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 Back to Eurekalert Medical and Health News Archives



Eurekalert Medical and Health News: 02-05-2005

Weight-loss and exercise study compares center- and home-based programs
A University of Central Florida study seeks to find out whether women who follow weight-loss and exercise programs at home fare as well as those who go to a center to work out and meet with counselors. The study is funded by a five-year, $2 million grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research at the National Institutes of Health.

Methamphtetamine's ruinous effects on children documented in Midwest study
In its destructive effect on rural families and their children, methamphetamine may be in a class of its own, based on the first study from an ongoing research project in seven Central Illinois counties, conducted by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. If the children of alcoholics often find themselves in a "thunderstorm" of family problems, then the drug methamphetamine brings a "tornado" by comparison.

Women's health, tissue regeneration is focus of Illinois & Carle Hospital initiative
Women's health and human-tissue regeneration are the focus of an agreement announced Feb. 4 between the Institute for Genomic Biology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana. The accord is a marriage of basic and clinical research in little-studied areas that could lead to new treatment approaches, said university and hospital officials.

Tiny superconductors withstand stronger magnetic fields
Ultrathin superconducting wires can withstand stronger magnetic fields than larger wires made from the same material, researchers now report. This finding may be useful for technologies that employ superconducting magnets, such as magnetic resonance imaging.

BioMed Central welcomes the new National Institutes of Health public access policy
BioMed Central welcomes the announcement of the US National Institutes of Health's (NIH) new public access policy. The NIH calls on all of its grantees to deposit articles resulting from their NIH-funded research in the National Library of Medicine's PubMed Central and make them freely available within 12 months.

Non-lethal weapons focus of research study
Injuries produced by law enforcement use of so-called non-lethal weapons will be the focus of a study at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, funded by a $104,071 grant from the National Institute of Justice.

Finland tops environmental scorecard at World Economic Forum in Davos
Finland ranks first in the world in environmental sustainability out of 146 countries according to the latest Environmental Sustainability Index (ESI) produced by a team of environmental experts at Yale and Columbia Universities.

Listening to fear: Helping kids cope, from nightmares to the nightly news
From the monster under the bed to the bullying upperclassman, a new book by Steven Marans of the Yale School of Medicine Child Study Center provides coping strategies for parents on these and other fears children and adolescents face.

Premature births from inflammation and infection rapidly detected by proteomics technology
A combination of four proteins that result from inflammation and infection and lead to premature birth can be rapidly and accurately detected in the amniotic fluid of pregnant women using proteomics technology, Yale researchers report in two studies in the February issue of British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Yale opens Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS (CIRA) in India
On a recent trip to India, Yale President Richard C. Levin and a delegation of Yale officials formally opened a new office for Yale's Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS (CIRA) housed at YRG Care, a non-profit organization based in Chennai.

Varicella vaccine effective on chicken pox; Impact on herpes zoster unclear
The varicella vaccine is almost 90 percent effective against chickenpox, but its impact on herpes zoster (shingles) is unknown and needs wider surveillance, Yale School of Medicine researchers write in today's New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) perspective section.

Infectious agent linked to mad cow disease found in organs other than the brain
Prions, infectious proteins associated with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or Mad Cow Disease, were previously thought to accumulate mainly in the brain, but Yale and University of Zurich researchers report in Science that other organs can also become infected.

New surgical procedure could save millions
A new procedure that could save millions of dollars annually in medical costs - and result in much better patient outcomes and satisfaction - was performed for the first time in the world this week at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.

PET/MRI scans may help unravel mechanisms of prenatal drug damage
Scientists have demonstrated a new way to assess the potentially damaging effects of prenatal drug exposure--a technique that could also be used to monitor a fetus's response to therapeutic drugs--using sophisticated, noninvasive medical imaging tools, reports the February issue of the Society of Nuclear Medicine's Journal of Nuclear Medicine. Scientists used PET combined with MRI to track the uptake and distribution of trace amounts of cocaine in pregnant monkeys.

Six research units given the go-ahead
The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) is establishing six new Research Units in order to promote cooperation between outstanding scientists and researchers in innovative research projects.

New survey finds red dress symbol prompts women to take action to care for their hearts
The Heart Truth, a national awareness campaign for women about heart disease sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), will host the Red Dress Collection 2005 Fashion Show today at Olympus Fashion Week in New York City on National Wear Red Day. With 26 of America's most influential designers and a star-studded cast of celebrity models, the fashion show brings to life the Red Dress, the national symbol for women and heart disease awareness.

Drought reduces nitrogen-fixing in legumes
In drought conditions, the capacity for retaining carbon in legume nodules is limited and this may be the reason why there is a drop in nitrogen-fixing in legumes under these conditions.

Effects of autism reach beyond language, new research suggests
A new study suggests that people with autism may perform unusually well on some tests of visual processing. The researchers found that autistic people were less likely than others to have false memories about images they had seen earlier. The researchers had previously demonstrated this kind of effect with verbal material, but not with visual material.

Calit2 launches prize program to encourage bioinformatics research by UCSD undergraduates
A technology institute at UC San Diego handed out its first awards to honor undergraduate researchers in bioinformatics.

Not-for-profit publishers call NIH public access rule a missed opportunity
The final public NIH rule is wasteful of federal research dollars and a missed opportunity to take advantage of available technology and existing efforts, according to leading not-for-profit medical and scientific publishers. These publishers already have policies to provide public access. They proposed that NIH work with them to save money and avoid confusion, but the final rule fails to do so.

HIV vaccine trial breaks ground for future research
The results of the world's first phase 3 HIV vaccine efficacy trial are reported in the March 1 issue of the Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available online. Although the vaccine was ineffective in preventing HIV infection, the trial represents a landmark in the fight against HIV and offers the scientific community a foundation on which to build future trials.

Public interest advocates question NIH Enhanced Access policy
Public interest supporters of the NIH Enhanced Public Access Plan today declared the just-announced policy falls short of their expectations and long-standing recommendations. In a letter addressed to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Michael Leavitt, the Alliance for Taxpayer Access outlined its key concerns with the NIH plan.

Binghamton University launches microelectronics research center
With a $10 million competitively bid contract from the U.S. Display Consortium (USDC), Binghamton University, State University of New York, has established the Center for Advanced Microelectronics Manufacturing (CAMM).

University of Washington joins new Autism Treatment Network to provide better medical services
Six leading medical institutions, including the Autism Center at the University of Washington, are joining forces with physicians and parents to form the nonprofit Austism Treatment Network.

Full-body MRI shows promise for screening, but should stay in research area for now, study says
The use of full-body cardiovascular and tumor MRI to screen for disease in patients who do not have any suspicious symptoms is technically feasible, but for the present, full-body MRI screening should not be performed outside of a research setting due to the uncertainty of whether the benefits outweigh the risks, according to a new study by researchers from the University Hospital of Essen in Germany.

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