Sunday, 22 July 2012

Protective Coating Transforms Silk Into A Weapon Against Anthrax And Other Microbes

Main Category: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses
Also Included In: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism
Article Date: 25 May 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Protective Coating Transforms Silk Into A Weapon Against Anthrax And Other Microbes
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The latest episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS') award-winning Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions podcast series describes a simple, inexpensive dip-and-dry treatment can convert ordinary silk into a fabric that kills disease-causing bacteria - even the armor-coated spores of microbes like anthrax - in minutes.

This new "killer silk" has many potential uses, including make-shift curtains and other protective coatings that protect homes and other buildings in the event of a terrorist attack with anthrax.

Based on an article by Rajesh R. Naik, Ph.D., and colleagues in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, the new podcast is available without charge at iTunes and from http://www.acs.org/globalchallenges.

Naik points out in the podcast that in adverse conditions, bacteria of the Bacillus species, which includes anthrax, become dormant spores, enclosing themselves in a tough coating. These spores can survive heat, radiation, antibiotics and harsh environmental conditions, and some have sprung back to life after 250 million years. Certain chemicals - most popular among which are oxidizing agents, including some chlorine compounds - can destroy bacterial spores, and they have been applied to fabrics like cotton, polyester, nylon and Kevlar. These treated fabrics are effective against many bacteria, but less so against spores. The researchers tried a similar coating on silk to see if it could perform better against these hardy microbes.

They developed a chlorinated form of silk, which involves soaking silk in a solution that includes a substance similar to household bleach and letting it dry. Silk treated for just an hour killed essentially all of the E. coli bacteria tested on it within 10 minutes and did similarly well against spores of a close anthrax relative used as a stand-in. "Given the potent bactericidal and sporicidal activity of the chlorinated silk fabrics prepared in this study, silk-Cl materials may find use in a variety of applications," the authors say. Other applications, they add, include purifying water in humanitarian relief efforts and in filters or to mitigate the effects of toxic substances.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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'Protective Coating Transforms Silk Into A Weapon Against Anthrax And Other Microbes'

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Seeking Out Terrorists With New Crime-Fighting Tools

Main Category: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism
Article Date: 11 Feb 2012 - 0:00 PST Current ratings for:
Seeking Out Terrorists With New Crime-Fighting Tools
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Fingerprints, ballistics, DNA analysis and other mainstays of the forensic science toolkit may get a powerful new crime-solving companion as scientists strive to develop technology for "fingerprinting" and tracing the origins of chemical substances that could be used in terrorist attacks and other criminal acts. That's the topic of the cover story in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society.

Bethany Halford, C&EN senior editor, focuses on an emerging field known as chemical forensics, where the goal is to use the technology of chemistry to trace weaponized toxic substances and related materials back to their source. A chemical forensic analysis could, for instance, show that ingredients in a terrorist's weapon were produced in a specific factory. Criminal investigators then could check sales records to determine exactly who purchased those ingredients.

The article explains that the research in the field has expanded substantially during the last few years due mainly to funding from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Chemical Forensics Program. With this research, DHS and chemical forensic scientists are sending messages to the public and to would-be terrorists, the article notes. DHS wants the public to know that the agency is preparing for future attacks, and terrorists to be aware that science is preparing to nab them if they do attack.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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Scientists Find The Structure Of A Key 'Gene Silencer' Protein

Main Category: Genetics
Also Included In: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism
Article Date: 30 Apr 2012 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Scientists Find The Structure Of A Key 'Gene Silencer' Protein
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Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have determined the three-dimensional atomic structure of a human protein that is centrally involved in regulating the activities of cells. Knowing the precise structure of this protein paves the way for scientists to understand a process known as RNA-silencing and to harness it to treat diseases.

"Biologists have known about RNA-silencing for only a decade or so, but it's already clear that there's an enormous untapped potential here for new therapies," said Ian MacRae, an assistant professor at Scripps Research and senior author of the new report.

The new report, which appeared in the journal Science's advance online publication, Science Express, focuses on Argonaute2. This protein can effectively "silence" a gene by intercepting and slicing the gene's RNA transcripts before they are translated into working proteins.

Interception and Destruction of Messages

When a gene that codes for a protein is active in a cell, its information is transcribed from DNA form into lengths of nucleic acid called messenger RNA (mRNA). If all goes well, these coded mRNA signals make their way to the cell's protein-factories, which use them as templates to synthesize new proteins. RNA-silencing, also called RNA interference (RNAi), is the interception and destruction of these messages - and as such, is a powerful and specific regulator of cell activity, as well as a strong defender against viral genes.

The silencing process requires not only an Argonaute protein but also a small length of guide RNA, known as a short-interfering RNA or microRNA. The guide RNA fits into a slot on Argonaute and serves as a target recognition device. Like a coded strip of VelcroTM, it latches onto a specific mRNA target whose sequence is the chemical mirror image, or "complement," of its own - thus bringing Argonaute into contact with its doomed prey.

Argonaute2 is not the only type of human Argonaute protein, but it seems to be the only one capable of destroying target RNA directly. "If the guide RNA is completely complementary to the target RNA, Argonaute2 will cleave the mRNA, and that will elicit the degradation of the fragments and the loss of the genetic message," said Nicole Schirle, the graduate student in MacRae's laboratory who was lead author of the paper.

Aimed at disease-causing genes or even a cell's own overactive guide RNAs, RNA-silencing could be a powerful therapeutic weapon. In principle, one needs only to inject target-specific guide RNAs, and these will link up with Argonaute proteins in cells to find and destroy the target RNAs. Scientists have managed to do this successfully with relatively accessible target cells, such as in the eye. But they have found it difficult to develop guide RNAs that can get from the bloodstream into distant tissues and still function.

"You have to modify the guide RNA, in some way to get it through the blood and into cells, but as soon as you start modifying it, you disrupt its ability to interact with Argonaute," said MacRae. Knowing the precise structure of Argonaute should enable researchers to clear this hurdle by designing better guide RNA.

More Points for Manipulation

Previous structural studies have focused mostly on Argonaute proteins from bacteria and other lower organisms, which have key differences from their human counterparts. Schirle was able to produce the comparatively large and complex human Argonaute2 and to manipulate it into forming crystals for X-ray crystallography analysis - a feat that structural biologists have wanted to achieve for much of the past decade. "It was just excellent and diligent crystallography on her part," said MacRae.

The team's analysis of Argonaute2's structure revealed that it has the same basic set of working parts as bacterial Argonaute proteins, except that they are arranged somewhat differently. Also, key parts of Argonaute2 have extra loops and other structures, not seen on bacterial versions, which may play roles in binding to guide RNA. Finally, Argonaute2 has what appear to be binding sites for additional co-factor proteins that are thought to perform other destructive operations on the target mRNA.

