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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: parkinson + disease + allergies  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 24 for parkinson disease allergies. (0.16 seconds) 
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Schering-Plough Highlights R&D Pipeline Progress, Innovation and ...
MarketWatch - Nov 24, 2008
... Parkinson's disease (completing Phase II); results of a Phase II dose-finding trial in patients suffering from moderate to severe Parkinson's disease ...SGP
Misery, misfortune leave the holidays hollow
Stamford Advocate, CT - Nov 30, 2008
... prepares all his meals himself because of budget constraints and debilitating food allergies. Battling Parkinson's disease and severe visual impairment, ...

The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
UPDATE: Schering Sees 5 New Drug Applications In 2009
CNNMoney.com - Nov 24, 2008
... the development of flu vaccines and new treatments for Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, cancer, and another combination allergy product. ...
Schering-Plough touts drug pipeline "stars" Reuters
UPDATE 1-Schering-Plough touts drug pipeline 'stars' Reuters
all 85 news articles »  SGP - OTC:SHRGY
Loss of smell, hearing can be treated
Denver Post, CO - Nov 16, 2008
Many causes, such as a side effect of medication, allergies, sinus disease and dental and gingival (gum) disease, can be treated, and smoking cessation may ...
North Shore support groups
The Salem News, MA - Nov 20, 2008
PARKINSON'S DISEASE: Beverly Council on Aging hosts the North Shore Parkinson's Support Group meetings on the second Monday of the month at 1 pm at the ...
Researchers Target Lymphatic System Cause Behind Many Diseases
PowerHomeBiz.com (press release) - Nov 26, 2008
If you've been diagnosed with fibromyalgia, cancer, multiple sclerosis, multiple chemical sensitivity, Parkinson's or Alzheimer's disease, lupus, arthritis, ...
Hector Elizondo: Caring for a Loved One with Alzheimer's Dementia
HispanicBusiness.com (press release), CA - Nov 21, 2008
In studies for Parkinson's disease dementia, parkinsonian symptoms, particularly tremor, occurred or worsened in some people taking EXELON(R) (rivastigmine ...
Ginkgo 'won't stop dementia'
Borders Today, UK - Nov 20, 2008
... mental disorders (including depression and psychosis), history of bleeding disorders or Parkinson disease, or other abnormal health markers. ...

Bangkok Post
Working small miracles
Bangkok Post, Thailand - Nov 10, 2008
... of every month is for dementia, the second is for multiple sclerosis, the third is for myasthenia gravis and the fourth is for Parkinson's disease. ...

BBC News
Valley Girls: Linda Avey and Anne Wojcicki
BBC News, UK - Nov 20, 2008
Her husband Sergey Brin, the co-founder of Google, discovered as a result of a gene test that he is predisposed to Parkinson's disease, a degenerative ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: disease + allergies + linked  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Road Pollution Blamed for Higher Allergy Risk in Kids
Natural News.com, AZ - Aug 3, 2008
"We consistently found strong associations between the distance to the nearest main road and the allergic disease outcomes," wrote Dr. Heinrich. ...
Doggone DNA
KREN CW 27 TV, NV - Aug 4, 2008
Two of the most common genetic-linked health issues among virtually all breeds are hip dysplasia and allergies. Hip dysplasia is abnormal development and ...
Germans Link Allergies to Gene and Skin Protein
Deutsche Welle, Germany - Jul 24, 2008
Allergy rates have been soaring in western nations in recent years. Scientists blame the disease on a combination of environmental and genetic factors. ...
Combination therapy best for severe asthma, studies find
American Medical News (subscription) - Aug 3, 2008
Nearly 4000 pregnant women participated in the Prevention and Incidence of Asthma and Mite Allergy study conducted by the Dutch government. ...
Clean homes linked to bowel disease
Independent Online, South Africa - Aug 3, 2008
The hygiene hypothesis was first advanced in the late 1980s as one explanation for the rise in allergic diseases in developed nations. ...
Despite risks, many staying with Tysabri
Boston Globe, United States - Aug 1, 2008
Or Cavallo could try a powerful new drug, Tysabri, that carried a worrisome side effect - it was linked to a rare and potentially fatal brain disease that ...
Cleaning Up The House
Newsweek - Aug 2, 2008
The Centers for Disease Control call floating things like mold spores "respiratory irritants" that could cause different levels of allergy-like symptoms. ...
As plain as the rash on his feet
SouthCoastToday.com, MA - Aug 2, 2008
The mite burrows into the skin, laying eggs and producing toxins, causing an allergy that triggers the itching. Mites are attracted to warmth and human ...
A2 Milk: the Solution to Lactose Intolerance, Allergies and Other ...
Natural News.com, AZ - Aug 1, 2008
His research examined links between the consumption of A1 milk and the occurrence of heart disease, Type 1 diabetes, and autism concluding that we should be ...

