Thursday, July 31, 2008

Menopause increases risk of metabolic syndrome

As women begin to enter menopause, their risk of developing a collection of heart disease risk factors appears to climb, a study has found.

Researchers found that among 949 U.S. women followed for nearly a decade, the risk of developing metabolic syndrome increased during perimenopause -- the years during which a woman's body begins to transition into menopause, usually starting somewhere in her 40s.

Metabolic syndrome refers to this cluster of risk factors for heart disease, stroke and diabetes -- including high blood pressure, abdominal obesity, high blood sugar, low levels of "good" HDL cholesterol and high triglycerides (another type of blood fat). The syndrome is usually diagnosed when a person has three or more of these traits.

The new findings, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, appear to be the first showing that the incidence of metabolic syndrome begins to rise during perimenopause.

More specifically, the study found, the risk is related to increases in testosterone activity.

The "main message" here for women is that maintaining a healthy lifestyle may be especially critical during perimenopause, lead researcher Dr. Imke Janssen, of Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, told Reuters Health.

Not smoking, eating a healthy diet and getting regular exercise can all help reduce a woman's risk of the various components of metabolic syndrome, Janssen said.

She and her colleagues based their findings on an ethnically diverse sample of U.S. women who were between the ages of 42 and 52 and free of metabolic syndrome at the outset. The women were followed for nine years.

Overall, Janssen's team found, nearly 14 percent developed metabolic syndrome by the time they had their final menstrual period. The risk of developing the syndrome increased progressively starting six years before the final menstrual period.

But while the odds of developing metabolic syndrome were elevated after menopause, the risk was greater during perimenopause, Janssen noted.

It has long been known that women generally have a lower risk of cardiovascular disease than men do before the age of 45. But after age 55, the trend reverses, with women actually being at greater risk than men their age.

"Obviously, something happens there, between 45 and 55," Janssen said, noting that it was once assumed that diminishing levels of estrogen told the whole story.

But in this study, women's estrogen levels were unrelated to the odds of developing the metabolic syndrome. Instead, the syndrome correlated with an increase in testosterone activity -- suggesting that the direct negative effects of testosterone are more important than the loss of estrogen's positive effects in women's cardiovascular risks.

This idea, Janssen and her colleagues note, is consistent with clinical trials that have found no cardiovascular benefits from estrogen replacement therapy.

The bottom line for women, according to Janssen, is that during these years of hormonal change, healthy habits become more important than ever.




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New excercise pill


Researchers who genetically engineered "marathon mice" that could run for hours have found two pills that can mimic the effects -- and they have already developed a test for the drugs in case athletes try to cheat with them.

The drugs reproduce many of the biological benefits of exercise, helping cells burn fat better and boosting endurance, said Ronald Evans, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute researcher at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California.

One of the pills may some day help people enhance their exercise or training, while the other might be more suited for couch potatoes who need to kick-start themselves, Evans and colleagues reported on Thursday in the journal Cell.

"If you like exercise, you like the idea of getting more bang for your buck," Evans said in a statement. "If you don't like exercise, you love the idea of getting the benefits from a pill."

In 2004, Evans and his colleagues genetically engineered mice by tweaking a gene called PPAR-delta, a master regulator of different genes. Gene-engineered mice could run twice as far as normal mice and stayed lean even when fed a high-fat diet.

The next step was to find a drug that might mimic these effects.

Evans tested a compound called GW1516, one of a family of compounds that researchers are looking at as obesity and diabetes drugs. But even though it affected the genes of the mice, it did not affect their metabolism.

"There was no change at all in running performance. Nothing -- not even a percent," Evans said in a statement.

MIMICKING LIFE

Then the researchers thought about what happens in real life.

"If you're out of shape -- and most of us are -- and you want to change, you have to do some exercise. The way we reprogram muscle in adults is by training."

So they trained the mice while some were on the drug and others were not.

All the mice became more athletic but those given GW1516 ran 68 percent longer than those that had only done the exercise training. "The dramatic effect of the drug was stunning," Evans said.

But that does not help people who might have muscle-wasting diseases, fatigue, or who are too overweight to exercise.

They went back to see if there was a different way to affect PPAR-delta. One compound that is well understood already is AMP-activate protein kinase or AMPK, "a master regulator of cellular and organismal metabolism", they wrote.

"We think AMPK activity is the secret to allowing PPAR-delta drugs to work," Evans said.

A drug called AICAR mimics AMP, Evans said, "so muscle thinks it's burning fat."

Mice given AICAR ran 44 percent longer than untreated animals, the researchers found.

"This is a drug that is like pharmacological exercise," Evans says. "After four weeks of receiving the drug, the mice were behaving as if they'd been exercised."

Treated mice could outrun mice given traditional exercise training, Evans said.

"Almost no one gets the recommended 40 minutes to an hour per day of exercise," Evans said. "For this group of people, if there was a way to mimic exercise, it would make the quality of exercise that they do much more efficient."

The pills are only available experimentally now and Evans is not working with any drug company. But GW1516 has a relatively simple chemical structure and can be synthesized easily, Evans said.

His team created a mass spectrometry test to detect the two drugs and their metabolic by-products in the blood or urine. They are working with the World Anti-Doping Agency to develop the test, perhaps in time to retroactively test 2008 Olympic athletes.




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Stem cells can be grown into nerve cells


Ordinary skin cells taken from patients with a fatal and incurable nerve disease have been transformed into nerve cells in a first step toward treating them, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

They transformed the cells from two patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, into motor neurons -- the cells that waste away and die in ALS.

There is no immediate medical use for the cells, taken from two sisters aged 82 and 89, the researchers reported in the journal Science.

"Now we can make limitless supplies of the cells that die in this awful disease. This will allow us to study these neurons, and ALS, in a lab dish, and figure out what's happening in the disease process," said Dr. Kevin Eggan of Harvard Medical School in Boston, who helped lead the study.

"We can generate hundreds of millions of motor neurons that are genetically identical to a patient's own neurons," added Chris Henderson of Columbia University in New York, who also worked on the study.

"This will be an immense help as we try to uncover the mechanisms behind this disease and screen for drugs that can prolong life."

There is no cure for ALS, also called motor neuron disease or Lou Gehrig's disease after the New York Yankees baseball player who died of it in 1941. The causes are not clear and it kills by gradually paralyzing patients.

About 120,000 new cases are diagnosed each year, according to the International Alliance of ALS.

"It is our lack of understanding of that disease process which is preventing us from developing more effective (treatments)," Henderson told reporters in a telephone briefing.

"There is no way we could go to an ALS patient and take a sample of their motor neurons," he added, because the affected cells are in the spinal cord.

DISEASE IN A DISH

Eggan and Henderson hope to grow and study these motor neurons and see if they can re-create the disease in a lab dish -- and then try out various drugs to treat it.

The two patients have a mild form of ALS caused by a single genetic mutation, and all of the cells in their body carry that mutation.

The experiment helps fulfill one of the promises of embryonic stem cell research, Eggan said. The hope of the controversial research has always been to figure out ways to make ordinary cells into customized scientific experiments, and into tailor-made medical treatments.

Last year several teams of researchers reported they had genetically engineered ordinary skin cells to act like embryonic stem cells -- the master cells of the body, which have the ability to morph into any cell or tissue type.

Eggan said this does not mean it is no longer necessary to use the controversial methods to get real embryonic stem cells by using human embryos from fertility clinics or by using cloning technology.

For one thing, they used viruses to carry in the four genes that transformed the skin cells. These viruses integrate into the cells, making them far too dangerous to use in people, Eggan said.

For another, the genetic defect that causes ALS would have to be corrected before the cells could be used in any treatment, the researchers said.

Embryonic stem cell research is what allowed them to figure out how to do every step in their experiment, Eggan added. And if this one fails, the researchers will have to return to true embryonic stem cells.



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Alcohol abuse may resume after critical surgery

Life-saving surgery to prevent repeated severe bleeding from ruptured veins in the esophagus or upper stomach may not induce some patients with alcoholic liver disease to stop drinking alcohol, researchers report.

Such a surgical procedure may be necessary to reduce the pressure in the veins of the esophagus and upper stomach among patients with cirrhosis, a scarring of the liver frequently caused by alcohol abuse.

The study group consisted of 132 patients with cirrhosis, including 78 with alcoholic liver disease, lead author Dr. Michael R. Lucey, of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, and colleagues report.

The investigators used patient and family member interviews to determine drinking patterns among 132 cirrhosis patients with who had surgically implanted shunts to reduce the pressure in their esophageal and upper stomach veins.

Twenty to 40 percent of patients with alcoholic liver disease acknowledged alcohol use during 5 years after receiving the pump. About one third of those with alcoholic liver disease reported drinking more than four alcoholic drinks per day during follow-up, the researchers report in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.

The patients with alcoholic liver disease were twice as likely to drink alcohol during follow-up as patients with cirrhosis from other causes.

Continued alcohol use among patient with alcoholic liver disease was associated with a 153 percent increase in gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), a liver enzyme indicative of liver disease. These patients also had a significantly increased risk repeat hemorrhage and death.

Lucey and colleagues conclude that a "substantial minority" of patients will return to drinking alcohol after experiencing a life-threatening complication. They recommend that patients with alcoholic liver disease should be encouraged to abstain from alcohol.



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Malaysia fights HIV

Strict laws and conservative attitudes are making the fight against HIV/AIDS harder in predominately Muslim Malaysia as they drive high-risk groups deeper underground.

Soliciting and sodomy are outlawed and there are heavy penalties for illegal drug use.

While lobbying from activists has won government support for HIV/AIDS prevention programs, distributing condoms and clean needles, implementation is far from easy.

Celine Ng, who runs a program distributing clean needles to drug addicts, knows that only too well.

Each day, her colleagues, many of them former drug addicts, lie in wait in abandoned buildings, on the fringes of jungles and dumpsites, where they give out clean needles to addicts in exchange for used ones.

Asked what her biggest challenge was, Ng answered instantly: "The police. They wait outside and (then conduct raids) and they say we are informers.

"Even my staff encounter problems with them. We have the endorsement of the narcotics (authorities) and we give needles, not drugs. So if they catch our clients with drugs, we can't stop them, but you can't catch those with just needles."

For homosexuals and sex workers, laws make it difficult to distribute condoms in gay venues because they are often used as evidence of the offence in court.

Anal and oral sex, even between consenting adults, is regarded as a "heinous crime" and is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. While prostitution is not illegal, soliciting is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Drug trafficking carries a mandatory death sentence.

DRIVEN UNDERGROUND

"They (people in high risk groups) are driven underground, so you can't reach them," said Adeeba Kamarulzaman, president of the government-backed Malaysian AIDS Council.

"We have (our) outreach workers getting arrested. They (authorities) raid and catch everyone, we are forever trying to bail out our outreach workers from the lockup, which is a major headache on a day-to-day basis," she said.

