Sunday, January 18, 2009

More Isn’t Always Better in Coronary Care


Personal Health
More Isn’t Always Better in Coronary Care

new_york_times:http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/06/health/06brod.html

By JANE E. BRODY
Published: January 5, 2009
Ira’s story is a classic example of invasive cardiology run amok.

Ira, of Hewlett, N.Y., was 53 when he had an exercise stress test as part of an insurance policy application. Though he lasted the full 12 minutes on the treadmill with no chest pain, an abnormality on the EKG led to an angiogram, which prompted the cardiologist to suggest that a coronary artery narrowed by atherosclerosis be widened by balloon angioplasty, with a wire-mesh tube called a stent inserted to keep the artery open.
The goal, he was told, was to prevent a clot from blocking the artery and causing a heart attack or sudden cardiac death.
Wanting to avoid an invasive procedure, Ira decided to pursue a less drastic course of dieting, weight loss and cholesterol-lowering medication. But three years later, the specter of a stent arose again. An abnormal reading on a presurgical EKG led to another angiogram, which indicated that the original narrowing had worsened. Cowed by the stature of the cardiologist, Ira finally agreed to have not one but three coronary arteries treated with angioplasty and drug-coated stents, making him one of about a million Americans who last year underwent angioplasties, most of whom had stents inserted.
Being Treated While Healthy
For patients in the throes of a heart attack and those with crippling chest pain from even minor exertion, angioplasty and stents can be lifesaving, says Dr. Michael Ozner, a Miami cardiologist and the author of “The Great American Heart Hoax” (Benbella Books, $24.95). But, Dr. Ozner said in an interview, such “unstable” patients represent only a minority of those undergoing these costly and sometimes risky procedures.
Most stent patients are healthy like Ira, who was experiencing no chest pain or cardiac symptoms of any sort. Yet Ira was afraid not to follow the doctor’s advice, despite the fact that no study has shown that these procedures in otherwise healthy patients can reduce the risk of heart attacks, crippling angina or sudden cardiac death. “We’ve extended the indications for surgical angioplasty and stent placement without any data to support the procedures in the vast majority of patients — stable patients with blockages in their arteries,” Dr. Ozner said.
What the studies do show, Dr. Ozner said, is that putting stents in such patients is no more protective than following a heart-healthy lifestyle and taking medication and, if necessary, nutritional supplements to reduce cardiac risk. The studies have also shown that stents sometimes make matters worse by increasing the chance that a dangerous clot will form in a coronary artery, as noted in 2006 by an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration.
Dr. Ozner, medical director of the Cardiovascular Prevention Institute of South Florida, is one of many prevention-oriented cardiologists vocal about the overuse of “interventional cardiology,” a specialty involving invasive coronary treatments that have become lucrative for the hospitals and doctors who perform them.
Even some interventional cardiologists have expressed concern about the many patients without symptoms who are treated surgically. “The only justification for these procedures is to prolong life or improve the quality of life,” said Dr. David L. Brown, an interventional cardiologist and chief of cardiology at Stony Brook University Medical Center, “and there are plenty of patients undergoing them who fit into neither category.”
Mistaken Assumptions
The treatments — coronary artery bypass surgery, angioplasty and the placement of drug-coated stents — cost about $60 billion a year in the United States. Though they are not known to prevent heart attacks or coronary mortality in most patients, they are covered by insurance. Counseling patients about diet, exercise and stress management — which is relatively inexpensive and has been proved to be life-extending — is rarely reimbursed. In other words, procedure-oriented modern cardiology is pound wise and penny foolish. And in these economic times, it makes great sense to reconsider the approaches to reducing morbidity and mortality from the nation’s leading killer.
Most people mistakenly think of coronary artery disease as a plumbing problem. Influenced by genetics, diet, diabetes, hypertension, smoking and other factors, major arteries through which oxygen-rich blood flows to the heart gradually become narrowed by deposits of cholesterol-rich plaques until blood can no longer pass through, resulting in a heart attack.
In coronary bypass surgery, a blood vessel taken from elsewhere in the body is reattached to a clogged coronary artery to bypass the narrowed part.
However, as Dr. Ozner points out in his book, “three major studies performed in the late 1970s and early 1980s clearly proved that for the majority of patients, bypass surgery is no more effective than conservative medical treatment.” The exceptions — patients whose health and lives could be saved — were those with advanced disease of the left main coronary artery and those with severe crippling, or unstable, angina.
Bypass surgery does relieve the pain of angina, though recent studies suggest this may happen because pain receptors around the heart are destroyed during surgery.
“The studies on angioplasty delivered even worse news,” Dr. Ozner wrote. “Unless the patient was in the midst of a heart attack, the opening of a blocked coronary artery with a balloon catheter resulted in a worse outcome compared to management through medication.” In fact, one trial, published in 2003 in The Journal of the American College of Cardiology, found that balloon angioplasty, which flattens plaque against arterial walls, actually raised the risk of a heart attack or death.
Stents were designed to keep the flattened plaque in place. But studies of stable patients found no greater protection against heart attacks from stents than from treatments like making lifestyle changes and taking drugs to lower cholesterol and blood pressure.
A Small Culprit
A new understanding of how most heart attacks occur suggests why these procedures have not lived up to their promise. According to current evidence, most heart attacks do not occur because an artery is closed by a large plaque. Rather, a relatively small, unstable plaque ruptures and attracts inflammatory cells and coagulating agents, leading to an artery-blocking clot.
In most Americans middle age and older, small plaques are ubiquitous in coronary arteries and there is no surgical way to treat them all.
“Interventional cardiology is doing cosmetic surgery on the coronary arteries, making them look pretty, but it’s not treating the underlying biology of these arteries,” said Dr. Ozner, who received the 2008 American Heart Association Humanitarian Award. “If some of the billions spent on intervention were put into prevention, we’d have a much healthier America at a lower cost.”
Dr. Ozner advises patients who are told they need surgery to get an independent second opinion from a specialist.
This is the first of two columns on preventing heart attacks. Next week: Noninvasive remedies that work.

