HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND LONGEVITY

HHAL MEDICAL NEWS JANUARY 2010
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HHAL MEDICAL NEWS JANUARY 2010

 

Could Reducing Salt Consumption Prevent Cardiovascular Events?

               High salt intake is associated in a dose-dependent manner with high rates of stroke and cardiovascular events.

Current guidelines recommend a daily salt intake of 5 to 6 g or less. However, daily salt consumption exceeds that level in most adult populations and is higher than 12 g in Eastern Europe and Asia.

In a meta-analysis of prospective studies with at least 3 years of follow-up published from 1966 through 2008, investigators assessed the association between salt intake and stroke or cardiovascular events; the analysis included 19 independent cohort samples from 13 studies involving 177,025 participants. Daily salt intake was estimated at baseline only from a single 24-hour urine measurement or dietary assessment. The average difference between high-intake and low-intake groups was about 5 g of salt (86 mmol of sodium) per day.

During follow-up periods ranging from 3.5 to 19.0 years, more than 10,000 vascular events occurred. High salt intake was associated with increased risks for stroke (relative risk, 1.23; 95% confidence interval, 1.06–1.43; P=0.007) and cardiovascular disease (RR, 1.14; 95% CI, 0.99–1.32; P=0.07). After exclusion of a single study with particularly unreliable estimates of sodium intake, a sensitivity analysis of the cardiovascular disease findings showed a pooled RR estimate of 1.17 (CI, 1.02–1.34; P=0.02).

Comment: According to this meta-analysis, high salt intake is associated

with significant increases in rates of stroke and total cardiovascular events. Based on the findings, a population-wide decrease in salt intake of 5 g (about 1 teaspoon) per day could result in 23% fewer strokes and 17% fewer total cardiovascular events. Efforts by public health authorities and the food industry to help individuals take steps toward meeting recommended targets for salt consumption are clearly warranted.

CONCLUSIONS: High salt intake is associated with significantly increased risk of stroke and total cardiovascular disease. Because of imprecision in measurement of salt intake, these effect sizes are likely to be underestimated. These results support the role of a substantial population reduction in salt intake for the prevention of cardiovascular disease.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19934192?dopt=Abstract 

Individual risk assessment might be the best approach.

http://general-medicine.jwatch.org/cgi/content/full/2009/1231/8?q=topic_stroke

 

The Scent Of A Woman: Men's Testosterone Responses To Olfactory Ovulation Cues

Women around the world spend billions of dollars each year on exotic smelling perfumes and lotions in the hopes of attracting a mate. However, according to a new study in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, going "au natural" may be the best way to capture a potential mate's attention.

Smells are known to be critical to animal mating habits: Animal studies have shown that male testosterone levels are influenced by odor signals emitted by females, particularly when they are ovulating (that is, when they are the most fertile). Psychological scientists Saul L. Miller and Jon K. Maner from
Florida State University
wanted to see if a similar response occurs in humans. In two studies, women wore tee shirts for 3 nights during various phases of their menstrual cycles. Male volunteers smelled one of the tee shirts that had been worn by a female participant. In addition, some of the male volunteers smelled control tee shirts that had not been worn by anyone. Saliva samples for testosterone analysis were collected before and after the men smelled the shirts.

Results revealed that men who smelled tee shirts of ovulating women subsequently had higher levels of testosterone than men who smelled tee shirts worn by non-ovulating women or men who smelled the control shirts. In addition, after smelling the shirts, the men rated the odors on pleasantness and rated the shirts worn by ovulating women as the most pleasant smelling.

The authors note that "the present research is the first to provide direct evidence that olfactory cues to female ovulation influence biological responses in men." In other words, this study suggests that testosterone levels may be responsive to smells indicating when a woman is fertile. The authors conclude that this biological response may promote mating-related behavior by males.

 

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=176029  

 

Prolonged TV Viewing Linked To Higher Risk Of Death Even In Regular Exercisers



Researchers in
Australia found that prolonged television viewing was linked to an increased risk of death, even in people who exercised regularly, and recommended more be done to encourage people to spend fewer hours sitting still in front of the TV.

The study, which appeared online on 11 January in the journal Circulation, is the work of lead author Dr David Dunstan, a researcher at the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, and colleagues.

The researchers wrote that studies have been done on television viewing time and health, but these have focused on links with cardiovascular risk, and not risk of death. So for this study they investigated the link between prolonged television viewing time and all-cause, cardiovascular, cancer and non- cardiovascular/non-cancer mortality in Australian adults.

One of the surprising things they found was that even for people who exercised regularly, the risk of death went up the longer they spent in front of the TV: they suggest the problem was the prolonged periods of sitting still.

For six years, Dunstan and colleagues followed 8,800 people aged 25 and over who were taking part in the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study (AusDiab) and found that those who said they watched four or more of TV a day were 46 per cent more likely to die of any cause and 80 per cent more likely to die of cardiovascular disease compared to people who said they spent less than two hours a day in front of their TVs.

The study revealed the following results:

The average age of the participants at enrollment in 1999-2000 was 50 years.

