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Released: 13-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Ex-Smokers May Have Irreversible Damage to Arteries, Wake Forest Study Shows
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist

New research from one of the most comprehensive studies ever of middle-age Americans indicates that people who once smoked may continue to suffer from the effects of smoking even if they had quit years before.

13-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
After heart attack, cling-on clots may need longer treatment
American Heart Association (AHA)

A new study raises the surprising possibility that physicians may not be treating the aftermath of their patients' heart attacks aggressively enough. The findings appear in today's Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

12-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Simple Test Predicts Poor Outcome in Heart Failure
American Heart Association (AHA)

The health of a person's heart may be found by looking in the blood, according to a report in today's Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Released: 10-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Epidemiology and Prevention Conference, March 19-21, 1998, Santa Fe, N.M., Convention Center
American Heart Association (AHA)

We invite you to make plans to attend the upcoming Epidemiology and Prevention Conference in Santa Fe. A fully equipped and staffed newsroom will be provided for working members of the media.

Released: 10-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Media Avisory -- Age of Drinking Onset News Conference
N/A

The younger the age of drinking onset, the greater the chance that an individual at some point in life will develop a clinically defined alcohol disorder, according to a new report to be released January 14 by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

Released: 10-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Scientists identify tantalizing new brain messengers
Stanford Medicine

Researchers have discovered two chemical messengers in the brain that may lead to new insights into weight control.

Released: 10-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
ASM Journals Tipsheet: January 1998
American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

Tips from the Journals of the American Society for Microbiology: 1) Hepatitis G May be Sexually Transmitted, 2) Gene Gun Delivers DNA Vaccine to Reproductive Tract, 3) Borna Virus Requires Low pH to Infect Cells

Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Agent Orange and Birth Defects to be Focus of a UT-Houston Study
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

The Environmental Protection Agency has awarded The University of Texas-Houston School of Public Health a $874,195 grant to determine whether exposure to an ingredient found in Agent Orange during the Vietnam War can be associated with neural tube defects in the veterans' children.

Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Engineer Blood Vessel Tissue Made Entirely From Human Cells
University of California San Diego

In the first successful attempt to make engineered tissue without synthetic scaffolding, a team of researchers created a blood vessel made entirely from human cells.

Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
ACS aids Cornell Vet School cancer research
Cornell University

Researchers studying the causes of cancer at Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine received grants from the American Cancer Society (ACS): Robert E. Oswald, pharmacology, $166,000 for a two-year study, "Structure and Regulation of Cdc42Hs;" James W. Casey, microbiology and immunology, $90,000 for a two-year continuation of "Development and Regression of a Retroviral Induced Sarcoma."

Released: 8-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Researching the genes of Down Syndrome
Louisiana State University

A Louisiana State University researcher is using a unique technique to study the genes that cause Down Syndrome.

Released: 8-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
UI/VAMC study says patient's history of malaria may be a clue to many Vietnam vets' psychological and other health problems
University of Iowa

IOWA CITY, Iowa -- Cerebral malaria should be considered as seriously as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or Agent Orange exposure as an underlying cause of long-term medical and psychological problems faced by some Vietnam War veterans, according to a study by a University of Iowa and Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) psychologist.

Released: 8-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Shed Light on Snoring, Stroke Risk
American Heart Association (AHA)

Sleep disorders associated with heavy snoring pose the greater stroke risk, researchers reported today in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association. The study by U.S. and German researchers is the first to indicate a possible mechanism for stroke risk that could explain why some sleep disorders are more dangerous than others.

