Honestmed
Friday, April 28, 2006
  Bloglines - New York Times Examines "Next Wave" Of Patient Lawsuits Over Medications
Bloglines user pltaylor (pltaylor@wport.com) has sent this item to you.


Medical Malpractice / Litigation News From Medical News Today
Latest Medical Malpractice / Litigation News From Medical News Today.

New York Times Examines "Next Wave" Of Patient Lawsuits Over Medications

The New York Times on Saturday examined how several "widely used" medications have become the focus of the "next wave" of lawsuits filed by patients over allegations that pharmaceutical companies concealed severe side effects or improperly marketed the treatments... click link for more info.


 
  Heart Disease
Heart Troubles: Is It Mom's Fault?

Study Examines Role of Maternal Contribution to Heart Disease Risk

April 27, 2006 -- New research points to yet another issue we can blame on our mothers -- our risk of heart diseaseheart disease.

The risk of coronary heart disease passed from mothers is greater than the risk from fathers, and risk is even greater if both parents have heart disease, according to study results slated to be published in the June issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The findings were presented Thursday at a media briefing on cardiovascular disease sponsored by the American Medical Association in New York City.

While it is well known that family history of heart disease is an independent risk factor for heart attackheart attack and strokestroke, until now little was known about how the sex of the affected parent influenced this risk.

Moms' Habits

Exactly why the risk from mothers is greater than the risk from fathers is not fully understood. Genetic factors may play a role, suggests Kristina Sundquist, MD, PhD. Sundquist is an assistant researcher at the Karolinska Institute's Center for Family Medicine in Stockholm.

Another possible factor, says Sundquist, is that kids tend to spend more time with their moms. As a result they are more likely to pick up their mother's bad habits.

"If moms with heart disease are more likely to smoke, be physically inactive, or have a poor diet, this can influence behavior in their offspring and influence heart disease risk," she says. The findings may call for "mother-child oriented long-term prevention of coronary heart disease with a focus on behavioral [issues]."


Moms vs. Dads

Moms vs. Dads

Sons had a 41% greater risk of developing heart diseaseheart disease if their dads had heart disease and a 55% greater risk if their moms did, the study shows. Daughters had a 17% increased risk of developing heart disease if their dads had a history of heart disease and a 43% increased risk if their moms did.

Children with two parents with heart disease had an 82% increased risk of developing it themselves, the study shows. What's more, children whose parents developed heart disease at an early age (before they turned 55) had a 300% greater risk of developing the disease.

"Of course, clinical attention should be given to patients whose mothers or fathers had heart disease, and special attention should be given to patients if both their parents had heart disease, their mother had heart disease, or if the [parent's] onset was at an early age," she says.

Comparing Parental Histories

To arrive at their findings, Sundquist and colleagues used data linked from different Swedish registries. The first database came from Swedish men and women born since 1932. This was linked to information about their parents -- as well as coronary heart disease -- and then to hospital admissions and deaths.

The database included 10,496 men and 3,281 women who had a mother and/or a father with heart disease. They then compared people with heart disease whose parents also had it to patients with heart disease but without parental history.

Calling the new research "exciting data," Sharonne N. Hayes, MD, director of the Women's Heart Clinic at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., says that the findings underscore the importance of family history as a risk factor for heart disease. "This type of information about the strength of family history can help us understand why knowing our family history is so important."


SOURCES: Kristina Sundquist, MD, PhD, assistant professor, Karolinska Institute's Center for Family Medicine, Stockholm, Sweden. Sharonne N. Hayes, MD, director, Women's Heart Clinic, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.; associate professor of medicine and cardiovascular disease, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minn. Sundquist, K. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2006 (in press).


 
  Bloglines - Acid - Alkaline Balance
Bloglines user pltaylor (pltaylor@wport.com) has sent this item to you.


Community Threads

Acid - Alkaline Balance

By Community Threads

Stress in relationships might be the result of bitter emotions held in bodies physical, mental, emotional, astral, etheric. Feelings can be bitter, neutral and sweet. It's good to check one's emotional acid-alkaline balance.

This household of bodies used to crave sweet foods that caused high acidic levels. Now we crave different foods. And our questions about reactionary and responsive behaviors seem to fit an acid-alkaline environmental model. Does that mean we avoid people and relationships that are acidic to us? Does love avoid as well as include? Does love mean sustaining self-balance first?


