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Matti Narkia

B Vitamins May Cut Stroke Risk - Neurology (Brain and Nerve) Conditions, Diseases, Medi... - 0 views

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    Feb. 20, 2009 (San Diego) -- High doses of B vitamins may help prevent stroke in high-risk people, new research suggests.\n\nThe finding comes from the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation 2 trial of more than 5,500 men and women with heart disease. Participants were assigned to a daily regime
Dr. John Bureau DC

More Pills, Less Quality Of Life For Kidney Patients - 0 views

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    see more articles reviewed on my blog: drjohndc.tumblr.com
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    ScienceDaily (May 12, 2009) - The more pills a dialysis patients takes, the worse their health-related quality of life, according to a new study. The findings indicate that increasing the number of medications to control patients' disease may interfere with their ability to enjoy normal activities. Kidney disease patients undergoing dialysis must take more pills than most patients with other chronic diseases. While these medications are important for controlling patients' disease, at some point taking too many pills (with their ensuing side effects) may negatively affect patients' health-related quality of life, or their perceived physical and mental health. Rajnish Mehrotra, MD and Yi-Wen Chiu, MD (Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute), and their colleagues conducted a study to see if "pill burden" affects dialysis patients' health-related quality of life. They studied 233 chronic dialysis patients from three clinics in different geographic areas in the United States. The investigators found that patients took an average of 19 pills a day and that a quarter of the patients took more than 25 pills a day. Patients with a high pill burden had lower perceived physical health. Medications called phosphate binders, which control the level of phosphorous in the blood, accounted for about half of the daily pill burden. Sixty-two percent of the patients did not take these medications as directed. The more phosphate binders a patient was prescribed, the less likely they were to take their medications as directed and the less likely they were to have their blood phosphorous levels under control. These findings indicate that increasing the number of prescribed pills does not seem to improve control of phosphorous levels and may come at the cost of poorer health-related quality of life. The authors note that any attempts to tackle dialysis patients' pill burden must address the number of phosphate binders a patient is prescribed on a daily basis. Dr. Mehrotra has re
Matti Narkia

Coming: Ersatz Calorie Restriction / Science News - 0 views

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    Avocados may hold a key to longer, better health
anonymous

Tips on Pregnancy Week 6 - 0 views

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    During pregnancy week 6, an baby is starting to come into view more and more similar to a little organic (even though not a human!). Dark spots must contain been formed whereas the eyes and nostrils will slowly take their shapes. There must also be little pits on either side of the skull, the place where ears are going to be shaped. There are tiny buds that will form charitable sha
Robert Peil

When it comes to brain protection, there is nothing quite like blueberries! - 0 views

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    Improved Memory and Brain Function is now suggested by a new report on blueberries by Russell Martin. This research has linked blueberries with improved memory retention and motor coordination that normally accompany aging.
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