![]() Below is a list of news items that were submitted to the news feed: Featured Article |
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1-10 (8/7/10 - 9/5/10) 11-20 (5/15/10 - 8/5/10) 21-30 (4/4/10 - 5/14/10) 31-40 (3/12/10 - 3/31/10) 41-50 (3/1/10 - 3/12/10) 51-60 (2/4/10 - 2/17/10) 61-70 (1/13/10 - 2/3/10) 71-80 (12/26/09 - 1/11/10) 81-90 (11/17/09 - 12/23/09) 91-100 (10/11/09 - 11/16/09) 101-110 (9/28/09 - 10/10/09) 111-120 (8/25/09 - 9/20/09) 121-130 (7/5/09 - 8/24/09) 131-140 (6/3/09 - 6/27/09) 141-150 (4/21/09 - 5/18/09) 151-160 (4/3/09 - 4/20/09) 161-170 (3/20/09 - 4/2/09) 171-180 (2/19/09 - 3/14/09) 181-190 (2/6/09 - 2/18/09) 191-200 (1/9/09 - 2/3/09) 201-210 (12/26/08 - 1/8/09) 211-220 (12/13/08 - 12/26/08) 221-230 (11/26/08 - 12/12/08) 231-240 (11/18/08 - 11/25/08) 241-250 (10/24/08 - 11/17/08) 251-260 (10/2/08 - 10/22/08) 261-270 (9/15/08 - 10/2/08) 271-280 (8/28/08 - 9/12/08) 281-290 (7/23/08 - 8/27/08) 291-300 (6/23/08 - 7/19/08) 301-310 (6/6/08 - 6/20/08) 311-320 (4/22/08 - 6/6/08) 321-330 (3/17/08 - 4/21/08) 331-340 (2/22/08 - 3/11/08) 341-350 (2/15/08 - 2/22/08) 351-360 (1/30/08 - 2/15/08) 361-370 (1/17/08 - 1/29/08) 371-380 (1/5/08 - 1/17/08) 381-390 (12/11/07 - 1/3/08) 391-400 (11/27/07 - 12/9/07) 401-410 (10/20/07 - 11/26/07) 411-420 (10/3/07 - 10/19/07) 421-430 (9/8/07 - 10/2/07) 431-440 (8/21/07 - 9/7/07) 441-450 (8/1/07 - 8/20/07) 451-460 (7/11/07 - 7/30/07) 461-470 (6/22/07 - 7/8/07) 471-480 (6/3/07 - 6/21/07) 481-490 (5/15/07 - 6/1/07) 491-500 (4/29/07 - 5/14/07) 501-510 (4/11/07 - 4/27/07) 511-520 (4/2/07 - 4/11/07) 521-530 (3/19/07 - 4/2/07) 531-540 (2/22/07 - 3/19/07) 541-550 (2/13/07 - 2/21/07) 551-560 (2/1/07 - 2/12/07) 561-570 (12/12/06 - 2/1/07) 571-580 (9/9/06 - 12/12/06) 581-590 (6/24/06 - 8/31/06) 591-600 (5/4/06 - 6/22/06) 601-610 (2/17/06 - 5/2/06) 611-620 (1/7/06 - 2/17/06) 621-630 (12/8/05 - 1/6/06) 631-640 (11/27/05 - 12/7/05) 641-650 (11/12/05 - 11/26/05) 651-660 (10/12/05 - 11/8/05) 661-670 (9/20/05 - 10/11/05) 671-680 (8/30/05 - 9/16/05) 681-690 (8/10/05 - 8/29/05) 691-700 (7/13/05 - 8/10/05) 701-710 (6/8/05 - 7/12/05) 711-720 (5/18/05 - 6/2/05) 721-730 (4/19/05 - 5/12/05) 731-740 (4/4/05 - 4/18/05) 741-750 (3/8/05 - 3/31/05) 751-760 (2/23/05 - 3/7/05) 761-770 (2/6/05 - 2/22/05) 771-780 (1/20/05 - 2/6/05) 781-790 (1/3/05 - 1/19/05) 791-800 (11/29/04 - 12/28/04) 801-810 (10/24/04 - 11/28/04) 811-820 (9/20/04 - 10/21/04) 821-830 (8/16/04 - 9/19/04) 831-840 (7/26/04 - 8/5/04) 841-850 (6/30/04 - 7/23/04) 851-860 (6/11/04 - 6/30/04) 861-870 (5/10/04 - 6/11/04) 871-880 (4/30/04 - 5/10/04) 881-890 (4/18/04 - 4/29/04) 891-900 (2/25/04 - 4/14/04) 901-910 (10/28/03 - 2/19/04) 911-920 (9/30/03 - 10/28/03) 921-930 (7/14/03 - 9/27/03) 931-940 (5/7/03 - 7/14/03) 941-950 (4/15/03 - 5/6/03) 951-960 (2/14/03 - 4/13/03) 961-970 (1/20/03 - 2/12/03) 971-980 (1/6/03 - 1/17/03) 981-990 (10/16/02 - 12/25/02) 991-1000 (9/19/02 - 10/16/02) 1001-1001 (0/0/ - 0/0/) |
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241. Health and medical news from abc12.com http://abclocal.go.com/wjrt/story?section=news/health&id=6510281 2008-11-17 15:06:45 Description: UNDATED (WJRT) -- 11/17/08)-- It's the number one cause of disability in the United States, but there's only one FDA-approved drug to treat stroke patients in the first critical minutes. HealthFirst reporter Leslie Toldo says researchers say a combination treatment could stop patients from slipping away. Stroke survivor Helen Whitehead is one of the first to receive a new experimental treatment. "The drug in her I-V is minocycline, an antibiotic that travels to the brain and protects neurons," said Dr. David Hess |
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242. Beta blockers reduce risk of heart attack, increase stroke risk ... http://www.advance.uconn.edu/2008/081117/08111702.htm 2008-11-14 12:05:43 Description: In one of the most stringent studies to date of the popular blood pressure-lowering drugs known as beta blockers, researchers at the UConn/Hartford Hospital Evidence-based Practice Center have confirmed that these drugs reduce the chances of a heart attack following non-cardiac surgery but increase the risk of having a stroke. |