"Basically, this Argonaute protein is more sophisticated than its bacterial cousins; it has more bells and whistles, which give us more points for manipulation. With this structure solved, we no longer need to use the prokaryotic structures to guess at what human Argonaute proteins look like," MacRae said.

He and Schirle and others in the lab now are analyzing the functions of Argonaute2's substructures, as well as looking for ways to design better therapeutic guide RNAs.

"Now with the structural data, we can see what synthetic guide RNAs will work with Argonaute and what won't," MacRae said. "We might even be able to make guide RNAs that can outcompete natural ones."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our genetics section for the latest news on this subject. The research that led to Schirle and MacRae’s new paper, “The Crystal Structure of Human Argonaute2,” was funded by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health.
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H5N1 Bird Flu Pandemic Potential Revealed

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Academic Journal
Main Category: Bird Flu / Avian Flu
Also Included In: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism
Article Date: 24 Jun 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
H5N1 Bird Flu Pandemic Potential Revealed
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Two papers published this week, and one last month, reveal the pandemic potential of H5N1 "bird flu". One identifies four, another identifies five, genetic changes the virus would have to undergo before it could spread easily in humans, and the third paper suggests some of these changes are already evident in circulating strains.

The papers were written last year, but were held back because of international concerns that making such data public would make it easier for terrorists to make bioweapons.

H5N1, or "bird flu", is a subtype of the influenza A virus that can cause illness in humans and many other animals. It has killed tens of millions of birds and spurred the culling of hundreds of millions of others to stop it spreading.

Since 2003, more than half of the 606 cases of human infection of H5N1 reported to the World Health Organization worldwide, have resulted in death. Most of the cases in humans appear to have occurred as a result of contact with infected birds.

So far, H5N1 has not triggered a pandemic in humans because it does not spread easily among mammals, and some scientists believe it never will. To spread easily from one person to another, the virus would have to become airborne, that is develop the ability to spread via tiny droplets that people spray out of their mouths and noses when they cough and sneeze. That is how other flu viruses, like the H1N1, the "swine flu", that caused a mild pandemic in 2009, spread.

Viruses like H5N1 and H1N1 are mutating all the time. If H5N1 were by chance to acquire some of the properties of H1N1 then it would spread more easily in mammals. One way it could do this is by accumulating chance mutations, another way is by swapping genes with other viruses, for instance while co-infecting an intermediate host (genetic "reassortment").

Much of the focus of H5N1 research, amid concerns about the bioterrorism risk, has been to investigate how easy it might be for H5N1 to mutate into a readily transmissible form, and if so, which genes would be involved. This information is useful for surveillance, so researchers know what changes to look out for in emerging strains when assessing pandemic risk.

The papers published this week and last month show that it would take about four or five genetic changes for H5N1 to mutate into a form that might trigger a pandemic in humans, and that some of these mutations have already occurred in nature. Colorized transmission electron micrograph of Avian influenza A H5N1 viruses
Colorized transmission electron micrograph of Avian influenza A H5N1 viruses In Science this week, one paper describes how the virologist Ron Fouchier of Erasmus MC in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and colleagues, compared the genetic structure of H5N1 with strains of flu that have caused human pandemics and identified some candidate genes.

Fouchier's team inserted the candidate genes one by one into an actual strain of H5N1 that was isolated from an Indonesian patient, and tested the artificially mutated strains in ferrets to see how easily they would spread (ferrets are a popular model for human flu research). They conclude that H5N1 would need just five genetic changes to transform it into a form that could spread easily and start a human pandemic.

(Actually, the "conclusion" of five mutations is not strictly accurate, it is a media shorthand that gives a reasonable gist of a more complicated story. Fouchier's team tested a number of strains and found up to nine mutations in each transmissible strain were relevant, but they all had five mutations in common, so that is how the number five came about. But there is still the possibility that some of the other mutations could play a role.)

Fouchier and colleagues also conclude that the virus could acquire the capacity for airborne transmission between mammals without having to swap genes with another flu virus while co-infecting an intermediate host (that is by accumulation within the strain, without the help of genetic reassortment).

In Nature last month, another paper, from a group led by Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin, Madison in the US, and the University of Tokyo in Japan, using a different approach to Fouchier's team, describes how it would take only four genetic changes, to transform the bird flu virus into an airborne strain.

Instead of taking an actual strain of H5N1 and then inserting genes one by one as the Dutch team did, Kawaoka's team created a hybrid strain of the bird flu virus and the already airborne-capable H1N1 "swine flu" virus. (In theory, such a strain could come about via "reassortment" or gene-swapping between viruses).

Then they showed, also using ferrets, that the hybrid, thanks to four delicately balanced mutations, would be able to bind more strongly to cells in mammals and replicate in sufficient quantity to be able to spread via respiratory droplets.

In the other Science paper published this week, researchers (including Kawaoka and Fouchier) led by mathematician Derek Smith of the University of Cambridge in the UK, explain how they investigated the likelihood of the emergence of a pandemic strain of H5N1 and how using surveillance data, they looked for evidence of whether some of the mutations described in the Kawaoka and Fouchier papers have already occurred in nature.

They found that several wild strains of H5N1 are three mutations away from the four described in Kawaoka's paper, and the five in Fouchier's paper. And they also found a few rare cases where the strain is only two mutations away.

Using some clever maths that they developed themselves, Smith and colleagues then created a model to simulate "within-host viral evolution" to study the factors that would increase or decrease the probability that a virus with some of the mutations could evolve the remaining ones after it had infected a mammalian host.

First author Colin Russell of the University of Cambridge, said in a comment reported in a Science News and Analysis article that a virus that is only three mutations away from acquiring the ability to be airborne is "likely" to do so, but there are so many unknowns they couldn't put a figure on it. The paper's main value is that it points others in the right direction:

"These factors, combined with the presence of some of these substitutions in circulating strains, make a virus evolving in nature a potentially serious threat. These results highlight critical areas in which more data are needed for assessing, and potentially averting, this threat," write the authors.

These papers have appeared after months of international debate about whether this information should be made public, and whether the researchers should have done the experiments in the first place.

In December last year, the US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) recommended that the Kawaoka and Fouchier studies, because they reveal so much detail about how the mutations could be introduced, should not be published in full. The concern was that the information could be used by terrorists to create a bioweapon, and this risk outweighed the benefits to public health.

Then, a few months later, after examining revised versions of the papers, the NSABB changed its position, and recommended to the US government that the papers be published in full.

In a statement issued at the end of March, the board said although the papers still contain information that could be useful to those who would use it to do harm, the new information they received caused them to change their risk-benefit calculation such that the benefits now outweight the risks.