284 deaths occurred over 58,087 person-years of follow up: 87 due to cardiovascular disease and 125 due to cancer.

After adjusting for age, sex, waist size, and exercise, the risk of dying from all causes, cardiovascular disease and cancer went up for each extra hour spent sitting still in front of the TV every day.

Risk of dying from any cause went up by 11 per cent for each extra TV viewing hour (hazard ratio [HR] for each one-hour increment was 1.11, with 95 per cent confidence interval [CI] ranging from 1.03 to 1.20).

Risk of dying from cardiovascular disease went up 18 per cent for each extra hour (HR 1.18, 95%CI 1.03-1.35).

Risk of dying from cancer went up 9 per cent for each extra hour (HR 1.09, 95%CI 0.96-1.23).

Watching TV for 2 to 4 hours a day increased the risk of dying from any cause by 13 per cent (adjusted HR 1.13 95%CI 0.87-1.36), and from cardiovascular disease by 19 per cent (adj HR 1.19, 95% CI, 0.72 to 1.99) compared to watching it for less than 2 hours.

Watching TV for 4 hours or more increased the risk of dying from any cause by 46 per cent (adj HR1.46, 95%CI 1.04-2.05), and from cardiovascular disease by 80 per cent (adj HR 1.80, 95%CI, 1.00 to 3.25) compared to daily TV viewing of under 2 hours.

The links with cancer mortality and non-cardiovascular/non-cancer mortality were not significant.

 

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175656

 

Study Reveals How One Form Of Natural Vitamin E Protects Brain After Stroke


Blocking the function of an enzyme in the brain with a specific kind of vitamin E can prevent nerve cells from dying after a stroke, new research suggests.

In a study using mouse brain cells, scientists found that the tocotrienol form of vitamin E, an alternative to the popular drugstore supplement, stopped the enzyme from releasing fatty acids that eventually kill neurons.

The
Ohio State University researchers have been studying how this form of vitamin E protects the brain in animal and cell models for a decade, and intend to pursue tests of its potential to both prevent and treat strokes in humans.

"Our research suggests that the different forms of natural vitamin E have distinct functions. The relatively poorly studied tocotrienol form of natural vitamin E targets specific pathways to protect against neural cell death and rescues the brain after stroke injury," said Chandan Sen, professor and vice chair for research in Ohio State's Department of Surgery and senior author of the study.

"Here, we identify a novel target for tocotrienol that explains how neural cells are protected."

The research appears online and is scheduled for later print publication in the Journal of Neurochemistry.

Vitamin E occurs naturally in eight different forms. The best-known form of vitamin E belongs to a variety called tocopherols. The form of vitamin E in this study, tocotrienol or TCT, is not abundant in the American diet but is available as a nutritional supplement. It is a common component of a typical Southeast Asian diet.

Sen's lab discovered tocotrienol vitamin E's ability to protect the brain 10 years ago. But this current study offers the most specific details about how that protection works, said Sen, who is also a deputy director of Ohio State's Heart and Lung Research Institute.

"We have studied an enzyme that is present all the time, but one that is activated after a stroke in a way that causes neurodegeneration. We found that it can be put in check by very low levels of tocotrienol," he said. "So what we have here is a naturally derived nutrient, rather than a drug, that provides this beneficial impact."

Sen and colleagues had linked TCT's effects to various substances that are activated in the brain after a stroke before they concluded that this enzyme could serve as an important therapeutic target. The enzyme is called cystolic calcium-dependent phospholipase A2, or cPLA2.

Following the trauma of blocked blood flow associated with a stroke, an excessive amount of glutamate is released in the brain. Glutamate is a neurotransmitter that, in tiny amounts, has important roles in learning and memory. Too much of it triggers a sequence of reactions that lead to the death of brain cells, or neurons the most damaging effects of a stroke.

Sen and colleagues used cells from the hippocampus region of developing mouse brains for the study. They introduced excess glutamate to the cells to mimic the brain's environment after a stroke.

With that extra glutamate present, the cPLA2 enzyme releases a fatty acid called arachidonic acid into the brain. Under normal conditions, this fatty acid is housed within lipids that help maintain cell membrane stability.

But when it is free-roaming, arachidonic acid undergoes an enzymatic chemical reaction that makes it toxic the final step before brain cells are poisoned in this environment and start to die. Activation of the cPLA2 enzyme is required to release the damaging fatty acid in response to insult caused by high levels of glutamate.

Sen and colleagues introduced the tocotrienol vitamin E to the cells that had already been exposed to excess glutamate. The presence of the vitamin decreased the release of fatty acids by 60 percent when compared to cells exposed to glutamate alone.

Brain cells exposed to excess glutamate followed by tocotrienol fared much better, too, compared to those exposed to only the damaging levels of glutamate. Cells treated with TCT were almost four times more likely to survive than were cells exposed to glutamate alone.

Though cPLA2 exists naturally in the body, blocking excessive function of this enzyme is not harmful, Sen explained. Scientists have already determined that mice genetically altered so they cannot activate the enzyme achieve their normal life expectancy and carry a lower risk for stroke.

