Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Monday 9 October 2017

Fed. Govt: no monkey pox virus injection

The Federal Government has described as false the news that the outbreak of Monkey Pox in some parts of the country resulted from its free medical care in the affected areas.
In a statement yesterday, Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed described the news as fake and sinister.
He urged Nigerians to disregard the report.
”The Federal Government has not conducted any free medical service or care in either Bayelsa or Rivers State, as alleged in the fake report being circulated. So that could not have been the cause of the outbreak of Monkey Pox in both states.
“Monkey Pox is a virus found only in monkeys and it is rare in human beings. It belongs to the same family as Chicken Pox and Smallpox.
”It is suspected that someone may have contracted it by eating monkey meat, thus triggering the current outbreak,” the minister said.
He said no effort will be spared in curtailing the spread of the disease.
With the confirmation of a new case of monkeypox in Akwa Ibom State, there are now 13 cases of the disease in the country.
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) yesterday, confirmed 12 cases, which started with that of an 11-year-old male patient reported at the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH) in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.
National Coordinator/Chief Executive Officer NCDC Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu said 11 other cases were identified.
“All the cases are currently receiving appropriate medical care. All the patients are improving clinically and there have been no deaths. As at first of this month, 32 close contacts of the cases were identified, advised appropriately and are being monitored,” he said
Ihekweazu explained that a Rapid Response Team (RRT) from NCDC was immediately deployed to support the Bayelsa State Government in the investigations and public health response to the outbreak.
The team has been supporting the Bayelsa State Department of Public Health and the State Epidemiologist to respond to the outbreak. “As the outbreak investigation and response continues, the Bayelsa State Government has started an aggressive public enlightenment campaign to advise clinicians and the public on the symptoms of the disease and the steps required to manage the cases and to prevent further spread. NCDC has also collected appropriate clinical samples from the cases and these are being analysed through the National Reference Laboratory in Abuja,” Ihekweazu explained.
There was panic in Akwa Ibom State following the reported case of monkey-pox disease.
Commissioner for Health Dr. Dominic Ukong, who announced the outbreak in Uyo, said the victim had been isolated.
He also said two other suspected cases were being monitored by doctors
Ukpong explained that the viral ailment borne by wild animals, especially Monkeys could be contracted through bodily contact with infected persons and warned the populace to shun bush meat.
Commissioner for Information and Strategy Charles Udoh spoke of the need for residents to avoid crowded places as relevant agencies had been alerted to ensure appropriate clinical measures were in place to deal with such emergencies.
But the Bayelsa State Government yesterday said it had curtailed the spread of the virus through various response mechanism it created in the wake of the epidemic.
Commissioner for Information and Orientation Daniel Iworiso-Markson said many of the victims quarantined at the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH), Okolobiri, were already showing signs of recovery.
He said the government had intensified sensitization and advocacy visits to communities to reassure the indigenes of its readiness to tackle the spread of the disease.
Iworiso-Markson explained that two of the index cases and the doctor affected by the disease had recovered and were discharged, adding that no death had been recorded from the disease.
“To further allay the fears and reassure Bayelsans of Governments’ effort in curbing the disease, let me make it clear that we are on top of the situation. However, it is important for people to take note of the fact that prevention is better than cure.
“Hence, they are required to always wash their hands, avoid monkeys, bushmeat and dead animals as well as be on the lookout for symptoms which often manifest as various stages of rash and an intense weakness of the body and severe pains, among other things,” he said.
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Saturday 7 October 2017

Monkeypox: Suspected cases in Rivers

Prof Chike Princewill, who disclosed this while briefing newsmen in Port Harcourt yesterday, said three suspected cases have been identified.
The deadly Monkey Pox virus, which has affected some people in Bayelsa State, has found its way into Rivers State.
The state Commissioner for Health, Prof Chike Princewill, who disclosed this while briefing newsmen in Port Harcourt yesterday, said three suspected cases have been identified.
Chike said the disease has been identified in three communities- Rumuolumeni, Eneka and Rumomoi, all in Obio/Akpor Council, adding that the ministry has deployed measures to prevent its spread.
He said those affected with the virus have been quarantined, pending the outcome of research on it and advised medical personnel in the state to put on their Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) while handling patients who have rashes and fever.
The commissioner appealed to the public to intensify efforts to improve on their personal and environmental hygiene methods and also endeavour to avoid contact with body fluid.
He noted that the Rapid Response Department of the ministry has been revamped, while the ministry has made arrangements with the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), the state primary health centres and other relevant authorities for any emergency.
He urged the public to contact the following numbers- 08056109538, 09062277699, and 08033124314– in case of any suspected case.
Chikere said the virus could be transmitted by rodents and monkeys, stating that the signs and symptoms include fever, sore throat, body weakness and rashes, among others.
The virus was first noticed in Bayelsa state early this week.
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Monkey pox arrives Bayelsa, Residents avoids hand shake.