Released: 8-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Hispanics Face Higher Risk for Bleeding Strokes than Whites, Native Americans
American Heart Association (AHA)

People who are Hispanic are more likely than whites and Native Americans to develop hemorrhagic strokes, caused by rupture of a brain artery, rather than ischemic strokes, caused by blockage of a brain artery, according to a new study appearing in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Released: 8-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Memory-robbing Disorder Detected in One in Three Stroke Survivors
American Heart Association (AHA)

About 30 percent of stroke survivors have dementia, a disorder that robs a person of memory and other intellectual abilities, according to a new study in this month's Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Released: 7-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Cholesterol-Lowering Benefits of a Whole Grain Ready-to-Eat Cereal
General Mills, Minneapolis MN

Peer-reviewed study published in the journal "Nutrition and Clinical Care" finds Cheerios(R) breakfast cereal significantly reduces total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol and apoB levels in adults

Released: 7-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
News Tips from Sinai Health System - January 1998
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore

News Tips from Sinai Health System: 1. Remote pediataric anesthesia puts patients and families at ease 2. Cataract Surgery Can Now Be Performed Without Needles 3. Emotional and Behavioral Problems in Older Adults Require Special Care 4. Weight Loss without Medication is Safer 5. Back Surgery Can Now Be Performed on an Outpatient Basis

7-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Natural Estrogens May Help Protect Women From Brain Damage During Stroke
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Natural estrogens may offer some protection to premenopausal women threatened with severe brain damage during stroke, according to a study led by researchers at Johns Hopkins and the National Institutes of Health.

Released: 6-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Nighttime fall of blood pressure from medication increases risk of vision loss, UI researchers say
University of Iowa

Researchers in the University of Iowa College of Medicine are concerned that people who take medications to control high blood pressure at bedtime or in excessive amounts may be at increased risk for an eye disorder known as anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) or stroke of the eye.

Released: 6-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Osteoarthritis is not inevitable for older people who play sports
University of Iowa

Osteoarthritis is not inevitable for people middle-aged and older who want to start playing sports or continue exercising regularly, according to a UI researcher.

Released: 6-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Emergency Medical Journal Publishes New Guidelines for Pediatric Equipment and a National Task Force Report on EMS Pediatric Educational Needs
American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP)

The January issue of Annals of Emergency Medicine presents new national guidelines for pediatric emergency department equipment and a national task force's report on the pediatric curricula needs of Emergency Medical Service providers. Copies of the articles can be obtained from the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Released: 6-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Zeneca Pharmaceuticals Introduces Educational and Informational Website for Anesthesiology and Critical Care Professionals
AstraZeneca

Health care professionals involved in the administration of general anesthesia, sedation of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU), and monitored anesthesia care (MAC) can now visit a new World Wide Web site containing frequently updated information and educational programs.

   
6-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Stress Reduction May Help Our Bodies Defend Against Illness, Disease
Carnegie Mellon University

Can stress reduction help our bodies defend against cancer? Carnegie Mellon University and University of Pittsburgh researchers addressing this question are optimistic but not yet sure. In an editorial in the Jan. 7, 1998 Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Carnegie Mellon psychologist Sheldon Cohen and University of Pittsburgh Medical School immunologist Bruce Rabin say that stress influences on the immune function may have implications for defenses against the development or growth of malignant tissue. However, the evidence for such a relationship is incomplete.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Diet and Exercise Tip the Scales as Americans' Most Popular New Year's Resolutions
Porter Novelli, DC

As the clock strikes midnight on New Year's Eve, most Americans will be looking toward a healthier, fitter New Year. According to a recent nationwide survey, 51 percent of Americans will resolve to eat more fruits and vegetables in 1998.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Internet Survey Declares a Winner in the Battle
Porter Novelli, DC

Internet Survey Declares a Winner in the Battle Between the TV and the PC: Snack Food Second Annual Survey Finds Snack Food Consumption Coming to the Web

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
UM Medical Center to be site for new Joslin Center for diabetes
University of Maryland Medical Center

The University of Maryland Medical Center has signed an agreement with the world renowned Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston to open a comprehensive interdisciplinary center providing medical care and education to the 146,000 adults and children in Maryland and Delaware who have diabetes.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
January Health News Tips from UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
UT Southwestern Medical Center

January health news tips from UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
American Heart Association's top research advances for 1997
American Heart Association (AHA)