Sen also noted that the amount of tocotrienol needed to achieve these effects is quite small just 250 nanomolar, a concentration about 10 times lower than the average amount of tocotrienol circulating in humans who consume the vitamin regularly.

"So you don't have to gobble up a lot of the nutrient to see these effects," he said.

The National Institutes of Health supported this work.

The study was co-authored by Savita Khanna, Sashwati Roy and Cameron Rink of the Department of Surgery and Narasimham Parinandi and Sainath Kotha of the Department of Internal Medicine, all at Ohio State; and Douglas Bibus of the University of Minnesota.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175640

 

Atrial Fibrillation Risk Lower With Some Classes Of Antihypertensives


            Atrial fibrillation, or irregular heartbeat, is a major risk factor for thromboembolic events, particularly stroke. This risk is especially high in patients with high blood pressure. Antihypertensive drugs are known to reduce the risk for atrial fibrillation by lowering blood pressure. However, some classes of antihypertensives may have greater risk reduction through other mechanisms.

Researchers studied 4,661 patients with atrial fibrillation against 18,642 matched control patients from a population of 682,993 patients treated for hypertension in the
United Kingdom. They compared the risk for atrial fibrillation among hypertensive patients taking angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, angiotensin II-receptor blockers (ARBs), or beta-blockers to the reference group taking calcium channel blockers. The researchers found that patients on long-term ACE-inhibitor, ARB, or beta blocker therapy had a reduced risk for atrial fibrillation compared to patients on calcium channel blockers.

Patients and physicians should consider these differences when choosing an antihypertensive therapy.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=176412

 

Pomegranate Compounds May Prevent Breast Cancer Growth

       US researchers found that pomegranates contain six natural compounds that may prevent the growth of hormone-dependent breast cancer by blocking the enzyme aromatase, which changes androgen to estrogen. However, experts caution this does not mean people should expect the same results from eating pomegranates, because this was an "in vitro" (test tube) study and results on the lab bench don't always translate to animals and humans.

The study, which was published in the 1 January issue of Cancer Prevention Research, is the work of Dr Shiuan Chen, director of the Division of Tumor Cell Biology at the Beckman Research Institute of the City of Hope, Duarte, California and colleagues also from City of Hope and the Center for Human Nutrition at the David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles.

For the study, the researchers screened ten compounds in a group known as ellagitannins.

Chen and his team found that the compound with the strongest impact was urolithin B (UB), which appeared to inhibit multiple estrogen-producing mechanisms that fuel the growth of breast cancer.

They also found that UB prevented estrogen-responsive breast cancer cells from multiplying.

Chen told the press that:

"By suppressing the production of estrogen, urolithin B and other phytochemicals found in pomegranates can prevent hormone-responsive breast cancer tumors from growing."

The other phytochemicals they found were urolithin A (UA), methylated UA, acetylated UB, methylated UB and UB sulfate: these also inhibited aromatase activity but to a lesser extent.

Other studies have found pomegranate juice is high in antioxidants and contains compounds that can control the growth of breast and prostate cancers humans, said the researchers.

Chen said the results of the study suggest that:

"Pomegranate intake may be a viable strategy for preventing breast cancer."

According to a report by Cancer Research UK, Chen said he and his team were surprised by the findings, explaining that they had previously found other fruits, such as grapes, were also able to inhibit aromatase, "But phytochemicals in pomegranates and in grapes are different", he said.

Experts are cautioning that further studies are needed before we can be sure that UB is effective against hormone-dependent breast cancer in humans: women should not start consuming lots of pomegranates on the strength of this study.

This was an in vitro (test tube) study, and sometimes such findings don't translate to animal and human studies: for instance it might turn out that these substances aren't well absorbed in the body by just eating pomegranates.

Dr Laura Bell, science information officer at Cancer Research UK, told the press that:

"It's too big a leap to conclude from this early-stage research that eating pomegranates could help prevent hormone-dependent breast cancer as the study was done using large amounts of purified chemicals on cells grown in the lab."

"In terms of cancer prevention, most foods contain many natural chemicals and we need to understand the combined effect of these when processed in the body to guess what influence, if any, a specific food may have on your chance of developing cancer," she explained, adding that numerous large studies have shown that:

"By eating a healthy balanced diet high in fibre, fruit and vegetables and low in red and processed meat, saturated fat and salt, you can help to reduce your risk of several different types of cancer."

Breast cancer drugs like anastrozole (Arimidex from AstraZeneca) are also designed to block the action of aromatase.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175411

 

URMC Study Links Vitamin D, Race, And Cardiac Deaths

       Vitamin D deficiency may contribute to a higher number of heart and stroke-related deaths among black Americans compared to whites, according to a University of Rochester Medical Center study.

The journal Annals of Family Medicine is publishing the study in the January-February edition, which goes online
Jan. 11, 2010
.

Researchers sought to understand the well-documented disparity between blacks and whites in cardiovascular deaths. They turned to vitamin D because growing evidence links low serum levels of D to many serious illnesses including diabetes, hypertension, kidney and heart disease.

