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

 

Sugar, high-fructose corn syrup and type II diabetes

DiabetesAug 17 05

Sugar and refined carbohydrates are undeniably linked to Diabetes Mellitus. Researchers around the world have come to the conclusion that the consumption of refined sugar is detrimental to the health of people without Diabetes Mellitus and disastrous for those with it. Furthermore, excess sugar in the blood can cause the onset of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. First, however, what exactly is diabetes?

According to Bruce Fife ND, “Diabetes is all about sugar—the sugar in our bodies known as blood sugar or blood glucose. Every cell in our bodies must have a constant source of glucose in order to fuel metabolism.

- Full Story - »»»    

Risks of hormone replacement not surprising: report

Gender: FemaleAug 15 05

The risks of Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) have made headlines only in recent years, but there had long been warning signs that supplemental estrogen might be more hazardous than healthful, a new report contends.

In 2002, a large US clinical trial called the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) was stopped when early findings showed that HRT after menopause slightly raised a woman’s risk of Breast cancer, Heart attack, Stroke and blood clots.

Hormone replacement therapy, called HRT, is the use of man- made or natural hormones to treat a person whose body is no longer making enough of certain hormones. It is often prescribed for women in menopause.

- Full Story - »»»    

FDA lowers patient age for hepatitis A vaccine

Drug NewsAug 15 05

Merck & Co. on Monday said US regulators have approved its already marketed Hepatitis A Vaccine Inactivated for use in children as young as 12 months old; the minimum age had been least two years old.

- Full Story - »»»    

Why lose weight is so hard?

Weight LossAug 15 05

Losing weight is hard because there are so many factors involved. The U.S. surgeon general says “for each individual body, weight is a combination of genetic, metabolic, behavioral, environmental, cultural and socioeconomic influences”. This means that when we are trying to lose weight we need to observe all of these components, including the genetic ones, although we cannot use that as an excuse, as the genetic factors only compose less than 15% of all influences.

Having said that, there are plenty of people who have successfully achieved that goal. Thus, losing weight is only difficult if we are not totally committed to achieving our weight goal.

- Full Story - »»»    

Scientists identify “Jekyll and Hyde” cancer gene

CancerAug 15 05

French and American scientists said Wednesday they have identified a “Jekyll and Hyde” type of cancer gene that could lead to better ways to diagnose and treat the disease.

Unlike other cancer genes that either promote cancerous tumors or block their growth, researchers at the University of Lyon in France and the Buck Institute in Novato, California have found a gene that does both.

- Full Story - »»»    

Prevention of Lung Cancer

CancerAug 15 05

Prevention

Doctors can not always explain why one person gets cancer and another does not. However, scientists have studied general patterns of cancer in the population to learn what things around us and what things we do in our lives may increase our chance of developing cancer.

Anything that increases a person’s chance of developing a disease is called a risk factor; anything that decreases a person’s chance of developing a disease is called a protective factor. Some of the risk factors for cancer can be avoided, but many can not.

- Full Story - »»»    

Future of Cancer Diagnosis

CancerAug 15 05

It has been said that a human being is a veritable encyclopedia of proteins. Proteins are the fabric of life - they provide the bricks and mortar of our cells, and run day-to-day operations. When these functions go awry - when too much or too little protein is produced, when a daisy-chain network of proteins working together is disrupted - illness can arise.

While an errant genetic code may underlie a disorder, biologists have estimated that 98% of disease is caused by something wrong in the proteins that genes produce.

- Full Story - »»»    

Diabetes UK worried at loss of choice

DiabetesAug 15 05

Modern insulin treatments for people with Diabetes Mellitus are making the condition worse for some patients, it is claimed today.

Manufacturers are taking long-established products off the market and replacing them with more expensive alternatives.

Diabetes Mellitus UK says long-term patients are finding their bodies do not always adjust to the substitutes.

- Full Story - »»»    

MRI scan shows promise in treating bipolar disorder

DepressionAug 15 05

A study published in the Jan. 1, 2004 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry had a surprising start.

As Michael Rohan, imaging physicist in McLean Hospital’s Brain Imaging Center, explains, “We were using MRI to investigate the effectiveness of certain medications in bipolar patients and noticed that many came out of the MRI feeling much better than when they went in. We decided to investigate further.” Researchers theorized that one type of magnetic pulse they were using was having the positive effect. “This was purely accidental.

- Full Story - »»»    

Genetic Disorders Often the Cause of Birth Defects

PregnancyAug 15 05

Although mothers often do all they can to maintain a healthy Pregnancy, babies still have birth defects.

Sometimes parents are told that an accident during the Pregnancy may have caused their child’s condition. But looking at the baby’s family history may reveal another source of the problem—genetics.

- Full Story - »»»    

Cannabis-based drugs might relieve bowel disease

Drug NewsAug 13 05

Derivatives of the active compound in cannabis—cannabinoids—may have the potential for treating inflammatory bowel diseases like Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative colitis, UK researchers report.

“The system that responds to cannabis in the brain is present and functioning in the lining of the gut,” said lead researcher Dr. Karen Wright, of the University of Bath. “There is an increased presence of one component of this system during inflammatory bowel diseases,” she explained.

- Full Story - »»»    

A little oxygen at birth, more cancer risk later?

Children's HealthAug 12 05

Babies given 3 or more minutes of oxygen soon after they’re born may run a slightly increased risk of developing cancer later in childhood, according to researchers. The association is not totally clearcut, however.

In a study published in the Journal of Pediatrics, Dr. Logan G. Spector, of the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, and colleagues examined the relationship between neonatal oxygen supplementation and childhood cancer. Included were 54,795 children born between 1959 and 1966 and followed to age 8.

- Full Story - »»»    

UK children claim easy access to cigarettes, drink

Tobacco & MarijuanaAug 12 05

Young people in Britain find it easy to get hold of cigarettes, alcohol and other drugs from ages as young as 12, health specialists said on Friday.

Most regular smokers aged 12-15 claim they buy cigarettes in shops, even though the legal minimum age is 16.

Around 80 percent of 15-year-olds say alcoholic drinks are very or fairly easy to obtain, usually through friends or relatives. By the age of 16 or 17, drinkers are usually buying alcohol for themselves, defying a legal minimum age of 18.

- Full Story - »»»    

Germany orders 6 million courses of flu drug

FluAug 12 05

Germany has placed an order for some 6 million courses of Roche Holding AG’s influenza drug Tamiflu to prepare for a potential outbreak of avian flu, the Swiss drugmaker said on Friday.

Germany is one of many countries to place orders for Tamiflu, the antiviral drug which the World Health Organisation recommends countries stockpile in case the H5N1 bird flu virus spreads.

“So far it is six million and discussions are still going on and it is not yet finalised,” a spokeswoman for Roche in Basel said.

- Full Story - »»»    

Calif court lets stand $50 million tobacco verdict

Lung CancerAug 12 05

The California Supreme Court on Thursday let stand a lower court’s decision that cut in half a $100 million punitive damages award to a sick smoker who had sued tobacco maker Philip Morris.

The Supreme Court voted 5-0 to not review the decision of the Second District Court of Appeal, which in April reduced the massive punitive award and upheld compensatory damages of more than $5 million to plaintiff Richard Boeken.

- Full Story - »»»    

Page 418 of 440 pages « First  <  416 417 418 419 420 >  Last »

 












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