A Better Way - Lesson 18 from Google.com

The Cause of Disease
Have you ever wondered if many of the diseases raging through our society have a common cause? Many doctors, herbalists and nutritionists believe that the explanation may come down to three words:


Acid Alkaline Imbalance
Over acidity, which can become a dangerous condition that weakens all body systems, is very common today. It gives rise to an internal environment conducive to disease, as opposed to a pH-balanced environment which allows normal body function necessary for the body to resist disease. A healthy body maintains adequate alkaline reserves to meet emergency demands. When excess acids must be neutralized our alkaline reserves are depleted leaving the body in a weakened condition.

The concept of acid alkaline imbalance as the cause of disease is not new. In 1933 a New York doctor named William Howard Hay published a ground-breaking book, A New Health Era in which he maintains that all disease is caused by autotoxication (or "self-poisoning") due to acid accumulation in the body:


Now we depart from health in just the proportion to which we have allowed our alkalies to be dissipated by introduction of acid-forming food in too great amount... It may seem strange to say that all disease is the same thing, no matter what its myriad modes of expression, but it is verily so.
William Howard Hay, M.D.

More recently, in his remarkable book Alkalize or Die (see recommended reading), Dr. Theodore A. Baroody says essentially the same thing:

The countless names of illnesses do not really matter. What does matter is that they all come from the same root cause...too much tissue acid waste in the body!
Theodore A. Baroody, N.D., D.C., Ph.D.

Understanding pH
pH (potential of hydrogen) is a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a solution. It is measured on a scale of 0 to 14—the lower the pH the more acidic the solution, the higher the pH the more alkaline (or base) the solution. When a solution is neither acid nor alkaline it has a pH of 7 which is neutral.

Water is the most abundant compound in the human body, comprising 70% of the body. The body has an acid-alkaline (or acid-base) ratio called the pH which is a balance between positively charges ions (acid-forming) and negatively charged ions (alkaline-forming.) The body continually strives to balance pH. When this balance is compromised many problems can occur.

It is important to understand that we are not talking about stomach acid or the pH of the stomach. We are talking about the pH of the body's fluids and tissues which is an entirely different matter.


 

ARCHIVES
03/24/06 / 03/25/06 / 03/28/06 / 03/29/06 / 03/30/06 / 03/31/06 / 04/04/06 / 04/05/06 / 04/07/06 / 04/08/06 / 04/10/06 / 04/11/06 / 04/12/06 / 04/13/06 / 04/14/06 / 04/15/06 / 04/16/06 / 04/17/06 / 04/18/06 / 04/20/06 / 04/21/06 / 04/26/06 / 04/27/06 / 04/28/06 / 05/01/06 / 05/02/06 / 05/03/06 / 05/04/06 / 05/05/06 / 05/08/06 / 05/09/06 / 05/17/06 / 05/18/06 / 05/19/06 / 05/30/06 / 05/31/06 / 06/01/06 / 06/02/06 / 06/03/06 / 06/07/06 / 06/08/06 / 06/09/06 / 06/14/06 / 06/15/06 / 06/20/06 / 06/22/06 / 06/26/06 / 06/27/06 / 06/29/06 / 07/01/06 / 07/07/06 / 07/10/06 / 07/13/06 / 07/15/06 / 07/18/06 / 07/21/06 / 07/24/06 / 07/29/06 / 07/31/06 / 08/02/06 / 08/04/06 / 08/30/06 / 09/13/06 / 09/14/06 / 09/21/06 / 09/26/06 / 09/27/06 / 10/01/06 / 10/02/06 / 10/05/06 / 10/06/06 / 10/09/06 / 10/11/06 / 10/16/06 / 10/17/06 / 10/18/06 / 10/23/06 / 10/24/06 / 10/27/06 / 11/09/06 / 11/10/06 / 01/03/07 / 01/16/07 / 01/17/07 / 01/19/07 / 01/29/07 / 02/12/07 / 02/28/07 / 03/16/07 / 05/01/07 / 05/02/07 / 11/18/07 / 05/15/08 / 05/26/08 /


Powered by Blogger