Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: upi + health + amore  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: health + upi + [doc]  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
United Press International - 25 minutes ago
5 (UPI) -- The US Food and Drug Administration has approved the 2008-09 seasonal influenza vaccine that includes strains likely to cause flu in the United ...
UPI NewsTrack Quirks in the News
United Press International - 42 minutes ago
Diane Wright, 67, Jackson Township, contends Porter Hospital caused her to lose her Social Security and health insurance after they allegedly notified ...
Celeb medical record 'peeking' widespread
United Press International -
5 (UPI) -- California officials say nearly twice as many UCLA Medical Center employees than previously thought have been peeking at celebrities' medical ...
27 infants die in Turkish hospital
United Press International -
5 (UPI) -- Turkish health officials say they have halted admissions of some expectant mothers to an Ankara hospital where 27 infants have died in a two-week ...
NASA awards medical support contract
United Press International -
5 (UPI) -- The US space agency says it has selected Innovative Health Applications LLC to provide medical and environmental services at the Kennedy Space ...
UPI NewsTrack TopNews United Press International
Rape may be connected to triple killing United Press International
all 28 news articles »
UPI NewsTrack TopNews
United Press International -
However, state employees performing critical health and safety functions and those whose jobs bring in revenue were exempted, and analysts said the move may ...
NY-Grenada med school deal blasted
United Press International -
5 (UPI) -- New York City medical schools say they're worried US students will suffer because of deal signed between city-owned hospitals and a Caribbean ...
Iraqi doctors lured back to the country
United Press International -
4 (UPI) -- Iraq's deputy minister of health unveiled a housing and incentives program to bring medical professionals who fled the violence to return home, ...
UPI NewsTrack Quirks in the News
United Press International - Aug 4, 2008
He said ESPN is "inundated" with ads for alcohol, which he said was "responsible for health issues and ultimately death." "Somehow I'm immoral and ...
UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
istockAnalyst.com, OR - Jul 31, 2008
HUNTSVILLE, Ala., July 31 (UPI) -- The US space agency says its new orbiting gamma-ray telescope, still in its checkout phase, has detected 12 powerful ...
Source: Google News

First Phase of a State-Wide Unique Patient Identifier?Lessons Learned and Recommendations Made
L Holen, T Sara, A Rezo - Health, 1999 - search.informit.com.au
... Available: http://internal.health.nsw. gov.au:2001/imicg/upi/downloads/UPI%20STRATEGY_%
20MASTER%20COPY_.doc [2002, June 2]. 5 Morris-Yates A & Andrews G (1997 ...

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AL Taylor - Am. JL & Med., 1992 - HeinOnline
... and Physical Sciences and Their Implications for Health Care, at 14, WHO Doc. ... See
Study: World Death Rates Down but Health Unimproved, UPI, May 3 ...

[DOC] Kirby R. Cundiff, Ph. D., CFA
P References, G Activity, V Activity - Urbana, 1997 - arapaho.nsuok.edu
... ?Think Tanks Wrap-Up.? United Press International. January 29, 2003 (http://www.
upi.com/view.cfm ... Presenter, ?Economics, Health Care, and Infant Mortality ...
-

[PDF] Integrated Health Log, handling sensitive multimedia data
P Porskamp, BV SportRasa, J Schroder, IBM … - doc.telin.nl
... alliance WS-IDF [24] and the UPI architecture from ... the Protection of Electronic
Protected Health Information, General ... Sept 1 available at https://doc.telin.nl ...

EFFECTS OF MOBILITY ON HEALTH-AN OVERVIEW
P NICOLOPOULOU-STAMATI, L HENS, P LAMMAR, CV … - ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY LIBRARY, 2005 - Springer
... Table 57. Health damage caused by cars, Germany 1996, annual totals (UPI, 1999).
Health effect Number Unit Deaths from particulate pollution 25,500 deaths/year ...

