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Chantix recommended to quit smoking despite safety concerns (AP) (May 08 2008 00:57 GMT) - AP - The federal government’s new advice to doctors for helping smokers quit recommends the drug Chantix, which has recently been linked with depression and suicidal behavior. The new guidelines mention the psychiatric risks but also say the popular Pfizer Inc. drug is the most effective at helping people get off cigarettes. Original post by AP [... |
D3scene
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Retail Account Question (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - I have TBC, but i pirated it and I don't have a CD key. If i buy one am I able to make a WoW account with that key or do I need to update from a regular WoW CD key? |
Blogcritics
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TasteTV Top 5 Report (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - The TasteTV Top 5 Report features chocolate art, Bray wine, chef movies, sexy chocolate dresses, and Hardwear by Renee. The TasteTV Top 5 Report features chocolate art, Bray wine, chef movies, sexy chocolate dresses, and Hardwear by Renee.Bray Vineyards is located in the heart of California's Shenandoah Valley appellation. The Shenandoah Valley is renowned for the fine quality of the grapes grown there. The 2004 Zinfandel has won the following awardsBronze National... |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Mental Fitness and Multi-Lingualism (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Children who speak a second or third language may have an unexpected advantage during the later part of life, a new Tel Aviv University study has observed. Knowing and speaking a number of languages may protect the brain against the effects of aging. Dr. Gitit Kave, a clinical neuro-psychology expert from the Herczeg Institute on Aging at Tel Aviv University, together with her colleagues Nitza Eyal, Aviva Shorek, and Jiska Cohen-Manfield, discovered recently that senior citizens who speak more languages test for better cognitive functioning. The results of her study were reported in the journal Psychology and Aging........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Caution on new anti-obesity drug in kids (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Anti-obesity drugs that work by blocking brain molecules similar to those in marijuana could also interfere with neural development in young children, as per a new study from MITs Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. Marijuana is known to be an appetite stimulant, and a new class of anti-obesity drugssuch as rimonabant (trade name Acomplia) developed by Sanofi-Aventis and awaiting approval for use in the United Stateswork by blocking brain receptors that bind to marijuana and other cannabinoids........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Speedier Precise Cancer Therapy (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) this month became the first U.S. medical center to offer a speedier cancer radiation treatment. The new technique can turn a 20-minute radiotherapy session into a 90-second session for selected patients. Additionally, the new treatment saves healthy human tissue from unwanted radiation exposure at rates that are the same or better than other radiotherapy techniques, as per doctors at the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Hunger hormone: makes food look more attractive (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - A new brain-imaging study by scientists at the Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University reveals that ghrelin - a stomach hormone, acts on specific regions of the brain to enhance our response to food related cues and eating for pleasure. This study, reported in the May 7 issue of Cell Metabolism, is critical to advance understanding and treating obesity, a condition affecting millions world-wide........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Safety Of Gene Therapy Using Adult Stem Cells (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - A new study by UC Davis scientists provides evidence that methods using human bone marrow-derived stem cells to deliver gene treatment to cure diseases of the blood, bone marrow and certain types of cancer do not cause the development of tumors or leukemia. The study was published online in the May 6, 2008 issue of Molecular Therapy........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Protein to limit heart attack injury (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Medical College of Wisconsin scientists in Milwaukee have demonstrated for the first time that thrombopoietin (TPO), a naturally occurring protein being developed as a pharmaceutical to increase platelet count in cancer patients during chemotherapy, can also protect the heart against injury during a heart attack........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Neurons duke it out for survival (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - The developing nervous system makes far more nerve cells than are needed to ensure target organs and tissues are properly connected to the nervous system. As nerves connect to target organs, they somehow compete with each other resulting in some living and some dying. Now, using a combination of computer modeling and molecular biology, neuroresearchers at Johns Hopkins have discovered how the target tissue helps newly connected peripheral nerve cells strengthen their connections and kill neighboring nerves. The study was reported in the April 18th issue of Science........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Ways to make tumor cells easier to destroy (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Tumors have a unique vulnerability that can be exploited to make them more sensitive to heat and radiation, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis report. The Washington University radiation oncology scientists observed that tumors have a built-in mechanism that protects them from heat (hyperthermia) damage and most likely decreases the benefit of hyperthermia and radiation as a combined treatment........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Immune exhaustion in HIV infection (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Its the virus, stupid: immune exhaustion in HIV infection As HIV disease progresses in a person infected with the HIV virus, a group of cells in the immune system, the CD8+ T lymphocytes, become exhausted, losing a number of of their abilities to kill other cells infected by the virus. For a number of years researchers have debated whether this exhaustion of CD8+ T cells is the cause, or the consequence, of persistence of the HIV virus. As per a research findings published this week in PLoS Medicine, Marcus Altfeld and his colleagues studied the immune response over time amongst 18 individuals who had very recently become infected with HIV........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Flip flops, mulch and no coat (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - At a time when over half of US children (aged 3-6) are in child care centers, and growing concern over childhood obesity has led physicians to focus on whether children are getting enough physical activity, a new study of outdoor physical activity at child care centers, conducted by scientists at Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center, has identified some surprising reasons why the kids may be staying inside. The study, will be presented May 5 at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies in Honolulu, Hawaii........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Youths in towns with smoke-free restaurant laws (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Young people who live in towns where regulations ban smoking in restaurants may be less likely to become established smokers, as per a report in the recent issue of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. A number of studies have examined the risk factors that lead young people to try their first cigarette, as per background information in the article. However, fewer scientists have differentiated these factors from those that cause children and teens to progress to established smoking, or having smoked 100 or more cigarettes. Yet understanding this difference is critical, the authors write. It would allow us to determine the age and stage at which youths are most sensitive to various types of interventions, thus enabling the more specific tailoring and more effective delivery of smoking prevention interventions........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Breastfeeding may improve children's intelligence scores (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Long-term, exclusive breastfeeding appears to improve childrens cognitive development, as per a report in the recent issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. Prior studies have reported that children and adults who were breastfed as infants have higher scores on IQ tests and other measures of cognitive (thinking, learning and memory) development than those who were fed formula, as per background information in the article. However, the evidence has been based on findings based on observation, in which children whose mothers chose to breastfeed were compared with those whose mothers chose not to breastfeed. The results of these studies may be complicated by subtle differences in the way breastfeeding mothers interact with their infants, the authors note........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Preference for alcohol may lead to heavy drinking (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Researchers at Duke University Medical Center have shown a correlation between early drinking patterns and a tendency to be a heavy drinker in adulthood, in a study of adolescent rats. Drinking patterns in adolescents may be set after only a few exposures to alcohol, said Nicole L. Schramm-Sapyta, research associate in the Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology at Duke University School of Medicine. Rats that demonstrated a taste for alcohol after only three nights of drinking were very likely to be the biggest drinkers after longer-term exposure........ |
Medicineworld.org: New Article Alert
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Mood Disorders Put Cancer Patients At Risk For PTSD (May 08 2008 00:56 GMT) - Patients with breast cancer who have a previous history of mood and anxiety disorders are at a much higher risk of experiencing posttraumatic stress disorder following their diagnosis, new research suggests. A study of 74 patients with breast cancer at the Ohio State University Medical Center observed that 16 percent of them (12 women) suffered from PTSD 18 months after diagnosis........ |
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