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只看该作者 80 发表于: 2006-12-03
80、Combination Therapy Eases Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Fri Dec 1, 11:47 PM ET



FRIDAY, Dec. 1 (HealthDay News) -- A combination therapy of two drugs -- inhaled iloprost and bosentan -- appears to improve the condition of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a debilitating and potentially fatal disease characterized by a progressive narrowing of blood vessels in the lungs.

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Dr. Vallerie V. McLaughlin, of the University of Michigan Medical Center, and nine colleagues studied 65 PAH patients who were being treated with bosentan, an endothelin receptor antagonist that helps boost blood flow in the lungs.


Of those patients, 32 were selected to receive inhaled iloprost (a prostacyclin analog) along with bosentan, while the remainder took a placebo and bosentan.


By the end of the 12-week study, all the patients who received the bosentan-iloprost therapy were able to walk 98 feet further during a six-minute walk test, and 11 of them showed improvement in a measurement of how severely they were affected by PAH.


In addition, none of the patients who received the bosentan-iloprost therapy experienced clinical deterioration over the course of the study.


The findings are published in the first issue for December of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.


Symptoms of PAH, which has no known cause, include shortness of breath following exercise, excessive fatigue, weakness, dizziness and fainting. The symptoms tend to grow worse over time.


More information


The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more about PAH.
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只看该作者 81 发表于: 2006-12-03
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Common PTSD Drug May Be Useless By E.J. Mundell
HealthDay Reporter
Fri Dec 1, 11:47 PM ET



FRIDAY, Dec. 1 (HealthDay News) -- A drug long used to treat post-traumatic stress disorder appears to have done patients no good and may even have done some harm.

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In the first-ever randomized, placebo-controlled trial of guanfacine for the alleviation of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), "we found that it really offered patients no benefits of any symptoms, and we looked at a lot of symptoms," said lead researcher Dr. Thomas Neylan, medical director of the PTSD treatment program at the San Francisco VA Medical Center.


"We looked at whether people were feeling less anxious, whether they were sleeping better, whether they startled less, whether they were having fewer intrusive memories," said Neylan, who is also an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco. "But in anything that we looked at, we found there was no benefit for the drug over placebo."


The study results may come as a surprise to psychiatrists and patients, since guanfacine and a related drug, clonidine, have been used for years to treat PTSD.


"They are commonly used, but what we hope now is that people shy away from using clonidine and guanfacine," Neylan said.


One expert said he was taken aback by the findings.


"I was so shocked that I had to think about it for two days. I was trying to find a hole in the science and I can't -- this is a state-of-the-art clinical trial," said Dr. Randall Marshall, director of Trauma Studies and Services at New York State Psychiatric Institute. "Their effect size was zero -- there's no hint of a benefit."


The study, which was funded by the U.S.     Department of Veterans Affairs, is published in the Dec. 1 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.


Guanfacine's rise and apparent fall as a PTSD treatment may be an object lesson in why randomized, controlled trials -- such as the one Neylan's group conducted -- are so important to assessing a drug's worth, he said.


Guanfacine and clonidine are alpha-2 agonists, which means they bind to the alpha-2 receptor on brain cells, blocking the release of a neurotransmitter called norepinephrine, Neylan explained. Norepinephrine is the neural form of the stress hormone adrenalin. Psychiatrists have long known that PTSD patients have increased levels of norepinephrine activity in their brains.


"So, from the start, the whole idea was very appealing -- you give a drug like guanfacine that blocks the effects of norepinephrine, and you'd hope to see some benefit," he said. "It made intuitive sense. It was a lovely idea."


In fact, it was such an attractive idea that more than 20 review articles and guidelines, published in a variety of psychiatric journals, touted the use of guanfacine and clonidine in easing PTSD symptoms.


But no one had ever put this idea to the test in a randomized, controlled trial.


In its eight-week study, Neylan's group compared the effects of guanfacine and an identical-looking placebo pill in 63 male and female veterans diagnosed with PTSD. Twenty-nine participants were randomly picked to take guanfacine while the other 34 took the dummy pill.


By the end of the study, the researchers found no net difference between the two groups in terms of changes in symptoms.


