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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: type + risk + boosts  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

Excessive Drinking Boosts Risk for Metabolic Syndrome
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
4 (HealthDay News) -- People who drink too much have increased odds of developing metabolic syndrome, a series of risk factors and conditions that are ...
Immunotherapy Boosts Treatment of Kids' High-Risk Sarcomas
Washington Post, United States -
4 (HealthDay News) -- Immunotherapy shows promise in treating children with high-risk sarcomas, according to a US National Institute of Health pilot study. ...
Cisco Orders May Slump; Forecast at Risk as Carriers Cut Back
Bloomberg -
Phone companies worldwide will boost spending 11 percent this year, down from 14 percent growth in 2007, according to a survey of about 200 carriers by ...CSCO

ChattahBox
Sleep Apnea Boosts Death Risk
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 1, 2008
1 (HealthDay News) -- The interrupted nighttime breathing of sleep apnea appears to increase the risk of dying, Australian researchers report. ...
Sleep apnea boosts death risk, study finds CNN
all 388 news articles »
UPDATE 1-Mexico's Cemex boosts US concrete prices
Reuters -
"We are effectively removing all fuel surcharges and taking on fuel price risk through this time," Perez said. Cemex said that producing ready-mix concrete ...
Cemex to Raise Ready-Mix Concrete Prices at US Unit (Update4) Bloomberg
all 25 news articles »  CX - AFM:RMCC
Pre-Pregnancy Diabetes Boosts Risk for Birth Defects
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Jul 30, 2008
"Early and effective management of diabetes for pregnant women is critical in helping to not only prevent birth defects, but also to reduce the risk for ...
Fish May Boost Memory, Prevent Stroke
WebMD -
Adults in this category reduced their risk of silent brain lesions by 13%. Those who regularly chose the healthy fish also had fewer changes in the white ...
7:50 am - Gum Disease Can Boost The Risk Of Cancer
KARK, Little Rock -
They were 35-percent more likely to develop a blood cancer and had a 21-percent overall higher risk for cancer than those who did not smoke.
Nuclear deal may boost India's ratings in financial markets
Hindu, India -
New Delhi (PTI): Signing of the nuclear deal with the US may boost in the global financial market India's credit worthiness which, otherwise, ...
Farmers boost local economy with group wind project
Litchfield Independent Review, MN -
Individual risk can be a scary prospect. But what if an entire community decided to take a leap together? More than 300 farmer-investors in southwestern ...
Source: Google News

Early breast cancer: influence of type of boost (electrons vs iridium-192 implant) on local control … -
E Touboul, Y Belkacemi, JP Lefranc, S Uzan, M … - Radiotherapy and Oncology, 1995 - Elsevier
... We analyzed retrospectively the influence of type of boost (iridium-192 implant ... In
our series, the 5- and IO-year actuarial risk of a breast recurrence were ...

Safety and Immunogenicity of a Live Recombinant Canarypox Virus Expressing HIV Type 1 gp120 MN tm/ … -
D Salmon-Ceron, JL Excler, L Finkielsztejn, B … - AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 1999 - liebertonline.com
... characteristics of such a vaccine, the type of immune ... im- munogenicity of various
prime?boost immunization regimens ... in healthy volunteers at low risk for HIV ...

… II Study of Two HIV Type 1 Envelope Vaccines, Comparing Their Immunogenicity in Populations at Risk -
MJ McElrath, L Corey, D Montefiori, M Wolff, MJ … - AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2000 - liebertonline.com
... Acquiring HIV Type 1 Infection ... assigned in a double-blind fashion within each risk
stra- tum to ... 1). To determine the effect of an additional boost on antibody ...

Improved local control with stereotactic radiosurgical boost in patients with nasopharyngeal … -
QT Le, D Tate, A Koong, IC Gibbs, SD Chang, JR … - International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, …, 2003 - Elsevier
... is associated with a significant risk of local ... carcinoma patients received a STR
boost after EBRT ... and World Health Organization histologic type (favoring type ...

… trial safety of DNA-and modified virus Ankara-vectored human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) … -
I Cebere, L Dorrell, H McShane, A Simmons, S … - Vaccine, 2006 - Elsevier
... It was presented in 3-ml sterile Type I glass ... In the prime-boost study IAVI-005,
9 volunteers (nos. ... out known HIV-1-positive and high-risk individuals, people ...