Lead author Kevin Fiscella, M.D., said a complex host of genetic and lifestyle factors among blacks may explain why this population group has lower vitamin D levels across the lifespan than other races.

People get vitamin D through their diets, sun exposure, and oral supplements. Genetic factors common to blacks sometimes preclude vitamin D absorption, such as a higher incidence of lactose intolerance, which can eliminate vitamin-D fortified milk from the diet, and darker skin pigment that significantly reduces vitamin D synthesis.

"Therefore, our study suggests that the next step would be to intervene to boost vitamin D levels safely, with supplements," said Fiscella, a national expert on disparities in health care and a professor of Family Medicine and Community and Preventive Medicine at URMC.

With funding through the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, Fiscella and colleagues studied a sample of more than 15,000 American adults. The data included measurements of blood levels of vitamin D and death rates due to cardiovascular disease. Researchers also looked at other factors that contribute to heart health, such as body mass index, smoking status and levels of C-reactive protein.

Overall, the analysis showed that, as expected, a vitamin D deficiency was associated with higher rates of death among all people in the sample. In fact, those adults with the worst deficiency had a 40 percent higher risk of death from cardiac illness. This suggests that vitamin D may be a modifiable, independent risk factor for heart disease, Fiscella said.

Most striking, however, was that when researchers adjusted the statistics to look at race, blacks had a 38 percent higher risk of death than whites. As vitamin D levels rose, however, the risk of death was reduced. The same was true when researchers analyzed the effect of poverty on cardiovascular death rates among blacks, which suggests that vitamin D deficiency and poverty each exert separate risk factors, the study said.

A review article published in September 2009 in The American Journal of Medicine, noted that Vitamin D deficiency is a worldwide health problem. In the
U.S.
, inadequate Vitamin D has been reported in about 36 percent of otherwise healthy young adults and about 57 percent of general medicine hospitalized patients.

Vitamin D is metabolized in the liver and converted to 25 hydroxyvitamin D or 25(OH) D, the form used to determine a person's status through a blood test. Deficiency is usually defined by levels of less than 20 nanograms per milliliter; 30 ng/ml is viewed as sufficient. The mean blood level in the study sample was 29.5 ng/ml.

Most of the body's tissues and cells have vitamin D receptors, making it a potent regulator of cell activity and growth. A deficiency contributes to inflammation associated with heart disease, many cancers and poor bone health.

Fiscella cautions, however, that not all observational studies of vitamin deficiency are borne out by subsequent clinical trials. For example, previous observational studies of vitamin E and beta-carotene that were associated with poor heart health did not hold up in later clinical studies. The need to further assess the vitamin D connection to heart disease is convincing, however, particularly among blacks, he added.

Other at-risk people include the obese and the elderly, (particularly housebound or nursing home residents), because vitamin D levels decline with age. And although more sun exposure can boost levels of D, skin cancer is also an increasing risk to many people. Therefore, medical authorities usually recommend increased dietary intake and/or supplementation as the best way to correct a deficiency.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175244

 

A Role For Calcium In Taste Perception

          Calcium may not come to mind when you think of tasty foods, but in a study appearing in the January 8 issue of JBC, Japanese researchers have provided the first demonstration that calcium channels on the tongue are the targets of compounds that can enhance taste.

In addition to molecules that directly trigger specific taste buds (salty, sweet etc.), there are other substances which have no flavor of their own but can enhance the flavors they are paired with (known as kokumi taste in Japanese cuisine).

Exploiting this enhancement could have practical uses in food modulation; for example, creating healthy foods that contain minimal sugar or salt but still elicit strong taste. At the moment, though, the mode of action for these substances is poorly understood.

However, Yuzuru Eto and colleagues examined whether calcium channels - which sense and regulate the levels of calcium in the body - might be the mechanism involved; they noted that calcium channels are closely related to the receptors that sense sweet and umami (savory) tastes and that glutathione (a common kokumi taste element) is known to interact with calcium channels.

To test their possibility, they created several small molecules that resembled glutathione and analyzed how well these compounds activated calcium channels in cell samples. Next, they diluted the same test substances in flavored water (salt water, sugar water, etc.) and asked volunteers (all trained in discriminating tastes) to rate how strong the flavors were.

The results provided a strong correlation; the molecules that induced the largest activity in calcium receptors also elicited the strongest flavor enhancement in the taste tests.

For further confirmation, the researchers tested several other known calcium channel activators, including calcium, and found all exhibited some degree of flavor enhancement, while a synthetic calcium channel blocker could suppress flavors.

This study provides new insight into areas of taste biology; the authors also note that calcium channels are found in the gastro-intestinal tract as well, suggesting they may be important in other aspects of eating, such as food digestion and absorption.

From the Article: "Involvement of the Calcium-sensing Receptor in Human Taste Perception" by Takeaki Ohsu, Yusuke Amino, Hiroaki Nagasaki, Tomohiko Yamanaka, Sen Takeshita, Toshihiro Hatanaka, Yutaka Maruyama, Naohiro Miyamura and Yuzuru Eto. Article link:
http://www.jbc.org/content/285/2/1016.abstract

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175552

 

Can Sweeteners Be Blamed For Rise In Obesity?