[CITATION] FROM GAZA TO HARVARD: THE POLITICIZATION OF MENTAL HEALTH AND THE EDUCATION OF PALESTINIAN CHILDREN
IJ Mansdorf, J Viewpoints
-

[CITATION] LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
A Annoyed, C Change, A Acquired, ARNAR Network, … - Environmental Health Impacts of Transport and Mobility, 2006 - Springer Verlag

[CITATION] Health Sciences Center Funds Allocation Process
U Fund - University of Colorado at Denver

[PDF] Hazards in the Corporatisation of Health Care -
JM Wynne - NEW DOCTOR-SYDNEY-, 2004 - drs.org.au
... sought to buy the allegiance of doc- tors by ... au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/
documents/health/Tenet2002story.html 11 ... firm to pay $12.6 million? UPI Spotlight ...

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JA Califano Jr - U. Pa. L. Rev., 1991 - HeinOnline
... 1986, available in LEXIS, Nexis Library, UPI File (quoting ... al., The Economic Costs
of the Health Effects of ... UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT: FISCAL YEAR 1992, H. DOc. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Your ticket to healthy travel

By CHRISTINE DELL'AMORE
UPI Consumer Health Correspondent

WASHINGTON, July 7 (UPI) -- Ah, summer vacation. It's the mind, body and soul's escape from the rat race of daily life. But in the quest for a perfect getaway, your health can easily take a back seat. Whether you're in California or Calcutta, not taking care of yourself can spoil a well-planned trip -- not to mention raise that stress level you're hoping to keep at a minimum.

"If you don't prepare yourself to stay healthy, you've ruined the whole objective of a good vacation," said Dr. Michael Zimring, director of the Center for Wilderness and Travel Medicine at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore and co-author of the book "Healthy Travel: Don't Travel Without It."

UPI asked Zimring and several other experts about their tips for traveling in top form.

--Stay well-hydrated, and get sufficient sleep before your trip, Zimring said. Don't pack the night before.

--Visit a travel physician to get proper immunizations and learn about the health risks present in your destination. All Americans should be up-to-date on tetanus, Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B shots, Zimring said.

--Consider getting international travel insurance; many major health insurance companies don't cover customers outside the country.

--Remember to eat foods they way they are supposed to be prepared. Don't eat ice cream that's melting in the summer sun.

--Pack healthy snacks with you to avoid much of the unhealthy food you find in airports and along the roadside. "Light meals are key in vacations -- the lighter you eat the better you feel," Zimring said.

If you're traveling by airplane, consider this advice from Dr. R. Doug Hardy, assistant professor of internal medicine and pediatrics at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

--Wash your hands. Even with air ventilation systems, planes can easily spread cold- and flu-causing germs. Even better, use alcohol handgels, proven to be effective and easy to keep in a purse or pocket.

--Drink plenty of water to combat the dry environment of an airplane cabin.

What about those homeopathic tablets that purport to keep colds away? Anecdotal evidence suggests they could be helpful, so it probably won't hurt to use them, Zimring said.

Zimring also recommends drinking a lot of water on planes, if only to "force you to get up and pee," he said. Walking up and down the plane gets the legs moving and can help ward off deep-vein thrombosis, or blood clots -- also known as "economy class syndrome." In some cases, these clots can travel to the lungs and cause a life-threatening pulmonary embolism.

 

 

Anyone who takes a long flight -- particularly over eight hours -- should walk around frequently and drink fluids, said Dr. Lawrence Glassman, chief of thoracic surgery at North Shore University Hospital in Long Island, N.Y. Pregnant women, diabetics, people with varicose veins and people older than 50 should be especially vigilant, Glassman said. They may even consider wearing compression stockings on their legs to prevent clots.

Lastly, your ears should not be neglected, according to Dr. Peter Roland, professor and chairman of otolaryngology at UT Southwestern. The unpleasant, stuffy ear sensation that occurs in flight comes from an air pressure imbalance in the ear.