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243. Hormone Shows Promise in Reversing Alzheimer?s and Stroke http://www.slu.edu/x27298.xml 2008-11-13 09:08:00 Description: Reversing Alzheimer’s and Stroke SLU Researchers Find Strategy to Get It Past Vigilant Blood-Brain Barrier ST. LOUIS -- Saint Louis University researchers have identified a novel way of getting a potential treatment for Alzheimer's disease and stroke into the brain where it can do its work. "We found a unique approach for delivering drugs to the brain," says William A. Banks, M.D., professor of geriatrics and pharmacological and physiological science at Saint Louis University. "We're turning off the guardian that's keeping the drugs out of the brain." |
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244. Heart attacks: Why they are more likely to happen around dawn http://www.wddty.com/03363800372014873663/heart-attacks-why-they-are-more-likely-to-happen-around-da wn.html 2008-11-12 12:07:10 Description: Heart attacks: Why they are more likely to happen around dawn 12 November 2008 Heart specialists know that many heart attacks and strokes happen in the early hours around dawn – and this week scientists have worked out why we may be at our most vulnerable at that time. Cells that line our blood vessels are at their most inactive at around dawn, and, as a result, arteries become more rigid and less able to repair themselves. |
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245. CRESTOR Demonstrates Dramatic CV Risk Reduction in a Large Statin ... http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/crestor-demonstrates-dramatic-cv-risk,613543.shtml 2008-11-09 09:04:16 Description: NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 9 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- New data from the JUPITER study demonstrated that CRESTOR(R) (rosuvastatin calcium) 20 mg significantly reduced major cardiovascular (CV) events (defined in this study as the combined risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, arterial revascularization, |
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246. After a stroke , blinded pilot is guided safely to the ground by ... http://kdrv.com/news/national/story-61916 2008-11-08 12:02:48 Description: safely down by a military pilot, the Royal Air Force said Friday. Jim O'Neill asked for help after he was went blind 40 minutes into a flight from Scotland to southeastern England last week. The BBC reported that O'Neill, flying a small Cessna aircraft, lost his sight 5,500 feet in the air. "It was terrifying," O'Neill said. "Suddenly, I couldn't see the dials in front of me." The air force said in a news release that O'Neill initially believed he'd been "dazzled" by bright sunlight, and made an emergency call for help. He then realized that something more serious was happening, and said, "I want to land, ASAP." RAF Wing Commander Paul Gerrard was just finishing a training flight nearby and was drafted in to help the stricken pilot. Gerrard located the plane, began flying close to it and radioed directions. "For me, I was just glad to help a fellow aviator in distress," he said. "Landing an aircraft literally blind needs someone to be right there to say 'Left a bit, right a bit, stop, down,'" Gerrard said. "On the crucial final approach, even with radar assistance, you need to take over visually. That's when having a fellow pilot there was so important. O'Neill's son, Douglas, said his father is an experienced pilot who has flown for nearly two decades. The 65-year-old is recovering in hospital where he is beginning to regain his sight. "The doctors have confirmed that he suffered a stroke from a blood clot, but he doesn't seem to have suffered any other ill-effects apart from losing his sight," Douglas O'Neill said. "He says he went blind very suddenly and then, once he'd got over the shock, was able to distinguish a bit of darkness and light." |