Friday, January 16, 2009

101 Free, Useful, and Striking Sites to Learn About Human Anatomy

101 Free, Useful, and Striking Sites to Learn About Human Anatomy
By Holly McCarthy

Whether you’re a biology student, interested in studying medicine someday, or just curious about how the human body works, these anatomy sites can teach you whatever you want to know about the nervous system, your skeleton, reproductive systems and more. You’ll find games, diagrams and even glossaries devoted to revealing the intricate systems and parts that make the human body tick.
Overviews
For a general overview of human anatomy, visit these sites.
Human Anatomy Online: This website has all kinds of photos of skeletal anatomy and more.
Human anatomy: This Wikipedia entry explains the study of human anatomy and what it represents, including the brain, organ systems and more.
Human Anatomy: Look up anatomy terms and get an introduction to the digestive system and skeletal system on the Minnesota State University–Mankato website.
Human Anatomy Printouts: Test your knowledge of the arm, the body, and the brain here.
Biology 129 Human Anatomy: Penn State’s biology class offers up a course syllabus and links to helpful anatomy resources.
Human-Anatomy.net: This website is devoted to “accurate, interactive 3D anatomy” systems and software representations.
Anatomy of the Human Body: Read Henry Gray’s illustrated publication about human anatomy at Bartleby.com.
Human Anatomy Learning Modules: Dartmouth’s excellent website lets you see photos and learn about everything from the pelvis to the head and neck to the thorax and abdomen.
The Visible Human Project: If you qualify to be a part of this project, you’ll be able to see all kinds of photos and images of the human body.
Human Anatomy Table of Contents: Click on an anatomy subject, like the heart, leg, lower extremity or thoracic wall, to learn more.
Skeletal
Here you can learn about bones, how the skeleton fits together, and its function.
The Skeletal System: Read about the divisions of the skeleton, like the axial skeleton and appendicular skeleton, here.
Skeleton: Find out where the ribs, spine, coccyx, femur, tarsals and metacarpals are with this diagram.
Skeletal System: View the front and back of a human skeleton here to learn terms and placement for the humerus, cuboid bone and more.
The Human Skeleton: Listen to a guided tour of the human skeleton, then test your understanding of the diagram.
List of bones of the human skeleton: Here you can get definitions and find out where certain bones are located, including the ethmoid bone, zygomatic bone and vomer bone.
The Human Skeletal System: Click on a section of the skeleton–like skull, spine and vertebrae, or extremities and joints–to learn more about each.
Skeletal System: Penn State’s skeletal system page offers up-close photos of everything from the sternum to the fetal skull.
The eSkeletons Project: Compare the skeletal anatomy of a human against a chimpanzee, gorilla, baboon or other mammal.
BioEd Online: Skeleton: Access slides that help teachers explain the skeletal system to their students, using drawings, key words and more.
The Skeleton: Learn about the functions of the skeleton and each group of bones here.
Muscular
Read about and view photos of muscles, tendons and more from these websites.
Muscles: This diagram shows you where a human’s quadriceps, frontalis, pectorals, deltoids and more lie under the skin.
Muscular System: This highly detailed diagram shows you where to find the Vastus Lateralis Muscle, Tibialis Anterior Muscle and a lot more.
The Hosford Muscle Tables: Get details about the body’s muscles, from the masseter to the extensor indicis.
Muscular and Skeletal Systems: Get zoomed-in diagrams of skeletal muscle systems and muscle fibers and more from this site.
Human Body Muscle Diagram: Find out where major muscles are located here.
Organs
From the skin to the lymphatic system, you’ll learn about organs here.
Human Anatomy - Organs: The BBC’s diagram points to the brain, voice box, bladder, appendix, gallbladder and more.
Organ Anatomy: Follow the links to find out more about the human organ systems, including the lymphatic system, urinary system and more.
Basic Anatomy - Tissues and Organs: View diagrams of the epidermis, circulatory system, muscular system and more.
Organs of the human body: Learn more about human organs by region. Included are vertebra, heart, lung, nose, scalp and more.