An expert panel advising the World Health Organization (WHO) had reached a similar conclusion a month earlier.

This cleared the way for Nature to publish the Kawaoka paper last month, and for Science to publish the Fouchier study this month.

In the meantime, while all this was going on, the influenza scientists responded by imposing a moratorium on themselves, effectively halting some types of H5N1 research, and the US government brought in new legislation to control government-funded studies using dangerous pathogens.

After the initial NSABB decision, the Dutch government also sought to restrict publication of Fouchier's paper by insisting he apply for an export licence, which he eventually did and received.

Fouchier said this week, that publishing the work in full gives scientists the best possible chance of fighting future flu pandemics.

"We hope to learn which viruses can cause pandemics and by knowing that we might be able to prevent them by enforcing strict eradication programmes," he told BBC News.

The activities surrounding the publication of these papers have also served to focus attention on what needs to be done to deal more effectively with research that could be misused, the so-called "dual use research of concern" or DURC.

Dr Bruce Alberts, Science's Editor in Chief, said in a statement reported by the BBC that it looks like we need to develop a "comprehensive, international system for assessing DURC". He said such a system should allow people with a need to know to have "selected access" to information that is omitted from a published scientific report.

But Fouchier said he doubts such a system is even workable, never mind appropriate.

"You can't share information with so many people in the field and keep it confidential," he told the BBC.

Fouchier said the general rule should be to make research information freely available, so scientists can build on it.

Written by Catharine Paddock
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

Visit our bird flu / avian flu section for the latest news on this subject. "Airborne Transmission of Influenza A/H5N1 Virus Between Ferrets"; Sander Herfst, Eefje J. A. Schrauwen, Martin Linster, Salin Chutinimitkul, Emmie de Wit, Vincent J. Munster, Erin M. Sorrell, Theo M. Bestebroer, David F. Burke, Derek J. Smith, Guus F. Rimmelzwaan, Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus, and Ron A. M. Fouchier; Science 22 June 2012: 1534-1541; Link to Abstract.
"The Potential for Respiratory Droplet–Transmissible A/H5N1 Influenza Virus to Evolve in a Mammalian Host"Colin A. Russell, Judith M. Fonville, André E. X. Brown, David F. Burke, David L. Smith, Sarah L. James, Sander Herfst, Sander van Boheemen, Martin Linster, Eefje J. Schrauwen, Leah Katzelnick, Ana Mosterín, Thijs Kuiken, Eileen Maher, Gabriele Neumann, Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus, Yoshihiro Kawaoka, Ron A. M. Fouchier, and Derek J. Smith; Science 22 June 2012: 1541-1547; Link to Abstract.
"Experimental adaptation of an influenza H5 HA confers respiratory droplet transmission to a reassortant H5 HA/H1N1 virus in ferrets"; Masaki Imai, Tokiko Watanabe, Masato Hatta, Subash C. Das, Makoto Ozawa, Kyoko Shinya, Gongxun Zhong, Anthony Hanson, Hiroaki Katsura, Shinji Watanabe, Chengjun Li, Eiryo Kawakami, Shinya Yamada, Maki Kiso, Yasuo Suzuki, Eileen A. Maher, Gabriele Neumann and Yoshihiro Kawaoka; Nature, published online 2 May, updated online 22 May, 2012; DOI:10.1038/nature10831; Link to Article.
Additional sources: "Public at Last, H5N1 Study Offers Insight Into Virus's Possible Path to Pandemic" News Analysis by Martin Enserink, Science, 22 June 2012; BBC News. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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posted by Giuseppe M on 22 Jun 2012 at 11:46 pm

Despite the incredible fanfare subsequent the publications of the most recent papers on ferrets airborned infected by a chimeric virus, the likelihood of an H5Nx pandemic remains the same as yesterday, a month ago, five years ago. In the meantime, H5N1 continues unabated to infect millions of chickens, ducks and a number of wild birds and an unknown number of domesticated mammals and humans. In Egypt, where civil unrests resulted in huge citizens rallies in very close contacts one to another - poultry outbreaks are out of control for years. On the ground, instead in BSL-? labs, biological experiments are ongoing.

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posted by Dr David Hill on 22 Jun 2012 at 4:38 pm

The recent release of Bird Flu research information, where a few mutations could lead to an airborne pandemic, is a nightmare scenario. In 1997 the pandemic was stopped in its tracks in Hong Kong. The system adopted was not reliant upon a drug cure but that prevention was better than cure dictate. It worked and Ken Shortridge who devised the strategy was given the Asian equivalent of the Nobel Prize in medicine, The Prince Mahidol Award. By doing this Prof. Shortridge stopped a bird flu pandemic starting and which had the propensity to kill millions (the only one ever to prevent the deaths of incalculable numbers). The pandemic premise was, ‘don’t let it start in the first place’. Why therefore it has to be asked has the establishment forgotten the first dictum of good medical health thinking that ‘prevention is better than cure'? For in the future humanity has to adopt the only global strategy that will stop in the greatest human mass killer ever happening.

And why have those who are advocating a drug cure not taken on-board this system that has worked? This question is postulated because the Swine Flu pandemic showed that with reference to the Spanish Flu in 1918 which took up to 100 million lives, that a cure would come too late. In this respect it was not until 7 months 1 week that a vaccine was created and then it had to be manufactured and thereafter distributed to the masses (a logistical nightmare). In the second wave of the Spanish Flu, after the virus had mutated again into a human-to-human killer, it did its worst between week 16 and week 26, some 1 month 1 week before a cure was found for the Swine Flu pandemic. Therefore whatever way we look at it a drug vaccine will come too late to save us, no matter who we are from the president of the United States downwards. Fact not fiction. Indeed Margaret Chan, Director-General of the WHO says that it is only a matter of time not when the killer virus will emerge - may be next week, next month, next year or whenever; but it will happen sometime and such a pandemic according to pandemic researchers is now overdue. Therefore we are living on borrowed time and we have to adopt Prof. Shortridge's strategy for the good of all humanity.

Dr David Hill
Chief Executive
World Innovation Foundation
Huddersfield, United Kingdom/Bern, Switzerland

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'H5N1 Bird Flu Pandemic Potential Revealed'

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Coverage Of Terrorist Attacks On TV: Viewing Increases Pain Intensity

Main Category: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism
Also Included In: Pain / Anesthetics;  Public Health
Article Date: 04 Jul 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Coverage Of Terrorist Attacks On TV: Viewing Increases Pain Intensity
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"Exposure to media coverage of terrorist missile attacks increases pain levels in people already suffering from chronic pain," according to a new study by Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers.

"Does War Hurt? Effects of Media Exposure After Missile Attacks on Chronic Pain," published in the online version of the Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings, showed that exposure to the attacks through the media predicted an increase in pain intensity and in the sensory component of pain during the pre-post war period, but did not predict depression or anxiety.

