Category: Research (Page 16 of 93)

Government Strategy Aggressive On Finding A Cure For Alzheimer’s

More than 5 million people in the United States are living with Alzheimer’s and the future doesn’t look promising.

Alzheimer’s statistics projected for 2050 show the grim reality that will be faced by many.

11 million additional people will have the condition in the United States.

115.4 million will have it worldwide, compared to the current figure of about 35.6 million.

$1.1 trillion will be spent in the U.S. on caregiving costs, compared with $200 billion this year.

The new strategy supports a $7.9 million dollar study on an insulin nasal spray treatment. Separately, researchers will work on the first-ever Alzheimer’s prevention trial in people with a genetic predisposition to develop the condition. The strategy also offers solutions for collaborating across federal and state agencies and for informing the public through a one-stop website, www.alzheimers.gov.

“The plan gives us a blueprint to build on our research efforts,” U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius said Tuesday at the announcement of the government’s new plan. “These actions are the cornerstone of an ambitious and aggressive agenda.”

Java Junkies Live Longer

Good news for coffee addicts who get conflicting news about their favorite beverage.

Coffee has more than 1,000 compounds and the effects of these compounds on human health have yet to be discovered.

Although it is not certain exactly why coffee benefits health there definitely seems to be some correlation.

Overall, in the U.S. about 64 percent of adults drink coffee daily, according to Joe DeRupo, spokesman for the National Coffee Association. At 3.2 cups a piece, that amounts to some 479 million cups a day, agency figures indicate.
Those coffee fans can take the new results seriously. The mortality reduction is modest but solid, said Freedman, whose study offered the size and power to document associations other researchers had only suspected.
He and his team in NIC’s Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics reviewed the coffee habits of more than 402,000 people followed between 1995 and 2008, including more than 52,000 who died.

The Surprisingly Dirty Places In Your Home

Appliances and cleaning supplies can often harbor bacteria and mold derailing your efforts to keep things clean.

Regularly run your toothbrush through a clean dishwasher, using standard dish detergent. A 2011 study in the American Journal of Dentistry found that this method eradicated nearly all disease-causing bacteria. Another option is to soak your brush in a mouthwash that contains cetylpyridinium chloride, such as Crest Pro-Health Complete Rinse, for 20 minutes; doing this can also beat bacteria, the study found. To avoid flying feces, Tierno says, simply store your brush in a closed cabinet.

Risk Of Death When Children Are Left Alone In Hot Cars

Summer heat too often brings tragedy when parents underestimate the dangers of leaving children cars in the hot sun.

The bodies of babies and children heat up three to five times faster than an adult’s and their internal systems are not fully developed.

Children don’t sweat as efficiently as adults and their bodies absorb heat faster.

It can take as little as 15 minutes in an overheated vehicle for a child to begin to suffer life-threatening brain or kidney injuries.

When body temperature reaches 104 degrees, internal organs begin to shut down.

At 107 degrees, children die.

At least 529 such deaths have been recorded since 1998, including the two logged in the past week, according to figures from the Department of Geosciences at San Francisco State University, which tracks reports.
On average, 38 children die each year in hot cars, reports show. The numbers typically begin to climb in May, with an average of three deaths per month. They spike in July and August, when nine deaths, on average, are recorded, the figures show.

Overall, more than half of the deaths — 52 percent — occur when a child is mistakenly left in a vehicle, typically by a parent or caregiver who is rushed or stressed.

FDA Approves New Weight Loss Drug

Weight loss drug lorcaserin was given approval by the FDA and will be marketed under the brand name Lorgress.

The panelists decided that the benefits of the weight loss drug outweigh the risks for severely obese patients.

The panel included specialists in obesity and diabetes, pediatric endocrinologists, cardiologists and toxicologists.
According to Arena Pharmaceuticals, which developed the drug, Lorqess “behaves as an appetite suppressant which helps patients lose weight by essentially causing them to feel less hunger sensations.”

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