Gene therapy to restore blood flow, preventing stroke in children with sickle cell anemia, and the emergence of common bacteria as a potential "smoking gun" in heart disease are among the top research advances in cardiovascular disease during 1997, according to Martha Hill, R.N., Ph.D., president of the American Heart Association.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
New Year's Resolution for Clinicians - Help Smokers Quit
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)

The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) announces a new Smoking Cessation Two-Three Initiative that seeks to enlist the help of all clinicians to get their patients who smoke to quit. The Initiative highlights the AHCPR-sponsored Smoking Cessation Clinical Practice Guideline released last year recommending Two Questions: "Do You Smoke?" and "Do You Want To Quit?" be part of every medical assessment by clinicians. This should be followed by an intervention as brief as Three Minutes recommending smoking cessation treatments proven to work. Research shows that smokers have the best chance of quitting when their health care providers get involved.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
New way of prescribing glasses reduces computer eye strain
Lewis & Clark College

Erik Nilsen, assistant professor of psychology at Lewis & Clark, and Lewis & Clark student researchers have conducted three major studies to evaluate a new technology for prescribing glasses to reduce eyestrain caused by use of computers. Seventy percent of the subjects preferred the experimental glasses.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
January 1, 1998 Annals of Internal Medicine TipSheet from the American College of Physicians
American College of Physicians (ACP)

1) Lyme disease testing guidelines from the ACP are cost-effective, according to analysis. 2) Individual practice guidelines are not effective for entire population. 3) Three studies about anticoagulation therapy, protein S deficiency and factor V Leiden mutation respectively, help in the prevention and diagnosis of deep vein blood clots.

Released: 1-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
National Cancer Institute Announces Increase in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
Porter Novelli, DC

Research shows that adult Americans are eating better. The average adult now eats about four and a half servings of fruits and vegetables a day - a significant step closer to the five or more servings a day recommended by the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) National 5 A Day for Better Health program.

31-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Cardiovascular Costs, Deaths Projected to Rise in 1998
American Heart Association (AHA)

Heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases could cost the nation about $15 billion more in economic costs in 1998 than they did in 1997, according to figures released today by the American Heart Association in its 1998 Heart and Stroke Statistical Update.

Released: 30-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Mental Exercise May Help Stave Off Parkinson's
University of Kansas

People who have Parkinson's disease may someday find themselves undergoing a mental training regimen that helps them respond better to the drugs they take and to avoid surgery. Studies by researchers at the University of Kansas hint that exercising your brain every day might be just as important as 20 minutes of physical exercise.

Released: 30-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
For Young Children with Brain Cancer, Innovative Therapy is Promising
NYU Langone Health

Malignant brain cancers in young children can be eradicated with high-dose chemotherapy and stem-cell transplants, eliminating the need for conventional radiation therapy, which causes irreparable physical and psychological damage in young children, according to two studies by New York University School of Medicine researchers.

Released: 30-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Increased Amount of Enzyme in Brain May Be Marker of Alzheimer's Disease
Northwestern University

An enzyme present in extremely low quantities in normal brains has been found to be greatly increased in the brain of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Northwestern University researchers found that the enzyme, butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), increases at the stage when beta-amyloid plaques in the brain become compact and insoluble. These insoluble plaques are one of two early pathological markers of Alzheimer's disease.

Released: 25-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Natural-born killers: An immunologic enigma solved
Stanford Medicine

Side-by-side papers featured in the December issue of Immunity resolve a mystery of basic immunology while suggesting a new way to improve the success of bone marrow transplantation. The research -- conducted by postdoctoral fellows in the lab of a Stanford structural biologist -- focused on enigmatic white blood cells called natural killer cells.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
December 97 Tipsheet from ATS
American Thoracic Society (ATS)