Human Skin: View basic and advanced models of the human skin here.
The Brain and Nervous System
Learn about the anatomy of your nervous system and how your brain operates with these guides.
The Brain: Read about the nervous system, how the brain receives nourishment and more from this site.
Nervous System: Here you’ll find out which part of the brain controls sight, smell, hearing, balance and taste.
The Human Nervous System: Learn about the Central Nervous System and view a diagram of the nerve cell here.
Nervous System: View a diagram and discover terms like neurons, peripheral nervous system and brain stem.
Nervous System: Find out where the plantar digital nerve, radial nerve and others are found here.
The Human Central Nervous System: Learn about the difference between white matter and gray matter, the spinal cord and more.
Human Nervous System: On this site, you can explore the cerebral cortex, view brain anatomy pictures and learn more about the senses.
The Whole Brain Atlas: Harvard Medical School’s resource has information about the normal brain, a brain that has suffered a stroke, has a brain tumor, inflammatory or infectious disease, or a degenerative disease.
Anatomy of the Brain: Each division of the brain is explained here.
About Brain Injury: A Guide to Brain Anatomy: View diagrams, read terms and definitions, and learn about the brain for the purpose of understanding treatments and brain injury.
Sexual Anatomy
Better understand your reproductive parts by studying glossaries and diagrams here.
Pink Parts - Female Sexual Anatomy: Scarleteen’s diagram and guide to female anatomy explains the function and appearance of the uterus, vulva, and more.
Man’s Best Friend: Male Sexual Anatomy: Scarleteen also explains the male sexual anatomy in this guide.
Sexual Anatomy, Reproduction and the Menstrual Cycle: Women can learn about their anatomy here.
Illustrated Human Body: View photographs the male and female body, accompanied by a guide to each.
Female External Genital Anatomy: This graphic photograph shows where the clitoris, labia majora, hymen, perinerum and more are located.
Female Reproductive Anatomy: Here you’ll find another diagram for the interior and exterior female anatomy.
Male Reproductive Anatomy: Vind out where the epididymis, pubic bone and urinary bladder are located.
Basics of the Female Sexual Anatomy: This less graphic diagram explains the function and location of labia minora, labia majora and more.
Overview of the Male Anatomy: Yale Medical Group’s diagram and guide explains terms like scrotum, prostate gland and more.
Understanding the Male Anatomy Glossary of Terms: Get medical definitions for BPG, antigen, bladder and more.
Interactive Sites and Games
Play games and view 3D animations to learn about anatomy in more creative ways.
Get Body Smart: These Flash animations provide an interactive way of studying muscle tissue, the skeletal system and more.
Visible Body: This 3D visual animation tool gives you up-close views of the human body from all angles.
Teen Species: This game shows you what happens to teenage boys and girls during puberty.
The Virtual Body: Listen to narrated tours, take a test and zoom in to learn more about the brain, skeleton, heart and digestive system of humans.
Anatomy.tv: Subscribe to this site to watch demos and interactive anatomy diagrams.
Interactive Body: BBC’s website features games for learning about the skeletal system, organs, muscles, nervous system and more.
Anatomy and Physiology I Interactive Tutorials: Find movies and interactive tutorials for the Central Nervous System, cellular respiration and more.
WebAnatomy: Take tests and play games to learn about human anatomy here.
Activities Index: These interactive activities teach you about facial bones, skin structure, cell structure, body planes and more.
eAnatomy: This very cool site has full-screen displays, pictures and 3D reconstructions of the ear, face and neck, brain and more.
For Kids
These kids-friendly sites teach students and children about the human body, without getting too graphic.
Neuroscience for Kids: Get trivia answers, view the brain structure and more on this kid-friendly site.
Anatomy Arcade: Here, kids can “poke a muscle,” “whack a bone,” or play the muscular jigsaw puzzle.
BAM! Your Body: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hosts this kid site that teaches health, anatomy and more.
Kid Info: These links and games are great for slightly older kids.