US researchers have claimed that a cheap form of sugar used in thousands of food products and soft drinks can damage human metabolism and is fuelling the obesity crisis. Dangerous growth of fat cells
       The study by a team at the University of California claimed fructose, a sweetener derived from corn, can cause dangerous growths of fat cells around vital organs has increasingly been used as a substitute for more expensive types of sugar in yoghurts, cakes, salad dressing and cereals.
    Over 10 weeks, 16 volunteers on a strictly controlled diet, including high levels of fructose, produced new fat cells around their heart, liver and other digestive organs. It was reported that they also showed signs of food-processing abnormalities linked to diabetes and heart disease. Another group of volunteers on the same diet, but with glucose sugar replacing fructose, did not have these problems.
   People in both groups put on a similar amount of weight. However, the researchers said the levels of weight gain among the fructose consumers would be greater over the long term. Fructose is not responsible for obesity

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175698

 

Vitamin C Reverses Abnormalities Caused By Werner Syndrome Gene, Including Cancer, Obesity, Diabetes, Heart Failure And High Cholesterol

     A new research discovery published in the January 2010 print issue of the FASEB Journal suggests that treatments for disorders that cause accelerated aging, particularly Werner's syndrome, might come straight from the family medicine chest. In the research report, a team of Canadian scientists show that vitamin C stops and even reverses accelerated aging in a mouse model of Werner's syndrome, but the discovery may also be applicable to other progeroid syndromes. People with Werner's syndrome begin to show signs of accelerated aging in their 20s and develop age-related diseases and generally die before the age of 50.

"Our study clearly indicates that a healthy organism or individuals with no health problems do not require a large amount of vitamin C in order to increase their lifespan, especially if they have a balanced diet and they exercise," said Michel Lebel, Ph.D., co-author of the study from the Centre de Recherche en Cancerologie in Quebec, Canada. "An organism or individual with a mutation in the WRN gene or any gene affected by the WRN protein, and thus predisposes them to several age-related diseases, may benefit from a diet with the appropriate amount of vitamin C."

Scientists treated both normal mice and mice with a mutation in the gene responsible for Werner's syndrome (WRN gene) with vitamin C in drinking water. Before treatment, the mice with a mutated WRN gene were fat, diabetic, and developing heart disease and cancer. After treatment, the mutant mice were as healthy as the normal mice and lived a normal lifespan. Vitamin C also improved how the mice stored and burned fat, decreased tissue inflammation and decreased oxidative stress in the WRN mice. The healthy mice did not appear to benefit from vitamin C.

"Vitamin C has become one of the most misunderstood substances in our medicine cabinets and food," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of the FASEB Journal. "This study and others like it help explain how and why this chemical can help to defend some, but certainly not all, people from premature senescence."

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/printerfriendlynews.php?newsid=175166

 

Study: Statin compliance would cut stroke, heart attack deaths
British researchers said that encouraging high-risk patients who have already been prescribed cholesterol-lowering drugs to continue taking them could prevent twice as many stroke and heart attack deaths as prescribing the drugs to more people. The report, in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, said only about half of patients on statins continue taking them over the long term. Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60B00U20100112

 

 

Omega-3 fatty acids linked to slower rate of telomeric aging

Among patients with coronary artery disease, those with higher intake of marine omega-3 fatty acids have a slower rate of telomere shortening—a novel marker of biologic age, reports a study in the January 20, 2010, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association. 

 

Symptoms Help Little in Detecting Early-Stage Ovarian Cancer

            Contrary to recommendations in a 2007 consensus statement, symptoms offer little help in diagnosing early-stage ovarian cancer, reports a study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

The study included some 800 women diagnosed with epithelial ovarian cancer and some 1300 population-based controls. All women were interviewed about the presence of certain symptoms (e.g., abdominal pain, bloating, or urinary urgency) in the year before their diagnosis (cases) or a corresponding reference date (controls).

Women with cancer were about 10 times as likely as controls to report the symptoms defined in the consensus statement. However, the symptoms did little to distinguish between early- and late-stage cancers. The positive predictive value for any cancer was low, with that for early-stage disease being less than 0.5%.

The authors say their study "argues for a cautious approach to the use of symptom patterns to trigger extensive medical evaluation for ovarian cancer.

Conclusion: Use of symptoms to trigger medical evaluation for ovarian cancer is likely to result in diagnosis of the disease in only one of 100 women in the general population with such symptoms.

http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/djp500

 

Does Soy Consumption Lower Risk for Endometrial and Ovarian Cancers?

Women's Health

         Meta-analysis showed that women with highest soy intake had lower risk for endometrial and ovarian cancers than did women with lowest soy consumption.

 

Soy: Safe and Perhaps Even Beneficial for Breast Cancer Survivors

Women's Health

         In a Chinese study, dietary soy intake was inversely related to breast cancer recurrence and mortality.

Shu XO et al. JAMA 2009 Dec 9; 302:2437

 

High-Dose Statins Before Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

In statin-naive patients, a single loading dose of atorvastatin within 24 hours before PCI significantly reduced the rate of periprocedural MI.