Injecting drug users in Malaysia make up the largest risk group for HIV/AIDS, or 65 percent of the 4,549 new infections in 2007. The country had 80,938 people living with HIV/AIDS at the end of 2007, with 13,635 of them suffering full-blown AIDS.

But sources familiar with the HIV/AIDS situation in this country of 26 million people say the problem may be graver than the figures suggest.

"Infections are going up but surveillance is very poor in Malaysia," said Raymond Tai of the Pink Triangle (PT) Foundation, which runs drop-in centers for major risk groups like sex workers, drug addicts and transsexuals in Kuala Lumpur.

"Many young gay men only know of their illness for the first time when they are warded with AIDS. How long have they been positive, how long have they been infectious? It is critical."

He said one in four men who have sex with men is HIV positive in Bangkok and there was a rising trend in Hong Kong.

"Those who came in for HIV testing and identified themselves as men who have sex with men, 10 percent tested positive. This is very high and consistent with what is happening in the region," he said.

The 10 percent figure came from tests conducted by PT Foundation between mid 2006 and end 2007.

MOVING INTO GENERAL POPULATION

What's worrying is the disease is moving away from high-risk groups to women in general.

"These (high risk) groups don't exist in isolation, drug users have wives, drug users patronize sex workers, they buy sex, they sell sex," said Kamarulzaman.

Concerned groups are trying to push out HIV/AIDS prevention messages, difficult in an environment where advertisements are under tight state control.

Condom ads are not allowed on national television, except in certain contexts such as promoting use between married couples.

"You can't use anything deemed pornographic," Tai said.

"When gay men are in a place picking up other men, (brochures) are competing (for attention). You have all the good looking men there and you are giving out boring information. Who is going to read it?"

Activists stress that more must be done, with the government first acknowledging the situation and cooperating with non-government organizations in spreading anti-HIV information.

"The number of sex workers has grown in Kuala Lumpur," said Rachel, a former sex worker who is now an outreach worker with PT trying to teach safe sex.

"Some university students, housewives and office workers do sex work part-time for money."

Her colleague, Jamie, agreed: "Some of them are so scared they won't even accept condoms from us because they think we are undercover police."




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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Fast food ban in Los Angeles

The Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted on Tuesday to put a one-year ban on new fast-food restaurants in one of the city's poorest areas, marking the latest effort by a municipality to fight rising obesity rates.

If approved by the mayor, the ordinance would put a moratorium on construction of new fast-food outlets in a 32-square-mile (82-sq-km) area of Los Angeles. The measure could also be extended for a second year.

The change would affect about half a million Angelenos living in an area that supporters say already has about 400 fast-food eateries and few grocery stores or other outlets for fresh, healthy food.

The 13-0 vote came about a year after research found that roughly 30 percent of children living in the South Los Angeles, West Adams, Baldwin Hills and Leimert Park areas are obese compared to about 21 percent in the rest of the city.

The moratorium would also be accompanied by moves to encourage more grocery chains and fresh food stores to open for business, supporters said.

Fast-food chains opposed the measure, saying that their industry was being unfairly blamed for causing the childhood obesity epidemic.

"Obesity is principally related to what and how much a consumer eats, not where he eats," Andrew Puzder, Chief Executive of Carl's Jr parent CKE Restaurants Inc, said in a letter to Council President Eric Garcetti.

Andrew Casana, spokesman for the California Restaurant Association, said fast-food companies were working to block ordinance or to make amendments to it.

"We have not ruled out lawsuits," Casana said.

Several U.S. cities have adopted measures forcing the restaurant industry to adopt healthier standards. California banned the sale of soft drinks in middle and elementary schools in 2003 and a new law requires fast-food restaurants in New York to post calorie counts above the service counter.




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Blood test can track alcohol consumption

A simple blood test that identifies the odds of heavy drinking in the previous four to six weeks is being used in several settings as an objective, non-judgmental way of identify problem drinkers and intervene, a researcher told the annual meeting of the American Association for Clinical Chemistry (AACC) this week.

"The test for heavy drinking works by measuring the changes in blood chemistries due to the effect of heavy drinking on various organ systems in the body," AACC presenter Dr. James Harasymiw, Director of Alcohol Detection Services in Big Bend, Wisconsin noted in a telephone interview with Reuters Health.

It's estimated that about 100,000 Americans die each year from alcohol abuse, including more than 17,000 people who die annually in alcohol-related traffic accidents.

"We defined heavy drinking as a woman having more than three drinks a day or a man having more than four drinks a day or binge drinking at least two times a week," Harasymiw said. "The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism has data showing that medical problems and psychological and social problems start to occur at this level of drinking."

The test is currently being used in several different settings, Harasymiw said. "It is being used in alcoholism treatment centers and we have a pilot project in one county in Wisconsin with repeat offense drunk drivers to see if we can see if we can reduce the rate of recidivism," he explained.

Drug courts are using the test to monitor individuals and the family courts in Wisconsin are using it where there are concerns about child safety, he told Reuters Health.

"We've used the test for heavy drinking to allow people to rebuild credibility after they've gone through treatment and are able to demonstrate that they are staying sober and that's allowed some women to get their children back," Harasymiw said.

Los Angeles County uses the test in some of their pre-employment screening.

The next proving ground for the test is doctor's offices. "We are hoping in time to have doctors use it; doctors have been resistant to screening for heavy drinking but we are trying to get a pilot going in medical settings to see if it can be integrated into office practice," Harasymiw said.

Doctors could show patients test results to help convince them that their drinking is causing "serious damage" to their body, he added.



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Garlic helps lower blood pressure

Garlic supplements may lower blood pressure just as effectively as some drugs used to treat hypertension can, according to a new research review.

"Supplementation with garlic preparations may provide an acceptable alternative or complementary treatment option for hypertension," Dr. Karin Ried and colleagues from The University of Adelaide in South Australia write.

Research to date on garlic and blood pressure has had "inconclusive" results, they note, while the last meta-analysis - in which the results of several studies are analyzed collectively -- only included studies done up until 1994.

To provide an updated perspective, Ried and her team included more recently published studies in their analysis, identifying 11 studies in which the patients were randomly assigned to garlic or placebo. In most studies, participants given garlic took it in powdered form, as a standardized supplement. Doses ranged from 600 mg to 900 mg daily, which study participants took for 12 to 23 weeks.

When the researchers pooled the data from the trials, they found that garlic reduced systolic blood pressure (the top number in a blood pressure reading) by 4.6 mm Hg, on average. An analysis limited to people with high blood pressure showed garlic reduced systolic blood pressure by 8.4 mm Hg, on average, and diastolic blood pressure (the bottom number) by 7.3 mm Hg. The higher a person's blood pressure -was at the beginning of the study, the more it was reduced by taking garlic.

The effects were similar to those of widely used drugs for treating hypertension, for example beta blockers, which reduce systolic blood pressure by 5 mm Hg, and ACE inhibitors, which produce an 8 mm Hg average drop in systolic blood pressure, the researchers note.

The 600 mg to 900 mg dosage used in the studies is equivalent to 3.6 mg to 5.4 mg of garlic's active ingredient, allicin, Ried and her team point out. A fresh clove of garlic contains 5 mg to 9 mg of allicin.

In the population as a whole, they note, reducing systolic blood pressure by an average of 4 to 5 points and diastolic blood pressure by 2 to 3 points could cut the risk of heart disease and heart disease-related death by up to 20 percent.

More research is needed to determine whether garlic supplementation might have a long-term effect on heart disease risk, the researchers conclude.



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Gammagard effective for 9 months in alzheimer patients

Alzheimer's disease patients treated with Baxter International Inc's Gammagard for nine months maintained cognitive function and in some cases improved it, according to an interim analysis of data from a small study.

"If successful, it should actually alter the long-term course of the illness, and the effects should persist for a very long time," Dr. Norman Relkin, lead researcher for the study and a neuroscientist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, said in an interview on Wednesday.

Gammagard, an intravenous therapy of antibodies derived from human plasma that has been sold for other uses for 15 years, is intended to attack the disease in two ways.

The antibodies target beta amyloid proteins thought to disrupt brain function in Alzheimer's patients. Gammagard also contains anti-inflammatory properties that may activate microglia cells to help dissolve amyloid deposits, or plaques.



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Should we fear Nano-foods?


Those consumers already worried about genetically engineered or cloned food reaching their tables may soon find something else in their grocery carts to furrow their brows over -- nano-foods.

Consumer advocates taking part in a food safety conference in Orlando, Florida, this week said food produced by using nanotechnology is quietly coming onto the market, and they want U.S. authorities to force manufacturers to identify them.

Nanotechnology involves the design and manipulation of materials on molecular scales, smaller than the width of a human hair and invisible to the naked eye. Companies using nanotechnology say it can enhance the flavor or nutritional effectiveness of food.

U.S. health officials generally prefer not to place warning labels on products unless there are clear reasons for caution or concern. But consumer advocates say uncertainty over health consequences alone is sufficient cause to justify identifying nano-foods.

"I think nanotechnology is the new genetic engineering. People just don't know what's going on, and it's moving so fast," Jane Kolodinsky, a consumer economist at the University of Vermont, said at the conference.

American consumers are generally more complacent about genetically modified or cloned foods than their counterparts in Europe.

But Michael Hansen, a senior scientist with the Consumers Union, said polls show that 69 percent of Americans are concerned about eating cloned meat.

He said that in focus groups run by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, no parents were willing to feed their children meat from cloned animals or their offspring.

In a recent CBS/New York Times poll, 53 percent of Americans said they wouldn't buy genetically modified foods.

SCANT AWARENESS

Hansen said there is scant public awareness, however, about foods produced through nanotechnology.

New consumer products created through nanotechnology are coming on the market at the rate of 3 to 4 per week, according to an advocacy group, The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (PEN), based on an inventory it has drawn up of 609 known or claimed nano-products.

Nano-products in common use today include lightweight tennis rackets and bicycles, and sunscreens containing clear, nonwhite versions of zinc oxide and titanium dioxide.

They also include lipsticks, and many items labeled as anti-microbial that contain silver ions such as socks, washing machines, salad spinners and food containers.

On PEN's list are three foods -- a brand of canola cooking oil called Canola Active Oil, a tea called Nanotea and a chocolate diet shake called Nanoceuticals Slim Shake Chocolate.

According to company information posted on PEN's Web site, the canola oil, by Shemen Industries of Israel, contains an additive called "nanodrops" designed to carry vitamins, minerals and phytochemicals through the digestive system.

The shake, according to U.S. manufacturer RBC Life Sciences Inc., uses cocoa infused "NanoClusters" to enhance the taste and health benefits of cocoa without the need for extra sugar.

The tea, says manufacturer Shenzhen Become Industry & Trade Co., Ltd. of China, is prepared with nanotechnology to "release effectively all of the excellent essences of the tea" and increase by a factor of 10 "the selenium supplement function."

Hansen, whose organization publishes the nonprofit product-testing magazine Consumer Reports, said there is no requirement that nano-products be identified as such.

