ScienceDaily: Top Health News |
- Advanced CT scanners reduce patient radiation exposure, study finds
- Antidepressant use during pregnancy may lead to childhood obesity, diabetes
- MA healthcare reform does not have early impact on disparities in cardiovascular care
- Telephone call is effective support when breast cancer treatment includes weight loss
- Possible new combination treatment for cancer
- Common genetic link in fatal autoimmune skin disease discovered
- Job loss linked with higher incidence of depression in Americans compared with Europeans
- First Alabamian receives new retrievable, nonsurgical pacemaker
- Portable brain-mapping device allows researchers to 'see' where memory fails
- Primer for doctors' use of clinical genome, exome sequencing
- Unintended danger from antidepressant warnings
Advanced CT scanners reduce patient radiation exposure, study finds Posted: 21 Jun 2014 06:31 PM PDT |
Antidepressant use during pregnancy may lead to childhood obesity, diabetes Posted: 21 Jun 2014 06:30 PM PDT Maternal use of a class of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, resulted in increased fat accumulation and inflammation in the liver of the adult offspring, researchers have demonstrated for the first time in an animal model. This raises new concerns about the long-term metabolic complications in children born to women who take SSRI antidepressants during pregnancy. |
MA healthcare reform does not have early impact on disparities in cardiovascular care Posted: 19 Jun 2014 08:15 AM PDT |
Telephone call is effective support when breast cancer treatment includes weight loss Posted: 19 Jun 2014 06:59 AM PDT A series of simple telephone calls can make a profound difference in helping women to meet their treatment goals for breast cancer, according to a randomized trial of women who are also obese. Women who received advice about weight loss from a trained lifestyle coach by telephone achieved weight loss that was still evident after two years, lowering their risk of breast cancer recurrence. |
Possible new combination treatment for cancer Posted: 19 Jun 2014 06:58 AM PDT A new cancer treatment has been developed that has proved to be effective in mice. The treatment is based on newly discovered properties of the so-called BET bromodomain inhibitors. "The work is challenging, but we believe that the prospects for success with combination treatments are good," says the lead investigator. |
Common genetic link in fatal autoimmune skin disease discovered Posted: 19 Jun 2014 06:19 AM PDT Autoimmune disease occurs when the body's own natural defense system rebels against itself. One example is pemphigus vulgaris (PV), a blistering skin disease in which autoantibodies attack desmoglein 3 (Dsg3), the protein that binds together skin cells. Researchers recently found a shared genetic link in the autoimmune response among PV patients that provides important new clues about how autoantibodies in PV originate. |
Job loss linked with higher incidence of depression in Americans compared with Europeans Posted: 18 Jun 2014 07:06 PM PDT |
First Alabamian receives new retrievable, nonsurgical pacemaker Posted: 18 Jun 2014 07:05 PM PDT |
Portable brain-mapping device allows researchers to 'see' where memory fails Posted: 18 Jun 2014 03:46 PM PDT |
Primer for doctors' use of clinical genome, exome sequencing Posted: 18 Jun 2014 03:46 PM PDT Sooner than almost anyone expected, a new, genome-based technology for demystifying undiagnosed illnesses -- particularly rare childhood diseases -- is moving from research laboratories into general medical practice. Now, two leading scientists have sketched out what doctors need to know in order to use the new technology effectively. |
Unintended danger from antidepressant warnings Posted: 18 Jun 2014 03:46 PM PDT Following 2003 FDA warnings about a potential danger to young people taking antidepressants, antidepressant use plummeted and attempted suicide by psychotropic drug poisoning increased proportionally by 22 percent. The FDA later revised the warning to recommend that physicians consider both the risk of prescribing the medication and the risk of not prescribing the medication, monitoring patients for thoughts of suicide and treating them as needed. |
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