These findings contribute to the understanding of the effects of terrorism on physical and emotional distress, and identify chronic pain patients as a vulnerable population requiring special attention during terrorism-related stress.

Prof. Golan Shahar and Dr. Sheera F. Lerman of BGU's Department of Psychology, along with Dr. Zvia Rudich of Soroka University Medical Center, assessed patients regarding their pain, depression and anxiety, as well as their level of exposure following the missile attacks during Operation Cast Lead in Israel's Negev Region. Prof. Shahar is also affiliated with Yale University's Department of Psychiatry in New Haven, Connecticut.

Stress and media exposure were also strongly related, suggesting that the amount of television viewing related to the terrorist attacks may have influenced how much stress the individual experienced.

"Patients' previous levels of emotional distress may affect their ability to cope with stressful situations, making stressors more prominent and influencing them to seek out more information about the situation," Prof. Shahar explains.

The study assessed 55 chronic pain patients treated at a specialty pain clinic. The patients completed self-report questionnaires regarding their pain, depression and anxiety before and after the three-week missile attack.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our bio-terrorism / terrorism section for the latest news on this subject. The research was supported by The Israel Science Foundation (Grant No.751/08).
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Saturday, 21 July 2012

Potential To Diagnose Radiation Exposure Using Novel Biomarkers

Main Category: Radiology / Nuclear Medicine
Also Included In: Bio-terrorism / Terrorism;  Aid / Disasters
Article Date: 24 May 2012 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Potential To Diagnose Radiation Exposure Using Novel Biomarkers
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Researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin have identified novel biomarkers that could be used to confirm exposure to damaging radiation in large groups of people potentially exposed to unknown and variable doses for the purpose of triage and treatment.

The findings are published in Radiation Research. John E. Baker, Ph.D., professor of surgery, biochemistry, pharmacology and toxicology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, is the lead author of the study.

There is an urgent need for rapid, accurate and sensitive diagnostic platforms to confirm exposure to radiation and estimate the dose absorbed by individuals - whether that exposure is a result of radiological terrorism, nuclear power plant accident, or nuclear warfare. Clinical symptoms do not provide adequate diagnostic information to triage and treat life-threatening radiation injuries; furthermore, the United States has been found to be ill-suited to evaluate and triage large groups of patients with potential radiation exposure.

In this study, researchers examined the microbes found in rat feces before and after exposure to radiation. Changes were identified in the levels of 212 genomically distinct bacteria, of which 59 are found in humans. Those changes persisted at least 21 days following the exposure to radiation. One particular type of microbe, Proteobacteria, increased almost one-thousand fold four days following irradiation.

"If there were to be a radiological terrorism scenario, there could be hundreds of thousands of people that would be present around the ground zero area, and limited medical resources available to evaluate their exposure levels," explained Dr. Baker. "Analyzing microbial signatures in those patients would be a non-invasive way to obtain results in a timely fashion, and allow us to commit resources to patients in need of intervention."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our radiology / nuclear medicine section for the latest news on this subject. The study was funded and data generated with US federal funds from the NIH Human Microbiome Project, the Common Fund, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases grant 1R01AI080363, and from grants from Tricorder Diagnostics and the Foundation for Heart Science.
The PhyloChip™ assay, developed by Second Genome, was utilized in this study to examine specific bacterial taxa.
Other authors of the study include Vy Lam, Ph.D.; John E. Moulder, Ph.D.; Nita H. Salzman, M.D., Ph.D., the Medical College of Wisconsin; and Eric A. Dubinsky, Ph.D.; and Gary L. Andersen, Ph.D.; from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. Dr. Andersen has an affiliation with Second Genome. Dr. Baker has an affiliation with Tricorder Diagnostics and the Foundation for Heart Science. The other authors report no such affiliation.
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New Preventive Treatments Available For Mild HIV

Editor's Choice
Main Category: HIV / AIDS
Also Included In: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses
Article Date: 19 Jul 2012 - 12:00 PDT Current ratings for:
New Preventive Treatments Available For Mild HIV
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According to researchers from Lund University in Sweden, they have opened the way for new methods to slow the development of AIDS in HIV-1 infected patients. The authors hope that their study, published in New England Journal of Medicine, can improve treatment methods and preventive measures to fight HIV and AIDS.

HIV-1 is the most common type of the virus that causes AIDS, and when it infects someone who already struggles with the milder HIV-2, it is less aggressive. In this study, the experts examined how the disease developed in people infected with HIV-1 and those who were infected with both HIV-1 and HIV-2.

Joakim Esbjörnsson, a virologist at Lund University, said:

"The moderating effect of HIV-2 was extremely strong. The time it took to develop AIDS was around 50 percent longer for those infected with both strains than for those only carrying the HIV-1 virus. The unusually large difference makes me, as a researchers, very optimistic that it will be possible to identify new and significant approaches that can be taken to combating the development of AIDS."

The unique thing about their research, explained Hans Norrgren, researcher at Lund University and Skåne University Hospital and doctor in infectious diseases, is that not only has the investigation been carried out for more than 20 years, but they have also followed healthy people from when they were first infected with HIV-1, or both HIV-1 and HIV-2, through the development of the disease which allowed them to compare how the infection in each individual has progressed over time.

Investigations showed that there was a difference in the genetic diversity of the HIV that was linked to an early stage of HIV infection. During the development of an infection, different strains of HIV co-exist; and the closer to AIDS the infection gets to, the larger the genetic difference between them.

CD4+ T cells, which are helper cells that play a key role in the immune system that are destroyed by the HIV virus, were also examined. Participants infected with both HIV-1 and HIV-2 had an advantage with these cells. In the course of infection, dual infected patients had a higher number of CD4+ T cells making it take longer to reach low levels of those cells. This meant that it would take longer for the infection to develop into AIDS.

Patrick Medstrand, Professor of Virology at Lund University, said:

"Our results suggest that HIV-2 can activate cellular reactions which naturally check the development of AIDS. If we can map these, I think we can also uncover entirely new mechanisms that are key to the slower development of the disease. In the long run, this could lead to better preventive measures and treatments."

A unique 20-year study of 4,700 infected people in Guinea-Bissau in West Africa lies behind the discoveries.

Fredrik Månsson, a doctor in infectious diseases in Malmö and one of the researchers in the study, explained:

"Our work is the result of many people's work over many years, in particular the staff of the National Public Health Laboratory in Guinea-Bissau and the police health station in the capital Bissau, who have carried out the practical work of examining the study participants, taking samples and conducting laboratory analyses."