He called for stronger federal regulations to require safety testing and labeling.

"Just because something is safe at the macro level, doesn't mean it's safe at the nano size," Hansen said. "All scientists agree that size matters."

Hansen said recent studies have shown that nano-sized particles in some cases can invade cells and breach the blood-brain barrier, and that some forms of nano-sized carbon could be as harmful as asbestos if inhaled in quantity.

"This represents science at the cutting edge. These technologies raise basic scientific issues," Hansen said.



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3 new genes found for schizophrenia

International researchers have identified three new DNA variations that increase the risk of schizophrenia and said on Wednesday they were some of the strongest genetic links yet found to the disease.

The results published in two independent studies in the journal Nature also confirmed a previously known genetic variation and could lead to new treatments for the condition that affects around 1 in 100 people, the researchers said.

"This is, if you like, the beginning of a new era in the field, said David St. Clair, a psychiatrist at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland who worked on both studies.

"Once we understand what the mutations are doing, new drugs and new approaches like preventative measures can be developed. It opens up the way to new methods for classifying and diagnosing people with the illness."

Schizophrenia, characterized by hallucinations, delusions and disordered thinking, is far more common in men than in women and is usually diagnosed in late adolescence or early adulthood.

While anti-psychotic drugs such as AstraZeneca's Seroquel and Eli Lilly and Co's Zyprexa can help, such drugs do not cure the mental illness and can cause unpleasant side-effects, including sometimes dangerous weight gain.

In the studies, the researchers analyzed the genes of 6,000 to 10,000 people from around the world, half of whom had schizophrenia.

They found one mutation on chromosome 1, two on chromosome 15 and confirmed a variant associated with the condition on chromosome 22. These changes can increase the risk of developing schizophrenia by up to 15 times, the researchers said.

The findings also suggest that the variants, while rare, pack a powerful punch and occur at a far higher rate than other uncommon mutations -- around 1 in every 10,000 people rather than 1 in every 10 million, St. Clair said.

"They are more common than your average rare variant," he said in a telephone interview. "We are now looking to see if there are environmental factors that affect the rate these variations come into the population."

In each case certain genes are knocked out, or deleted, on the chromosome. They are also found in some people with autism and other psychological disorders, suggesting the conditions may be related, the researchers said.

The next step is determining how these deletions affect brain function, according to the researchers, who included scientists from deCODE genetics in Iceland and the U.S. based Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Universities in Massachusetts.

"This work opens up an entirely new way to think about schizophrenia and eventually will suggest avenues for researching therapies for the sake of patients and families suffering from this terrible disorder," said Pamela Sklar of the Broad Institute, who led one of the studies.



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Birth defects chances in women increased by Diabetes

Women who have diabetes before becoming pregnant are about three times as likely as other women to have a baby with at least one birth defect, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.

A variety of different birth defects are associated with mothers who have type 1 diabetes, also called juvenile diabetes, or type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease that is linked to obesity, the researchers said.

These included defects of the heart, brain, spine, limbs, kidneys and gastrointestinal tract, penile and ear abnormalities and cleft palate, the researchers wrote in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

"This study documents the fact that diabetes is associated with a wider range of defects than we had been aware of in the past," Dr. Adolfo Correa of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

Correa said it appears that the condition called gestational diabetes is not associated with an increased risk of birth defects. This is a short-lived form of diabetes that can appear in a woman during pregnancy, but blood sugar levels usually return to normal shortly after the baby is born.

But Correa said some cases diagnosed as gestational diabetes may actually be type 2 diabetes that simply had gone unrecognized until the pregnancy.

The study involved 13,030 babies born with birth defects around the United States and 4,895 babies without birth defects, and the researchers determined which of the mothers had diabetes before becoming pregnant.

Women with diabetes had triple the risk of having a baby with birth defects than other women, the researchers said.

"Preconception care is not reaching all women with diabetes the way it ought to. And given the increasing prevalence of diabetes, including diabetes among women of reproductive age in this country and in many parts of the world, this is a call to action to the clinical and public health communities to come up with more effective prevention measures," Correa said.

Correa said doctors who know a woman who is pregnant or planning to become pregnant may consider steps including weight control, diet, exercise and medications.



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Germany's indoor smoking ban ruled


A German ban on smoking in indoor public places should be overturned for small bars, the country's highest court ruled on Wednesday.

The Karlsruhe-based Federal Constitutional Court said small bars were at an unfair disadvantage due to the ban, rendering it in breach of the constitution. The measures came into effect in most of Germany's 16 states at the start of the year.

The ruling upheld a complaint lodged by the owners of two small bars in Berlin and a disco operator in the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, who argued the anti-smoking legislation had put their business at risk.

Almost a third of the population smokes in Germany, where lighting up became a badge of freedom and tolerance after Hitler's Nazi regime cracked down on the habit in the 1930s.

An attempt by the federal government to introduce a nationwide ban failed in 2006, and many bars and restaurants in Berlin flouted the ban when it came into force in January.

Hans-Juergen Papier, the court's president, said the law would need to be redrawn by the end of 2009. Until then, smoking should be allowed in bars and restaurants of less than 75 square meters that lack a separate smokers' area, he said.

In the case of the disco, the court said the ban should be repealed for discos open only to adults.

As most of Germany's states have similar smoking laws to Berlin and Baden-Wuerttemberg, the ruling is likely to set a precedent for future complaints.



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Muscles strength not reduced by little stretching

While some research has raised the question of whether pre-workout stretching hinders muscle performance, a new study suggests that a few minutes of stretching may not sap the average exerciser's muscle strength.

Stretching is part of many active people's pre-exercise routine. But some recent studies have been pointing to potentially negative effects on athletic performance.

In some studies, though not all, stretching right before a workout has been found to decrease both sprint speed and jump height. There's also evidence that stretching temporarily reduces muscle strength.

However, one question has been whether such effects would be seen after the short bouts of stretching that a typical exerciser or weekend athlete might perform.

The new study, published in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, looked at just such a "practical" stretching regimen.

Researchers measured calf-muscle strength in 13 moderately active men and women under four different conditions: after no stretching, and before and after 2, 4 or 8 minutes of calf-muscle stretching.

They found that stretching did not diminish the participants' muscle strength compared with the no-stretching condition. It did, however, temporarily improve the range of motion in the ankle joint.

The findings suggest that "a few minutes of static stretching of the calf muscles before exercise is unlikely to diminish muscle strength," senior researcher Dr. Joel T. Cramer, of the University of Oklahoma in Norman, told Reuters Health.

Past studies, he noted, have shown that longer, less practical stretching regimens may in fact dampen calf muscle strength for a short time. "However," Cramer said, "most exercisers do not continuously stretch their calves for 10, 20 or 30 minutes."

It is possible that other muscle groups respond differently to stretching than the calf muscles do, according to Cramer. For instance, the quadriceps and hamstrings -- muscles in the front and back of the thighs, respectively -- may be more susceptible to the strength-sapping effects of stretching.

More studies are needed to answer that question, Cramer said.

Another limitation of the current study is that it included only moderately active people -- not athletes, who might be more affected by small changes in muscle strength or power brought on by pre-competition stretching.

None of this means that stretching is not useful to active people. As demonstrated in the current study, stretching can improve joint range of motion in the short term. And some studies suggest that over the long term, a regular stretching regimen can help build muscle strength.



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Unhealthy lipid levels found in heart patients

Many patients with cardiovascular disease fail to achieve recommended levels of "bad" LDL-cholesterol and other lipids (blood fats), according to a report published this month.

Dr. Nathan D. Wong from the University of California, Irvine, and colleagues examined the extent to which recommended levels of lipids were present in a large sample of U.S. adults.

Among individuals free of cardiovascular disease, 85 percent to 89 percent had recommended levels of harmful LDL-cholesterol and triglycerides and healthy or "good" HDL-cholesterol, the researchers report. The same was true for non-HDL-cholesterol.

In contrast, less than 40 percent of patients with cardiovascular disease were at goal for LDL-cholesterol and non-HDL-cholesterol, 35 percent had low levels of healthy HDL-cholesterol, and 44 percent had levels of harmful triglycerides above the recommended level.

Overall, only 17 percent of cardiovascular disease patients were at recommended levels for all lipids, the researchers report in the American Heart Journal.

Just over a third of patients with abnormal lipid levels reported being treated with a lipid-lowering drug, the report indicates, though this ranged from 3 percent in patients aged 20-29 years to 51 percent in patients aged 70-79 years and from 24 percent in those without cardiovascular disease to 63 percent in those with heart and blood vessel disease.

Despite treatment, only 30 percent of these patients (including only 19 percent of patients with cardiovascular disease) were at recommended levels of all three lipids.

The percent of individuals at goal for the various lipids increased between 1988-1994 and 2003-2006, the investigators say, but treatment rates in all groups remained suboptimal.

"Greater use of proven efficacious dosages of lipid-lowering agents as well as intensified consideration of combination therapy to address those with multiple lipid disorders are required, particularly among persons with cardiovascular and related high-risk comorbidities," Wong and colleagues conclude.



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Gestational diabetes can cause type 2 diabetes

Developing diabetes while pregnant -- what doctors call gestational diabetes -- greatly increases a woman's risk of developing type 2 diabetes later on, a new study confirms.

"Because of the high level of risk for these women, both screening for type 2 diabetes and preventive measures should be taken," Dr. Denice Feig of the University of Toronto, who was involved in the study, told Reuters Health.

Detecting and treating type 2 diabetes is particularly crucial if a woman plans to become pregnant again, she added, because poorly controlled diabetes in pregnancy increases the risk of fetal malformations and stillbirth.

Gestational diabetes is a known risk factor for type 2 diabetes. To gauge the exact degree of risk, Feig's team looked at 633,449 women who gave birth in Toronto between 1995 and 2002. A total of 21,823 (3.3 percent) of the women were diagnosed with gestational diabetes.

While just 2 percent of the women who didn't have gestational diabetes went on to develop type 2 diabetes during the 9-year follow-up period, 19 percent of those with gestational diabetes did, the researchers found.

Moreover, they say the strongest risk factor for type 2 diabetes was gestational diabetes, which increased risk more than 37-fold.

Women who are diagnosed with gestational diabetes can help ward off type 2 diabetes by staying at a healthy weight and exercising, Feig noted. Taking these steps can also help to reduce the risk of developing gestational diabetes, the researcher added, but some factors in the development of diabetes in pregnancy aren't modifiable, such as a person's family history of diabetes.



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Unnecessary chemotherapy for leukemia patients

Nearly one-third of leukemia patients do not respond to chemotherapy, but this is not typically discovered until they have already endured a week-long course of chemotherapy and waited even longer to see if the chemotherapy worked.

A new study shows that positron emission tomography, known as PET scans, may tell doctors how well a leukemia patient is responding after just one day of chemotherapy.