Several studies have demonstrated that patients who receive statins before percutaneous coronary intervention are less likely to have a periprocedural MI than are those who do not receive preprocedural statins (JW Cardiol Aug 19 2009). In this two-center, placebo-controlled, randomized trial, investigators in Italy examined whether this beneficial effect could be achieved with a single 80-mg dose of atorvastatin administered on the day of the procedure.

A total of 668 statin-naive patients with de novo lesions underwent randomization and treatment with stenting. The primary endpoint of creatine kinase-MB elevation >3 times the upper limit of normal (ULN) occurred in 9.5% of statin-treated patients and in 15.8% of controls (odds ratio, 0.56; P=0.014). Troponin I was elevated in 26.6% of the statin group versus 39.1% of the control group (OR, 0.56; P<0.001). In a post hoc analysis, the benefit of atorvastatin was more pronounced in patients with high baseline C-reactive protein levels; in this group, the rate of CK-MB >3 times the ULN was significantly lower in control patients than in statin-treated patients (16.5% vs. 4.6%).

Comment: These results confirm those of other studies that demonstrate a cardioprotective effect of statins for periprocedural MI and extend the observed benefit to a single high dose administered on the day of procedure, suggesting a pleiotropic anti-inflammatory mechanism. The mean delay between drug administration and PCI is not provided, and the clinical significance of small enzyme elevations post-PCI has been debated. Nonetheless, these findings should encourage interventionalists to treat all of their patients with statins before PCI.

 

 

 

Overweight Older Adults May Live Longer Than Their Normal-Weight Peers

Among the elderly, having a BMI in the overweight range (25.0 to 29.9) may confer a lower mortality risk than having one in the normal range (18.5 to 24.9), according to an observationalcohort study in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

Researchers followed a cohort of some 9000 western Australian men and women aged between 70 and 75 at baseline, when their BMIs were measured. Over a mean observation period of roughly 9 years, people with BMIs in the overweight range had a mortality risk 13% lower than those with BMIs in the normal range. In fact, the mortality risk at the lower end of the normal range was almost twice that of the overweight group. The effect remained even after adjustment for the subjects' state of health at entry into the study.

The authors conclude that the World Health Organization's thresholds for overweight and obesity in the elderly "are overly restrictive

CONCLUSION: These results lend further credence to claims that the BMI thresholds for overweight and obese are overly restrictive for older people. Overweight older people are not at greater mortality risk than those who are normal weight. Being sedentary was associated with a greater risk of mortality in women than in men.

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123265340/HTMLSTART?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0

 

Catheter ablation is better than drugs in treating AF
       
U.S. researchers found that 66% of patients with paroxysmal or intermittent atrial fibrillation who had catheter ablation showed no symptoms of the condition a year after treatment compared with 16% of those who took drugs. The study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Reuters (1/26)

Survey finds 57% of diabetics skip medication
         
An Internet survey of 500 people with diabetes, published in Diabetes Care, showed 57% occasionally choose not to take their insulin shots, and one in five skips shots regularly. Those most likely to skip the shots include younger, better-educated and low-income patients, those with Type 2 diabetes, and people prescribed multiple daily injections. USA TODAY (1/25)

 

More Evidence Against Too-Intensive Glucose Control in Type 2 Diabetes

                 The most intensive glucose control is associated with increased risk for death, according to aretrospective cohort study published online in the Lancet.

Using a U.K. general practice database, researchers identified two diabetic cohorts together comprising some 48,000 patients whose treatments had been intensified. One cohort started treatment with oral glucose-lowering monotherapy and switched to a combination therapy using a sulfonylurea plus metformin. The other cohort switched from oral agents alone to insulin with or without oral agents.

During the 5 years after changing therapy, the investigators noted a U-shaped curve in both cohorts with respect to all-cause mortality and levels of glycated hemoglobin — patients in the lowest decile of glycated hemoglobin (median HbA1c, 6.4%) and the highest (10.6%) had significantly higher mortality rates than those in the reference decile (7.5%).

Low and high mean HbA1c values were associated with increased all-cause mortality and cardiac events. If confirmed, diabetes guidelines might need revision to include a minimum HbA1c value.

Cardiovascular Benefit of Glycemic Control Is Limited to Those with Low Comorbidity

 

Does an HbA1c level of 7% remain an appropriate goal?

         The effect of glycemic control on preventing adverse cardiovascular events has been difficult to demonstrate, possibly because such effects are limited to particular patient subgroups. To determine whether achieving glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) targets of 7% versus 6.5% had differential effects by comorbidity, industry-sponsored researchers studied 2613 Italian patients with type 2 diabetes who received care from general practitioners or in diabetes clinics. Comorbidity was measured by questionnaire and was dichotomized at a level that was associated with excess mortality. Comorbidities includedheart disease, lung disease, arthritis, genitourinary disease, vision loss, adverse gastrointestinal conditions, and foot disease.