Bone Links: This website has bone games and information about “bone careers.”
Anatomy Lesson Plans: Help your kids learn about anatomy using these lesson plans.
Ask a Scientist: Kids with an understanding of basic anatomy can ask questions or review the archive to learn more about biology, evolution and anatomy.
Brains Rule!: All kids can play around on this colorful, interactive site that explains the brain through games and more.
The Magic School Bus Human Body Tour: Scholastic’s children’s book comes to life with this game.
Probe the Brain: Shock the brain to learn how it works.
Digestive System
Find out exactly how your digestive system operates here.
Your Digestive System and How it Works: Find out why digestion is important, how food is digested and where key organs are located here.
Digestion: Learn about the stomach, small and large intestines, and fat digestion here.
Pathophysiology of the Digestive System: On this website, you can take “a voyage through the digestive tract” and learn about the liver and biliary system, pancreas and more.
AMA Digestive System: AMA offers up a diagram and helpful guide to explain how your digestive system works.
How Stuff Works: This Shockwave representation is all about the digestive system.
Digestive System Topics: View a diagram and look up symptoms or digestive problems here.
Your Gross and Cool Body — Digestive System: Follow your food as it travels through your body. This guide explains it all.
Cell Anatomy
Learn about the construction of your cells from these sites.
Cells Alive!: Find diagrams, puzzles and cell cams here.
The Anatomy of a Cell: This guide explains cell function and the different types of cells, prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
The Structure of a Human Red Blood Cell: Learn about red blood cells here.
Pregnancy and Infancy
Study how the female body changes during pregnancy and learn about the anatomy of a fetus in this list.
Pregnancy Anatomy and Physiology: Understand how the uterus and cervix change during pregnancy, and all about the placenta and umbilical cord.
Pregnancy: MedlinePlus offers up plenty of information about pregnancy anatomy and more.
Anatomy During Pregnancy: ProHealth Care’s diagram shows amniotic fluids and placenta, as well as fetal development from 10 weeks to 30 weeks.
Anatomy: Fetus in Utero: The Ohio State Medical Center explains terms like uterine wall and amniotic sac and also includes a diagram.
Anatomy of a Fetus: Circulation and Breathing: Learn about the development of a fetus’ circulatory and respiratory systems here.
Heart
Here you can learn all about the construction and function of the heart.
Heart Anatomy: This glossary gives definitions for terms like left atrium, aorta, mitral valve and others.
Heart Anatomy: Find out where the right ventricle, left atrium and more are located.
Heart Anatomy: The Texas Heart Institute offers a diagram and basic stats of the human heart here.
The Anatomy of the Heart: Click through the slides to view the chambers of the heart, learn about the valves and more.
Anatomy of the Heart: Find out how the human heart works when you read this guide.
Miscellaneous
From the anatomy of the ear to the anatomy of your foot and ankle, this list contains even more educational sites and diagrams.
Ear Anatomy: Learn terms and view a diagram of the ear here.
Lungs: This rough sketch asks you to match the parts of the lung–larynx, cardiac notch, or bronchial tree–to the appropriate spot.
Skin Anatomy: Learn where the Pacinian corpuscle, sweat gland and sebaceous gland are situated.
Anatomy References for Artists: Artists can access anatomy resources and games here to help them with their work.
Respiratory System: View a diagram of the human respiratory system and learn how it compares to the respiratory systems of birds, fish and reptiles.
3D Female and Male Anatomy: Find out how men and women’s anatomy differs, from the respiratory system to the urinary system.
Anatomical Dictionary: Refer to this dictionary to look up terms like angular bone, sternal plate and more.
Liver: MamasHealth.com explains the liver’s function, body location and even which medications can negatively affect the liver.
Anatomy of the Eye: Watch videos and view pictures of the retina and eye.
Anatomy of the Food and Ankle: Learn about the bones, joints, muscles and tendons that make up your foot and ankle.
The Anatomy of Teeth and Jaws: Get a look inside and around your teeth here.


