Posts

US Cancer Screening

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Maria Dalamagka  In the last decade, the general US population did not meet Healthy People 2010 (HP2010) goals for cancer screening except for colorectal cancer, according to results from a US survey published online December 27 in Frontiers in Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention . However, cancer survivors met goals for all cancer types except cervical cancer.   "There is a great need for increased cancer prevention efforts in the U.S., especially for screening as it is considered one of the most important preventive behaviors and helps decrease the burden of this disease on society in terms of quality of life, the number of lives lost and insurance costs," lead author Tainya C. Clarke, MPH, a research associate in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Florida, said in a news release.   "But despite this, our research has shown that adherence rates for cancer screenings have generally declined w...

Carotid Artery Stenting

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Maria Dalamagka  According to the authors, treatment options for patients with significant carotid atherosclerosis include carotid endarterectomy (CEA), carotid artery stenting (CAS), and medical therapy. This is an analysis of results from the Stenting and Angioplasty with Protection in Patients at High-Risk for Endarterectomy (SAPPHIRE) randomized trial, which examined patients at higher surgical risk to determine factors predictive of death or stroke within 30 days of CAS. A new study gives guidance on patient features that identify patients at high and low risk for stroke or death after   carotid artery stenting - CAS. Using a population of patients at high surgical risk undergoing stenting (the SAPPHIRE worldwide study), researchers identified variables that were independently associated with higher risk, including demographic, clinical history, and lesion anatomy features, with the aim of developing a bedside tool for risk prediction. "We developed and validated ...

Beautiful people

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Maria Dalamagka Despite the widely accepted ‘What is beautiful is good’ stereotype, our findings suggest that the beautiful strive for conformity rather than independence, and for self-promotion rather than tolerance,” writes a research team led by Lihi Segal-Caspi of the Open University of Israel. In other words, the positive traits we attribute to good-looking people are simply a matter of stereotyping. But this study, published in the journal Psychological Science, suggests the unusually attractive have a distinct set of values—and they’re not, well, pretty. The experiment featured 236 university students (mean age 29), all of whom completed detailed questionnaires designed to uncover their personality traits and deeply held values. Half the participants—118 women—were then videotaped for roughly one minute apiece as they walked around a table and read a weather forecast while looking into the camera. The other 118 (a mixed group, 59 percent female and 41 percent male) su...

Vision and Hearing Loss in Older Adults

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Maria Dalamagka Among 446 older adults (mean age, 79.9 years) screened, 3 measures of low-contrast visual acuity were significantly associated with moderate bilateral hearing loss in analyses controlling for age and comorbid conditions, report Marilyn E. Schneck, PhD, and colleagues at the Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute in San Francisco, California. "It is suggested that audiologists consider including a brief test of low contrast vision, such as low contrast acuity. Likewise, eye care practitioners should consider performing a screening test of hearing on their patients. Depending on the severity of the dual sensory loss, referral for rehabilitation may be called for," they write. Although most people can adapt well to moderate loss of either vision or hearing, dual sensory impairment can lead to significant decline in quality of life, said Dr. Schneck, a scientist at Smith-Kettlewell and a research scientist at the University of California at Berkeley School of Opt...

alcohol

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Maria Dalamagka  Does moderate, prudent drinking protect the heart and arteries? Two analyses say, actually that the answer is yes. But they raise a bigger issue: What should we do with this information? The answer to that question may come as a surprise. Let's look at the findings first. Researchers from the University of Calgary, University of Texas Health Science Center, and Harvard Medical School scoured the medical literature for long-term studies that compared drinking habits with the development of cardiovascular disease. Of the 4,235 studies they identified, 84 met the researchers' strict criteria. When combined, these studies included more than two million men and women who were followed for an average of 11 years. Using a technique called meta-analysis, the researchers pooled results from the 84 publications and analyzed the data as if they were from one gigantic study. Compared with no alcohol use, moderate alcohol use over the average study duration • reduced the...

Poor Glucose Control

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Maria Dalamagka  Poor glycemic control , whether too high or too low, is associated with decreased survival in diabetic patients on hemodialysis, Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, MD, MPH, PhD, professor of medicine, pediatrics, and epidemiology at the University of California at Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine, reported here at Kidney Week 2011: American Society of Nephrology 44th Annual Meeting. Dr. Kalantar-Zadeh reported that in a 6-year study, moderate hyperglycemia raised the risk for all-cause or cardiovascular mortality of hemodialysis patients with diabetes, and levels of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) below 6% or blood glucose below 100 mg/dL were associated with an elevated risk for death. According to most studies, he said, if glucose is well controlled, there are improvements in mortality, microvascular complications, and cardiovascular disease. One study showed that for every 1% decrease in HbA1c, deaths related to diabetes decreased 21%, microvascular complications de...

Child abuse

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Maria Dalamagka Women who suffer either physical or sexual abuse early in life have a significantly increased risk for subsequent cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction and stroke, a new study suggests. The study, using data from the Nurses' Health Study II, shows that women who reported they had experienced forced sexual activity during childhood or adolescence had a greater than 50% increased risk for cardiovascular disease. The relationship with physical abuse was significant but less robust, the authors note, and will have to be confirmed in other data sets. This is the third study to show that forced sex among girls is linked with at least a 50% increase in cardiovascular event risk, lead author Janet Rich-Edwards, ScD, MPH, associate professor in the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, said at a press conference here. The relationship was only partially explained by traditional cardiovascular risk factors. ...