… irradiation with nodal boost for patients with endometrial cancer at high risk of failure in the … -
A Martinez, K Podratz, M Schray, G Malkasian - Hematol Oncol Clin North Am, 1988 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... with endometrial cancer at high risk of failure ... abdominopelvic irradiation with a
nodal and vaginal boost. ... modest, usually of the acute type, and particularly ...

Impact of Boost Technique on Outcome in Early-Stage Breast Cancer Patients Treated With Breast- … -
RC Frazier, LL Kestin, V Kini, AA Martinez, PY … - American Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2001 - amjclinicaloncology.com
... or treatment characteristics could account for differences in treatment outcome,
the frequency of various risk factors were analyzed according to boost type. ...

… Virus Type 1 Vaccine with or without gp120: A Phase 2 Study in Higher-and Lower-Risk Volunteers -
RB Belshe, C Stevens, GJ Gorse, S Buchbinder, K … - The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2001 - UChicago Press
... Recherche sur le SIDA: a prime-boost approach to ... recombinant gp160 human
immunodeficiency virus type-1 vaccine in subjects at low risk of infection ...

… for localized esophageal carcinoma: dose-effect relationship of brachytherapy with the balloon type -
A Yorozu, T Dokiya, Y Oki, T Suzuki - Radiotherapy and Oncology, 1999 - Elsevier
... external irradiation with chemotherapy [6]. The risk of a ... were some problems with
our balloon type appli- cator ... case, the aim for brachytherapy boost should be ...

… radiotherapy, and online quality control in standard-risk medulloblastoma without chemotherapy: … -
C Carrie, X Muracciole, F Gomez, JL Habrand, M … - International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, …, 2005 - Elsevier
... because of wrong staging or histologic type, 3 developed ... if the entire posterior
fossa receives a boost, except with ... The risk with a reduced volume is, however ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Consumers Warned About Jamba Juice Smoothies

Consumers in the U.S. Southwest are being warned that Jamba Juice Co. smoothies containing strawberries may be contaminated with the potentially deadly Listeria monocytogenes bacterium.

The warning applies to smoothies sold at Jamba Juice stores in Arizona, southern Nevada and southern California from Nov. 25 to Dec. 1, the Associated Press reported.

There have been no reports of illness, said the San Francisco-based company, which issued the warning Tuesday after it learned that some frozen strawberries from one of its suppliers tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes.

Jamba Juice immediately stopped shipments from that supplier -- Cleugh's Frozen Foods of Salinas, Calif. -- and removed all strawberries supplied by that company, the AP reported.

Listeria monocytogenes can cause potentially deadly infections in children, the elderly and other people with weakened immune systems. The bacterium can also cause miscarriages and stillbirths in pregnant women.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

U.S. Companies to Give Workers Electronic Medical Records

Workers at five of the largest employers in the United States will soon have electronic medical records that they can access from any computer.

The medical records of about 2.5 million workers and their dependents will be compiled by an independent, nonprofit organization and stored in a database that will only be accessible to the employees, the Associated Press reported.

The five companies -- Applied Materials; BP America Inc.; Intel Corp.; Pitney Bowes; and Wal-Mart -- hope the move will reduce health-care paperwork and reduce administrative costs, medical errors and duplication of care. The savings may make it easier for the companies to continue sponsoring health insurance for their employees.

The companies did not say how much the program will cost, the AP reported.

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Scientists Find Potential 'Achilles' Heel' in Bird-Flu Virus

U.S. scientists say they may have found the "Achilles' heel" of the H5N1 bird-flu virus and other influenza strains. This weak point may offer a target for new drugs to fight the viruses, the researchers say in a report to be published Thursday in the journal Nature.

The potential vulnerability is a loop in the long, flexible protein tail that's essential for flu virus replication. A single mutation in the amino building blocks that comprise this loop is enough to stop the virus from replicating, Agence France Presse reported.

"We know from previous genetic studies that this tail loop is almost identical across strains of influenza A, so drugs that target the tail have a high potential of being effective across multiple strains, including the H5N1 strains," research team leader Yizhi Jane Tao, of Rice University in Houston, said in a prepared statement.

"Such new antivirals are especially needed at the moment as some H5N1 viruses are resistant to the flu drug Tamiflu," Tao noted.

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U.S. Urged to Ban Children's Jewelry Containing Lead

The United States should ban children's jewelry that contains lead, says the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), an independent federal regulator responsible for overseeing the safety of consumer products.

The CPSC staff said Tuesday that the commission should prohibit the manufacture, sale and importation of toy jewelry that contains more than .06 percent lead by weight, the Associated Press reported.

