Monthly Archives: February 2012

Stem Cell Therapy Procedure and Outcome – Video

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

28-02-2012 14:48 Albert Rodriguez, MD administers stem cell therapy for Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia. stemcelldrR.com, email airpainmd@aol.com See the original post: Stem Cell Therapy Procedure and Outcome - Video … Continue reading

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MWI to Market Innovative Canine Platelet Therapy from Pall Under SECUROS Brand

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pall Corporation (NYSE: PLL), a global leader in filtration, separation and purification, today announced it has entered into an exclusive U.S. distribution agreement with leading animal health products provider MWI Veterinary Supply Co. As part of the agreement, MWI, through its SECUROS division, will market an innovative canine platelet enhancement therapy (C-PET) kit developed by Pall to treat dogs suffering from osteoarthritis as well as tendon and ligament injuries. The disposable system provides veterinarians a quick, portable and cost-effective solution for helping dogs realize long-term relief from these painful conditions. Osteoarthritis, a major concern for owners of the more than 72 million pet dogs1 in the United States, is a chronic condition characterized by pain and stiffness in the joints. Approximately one in five adult dogs in the U.S.2 suffer from osteoarthritis. Common canine treatment methods can range from weight control and exercise to the administration of nutraceuticals and anti-inflammatory drugs. In an effort to treat the condition rather than just the symptoms, many veterinarians have begun offering alternatives like minimally-invasive cell therapy procedures. Typically offered in conjunction with some of the more traditional methods, cell therapy can help accelerate healing and lead to longer-term relief. … Continue reading

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Sleeping Pills Linked to Death Risk: Which Prescriptions Are Dangerous, and Why?

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

According to new data from the Scripps Clinic Sleep Center in San Diego, people taking medication for insomnia now have something else to lose sleep over. Research published yesterday in the medical journal BMJ by Daniel F. Kripke, Robert D. Langer and Lawrence E. Kline points to very strong links between sleeping pills and early death. This was a large study with clear, compelling and statistically significant findings. "The results were pretty surprising," said Kripke in an interview with Time. "And as far as I know, the mortality and cancer risks are not reflected in any [sleep aid medication] labels." The study followed 10,529 people who took sleeping pills, as well as about 23,676 others who did not, for about 2.5 years between 2002 and 2007. The subjects' average age was 54. Like us on Facebook Even those who took less than 18 pills a year faced increased mortality--they were 3.6 times more likely to die than non-users. Those who took between 18 and 132 doses a year were four times more likely, and those who took 132 or more were five times more likely. These are frightening statistics for the 6 to 10 percent of Americans who use sleeping … Continue reading

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Rottenstein Law Group Hopes for Big Benefits from Small Device

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

The Rottenstein Law Group, which represents clients with claims stemming from the severe side effects of the drug Fosamax, is cautiously optimistic about a new medical device designed to eliminate the need for regular self-injection of medication. (PRWEB) February 28, 2012 Robert Langer and Michael Cima, two MIT researchers working with the company MicroCHIPS, Inc., have developed a microchip implant capable of delivering prescription medications to patients. The chip, in development for about ten years, just completed its first human test, prompting the researchers to claim, It passed with flying colors. The microchip implants were tested on seven women between the ages of 65 and 70 who suffer from osteoporosis. In all seven patients, the chip delivered the correct dose of medication without any adverse side effects. Some bisphosphonate medications are administered by injection, rather than in pill form like Fosamax. The idea behind the microchip implant is to effectively deliver an accurate dosing of medication while ensuring compliance on the part of patients. Many persons cannot, or will not inject themselves with medication. Cima commented in an MIT press release: Compliance is very important in a lot of drug regimens, and it can be very difficult to get patients … Continue reading

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Modified bone drug kills malaria parasite

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

Washington, Feb 28 (IANS) A modified osteoporosis drug may prove to be a boon in fighting malaria, which works at very low concentrations and has no side-effects. Osteoporosis is the thinning of bone tissue and loss of bone density over time, increasing the risk of fractures. Unlike similar compounds tested against other parasitic protozoa, the new drug BPH-703 readily crosses into the red blood cells of malaria-infected mice and kills the malaria parasite. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign researchers found the drug by screening a library of about 1,000 compounds used in targeting a key enzyme in an important biochemical pathway (isoprenoid biosynthesis) in cancer and in disease-causing organisms, the journal proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reports. The new drug lead, BPH-703, inhibits a key enzyme in isoprenoid biosynthesis that enables the malaria parasite to defend itself from the host immune system. The drug has little effect on the same chemical pathway in human or mouse cells, said Illinois chemistry professor Eric Oldfield, who led the study, according to an Illinois statement. The lead compounds are chemically modified forms of the osteoporosis drugs Actonel (Risedronate) and Zometa (Zoledronate), Oldfield said. The World Health Organization estimates that malaria killed … Continue reading

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FDA adds new safety information to statin drugs