"This has very profound implications for patients," Dr. Matt Vanderhoek told Reuters Health. "Instead of making the patient go through a week of chemotherapy only to find out after the fact that their chemotherapy wasn't successful, therapy could be modified and changed on the fly."

The University of Wisconsin researcher will present the research Thursday at the 50th annual meeting of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine, underway in Houston, Texas.

Treating leukemia typically involves killing the cancer cells where they originate in the bone marrow. Doctors traditionally take a bone marrow biopsy up to a week after the end of chemotherapy to see how well the cancer-killing drugs have worked.

"The problem with the bone marrow biopsy is that it is an insensitive and weak predictor of treatment response," Vanderhoek said. "A lot of patients will be told that their treatment was successful when in fact it wasn't. As a result you have a patient who has undergone a week of chemotherapy only to find out much later on that their treatment was unsuccessful."

In eight patients with a type of leukemia called acute myeloid leukemia (AML) undergoing a standard 7-day course of chemotherapy, Vanderhoek's team found that a PET scan using a PET radio-tracer called FLT obtained after only one day of chemotherapy can indicate whether or not the patient is responding to chemotherapy.

According to Vanderhoek and colleagues, brightness and non-uniformity in the bone marrow FLT PET scan was an indication that the patient was not responding to chemotherapy.

"We hope that this data will provide enough evidence for a larger study to reach more definitive conclusions" on the value of FLT PET in determining response to chemotherapy in leukemia patients, Vanderhoek said.



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Premature birth causes adulthood lung problems

Infants born prematurely are at increased risk for a chronic lung disease, called bronchopulmonary dysplasia, associated with prolonged use of oxygen therapy or a respirator.

A new study shows that bronchopulmonary dysplasia as a complication of extreme preterm birth is strongly associated with reduced lung function and structural abnormalities -- notably emphysema -- in adulthood.

Dr. Daniel C. Chambers from Brisbane's Prince Charles Hospital in Queensland, Australia and colleagues report their findings in the European Respiratory Journal for August.

Bronchopulmonary dysplasia, or BPD, affects up to one-third of infants born prematurely, with impaired lung function persisting into childhood. Until now, the effects on adult survivors were largely unknown.

Chambers and associates identified 21 people born in Western Australia between 1980 and 1987 prematurely weighing less than 1500 grams (3 pounds, 5 ounces) and who required a respirator.

Lung function tests performed when they were about 19 years old showed that 15, or 71 percent, had persistent respiratory symptoms, including wheeze, cough, and shortness of breath.

Only three subjects had normal lung function, the investigators note.

CT images of the lungs revealed structural abnormalities in all 19 subjects examined, with 84 percent having emphysema.

As technological advances increase survival of the most premature newborns, BPD -associated adult lung disease is likely to be seen more frequently, Chambers and his associates warn.

Physicians, they advise, "will need to become increasingly prepared" to ask about the birth history, recognize lung disease potentially associated with prematurity, and offer smoking cessation advice and long-term follow-up to young adults born preterm "as they move past maximum lung growth and into their late 20s and 30s."

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Tau drug the Alzheimer's new hope

An Alzheimer's drug that attacks abnormal tangles in the brain appeared to slow progression of the disease, British researchers said on Tuesday, but doctors cautioned that the results are early.

The drug, made by private biotechnology company TauRX and called Rember, produced a significant improvement in key measures of thinking and memory in people with moderate Alzheimer's disease, company officials said.

The drug is among the first to attack tangles of tau protein in the brain that are strongly associated with dementia in Alzheimer's disease.

"We've demonstrated for the first time we can halt the disease by a treatment that aims to dissolve the tangles," said Claude Wischik of the University of Aberdeen and chairman of TauRX Therapeutics in Singapore.

The researchers tested 321 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease at 17 centers in the United Kingdom and Singapore, they told the International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease in Chicago.

They evaluated the patients at intervals over seven years. "We've held the disease at bay for a total of 19 months, whereas the control group declined at the expected rate," he said in an interview.

But other doctors said the drug needed more study.

"It's a phase 2 trial," said Dr. Sam Gandy, of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, who serves on an advisory council of the Alzheimer's Association.

"Predicting anything from a phase 2 trial is dangerous. All I can say is it is encouraging enough to move on to a phase 3 trial," Gandy said. Phase 3 trials look at whether a drug works in large groups of people.

"I would very much like to believe it is going to work but we don't know," Marcelle Morrison-Bogorad, director of the division of neurology for the National Institute on Aging, said in an interview.

Many researchers have been working to develop drugs to target amyloid plaques, the sticky clogs that build up in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.

The theory had been that if drugs can remove these plaques, doctors could alter the course of disease. But several drugs that have managed to remove these plaques have failed to show a benefit to patients.

Researchers presented results on a nasal spray on Monday that targets tau. In people with mild cognitive impairment, a precursor to Alzheimer's, it helped improve some measures of memory over three months.

Morrison-Bogorad said she is encouraged that researchers are now studying the tangles of Alzheimer's disease in addition to amyloid.

"I think eventually we will have a combination cocktail of drugs. I don't think it will be one thing," she said.

Alzheimer's disease is incurable and is the most common form of dementia among older people. It affects the regions of the brain involving thought, memory and language.



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Comparison of mammogram screening methods

The mammography screening policy used in the U.S. is equally effective as one used in Europe in detecting breast cancer, according to a report in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The results suggest that the longer screening intervals used by Europeans may be suitable for use in the U.S.

The researcher compared an "opportunistic" screening approach used in Vermont with an "organized" approach used in Norway. The former differs from the latter in that the screening is initiated by a physician's recommendation rather than by letters sent to all women in a specific age range. In addition, the screening interval is shorter with the opportunistic approach (annually vs. biennially) and involves one mammogram interpreter rather than two independent readings.

In the study, Dr. Berta M. Geller, from the University of Vermont in Burlington, compared cancer rates in 45,050 women screened in Vermont and 194,430 screened in Norway.

The authors found that the two screening approaches were comparable in their ability to detect breast cancer. For every 1000 women screened in 1 year, each approach identified roughly 3 women with breast cancer.

Moreover, the cancers detected with each approach carried roughly the same prognosis, the findings indicate.

"Our results demonstrate that despite its longer screening interval, the organized population-based screening program in Norway achieved similar outcomes as the opportunistic screening in Vermont," the authors state.



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Cell phone exposure and behaviour


Children whose mothers used cell phones frequently during pregnancy and who are themselves cell phone users are more likely to have behavior problems, new research shows.

The finding "certainly shouldn't be over interpreted, but nevertheless points in a direction where further research is needed," Dr. Leeka Kheifets of the UCLA School of Public Health, who helped conduct the study, told Reuters Health. "It's a wonderful technology and people are certainly going to be using it more and more," she added. "We need to be looking into what are the potential health effects and what are ways to reduce risks should there be any."

Kheifets and her team looked at a group of 13,159 children whose mothers had been recruited to participate in the Danish National Birth Cohort study early in their pregnancies. When the children reached age 7, mothers were asked to complete a questionnaire about their children's behavior and health, as well as the mother's own cell phone use in pregnancy and the child's use of cell phones.

After the researchers adjusted for factors that could influence the results, such as a mother's psychiatric problems and socioeconomic factors, children with both prenatal and postnatal cell phone exposure were 80 percent more likely to have abnormal or borderline scores on tests evaluating emotional problems, conduct problems, hyperactivity, or problems with peers.

Risks were higher for children exposed prenatally only, compared with those exposed only postnatally, but were lower than for children exposed at both time points.

Kheifets and her colleagues note that a fetus's exposure to radiofrequency fields by a mother's cell phone use is likely very small. However, they add, research has shown that children using cell phones are exposed to more radiofrequency energy than adults, because their ears and brains are smaller.

Because cell phone use was so infrequent among children in the study - 30 percent of kids were using a cell phone, but just 1 percent used a cell phone for more than an hour a week - radiofrequency exposure seems unlikely to have caused any behavior problems, they say.

"Another possible explanation for the observed association might be the lack of attention given to a child by mothers who are frequent users of cell phones," the researchers suggest. They note that mothers who used cell phones frequently were of lower socio-occupational status, more likely to have mental health and psychiatric problems, and more likely to have smoked while they were pregnant.

No matter what the factors behind the association are - if there indeed is a real relationship between cell phone use and behavior problems--one simple way to reduce exposure to cell phones would be to use hands-free technology, Kheifets said in an interview.

Editorialists writing in the journal raise the question of whether the publication of these findings may scare people for no reason.

Kheifets and her team believe that while their findings are preliminary, they should be reported. "We felt that the public is quite capable of dealing with proper information," the researcher said. "One shouldn't really try to be paternalistic about it."



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Premature birth linked to emphysema

Some premature babies may have a higher risk of developing emphysema and other lung problems, Australian researchers said on Tuesday.

A small study of 21 infants born up to four months prematurely in the 1980s and weighing as little as 0.6 kilograms showed that by the time they were young adults all had lung problems, including 84 percent who showed areas of emphysema.

"Larger, controlled, population-based studies are urgently required to fully define and guide the management of adult lung disease with extreme preterm birth," Daniel Chambers of the Prince Charles Hospital and Andrew Wilson of the Princess Margaret and Royal Perth Hospitals in Australia said in the study published in the European Respiratory Journal.

Emphysema is a progressive lung condition in which the walls between the alveoli, or air sacs, lose their ability to stretch and recoil. Smoking is the main cause, although genes also play a role.

The most common symptoms of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) -- which include chronic bronchitis and emphysema -- include shortness of breath, coughing and a limited ability to exercise.

Treating COPD, which affects an estimated 210 million people worldwide, is a major market for GlaxoSmithKline's Advair and one AstraZeneca is hoping to cut into with its rival medicine Symbicort.

The young adults in the study were born between 1980 and 1987 and were dependent on supplementary oxygen for more than 28 days during their stay in the hospital.

The researchers said it was surprising that so many of the volunteers had areas of emphysema, and this may be because they were born so prematurely,

With major improvements in neo-natal care helping more babies survive extreme prematurity, the findings mean doctors will have to pay more attention to the birth history of people born so prematurely, as they may be at higher risk of lung disease as they grow up.

The findings also underscore the extra risks of smoking for people who were born prematurely, the researchers said.

"This study reinforces the importance of stopping, or preferably never taking up, cigarette smoking, particularly if there is a history of preterm birth," the researchers wrote.



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Salmonella found in jalapeno say Colorado health officials


Colorado health officials said they had found a Salmonella-tainted jalapeno in the home of someone sickened in a recent outbreak of the food poisoning -- a vital clue in tracking down the source of the illness.

The pepper carried bacteria with the same unusual strain of Salmonella saintpaul that has made 1,307 people sick in the United States, the state health department said.

"The pepper was purchased at a local Wal-Mart, likely on June 24, and the individual became ill on July 4. This is the first pepper linked directly to an ill person in this outbreak," the health department said in a statement posted on its Web site this week.