Some people who spoke during Thursday’s World Teachers Day celebration in Yenagoa said the precautionary measure was justified due to the anxiety created by the news of the dreaded disease on social media. PHOTO:CDC
Government Sets Up Rapid Response Squad To Curtail Spread
Residents of Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, are avoiding handshakes and bodily contact in public places following the outbreak of monkeypox viral disease, which has infected 13 people, including a medical doctor.
According to NAN, many people at public functions on Thursday and yesterday in Yenagoa kept their distance and avoided handshakes and hugs that characterised exchange of pleasantries at social functions.
Some people who spoke during Thursday’s World Teachers Day celebration in Yenagoa said the precautionary measure was justified due to the anxiety created by the news of the dreaded disease on social media.
“This issue of avoiding handshakes reminds one of the days of Ebola, which compelled everyone to heighten personal hygiene. “It is based on advice that we should wash hands frequently, and if my hand is clean, I would endanger myself by shaking hands with someone with unwashed hands,” one respondent said.
Residents across the state capital have been circulating text messages urging people to abstain from shaking hands due to the outbreak of the disease.
As part of efforts to curtail the spread of the epidemic, the Bayelsa State Government has inaugurated a 12-member rapid response team, comprising top medical professionals.
The committee, whose mandate is to prevent the spread of the disease, besides the 12- member core team, is also made up of other sub-teams to carry out contact tracing of patients.
According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the abstention from handshakes followed an advice by the Commissioner for Health, Prof Ebitimitula Etebu, to members of the public to wash hands frequently and maintain higher level of personal hygiene to curtail the spread of the disease.
This is just as authorities of the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH) disclosed that the infected medical doctor and the 11-years-old boy earlier quarantined in the hospital have been treated and discharged.
Etebu, who inaugurated the committee, reassured the people that there was no need to panic, saying the state had 13 suspected cases at different stages of recovery, following treatment at the makeshift isolation ward at the NDUTH, Okolobiri.
He also said that over 50 persons were being actively followed at differently located places in the state, stressing that the situation was not beyond control, but restated the need for people to observe the simple hygiene of washing hands, noting that government has handed over some boxes of hand sanitizers to the team entrusted with the responsibility of monitoring the disease.
Etebu stated: ‘”The state Ministry of Health, with the support of the international community, led by the World Health Organisation (WHO), international partners, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) have since embarked on enlightenment campaigns.
“Active disease surveillance has also been carried, case management and other sundry measures have also been carried out in a bid to halt the spread of the disease in the state.
“New suspected cases are being reported everyday in the state. The situation can get out of hand if critical measures are not quickly put in place, and that is why we have thought it expedient to inform the public.
“The essence is to allay the general public of the fact that there is no need to panic; it does not call for any fear. The government is on top of the situation.
He said the disease is transmitted when a person comes in contact with the virus from animals or materials that are contaminated with the virus, noting that the virus enters the body through broken skin that is usually not visible and through respiratory tract or the mucus membrane in the eyes, in the nose and in the mouth.
He said animal to human transmission could occur by the bite of many bush animals and it could also occur through a direct contact with body fluids or lesions of patients that had already come down with the disease.
“It can also be contracted through contaminated beddings and so on and so forth. Human to human transmission occurs through droplet infection with direct contact with body fluids or lesions or materials that are in direct contact with contaminated clothings and the like.
“So, the simple measures we have been propagating and sensitising people and creating awareness is that if you maintain simple hygiene of washing your hands when you touch animals, whether dead or alive, when you go to toilet and so on, will help prevent transmission of this virus.
“We are telling the public that if you see anybody that has developed an unusual rash that is similar to chicken pox rash or small pox, immediately contact us or advise the person to go to the nearest health facility.”
The commissioner recalled that the first index case came from Agbura in Yenagoa, where somebody was purported to have killed and ate monkey meat and started developing rashes.
Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Markson Iworiso, said the government was embarking on practical steps to ensure that the disease was prevented from spreading, urging the people to report all cases of unusual rash to the medical facilities for necessary action.
The Chief Medical Director of NDUTH, Prof Dimie Ogoina, said the affected victims were responding to treatment and stressed the need for the creation of awareness to effectively arrest the disease.
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Tuesday 19 September 2017

Old woman in US reveals the secret to long life, see what she tells us.