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal health officials are adding new safety warnings about risks of memory loss and elevated blood sugar to statins, the most widely prescribed group of cholesterol-lowering medications. The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday it is making labeling changes to medicines like Pfizer Inc.'s Lipitor, AstraZeneca's Crestor and Merck & Co. Inc.'s Zocor. The drugs are used by tens of millions of U.S. patients to help prevent heart-related problems associated with cholesterol. New labeling on all such drugs will warn of memory loss and confusion reported among certain patients taking statins. In general the problems were not serious and went away after patients stopped taking the drugs, according to the FDA. The updated labels will also mention elevated levels of blood sugar, associated with diabetes, that have been reported in some patients taking statins. A growing number of studies published over the last five years have found a link between statin use and type 2 diabetes. Last June, a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association analyzed five older randomized trials and concluded the increased risk was small but real for people taking higher doses of any statin. Cardiologists said Tuesday that the lifesaving benefits … Continue reading

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UN: Illegal drugs sold via social media

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

VIENNA (AP) Illegal Internet pharmacies are selling illicit drugs and prescription medicines online and are increasingly targeting young people, a U.N. drug agency warned Tuesday. The International Narcotics Control Board also described North America as continuing to be "the world's largest illicit drug market" in 2010; parts of Europe as the homes of industrial scale cannabis factories; and growing poppy cultivation in West Asia. Focusing on Internet pharmacies as a growing threat, a summary of the agency's 2011 report cited the agency's head, Hamid Ghodse, as saying such use of social media "can put large, and especially young, audiences at risk of dangerous products." The Vienna-based board urged governments to close down illegal Internet pharmacies. It also called on them to seize substances that have been illicitly ordered on the Internet and smuggled through the mail. The organization noted "high levels of illicit drug production manufacture, trade and consumption," with "vast amounts produced in all three countries" in North America the United States, Canada and Mexico. About 90 percent of the cocaine reaching the United States is transited through Mexico, even as an increasingly harsh crackdown by Mexican authorities is forcing some drug cartels to move their operations to Central … Continue reading

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Many don't stick to bone drugs, despite counseling

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with the bone-thinning condition osteoporosis often skip the drugs they are prescribed, and telephone counseling does little to change that, according to new research. Researchers said osteoporosis is involved in more than two million fractures a year in the U.S., racking up medical costs of $19 billion. In addition to exercise and a healthy diet with enough calcium and vitamin D, as well as measures to prevent falls, medications may reduce the risk of broken bones -- which can take a serious toll on the health of old people. For people at high risk, bone drugs such as bisphosphonates may cut the yearly fracture risk from five percent to three percent, said Dr. Daniel Solomon of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. But people often stop taking the medications, added Solomon, also of Harvard Medical School. "It's the problem with all chronic conditions," he told Reuters Health. "Drugs for asymptomatic chronic conditions are universally poorly adhered to." Some 10 million Americans currently suffer from bone thinning, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation. The majority are postmenopausal women. Bone drugs include Merck's Fosamax, Roche's Boniva, Novartis's Reclast and Warner Chilcott's Actonel. To see if they … Continue reading

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Social media used to sell drugs to youth, report says

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

VIENNA (Reuters) - Illegal "Internet pharmacies" are using social media to market drugs to young people, an international report said on Tuesday. The International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), which monitors the implementation of U.N. drug control conventions, said illicit drugs as well as prescription medicines were being ordered online from such unscrupulous operations. "Disturbingly, illegal Internet pharmacies have started to use social media to publicize their websites, which can put large audiences at risk of dangerous products," INCB President Hamid Ghodse said in a statement accompanying its 2011 report. He told a news conference in London that the rogue pharmacists used social media such as YouTube or Facebook to draw people to chatrooms and engage them "in a variety of ways which, in the first instance, you do not see as that they are marketing the drug....then of course they are bombarding them with the sort of drugs." The Vienna-based body called on governments to shut down illegal Internet drug activity and to seize substances smuggled via the postal system, adding that many of the medicines sold in this way were counterfeit. "Key aspects of illegal Internet pharmacies' activities include smuggling their products to consumers, finding hosting space for their … Continue reading

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Cholesterol drugs will come with new safety warnings

Posted: Published on February 29th, 2012

By Saundra Young, CNN updated 4:29 PM EST, Tue February 28, 2012 FDA warns of statin side effects STORY HIGHLIGHTS Washington (CNN) -- An entire class of statin drugs will get new labels that alert the public to safety concerns, the Food and Drug Administration announced Tuesday. Statins, which treat cholesterol, now will come with labels that include a warning that the drugs, taken by almost 32 million Americans, can cause memory loss and confusion. The FDA says reports in general have not been serious, and the symptoms subsided when patients stopped taking the medications. The new labeling will also warn doctors and patients that statins can cause hyperglycemia, an increase in blood sugar levels and increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes. The FDA will no longer recommend routine and periodic monitoring of liver enzymes of patients taking statins. Instead, it said liver enzyme tests should be performed before a patient starts taking statins, and then only when clinically indicated. That's because according to the FDA, serious injury to the liver is rare, and routine monitoring doesn't detect or prevent it. The new label will tell patients who experience fatigue, loss of appetite, dark urine, upper stomach pain or … Continue reading

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