"But the one thing that did clearly come out was that there were more side effects with guanfacine," Neylan said. "There was more sedation, feeling fatigued, dry mouth."


Why did a pill that should have worked so well in theory fall flat in practice? Neylan offered one possible answer. "[Too much] norepinephrine can be a bad thing," he noted, "but you also need it for your brain to work well. So, lowering the whole pool of norepinephrine did not seem to be an effective strategy."


He said the relatively small sample size in the study means he can't be absolutely certain that alpha-2 agonists have no benefit, "but we did get a zero effect size. That means that even if we had 5 or 6 times this sample, the probability of showing a meaningful difference is really, really low."

Marshall agreed that the methodology is sound, and the findings conclusive. "I think this pretty much answers the question of whether, in this population, guanfacine should be considered as either a primary or an adjunctive treatment. The answer is no -- it's a big surprise," he said.

The finding will change the way he and psychiatrists everywhere treat PTSD patients, said Marshall, who is also associate director of the Anxiety Disorders Clinic and an associate professor of clinical psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. He believes that, despite the anecdotal success of guanfacine in isolated cases, "We should not generalize that to PTSD or treatment-refractory PTSD."

Neylan said a newer drug that works on norepinephrine receptors, but in a different way, might still succeed where guanfacine has failed.

That drug, called prazosin, blocks the alpha-1 receptor in the synapse. "There have been a few trials to show that prazosin does have some promise, and I know the VA is gearing up to do a large multi-site study. It is becoming more popular."

In the meantime, he said, it's important to remember that the first-line therapy for most people with PTSD is antidepressants and/or psychotherapy, especially "exposure therapy," where patients are gently confronted with reminders of the traumatic event itself.

"Most people feel that PTSD benefits most from a combination of pharmacologic treatment and psychotherapy," Neylan said.

Moe information

To learn more about PTSD, head to the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health.
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只看该作者 82 发表于: 2006-12-03
82、Criminal psychopathy may be biological dysfunction: study
Fri Dec 1, 2006 1:40pm ET

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By Tahani Karrar

LONDON (Reuters) - A biological defect in the way blood flows in the brain rather than a psychological defect could be one reason why some people become criminal psychopaths, a new study shows.

Researchers from the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London monitored the emotional responses of six men who had committed repeat offences such as attempted murder, rape with strangulation and grievous bodily harm.

"We've never been able to look directly in the brain before and what we found is that when psychopaths were exposed to frightened faces the distress cue didn't increase the psychopath's blood flow. It decreased it," Declan Murphy, a professor of psychiatry at the institute, told Reuters.


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He added psychopaths might not stop their attacks because they may have learned to dampen their brain's response to other peoples' distress signals.

All six subjects scored highly on the Hare Psychopathy Checklist, a test which looks for the presence of cunning, manipulative or exploitative behaviors as well as lack of guilt or remorse.

The results were published on Friday in the British Journal of Psychiatry. Their scans were compared to nine healthy volunteers who were also shown images of fearful, happy and neutral faces.

Tom Fahy, professor of forensic mental health and co-author of the study, said the condition may be inherited or acquired through very deprived and abusive childhoods.

He added the findings of the study opened possibilities for new treatments other than counseling therapies and could be used to identify people who had a higher risk of re-offending.

"Psychopaths currently respond pretty poorly to treatment but this biological problem could be used as a marker for people who say they have recovered but actually haven't," Murphy said.


© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 83 发表于: 2006-12-03
83、Criminal psychopathy may be biological dysfunction: study
Fri Dec 1, 2006 1:40pm ET

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Older schizophrenia drug works, costs less: study
Metformin slows antipsychotic drug weight gain
More Related News...
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Health News
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HIV drugs reaching more people as AIDS Day marked
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More Health News... Email This Article | Print This Article | Reprints [-] Text [+]
By Tahani Karrar

LONDON (Reuters) - A biological defect in the way blood flows in the brain rather than a psychological defect could be one reason why some people become criminal psychopaths, a new study shows.

Researchers from the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London monitored the emotional responses of six men who had committed repeat offences such as attempted murder, rape with strangulation and grievous bodily harm.

"We've never been able to look directly in the brain before and what we found is that when psychopaths were exposed to frightened faces the distress cue didn't increase the psychopath's blood flow. It decreased it," Declan Murphy, a professor of psychiatry at the institute, told Reuters.


