3-rx.comCustomer Support
3-rx.com
   
HomeAbout UsFAQContactHelp
News Center
Health Centers
Medical Encyclopedia
Drugs & Medications
Diseases & Conditions
Medical Symptoms
Med. Tests & Exams
Surgery & Procedures
Injuries & Wounds
Diet & Nutrition
Special Topics



\"$alt_text\"');"); } else { echo"\"$alt_text\""; } ?>


Join our Mailing List



Syndicate

You are here : 3-RX.com > Home > CancerDrug News

 

Asthma education aids inner-city Latinos

AsthmaOct 07 05

An education program designed for Latino asthma sufferers has shown promise for improving patients’ asthma control and quality of life, according to researchers.

Their study, of 198 asthmatic adults living in a predominately Hispanic area of New York City, found that a “culturally directed” asthma education program helped cut hospital visits for asthma attacks and lessen the burden the lung disease put on patients’ lives.

- Full Story - »»»    

Many With Coronary Disease Continue to Smoke Despite Physicians’ Advice

HeartOct 07 05

Coronary disease is not always a wake-up call for smokers.

One in five European patients with established coronary heart disease keeps smoking despite physicians’ efforts to get them to quit, according to an international multicenter survey.

- Full Story - »»»    

New Warning Issued on Paxil

DepressionOct 07 05

U.S. health officials have issued a warning about possible birth defects in infants born to women who take the antidepressant Paxil during the first trimester of pregnancy.

A study sponsored by GlaxoSmithKline, the drug’s maker, suggested that infants born to women taking Paxil were at about double the risk of birth defects compared with women taking other antidepressants. The most common defects were cardiovascular. The risks were about 50 percent higher than they were in the general population.

- Full Story - »»»    

Study Sheds Light On Birth Defects In Diabetic Pregnancy

PregnancyOct 07 05

A cascade of events that begins with high blood glucose has been offered as an explanation for why diabetic pregnancies result in a high rate of birth defects.

The high blood glucose levels early in pregnancy deprive the embryo of oxygen, leading to high levels of free radicals that reduce expression of a key gene called Pax3, said Mary R. Loeken, Ph.D., of Harvard Medical School.

- Full Story - »»»    

High-Normal Blood Sugar Could Signal Diabetes Risk

DiabetesOct 07 05

Young men with fasting plasma glucose levels in the high-normal range appear to be at increased risk for type 2 diabetes, especially if they are on the heavy side and have high serum triglyceride levels.

That’s the finding of researchers here who studied more than 13,000 apparently healthy young men in the Israeli defense forces. The investigators found that so-called “normal” test values may actually predict type 2 diabetes. The results of their study were published in today’s issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

- Full Story - »»»    

PET Scans Predict Alzheimer’s in Cognitively Impaired Patients

BrainOct 07 05

Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of glucose metabolism in the brain can accurately predict which patients with mild cognitive impairment will progress to full-blown Alzheimer’s dementia, researchers here say.

PET proved more accurate than screening for genetic predisposition to Alzheimer’s, Alexander Drzezga, M.D., of the Technical University of Munich, and colleagues reported in the October issue of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine. However, a combination of PET and genetic screening appeared to have the highest positive predictive value.

- Full Story - »»»    

HPV Vaccine Gets High Marks in Trial

Drug NewsOct 07 05

An investigational vaccine aimed at cervical cancer has proved 100% effective against cervical pre-malignant lesions associated with the most prevalent strains of the human papilloma virus (HPV), according to researchers here.

Results of the Phase III study of Merck’s quadrivalent recombinant vaccine, known as Gardisil, are to be presented Friday at the Infectious Diseases Society of America meeting here.

- Full Story - »»»    

Medicare prescription-drug coverage plan

Public HealthOct 07 05

The new Medicare prescription-drug coverage plan doesn’t cover all of the expenses for all of the people, but it may make the difference between meals and medicine for many fixed-income retirees.

