Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: asthma + 0.19 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Prenatal Exposure to n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Protects ...
Medscape (subscription) - Jul 14, 2008
... vs the olive oil group was 0.43 (95% CI, 0.19 - 0.96). In the low, middle, and high fish intake groups, the HRs for all types of asthma were 0.13, 0.54, ...
Cytokinetics, Incorporated Reports Second Quarter 2008 Financial ...
CNNMoney.com - Jul 31, 2008
This represents a greater dose density (0.43 mg/m2/day) than on the previously studied dosing regimen of 4 mg/m2 or 0.19 mg/m2/day every 3 weeks. ...CYTK
Primary and Metastatic Lung Tumors in the Pediatric Population: A ...
RedOrbit, TX - Jul 16, 2008
Other nonspecific respiratory symptoms may be attributed initially to asthma or other inflammatory processes, resulting in a delay of diagnosis until only ...
Sciele Pharma, Inc. Reports Results for the Second Quarter of 2008
Genetic Engineering News (press release), NY - Jul 30, 2008
... and its Pediatrics products treat allergies, asthma, coughs and colds, and attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ...SCRX
Source: Google News

Outcome Measures of Efficacy Associated with a Web-Enabled Asthma Self-Management Programme: …
M Atherton - Disease Management and Health Outcomes, 2000 - diseasemanagement.adisonline.com
... Abstract Objective: To assess the efficacy of a World Wide Web?enabled asthma self-
management intervention on quality-of-life indicators among self-selected ...

A Web-based, Tailored Asthma Management Program for Urban, African-American High School Students -
CLM Joseph, E Peterson, S Havstad, CC Johnson, S … - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2007 - Am Thoracic Soc
... in terms of connecting and convincing. We developed a multimedia, web-based
asthma ... with access to generic asthma education web sites. ...

Outcome Measures of Efficacy Associated with a Web-Enabled Asthma Self-Management Programme
F from a Quasi-Experiment - Disease Management and Health Outcomes, 2000 - ingentaconnect.com
... Abstract Objective: To assess the efficacy of a World Wide Web?enabled asthma self-
management intervention on quality-of-life indicators among self-selected ...
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Bronchial response to methacholine in parents of asthmatic children -
I Bruderman - Chest, 1987 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... abstract/91/2/210 services can be found online on the World Wide Web at: The ... Asthma
0.19?0.06 0.13-0.25 4.7?2.1 123 3.7? 1.4 119 3.2?0.2 68 1.6?0.4 74 ...

Determinants of Different Dimensions of Disease Severity in Asthma and COPD* Pulmonary Function and … -
HAH Wijnhoven, DMW Kriegsman, AE Hesselink, BWJH … - Chest, 2001 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science ... poor for asthma (? = 0.10) and COPD (? =
0.19). Multivariately, in asthma, lower pulmonary function was associated ...

Incidence and prognosis of asthma to age 33
K Hinshaw - British Medical Journal, 1996 - Br Med Assoc
... is, threatened miscarriage) and the risk of asthma at age ... for which the odds ratio
was 0.40 (0.19 to 0.85 ... rss feeds for this page. Online poll. web surveys - Take ...
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… , Eosinophilia, and Cardiomyopathy Following Corticosteroid Withdrawal in Patients With Asthma -
ME Wechsler, E Garpestad, SR Flier, O Kocher, DA … - JAMA, 1998 - Am Med Assoc
... Eight adults (7 women and 1 man) with steroid-dependent asthma who received ... leukocytosis
(range, 14.5-27.6x10 9 /L) with eosinophilia (range, 0.19-0.71). ...

… Method on the Discrepancy between Judgments of Health Disorders People have and do not have: A Web -
J Baron, DA Asch, A Fagerlin, C Jepson, G … - Medical Decision Making, 2003 - mdm.sagepub.com
... Method Ninety-nine subjects completed a questionnaire on the World Wide Web. ...
Insomnia 22 37.3 3.2 2.1 0.09 Asthma 11 49.2 3.2 2.7 0.09 ...

Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae in Asthma* Effect of Clarithromycin -
M Kraft, GH Cassell, J Pak, RJ Martin - Chest, 2002 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science ... Fifty-five subjects with chronic,
stable asthma recruited from ... subjects (2.50 ? 0.16 to 2.69 ? 0.19 L, mean ...

How Should We Quantify Asthma Control?* A Proposal -
LP Boulet, V Boulet, J Milot - Chest, 2002 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science ... 0.14 for emotional function, and
5.63 ? 0.19 for environmental ... a new window], Figure 3. Asthma control score ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Blacks Face Much Higher Asthma Burden

 FRIDAY, July 22 (HealthDayNews) -- American urban blacks are many times more likely than their white counterparts to have an asthma-related medical emergency or to be hospitalized for asthma, researchers report.