Reuters Pictures

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from the last 24 hours.
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He added psychopaths might not stop their attacks because they may have learned to dampen their brain's response to other peoples' distress signals.

All six subjects scored highly on the Hare Psychopathy Checklist, a test which looks for the presence of cunning, manipulative or exploitative behaviors as well as lack of guilt or remorse.

The results were published on Friday in the British Journal of Psychiatry. Their scans were compared to nine healthy volunteers who were also shown images of fearful, happy and neutral faces.

Tom Fahy, professor of forensic mental health and co-author of the study, said the condition may be inherited or acquired through very deprived and abusive childhoods.

He added the findings of the study opened possibilities for new treatments other than counseling therapies and could be used to identify people who had a higher risk of re-offending.

"Psychopaths currently respond pretty poorly to treatment but this biological problem could be used as a marker for people who say they have recovered but actually haven't," Murphy said.
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只看该作者 84 发表于: 2006-12-03
84、Diabetes Drug Halts Weight Gain in Kids Taking Antipsychotics By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter
Fri Dec 1, 7:02 PM ET



FRIDAY, Dec. 1 (HealthDay News) -- While increasing numbers of children and teens are being treated for psychiatric illness with medications called atypical antipsychotics, many experience significant weight gain while on these drugs -- as much as a pound or more a week.

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However, a new study suggests that the diabetes drug metformin may be able to put the brakes on that weight gain.


During the 16-week study period, children taking metformin along with atypical antipsychotics lost a slight amount of weight, while those given a placebo along with their psychiatric medications gained nearly 9 pounds.


"For someone with a major psychiatric diagnosis, there's a stigma attached to that to begin with, then if you add obesity on top of that, there's an additional stigma," noted the study's lead author, Dr. David Klein, an endocrinologist at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. "Now, if people do gain weight, there's an effective treatment to control weight gain."


Results of the study are in the December 2006 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.


Atypical antipsychotic medications include risperidone (brand name Risperidal), olanzapine (brand name Zyprexa) and quetiapine (brand name Seroquel). These medications are used to treat a variety of psychiatric illnesses, such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.


Increased appetite and accompanying weight gain are common side effects attributed to the drugs.


"We know that appetite increases, but the mechanism behind that isn't fully clear," said Dr. Glenn Hirsch, medical director of the New York University Child Study Center.


Klein said his interest was piqued when he saw a patient with type 2 diabetes who was "eating voraciously." Once he took her off the antipsychotic medications, her diabetes went away. Unfortunately, her psychiatric symptoms quickly returned. Once back on the atypical antipsychotics, her diabetes came back.


That suggested, said Klein, "that there was some 'diabeticogenic' effect of these agents," and that insulin resistance might play some role in the excess weight gain.


So, for the current study, the researchers wanted to learn if medication that can improve the body's use of insulin might also halt the weight gain these children experienced.


For the study, the researchers randomly assigned a group 39 children between the ages of 10 and 17 to receive either 850 milligrams of metformin daily or a placebo. All of the children were taking atypical antipsychotic medications, and all had experienced at least a 10 percent gain in body weight in less than a year.


The study lasted four months. During that time, those taking the placebo gained an average of 8.8 pounds while those on metformin lost 0.2 pounds.


Additionally, there was a significant reduction in insulin resistance in the group taking metformin.


Klein said there were no serious side effects in the treatment group, and the drug was generally well-tolerated.


"For people who need these medicines and start to gain weight, this study suggests we can stop the weight gain," said Hirsch.


However, both Klein and Hirsch said that larger studies of longer duration should be conducted to confirm these findings.


In the meantime, Klein said he expects that physicians will try using metformin if they have patients who are gaining weight while taking atypical antipsychotics.

Hirsch said that if you or your child is taking these drugs, and you've done everything you can to prevent weight gain, including consulting a nutritionist and exercising, but weight gain continues, you should talk to your doctor about possibly trying metformin.

"We have a critical issue here. Certain kids need this type of medication and are helped by it, but we don't want to cause any additional problems. If you have a child who's gaining weight on this medicine, there may be a treatment that can stop the weight gain. It's certainly worth talking with your physician about it," said Hirsch.