Grace Jones and her nightly whiskey (Picture: SWNS)
One of the oldest people in the UK has just turned 111, and she claims to owe her amazing longevity to a shot of whiskey each night.
Grace Jones, who has acquired the fitting moniker Amazing Grace, recently celebrated her 111th birthday recently, however she said she doesn’t ‘feel any different than I did at 21’.
It’s not just 60 years of seeing off a whiskey every night that has kept Grace going into her 12th decade.
Her daughter Dierdre, who is approaching her 80th birthday herself, said of her mother: ‘She’s a very positive person and never seems to worry about anything.
‘She’s also very lively and interested in everything and everyone. She loved moving around. She’s the kind of person who cannot understand why anybody would want to live the quiet life.’
This 111-year-old's secret to a long life? One shot of whiskey every night


Grace Jones in 1930 when she was 24 (Picture: SWNS)
Grace was born in Liverpool in 1906. She was alive when the Titanic sank and was 12 when WW1 ended.
She even shares the year of her birth with artist Samuel Beckett and actress Mary Astor.
Grace is the 6th oldest person in the UK, the oldest being Bessie Cam from Rotherham who is 113.
As well as seeing more than 100 years of British history, including women gaining the vote, five separate monarchs and two world wars, Grace has also moved home 27 times in her life.
She also said the highlight of her life (so far) was her happy marriage to Leonard, who sadly died in 1986.
And what brand of whiskey does Grace favour each night? She usually goes for Teacher’s Highland Cream, which started being made in 1884, only 22 years before Grace was born, however occasionally she enjoys a Famous Grouse.
This 111-year-old's secret to a long life? One shot of whiskey every night

Grace Jones, with a Famous Grouse whiskey – although she usually enjoys a Teacher’s (Picture: SWNS)


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Friday 5 May 2017

Criminalizing HIV Transmission Doesn’t Cut Down On New Diagnoses


BARCROFT MEDIA VIA GETTY IMAGES
More than 30 years since the first criminal laws were enacted in the United States to try to prevent the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus, a new study suggests that the regulations have failed to slow transmission of the deadly virus.
The laws impose criminal penalties on people who know they have HIV and engage in behaviors such as sexual activity or needle sharing that might transmit the virus to others, without disclosing their infection status.
“There has been much discussion about whether criminal-exposure laws affect HIV-risk behaviors or transmission,” senior author Dr. Jonathan Mermin said in an email. “In this analysis, we found no association between HIV diagnosis rates and laws that criminalize HIV exposure.”
Working with data collected in 33 states from 2001-2010, Mermin and colleagues at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta tracked diagnoses of HIV, the virus that causes the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). They also analyzed AIDS diagnosis rates in all 50 states from 1994-2010.
By the end of 2010, 30 states had passed criminal-exposure laws. But the new study, published in the journal AIDS, found no association between criminal-exposure laws and HIV or AIDS diagnosis rates.
The researchers did find two factors associated with higher HIV and AIDS diagnosis rates: lack of education and living in urban areas.
Ayako Miyashita, director of the Los Angeles HIV Law and Policy Project at the UCLA School of Law, said the study “underscores the fact that we understand the social and structural drivers of the epidemic, and that criminalization is not a particularly useful tool in addressing HIV transmission.”
“These laws are harmful,” said Miyashita, who was not involved with the study, in an email. “They embody the continued fear and stigma associated with HIV and serve to perpetuate a lack of awareness and understanding about existing biomedical interventions.”
More than 1.2 million people in the U.S. have been diagnosed with HIV, according to the CDC. About a third of them take antiretroviral therapy, which can virtually eliminate the possibility of transmitting the virus to others.
Few HIV criminalization laws consider whether an HIV-positive person took measures to reduce the risk of transmitting the virus, the authors write.
A 2013 report in ProPublica pointed out that people have been prosecuted for nondisclosure of HIV infection even when they were using condoms or taking antiviral drugs that made transmission very unlikely (http://bit.ly/1ZBdlfN).
HIV criminal-exposure laws have engendered debate about their effectiveness since 1986, when states first enacted them, the authors write. The laws were intended to encourage people who tested positive for HIV to disclose the fact to potential sex partners and to discourage behaviors that could expose others.
Some feared the laws could have the reverse effect and increase transmission by discouraging testing; if people don’t know they have the virus, they can’t be prosecuted under these laws.
Since 2010, an estimated 40,000 people a year in the U.S. have been diagnosed with HIV.
HIV disproportionately infects blacks, African-Americans, gay Hispanics and Hispanics who inject drugs, previous studies have shown. The new analysis too found that minority populations had higher HIV and AIDS diagnosis rates.
Amira Hasenbush, who has studied HIV criminalization laws in California, said in an email that her research has shown that the laws disproportionately target women and people of color. Hasenbush, a fellow at The Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law, was not involved with the new study.
“Enforcement data show that HIV criminalization is yet another example of the criminalization of the poor, criminalization of people of color and criminalization of otherwise marginalized populations,” Miyashita said. “We know HIV impacts these communities greatly, and it’s time we realize criminalization is not the solution to addressing the epidemic.”
Miyashita called for review, if not repeal, of all HIV criminalization laws.
“Criminalization is not the solution to this problem,” she said. “These data prove that.”
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Tuesday 2 May 2017