Canada.com
Asthma oddity
Science News - Jul 15, 2008
Like allergies, asthma is an overreaction of the immune system to an innocuous substance. Nevertheless, it?s possible that an H. pylori infection might ...
Antibiotic Use Linked To Increase In Asthma ? Lack of Common ... Best Syndication
Childhood Asthma Linked To Lack Of Ancient Gut Bacteria Medical News Today
Ulcer- and Cancer-Causing Bacteria Also Protects Against Asthma Discover Magazine
eFluxMedia - Nursing Times
all 80 news articles »
Source: Google News

… Activity in the Sputum from Patients with Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease -
IAA Immunol - Logo, 2000 - content.karger.com
MMP-2- and MMP-9-Linked Gelatinolytic Activity ... Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease D. Cataldo ... International Archives of Allergy and Immunology 2000 ...

Control of Regulatory T Cell Development by the Transcription Factor Foxp3 -
S Hori, T Nomura, S Sakaguchi - Science, 2003 - sciencemag.org
... Similar multiorgan autoimmune diseases, allergy, and IBD develop ... X-linked recessive
disease, IPEX (immune ... X-linked autoimmunity-allergic dysregulation syndrome ...

What are the important allergens in grass pollen that are linked to human allergic disease? -
C Suphioglu - Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 2000 - Blackwell Synergy
... skin tests, use total grass pollen protein extracts to establish allergy. ... allergens
in grass pollen that are linked to human allergic disease?' The answer ...

… without atopy: immunoregulation in chronic helminth infections and reduced allergic disease -
M Yazdanbakhsh, A van den Biggelaar, RM Maizels - Trends in Immunology, 2001 - Elsevier
... in either infectious disease or allergy, but it ... has been found for autoimmune disease
and oral ... expanded in numbers, could influence allergic reactivity either ...

Allergy, Parasites, and the Hygiene Hypothesis -
M Yazdanbakhsh, PG Kremsner, R van Ree - Science, 2002 - sciencemag.org
... Allergic individuals express lower levels of IL-10 (53 ... that several other chronic
infectious diseases are associated ... malaria has been linked to allergy; in a ...

… of intradermal allergy test and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in dogs with allergic skin disease -
EC Codner, P Lessard - J Am Vet Med Assoc, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1993 Mar 1;202(5):739-43. Comparison of intradermal allergy
test and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in dogs with allergic skin disease. ...

… redirection in humans with ragweed allergy by injecting Amb a 1 linked to immunostimulatory DNA -
FER Simons, Y Shikishima, G Van Nest, JJ Eiden, KT … - The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2004 - Elsevier
... systemic or local allergic reactions were ... redirection in human immediate
hypersensitivity diseases. ... humans; immunostimulatory DNA sequences; ragweed allergy. ...

ABC of allergies: The epidemiology of allergic disease -
D Jarvis, P Burney - BMJ: British Medical Journal, 1998 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... to eczema; specific HLA haplotypes are linked to the ... bias (the tendency of those
with allergic disease not to ... incidence of some forms of allergy among smokers; ...

… and their potential role in allergic rhinitis based on the concept of ?one linked airway disease? -
EO Meltzer - Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol, 2000 - ingentaconnect.com
... illustrate the ?one linked airway disease? concept, a ... The pathophysiology of allergic
rhinitis and its similarities ... Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2000;84:176 ...

Genetic susceptibility to food allergy is linked to differential TH2- TH1 responses in C3H/HeJ and … -
V Morafo, K Srivastava, CK Huang, G Kleiner, SY … - The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2003 - Elsevier
... and inflammato- ry responses in autoimmune diseases, 21 has ... to food allergy, like
other allergies, is due ... induction or sup- pression of food allergy in these ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Nasal Allergies Linked to Increased Parkinson's Disease Risk

People with nasal allergies are nearly three times more likely to develop Parkinson's disease later in life than the general population, says a Mayo Clinic study published Tuesday in the journal Neurology.

While the study of 196 Parkinson's patients concluded that allergic rhinitis was associated with increased the risk of the disease, it found no link between other inflammatory diseases (such as asthma, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis) and Parkinson's, United Press International reported.