More information
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 85 发表于: 2006-12-03
85、Eating slowly really does make people eat less
Fri Dec 1, 2006 9:57pm ET

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By Anne Harding

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A new study provides the first-ever scientific proof that if you eat slowly, you will eat less -- and you will enjoy the meal more.

Women consumed about 70 fewer calories when they were told to take their time eating a meal of pasta and sauce, compared to when they were instructed to eat it as quickly as possible. They also rated the meal as more pleasant when they ate slowly.

"They got more pleasure for (fewer) calories, and more satiety for (fewer) calories," Dr. Kathleen Melanson of the University of Rhode Island in Kingston told Reuters Health.


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Melanson decided to conduct the study when she learned there was no research to support the familiar claim that eating slowly reduces appetite.

She and her colleagues had 30 young women eat a meal of ditalini with tomato and vegetable sauce, topped with Parmesan cheese, under two different conditions. Before each meal, the women had eaten a standard 400-calorie breakfast, and then fasted for four hours.

At one visit to the lab, study participants were given a large spoon and told not to pause between bites and to eat as quickly as possible. At the other, participants ate with a small spoon, which they put down after each bite, and were told to take small bites and chew each bite 15 to 20 times.

When eating quickly, the women took in an average of 646 calories in nine minutes. But when they slowed down, they consumed 579 calories in 29 minutes, according to their report, presented at the annual meeting of the North American Association for the Study of Obesity

The women felt fuller and more satisfied immediately after they ate the meal and an hour later when they had consumed it slowly, Melanson and her colleagues found.

Eating slowly may indeed promote weight loss, or help people maintain a healthy weight, Melanson noted, given that someone who ate three leisurely meals might consume 210 fewer calories a day than someone who wolfed those meals down.
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只看该作者 86 发表于: 2006-12-03
86、 English smoking ban to begin July 1 By DAVID STRINGER, Associated Press Writer
Thu Nov 30, 11:34 PM ET



LONDON - A ban on smoking in movie theaters, shopping malls, pubs and other public places in England will take effect July 1, the government said Friday.

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Prime Minister     Tony Blair has said the ban is aimed at aiding Britain's smokers to quit and part of a wider drive to improve public health. Government statistics compiled in 2004 found around one in four adult Britons smokes regularly.

The measure extends England's no smoking law to public places such as cinemas, offices, factories.

A similar ban will take effect in Wales on April 2.

Pub landlords and pro-smoker groups have all expressed concerns about the law ― fearing a negative impact on business and the ebbing away of civil liberties.

"Thousands of people's lives will be saved and the health of thousands more protected" by the ban, said Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt. "Smokefree legislation will protect everyone from the harm of secondhand smoke ... and relaxing and will provide a more supportive environment for smokers who wish to give up."

In March, Scotland became the first British nation to ban smoking in public places, with businesses warned that failure to prevent smoking on their premises would lead to $350 fines. Individuals can be fined $87.

Some workplaces, including adult care homes, hospices, offshore installations and submarines, are exempt from the ban. Smoking is also allowed in police detention or interview rooms and in designated hotel bedrooms, but cinemas, offices, factories and shopping malls are all covered by the law.

Similar rules will apply in England and Wales.

Several American states and cities, Scotland, Ireland, Finland, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, Spain, and Sweden have all restricted smoking in pubs, cafes, offices and other public places in recent years.
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只看该作者 87 发表于: 2006-12-03
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FDA, lawmaker clash over antibiotic Thu Nov 30, 8:12 PM ET



WASHINGTON -     President Bush's choice to head the     Food and Drug Administration is refusing to give Congress all the information it seeks about a controversial antibiotic, setting up further confrontations with a Republican senator blocking his nomination.

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The agency's acting chief, Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, said full disclosure of the information about Ketek could have a chilling effect on the FDA's ability to be an independent and objective evaluator of drug safety and other issues.

The statement came in a written response to questions by Sen. Charles Grassley (news, bio, voting record), R-Iowa. Grassley is blocking Senate confirmation of von Eschenbach while he investigates the FDA's handling of Ketek, which has been linked to severe liver problems and several deaths.