http://www.geriatricnursingcertification.com/blog/2009/101-free-useful-and-striking-sites-to-learn-about-human-anatomy/

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Jobs’s Pancreas May Be Removed After Complications




Jobs’s Pancreas May Be Removed After Complications (Update1)

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By John Lauerman and Jason Gale
Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) --
Surgery that Apple Inc.’s Steve Jobs may be having to remove his pancreas could be the result of painful side effects from a cancer procedure, or the return of tumors he said were removed five years ago, doctors say.
If Jobs had a so-called Whipple procedure to excise the cancer, parts of his pancreas and other organs were removed. Sometimes, damage from cancer and the surgery can spur side effects, including enzyme leaks, that worsen in time, spurring a decision to remove the entire pancreas, said Robert Thomas, head of surgery at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne.
Most often, the pancreas is removed because the cancer has returned, said Andrew Lowy, head of the division of surgical oncology at Moores Cancer Center at the University of California, San Diego. In either case, patients must take insulin, a hormone produced in the organ, for the rest of their lives, along with enzymes to help digestion, the doctors said.
“We have to assume it’s quite likely that his disease may be harder to control, or coming back in a bigger way than we’d like to see,” said Simon Lo, director of the pancreas disease program at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, in a telephone interview yesterday. “Speculation is dangerous without knowing all the facts, but if I were to guess I’d say this is not a good sign.”
Jobs hasn’t said whether the cancer has returned or spread. Last week Jobs, Apple’s chief executive officer, said he was getting “simple and straightforward” treatment for a hormone imbalance. Yesterday, the computer company said he was taking five months of leave because his “health-related issues” were more complex than he thought.
2004 Surgery
In 2004 Jobs said he underwent surgery to remove a neuroendocrine islet-cell tumor, a type of pancreatic cancer that can spur production of abnormal levels of hormones. The Whipple procedure can remove the cancer, but sometimes can result in dangerous leakage from the organ, Thomas said.
“Even with excellent surgery, there is an inexorable decline in survival of patients over the years and most patients end up dying of their pancreatic cancer despite having what seems to be effective surgery,” said Thomas, 66, who first performed the Whipple procedure more than 20 years ago.
When enzymes leak from the pancreas, they become toxic for other organs, Thomas said, and “you might have to take the rest of the pancreas out.”
Pancreatic leakage “is the most feared risk and it’s the most common issue”
after Whipple operations, said Neil Collier, head of the hepatobiliary pancreatic unit at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Melbourne. Collier has done about 200 Whipple procedures over 24 years. He wasn’t familiar with Jobs’s case.
Odds of Complications
“You are looking at something like a 40-to-45 percent chance of complications after the operation, so there are certainly reasons why further surgery could be necessary,” Collier said.
Once the pancreas is removed entirely, “you’re on significant doses of insulin, and it’s not easy to manage,” said Thomas, of the McCallum Center. “The person has the risk of severe diabetes.”
Neuroendocrine tumors can affect levels of hormones produced in the pancreas, including insulin and glucagon that help control blood sugar levels, and somatostatin and gastrin that are involved in digestion and other functions.
Tumor Recurrence
“The main reason to remove the rest of the pancreas” after a Whipple procedure “would be if the tumor recurred there,” Lowy said. “In garden-variety pancreas cancer that almost never happens. There are rare instances where the tumor could recur locally, and you could go in and try to remove the rest of the pancreas to get rid of the cancer.”
David Metz, associate chief for clinical affairs in the school’s division of gastroenterology at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, said a return of the cancer isn’t necessarily an early death sentence for Jobs. Some patients with neuroendocrine tumors live 20 years or longer, he said.
“Generally these tumors are slow growing, and occasionally they can be more aggressive and unpredictable,” Metz said in a telephone interview yesterday. He said he has no knowledge of Jobs’s case.
