Medicine Information - September 6, 2008

Too Little, Too Much Sleep Linked To Stroke Risk In Older Women

July 18, 2008 - Topics stroke, sleep, women, disease and research
Older women who either sleep too much or too little are at a greater risk of suffering from stroke, a new study shows. Researchers found that habitual sleep patterns in postmenopausal women could be important in determining the risk of ischemic stroke.

Researchers from Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City studied 93,676 postmenopausal women and found that those who regularly slept nine hours or more were 70 percent more likely to have an ischemic stroke, compared with women who slept seven hours a night

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Clinton Foundation Strikes Deal With Drug Makers To Lower Malaria Medicine

July 17, 2008 - Topics malaria, medicine, disease, flu and global
The Clinton Foundation has forged a deal with six drug makers to sell anti-malaria medicine at a fixed lower price to make it globally affordable to poor patients suffering the disease.

The charity formed by former U.S. President Bill Clinton announced the deal Thursday with two Chinese suppliers of artemisinin and four Indian firms that process the anti-malaria drug ingredient into finished products

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Indian Doctors Perform Six-Hour Surgery To Extract Iron Bar Embedded In Man

July 17, 2008 - Topics surgery, exercise, hospital, medicine and impact
A 23-year-old man from New Delhi who was admitted to an Indian hospital after a five-feet-long iron rod went through his chest has survived the accident.

Calling it the "rarest of the rare surgeries," doctors of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) saved the life of a young executive, Supratim Dutta, whose chest, lungs, stomach and liver were pierced by an iron bar

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U.S., Japan, France Top Survival Rates For 4 Types Of Cancer

July 17, 2008 - Topics cancer, breast cancer, hygiene, study and medicine
An international study, the Concord Report, comparing cancer survival rates in 31 nations for four types of cancer, shows that the U.S. topped survival rates for breast and prostate cancer, while for colorectal cancer, Japan led the men's category and France the women's category.

Canada ranked high in the four categories, indicating the good access rate of Canadian cancer patients to quality health care

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Preemies More Likely To Have Medical And Social Disabilities In Adulthood

July 16, 2008 - Topics disabilities, epilepsy, study, impair and disorder
Children born prematurely are more likely to have medical and social disabilities in adulthood, new research says. The factors can hinder the preemies from getting a well-paid job and starting a family, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Over the last four decades, the advancement in medical science has led to better survival in premature babies but studies suggest that it may come at the cost of disabilities and hurdles in adult life

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