Health News

Rural women at greater risk of BP disorders during pregnancy

Washington, Nov 9 : Social factors—including living in a rural county—may increase the risk of pre-eclampsia and pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), according to new study.

Several factors, such as older age and high weight gain, are known risk factors for pre-eclampsia and other pregnancy-related blood pressure disorders.

Now, the new study has found that belonging to rural county may be another risk factor for blood pressure disorders during pregnancy.

Breastfeeding beneficial despite presence of pollutants in human milk

Breastfeeding beneficial despite presence of pollutants in human milkWashington, Nov 9: Mothers reluctant to breastfeed their infants following the threat of the exposure to chemical agents measured in human milk might be putting their kids at a greater health risk, say researchers.

The researchers said that not breastfeeding an infant typically poses more of a threat than does exposure to any of environmental pollutants measured in human milk.

Bone marrow transplantation approach can cure sickle cell disease

Washington, Nov 9 : A research team led by an Indian origin scientist has pioneered a new form of bone marrow transplantation that can prove safe and effective in curing sickle cell disease.

The research team led by Dr Lakshmanan Krishnamurti, a pediatric hematologist/oncologist at Children''s Hospital developed a new approach of bone marrow transplantation which relies on reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC).

RIC regimens are less toxic to patients and therefore can be offered to patients with severe sickle cell disease because they eliminate life-threatening side effects generally associated with bone marrow transplantation.

Twins for Taiwan cancer patient who had sperm frozen 13 years ago

Taipei - A Taiwan man, infertile due to cancer, has become the father of twins after the sperm he had frozen 13 years ago, was used to impregnate his wife, a newspaper reported Saturday.

Doctors at the Taipei Medical University's College of Medicine set the local record for the use of the longest-preserved sperm in helping the couple have children, the China Times reported.

The man, identified only as Chen, was 23 and a university student in 1995 when he contracted testicular cancer. Fearing chemotherapy would make him infertile, he stored nine tubes of sperm in a sperm bank.

Leprosy still prevalent in US

Leprosy Washington, November 7 : A new study has revealed that leprosy, also known as Hansen''s disease, is still prevalent in the United States.

"Approximately 150 cases are diagnosed each year with 3,000 people in the U. S. currently being treated for leprosy,” says Dr. James Krahenbuhl, director of the Health Resources Service Administration''s National Hansen''s Disease Program (NHDP) in Baton Rouge, LA.

African Americans Respond better to Positive Messages in Cancer Screening

African Americans Respond better to Positive Messages in Cancer ScreeningA recent research has shown that many African Americans avoid getting screened for cancer hearing public service announcements and cancer news stories that highlight the fact that African Americans are often diagnosed with cancer at a later stage and have a lower survival rate as compared to whites.

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