDL (bad) cholesterol, torcetrapib was designed to raise levels of good (HDL) cholesterol.

"It's big news," said Dr. Daniel Fisher, clinical assistant professor of medicine at New York University School of Medicine. "This was going to be a blockbuster drug because it represented a new form of treatment -- raising HDL cholesterol significantly. It had a lot of promise to it. Heart disease is the number one killer," Fisher explained.

But not all clinicians agree that the loss of the drug is a devastating blow in the fight against heart disease.

"It's a significant disappointment, but it's not setting the field back," said Dr. Robert Myerburg, professor of medicine and physiology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. "What we have that's good is good. It was anticipated that this would be another significant benefit, and it's not working out. But the notion of doom and gloom doesn't make any sense."

Dr. Raymond Gibbons, president of the American Heart Association and co-director of the Nuclear Cardiology Lab at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., added: "Whenever we hear that a potential new drug for the treatment of heart disease is not going to come to market, it's disappointing. However, that's the reason we do clinical trials and careful studies of these compounds before they're released for general use."

Pfizer said it has asked that all clinical investigators conducting trials warn patients to stop taking the drug immediately.

According to Pfizer spokesman Paul Fitzhenry, in a trial of 15,000 patients, 82 of those taking the combination of torcetrapib and the statin Lipitor had died, compared to 51 deaths among those taking Lipitor alone. Pfizer said the study did not raise any questions about Lipitor's safety.

There had been concerns about torcetrapib, which was designed to be taken with a statin like Lipitor, because a recent study showed it triggered a slight increase in blood pressure.

But only last week, Pfizer had announced its intention to file an application with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for approval of torcetrapib by the second half of next year. The company had expected to sell torcetrapib in combination with Lipitor, which is the company's -- and the world's -- best-selling drug.

LDL cholesterol is worrisome because if too much circulates in the blood, it can help to form plaque -- a thick, hard deposit that can clog arteries. This can lead to the creation of clots that can cause heart attacks or strokes. HDL cholesterol is beneficial because it carries cholesterol away from arteries and back to the liver, where it's passed from the body, according to the American Heart Association.

One remaining question is whether the finding on torcetrapib represents a so-called "class effect," because there are other, similar drugs currently in various stages of development.

"We have no idea if this effect will extend to other drugs in the class," Gibbons said. "We've learned from experience that it's incorrect to extrapolate the findings from one drug to another. This drug is in a different class than any of the drugs currently used by patients, so patients currently taking cholesterol-lowering drugs should not be concerned by the findings of this study. They should not decide they should not take existing therapies."

Myerburg added, "I don't think there's any sense at this point of whether this is a class effect."

Heart patients still have other options, however, namely the cholesterol-lowering statins.

 

And, with the Pfizer study cut short, it's also unclear if torcetrapib would have turned out to be a blockbuster along the lines of Lipitor.

"There was no reason to think that there would be this kind of harm, but the other side of the coin is how much added benefit would this strategy have given to what we already have," Myerburg said. "There could have been a surprise there. We could have been wrong on the upside as well."

Perhaps the only good news for Pfizer is that the negative study results came out in pre-marketing studies, thus avoiding the litigation problems Merck & Co. is now facing with its derailed arthritis drug Vioxx.

The torcetrapib study was large enough to detect a relatively small number of problems. Usually such issues only surface when a drug is approved and marketed.

"Most studies aren't that big," Myerburg said. "This is a statement about the importance of doing adequately sized trials and of doing post-marketing studies. Cut this study in half, and you might have seen a benefit but missed the adverse effects."

More information

For more on cholesterol and heart disease, visit the American Heart Association.

 
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