On Friday, U.S. health officials said they had traced the outbreak to jalapeno peppers from Mexico. The only other tainted pepper was found last week at a distribution facility in McAllen, Texas.

The Food and Drug Administration has said peppers grown in the United States are not involved in the outbreak.

Investigators had focused early in the probe on tomatoes as a possible culprit. Last week, regulators lifted their warning on tomatoes, not because they were cleared from suspicion but because any that could have been contaminated would have spoiled and been discarded by that time.

Mexican officials have been angered by the FDA's statements.

Last week, Enrique Sanchez, director of Mexico's National Sanitation and Farm Food Quality Service, called the decision "arbitrary" and said it could have an "enormous" harmful impact on the local jalapeno industry.

Some members of Congress have also said they do not believe the investigation has been handled well. The House of Representatives Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations plans a hearing on the matter on Thursday.

Salmonella poisoning, which causes diarrhea, fever and abdominal cramps is very common, with 40,000 cases and 400 deaths each year in the United States alone.

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Secondhand smoke risks spouse's life


Nonsmokers married to smokers have a greatly increased chance of having strokes, according to a U.S. study published on Tuesday showing yet another hazard from secondhand smoke.

Being married to a smoker raised the stroke risk by 42 percent in people who have never smoked compared to those married to someone who never smoked, the researchers said.

This jumped to 72 percent for former smokers married to a current smoker, according to the study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

Former smokers who were married to smokers had a stroke risk similar to people who themselves were smokers.

"Quitting smoking helps your own health and also the health of the people living with you," Maria Glymour of Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and Columbia University in New York, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

The study involved 16,225 people aged 50 and up who had never had a stroke. They were followed for an average of nine years.

Glymour said there is accumulating evidence about the number of health problems linked to secondhand smoke.

Previous research had suggested that secondhand smoke increases the risk of stroke, but Glymour said stroke risk has been studied more extensively in smokers than in people exposed to secondhand smoke.

People who breathe in secondhand smoke also have a higher risk of lung cancer, nasal sinus cancer, respiratory tract infections and heart disease, among other conditions.

A 2006 U.S. surgeon general's report said secondhand smoke contains hundreds of chemicals known to be toxic or cancer-causing. These include formaldehyde, benzene, vinyl chloride, arsenic, ammonia and hydrogen cyanide.

For this study, smoking involved cigarettes and not pipes or cigars. It looked at health consequences for the spouses of smokers, but not at the long-term stroke risk in children of smokers due to secondhand smoke.

"We know that there are a lot of undesirable health consequences for kids, especially asthma and breathing problems that are exacerbated by secondhand smoke," Glymour said.



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Europe approves new anesthesia drug


European regulators have approved a breakthrough new medicine to help patients emerge far more quickly from anesthesia than existing treatments,

Schering-Plough Corp , the maker of the medicine, said on Tuesday.

The U.S. drugmaker has said the injectable drug, called Bridion, is one of the biggest advances in anesthesiology in the past generation.

The medicine was approved by the European Commission, following a recommendation last month by an advisory panel in support of the drug, also known as sugammadex.

Bridion was approved for reversal of neuromuscular block induced by the widely used drugs rocuronium and vecuronium.

It was obtained in Schering-Plough's $14.5 billion purchase last year of Organon Biosciences.

Analysts have said that Bridion is one of the biggest advances in anesthesiology in decades and could generate up to $1 billion in annual revenue if it is approved in major markets.

The medicine is awaiting approval in the United States, the world's most lucrative market for prescription drugs. An advisory panel to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in March voted that it was safe and effective.

In a late stage clinical trial, Bridion reversed the effects neuromuscular blockade within a few minutes- nine to 12 times faster than the standard reversal agent, neostigmine, according to researchers.

Neuromuscular blockade is used by anesthesiologists to cause paralysis during surgical procedures, particularly of the abdomen, chest and brain. But patients require breathing tubes until the drugs wear off or are reversed.

Bridion would allow many patients to start breathing on their own far more quickly, and thereby greatly lessen the time needed on ventilatory support and to remain in the recovery room, Schering-Plough has said.



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The use of precription drugs rises


When Sarah Roisman was 11 years old, her doctors prescribed Klonopin, a muscle relaxant, for a psychiatric disorder that caused her to have seizures. She liked how the drug made her feel. Her seizures went away.

But that's where her trouble with addiction began.

By age 14, the teen from an upper middle-class Philadelphia suburb led a dangerous double life. Editor of her school paper, strong student and popular athlete, Roisman was also hooked on painkillers and other drugs in an addiction that illustrates the rapid expansion in prescription drug abuse in America.

"My friends and I would take a bunch of different pills and break them up and put them all together and call it confetti. It could be any combination of anything. We could learn from it, and continue to take it," said Roisman, who is now 17.

The issue of prescription drug abuse shot to prominence with January's death of 28-year-old Hollywood actor Heath Ledger after he took six different prescriptions. The death of Ledger, who plays the Joker in the new Batman film "The Dark Night," adds to a growing list of prescription drug overdoses that includes Playboy model Anna Nicole Smith in 2007.

Other deaths are less celebrated. In the 45-54 age group, overdose deaths fueled by prescription drugs now surpass motor vehicle deaths as the nation's No. 1 cause of accidental death, federal data show.

The federal data also show nearly 7 million Americans abused prescription drugs in 2007 -- more than cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, Ecstasy and inhalants such as marijuana combined. The figure is up 80 percent since 2000.

Definitions of abuse vary but refer typically to nonmedical use of prescription drugs.

The number of Americans treated for abuse of painkillers surged 321 percent from 1995 to 2005, federal statistics show -- a trend some health experts link to another stunning figure: the 180 million prescriptions dispensed legally by U.S. pharmacies each year for pain medication.

In Florida, whose reputation for cocaine and other hard drugs was burnished in movies such as "Scarface" and "Miami Vice," the rate of deaths caused by prescription drugs was three times the rate of death caused by all illicit drugs combined, according to an analysis of 2007 autopsies by the Florida Medical Examiners Commission released in June.

'LOW SOCIAL DISAPPROVAL'

"What you have among over the counter and prescription drug use is a very low perception of risk," said Stephen Pasierb, president and chief executive of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, a nonprofit advocacy group.

"There's very low social disapproval. In fact, there are parents who almost relieved that their kid is using Vicodin and not smoking marijuana," he said.

Len Paulozzi, an epidemiologist with the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, testified recently in Congress that he believed physicians were improperly trained in the long-term dangers of therapy involving opioid painkillers, or drugs containing opium.

"There are guidelines out there, but we don't think that they're being routinely followed," he said.

Sen. Joseph Biden, a Democrat from Delaware, proposed to make August 2008 "National Medicine Abuse Awareness Month" in a resolution now before the Senate Judiciary Committee, saying the Internet had become "an information superhighway" for abuse of medicine in the United States.

But containing the abuse is notoriously difficult. Thirty-eight states have passed legislation for prescription drug monitoring programs to trace the source of drugs, and police in some states have had success in reducing pharmacy break-ins.

A University of Maine program provides pre-addressed, postage-paid pouches to the elderly so they can mail their surplus prescription drugs to state authorities for disposal in a bid to reduce the amount that get into the wrong hands.

None of the measures has stopped the growth nationwide, and experts point to several stubborn problems, including the phenomenon of "doctor shopping," in which patients go to multiple doctors to get several prescriptions.

Hundreds of online pharmacies also offer drugs that include generic versions of opiates like Purdue Pharma's OxyContin, methadone and Abbott Laboratories Inc's Vicodin, which are legitimately prescribed as painkillers, along with stimulants like Ritalin made by Novartis, and benzodiazepines like Pfizer's Xanax.

It is as easy in the United States to buy opiates or other abusable prescription drugs online as it is to purchase a book, said David Festinger, a scientist who has studied online drug sales at the Treatment Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. Regulating such trade is tough, he said.

"These Internet enterprises set up a bank account in one country, buy their drugs from another country, and do their merchandising and sales from another country," he said. "Everything is spread all over the globe. And in an instant, if anybody's on their tail, they can switch everything around."

RAIDING MEDICINE CABINETS

For many children, getting the drugs is simple.

In Philadelphia, Roisman and her friends raided family medicine cabinets for the big prizes -- OxyContin, a kind of synthetic morphine also known as "hillbilly heroin," along with Ritalin and Vicodin -- until she eventually passed out one day in school. A drug test showed she had seven drugs in her system.

"People think that it's OK because it's a prescribed pill. It comes from a credible source. Even if a doctor has not told you it's OK, they've told someone else it's OK," said Roisman, who became sober two years ago after treatment at a rehab center run by the nonprofit Caron organization.

She blames doctors for failing to "watch what they are prescribing" and parents for failing to understand "just how hard people will work to get what they want when they are an addict," adding many teens use the drugs to help study.

On college campuses, popping Adderall, Ritalin and other prescribed amphetamine-like psychostimulant drugs is a popular way to help cram for tests and cope with academic pressure.

Some are legitimately prescribed for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, helping sufferers increase alertness, attention and energy. But many use it without prescriptions.

Almost 60 percent of students have been offered an opportunity to try prescription stimulants by their junior (third) year of college in the United States, said Amelia Arria, a senior researcher at the University of Maryland's Center for Drug Abuse Research, which surveyed 1,253 students on drug usage.

Health insurers are also feeling the effects. Some face mounting pressure to expand coverage to include substance-abuse disorders. Others are grappling with swindlers who obtain illicit prescription narcotics through fraudulent insurance claims for bogus prescriptions, treating phantom injuries.

Such fraud costs health insurers up to $72.5 billion a year, according to a 2008 report by the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud, an advocacy group based in Washington.



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Global AIDS deaths edged down



The number of people killed by AIDS worldwide edged down for a second straight year in 2007 after rising for more than two decades, amid intensified global efforts to fight the disease, a U.N. agency said on Tuesday.

The AIDS epidemic is far from over, but appears to have leveled off with more people getting life-extending drugs and the number of new HIV infections falling in many places, UNAIDS said in a report.

Officials with Geneva-based UNAIDS and outside activists said much more needed to be done to beat this modern scourge.

Dr. Paul Zeitz, executive director of the Washington-based activist group Global AIDS Alliance, said the report showed the big increase in spending on prevention and treatment programs in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere had produced results.

"Based on this evidence, it's time to ramp up funding from all sources -- not to slow down or go on to other things. We're on the path toward victory here. Let's invest more," he said.

Global AIDS deaths numbered about 2 million in 2007, down from 2.1 million in 2006, UNAIDS said. AIDS deaths peaked in 2005 at 2.2 million after a steady climb since the disease was first identified in the early 1980s, UNAIDS said.

"A six-fold increase in financing for HIV programs in low- and middle-income countries (from) 2001-2007 is beginning to bear fruit, as gains in lowering the number of AIDS deaths and preventing new infections are apparent in many countries," according to the report issued before an international AIDS conference in Mexico next week.