Apple yesterday announced Jobs will take a leave of absence from his job through June. Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook, who filled in for Jobs in 2004, has taken over Apple’s day-to-day operations, the Cupertino, California-based company said in a statement.
‘More Complex’
“During the past week I have learned that my health- related issues are more complex than I originally thought,” Jobs said in the statement.
The type of pancreatic cancer Jobs has said he had can cause symptoms that include weight loss, low blood sugar, and blood pressure changes, said Raji Annaswamy, an endocrinologist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, in a Jan. 5 telephone interview. Annaswamy hasn’t treated Jobs, and said she has no specific knowledge of his case.
Even if the cancer was defeated, the procedure can lead to a digestive condition known as dumping syndrome that causes people to lose weight, Lo, of Cedars Sinai Medical Center, said in a Jan. 5 telephone interview.
“It’s considered one of the most complicated surgeries in the abdomen,” said Lo, who hasn’t treated Jobs and doesn’t know details of his condition. “You’re creating a big hole in that area, and then trying to connect everything back together.”
Thousands of Patients
Neuroendocrine islet-cell tumors are found in about 2,000 to 3,000 people in the U.S. annually, making them about 10 times less common than other pancreatic cancer, according to pancreatica.org, a cancer information Web site maintained by the Lorenzen Cancer Foundation in Monterey, California.
An Apple spokesman, Steve Dowling, declined to comment, citing Jobs’s statement yesterday as the company’s response.
Speculation about Jobs’s health surfaced in June after he appeared thinner at Apple’s conference for developers. The company said at the time that he was suffering from a “common bug” and declined to elaborate. The speculation persisted as he continued to appear frail at company events. Investors punished the company’s shares with each report of Jobs’s ill health.
‘A Mystery’
On Jan. 5, Jobs, who turns 54 in February, said the reason for his weight loss “has been a mystery to me and my doctors.”
“After further testing, my doctors think they have found the cause -- a hormone imbalance that has been ‘robbing’ me of the proteins my body needs to be healthy,” he said in the Jan. 5 statement. The remedy “is relatively simple and straightforward,” he wrote.
Jobs is a vegetarian and is skeptical of mainstream medicine, Fortune reported last year. He delayed cancer surgery for nine months while he followed alternative treatments, the magazine reported in March.
Jobs, who co-founded Apple in 1976, said in his Jan. 5 statement that he lost weight throughout 2008.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Lauerman in Boston at jlauerman@bloomberg.net; Jason Gale in Singapore at j.gale@bloomberg.net Last Updated: January 15, 2009 10:02 EST

Friday, January 9, 2009

Child's Death Is First of Flu Season

Child's Death Is First of Flu Season
CDC Reports Flu-Related Death of Minnesota Child
By Daniel J. DeNoonWebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
Jan. 7, 2009 - A Minnesota child was the first flu-related pediatric death of the 2008-2009 flu season, the CDC reports.
The death occurred during the week ending Dec. 20, 2008.
As of the end of 2008, flu cases had begun to trend upward. Thirty states, including Minnesota and the District of Columbia, report only sporadic flu cases. Three states -- Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Virginia -- reported region-wide flu activity; 10 states reported localized flu outbreaks.
No state has reported widespread flu. That's likely to change. Peak flu season usually occurs in January or February.
Hospitals report that cases of flu-like illnesses have begun to rise, although they hadn't yet increased beyond what is normal for this time of year. A trend of increasing flu-like illnesses is the first sign that flu season has arrived.
That's good news if you haven't yet got around to getting flu shots (or sniffs of the nasal flu vaccine) for your family. There's still plenty of time for protection, especially as flu cases pop up throughout the winter and spring.
Flu vaccination is even more important this year, as one of the flu bugs in circulation is resistant to the flu drug Tamiflu. Fortunately, this year's vaccine is an excellent match for the flu bugs circulating in the U.S.
Last year's flu vaccine was not a good match for the H3N2 flu bug that caused the most flu over the course of the season. However, even mismatched flu vaccine offers significant protection.
In terms of deaths and hospitalizations, the 2007-2008 flu season was the most severe season of the past three seasons. There's no way to predict how severe this year's flu season will be.

