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Blood pressure drugs may prevent headaches

HeadachesOct 11 05

Findings from a large analysis of clinical trial data indicate that the use of blood pressure-lowering drugs can prevent a substantial proportion of headaches.

The fact that agents of different classes produce this effect suggests that the mechanism is the ability to lower blood pressure, lead author Dr. Malcolm Law, from London Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, and colleagues note. Yet, findings from observational studies have not supported a link between high blood pressure and headaches.

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Retina disease linked to stroke in nondiabetics

NeurologyOct 11 05

New research suggests deterioration of the retina, or retinopathy, as determined with retinal photography, is an independent predictor of stroke or stroke-related death in older adults without diabetes.

“The blood vessels in the eyes share similar anatomic characteristics and other characteristics with the blood vessels in the brain,” lead author Dr. Paul Mitchell, from the University of Sydney in Australia, and colleagues note. “More research needs to be done to confirm these results, but it’s exciting to think that this fairly simple procedure could help us predict whether someone will be more likely to have a stroke several years later.”

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Stroke treatment a step closer after trial

NeurologyOct 11 05

A potential new treatment for stroke has taken a major step forward following promising results from the first clinical trial.

Researchers at The University of Manchester have shown in laboratory studies that a naturally occurring protein called IL-1ra protects brain cells from injury and death.

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Scientists Finding Out What Losing Sleep Does to a Body

Sleep AidOct 10 05

With a good night’s rest increasingly losing out to the Internet, e-mail, late-night cable and other distractions of modern life, a growing body of scientific evidence suggests that too little or erratic sleep may be taking an unappreciated toll on Americans’ health.

Beyond leaving people bleary-eyed, clutching a Starbucks cup and dozing off at afternoon meetings, failing to get enough sleep or sleeping at odd hours heightens the risk for a variety of major illnesses, including cancer, heart disease, diabetes and obesity, recent studies indicate.

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Psychiatric Drugs’ Use Drops for Children

Drug AbuseOct 10 05

Warnings that drugs such as Prozac, Paxil and Effexor can increase suicidal behavior in some children have resulted in a nearly 20 percent drop in U.S. pediatric prescriptions of the widely used antidepressants and have triggered deep concerns about the quality of current data on psychiatric drugs, doctors and regulators said.

The unprecedented fall of what were once considered wonder drugs comes as a series of taxpayer-funded analyses have systematically undermined the claims of industry-funded drug trials, raising thorny questions about the ways in which psychiatric drugs are being tested, marketed and used.

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New Diabetes Drug may Help

DiabetesOct 10 05

New research is turning up mixed results on the benefits of a Diabetes drug.

British researchers studied 5,200 patients with type 2 diabetes and heart disease, half of who took the drug pioglitazone in addition to their regular medications. They found the pioglitazone patients had a slightly reduced risk of problems like heart attack and stroke but an increased risk of heart failure compared to patients who took their regular medications and a placebo.

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Body mass index of healthy men compared with healthy women in the United States

Weight LossOct 10 05

Objective:
To compare the distributions of body mass index (BMI) in relatively healthy nonsmoking men and women in the United States.

Design:
Cross-sectional national survey data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III).

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Atkins diet may reduce seizures in children with epilepsy

EpilepsyOct 10 05

The popular Atkins low-carbohydrate diet not only helps some people lose weight, it might have a role in preventing seizures in children with epilepsy, say researchers at the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center.

In a study of six patients, including three patients 12 years old and younger on the Atkins regimen for at least four months, two children and one young adult were seizure-free and were able to reduce use of anti-convulsant medications, according to Johns Hopkins. Findings of the study also showed that seizure control could be long-lasting on the diet, with the three patients continuing to be seizure-free for as long as 20 months.

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Drug Can Reduce Risk of Death, Heart Attack, and Stroke in Diabetes Patients

Drug NewsOct 10 05

A Diabetes drug called pioglitazone can reduce the risk of death, heart attack, and stroke in high-risk patients with type 2 diabetes, concludes an article in this week’s issue of The Lancet.

Patients with diabetes have a two to four-fold increased risk of a cardiovascular event compared with non-diabetics. Until now there has only been indirect evidence suggesting that pioglitazone could reduce cardiovascular-related deaths and illness in diabetics.

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Baby blues or depression?

DepressionOct 10 05

What do you want to know? Come ask the experts! A selection of answers to your questions will be regularly posted on the site. For instant gratification, click here to see what other questions have already been answered. Something not here that you want to know? Well come on—ask your question!

The question:
What are “the baby blues”? Are they an early warning sign of postpartum depression?

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Safe sleep for babies

Children's HealthOct 10 05

MANY mothers like to keep their newborns in bed with them to bond and breastfeed. Now, after years of hedging about the wisdom of the practice, the American Academy of Pediatrics has said that sleeping in a bed with a baby can increase the risk of sudden infant death syndrome.

“Bed-sharing during sleep is hazardous,” says Dr. John Kattwinkel, chairman of the association’s task force on SIDS and a neonatologist at the University of Virginia. “We have strong evidence from 10 controlled studies showing this increases risk.”

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Breastfed infants show little effect when moms take popular anti-depressant

Children's HealthOct 10 05

Most breastfed infants nurse without showing meaningful effects from their mothers taking 20 to 40 mg of the anti-depressant fluoxetine ( Prozac ) daily, according to a study by Yale researchers.

Postpartum major depression affects about 10 percent of women. Prozac belongs to a class of anti-depressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, which are the most commonly prescribed class of anti-depressants for postpartum depression.

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Does it really matter what diet your on when they all fail for you anyway?

Dieting To Lose WeightOct 10 05

Get off the scale and put down that protein shake. It’s time to learn the shocking truth about all kinds of hidden weight loss enemies-from metabolic dysfunction to hormonal imbalances and emotional baggage-that are keeping you fat no matter what you do?

Find out what the dieting industry, most doctors and even your training don’t know. Loree Taylor Jordan, author of Fat & Furious: Overcome Your Body’s Resistance To Weight Loss Now, is a holistic health expert and educator as well as a reformed dieting maniac.

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Diet Tips

DietingOct 10 05

Increase your fiber intake. Like I mentioned, the body needs a lot of fiber. So try to include in your diet as many fruits and vegetables as you can.

Go crazy on vegetables. Vegetables are your best bet when it comes to losing pounds. Nature has a terrific spread when it comes to choosing vegetables. And the leafy green vegetables are your best bet. Try to include a salad in you diet always.

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Surprising Links Between Depression, Suicide, and Epilepsy

DepressionOct 10 05

Researchers have found provocative evidence that the brain dysfunction that underlies epilepsy may also determine whether people are at risk for suicide. The study, published online October 10, 2005 in the Annals of Neurology (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/ana), also suggests that Depression and suicide may have different brain mechanisms.

“For reasons that are not understood, depression both increases the risk for developing epilepsy and is also common among people with epilepsy who experience many seizures,” said lead author Dale C. Hesdorffer, Ph.D., of the Gertrude Sergievsky Center at Columbia University.

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