Among patients who had HbA1c levels  6.5%, 5-year incidence of adverse cardiovascular events was lower for those with low comorbidity (hazard ratio, 0.6) than for those with high comorbidity (HR, 0.9) in analyses adjusted for age and sex. For an HbA1c target level of 7%, the same finding was noted (i.e., lower incidence of adverse cardiovascular events only among those with low comorbidity).

Comment: When individual randomized trials have been analyzed in systematic reviews, intensive control (HbA1c <7% but not <6.5%) modestly lowered incidence of adverse cardiovascular events (mainly nonfatal myocardial infarction) at a cost of excess severe hypoglycemia. Results of this observational study suggest that cardiovascular benefits might accrue only to those without substantial comorbidity. An editorialist concludes that 7% remains an appropriate goal to prevent adverse microvascular, neurological, and, possibly, cardiovascular events. However, for many patients with substantial comorbidity, the overall benefits of even a 7% goal might not exceed the burdens or harms associated with trying to achieve that goal.

CONCLUSION: Patients with the high levels of comorbidity common in type 2 diabetes may receive diminished cardiovascular benefit from intensive blood glucose control. Comorbidity should be considered when tailoring glucose-lowering therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20008761?dopt=Abstract

 

 

The hidden danger in acid-suppressing drugs
        
Acid-suppressing drug use substantially increased the likelihood of recurrent pneumonia in high-risk elderly patients. The association was confined to patients initiating PPI/H2s after hospital discharge. These findings should be considered when deciding to prescribe this drug category in patients with a recent history of pneumonia.

Conclusion

Acid-suppressing drug use substantially increased the likelihood of recurrent pneumonia in high-risk elderly patients. The association was confined to patients initiating PPI/H2s after hospital discharge. Our findings should be considered when deciding to prescribe these drugs in patients with a recent history of pneumonia.

http://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(09)00863-8/fulltext

 The American Journal of Medicine 

 

AHA publishes 7 secrets to long, healthy life
The American Heart Association says 50-year-olds who follow seven basic health guidelines -- including eating a healthy diet, regular exercise and not smoking -- could live another 40 years free of stroke and heart disease. The AHA offers an online quiz so people can see how close they are to the ideal and get tips for improving if they fall short. Yahoo!/The Associated Press

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100120/ap_on_he_me/us_heart_health/print;_ylt=AvpKWhroxAJtufRAc.ZkzNiF1LJ_;_ylu=X3oDMTBycjdqNWs0BHBvcwMxNQRzZWMDYm90dG9tBHNsawNwcmludA--

 

Study: Kidney stones are more frequent in obese people
           
People who are obese are more likely to develop kidney stones than are normal-weight people, a study in the Journal of Urology indicates. Researchers looked at records for more than 95,000 people and found that people who were of normal weight or overweight had a one in 40 chance of being diagnosed with kidney stones compared with a one in 20 chance for obese people. The severity of the obesity didn't seem to matter, data showed. Reuters

 

Severe psoriasis increases risk of death from heart disease, stroke
            
A U.S. study published in the European Heart Journal found people with the severe form of psoriasis have a 60% higher risk of death from heart disease or stroke compared with people without the disease. More research is needed to determine the reasons for the connection and whether treatment can reduce the risk, the researchers said. Reuters

 

What's almost as good as pravastatin? Red yeast rice
          
This study concluded that red yeast rice was approximately as well tolerated as pravastatin and achieved comparable levels of low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol reduction in a population previously intolerant to statins.

In conclusion, red yeast rice was tolerated as well as pravastatin and achieved a comparable reduction of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in a population previously intolerant to statins.

 The American Journal of Cardiology 

http://www.ajconline.org/article/S0002-9149(09)02325-X/fulltext

 

Tigagrelor vs. clopidogrel for acute coronary syndromes: A clear winner
             
Ticagrelor seems to be a better option than clopidogrel for patients with acute coronary syndromes for whom an early invasive strategy is

The platelet inhibitor ticagrelor is superior to clopidogrel among patients with acute coronary syndromes who are scheduled to undergo invasive management, according to a prespecified subanalysis of the industry-funded, phase III PLATO study. The findings appear online in the Lancet.

Nearly 13,500 patients with acute coronary syndromes, with or without ST-segment elevation and for whom early invasive treatment was planned, were randomized to receive ticagrelor or clopidogrel for 6 to 12 months. By 1 year, the primary endpoint — a composite of cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke — had occurred significantly less often with ticagrelor than with clopidogrel (9% vs. 11%). Total major bleeding did not differ significantly between the groups.

A commentator concludes: "These compelling results support ticagrelor as a new standard of care in acute coronary syndromes."

http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(09)62191-7/fulltext

 

One in Five U.S. Adolescents Have Abnormal Lipid Levels

                   Roughly 20% of U.S. youths aged 12 to 19 have at least one abnormal lipid level, with overweight and obese teens being most at risk, according to an analysis of NHANES data published in MMWR.

In particular, abnormal lipid levels were noted in 14% of normal-weight, 22% of overweight, and 43% of obese adolescents.

An editorial note points out that the American Academy of Pediatrics currently recommends lipid screening among teens with certain cardiovascular risk factors, including overweight or obesity. The note urges clinicians to be aware of both the screening guidelines and appropriate interventions (e.g., lifestyle counseling, dietary changes) to help minimize teens' risk for cardiovascular disease in adulthood.

