From the monthly archives:

August 2010

Diabetes Can Cause A Sugar Coating That Smothers Body’s Immune Defences, Researchers Find

August 24, 2010 Diabetes Research

Research led by the Warwick Medical School at the University of Warwick has found that unhealthy glucose levels in patients with diabetes can cause significantly more problems for the body than just the well-known symptoms of the disease such as kidney damage and circulation problems. The raised glucose can also form what can be described as a sugar coating that can effectively smother and block the mechanisms our bodies use to detect and fight bacterial and fungal infections.

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Dogs May Not Be’ Man’s Best Friend’ During Hay Fever Season

August 24, 2010 Asthma Research

Ragweed allergy season can be even more miserable for those with dog, cat or dust mite allergies, according to new research. These year-round allergies appear to “pre-prime” the immune system so symptoms hit harder, according to a study recently published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, the scientific journal of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI).

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Healthy Blood Vessels May Prevent Fat Growth

August 19, 2010 News & Research

The cells lining blood vessels are known to be important for maintaining health, but researchers at the Indiana University School of Medicine believe these cells may perform an unsuspected task – controlling the development of fat cells.

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Modest Gain In Visceral Fat Causes Dysfunction Of Blood Vessel Lining In Lean, Healthy Humans

August 19, 2010 Cardiovascular Research

When lean healthy young adults gained about 9 pounds, the functioning of their blood vessel lining became impaired — but shedding the weight restored proper functioning, according to a Mayo Clinic research report. The finding is important because this vessel disorder, known as endothelial dysfunction, is a predictor of heart attacks and stroke, and the effects of modest weight gain on the disorder were not previously known.

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Even Modest Weight Gain Can Harm Blood Vessels, Researchers Find

August 19, 2010 News & Research

Mayo Clinic researchers found that healthy young people who put on as little as 9 pounds of fat, specifically in the abdomen, are at risk for developing endothelial cell dysfunction. Endothelial cells line the blood vessels and control the ability of the vessels to expand and contract.

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Customer Grateful After Taking Vital Cell

August 18, 2010 Energy and Circulation

I was sure that I was going to die with congestive heart failure, when I started taking VitalCell. Within about 10 to 14 days I was a different person. My beautiful wife was stunned at the quick turn around.

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Sports Brain Trauma May Cause Disease Mimicking ALS, Researchers Find

August 18, 2010 Cognitive Function

New research by the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides the first pathological evidence that repetitive head trauma experienced in collision sports is associated with motor neuron disease, a neurological condition that affects voluntary muscle movements.

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Vitamin D May Treat Or Prevent Allergy To Common Mold

August 18, 2010 Asthma Research

Research conducted by Dr. Jay Kolls, Professor and Chair of Genetics at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, and colleagues, has found that vitamin D may be an effective therapeutic agent to treat or prevent allergy to a common mold that can complicate asthma and frequently affects patients with Cystic Fibrosis.

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Women With Osteoporosis Suffer More If They Have Previously Broken a Bone, Say Scientists

August 18, 2010 Diabetes Research

Osteoporosis is more common in women who have fractured bones when they were younger — and they experience a similar loss in health-related quality of life as those with arthritis, lung disease, diabetes and other chronic diseases.

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Men Told To Watch Their Step: Consequences Of Failing To Treat Osteoporosis

August 18, 2010 News & Research

Leading study author, Dr Jackie Center says: “While women are initially twice as likely as men to have a fracture, once the first break occurs, the risk of a second substantially increases and the protective effects of being male disappear altogether.”

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Make Or Break Time For Osteoporosis Treatment

August 18, 2010 News & Research

Women who do not comply with treatment instructions for osteoporosis or who do not respond to treatment are more likely to suffer further fractures, which seriously affects their quality of life. There is an urgent need to provide support to these patients and address their issues when new therapies are assessed and new treatment guidelines drawn up, according to lead researcher Professor Cyrus Cooper from the MRC Epidemiology Resource Centre, University of Southampton, in the UK.

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Brain May Age Faster In People Whose Hearts Pump Less Blood

August 17, 2010 Cardiovascular Research

Keep your heart healthy and you may slow down the aging of your brain, according to a new study reported in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association. In the study, people whose hearts pumped less blood had brains that appeared older than the brains of those whose hearts pumped more blood.

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