3 hrs ago | Political Gateway
Arsenic used to fight warrior cancer cells
“Ninety percent of existing cancer treatments are antiproliferative agents -- they target the pool of proliferative cells, leaving behind the dormant LICs”
Medical researchers in Boston say arsenic can be used in conjunction with chemotherapy to treat chronic myeloid leukemia. via Political Gateway
8 hrs ago | Science Daily
Electrode Re-implantation Helps Some Parkinson's Disease Patients
“Patients demonstrating poor response to subthalamic nucleus stimulation as a result of electrode misplacement can benefit from re-implantation in the subthalamic nucleus closer to the theoretical target.”
Implanting electrodes that stimulate the subthalamic nucleus, a region deep in the brain potentially related to impulsivity, is effective in reducing medication doses and improving the symptoms of Parkinson's ... via Science Daily
13 hrs ago | NBC11.com
East Bay School Reopens School After Whooping Cough Outbreak
One more case of whooping cough has been diagnosed at the East Bay Waldorf School in El Sobrante, bringing the total number of people infected in a recent outbreak of the highly contagious lung disease at the ... via NBC11.com
17 hrs ago | WCCO-TV | Posted by WCCO-TV
Study: Older Brains Don't Benefit From Painkillers
“With the side effects of these drugs, people shouldn't be taking them for this reason.”
Results from a large government experiment are dimming hopes that two common painkillers can prevent Alzheimer's disease or slow mental decline in older people.
The arthritis drug Celebrex and the over-the-counter painkiller Aleve showed no benefit on thinking skills, new findings show. Earlier results from the same research showed the two drugs didn't prevent Alzheimer's, at least in the short term.
The experiment was halted several years early in 2004 when heart risks turned up in a separate study on Celebrex. Researchers also had noticed more heart attacks and strokes in the people taking Aleve in the Alzheimer's prevention study. Read more
22 hrs ago | ClipSyndicate
Yesterday | Stuff
Smart Vending: If You're Wrinkly Enough, You're Old Enough
“With face recognition, so long as you've got some change and you are an adult, you can buy cigarettes like before. The problem of minors borrowing (identification) cards to purchase cigarettes could be avoided as well”
TARGET DEMOGRAPHIC: A Japanese company has developed a smart cigarette vending machine that counts wrinkles, crow's feet and skin sags to determine whether buyers are old enough to smoke. via Stuff
Yesterday | HendersonvilleNews.com
First US airlift of aid heads to Myanmar
“Those who want to give directly to the victims get into trouble. They have to give to the government or do it secretly. They follow international aid trucks everywhere. They don't want others to take credit.”
A villager sails at the river in Pyapon, a town in the Irrawaddy delta of Myanmar, on Sunday, May 11, 2008, a week after devastating cyclone Nagris slammed into the low-lying region and Yangon. via HendersonvilleNews.com
Yesterday | The Associated Press | Posted by The Associated Press
Families will make case for vaccine link to autism
“In some kids, there's enough of it that it sets off this chronic neuroinflammatory pattern that can lead to regressive autism”
Families claiming that a mercury-based preservative in vaccines triggers autism will challenge mainstream medicine Monday as they take their case to a federal court.
They seek vindication and financial redress from a government fund that helps people injured by shots.
Two 10-year-old boys from Portland, Ore., will serve as test cases that determine whether the children and their families in similar situations should be compensated. Attorneys for the boys will attempt to show the boys were happy, healthy and developing normally. But, after being exposed to vaccines with thimerosal, they began to regress and show symptoms of autism. Read more
Yesterday | The Post Chronicle
Seoul Delays U.S. Beef Inspections
“The dispatch of inspectors was put off due to differences on the issue of scheduling their visits”
Seoul Delays U.S. Beef Inspections by Staff South Korean officials said they delayed sending inspectors to U.S. slaughterhouses, despite mad cow concerns as U.S. beef hit domestic markets Thursday. via The Post Chronicle
Sunday | WQAD-TV Moline
$2 million needed to open Springfield cancer center labs
Davenport man hit by train Family cares for sick daughter, battles insurance company Many middle class families are living in fear that a major illness will strike and their health insurance won't cover the ... via WQAD-TV Moline
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