Friday, August 5, 2016

Fighting Zika's microcephaly in Brazil, one brain at a time and other top stories.

  • Fighting Zika's microcephaly in Brazil, one brain at a time

    Fighting Zika's microcephaly in Brazil, one brain at a time
    Despite the heat, I'm in long sleeves and long pants, with an extra layer of pesticide for good measure. I'm not making it easy for any local mosquitoes to bite me and implant the virus they carry. But everywhere I look, women and children are in shorts and tank tops, and the men bare chested. Even in the dead of winter, Brazil's heat is oppressive.Beside me walks Dr. Jamary Oliveira Filho, a Harvard-trained neurologist who is showing me around his hometown, where his family still lives. He's ta..
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  • Zika strikes overseas U.S. troops

    Zika strikes overseas U.S. troops
    Zika strikes overseas U.S. troops Patricia Kime, Military Times , KTHV 12:49 PM. EDT August 03, 2016 Mosquito, Thinkstock Thirty-three active-duty service members have contracted Zika since the Pentagon began tracking infections earlier this year, including one who is expecting a baby, according to Defense Department surveillance records.The cases all were acquired outside of the continental United States, but the Defense Department continues to monitor U.S. milita..
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  • NY Attorney General Targeting Bogus Zika Protection Products

    NY Attorney General Targeting Bogus Zika Protection Products
    NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) — New York’s attorney general is targeting companies that advertise ineffective insect repellents to cash in on concerns over the Zika virus. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said Wednesday his office has sent letters to seven companies, telling them to stop marketing products as “Zika-preventive” or “Zika-protective.” He said some of the products include bands, patches and ultrasound devices that “plug into your wall and supposedly it gets rid of mosquitoes, rodents ..
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  • Women without tonsils, appendix may be more fertile

    Women without tonsils, appendix may be more fertile
    Women who have their appendix or tonsils removed appear to be more fertile, according to a new British study. The chance of pregnancy was 34 percent higher for women who had their appendix removed, 49 percent higher after a tonsillectomy and 43 percent greater for women who had both removed, according to researchers at the University of Dundee and University College London. “For many years medical students were taught that appendectomy had a negative effect on fertility and young women often fe..
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  • The average Americans' weight change since the 1980s is startling

    The average Americans' weight change since the 1980s is startling
    There's no doubt about it: Americans are getting heavier and heavier. But new U.S. estimates may still come as a shock -- since the late 1980s and early 1990s, the average American has put on 15 or more additional pounds without getting any taller.Even 11-year-old kids aren't immune from this weight plague, the study found. Girls are more than seven pounds heavier even though their height is the same. Boys gained an inch in height, but also packed on an additional 13.5 pounds compared to two de..
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  • Rx for Seniors' Health: Upbeat View, Less Stress

    Rx for Seniors' Health: Upbeat View, Less Stress
    By Robert Preidt, HealthDay Reporter (HealthDay) WEDNESDAY, Aug. 3, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- A positive attitude about aging can help seniors cope with stress, a small study suggests. "We found that people in the study who had more positive attitudes toward aging were more resilient in response to stress -- meaning that there wasn't a significant increase in negative emotions," study author Jennifer Bellingtier, a Ph.D. student at North Carolina State University, said in a universi..
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  • 23andMe data helps researchers find DNA links to depression

    23andMe data helps researchers find DNA links to depression
    Scientists announced on Monday that they had pinpointed 15 locations in our DNA that are associated with depression, one of the most common mental health conditions and one that is estimated to cost the world billions in health care costs and lost productivity.RELATED: TRENDING LIFE & STYLE NEWS THIS HOUR While gene association studies -- which link DNA inherited from our parents to particular diseases, conditions or even habits like vegetarianism -- are published practically every week, this i..
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  • National Institutes of Health Begins Human Zika Vaccine Trial

    National Institutes of Health Begins Human Zika Vaccine Trial
    The federal government is launching an investigational human trial of a Zika vaccine, health officials announced on Wednesday. The National Institutes of Health announced that at least 80 volunteers will test a new Zika vaccine. The trial, which will take place at three locations in the United States, will test the safety of the vaccine as well as its ability to generate a response from the volunteers’ immune systems. The trial volunteers will be separated into four groups of 20 people. All o..
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  • Fish Oil May Improve Post-MI Recovery

    Fish Oil May Improve Post-MI Recovery
    Action Points Note that this randomized trial found that omega-3 fatty acid (4g per day) was superior to placebo in terms of ventricular remodeling after acute myocardial infarction.Be aware that the study drug was not started immediately following MI; earlier treatment may have differing effects. High-dose omega-3 fatty acids after MI improved function of the heart and reduced scarring in the undamaged muscle as well as markers of systemic inflammation, the OMEGA-REMODEL randomized ..
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  • National Institutes of Health launches first clinical trial of Zika vaccine

    National Institutes of Health launches first clinical trial of Zika vaccine
    Fearing devastating birth defects associated with the Zika virus, hundreds of pregnant women living near downtown Miami are getting tested. Obstetricians are handing out kits that include bug spray with DEET. (Aug. 2) APA nurse bottle feeds a newborn baby aflicted with microcephaly at a maternity ward of the University Hospital in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Tuesday, July 26, 2016.(Photo: Fernando Antonio, AP)As health officials work to contain the country's first Zika outbreak, centered in ..
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Louisville beats Charlotte on Schebler's big night .8-year-old boy hit by car in south Louisville .
West Louisville church hosting community health fair today .University of Louisville president's resignation accepted .

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