• Tracker kept the lights on – Thank you Boyce and Paul

    Updated: 2011-04-29 20:55:09
    Indulge me by permitting, first, a sort of house-ad note of thanks to regular medical tracker Paul Raeburn, and to the former Knight Fellowships director Boyce Rensberger – who thunk up this tracker site six years or more ago – for pitching in and filing a pile of thoughtful posts this week so I could [...]

  • AP, NYTimes: Tornado outbreak leaves experts agape. They cannot quite explain it either.

    Updated: 2011-04-29 20:38:50
    I sat mesmerized this morning by some of the video of the tornadoes that pummeled so much of the nation’s south and nearby regions this week. A fabulous and terrifying collection of mostly-amateur and local TV show videos is at Al.com, apparently the website for the Birmingham News, that Christine Kneidinger compiled. Sit down, watch, [...]

  • Wall St. Journal: Smart phones as sociobiological data loggers

    Updated: 2011-04-29 20:06:51
    This is a little out of date, but as I’ve been off for a few days, all the better for having stuck in my mind for awhile. At the Wall Street Journal on April 23 Robert Lee Hotz did what he does often and very well: Flesh out a news item by digging up a [...]

  • FDA looks to improve design and cleaning instructions for reusable medical devices

    Updated: 2011-04-29 16:58:00
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today announced steps to help reduce the risk of exposure to improperly reprocessed devices that can lead to the transmission of disease.

  • Payment Rates May Affect Breast Cancer Treatment

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Title: Payment Rates May Affect Breast Cancer TreatmentCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/28/2011 4:06:00 PMLast Editorial Review: 4/29/2011

  • Monkey See, Monkey Remember

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Title: Monkey See, Monkey RememberCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/28/2011 4:06:00 PMLast Editorial Review: 4/29/2011

  • Injuries Among Older Workers on the Rise: CDC

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Title: Injuries Among Older Workers on the Rise: CDCCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/28/2011 4:06:00 PMLast Editorial Review: 4/29/2011

  • Health Tip: Turn Baby’s Head to Prevent Flat Spots

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Title: Health Tip: Turn Baby’s Head to Prevent Flat SpotsCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/29/2011 8:05:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 4/29/2011

  • FDA Panel Backs 2 Hepatitis C Drugs

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Government advisors backed two new drugs: telaprevir and boceprivir.

  • FDA Approves Zytiga for Late-Stage Prostate Cancer

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved Zytiga (abiraterone acetate) in combination with prednisone (a steroid) to treat patients with late-stage (metastatic) castration-resistant prostate cancer who have received prior docetaxel (chemotherapy).

  • Drugs for Bone Loss May Also Help the Heart

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Compared to Lipitor alone, a new study shows that the first-generation bisphosphonate, Didronel, in combination with the cholesterol drug Lipitor, reduced abdominal aortic plaques by about 12% in people with high cholesterol.

  • Bone Drug Plus Statin Better at Fighting Plaque in Aorta: Study

    Updated: 2011-04-29 08:00:00
    Title: Bone Drug Plus Statin Better at Fighting Plaque in Aorta: StudyCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/28/2011 6:06:00 PMLast Editorial Review: 4/29/2011

  • Royal wedding, part II

    Updated: 2011-04-28 20:00:30
    What bloody can of worms have I opened by posting on The Wedding? Now comes Faye Flam at The Philadelphia Inquirer with a nicely reported story on royal families and inbreeding. It includes this insightful analysis of the wedding, which I trust we will not hear from Katie Couric: “It can’t hurt for William to be [...]

  • CBC: Canadian science writers protest alleged muzzling of scientists

    Updated: 2011-04-28 19:49:25
    Kristina Miller, a scientist at the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans, was the lead author of a January 14, 2011 article in Science that suggested that viral infections may be linked to higher salmon mortality. But when the study came out, the government did not allow anyone to interview Miller, “citing a possible conflict of [...]

  • More on Guantanamo: Psychologists under fire

    Updated: 2011-04-28 19:18:16
    Yesterday, I argued that science writers had missed a good bet by (mostly) not covering a study concluding that doctors at Guantanamo had failed to inquire about, or document, potential abuse of detainees. Today, The New York Times and a scattering of others covered a story about legal action being taken against psychologists alleged to have [...]