--Swallow, yawn or chew gum to help open the Eustachian tube, a passageway that leads from the back of the throat to the middle ear.

--Take nasal decongestant sprays to clear the opening of the Eustachian tube and improve its function.

--Pinch your nose with mouth closed and blow, which forces the Eustachian tube muscles to open.

--

For more information on happy travels:

http://www.travelmedicinemd.com/1.html

http://www.cdc.gov/travel/

 
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Prion Disease Infectivity Causes Heart Damage in Mouse Study

Laboratory mice infected with the agent of scrapie — a brain-wasting disease of sheep — show high levels of the scrapie agent in their heart several hundred days after being infected in the brain, indicating that heart infection might be a new aspect of this disease, according to a research paper released online today by the journal Science.

Collaborators in the work include scientists at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML), part of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health.

"Undoubtedly, this work will enable scientists to pursue new theories about the effects of these deadly brain wasting diseases," says NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. "The implications of this research could be vital to our efforts to slow or stop these diseases."

“Although much work remains to be done, the diseased hearts seen in this mouse study have similarities to human amyloid heart disease, which is potentially significant,” says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.

Scrapie belongs to a group of diseases called prion diseases, also known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies or TSEs because of the sponge-like holes created in the brain. In addition to scrapie in sheep, prion diseases include Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease in humans, mad cow disease in cattle and chronic wasting disease in deer and elk. The cause of prion diseases, still under debate, may be abnormal aggregated forms of prion protein.

The new research has provided cardiologists an animal model in which to study heart amyloidosis, a family of heart diseases that affect humans, says Bruce Chesebro, M.D., an RML virologist and a senior author of the new paper. Amyloidoses involve waxy protein deposits that stiffen the heart, limit its pumping ability and typically lead to fatal heart stoppage.

“Although several types of protein are known to form heart amyloid, this is the first time prion protein amyloid has been found in heart muscle and also found to cause heart malfunction,” says Dr. Chesebro. “That’s exciting for cardiologists, because this study connects the two fields of research.”

Last year, Dr. Chesebro’s research group from Hamilton, MT, collaborated with Michael Oldstone, M.D., and other researchers at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA, and learned that scrapie-infected mice engineered without an “anchor” between the membrane of cells and the prion protein regularly lived for more than 600 days, ultimately dying of old age, according to Dr. Chesebro. Wild mice infected with scrapie typically die after about 150 days.

In this earlier research, signs of prion protein amyloid were most prominent near blood vessels in the mouse brain. In the newly reported study, researchers at Scripps found similar amyloid in heart muscle. They then secured the help of Kirk Knowlton, M.D., chief of the division of cardiology at the University of California, San Diego, who investigated the effect of prion protein amyloid on mouse heart function, discovering that it decreased the heart’s ability to pump blood.

Unusually high levels of scrapie infectivity were also found in the blood of the same mice used in the heart study. In the future, this finding could help scientists develop a blood-based diagnostic test to identify brain-wasting diseases and possibly lead to a way to filter or chemically treat blood to remove any infectious prion disease agents, says Dr. Chesebro.

News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID Web site at http://www.niaid.nih.gov.

NIAID is a component of the National Institutes of Health. NIAID supports basic and applied research to prevent, diagnose and treat infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections, influenza, tuberculosis, malaria and illness from potential agents of bioterrorism. NIAID also supports research on basic immunology, transplantation and immune-related disorders, including autoimmune diseases, asthma and allergies.

The National Institutes of Health (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. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.


References: MJ Trifilo et al. Prion-induced amyloid heart disease with high blood infectivity in transgenic mice. Science 313:94-97 (2006). DOI: 10.1126/science.1128635.

B Chesebro et al. Anchorless prion protein results in infectious amyloid disease without clinical scrapie. Science 308 (5727):1435-39 (2005). DOI: 10.1126/science.1110837.

 

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