The following are articles appearing in the December issue of the "American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine," published by the American Thoracic Society: 1- Fall Weather Brings Increased Hospitalization For Asthmatics; 2- Dust Mites Appear To Be A Dominant Risk Factor For Asthma; 3- Hospitalization for COPD and Asthma Dramatically Increases With Age; 4- Delirium, Acute Confusion and Malnutrition See As Indicators Of Pneumonia In The Elderly

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Brain Imaging Researchers Receive Grants to Study Reasoning and Decision-making
Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon University and University of Pittsburgh researchers have received nearly $16 million to collaborate on a first-ever research effort that will use brain imaging to analyze complex human thought processes--how people make plans, make decisions under time pressure or solve problems.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Education Program Relating To Repetitive Stress Injuries (RSI) From Computer Use
Carnegie Mellon University

With debilitating injuries from computer use becoming the fastest growing category of work-related injuries in the U.S., Carnegie Mellon University has launched the first accurate, comprehensive effort to educate its community and the public about the causes and possible prevention of repetitive stress injuries (RSI).

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
"Lead Busters" on the move in Bridgeport
Fairfield University

When the Southern Connecticut Gas Company joined forces with Fairfield University's School of Nursing last year the goal they had in mind was to provide health screening and lead testing for 3,100 adults, adolescents and school-age children, especially children under age 5.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Disabled Employees Have Higher Risk for Injuries
University of Iowa

Employees with certain disabilities are more likely to be injured on the job than workers without disabilities. As a result, further research in the design and evaluation of workplace accommodations for these employees may be needed, according to a study by researchers at the University of Iowa College of Medicine.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Treatment Device Shows Promise
Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon scientists are working with a physician on a new device that could bring relief to the millions of people who suffer from carpal tunnel syndrome. The device provides an effective non-surgical treatment enabling doctors to more accurately treat CTS reducing recovery time and cost.

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
1997--A Year of Headlines About Women's Health
Mayo Clinic

Womenís health issues frequently made headlines in 1997 ó from mammograms and pap smears to diet pills and hormone replacement therapy.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
January Online Tipsheet from APA
American Psychiatric Association (APA)

January Online Tipsheet: 1- ECT: Safe, Effective, Affordable -- Why Aren?t We Using It? 2- High Rate of Homelessness Among Newly Diagnosed Patients with Schizophrenia; 3- Confidentiality of Patients Records Threatened; 4- Psychiatrist, Heal Them Quick; 5- What Happens to the Children When Mental Illness Strikes?

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Pfizer Receives Clearance to Market New Broad-Spectrum Antibiotic Trovan
Pfizer, NY

Pfizer Inc announced on Dec. 19 that its broad-spectrum antibiotic Trovan (trovafloxacin) had gained marketing clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Discovered and developed by Pfizer, Trovan was cleared for the treatment of 14 bacterial infections, which is the largest number of indications ever included at an intial drug approval in the U.S. More than 13,000 patients participated in 87 studies involving Trovan and 30 comparatoe drug regimens, representing the largest clinical trial program in Pfizer history.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Millions With Mental Illnesses Benefit From New Federal Rules
Mental Health America

Millions of Americans will be protected by new rules the Clinton administration released today telling employers how they must comply with the 1996 Mental Health Parity Act. The administration said all group health plans and all employers with 50 or more workers -- including state governments and churches -- must equalize the annual and lifetime limits imposed on mental and physical health care.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Drug Slows Progression of Lou Gehrig's Disease
Porter Novelli, New York

Myotrophin, an experimental drug for Lou Gehrig's disease, appears to slow the disease's symptom progression. Results of a nine-month study involving 266 patients at eight North American medical centers were reported in the December issue of the journal Neurology.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
CRN Responds to News Stories about Creatine
Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN)

There is no evidence whatsoever to link the creatine supplement or any other supplement to the recent deaths of college wrestlers, and the media implications of a link are irresponsible and not supported by evidence.

Released: 23-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Colon Cancer Linked To Genes, Not Lifestyle
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Colon cancer and many other geriatric diseases in primates appear to be natural outcomes of aging, rather than being caused by outside factors, a scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has found.



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