Like HIV-1, HIV-2 can also lead to AIDS

HIV-2, the milder strain of HIV, is found on a large scale only in West Africa. More people are infected with HIV-1 than HIV-2, and know that it is more aggressive. However, HIV-2 can also lead to AIDS. Fewer people infected with HIV-2 develop AIDS, and only about 25-30 percent of those who have received no treatment.

Written by Sarah Glynn
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

Visit our hiv / aids section for the latest news on this subject. Inhibition of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Contemporaneous HIV-2 Infection
Joakim Esbjörnsson, Ph.D., Fredrik Månsson, M.D., Ph.D., Anders Kvist, Ph.D., Per-Erik Isberg, M.Sc., Salma Nowroozalizadeh, Ph.D., Antonio J. Biague, M.D., Zacarias J. da Silva, M.D., Ph.D., Marianne Jansson, Ph.D., Eva Maria Fenyö, M.D., Ph.D., Hans Norrgren, M.D., Ph.D., and Patrik Medstrand, Ph.D.
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Brain Development Not Affected By Long-Term ADHD Drug

Main Category: ADHD
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health;  Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Brain Development Not Affected By Long-Term ADHD Drug
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Drugs used to treat Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) do not appear to have long-term effects on the brain, according to new animal research from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.

As many as five to seven percent of elementary school children are diagnosed with ADHD, a behavioral disorder that causes problems with inattentiveness, over-activity, impulsivity, or a combination of these traits. Many of these children are treated with psychostimulant drugs, and while doctors and scientists know a lot about how these drugs work and their effectiveness, little is known about their long-term effects.

Linda Porrino, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, along with fellow professor Michael A. Nader, Ph.D., both of Wake Forest Baptist, and colleagues conducted an animal study to determine what the long-lasting effects may be. Their findings were surprising, said Porrino.

"We know that the drugs used to treat ADHD are very effective, but there have always been concerns about the long-lasting effects of these drugs," Porrino said. "We didn't know whether taking these drugs over a long period could harm brain development in some way or possibly lead to abuse of drugs later in adolescence."

Findings from the Wake Forest Baptist research are published online this month in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.

The researchers studied 16 juvenile non-human primates, whose ages were equivalent to 6-to 10-year-old humans. Eight animals were in the control group that did not receive any drug treatment and the other eight were treated with a therapeutic-level dose of an extended-release form of Ritalin, or methylphenidate (MPH), for over a year, which is equivalent to about four years in children. Imaging of the animals' brains, both before and after the study, was conducted on both groups to measure brain chemistry and structure. The researchers also looked at developmental milestones to address concerns that ADHD drugs adversely affect physical growth.

Once the MPH treatment and imaging studies were concluded, the animals were given the opportunity to self administer cocaine over several months. Nader measured their propensity to acquire the drug and looked at how rapidly and in what amounts, to provide an index of vulnerability to substance abuse in adolescence. As reported in the research paper, they found no differences between groups - monkeys treated with Ritalin during adolescence were not more vulnerable to later drug use than the control animals.

"After one year of drug therapy, we found no long-lasting effects on the neurochemistry of the brain, no changes in the structure of the developing brain. There was also no increase in the susceptibility for drug abuse later in adolescence," Porrino said. "We were very careful to give the drugs in the same doses that would be given to children. That's one of the great advantages of our study is that it's directly translatable to children."

Porrino said non-human primates provide exceptional models for developmental research because they undergo relatively long childhood and adolescent periods marked by hormonal and physiological maturation much like humans.

"Our study showed that long-term therapeutic use of drugs to treat ADHD does not cause long-term negative effects on the developing brain, and importantly, it doesn't put children at risk for substance abuse later in adolescence," she said.

One of the exciting things about this research, Porrino said, is that a "sister" study was conducted simultaneously at John Hopkins with slightly older aged animals and different drugs and their findings were similar. "We feel very confident of the results because we have replicated each other's studies within the same time frame and gotten similar results," she said. "We think that's pretty powerful and reassuring."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our adhd section for the latest news on this subject. The research described was supported by grants from the National Institute of Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health, DA 20648 (LJP) and DA 06634 (LJP, MAN), NIAAA, AA 17056 (AJB), and T32-AA007565. Study medication was provided by UCB SA, Belgium.
Co-authors include Peter J. Pierre, Ph.D., James Daunais, Ph.D., Allyson J. Bennett, Ph.D., H. Donald Gage, Ph.D., and graduate students Kathryn E. Gill and Susan Martelle, all of Wake Forest Baptist, and James M. Swanson, Ph.D., University of California, Irvine.
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The Ancients Knew A Thing Or Two About Plants' Healing Qualities

Main Category: Nutrition / Diet
Also Included In: Biology / Biochemistry
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
The Ancients Knew A Thing Or Two About Plants' Healing Qualities
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An international team of researchers, led by the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona and the University of York, has provided the first molecular evidence that Neanderthals not only ate a range of cooked plant foods, but also understood its nutritional and medicinal qualities.

Until recently Neanderthals, who disappeared between 30,000 and 24,000 years ago, were thought to be predominantly meat-eaters. However, evidence of dietary breadth is growing as more sophisticated analyses are undertaken.

Researchers from Spain, the UK and Australia combined pyrolysis gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry with morphological analysis of plant microfossils to identify material trapped in dental calculus (calcified dental plaque) from five Neanderthals from the north Spanish site of El Sidrón.

Their results, published in Naturwissenschaften - The Science of Nature this week, provide another twist to the story - the first molecular evidence for medicinal plants being used by a Neanderthal individual.

The researchers say the starch granules and carbohydrate markers in the samples, plus evidence for plant compounds such as azulenes and coumarins, as well as possible evidence for nuts, grasses and even green vegetables, argue for a broader use of ingested plants than is often suggested by stable isotope analysis.

Lead author Karen Hardy, a Catalan Institute of Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA) Research Professor at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) and an Honorary Research Associate at the University of York, UK, said: "The varied use of plants we identified suggests that the Neanderthal occupants of El Sidrón had a sophisticated knowledge of their natural surroundings which included the ability to select and use certain plants for their nutritional value and for self-medication. While meat was clearly important, our research points to an even more complex diet than has previously been supposed."

Earlier research by members of this team had shown that the Neanderthals in El Sidrón had the bitter taste perception gene. Now trapped within dental calculus researchers found molecular evidence that one individual had eaten bitter tasting plants.

Dr Stephen Buckley, a Research Fellow at the University of York's BioArCh research facility, said: "The evidence indicating this individual was eating bitter-tasting plants such as yarrow and camomile with little nutritional value is surprising. We know that Neanderthals would find these plants bitter, so it is likely these plants must have been selected for reasons other than taste."