‘Malnutrition hinders children’s immunity against polio’


Molecular Biologist, Dr Bamidele Iwalokun, says malnutrition is a major hindrance to Nigerian children’s mounting adequate immunity against Poliomyelitis, even with vaccination.
Poliomyelitis, often called Polio or infantile paralysis, is an infectious disease caused by the polio virus.
Iwalokun, head, Immunology and Vaccinology Research Department, Nigeria Institute of Medical Research (NIMR), Yaba, Lagos, in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, said the inability to mount adequate immune response with oral polio vaccine was one of the factors leading to the resurfaced cases of polio in parts of the country.
“Malnutrition is described as the most common immunodeficiency globally, a malnourished child may not be able to respond effectively to vaccines and this is not peculiar to polio vaccine alone.
”Some children that are being vaccinated for measles still come down with measles sometimes and we are expected to have long time immunity after been vaccinated.
“We do have confounding factors that are making Nigerian children not to mount adequate response to vaccines that have been given to them and our immunisation programme does not take this into consideration.
“When a child is vaccinated, after few months, it is expected that the blood sample of such child should be taken and screened for antibodies raised against the antigens in the body,’’ Iwalokun said.
He said besides the nutritional effects on the response to oral polio vaccine, environmental virology was needed to survey for polio virus in an environment where an index case was being reported.


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Wednesday 19 April 2017

Hay Fever & Seasonal Allergies: Symptoms, Causes & Treatment By Heather Whipps, Live Science Contributor