"Progress remains uneven, however, and the epidemic's future is still uncertain, underscoring the need for intensified action to move towards universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support," the report read.

In 2007, about 33 million people were infected with human immunodeficiency virus, UNAIDS said. HIV is most often spread through sexual contact or injection drug use.

The total number of people living with HIV infections continues to inch higher as more people in hard-hit regions like sub-Saharan Africa, with two-thirds of all global cases, receive drugs that help them live longer, the report showed.

NEW INFECTIONS

New HIV infection rates were basically the same in 2007 as in 2006 -- about 2.7 million people, with a very small increase last year over the prior year, the agency said.

The report cited a big increase in the number of people receiving AIDS drugs in low- and middle-income countries, numbering about 3 million. But many more still lack access.

"There are still five new infections for every two people who are newly added on treatment. So clearly, we're not pushing back the epidemic enough," Dr. Paul De Lay of UNAIDS said.

Rates of new infections are rising in many countries, including China, Indonesia, Kenya, Mozambique, Papua New Guinea, Russia, Ukraine and Vietnam, and even rich nations such as Germany, Britain and Australia.

UNAIDS said its report used data from 147 countries, but De Lay said he was disappointed the United States did not provide its 2007 AIDS figures because U.S. officials continue to "refine" the numbers and will announce them soon.

Last week, the U.S. Congress passed a bill to triple spending on a program to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in Africa and other parts of the world, with President George W. Bush scheduled to sign it into law this week.

It calls for $48 billion over the next five years.

The Black AIDS Institute activist group issued a report saying the U.S. government had neglected the epidemic among black Americans even as it fights the disease overseas.

Cholesterol

CHOLESTEROL IS A LIPID, OR FAT-LIKE SUBSTANCE,
made by animal cells. The role of an elevated blood
cholesterol in causing a blockage to arteries by atherosclerosis
and a subsequent myocardial infarction was a
controversial issue from 1900 to 1994. Advice to patients
during those 90 years was often half-hearted. Until recently
we were not able to put the blame firmly on cholesterol
and convince physicians and patients worldwide to
aggressively lower serum cholesterol levels. The key piece
of scientific evidence proving that lowering elevated blood
cholesterol in humans prevents fatal or nonfatal heart
attacks was missing.

I. THE MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM
If cholesterol is the major cause of atheroma that obstructs
the flow of blood in arteries of the heart and brain,
significant morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular
disease would be prevented by the aggressive lowering of
total serum cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL)
cholesterol. The complete occlusion of a coronary artery or
cerebral artery is virtually always caused by a combination
of atheromatous obstruction of the artery and subsequent
rupture of the plaque of atheroma with thrombus
formation on the ruptured material. Thus, the term
atherothrombosis (see the chapter, Atherosclerosis/Atherothrombosis).
Atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease causes more
than 14 million deaths per year worldwide in a population
of about 6 billion people. This is expected to increase to
more than 25 million deaths by the year 2020 in a
population of about 7.4 billion people. It is estimated
that worldwide interventions could prevent more than
one million deaths annually. The prevention of atheroma
is obviously more important to world health than
the expensive production of so-called left ventricular assist
devices, which are a bridge to heart transplantation.

CAUSES OF HYPERCHOLESTEROLEMIA
A. Familial Hypercholesterolemia
This is a primary genetic abnormality. In very rare cases,
marked elevation of cholesterol (800–1500 mg/dl) is caused
by a genetic defect. A receptor on the surface of cells (LDL
receptors) removes LDL cholesterol from the blood. In
this disorder there is decreased production or function of
the LDL receptor. This autosomal disorder may involve
abnormalities in the synthesis, transport, or clustering of
the LDL receptor.

Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia fortunately
is rare and occurs in approximately one per million
individuals in the United States. These patients have no
functioning LDL receptors and have markedly elevated
LDL cholesterol as high as 1200 mg/dl (31 mmol/L)
and extensive coronary and peripheral atherosclerosis.
Acute MI may occur within the first one to two years of
childhood.

Heterozygotes have a reduction of 50% of the circulating
LDL receptors and may have serum cholesterol
levels in the range of 300–800 mg/dl and manifest coronary
artery atherothrombosis, peripheral vascular disease,
or atheromatous obstruction to the abdominal aorta in
the third or fourth decade. Racial differences may determine
the number of LDL receptors, and thus the ability
to remove LDL cholesterol gradually from the bloodstream
is affected.

Familial combined hyperlipidemia is a common condition
that occurs in more than 1% of the North American
population. This disorder may cause elevation of total
cholesterol or triglycerides or both.

B. Polygenic Hypercholesterolemia
In this condition there is a genetic predisposition and
dietary factors. In susceptible individuals with a decreased
number of LDL receptors, high saturated fat and
cholesterol intake causes substantial elevation of serum
cholesterol with levels in range of 260–320 mg/dl
(6.5–8.3 mmol/L). Approximately 3% of the population
in the United States appears to be affected. Although
elevation in total cholesterol is less severe than in heterozygous
familial hypercholesterolemia, the elevation of total
and LDL cholesterol increases risk for coronary artery
disease and drug therapy with statins is advisable.
C. Other Causes for Hypercholesterolemia
Type 2 diabetes occurs in approximately 7% of the North
American population and nearly all of these individuals
have some form of dyslipidemia. Their serum cholesterol is
usually in the range of 240–290 mg/dl (6.2–7.5 mmol/L).
Hypothyroidism is a relatively common condition that
decreases the metabolism with increases in serum cholesterol
in the range of 240–320 mg/dl.

Renal disease can also affect cholesterol levels. A form of
glomerulonephritis causes marked loss of protein in the
urine, diffuse edema, and hypercholesterolemia. Biliary
cirrhosis with its prolonged obstructive jaundice causes
marked elevation in serum cholesterol. Other causes include
pancreatitis, monoclonal gammopathy, and porphyria.

IV. TYPES OF CHOLESTEROL
Cholesterol is a member of a class of naturally occurring
compounds called sterols. It is an essential part of the
fatty sheath that insulates nerves and the outer membrane
of all animal cells, and is a component of chemicals that
include steroids (cortisone) and sex hormones such as
androgens and estrogens. Cholesterol acts as a precursor
of bile acids and occurs in high concentrations in the
brain, nerves, and adrenal glands; cholesterol concentration
is greater than 3 g per 100 g in the brain. Body cells
satisfy their cholesterol requirements for maintenance
and growth by intracellular synthesis of cholesterol and
the receptor-mediated uptake from the external medium
of cholesterol-rich LDL particles.

Dietary cholesterol is absorbed from the jejunum in
an unesterified form. Within the small intestine cholesterol
is esterified with fatty acids and incorporated into the
triglyceride core of chylomicrons that are secreted into
the intestinal lymphatics and reach the blood circulation.
Within the bloodstream chylomicrons are converted
into remnant particles through the action of lipoprotein
lipase. Triglycerides are liberated and virtually all the cholesterol
particles are carried to the liver via the portal vein.
Less than half the cholesterol in the diet is absorbed. It is
interesting that after many years intensive drug research,
ezetimibe, the newest agent, has been shown to localize in
the distal and at the brush border cells of the small intestine
and inhibit cholesterol absorption. This drug is,
therefore, an important addition to our therapeutic armamentarium
because it can be combined safety with the
powerful acting statins that interfere with the manufacture
of cholesterol in the liver.

The human body and contains approximately 1 g of
cholesterol per kilogram body weight. About 1 g of cholesterol
is lost from the body by the conversion to bile
acids and steroid hormones. This loss is balanced by endogenous
synthesis from saturated fats and fecal excretion of
unabsorbed dietary cholesterol.

Some of the cholesterol in blood is derived from the
food you eat, but the major part, greater than 70%, is
manufactured in the liver, mainly from saturated fats.
Thus, if we had no cholesterol in the diet, the liver would
manufacture more cholesterol to compensate. Some excess
cholesterol is excreted in the bile. Cholesterol is present
only in foods of animal origin, in particular, eggs, milk,
butter, cheese and meats, and a very high concentration
is present in gland meats, such as liver, brain, kidney,
heart, and sweetbreads. Plant-based foods such as potatoes,
wheat, rice, vegetables, fruits, grains, and beans contain no
cholesterol.

In order to understand the changes that may be required
in your diet, it is important to learn the difference
between the types of cholesterol: total cholesterol, LDL
cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol. Individuals should
become familiar with the different types of fats in foods
such as triglycerides, saturated fats, monounsaturated fats,
and polyunsaturated fats.

A. Total Cholesterol
Cholesterol is a fat (lipid) that is insoluble in water. It is
absorbed by the intestine or released from the liver into
the bloodstream. Cholesterol does not circulate freely in
solution but is attached to a protein carrier, forming a
molecule called a lipoprotein. Lipoproteins vary in size
and density; the smaller the size, the higher the density.
Cholesterol may be transported in a low-density lipoprotein;
thus the term ‘‘low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol.’’
There is also a high-density lipoprotein (HDL)
cholesterol (see the chapter Dyslipidemia).

When a doctor states that your cholesterol is 250 mg
(6.5 mmol), he is giving you the total amount of cholesterol
in your blood, which includes LDL and HDL
cholesterol. The total figure is not broken down unless
specifically requested by the doctor. The values given in
milligrams are the amount in each 100 ml of blood or
number of millimoles in one liter of blood.

B. Low-Density Lipoprotein (Bad) Cholesterol
The low-density lipoprotein is small and contains most of
the cholesterol that is transported to cells. About 75%
of the blood cholesterol is carried as LDL cholesterol.
The LDL cholesterol particle is the one responsible for
atheroma formation and progression. The higher the level
of LDL cholesterol in the blood, the greater the risk of
coronary heart disease; thus the term ‘‘bad’’ cholesterol.
Oxidation of LDL cholesterol is believed to be an
important process in the formation and progression of
atheroma. It appears that oxidative modification of LDL
causes an increase in foam cell formation and increased
rates of LDL accumulation within developing atheromatous
plaques. In addition, oxidized LDL appears to have
direct cytotoxic effects on the endothelium of arteries at
the site of injury.

Oxidative stress causes oxidation of LDL cholesterol.
Oxidative stress results from the production of reactive
oxygen species, superoxide anion, and hydrogen peroxide
molecules that cause oxidative damage and trigger intracellular
signaling cascades. The constituents of the atheroma
plaque produce and use reactive oxygen species. LDL
cholesterol reduction appears to reduce the production of
deleterious reactive oxygen species.

This author believes that it is unlikely that LDL particles
cause direct injury to normal healthy endothelium,
because the same blood level of LDL cholesterol is present
in veins that virtually never develop atheroma except
when they are exposed to high blood pressure, such as in
severe pulmonary hypertension. It is more likely that shear
stress caused by turbulence of blood at particular focal
points in arteries, particularly at branching areas, and
other factors cause endothelial injury; LDL particles then
just partake in the orchestration of accelerated atheromatous
plaque growth. Increased blood pressure appears
to promote atherogenesis through the mechanical effects
of pulsatile blood flow (see the chapter Atherosclerosis/
Atheroma).