Ten samples of dental calculus from five Neanderthals were selected for this study. The researchers used thermal desorption and pyrolysis gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry to identify both free/unbound and bound/polymeric organic components in the dental calculus. By using this method in conjunction with the extraction and analysis of plant microfossils, they found chemical evidence consistent with wood-fire smoke, a range of cooked starchy foods, two plants known today for their medicinal qualities, and bitumen or oil shale trapped in the dental calculus.

Professor Matthew Collins, who heads the BioArCh research facility at York, said: "Using mass spectrometry, we were able to identify the building blocks of carbohydrates in the calculus of two adults, one individual in particular having apparently eaten several different carbohydrate-rich foods. Combined with the microscopic analysis it also demonstrates how dental calculus can provide a rich source of information."

The researchers say evidence for cooked carbohydrates is confirmed by both the cracked/roasted starch granules observed microscopically and the molecular evidence for cooking and exposure to wood smoke or smoked food in the form of a range of chemical markers including methyl esters, phenols, and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons found in dental calculus.

Professor Les Copeland from the Faculty of Agriculture and Environment, University of Sydney, Australia, said: "Our research confirms the varied and selective use of plants by Neanderthals."

The study also provides evidence that the starch granules reported from El Sidrón represent the oldest granules ever to be confirmed using a biochemical test, while ancient bacteria found embedded in the calculus offers the potential for future studies in oral health.

The archaeological cave site of El Sidrón, located in the Asturias region of northern Spain, contains the best collection of Neanderthal remains found in the Iberian Peninsula and one of the most important active sites in the world. Discovered in 1994, it contains around 2,000 skeletal remains of at least 13 individuals dating back around 47,300 to 50,600 years.

Antonio Rosas, of the Museum of Natural History in Madrid - CSIC (Spanish National Research Council), said: "El Sidrón has allowed us to banish many of the preconceptions we had of Neanderthals. Thanks to previous studies, we know that they looked after the sick, buried their dead and decorated their bodies. Now another dimension has been added relating to their diet and self-medication."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our nutrition / diet section for the latest news on this subject. Fieldwork at El Sidrón, conducted by researchers from the University of Oviedo, is funded by the Department of Culture, Principality of Asturias. The dental calculus samples used in this study were provided by the laboratory leading the study of the human remains discovered in El Sidrón, which is located at the Museum of Natural History in Madrid - CSIC.
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Non-Invasive Thermal Imaging Joins The Fight Against Obesity

Main Category: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health;  Nutrition / Diet
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Non-Invasive Thermal Imaging Joins The Fight Against Obesity
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Scientists at The University of Nottingham believe they've found a way of fighting obesity - with a pioneering technique which uses thermal imaging. This heat-seeking technology is being used to trace our reserves of brown fat - the body's 'good fat' - which plays a key role in how quickly our body can burn calories as energy.

This special tissue known as Brown Adipose Tissue, or brown fat, produces 300 times more heat than any other tissue in the body. Potentially the more brown fat we have the less likely we are to lay down excess energy or food as white fat.

Michael Symonds, Professor of Developmental Physiology in the School of Clinical Sciences, led a team of scientists and doctors at The University of Nottingham who have pioneered the thermal imaging process so we can assess how much brown fat we've got and how much heat it is producing. Their research has just been published in the Journal of Pediatrics.

The University of Nottingham's Early Life Nutrition Research Unit is at the forefront of ground-breaking international research into managing brown adipose tissue using nutrition, exercise, and environmental and therapeutic interventions.

Thermogenic index for food labels

Professor Symonds said: "Potentially the more brown fat you have or the more active your brown fat is you produce more heat and as a result you might be less likely to lay down excess energy or food as white fat.

"This completely non-invasive technique could play a crucial role in our fight against obesity. Potentially we could add a thermogenic index to food labels to show whether that product would increase or decrease heat production within brown fat. In other words whether it would speed up or slow down the amount of calories we burn."

The obesity threat

Obesity is one of the biggest challenges we face in Europe and America as our children grow older. It affects 155 million children worldwide. In the UK the number of overweight children doubled in the 1990s.

Dr Helen Budge, Clinical Associate Professor and Reader in Neonatology, said: "Babies have a larger amount of brown fat which they use up to keep warm soon after birth making our study's finding that this healthy fat can also generate heat in childhood and adolescence very exciting."

Professor Symonds and his team say their ground-breaking research could lead to a better understanding of how brown fat balances the energy from the food we eat with the energy our bodies actually use up.

Professor Symonds, together with Dr Budge and their team from the University's School of Clinical Sciences has shown that the neck region in healthy children produces heat. With the help of local school children they found that this region, which is known to contain brown adipose tissue, rapidly switches on to produce heat. This capacity is much greater in young children compared with adolescents and adults. The researchers are now using their findings to explore interventions designed to promote energy use as heat and, thus, prevent excess weight gain in both children and adults.

New non-invasive technology

Professor Symonds said: "Using our imaging technique we can locate brown fat and assess its capacity to produce heat. It avoids harmful techniques which use radiation and enables detailed studies with larger groups of people. This may provide new insights into the role of brown fat in how we balance energy from the food we eat, with the energy our bodies use up.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our obesity / weight loss / fitness section for the latest news on this subject. This research goes to the heart of the University’s biggest ever fund raising appeal, Impact: The Nottingham Campaign, which is supporting lifelong health for children. Additional funding will allow more innovative approaches to be researched, developed and introduced across the globe. Find out more about our research and how you can support us at http://tiny.cc/UoNImpact
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Ongoing Study Reveals Similarities Between Sexual Fantasies In Men And Women

Main Category: Sexual Health / STDs
Also Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Ongoing Study Reveals Similarities Between Sexual Fantasies In Men And Women
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A study conducted at the University of Granada have demonstrated that there are not significant differences between men's and women's sexual fantasies. The fact is that both sexes have intimate and romantic sexual fantaies involving their partner or loved one. In addition, men have more sexual fantasies (positive and negative) than women, which would confirm the old belief that men think more frequently about sex than women.To carry out this study, the researchers took a sample of 2250 Spanish people (49.6% mend and 0.4% women) aged between 18 and 73 years, who had maintained a heterosexual relationship for at least 6 months. The information was collected by an Incidental and Planned Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). A number of provincial ongoing training centers, adult education centers, Granada local library and several University of Granada and Universidad Complutense schools collaborated in this study.

The results obtained suggest that near 100% of men and women have experienced a pleasant sexual fantasy in their life, while about 80% of the interviewees have experienced a negative or unpleasant sexual fantasy sometime in life.