Hay Fever & Seasonal Allergies: Symptoms, Causes & Treatment
When it comes to seasonal allergies, myths abound.
Credit: Pollen allergy photo via Shutterstock
Itchy eyes, a congested nose, sneezing, wheezing and hives: these are symptoms of an allergic reaction to the environment caused when plants release pollen into the air, usually in the spring or fall. Many people use hay fever as a colloquial term for these seasonal allergies and the inflammation of the nose and airways.
But hay fever is a misnomer, said Dr. Jordan Josephson, an ear, nose and throat doctor and sinus specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
"It is not an allergy to hay," Josephson, author of the book "Sinus Relief Now" (Perigee Trade, 2006), told Live Science. "Rather, it is an allergy to weeds that pollinate."
Doctors and researchers prefer the term "allergic rhinitis." About 8 percent of adults in the United States have allergic rhinitis, Josephson said. Among children in the United States, 9 percent reported having allergic rhinitis symptoms during the past 12 months, according to a 2012 study, he added. [Check out our 2017 guide for coping with allergies and asthma.]
Worldwide, between 10 and 30 percent of people are affected by allergic rhinitis, he said. 
The symptoms of allergic rhinitis may at first feel like those of a cold. But in the case of hay fever, symptoms usually appear when a person encounters an allergen, such as pollen or mold.
Symptoms include itchy eyes, itchy nose, itchy throat, itchy ears, sneezing, irritability, nasal congestion and hoarseness. People may also experience cough, postnasal drip, sinus pressure or headaches, decreased sense of smell, snoring, sleep apnea, fatigue and asthma, Josephson said. 
Many of these symptoms are an immune overreaction by the body attempting to protect the vital and sensitive respiratory system from outside invaders. The antibodies produced by the body succeed in keeping the foreign invaders out, but also cause the symptoms characteristic of allergic responses. 
People can develop hay fever at any age, but most people are diagnosed with the disorder in childhood or early adulthood, according to the Mayo Clinic. Symptoms typically become less severe as people age. 
Often, children may first experience food allergies and eczema before developing hay fever, Josephson said. "This then worsens over the years, and patients then develop allergies to indoor allergens like dust and animals, or seasonal rhinitis, like ragweed (hay fever), grass pollen, molds and tree pollen."
Hay fever can also lead to other medical conditions. People who are allergic to weeds are more likely to get other allergies and develop asthma as they age, Josephson said. But those who receive immunotherapy, such as allergy shots that help people's bodies get used to allergens, are less likely to develop asthma, he said. 
The most common allergen is pollen, a powder released by trees, grasses and weeds that fertilize the seeds of neighboring plants. As plants rely on the wind to do the work for them, the pollination season sees billions of microscopic particles fill the air, and some of them end up in people's noses and mouths.
Spring bloomers include ash, birch, cedar, elm and maple trees, plus many species of grass. Weeds pollinate in the late summer and fall, with ragweed being the most volatile. The pollen that sits on brightly colored flowers, it is interesting to note, is rarely responsible for hay fever, because it is heavier and falls to the ground rather than being borne in the air. Also, bees and other insects carry that pollen directly from one flower to the next without ever bothering human noses. 
Mold allergies are different. Mold is a spore that grows on rotting logs, dead leaves and grasses. While dry-weather mold species exist, many types of mold thrive in moist, rainy conditions, releasing their "seeds" overnight. Both in the spring or fall allergy seasons, pollen is released mainly in the morning hours and travels best on dry, warm and breezy days. 
In 2017, spring arrived unusually early, according to a study led by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). Spring means blooming flowers and, for some, lots of sneezing, itchy, watery eyes and runny noses. By looking at various spring indices, including the blooming of known temperature-sensitive flowering plants, the researchers created maps showing when spring had sprung this year. For instance, the maps showed that spring reared its head at the end of February in coastal California, southern Nevada, southeastern Colorado, central Kansas, Missouri, southern Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. Spring arrived 22 days early in Washington, D.C., those maps showed.  
How do scientists know how much pollen is in the air? It’s more than just a guess. Specialists charged with counting pollen set a trap where ambient air flows freely. The trap — usually a glass plate or rod coated with adhesive — is analyzed every few hours, and the number of particles collected is then averaged to reflect the particles that would pass through the area in any 24-hour period. That measurement is converted to pollen per cubic meter. Mold counts work much the same way.
A pollen count is an imprecise measurement, scientists admit, and an arduous one — at the analysis stage, pollen grains are literally counted one by one under a microscope. It is also highly time-consuming to discern between types of pollen, so they are usually bundled into one variable. Given the imprecise nature of the measurement, total daily pollen counts are often listed simply as low, moderate or high. 
The American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology provides up-to-date pollen counts for U.S. states.
People who have access to pollen counts may decide to stay indoors if a pollen count is high, or simply may take medication to help control their symptoms.
A physician will take patient history and do a thorough physical examination if a person reports having hay fever-like symptoms.  If necessary, the physician will do an allergy test. According to the Mayo Clinic, people can get a skin prick test, in which doctors prick the skin on a person's arm or upper back with different substances to see if any cause an allergic reaction, such as a raised bump called a hive. 
A person can also do an allergy blood test. This test rates the immune system's response to a particular allergen by measuring the amount of allergy-causing antibodies in the bloodstream, according to the Mayo Clinic. 
Dr. Sarita Patil, an allergist with Massachusetts General Hospital's Allergy Associates in Boston, talked to Live Science about strategies for outdoor lovers with seasonal allergies. Patil suggested seven tips. For instance, Patil suggested figuring out exactly what type of pollen you're allergic to, and then avoiding the months when those plants are in bloom. Her other strategies: Be able to identify the pollen perpetrator by sight; monitor pollen counts before scheduling outdoor time; go outside at a time of day when the plants that make you go achoo are not pollinating (grasses, for instance, have a peak pollination time of afternoon to early evening); wear protective gear like sunglasses, among other tips.  
Allergy sufferers may also choose to combat symptoms with medication designed to shut down or trick the immune sensitivity in the body. Whether over-the-counter or prescription, most allergy pills work by sending chemicals that bind naturally to histamine — the protein that reacts to the allergen and causes an immune response — coursing through the body, negating the protein’s effect. 
Other allergy remedies attack the symptoms at the source. Nasal sprays contain active ingredients that decongest by soothing irritated blood vessels in the nose, while eye drops both moisturize and reduce inflammation. Doctors may also prescribe allergy shots for those particularly afflicted, Josephson said.
For kids, allergy medications are tricky, according to a nationally representative poll of parents with kids between the ages of 6 and 12. That study, carried out in January 2017 by the University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, found that 21 percent of parents said they had trouble figuring out the correct dose of allergy meds for their child; 15 percent of parents gave a child and adult form of the allergy medicine, with one-third of these parents giving their child the adult dose of that medicine.
Doctors may also recommend allergy shots, a neti pot that can rinse the sinuses, or a Grossan Hydropulse, an irrigating system that cleans the nose of pollens, infection and environmental irritants, Josephson said.
Alternative and holistic options, along with acupuncture, may also help people with hay fever, Josephson said. People can also avoid pollen by keeping their windows closed in the spring, and by using air purifiers and air conditioners at home. 
Probiotics may also be helpful in stopping those itchy eyes and runny noses: After analyzing more than 20 previous, and relevant, studies, researchers found that those who suffer from hay fever may benefit from using probiotics, or "good bacteria" thought to promote a healthy gut. Though the jury is still out on whether probiotics are an effective treatment for seasonal allergies, the researchers noted these gut bacteria could keep the body's immune system from flaring up in response to allergens, something that could reduce allergy symptoms. The study was reported in 2015 in the journal International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. Probiotics can be found in certain foods such as yogurt as well as in supplements. [5 Myths About Probiotics]