A plasma level of LDL cholesterol greater than
160 mg/dl is associated with a high risk for coronary
artery disease events in susceptible individuals and levels
less than 100 mg/dl confer a low risk. When an individual
is documented as having very-high-risk LDL cholesterol
levels (>200 mg/dl) associated with premature coronary
artery disease, all available first-degree relatives should be
tested.

C. High-Density Lipoprotein (Good)
Cholesterol
Much interest has been focused on HDL cholesterol,
so-called because it is very small in size and very high in
density. HDL cholesterol is believed to carry cholesterol
away from body cells such as the lining of arteries helping
to keep the artery wall clean; thus the term ‘‘good’’
cholesterol.

As discussed earlier most heart attacks occur in individuals
with total cholesterol levels between 210 and 240
mg/dl (5.5 and 6.2 mmol/L), and more than 50% of adult
Americans have cholesterol levels in this range. In these
individuals with borderline high blood cholesterol, a low
level of HDL cholesterol further increases the risk for
coronary artery disease. Figure 1 shows the incidence of
coronary heart disease in four years by HDL cholesterol
and total plasma cholesterol level for men and women
older than 49 and free of cardiovascular disease.

The HDL system comprises a variety of small lipoproteins
smaller than LDL, but both HDL and LDL
particles contain mostly cholesteryl ester. Virtually all HDL
particles contain apoA-1 as their major apolipoprotein and
the particles vary a little in size; the largest particles is HDL
2 and the predominant smaller particle HDL 3.

1. Metabolism
The many steps involved in HDL metabolism are not
fully understood. Small HDL 3 particles accumulate cholesteryl
ester and expand to HDL 2; an important step is
further transformation by interaction with cholesteryl ester
transfer protein (CETP). At each step of the HDL metabolic
cycle some apoA-1 is lost. High levels of CETP turn
up the cycle at a high rate and this diminishes the total
pool size of HDL that is manifested as a lowered HDL
cholesterol level.

It appears that CETP is an important enzyme involved
in HDL biology. Inhibiting this key enzyme that modulates
HDL can raise HDL levels. Vaccines and cardioactive
agents that may increase HDL levels significantly are being
investigated, and there is great hope that major increases in
HDL cholesterol would cause significant protection from
atherothrombosis and its serious impact on morbidity and
mortality worldwide.

2. Effect on Atherosclerosis
Several epidemiologic studies indicate an inverse relationship
between HDL cholesterol levels and risk for coronary
artery disease (see Fig. 1). A low HDL cholesterol level
greater than 35 mg/dl (0.9 mmol/L) has been designated as
a major risk factor for coronary artery disease. It is stated
that every 1% increase in HDL cholesterol decreases coronary
artery disease risk by about 2%, and each 1% reduction
in total cholesterol should produce a 2% reduction in
coronary artery disease risk. In Finland where HDL blood
cholesterol levels are among the highest in the world, the
cardiovascular death rate is the highest of all European
countries (see the chapter Heart Attacks).

Some scientists suggest that HDL promotes reverse
cholesterol transport, that is, the removal of cholesterol
from tissues including removal of unesterified cholesterol
in atheromatous plaques so that it can be transported to
the liver and excreted. But proof is required. Most important,
HDL is believed to prevent LDL from oxidation
and aggregation and thus protect against formation and
progression of atheroma. This important area requires
further intensive investigation for clarification.

3. Variability of HDL Levels
About 25% of blood cholesterol is carried as HDL
cholesterol. People with high levels of HDL cholesterol,
greater than 60 mg (1.6 mmol), appear to live longer and
have less coronary artery disease. People with levels less
than 31 mg (0.8 mmol) have an increased risk of coronary
artery disease. It is not clear why some people should have
high values and others very low. It appears that about half
of the variation in HDL levels in the general population is
explained by genetic factors. Fortunately not all individuals
with low HDL levels get heart attacks.

Nongenetic factors that are known to be associated with
low levels of HDL are diabetes, obesity, smoking, and lack
of exercise.

Most females and males prior to puberty have about the
same cholesterol levels. Boys, however, at puberty have
about a 20% drop in HDL and a rise in LDL cholesterol.
The decrease in HDL cholesterol may be due to an
increase in androgens. In men the HDL level stays fairly
constant up to age 55, then starts to rise between 55–65.
It is possible that this rise might be due to a decrease
of androgens, which occurs during the male climacteric
period. In women there is a gradual rise in HDL cholesterol
from age 25 onward. Women are believed to be
protected until post menopause by this increase in HDL
and by their hormonal status. Why women are protected
from coronary heart disease until menopause and yet not
protected from strokes is not easily explained, especially if
atherosclerosis is the basis of both diseases.
There is a relationship between HDL cholesterol
levels and population groups, foods, alcohol, exercise,
and drugs.

D. Very-Low-Density Lipoprotein
The very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) is very large and
low in density. It transports triglycerides, which are used
mainly as a fuel; for example, in exercising muscle. The
evidence linking elevated blood triglyceride levels with
coronary heart disease is very weak and unclear. Thus, an
elevated blood triglyceride level alone is not of importance.
Weight reduction or cessation of alcohol intake always
causes a marked reduction in triglyceride levels but does
not alter LDL cholesterol levels.

V. BLOOD TESTS
A. Total Cholesterol
What is a normal blood cholesterol, and when does the
level produce a risk of coronary heart disease? Blood
cholesterol is not necessarily very high, that is, greater than
265 mg (6.9 mmol), in those who have heart attacks. In
fact, most heart attacks occur in individuals with blood
cholesterol around the average of 220–250 mg (5.7–6.5
mmol). In the LIPID study described above, only 3806
men with a blood cholesterol greater than 265 mg could be
found from a screening of 480,000. The remainder had
cholesterol levels of less than 265 mg and most likely in the
range of 200 to 250 mg.

Between 1970 and 1989, laboratories in North America
reported a normal cholesterol as between 150 (3.9 mmol)
and 250 (6.5 mmol). But it is now established that
individuals with so-called normal cholesterol in the range
of 220–250 are at increased risk, and heart attacks are
common in individuals with such levels. A blood cholesterol
of 220–250 mg (5.7–6.5 mmol) is considered high
by world standards. Most doctors now talk about an
optimal safe total cholesterol level of less than 190 mg/dl
(4.9 mmol/l) or LDL less than 120 mg (3 mmol). Heart
attacks are uncommon in individuals with a cholesterol
level less than 160 mg (4.2 mmol).

If we treat patients with a cholesterol level greater
than 250 mg (6.5 mmol), we will be excluding more than
80% of the population who are at high risk for coronary
heart disease. To reiterate, most heart attacks in North
America occur in people with blood cholesterol between
220 and 260 mg. Individuals with a blood cholesterol
less than 180 mg (4.7 mmol) obviously deal with
cholesterol by their own natural process. They are among
the fortunate; no dietary modification is necessary, and
blood cholesterol only needs to be rechecked about every
five years.

The blood cholesterol measurement gives the total
blood cholesterol, that is, LDL cholesterol plus HDL
cholesterol. Food eaten within hours does not have an
immediate effect on total blood cholesterol and HDL
cholesterol measurements, so fasting is not necessary for
this test. Triglyceride level is not an independent risk
factor and therefore widespread screening for elevated
triglycerides is not warranted. It is also an expensive
investigation. If your doctor thinks that triglyceride determination
is necessary, you must fast for 14 h before
blood is taken. Blood tests for glucose, diabetes, and
triglycerides are the only tests for which it is necessary to
fast for 12–14 h before the test.

B. Blood LDL Cholesterol Levels
Determination of LDL cholesterol is not done routinely,
because it is a difficult, time-consuming, and expensive
technique. It must be done fasting because it is
calculated by a formula that requires a triglyceride blood
level, which must be done after fasting 12 hours. The
formula for calculating the blood LDL cholesterol level
is as follows:
LDL cholesterol
¼ total cholesterol  HDL cholesterol
 ðtriglyceride divided by 5Þ
¼ mg=dl; for the value in mmol=L divide by 2
This formula does not apply if the triglycerides exceed 250
mg/dl.

In individuals age 15–75 optimal LDL cholesterol levels
are less than 115 mg/dl (3 mmol/L). In North America,
the UK, and Europe the vast majority of individuals
have an LDL cholesterol in the range of 130–200 mg/dl
(3.4–5.2 mmol/L). In patients with coronary heart disease,
the level of LDL is of paramount importance and should
be maintained at less than 100 mg/dl (2.6 mmol).

C. HDL Cholesterol Blood Level
Blood testing for HDL cholesterol levels can be done in the
nonfasting state. Levels less than 35 mg/dl (0.9 mmol/L)
are considered low and less than 27 mg/dl (0.7 mmol/L) is
considered unacceptably low. Levels greater than 54 mg/dl
(1.4 mmol/L) are considered optimal.

CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE RISK
A. Based on LDL Cholesterol
A high LDL cholesterol level is considered the most
important major risk factor for coronary artery disease.
The relationship between LDL cholesterol and coronary
artery disease risk is continuous over a broad range of
blood levels from low to high (110 mg/dl to greater than
190 mg/dl) and LDL cholesterol is the primary target of
therapy.

Patients with established coronary artery disease are
considered to have a 10-year risk greater than 20%. It is
expected that more than 20% of such individuals will
develop a recurrent coronary artery disease event within 10
years. In these individuals LDL cholesterol levels greater
than 130 mg/dl greatly increase the risk. Most national
guidelines state that in patients with proven coronary
artery disease or CAD risk equivalent, particularly
diabetes, drug treatment is strongly indicated to maintain
the level to less than 100 mg/dl (2.6 mmol/L).

Individuals without coronary artery disease or evidence
of cardiovascular disease should be assigned a risk based on
the following:
1. Their levels of LDL cholesterol: risk is increased if the
LDL-C is >190 mg/dl, and the goal should be <130
mg/dl (3.5 mmol/L)
2. Presence of diabetes risk score of >20 with a goal LDL
<100 mg/dl
3. Age
4. Family history of premature coronary heart disease
5. HDL cholesterol level
6. Smoking
7. The presence or absence of hypertension

DIETS AND CHOLESTEROL
A. Saturated Fats and Cholesterol
All animal fat is saturated and solid at normal room
temperatures. The degree of hydrogenation of a fat
determines how solid and saturated it is. Saturated fats
are broken down in the body and increase blood cholesterol.
Therefore, the most effective dietary method of
lowering blood cholesterol is to reduce intake of saturated
fats. High-cholesterol foods are few, therefore, we do not
use the term low-cholesterol diet.