According to a review of 152 adults and children in the greater Chicago area, blacks were 6.3 times more likely to visit the emergency room for asthma and 12.3 times more likely to have been hospitalized, when compared to whites.

Blacks also were more likely to have to limit their activities than whites due to asthma, although whites were slightly more likely to miss work or school one day per week because of asthma.

The findings appear in the July issue of the Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.

 

Nationwide estimates blame asthma for 478,000 hospitalizations and 100 million days of restricted activity annually. Direct medical expenditures associated with asthma total $9.4 billion annually while indirect expenditures, such as lost productivity, add another $4.6 billion.

"Uncontrolled asthma is not only placing an unmanageable burden on the emergency health-care system in our most impoverished areas, but it's impacting our workforce and our ability to educate the increasing number of asthmatic students in high risk neighborhoods," said lead author Dr. Evalyn N. Grant, who was with Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago during the study.

More information

The National Institutes of Health have more about asthma.

 
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Group B Strep Infection Poses Fatal Risk to Newborns

July 22, 2005 08:40:58 PM PST
By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, July 22 (HealthDay News) -- Women nearing the end of their pregnancy should know about -- and undergo -- a simple test that can end up saving the life of their newborn.

The test, a swab of the vagina and rectum, is looking for a single offender: a type of bacteria called Group B streptococcus, or GBS.

GBS is relatively common and can be found in about a quarter of pregnant women.

It's also the leading cause of sepsis and meningitis in newborns, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Before prevention methods became widely used, about 8,000 babies would contract the bacteria during birth, with one in 20 dying from the infection. Babies that survive, particularly those who have meningitis, may have long-term problems, such as hearing or vision loss or learning disabilities.

Detection of GBS has improved, thanks to new federal guidelines recommending universal screening of all pregnant women at 35 to 37 weeks of pregnancy.

But doctors still haven't agreed on the best way to treat a mother with a positive GBS reading, particularly regarding the use of antibiotics, said Dr. Craig Rubens, a physician with Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center in Seattle, and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington.

Said Janine Cory, a health communicator with the respiratory disease branch of the CDC: "I think it's important for women to not only be empowered and ask for the test, but also to understand why they need it."

A fetus can contract Group B strep by coming into contact with the bacteria either before or during birth, and signs of illness can occur within hours of birth. GBS is usually found around the vagina and rectum of a pregnant carrier.

During childbirth, the bacteria is transmitted to approximately half of all infants born to carriers, according to the National Institutes of Health, and nearly two of every 1,000 infants in the United States develop invasive infections.

Half of all infants who develop Group B strep meningitis experience long-term neurologic problems, including seizure disorders and mental retardation. About 5 percent of infected infants die, according to the March of Dimes.

The standard practice has been to treat mothers with antibiotics shortly before birth, Cory said. The medications usually are administered as a woman enters labor.

"There is a very regimented way to do the antibiotic," Cory noted. "There's a table for physicians to follow. There's management."

However, the antibiotic needs to be administered at least four hours prior to delivery if doctors want to be sure the bacteria have been killed off, Rubens explained. Some women in labor simply don't have that long.

"Sometimes they're going to deliver more rapidly than we can administer the antibiotic properly," he said. "It's really a logistical problem, because you can't predict how quickly a woman will deliver."

Researchers currently are looking into ways to get around that problem, either by treating a pregnant woman with antibiotics earlier in their term or by giving antibiotics to a newborn child at risk of contracting GBS.

"We need to understand the window of opportunity for delivering antibiotics to either the mother or her baby," Rubens said.

Another treatment possibility under investigation is the development of a GBS vaccine that could be administered to either pregnant women or women of childbearing age.

Rubens said there are a dozen different vaccines in various stages of development, including one that currently is in clinical trials.

"You give the vaccine to the mother, she develops antibodies that clear the bacteria and pass to the baby from the mother," Rubens added. "That way, if the baby is exposed to the bacteria, it has a way to fight back."

Researchers are also looking into ways to speed up screening for Group B strep. The current gold standard involves working up a culture, which can take 24 hours or more.

But many women still are coming into hospitals without having had the test, either because they haven't seen a pediatrician or because they are afraid of it, Cory pointed out.

"Women undergo a battery of tests during pregnancy," Cory said. "Doctors say, 'Oh, we have to poke, pinch, prod.' This is a very easy one, but they need to know that."

Scientists need to come up with a quick and easy test that can confirm the presence of GBS so antibiotic treatment can begin, Rubens stated.

"Rapid testing is still something that needs to be made technically easier," Rubens said. "Some of the newer techniques for rapid testing are not sensitive enough or are too technical. We need better rapid tests that are easier to perform."

More information

For more information on Group B strep and newborns, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

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