  • City birds have bigger brains, or so one study claims

    Updated: 2011-04-28 16:46:28
    One should never put too much credence in studies that claim to show a relationship between brain size, even when calculated in proportion to body size, and any specific behaviors. But, with that caveat out of the way, we note a study by researchers in Sweden and Spain who looked at relative brain sizes among [...]

  • NPR blog: You gotta hear the superb lyrebird

    Updated: 2011-04-28 16:46:12
    The ever inventive Robert Krulwich is one of the best science explainers around, especially on broadcast media. But he also blogs at NPR online under the title “Krulwich Wonders: An NPR sciencey blog.” He posted one a couple of days ago on the astonishing mimicry of an Australian species called the superb lyrebird (illustration), specifically one [...]

  • Tracking the Royal Wedding

    Updated: 2011-04-28 14:09:22
    The Tracker would be remiss if it ignored the wedding of the century. Fortunately, we are able to take note of this blessed event without actually reading gigabytes of copy, thanks to Ed Yong, of Not Exactly Rocket Science, who has rewritten all of this week’s posts as wedding tie-ins. For example: Just as Will and Kate [...]

  • Tell your story to help get asthma taken seriously

    Updated: 2011-04-27 02:00:00
    World Asthma Day is imminent and we need all of our friends, members and supporters to help us put asthma on the map. This year, we want to show everyone what living with asthma is like. The highs. The lows. The frustrations and, yes, the tragedies.

  • Psychological Problems for Obesity

    Updated: 2011-04-26 01:00:17
    It is known that obesity favors the development of cancer, diabetes, hypertension, heart attacks and brain, sleep disorders and tear on joints, but not always talk about the adverse consequences that the emotional health and self-esteem of the individual. According to reports issued by the World Health Organization, obesity is one of the top 10 [...]

  • What You Need To Know About Kent Holtorf Quack

    Updated: 2011-04-25 04:14:17
    People from all walks of life have at one point experienced in their lives what it feels to know something they know is really going on and sometimes even if a lot of professional doctors tell you that nothing is wrong, only you yourself can say that something really weird is happening inside your body. [...]

  • Anthistamine and Allergy: Act and Characteristics

    Updated: 2011-04-23 01:00:23
    Antihistamines are useful for treating and preventing any of the disorders described in the posting before, since they act to histamine in the following ways: - Prevent its production. - Accelerate its destruction. - Prevent it from attaching to the receptors. On the other hand, it is necessary to take into account that these drugs [...]

  • NHS reforms - what do we know?

    Updated: 2011-04-21 02:00:00
    It?s been a breathless couple of weeks, and I have not been keeping up with my blog, for which I feel a little guilty. The NHS reforms were paused to allow ministers to listen and reflect on the considerable anxiety they have caused.

  • Natural Allergy Remedies

    Updated: 2011-04-19 04:20:30

  • Anthistamine and Allergy: Diagnosis and Administration

    Updated: 2011-04-19 01:00:42
    Diagnosis To diagnose allergies the patient may be subjected to one or more of the following clinical studies: Measurement of immunoglobulin E. Blood test that reveals the total amount of the antibody in the body when in contact with an allergen. Skin tests. Consist of applying in the forearm or back different substances that can [...]

  • Sinus Infection Medication

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:18
    Sinus infection or sinusitis is inflammation of the sinuses. Sinuses are the hollow cavities in the bones around the nose. When these sinuses get inflamed because of some viral or fungal infection, it results in blockage of air or mucus inside, which causes lot of pain and discomfort, often known as a sinus attack. Sinus [...]

  • Sinus Infections

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:17
    Sinus infection, also known as sinusitis, is an infection that affects the sinuses in the body. Sinuses are the hollow spaces or cavities near the bones in the skull around the nose. Sinusitis is the swelling of these sinuses because of some allergic or immune reaction that causes the sinuses to be blocked. This blockage [...]

  • Muscle Spasms

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:16
    Muscles are made up of elastic fibers that not only give general shape to the body, but also contract to move its various parts. The body gets its frame and shape from the skeleton muscles. These are voluntary muscles. The contraction of these muscles is consciously determined by the living being. In other words, living [...]

