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Aging:

News Articles on Aging, Back Pain, Age Related Disease, Eldercare, Healthy Aging

  • Obama declares H1N1 emergency
    Jenny Decker RN
    Oct 24th, 2009

    In an email declaration, President Obama has declared an H1N1 emergency. This national emergency is not in response to anything new with the H1N1 situation. However, to provide individual hospitals with the needed tools they need to handle overload problems, this was a critical step in caring for the nation’s citizens, writes Reuters.

  • Study May Uncover New Cause of Multiple Sclerosis
    Deborah Mitchell
    Oct 24th, 2009

    The cause of multiple sclerosis, a chronic, often debilitating disease that attacks the central nervous system, has puzzled doctors for decades. Now neurologists at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York are embarking on research that may introduce an entirely new hypothesis as to what causes the disease.

  • GERD drugs lead to weight gain
    Kathleen Blanchard RN
    Oct 24th, 2009

    Long term use of popular drugs to treat GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease), seem to lead to weight gain. The study is the first to investigate the effect of GERD drugs on body weight, and show that patients taking the popular reflux drugs should be encouraged to take extra care not to overeat and manage weight.

  • Mumps Outbreak Hits More than 70 in New York, New Jersey
    Deborah Mitchell
    Oct 23rd, 2009

    Remember mumps? Baby boomers may remember getting the childhood disease or getting the vaccine as a young child. Now the New York Department of Health has confirmed an outbreak of about 57 confirmed or probable cases of mumps, which have been reported since August 21 in Brooklyn. Across the border, residents in the New Jersey township of Lakewood are reporting about 15 to 30 cases of their own.

  • Are We Overdiagnosing, Overtreating Breast and Prostate Cancer?
    Deborah Mitchell
    Oct 21st, 2009

    Cancer experts say it is time to reevaluate current screening efforts for breast and prostate cancer.

  • Locked-In Syndrome Explained
    Denise Reynolds RD
    Oct 21st, 2009

    Locked-in syndrome is a rare condition in which a patient is aware and awake, but cannot move or communicate due to complete paralysis of nearly all voluntary muscles in the body. In French, the condition is described as “maladie de l’emmure vivant”, literally translated as walled-in alive disease.

  • Enzyme May Lead to ALS Treatment
    Denise Reynolds RD
    Oct 20th, 2009

    A drug similar to one now used to treat sepsis, an illness in which the bloodstream is overwhelmed with bacteria, holds promise as a treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, better known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease, per research published online in the October 19th Journal of Clinical Investigation.

  • H1N1 Outbreak at Air Force Academy Provides Virus Insights
    Kathleen Blanchard RN
    Oct 20th, 2009

    Scientists have gained insights about controlling H1N1 flu spread from a major outbreak of swine flu that occurred June 2009 at the U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA). They found that the H1N1 virus persists after symptoms of swine flu have disappeared, though questions remain about how long it can spread.

  • New FRAX Report for World Osteoporosis Day
    Deborah Mitchell
    Oct 19th, 2009

    In recognition of World Osteoporosis Day and the millions of women and men who have osteoporosis or who are at risk of the disease, the International Osteoporosis Foundation is issuing a new report on FRAX®. The FRAX was developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and stands for “Fracture Risk Assessment Tool.”

  • Scientists Show Cancer Can Pass from Mother to Infant
    Deborah Mitchell
    Oct 19th, 2009

    Researchers say they have determined without a doubt that in rare cases, cancer can be transmitted from a mother to her infant in the womb. The report comes after a team of scientists at the Institute of Cancer Research conducted a thorough investigation of a case in which a 28-year-old mother passed along cancer to her infant daughter.

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