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247. Written Instructions Cut Bleeding Risk for Blood Thinner Use http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/healthday/2008/11/08/written-instructions-cut-bleeding-risk -for--blood.html 2008-11-08 09:04:56 Description: SATURDAY, Nov. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Giving patients written and verbal instructions on proper use of the blood thinner warfarin significantly reduces the risk of serious gastrointestinal and brain bleeding problems, according to a University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine study. Related News Video: Health News & Features Join a Discussion More from Health It also found that patients who see only one doctor and fill their prescription at a single pharmacy are less likely to suffer serious bleeding events. The study included 2,346 older adults taking warfarin for problems such as heart rhythm abnormalities, deep vein thrombosis, stroke, heart valve replacements or pulmonary embolism. Only 55 percent of patients reported receiving any type of medication instructions from a doctor or nurse. The researchers found that patients who did receive medication instructions from a doctor and nurse plus a pharmacy worker were 60 percent less likely to suffer a serious bleeding problem over the next two years. |
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248. Former Grateful Dead keyboardist Saunders dies http://www.auburnpub.com/articles/2008/10/26/ap/entertainment/music/d941vvvg0.txt 2008-10-26 09:03:44 Description: Former Grateful Dead keyboardist Saunders dies Sunday, October 26, 2008 1:45 AM EDT SAN FRANCISCO - Merl Saunders, a jazz and rock keyboardist who collaborated with iconic acts including Miles Davis and the Grateful Dead, has died. He was 74. Saunders died Friday at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in San Francisco of complications due to a stroke, said his son, Merl Saunders Jr. |
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249. Michigan Stroke Malpractice Lawyers | Michigan Medical Malpractice ... http://detroit.injuryboard.com/medical-malpractice/michigan-stroke-malpractice-lawyers-michigan-medi cal-malpractice-lawyers.aspx?googleid=249884 2008-10-24 15:04:04 Description: The Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI) Stroke Research Group has developed a system to fast track stroke treatment which could benefit thousands of Australian stroke patients and save millions of dollars annually. The system (called the Pre-hospital Acute Stroke Triage or PAST Protocol) reduces pre-hospital and emergency department delays to allow more stroke patients to receive brain saving thrombolysis or clot busting treatment within the three hour treatment window. Results of the Australian-first trial conducted at John Hunter Hospital, New South Wales, are published in the latest Medical Journal of Australia. 'By reversing the crippling effects of stroke we are enabling more people to return to their families, their homes and their jobs. This also reduces the demand on nursing home beds, in-hospital rehabilitation programs and the health care dollar,' said lead investigator Debbie Quain, a member of the HMRI Stroke Research Group and a Hunter New England Health Stroke Research Nurse. As a result of the protocol, the number of patients treated with thrombolytic therapy at John Hunter Hospital rose from 4.7 per cent to 21.4 per cent. Of those treated, 43 per cent had minimal or no disability three months after the stroke. Currently, less than 1 per cent of patients who have experienced an ischaemic stroke receive thrombolysis treatment in Australia. The world best practise rate is 15 to 20 per cent. |