"Selectively providing documents and access to executive agency officials pursuant to a congressional subpoena cannot constitute compliance," Grassley wrote Health and Human Services Secretary     Mike Leavitt on Wednesday.

The letter was released Thursday; the FDA is part of HHS.

Von Eschenbach wrote that "the disclosure of information that might relate to any open investigation in response to congressional inquiries poses an inherent threat to the integrity of the executive branch's enforcement and litigation functions."

On Thursday, FDA spokeswoman Kristen Neese said the agency had worked since April to provide Grassley's staff "access to as much data and as many agency personnel as possible, while remaining responsible stewards of the extraordinarily sensitive information we handle."

Grassley said he would continue to block von Eschenbach's confirmation due to "resistance from the FDA and the     Department of Health and Human Services to congressional oversight."

"The actions and words of this nominee display a misunderstanding of congressional oversight of the executive branch of government," Grassley said.

Ketek is made by the French pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Aventis SA.
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只看该作者 88 发表于: 2006-12-03
88、 Govt. fights morning-after pill subpoena Thu Nov 30, 8:08 PM ET



WASHINGTON - A reproductive rights group is on a "fishing expedition" and should be denied access to White House e-mails and other documents it seek as part of a lawsuit promoting unfettered access to the morning-after pill, the Justice Department said Thursday.

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The Center for Reproductive Rights subpoenaed the White House in mid-November as part of its lawsuit against the     Food and Drug Administration. The group sued seeking to lift all age restrictions on nonprescription sales of the Plan B emergency contraceptive pills. It wants the White House documents to determine whether it interfered with the FDA's handling of a request by manufacturer Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc. to allow unrestricted, over-the-counter sales of the pills.

In a Thursday letter, Justice Department attorney John R. Tyler told the Center it hadn't demonstrated the adequate need required to gain access to White House documents.

"Plaintiffs have not met this heightened standard, and the subpoena is a fishing expedition to probe the internal processes of the White House," Tyler wrote.

The Center will continue to pursue the lawsuit and compel the White House to provide the documents it wants, spokeswoman Dionne Scott said.

The Center's lawsuit hit a snag Nov. 21 when a judge issued a stay that keeps the FDA from having to turn over further agency documents. Scott said the stay doesn't apply to the White House subpoena; Tyler said the stay, until lifted, made it "inappropriate" for Center lawyers to pursue the subpoena.

In August, the FDA said it would let women 18 and older buy Plan B without a prescription, but younger women would still need a doctor's note. The restricted over-the-counter sales began in November.

The morning-after pill is a high dose of the most common ingredient in regular birth control pills. When taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex, the two-pill series can lower the risk of pregnancy by up to 89 percent.

___

On the Net:

Center for Reproductive Rights: http://www.crlp.org/
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只看该作者 89 发表于: 2006-12-03
89、Groundwater polluted in 9 out of 10 Chinese cities
Sat Dec 2, 2006 12:19am ET

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BEIJING (Reuters) - Underground water reserves in around 9 out of every 10 Chinese cities are polluted or over-exploited, and could take hundreds of years to recover, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Saturday.

In coastal areas overuse of reservoirs is allowing saline seawater to seep into and contaminate freshwater, while underground pressure changes caused by depleted reserves are also causing massive subsidence nationwide.

China has limited water resources, less than one third of the global per capita average and falling. Groundwater is crucial because it provides up to 70 percent of drinking water.

"Groundwater is now contaminated in about 90 percent of the nation's cities," Xinhua quoted Zhang Lijun, deputy director of the State Environmental Protection Administration saying.


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Years of promoting economic growth at almost any cost have taken their toll on China's environment, although growing rural discontent caused by dirty water and other pollution has pushed Beijing to promote cleaner growth.

But because some groundwater aquifers are up to 20,000 years old -- and many around the capital Beijing hold water from 1,000 years ago -- China cannot afford to put off pollution control.

"If polluted, surface waters can soon clean itself," Xinhua quoted water expert Ma Jun saying. "But groundwater needs an unimaginable length of time to become clean. Prevention is all we can do."

Subsidence could also become a major economic headache.

Among the worst-hit cities are the finance hub Shanghai, and Tianjin port, which have sunk over two meters since the early 1900s, according to a Ministry of Land and Resources survey.
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