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5902a1.htm

 

 

 

ARBs Associated with Reduced Dementia and Alzheimer Disease Risk

              Angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) are associated with reduced risk for dementia and Alzheimer disease, according to a BMJ study.

Researchers analyzed Veterans Affairs records of 800,000 mostly male patients aged 65 and older with cardiovascular disease. Over the 4-year observation period, patients taking ARBs were less likely to develop dementia or Alzheimer disease, to be admitted to a nursing home, or to die than were patients taking the ACE-inhibitor lisinopril or other cardiovascular drugs, such as beta-blockers or calcium channel antagonists. Patients taking both ARBs and ACE-inhibitors saw a further risk reduction.

The authors suggest that ARBs may protect against cognitive decline by limiting neuronal damage linked to stroke and vascular problems.

Conclusions Angiotensin receptor blockers are associated with a significant reduction in the incidence and progression of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia compared with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or other cardiovascular drugs in a predominantly male population.

http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/340/jan12_1/b5465

 

Is It Okay for Patients with Peptic Ulcer Bleeding to Continue Low-Dose Aspirin?

           For patients at cardiovascular risk, the short-term survival advantage of continuing aspirin therapy outweighed the bleeding risk.

Sung JJY et al. Ann Intern Med 2009 Dec 1;

 

 

How can statins help cancer patients?
               This study suggests that the use of statins is associated with a significant reduction in the occurrence of venous thromboembolism. This pleiotropic effect warrants further investigation. The American Journal of Medicinehttp://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(09)00706-2/fulltext

 

Obesity's effect on quality of life is equal to smoking
U.S. researchers reported that obesity can affect a person's quality of life just as much as smoking. The study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, included 3.5 million adults and found quality-adjusted life years lost to obesity are equal to or exceed those lost to smoking. Yahoo!/HealthDay News

 

Overweight men have higher risk of stroke, heart attack
Researchers who followed more than 1,700 Swedish men for 30 years found those who were overweight were 52% more likely to have heart attacks and strokes and those who were obese had almost double the risk, compared with normal-weight men. These men had an increased risk even though they didn't have metabolic syndrome, which the study in Circulation noted also raised the risk of heart attack and stroke, even among participants who weren't overweight. Reuters

 

Dietary effect on diabetes risk varies by sex, ethnicity
People who eat a diet high in meat and fat generally have a higher risk of diabetes but the effects of such a diet may vary by sex and ethnicity, a study in Diabetes Care found. Researchers said data showed that the protective effects of diets high in vegetables also varied by sex and ethnicity. Reuters

 

Ginkgo Does Not Prevent or Slow Cognitive Decline in Older Adults

Ginkgo biloba extract does not prevent or delay cognitive decline in older adults, according to a JAMA study.

Some 3000 U.S. adults (aged 72 to 96) with normal cognition or mild cognitive impairment were randomized to twice-daily 120 mg of ginkgo or placebo. During a median 6 years' follow-up, the two groups did not differ in annually measured rates of overall cognitive decline, or in rates of decline in specific areas such as memory, language, or executive function.

JAMA article

Does Exercise Lengthen Our Lives by Lengthening Our Cells' Lives?

 

Exercising was beneficial for preserving telomeres in both humans and mice.

Werner C et al. Circulation 2009 Dec 15; 120:2438

 

 

C-reactive protein levels: Correlation but no causality for heart attack, stroke and cancer?
C-reactive protein (CRP) concentration has continuous associations with the risk of coronary heart disease, ischaemic stroke, vascular mortality, and death from several cancers and lung disease that are each of broadly similar size. The relevance of CRP to such a range of disorders is unclear. Associations with ischaemic vascular disease depend considerably on conventional risk factors and other markers of inflammation. The Lancet

http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(09)61717-7/abstract

 

Smoking Cessation Associated with Short-Term Increase in Diabetes Risk

Adults who quit smoking face increased risk for type 2 diabetes during the first several years after quitting, according to an Annals of Internal Medicine study.

Researchers followed nearly 11,000 middle-aged adults for roughly 9 years, during which about 12% developed diabetes. Compared with adults who never smoked, those who continued smoking during follow-up had a roughly 30% elevated risk for diabetes, while those who quit smoking by year 3 had almost a 75% increase in risk. The elevated risk among these new quitters seemed to be mediated by adverse metabolic changes, including weight gain and systemic inflammation.

The authors write: "Of course, smoking cessation has many beneficial health effects that outweigh this short-term risk. Nonetheless, physicians should be aware of this elevated risk and should consider countermeasures [e.g., lifestyle counseling, aggressive weight management], especially for heavy smokers."

Conclusion: Cigarette smoking predicts incident type 2 diabetes, but smoking cessation leads to higher short-term risk. For smokers at risk for diabetes, smoking cessation should be coupled with strategies for diabetes prevention and early detection.

Annals of Internal Medicine article

http://www.annals.org/content/152/1/10.abstract

 

  

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