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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: healthday + 0.07 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Health Tip: Before You Take Medication
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
(HealthDay News) -- Drug reactions and interactions between different medications are common, so it's important to speak with your doctor before you take ...
For Psychiatrists, Talk Therapy Falling by Wayside
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA -
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New Test Diagnoses Anemia in Chronic Disease
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5 (HealthDay News) -- A new tool for diagnosing anemia related to chronic illness and diseases of iron overload has been developed by US researchers. ...
Commonly Used HIV Infectivity Rate Misses Risks
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5 (HealthDay News) -- A widely used HIV infectivity rate doesn't take into account multiple risk factors, say US researchers who reviewed published data. ...
Researchers Push Aggressive Cholesterol Control in Kids
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4 (HealthDay News) -- Programs to lower cholesterol from childhood on could lower rates of coronary artery disease and save lives, according to a review ...
Vitamin C Shows Promise as Cancer Treatment
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5 (HealthDay News) -- New research with mice suggests that intravenous doses of vitamin C could one day reduce the size of cancerous tumors in people. ...
Immigrant Children Less Likely to Exercise
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4 (HealthDay News) -- Immigrant children in the United States are less active and less likely to participate in sports than US-born children, says a federal ...
Injected Drug Approved for High Blood Pressure
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4 (HealthDay News) -- The US Food and Drug Administration has approved Cleviprex (clevidipine butyrate), an injected drug to treat high blood pressure. ...
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Many Cancer Patients Turn to Complementary Medicine
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 4, 2008
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Source: Google News

Toxic Nation Study Volunteers -
J Neumann, S Winterton, J Foulds, R Smith, J Lu - environmentaldefence.ca
... Environmental Defence encour- ages people to visit the Toxic Nation web site at
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-

Volontaires de l'?tude Une nation toxique -
R Bateman, N Tandberg, C Henkelman, MA Phare, K … - environmentaldefense.ca
Page 1. Page 2. Remerciements D?fense environnementale remercie
chaleureusement la Laidlaw Foundation gr?ce ? laquelle le projet ...
-

[PDF] WE'RE ON A MISSION. -
J Neumann, S Winterton, J Foulds, R Smith, J Lu, R … - environmentaldefence.ca
... Environmental Defence encour- ages people to visit the Toxic Nation web site at
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[PDF] THE ROLE OF LANGUAGE CODESWITCHING IN INCREASING ADVERTISING EFFECTIVENESS AMONG MEXICAN-AMERICAN … -
MM BISHOP - 2006 - dspace.uta.edu
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Dual anti-platelet only benefits established CV disease patients -
S Feature, A Hours - medicaltribune.net
... Use of Strategies to Open Occluded Coronary Arteries (GUSTO) criteria (p=0.07). ... is
the only mass breast screening program that has secure, web-based reporting ...
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Source: Google Scholar

Cell Transplants Hold Promise for Heart Attack Survivors

Studies in mice suggest they might prevent cardiac arrest.

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

(SOURCES: Michael Kotlikoff, V.M.D., Ph.D., Austin O. Hooey Dean, professor, Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.; Kenneth Chien, M.D., director, Massachusetts General Hospital Cardiovascular Research Center, Boston; Dec. 6, 2007, Nature )

THURSDAY, Dec. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers say they're moving closer to using transplanted cells to protect heart attack survivors from suffering sudden cardiac arrest.

Working with mice, scientists strengthened the heart's electrical system to prevent it from going haywire. "We're showing that the electrical risk can be reversed," said study co-author Dr. Michael Kotlikoff, a professor in the department of biomedical sciences at Cornell University.

It's still unclear, however, how long it may take before the research could be tested in humans.

At stake is the health of people who survive heart attacks. They face a higher risk of another life-threatening event known as cardiac arrest, which occurs when the electrical system in the heart loses its ability to properly control heartbeat.

The heart "goes into an irregular rhythm, stops functioning and stops pumping blood at all," Kotlikoff said.

The higher risk may have something to do with disruption in cells around areas of the heart that were damaged during a heart attack, said Dr. Kenneth Chien, director of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cardiovascular Research Center in Boston. He was not involved in the research.

According to the new study, previous transplantation of cells into human heart-attack survivors has had mixed results. So, Kotlikoff and colleagues from Germany and the United States tried a new approach by transplanting genetically engineered embryonic heart cells into the hearts of mice after they had heart attacks.

According to Kotlikoff, the cells become mature heart cells and produce a molecule that helps electrical impulses move between cells.

The new findings, which are published in the Dec. 6 issue of Nature, have now outlined the "mechanism underlying the reversal" of the risk of irregular heartbeat after a heart attack, Kotlikoff said.

Cell transplantation "increases the electrical conduction within the damaged or dead section of (heart) tissue," he said.

According to Kotlikoff, the next steps are to figure out whether the cells could provide protection in people and for how long.

Potentially, the cells could be delivered to the heart -- perhaps through a tube -- and prevent heart-attack survivors from having to get pacemakers, Kotlikoff said.

Chien called the study findings "a step in the right direction," but said the method's blend of gene and cell-based therapy could be troublesome. Federal regulators "are very stringent about gene therapy, let alone gene and cell therapy (together)," he said.

More information

There's more on cardiac arrest and heart attack at the American Heart Association.  

 
 
 
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