Differences by Sex

However, men and women do not fantasize with the same frequency. Specifically, the study showed that women have pleasant romantic fantasies more frequently than men -a few times a month. Men, however, fantasize more frequently about exploratory sexual activities as group sex and seek new sensations as "being promiscuous", "being a swinger","participating in an orgy". The frequency of these fantasies is "sometime in life" or "once a year.The most unpleasant sexual fantasies are those associated with sexual submission. Women were found to think more frequently than men about "being forced to have sex" - they fantasize about it at least once in life. However, the most frequent negative fantasies in men are associated with homosexual sex.The authors of this study are Nieves Moyano Muñoz and Juan Carlos Sierra Freire at the University of Granada department of Personality, Psychological Evaluation and Treatment. This is the first study to approach sexual fantasies as positive and negative thoughts in Spain. The results will be published in the Spanish journal Anales de Psicología.

Currently, the intent of these researchers is to elucidate whether negative or unpleasant sexual fantasies are dysfunctional for the development of a number of sexual behaviors. For this purpose, they are looking for adults (over 18 years of age) that have had a relationship for at least 6 months.To participate in this study, it is only necessary to answer a set of questions. Anonymity and confidentiality is guaranteed. *

The University of Granada researchers point out that having sexual fantasies "favors some aspects as sexual desire and arousal". In therapeutic terms, researchers think that it is not only the presence of lack of sexual fantasies that should be considered, but also the patient's attitude towards them.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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Friday, 20 July 2012

Parents Should Be Involved In Decision For Adolescents To Get The HPV Vaccination That Protects Against Genital Warts, Cervical Cancer

Main Category: Cervical Cancer / HPV Vaccine
Also Included In: Sexual Health / STDs;  Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Parents Should Be Involved In Decision For Adolescents To Get The HPV Vaccination That Protects Against Genital Warts, Cervical Cancer
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Most U.S. adults support laws that allow teens to get medical care for sexually transmitted infections without parental consent. But when asked about the vaccine against the human papillomavirus (HPV), most adults want parents to have the final say on whether their teen or pre-teen gets the shots.

The University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health recently asked a national sample of adults about allowing adolescents age 12 to 17 years old to receive the HPV vaccinations without parental consent.

Only 45 percent of those polled would support state laws allowing the HPV vaccination without parental consent.

"But in contrast, 57 percent say they support teens being able to get medical care for prevention of sexually transmitted infections and 55 percent for treatment, all without parental consent," says Sarah Clark, M.P.H., Associate Director of the Child Health Evaluation and Research (CHEAR) Unit at the University of Michigan and Associate Director of the National Poll on Children's Health.

In the short term, the HPV vaccine protects against genital warts, one of the most common types of sexually transmitted infection. In the long term, the vaccine prevents development of cervical cancer in females and some head and neck cancers in men.

Routine HPV vaccination is recommended for males and females at 11-12 years of age. The vaccine is most effective if administered before the onset of sexual activity.

"That presents a challenge. Parents aren't thinking their 11 or 12 year-old child is ready for sexual activity at that age," Clark says. "Many parents ask to delay the vaccine until their child is a little older. But older teens go to the doctor much less than younger adolescents, and often they go without a parent."

Public health officials have considered pushing laws that would drop the need for parental consent, in order to boost HPV vaccination rates.

"But in this poll, most agreed they are reluctant to support dropping parental consent, even though 74 percent agreed that getting vaccines is a good way to protect adolescents from disease," Clark says.

Those who did not support dropping parental consent were asked about their reasons. The most common reason, cited by 86 percent, was that HPV should be a parent's decision; 43 percent cited the risk of side effects of the vaccine. About 40 percent said they have moral or ethical concerns about the vaccine.

The support for state laws that would allow HPV vaccination without parental consent was not different between parents and non-parents.

"These poll results show the majority of adults view HPV vaccination as distinct from sexually transmitted infection prevention and are reluctant to support taking away parental consent," Clark says.

"Policymakers and public health officials interested in changing parental consent rules should consider this data and provide education to ensure adults understand the importance of HPV vaccination as a form of prevention against sexually transmitted infections."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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As A Predictor Of Late-Stage Diagnosis Of Cervical Cancer, Lack Of Insurance Found To Be Second Only To Age

Main Category: Cervical Cancer / HPV Vaccine
Also Included In: Health Insurance / Medical Insurance;  Seniors / Aging
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 3:00 PDT Current ratings for:
As A Predictor Of Late-Stage Diagnosis Of Cervical Cancer, Lack Of Insurance Found To Be Second Only To Age
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A large national sample of women diagnosed with cervical cancer between 2000 and 2007 finds lack of insurance was second only to age as the strongest predictor of late stage at diagnosis, a gap the authors say is likely attributable to lack of screening.

The American Cancer Society estimates that 12,170 women will be diagnosed with cervical cancer and 4,220 women will die from the disease in 2012. Although incidence and mortality from cervical cancer have declined dramatically since the introduction of the Pap test, one in three cervical cancer patients is diagnosed only after the cancer has spread to nearby organs and one in ten is diagnosed only after the disease has spread to distant organs (35% and 11% respectively). Prognosis is strongly related to stage: the 5-year relative survival rate is 91.2% for patients with localized disease, but only 57.8% for patients with regional disease and 17.0% for those with distant disease.

Socioeconomic status, race, marital status, and geographic location have all been identified as factors related to late stage at diagnosis among cervical cancer patients. Previous studies also documented age as a significant predictor of advanced stage, although the effects of age and also of insurance status, which are two of the strongest predictors of cervical cancer screening, had not been studied together prior to the current study.

For the current study, which appears early online in the American Journal of Public Health, researchers led by Stacey Fedewa, MPH reviewed the association between late stage (stage III/IV) cervical cancer and both insurance and age, with adjustment for race/ethnicity and other sociodemographic and clinical factors on 69,739 women diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer between 2000 and 2007 from the National Cancer Database.

More than half (55.5%) of privately insured cervical cancer patients in the observed population were at stage I at diagnosis, compared to 40.2% of Medicaid recipients, and 36.4% of uninsured patients. Meanwhile, 24.03% of privately insured women, 34.51% of those with Medicaid, and 35.22% of those without insurance were diagnosed with advanced disease, described as stages III and IV. Advanced stage also increased with age; the adjusted relative risk among women =35 years of age was 1.25 to 2.5 that of women 21-34 years.

"Late stage at diagnosis is likely attributable to underscreening," write the authors. They conclude: "Advanced-stage disease leads not only to poorer quality of life and greater morbidity, but often to higher treatment costs as well. Screening should be made accessible and affordable for all women for whom it is recommended, especially for those at higher risk of advanced-stage disease, such as middle-aged women, Medicaid recipients, and uninsured women."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our cervical cancer / hpv vaccine section for the latest news on this subject. Article: "Association of Insurance Status and Age with Cervical Cancer Stage at Diagnosis: National Cancer Database, 2000-2007," Fedewa et al. Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print July 19, 2012: e1–e9. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2011.300532
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Medical Devices Summit, 6-7 September 2012, Minnesota

Main Category: Conferences
Article Date: 20 Jul 2012 - 4:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Medical Devices Summit, 6-7 September 2012, Minnesota
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In response to an overwhelming amount of feedback from the industry, Opal Events is proud to announce that it will be taking its Medical Devices Summit to Minnesota! The event will take place from Sept 6-7, 2012 in Bloomington, MN.

