Medicine Information - December 4, 2008

China And U.S. Institute To Join Forces In Battling AIDS

August 29, 2005 - Topics aids, hiv, research, disease and africa

Yvonne Lee - All Headline News Staff Reporter

Baltimore, MD (AP) - Chinese health officials are partnering up with a U.S. institute to battle AIDS in a country that officials fear will see a tenfold increase in HIV infection over the next five years

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Researchers Find Little Success In Homeopathy

August 26, 2005 - Topics research and medicine
The clinical benefits attributed to homeopathic treatment are merely placebo effects, according to a report in The Lancet

In the current article, Dr. Matthias Egger, from the University of Berne in Switzerland, and associates searched 19 electronic databases covering the period from 1995 to 2003 to identify scientific trials of homeopathy, and matched them with trials in conventional medicine

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Pill Just As Effective As Surgery After Failed Pregnancy

August 25, 2005 - Topics pregnancy, surgery, cytotec, misoprostol and child
A test released Wednesday shows that the drug misoprostol is almost as effective as surgery for removing tissue that remains in the uterus after a failed pregnancy.

The drug, called Cytotec by manufacturers G.D. Searle and Pfizer Inc., has a success rate of around 85 percent, says Jun Zhang of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the chief author of the study

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FDA Approves Genetic Blood Testing

August 23, 2005 - Topics fda, genetic, blood, food and study
Third Wave Technologies Inc. wins U.S. approval Monday to market a genetic blood test that could help make certain medicines more personalized, allowing doctors to adjust drug dosages accordingly, and minimizes side effects.

The Food and Drug Administration says the Invader UGT1A1 Molecular Assay has so far only been shown to work with Pfizer Inc's colon cancer drug Camptosar, but future data could link it to other drugs

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Women Get Drunk Faster Than Men

August 21, 2005 - Topics men, women, sex, male and medicine
Simple observations in places like public bars or restaurants can suggest that women in general feel the effects of alcohol faster than men. But while most people argue that it is all about the difference of sizes between the two sexes, studies suggest it has more to do with body composition.

According to a study published in The New England Journal of Medicine, it found that in women levels of gastric alcohol dehydrogenase, a compound that breaks down alcohol, are on average nearly half what they are in men. It also found that the amount of alcohol metabolized after its first passage through a woman's liver and stomach is 23 percent of what it is in men

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