Clearly Medicare Part D is better than nothing for many of the estimated 43 million elderly and disabled Americans who are enrolled in the program. That said, Medicare’s new prescription-drug coverage will never live up to its hype as a comprehensive prescription drug plan.

- Full Story - »»»    

Many ‘Minor’ Strokes Can Be Serious or Even Fatal

NeurologyOct 07 05

Patients with mild or improving ischemic stroke sometimes aren’t treated with tissue-plasminogen activator (tPA) because their symptoms appear to be minor.

This may be a big mistake, cautioned researchers here and in Los Angeles.

Among 128 patients who showed up at the hospital within three hours of stroke onset, 41% didn’t get tPA because they appeared to be “too good to treat,” reported investigators from the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, and the University of California at Los Angeles.

- Full Story - »»»    

Fitness isn’t easy, but it is cheap

Weight LossOct 06 05

Commissioning a luxury home is a bit outside your means, you say? Sorry, that doesn’t earn you a pass straight to the Barcalounger. Designing fitness into your nest isn’t an idea limited to the rich, say exercise experts. With a bit of ingenuity, you can make your home a fitness site on practically a pauper’s budget. Here are some ideas:

Challenge yourself vertically. Integrating fitness into your house or apartment means, first, taking advantage of features that already exist, according to Jeffrey Potteiger, professor of physical education, health and sport studies at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. “Remember that a StairMaster is just going up and down stairs,” he said. The challenge: Finding incentives to make you use those steps more often, such as vowing to answer every call on the upstairs phone. Cost: Nothing.

- Full Story - »»»    

Most Americans risk obesity, study finds

ObesityOct 06 05

A new study that followed Americans for thirty years has found that 90 per cent of men and 70 per cent of women were overweight or became overweight.

In addition, more than one in three were obese or became obese.

- Full Story - »»»    

Drug Addiction: Cocaine Is the Most Addictive

Tobacco & MarijuanaOct 06 05

Certain drugs, such as narcotics and cocaine, central nervous system stimulant, are more physically addicting than are other drugs.

Drug addiction affects 19.5 million Americans over the age of 12. Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug. While not everyone who uses drugs becomes addicted, many people do. As many as 19,000 people die of drug-related causes every year.

- Full Story - »»»    

High-vegetable diet linked to protection against pancreatic cancer

DietingOct 06 05

A diet rich in fruits and vegetables may help cut the risk of pancreatic cancer in half, according to a new survey.

Researchers at the University of California in San Francisco found that eating five or more daily servings of fruit and vegetables reduces a person’s risk of developing pancreatic cancer by 50 around per cent.

- Full Story - »»»    

Where to find South Beach Diet Recipes

Dieting To Lose WeightOct 06 05

The South Beach diet is very popular in the wake of the Atkins diet becoming a bit too much for casual dieters. South Beach focuses more on good carbs and bad carbs than some of the high protein diets. South Beach recipes are available from a number of places both online and in the real world. A search in goolge or a walk to your local bookstore will certainly lead you to some tasty eats that won’t compromise your dieting.

- Full Story - »»»    

Breakfast good time for taking vitamins

Food & NutritionOct 06 05

Question: What is the optimum time of day to take vitamin and mineral supplements? Are there certain foods that interfere with absorption?

Answer: There are no rules about the best time of day to take supplements. Take them when they agree with you most. Many people find taking pills of any kind as part of a morning routine is easier to remember, so taking them with breakfast is a popular option. Vitamin and mineral supplements can cause nausea, heartburn and other gastric disturbances, especially when taken on an empty stomach. For best absorption and the least irritation to the stomach, take your supplements with a meal containing fat. This is particularly important for fat-soluble vitamins (A, D and E).

- Full Story - »»»    

Page 395 of 440 pages « First  <  393 394 395 396 397 >  Last »

 












Home | About Us | FAQ | Contact | Advertising Policy | Privacy Policy | Bookmark Site