Research Information - October 13, 2008

Breast Milk Not as Beneficial to Baby Teeth as Cow Milk

October 4, 2005 - Topics baby, infant, breastfeed, babies and hygiene
New research tested in rats suggests breast milk causes more cavities in infants and toddlers than cow milk. Researchers from the University of Rochester Medical Center, also find that cola, sucrose and honey are the worst fluids for young teeth.

Researchers advise parents to stop feeding babies sugary liquids from bottles, or sweetening water with honey, thought to be good for dental health, or letting babies fall asleep on the nipple

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Mosquito-Born Disease Raising Fears In Asia

October 3, 2005 - Topics disease, asia, mosquito, vaccine and research
The dengue virus-carrying Aedes mosquito is adapting to urbanized human environments and traditional methods used in most Asian countries to control their breeding, making it more diffcult to control.

Dr. Duane Gubler, director at the Asia-Pacific Institute of Tropical Diseases in Hawaii says, "It's a global pandemic. It's quite clear that the disease...has evolved. There just is more dengue in the world

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Researchers Link Diet And Lung Cancer

October 3, 2005 - Topics cancer, research, lung cancer, diet and plant
New evidence suggests eating a diet rich in plant foods, such as beans and Soya, cuts the risk of lung cancer
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Two Australian Researchers Win Nobel Medicine Prize

October 3, 2005 - Topics research, australia, medicine, stress and disease
Two Australians wins the Nobel Prize for Medicine for revolutionary research on stomach ulcers. Their research invalidates conventional understanding they are caused by bacteria and can be cured with antibiotics.

The Nobel jury says Barry J. Marshall and J. Robin Warren "made the remarkable and unexpected discovery" in 1982 that gastritis and peptic ulcer disease are caused by the Helicobacter pylori bacterium. They had a tough time proving the theory

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Asia Scrambles To Contain Dengue Virus

October 3, 2005 - Topics asia, vaccine, research, global and fever
The dengue virus-carrying Aedes mosquito has adapted to urbanized human environments and traditional methods used in most Asian countries to control their breeding, making it more diffcult to control its spread.

"It's a global pandemic," says Dr. Duane Gubler, director at the Asia-Pacific Institute of Tropical Diseases in Hawaii. "It's quite clear that the disease...has evolved. There just is more dengue in the world

read more >>





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