  • Pulled Muscles

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:15
    A human body gets its shape and all possible flex movements due to the presence of muscles. The contraction of the muscles voluntarily helps in moving the legs or hands while walking, or to turn the neck when somebody calls from behind. The muscles are made up of elastic fibers that make these movements possible. [...]

  • Build Muscles

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:15
    The human body consists of various systems performing a multitude of functions. Every action is determined and stimulated as per the nervous system. Similarly, the actions to move a limb or any other body part are conditioned by the muscular system. Muscle, known for its elasticity, contracts to help the various body movements. Not only [...]

  • Muscles

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:14
    The human body is a complex system. It consists of cells or small units that are organized to function together. Every body function is coordinated by the nerve cells in the brain, whether it is movement of the eyes or the heartbeat. In the body, Muscles are one of the most important constituents. They account [...]

  • Upper Back Pain

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:13
    Upper back pains are not as common as lower back pains; they also do not have the host of causes that trigger lower back pain. But whenever they occur, they are equally painful in nature. Mainly two causes of upper back pain have been identified: muscular irritation in the myofascial region, a region comprising of [...]

  • Back Pain Relief

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:12
    Different types of back pains have different types of causes, and to gain some relief, the cause rather than the symptom should be addressed. People suffering from back pain are often suggested by friends and relatives to have complete bed rest, which is a misconception. Mere bed rest would not be sufficient to alleviate back [...]

  • Lower Back Pain

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:11
    The back is made up of several different bones, called vertebrae, which are stacked upon each other to form a strong column that supports the upper portion of the body. Bones near neck are called cervical vertebrae, those adjacent to chest are called thoracic vertebrae, those around the lower back are called lumbar vertebrae, and [...]

  • Back Pain

    Updated: 2011-04-18 02:52:10
    Statistics reveal that up to 85% of all people have back pain at any given time in their lives. Nearly 2% of all American workers get compensated for back-pain-related disabilities. Back pain can occur for several reasons like injury to the muscles on account of their overuse or otherwise, strains, or injury to the ligaments’ [...]

  • Antihistamine and Allergy: Risk Factors

    Updated: 2011-04-16 01:00:22
    The environment we are exposed contains both harmless and harmful elements, which can enter the body through the respiratory tract, gastrointestinal tract, skin and mucous membranes, and when this happens, the immune system (the one who defends us from external aggression) is activated and identifies whether the substances that enter the body are harmful or [...]

  • Oral Hygiene During Pregnancy

    Updated: 2011-04-12 01:00:02
    There are many reasons why the oral health of pregnant women may suffer damage, among them is that during pregnancy the baby needs nutrients such as calcium for bone formation, which will take her mother’s reserves, which inevitably cause the weakening of the teeth of her and her loss. On the other hand, hormones that [...]

  • Cord Blood and the CD34+ Stem Cells as the Major Component from Blood Transplantation Procedure

    Updated: 2011-04-11 09:20:22
    There are many factors that may interrupt your life. One of them is disease. Since a long time ago, diseases have become the natural opponent of human. When human grows and develops his own world, any type of disease also grows its ability. Luckily, the human is able to create better and newer cure for [...]

  • Oral Hygiene: Great Allies

    Updated: 2011-04-09 01:00:27
    To preserve free gum infections and teeth white and bright is very important since the children acquire the habit of practicing oral hygiene several times a day. Although babies mouth washes are using gauze when the first pieces spring should begin to wash them daily after meals and at first may be appealed to an [...]

  • Research brings new treatment hope

    Updated: 2011-04-06 02:00:00
    I joined a small group of our supporters on a visit to the MRC/Asthma UK Centre for Allergic Mechanisms in Asthma yesterday. It was good to hear about the progress being made.

  • Oral Hygiene

    Updated: 2011-04-05 01:00:25
    The mouth, like the rest of the body, is inhabited by microorganisms, they may represent a serious threat to oral health if it is not proper hygiene, since along with the remains of food (mainly those containing sugar) result to the formation of compounds that can affect your gums and teeth are described below: Plaque. [...]

  • It?s chaos over NHS reforms

    Updated: 2011-04-04 02:00:00
    According to today?s papers, the Government is about to announce a pause in its proposed reforms to the NHS in England to consider how to respond to the criticism they have received from organisations representing doctors, managers and patients.

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