Study lead author James Bower noted that this was a small study and that Parkinson's is a complex disease and many factors contribute to its development.

"I wouldn't worry if you have allergies. Treat the allergy symptoms you have to alleviate them at the time," Bower said.

-----

 

Wide Variation in Family Health Insurance Premiums

In 2004, health insurance premiums for job-related family coverage varied by as much as $4,000 a year between the least expensive and most expensive state, according to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

The District of Columbia had the most expensive average cost for family coverage ($11,742), while North Dakota had the least expensive ($7,800). The national average cost was $10,006.

The four other most expensive states were: New Jersey ($11,425); New Hampshire ($11,156); Connecticut ($11,035); and Maine ($10,823). The four other least expensive states were: Arkansas ($8,383); Hawaii ($8,580); Utah ($8,654); and Idaho ($8,908).

These premiums can be paid totally by the employer or the employee, or they can share the cost.

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Generic Version of Plavix Being Sold in U.S.

A cheaper version of the best-selling blood thinner drug Plavix is now being sold in the United States by Canadian generic drug maker Apotex Corp.

However, the new drug faces challenges. Plavix maker Bristol-Myers Squibb and its partner, Sanofi-Aventis SA, which markets Plavix outside of the United States, claim that their patent has been infringed. The companies say they're exploring legal and commercial options to fight the generic drug, the Associated Press reported.

However, due to an agreement they signed with Apotex, the two companies have to wait five days before they can seek an injunction to stop sales of the generic drug.

An Apotex spokesman would not divulge how much of the drug has been sold so far in the United States, or the price of the pills, the AP reported. Last year, sales of Plavix totaled about $5.9 billion. It's the second-best selling drug in the world, after the cholesterol drug Lipitor.

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Sleeping Pill Sales Surge in U.S.

Americans' use of prescription sleeping pills rose nearly 50 percent -- from 29 million to 43 million prescriptions -- between 2001 and 2005, according to a study by the Consumers Union, which publishes Consumer Reports magazine.

The study said the growth in direct-to-consumer advertising of sleeping pills is one reason for surging sales, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The findings add to the debate about how drug company advertising influences medical choices made by doctors and patients. Some critics say sleeping pill ads may lead to unnecessary use of the drugs.

"We've always known there are people who suffer from insomnia. But what the advertising has done is make a big noise about a problem that may not have been that big of a problem. In a sense, they've helped create the disease," Dr. Marvin M. Lipman, chief medical officer for Consumers Union, told the Times.

In 2005, the drug industry spent more than $4 billion in consumer advertising, a fivefold increase from a decade ago. The United States is one of the few countries that allows direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising.

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JAMA Won't Ban Authors Who Don't Disclose Pharma Links

Researchers who don't disclose ties to drug companies will not be barred from publishing studies in the Journal of the American Medical Association, says the journal's editor-in-chief.

Catherine DeAngelis told the Bloomberg news service that drugmakers would launch lawsuits if medical journals joined together to ban authors who did not reveal their financial ties to pharmaceutical companies.

"There's a risk for antitrust suits. I've talked to lawyers, and so have other journals," DeAngelis said.

However, authors who do fail to disclose links to drugmakers can expect "appropriate corrective actions," from their universities, DeAngelis wrote in an editorial published Monday.

Last month, it was revealed that two separate studies published in JAMA were authored by researchers who did not disclose their ties to drug companies. The journal published corrections for both studies, Bloomberg reported.

While medical journals may face legal action if they collectively agree to ban authors who violate disclosure rules, there's nothing to stop the journals from sharing the names of such authors, said Pennsylvania State University law professor Stephen Ross, a former lawyer for the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

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Doctors Separate Conjoined Twins With Shared Kidney

Doctors in Utah successfully separated four-year-old conjoined twins and finished reconstruction surgery Tuesday, the Associated Press reported.

The twin girls -- Kendra and Maliyah Herrin -- were born fused at the midsection and shared a kidney and one set of legs. It took nearly 16 hours of surgery to separate them. During the operation, the doctors divided the girls' shared liver and cut Maliyah's connection to Kendra's kidney.

Maliyah will be placed on dialysis and is expected to receive a kidney from her mother within three-to-six months. Doctors at Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake City said this was the first known surgical attempt to separate twins with a shared kidney, the AP reported.

After the surgery to separate the twins, doctors began separate operations to reconstruct the girls' pelvic rings and several internal organs. The girls are expected to remain in intensive care for about a week and will be hospitalized for at least a month, the wire service said.

 
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