http://www.webmd.com/cold-and-flu/news/20090107/childs-death-is-first-of-flu-season?ecd=wnl_epi_010909

Kanye West's mother's plastic surgeon jailed for one year

Kanye West's mother's plastic surgeon jailed for one year
01/08/2009 5:00 PM, Yahoo!

Dr. Jan Adams--the man who performed plastic surgery on Kanye West's mother Donda, shortly before she died--has been jailed for a year for drunken driving.

Adams pleaded guilty to the charge last year, after he drove his car the wrong way on Interstate 680. His blood alcohol level was .20 percent, reports the Associated Press.

When he performed West's surgery, the Medical Board Of California were seeking to remove his license to practice because of multiple alcohol-related arrests. There were also two malpractice judgments against him.

West died a day after having surgery for a breast reduction, tummy tuck, and liposuction. The autopsy cited heart disease and complications that arose from the surgery as the cause of death.

http://music.yahoo.com/read/news/61960621

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Lisa Rinna: "I Look Like a Freak" After Too Much Plastic Surgery

Lisa Rinna: "I Look Like a Freak" After Too Much Plastic Surgery
By Us MagazineJanuary 7, 2009 11:37 AM PST
celebs:
Lisa Rinna
topics:
Makeovers

Lisa Rinna arrives at the P.S. Arts "Express Yourself 2008" at Barker Hanger on November 16, 2008 in Santa Monica, CA.Us Magazine Lisa Rinna says she has one major plastic surgery regret."My cheeks. I had Juvederm put in my cheeks. That's what I overdid -- big time," Rinna, 45, tells the Web site momlogic.com in a new interview.
"I tried it because my girlfriends did it," she says. "I thought, 'I'll do it! I saw a photo and I was like, 'Oh Jesus. That's no good. That's NOT good.'"When you change your face, you don't look like yourself," she goes on. "Looking fresher is one thing. I look like a freak! I always said I wouldn't change my face, but I did it.
"I can't not be honest about it. I'd look like a fool. It's so obvious," she goes on. "But when this happened, I realized I couldn't hide it."
Although she still likes Botox ("it doesn't change the shape of my face," she says), she has learned she doesn't need so much surgery."You get older and insecure and you think you need it, and you don't," she says. "I learned less is more. Keep your skin good."

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

GPs to receive dementia training


GPs to receive dementia training
Monday, December 22 02:45 pm
Print Story
Every GP is to be trained to spot the first signs of dementia under a new Government scheme.
A total of 700,000 people in the UK have a form of dementia and the number of sufferers is set to double or triple.
Care Services Minister Phil Hope has said that "memory clinics" will be set up in every town as places where patients can get treatment and support to live their lives as normally as possible.
A national dementia strategy will be launched next month which could save nearly £1 billion while providing better care, Mr Hope said.
He said: "We want to see every GP trained to recognise the symptoms of early dementia and patients referred to specialist services in every area where they would get a proper diagnosis.
"As well as national training for GPs, we'd like to see memory clinics in every town where people can go for treatment and support to help them live their life as normally as possible."
He added: "This could be provided by a range of different people, from geriatricians and psychiatrists to local GPs with a specialist interest, working in partnership and possibly involving the voluntary sector."
A Department of Health spokeswoman said: "We want to make sure that every GP is trained to spot the first signs of dementia, and to refer patients on to specialists.
"The Department of Health will work with all relevant medical and nursing organisations - including the Royal College of GPs, Skills for Care and the NHS - to make sure that appropriate training is provided for medical students, and we will create opportunities for post-graduate education and training in dementia."