Currently, most children's products with more than .06 percent lead are only subject to a recall. By prohibiting toy jewelry with that much lead, the CPSC could fine companies that knowingly make, sell, or import such products, said CPSC spokesman Scott Wolfson.

"The goal is to make the marketplace safer when it comes to children's jewelry by having a simpler policy for companies in their manufacturing and CPSC in assessing safe from dangerous," Wolfson said.

He said lead paint in older homes is still the leading lead danger for children in the United States but the threat from toy jewelry has become a major issue in recent years. In 2004, the CPSC issued a recall for 150 million pieces of children's jewelry with unsafe lead levels. It was the largest recall in the commission's history, the AP reported.

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FDA Warns Cos. to Stop Making Compounded Anesthetic Creams

Five U.S. companies have been warned to stop compounding and distributing topical anesthetic creams, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday.

The compounded creams are being marketed for general distribution, rather than for the unique medical needs of individual patients, and the FDA is concerned about the possible health risks posed by these creams. Exposure to the high concentrations of local anesthetics in the creams can cause serious reactions, such as irregular heartbeats and seizures.

Two deaths have been connected to compounded topical anesthetic creams made by Triangle Compounding Pharmacy and University Pharmacy, two of the companies that received warning letters from the FDA. The other three are Custom Scripts Pharmacy, Hal's Compounding Pharmacy, and New England Compounding Center.

"Compounded topical anesthetic creams, like all compounded drugs, are not reviewed by FDA for safety and effectiveness, and are not FDA-approved. These high-potency drugs may expose patients to unnecessary risk, especially when they are used without proper medical supervision," Dr. Steven Galson, director of FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in a prepared statement.

Compounded topical anesthetic creams are often used to reduce pain in patients having procedures such as laser hair removal, tattoos and skin treatments. There are FDA-approved topical anesthetic products.

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Australia Legalizes Cloning of Embryos for Stem Cell Research

Australian legislators voted Wednesday to legalize the cloning of human embryos for stem cell research.

The House of Representatives voted 82-62 in favor of lifting a four-year-old ban on the procedure. Conservative Prime Minister John Howard and the other major party leaders voted against the bill, the Associated Press reported.

Last month, the Senate passed the bill. The new law will take effect in about six months, after government health and science officials establish guidelines for egg donation and research licensing.

In 2002, Australia's Parliament passed the country's first laws on stem cell research. Under those rules, scientists were only permitted to extract stem cells from spare embryos intended for in-vitro fertilization, the AP reported.

 

Obesity Boosts Kidney Risk in Type 1 Diabetes

December 6, 2006 03:56:25 PM PST

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 6 (HealthDay News) -- For people with type 1 diabetes, obesity is also associated with an increased risk of kidney disease, a U.S. study finds.

"Our results suggest that weight control is important in type 1 diabetes and that overweight patients with type 1 diabetes may need further evaluation and treatment," study lead author Dr. Ian H. de Boer, of the University of Washington in Seattle, said in a prepared statement.

Type 1 diabetes is the inherited form of the disease, in which the body fails to produce enough insulin. It differs from adult-onset type 2 diabetes, which comprises 95 percent of diabetes cases and is often linked to obesity.

In the study, de Boer and colleagues analyzed data on about 1,300 type 1 diabetes patients. These patients were part of a large study that found that intensive insulin therapy -- keeping blood sugar levels as close to normal as possible -- reduced the risk of kidney disease and other diabetes-related complications.

In this new study, the researchers looked at what effect obesity -- specifically waist circumference (central obesity) -- had on kidney disease risk.

Over an average of nearly six years of follow-up, 8.4 percent of the patients developed microalbuminuria -- small amounts of the protein albumin in urine. This is the first sign of diabetic kidney disease. The risk of microalbuminuria was 4.5 percent for patients who received intensive insulin therapy and 12.8 percent for those who received standard insulin treatment.

This study found that the larger a patient's waist measurement, the greater their risk for kidney disease. For each four-inch increase in waist circumference, there was a 34 percent increased risk of microalbuminuria. This held true even after the researchers adjusted for other factors, including intensive insulin therapy.

The findings were published online Wednesday by the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, and are expected to be in the January print issue.

"Obesity is a growing problem for people with type 1 diabetes, but little was previously known about whether it affects risk for kidney disease in this group," de Boer said.

"Our research shows that central obesity is associated with an increased risk of developing microalbuminuria, which is not only an important sign of kidney disease but also a marker of increased risk for cardiovascular disease," he said.

More information

The National Kidney Foundation has more about diabetes and kidney disease.

 
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