Vegetable fats are unsaturated and almost all are liquid
at room temperatures. There are three vegetable oils that
should be avoided: coconut, palm, and peanut. Coconut
oil contains a high amount of saturated fat and is used
for cooking in several countries. It is also used in North
America in nondairy cream substitutes, for example,
coffee cream. Palm oil contains significant amounts of
saturated fat, and peanut oil, though mainly unsaturated,
has certain fatty acids that produce plaques of atheroma
in animals. The only vegetable that contains a little
saturated fat is the avocado; therefore, low-cholesterol,
low-fat diets often recommend that you avoid avocados.
You will note from Table 1, however, that although a large
avocado contains a significant amount of fat, only a little
of it is saturated, and no cholesterol is present. Therefore,
one avocado a week is an excellent food, especially if a
high potassium intake is required.

B. Polyunsaturates and Linolenic Acid
The replacement of some saturated fats in the diet by
polyunsaturated, monounsaturated, and other unsaturated
fats found in abundance in vegetable oil reduces blood
LDL cholesterol. The saturated and polyunsaturated fat
contents of commonly used foods are given in Table 1.
Oils recommended for the preparation of meals include
canola, olive, and soybean because they contain alphalinolenic
acid, very low cholesterol levels, and a minimum
of saturated fat. For example, ‘‘cholesterol-free’’ canola oil
contains 6% saturates and will produce a small amount
of cholesterol in the body. Not all vegetable oils claim to
be cholesterol free but contain significant saturated fats.
Because vegetable margarines contain a small amount of
saturated fat and hydrogenation remains controversial,
they should be used in moderation. Some products may have palm or
coconut oil added to enhance hardening; these two oils are
not recommended. Olive oil is recommended
for salads, but olive oil margarines may contain palm oil
to enhance hardening so read labels carefully. Some margarines
claim that they contain no cholesterol and are
nonhydrogenated yet they contain palm oil.

It is important to note that many recipes developed for
weight reduction diets tend to cut out carbohydrate foods
in order to decrease weight and may even introduce foods
that increase blood clotting and cholesterol. Therefore,
be careful in choosing ‘‘popular’’ weight reduction diets.
Consult Table 4 and the instructions given in the chapter
on Heart Attacks.

C. Nuts and Cholesterol and Risk
Most nuts contain no cholesterol and very little saturated
fats, but the exceptions include coconut and Brazil nuts
which have high saturated fat content and their products
should be avoided (see Table 4). Cashew nuts and peanuts
have significant saturated fats, and although they contain
an adequate amount of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated
fatty acids, they are not recommended and should
be used sparingly. Additionally, it appears that peanuts
may have atherogenic potential. Nuts that contain little
saturated fat and a high amount of monounsaturated fats
include almonds, walnuts, and hazelnuts and their intake
is highly recommended.

D. General Advice on Diets
Diets to reduce atherosclerosis or heart attacks must be
tailored to meet the needs of the individual, because each
family has different eating habits. Special recipes and diet
sheets may be misleading and difficult to follow for a
lifetime and individuals should consult Table 4, or similar
information.

It is recommended that the general population use foods
that contain a low amount of saturated fat and cholesterol
and make an effort to increase intake of polyunsaturated
and monounsaturated fat, linolenic acid, and foods that
have a favorable effect on blood clotting (see the chapter
Blood Clots). Reduction in the intake of cholesterol
alone is not sufficient because saturated fat is converted
into cholesterol in the body; therefore, reduction in
saturated fat intake is essential. Most important, the
intake of trans fat must be curtailed.

The recommendation made by the American Heart
Association is as follows:
Total fat intake should be reduced from the average
40% of calories to 30%. Polyunsaturated fat should
provide up to 10% of calories and the polyunsaturated
fat to saturated fat (P/S) ratio should be about 1:1.
Carbohydrate intake should be increased from an
average of about 45%–55% to maintain average
body weight, and protein intake should remain at
about 12–14%.
Scotland has not shared, however, in the slight decline
in mortality that has been experienced in Australia,
Belgium, Canada, Finland, Norway, and the United
States. Scotland has moved up in the world league of
coronary deaths to second for men, and Northern Ireland
has moved to third for men and second for women. In the
UK, fat intake has remained the same for the past 30 years
at about 40% of food energy and even increased between
1974 and 1982 to 41% of food energy. The Department
of Health and Social Security made the following
recommendations to physicians and the general public in
the UK:

Reduce the total fat intake to 35% of food energy with
saturated fats making up no more than 11%. Increase
the polyunsaturated to saturated ratio from the present
0.27 to about 0.45. The intake of polyunsaturated
acids presently at 5% of food energy should reach 7%,
which is less than the American and World Health
Organization’s suggestion of 10%.

The UK panel claims that the effects on the population
of a P/S ratio of 1.0 and beyond are unknown. Individuals
who are considered to have a high risk of developing
coronary heart disease are advised to cut fats to 30% of
food energy, with saturated fats contributing no more
than 10%, i.e., identical to the recommendation in the
United States. Thus there is consensus on both sides of the
Atlantic.

A Mediterranean style diet that contains an abundance
of linolenic acids is strongly recommended by the author;
see the chapter Diets and Heart Disease.
The reduction in dietary saturated fat intake as well
as the cessation of smoking by many individuals has provided
a decline in the incidence of coronary heart disease
mortality.

CHOLESTEROL-LOWERING DRUGS
A. HMC-CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins)
The statins, atorvastatin, fluvastatin, lovastatin, pravastatin,
and simvastatin, are cholesterol-lowering agents
that are effective and have few side effects. They cause a
20–40% reduction in total, or LDL, cholesterol. They may
cause a small, 1–6%, increase in HDL cholesterol, but
this effect is variable. Clinical trials have shown that these
agents decrease LDL cholesterol levels and reduce the risk
of heart attack and death from heart attacks. The newest
agent, rosuvastatin, is even more powerful than Lipitor
in reducing LDL levels to goal. Randomized clinical trials
that document the effectiveness of these agents are given
the chapter Dyslipidemia.

Mild side effects from statins include headaches, muscle
aches, and pain in the upper abdomen without gastritis,
ulcers, or bleeding. An increase in the liver enzymes may
be detected on blood test, but the risk subsides when the
drug is discontinued. Caution: Do not take with niacin
or fibrates such as gemfibrozil or fenofibrate. Statins are
contraindicated in pregnancy.

1. Atorvastatin
Supplied: Tablets: 10, 20, 40, 60 mg.
Dosage: 10–40 mg once daily; the author’s maximum
dose is 60 mg daily. The 80 mg dose is rarely required and
more adverse effects may occur at the maximal dose of
the drug.
2. Fluvastatin
Supplied: Capsules: 20 mg.
Dosage: 20–40 mg after the evening meal or bedtime.
3. Lovastatin
Supplied: Tablets: 10, 20, 40 mg.
Dosage: 10–40 mg after the evening meal.
4. Pravastatin
Supplied: Tablets: 10, 20, 40 mg.
Dosage: 10–40 mg after the evening meal or bedtime.

5. Rosuvastatin
Supplied: Tablets: 10, 20, 40 mg.
Dosage: 10 mg once daily is more effective in lowering
LDL cholesterol than 40 mg of Lipitor or simvastatin.
It causes a better increase in HDL cholesterol. The author’s
maximum suggested dose is 20 mg daily.
6. Simvastatin
Supplied: Tablets: 5, 10, 20 40, 60 mg.
Dosage: 10–40 mg after the evening meal.
B. Cholesterol Absorption Inhibitors
1. Ezetimibe
Supplied: Tablets 10 mg.
Dosage: 10 mg once daily. This drug has a low side
effect profile and can be combined with a statin.

Resins

1. Cholestyramine
Supplied: Powder in packets or in cans with a scoop.
Dosage: 12–24 g daily in liquid a half hour before to a
half hour after meals. Start with 4 g (one scoop) twice daily
for one week, then 4 g three times daily for one month,
and if necessary, thereafter increase to 8 g three times daily.
Cholestyramine and colestipol are not absorbed from
the gut and act by binding bile salts in the intestine. This
action causes the liver to increase the conversion of
cholesterol to bile acids, which are excreted in the bile.
Cholestyramine has no serious side effects. Constipation,
nausea, bloating, gas, and abdominal cramps may
occur. High doses taken for several years can cause poor
absorption of certain vitamins. It may interfere with the
absorption of digoxin and blood thinners (anticoagulants).
The recent introduction of ezetimibe as an effective drug
will render bile acid resins such as cholestyramine and
colestipol obsolete.

Fibrates
1. Gemfibrozil
Supplied: Capsules: 300 mg.
Dosage: 300 mg taken about a half hour before the
morning and the evening meal for one to two weeks, then
300 mg twice daily.
Gemfibrozil is the first fibrate to be introduced in the
seventies since the discontinuation of clofibrate in the
late sixties. This drug causes a 5–10% reduction in serum
cholesterol, 30% reduction in triglycerides, and a 5–10 %
increase in HDL cholesterol. Side effects include stomach
pain and bloating in less than 5% of patients. Gallstones
may occur.

In the VA-HIT study gemfibrozil caused a 31% decrease
in triglycerides, but only a 6% increase in HDL cholesterol
compared with placebo. This negligible increase in HDL is
claimed to have caused a beneficial reduction in cardiac
events. There was no reduction in all cause mortality or in
total cardiac mortality; there was a small, 22% reduction
in total cardiac death and nonfatal myocardial infarction
(MI) (P<0.05), a low level of significance. Virtually all of
the benefit was due to reduction in nonfatal MIs; a result
similar to that observed for vitamin E in the CHAOS
study.

2. Fenofibrate
Supplied; Tablets 100, 160 mg.
Dosage: 100–200 mg once daily with the main meal,
maximum 100 mg in renal dysfunction.
3. Bezafibrate
Supplied: Tablets 200 mg.
Dosage: Mono formulation once daily in the evening.
E. Niacin (Nicotinic Acid)
This drug is not often used because of prominent side
effects, which include flushing, itching, nausea, abdominal
pain, diarrhea, jaundice, gout, palpitations, and increased
blood sugar in diabetics. This drug should not be used if
you have low blood pressure or have had a heart attack,
heart failure, liver disease, a stomach ulcer, or diabetes. It is
not advisable to combine niacin with statins because severe
damage to muscles and the kidneys may occur.

Combination Therapy
The combination of simvastatin and ezetimibe has been
shown in a clinical trial to be more effective than simvastatin
alone. The combination caused LDL cholesterol
reductions of 44–57% and HDL cholesterol increases of
8%–11%. Ezetimibe 10 mg plus simvastatin 10 mg and
simvastatin 80 mg alone each caused a 44% reduction
in LDL cholesterol. The combination was well tolerated
with the safety profile similar to those of simvastatin and
of placebo.

The combination of rosuvastatin and ezetimibe is
advisable for severe hypercholesterolemia. This is the
most powerful combination available for the reduction
of elevated LDL cholesterol and is a welcome addition to
the clinician’s armamentarium. Caution is required, however,
because liver dysfunction or rhabdomyolysis may be
precipitated at high doses of any statin, particularly if drug
interaction occurs.

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