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250. New research could save lives and millions of dollars http://www.sciencecentric.com/news/article.php?q=08102454 2008-10-24 09:01:01 Description: The Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI) Stroke Research Group has developed a system to fast track stroke treatment which could benefit thousands of Australian stroke patients and save millions of dollars annually. The system (called the Pre-hospital Acute Stroke Triage or PAST Protocol) reduces pre-hospital and emergency department delays to allow more stroke patients to receive brain saving thrombolysis or clot busting treatment within the three hour treatment window. Results of the Australian-first trial conducted at John Hunter Hospital, New South Wales, are published in the latest Medical Journal of Australia. 'By reversing the crippling effects of stroke we are enabling more people to return to their families, their homes and their jobs. This also reduces the demand on nursing home beds, in-hospital rehabilitation programs and the health care dollar,' said lead investigator Debbie Quain, a member of the HMRI Stroke Research Group and a Hunter New England Health Stroke Research Nurse. As a result of the protocol, the number of patients treated with thrombolytic therapy at John Hunter Hospital rose from 4.7 per cent to 21.4 per cent. Of those treated, 43 per cent had minimal or no disability three months after the stroke. Currently, less than 1 per cent of patients who have experienced an ischaemic stroke receive thrombolysis treatment in Australia. The world best practise rate is 15 to 20 per cent. |
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1-10 (8/7/10 - 9/5/10) 11-20 (5/15/10 - 8/5/10) 21-30 (4/4/10 - 5/14/10) 31-40 (3/12/10 - 3/31/10) 41-50 (3/1/10 - 3/12/10) 51-60 (2/4/10 - 2/17/10) 61-70 (1/13/10 - 2/3/10) 71-80 (12/26/09 - 1/11/10) 81-90 (11/17/09 - 12/23/09) 91-100 (10/11/09 - 11/16/09) 101-110 (9/28/09 - 10/10/09) 111-120 (8/25/09 - 9/20/09) 121-130 (7/5/09 - 8/24/09) 131-140 (6/3/09 - 6/27/09) 141-150 (4/21/09 - 5/18/09) 151-160 (4/3/09 - 4/20/09) 161-170 (3/20/09 - 4/2/09) 171-180 (2/19/09 - 3/14/09) 181-190 (2/6/09 - 2/18/09) 191-200 (1/9/09 - 2/3/09) 201-210 (12/26/08 - 1/8/09) 211-220 (12/13/08 - 12/26/08) 221-230 (11/26/08 - 12/12/08) 231-240 (11/18/08 - 11/25/08) 241-250 (10/24/08 - 11/17/08) 251-260 (10/2/08 - 10/22/08) 261-270 (9/15/08 - 10/2/08) 271-280 (8/28/08 - 9/12/08) 281-290 (7/23/08 - 8/27/08) 291-300 (6/23/08 - 7/19/08) 301-310 (6/6/08 - 6/20/08) 311-320 (4/22/08 - 6/6/08) 321-330 (3/17/08 - 4/21/08) 331-340 (2/22/08 - 3/11/08) 341-350 (2/15/08 - 2/22/08) 351-360 (1/30/08 - 2/15/08) 361-370 (1/17/08 - 1/29/08) 371-380 (1/5/08 - 1/17/08) 381-390 (12/11/07 - 1/3/08) 391-400 (11/27/07 - 12/9/07) 401-410 (10/20/07 - 11/26/07) 411-420 (10/3/07 - 10/19/07) 421-430 (9/8/07 - 10/2/07) 431-440 (8/21/07 - 9/7/07) 441-450 (8/1/07 - 8/20/07) 451-460 (7/11/07 - 7/30/07) 461-470 (6/22/07 - 7/8/07) 471-480 (6/3/07 - 6/21/07) 481-490 (5/15/07 - 6/1/07) 491-500 (4/29/07 - 5/14/07) 501-510 (4/11/07 - 4/27/07) 511-520 (4/2/07 - 4/11/07) 521-530 (3/19/07 - 4/2/07) 531-540 (2/22/07 - 3/19/07) 541-550 (2/13/07 - 2/21/07) 551-560 (2/1/07 - 2/12/07) 561-570 (12/12/06 - 2/1/07) 571-580 (9/9/06 - 12/12/06) 581-590 (6/24/06 - 8/31/06) 591-600 (5/4/06 - 6/22/06) 601-610 (2/17/06 - 5/2/06) 611-620 (1/7/06 - 2/17/06) 621-630 (12/8/05 - 1/6/06) 631-640 (11/27/05 - 12/7/05) 641-650 (11/12/05 - 11/26/05) 651-660 (10/12/05 - 11/8/05) 661-670 (9/20/05 - 10/11/05) 671-680 (8/30/05 - 9/16/05) 681-690 (8/10/05 - 8/29/05) 691-700 (7/13/05 - 8/10/05) 701-710 (6/8/05 - 7/12/05) 711-720 (5/18/05 - 6/2/05) 721-730 (4/19/05 - 5/12/05) 731-740 (4/4/05 - 4/18/05) 741-750 (3/8/05 - 3/31/05) 751-760 (2/23/05 - 3/7/05) 761-770 (2/6/05 - 2/22/05) 771-780 (1/20/05 - 2/6/05) 781-790 (1/3/05 - 1/19/05) 791-800 (11/29/04 - 12/28/04) 801-810 (10/24/04 - 11/28/04) 811-820 (9/20/04 - 10/21/04) 821-830 (8/16/04 - 9/19/04) 831-840 (7/26/04 - 8/5/04) 841-850 (6/30/04 - 7/23/04) 851-860 (6/11/04 - 6/30/04) 861-870 (5/10/04 - 6/11/04) 871-880 (4/30/04 - 5/10/04) 881-890 (4/18/04 - 4/29/04) 891-900 (2/25/04 - 4/14/04) 901-910 (10/28/03 - 2/19/04) 911-920 (9/30/03 - 10/28/03) 921-930 (7/14/03 - 9/27/03) 931-940 (5/7/03 - 7/14/03) 941-950 (4/15/03 - 5/6/03) 951-960 (2/14/03 - 4/13/03) 961-970 (1/20/03 - 2/12/03) 971-980 (1/6/03 - 1/17/03) 981-990 (10/16/02 - 12/25/02) 991-1000 (9/19/02 - 10/16/02) 1001-1001 (0/0/ - 0/0/) |