First 100 Medical Device Companies Register Free!

The Midwest is a hotbed for medical device innovation and development, and many companies are moving to the Midwest to be ahead of this curve. With so many new devices coming to market, it's absolutely vital for companies to arm themselves with the latest legal, regulatory and business strategies available. And Opal Events is striving to meet these needs!

Join us for insightful panel presentations, talks and workshops from foremost industry leaders as they build a roadmap for the industry's future. We will be bringing together industry professionals to discuss how medical devices will be impacted by the changing healthcare system in our country, how the current business model is changing and who the new players will be, how to be involved in the rapid globalization of the industry and how to foster innovation and plan for compliance!

The featuring keynote speaker is Congressman Erik Paulsen of Minnesota's 3rd District. His topic will be "Medical Innovation and U.S. Leadership: An Update from Washington."

A short list of other confirmed speakers are: Dr. Daniel Schultz, Senior Director of Medical Devices and Combination Products, Greenleaf Health, (and former Director of the CDRH) Randy Schiestl, Vice President of R&D, Engineering Services Group, Boston Scientific Corporation David M. Cronin, CEO, Cognition Corporation Dr. John Sperling, Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic John Romans, President & CEO, BioMedix Please visit our website for complete information about the conference

This event is designed for those within the medical devices manufacturing companies, the managers/engineers/director/VP of: product development and design, research and development, quality, regulatory affairs, business development, compliance, and legal affairs.

Medical Devices Summit Midwest, September 6-7, 2012, Bloomington, MN For conference registration prices, please visit: http://www.opalevents.org/trk/mdsmwc1209.html

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Source: Opal Events
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University Launches Study Into Use Of Meditation To Reduce Stress Levels Of Trainee Nurses

Main Category: Nursing / Midwifery
Also Included In: Anxiety / Stress
Article Date: 19 Jul 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
University Launches Study Into Use Of Meditation To Reduce Stress Levels Of Trainee Nurses
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University of Stirling researchers have secured funding to investigate the effectiveness of training student nurses in mindfulness to reduce stress levels.

The study, which begins next month, will involve student nurses undergoing a stress test and then carrying out four weeks of mindfulness training. The participants will then undergo another stress test to find out if the mindfulness has helped reduce stress levels and increase their ability to cope with stress.

The student nurses will have guided meditation sessions and keep a journal about their own practice sessions at home as part of the research.

Mindfulness, or meditation, is a technique which can be learned and helps individuals to relax and cope better with stressful situations.

PhD research student Jenny Jones and Research Fellow Mariyana Schoultz, based at the Highland Campus in Inverness, are carrying out the study with Professor Stephen Leslie, a cardiologist consultant at Raigmore Hospital and Professor Angus Watson.

Researcher Jenny Jones said: "Hospitals can be a very stressful environment to work in. In my nursing training there was no mention of how to cope with stress but this is something that nurses face on a daily basis. Student nurses are not prepared for the very emotional and sometimes traumatic events they may witness at work, or equipped with the tools to cope and carry on with their job effectively. This study hopes to change that.

"We want to find out if mindfulness will impact on how nursing students cope with stress. If the results are positive, we want it to be introduced as part of nursing training. The ultimate hope is that this will make the nurses of the future more resilient to work related stress."

Nurses experience high levels of work related stress and are at risk of stress related illness. At any one time up to four per cent of trained nurses and up to six per cent of health care assistants are off work with stress or stress-related illness.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Source: Source: University of Stirling
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What Are The Best Ways To Promote Exercise Around The World?

Editor's Choice
Main Category: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness
Also Included In: Sports Medicine / Fitness
Article Date: 18 Jul 2012 - 11:00 PDT Current ratings for:
What Are The Best Ways To Promote Exercise Around The World?
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A range of successful and effective interventions from around the world were recognized in the third paper in The Lancet Series that can be used to encourage people to be physically active and improve their exercise opportunities.

Gregory Heath, lead author of the study and from the University of Tennessee, said:

"Because even moderate physical activity such as walking and cycling can have substantial health benefits, understanding strategies that can increase these behaviors in different regions and cultures has become a public health priority."

The researchers evaluated 100 reviews published between 2001 and 2011 of clinical and community-based physical interventions. They then discovered a number of effective ways for promoting exercise in people of different age groups, social groups, and countries worldwide through: Behavioral and social initiativesModifications to environmental design and transport policiesCommunication and information strategiesSuccessful examples of encouraging people to be physically active include promoting exercise and community events through mass media campaigns and decision prompts to help inspire people, like using the stairs instead of an elevator.

Walking clubs and buddy systems are also valuable social support networks. Free exercise classes in public areas, like parks, are very important because they target populations who are less likely to manage the suggested amount of exercise, including older adults, women, and those on lower incomes.

According to Heath and his colleagues, creating environments suitable for walking and biking, like bike lanes, can be very beneficial. If people improve their access to sports and other outdoor activities, help shape policies for neighborhood design, increase the amount of green in their yard, and/or improve public transportation, they will see an improvement in their physical activity levels.

Research has shown that USA, Australia, England, Canada, Belgium, and Germany can increase their activity levels by 50% from street-level strategies (improving lighting and aesthetics).

Ciclovía is another potentially beneficial intervention that started in Bogotá, Columbia and has spread to almost half of the countries in the Americas (100 cities). Ciclovía is a program that allows runners, walkers, cyclists, and skaters on every Sunday morning and each public holiday to exercise freely in the street by closing it off to motorized vehicles. About one million people use this program every week, mostly people on lower incomes. It covers about 14% of the recommended population requirement of weekly activity for Bogotá.

Heath explained:

"Overall, our findings showed the interventions to have consistent and significant effects on physical activity behaviors. Even though in some instances the effect sizes of these interventions were rather modest, they were large enough to translate into real population-level benefits if rolled out on a larger scale."

Written by Sarah Glynn
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

Visit our obesity / weight loss / fitness section for the latest news on this subject. Evidence-based intervention in physical activity: lessons from around the world
Prof Gregory W Heath DHSc, Diana C Parra MPH, Olga L Sarmiento MD, Prof Lars Bo Andersen Dr Med Sci, Prof Neville Owen PhD, Shifalika Goenka PhD, Felipe Montes MSc, Prof Ross C Brownson PhD
The Lancet July 18, 2012 doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60816-2 Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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