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Could Brain Stimulation Fight Obesity?


The man-eating Tsavo lions are currently on display at The Field Museum in Chicago.Credit: Lightspring/Shutterstock.com
People with obesity could benefit from magnetic or electric stimulation of the brain that helps them to eat less, a new review of studies finds.
In the review, researchers looked at the latest work on two noninvasive brain-stimulation techniques, and found that for people with obesity, both electrical and magnetic pulses yielded promising, though very preliminary, results. The main target of the brain stimulation is usually a region called the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which is linked to dietary self-control, the review said.
For people with other eating disorders, such as bulimia and binge-eating, treatment with multiple sessions of noninvasive brain stimulation — usually magnetic pulses — may also have the potential to help. However, the researchers ultimately said the results were inconclusive. And when it comes to using the brain stimulation to treat people with anorexia, "the findings are quite mixed and less promising," said study lead author Peter Hall, a clinical psychologist and the director of the Prevention Neuroscience Lab at the University of Waterloo in Canada. [10 Things You Didn't Know About the Brain]
Much recent work has focused on the possible beneficial effects of noninvasive brain stimulation techniques, such as boosting creativityenhancing math skills and helping patients recover from strokes. Two commonly analyzed techniques include transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), which applies electric current to the brain, and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), which uses magnetic pulses.
"There is a lot of interest in new techniques for treating disorders of eating, as many of our standard approaches [to treating eating disorders] don't work as well as we would like," Hall told Live Science.
In the review, the researchers looked at studies done on both tDCS and rTMS. They found in a number of those studies that stimulating the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex appears to decrease cravings.
In addition, three completed clinical trials and one ongoing one suggest that noninvasive brain stimulation can reduce food consumption and thus fight obesity. However, Hall and his colleagues noted that all these studies were short and had few participants, and that such work mostly highlighted the need for more clinical trials. [6 Foods That Are Good For Your Brain]
Hall and his colleagues also examined recent studies of people with bulimia and anorexia. Bulimia includes cyclical binge-eating episodes followed by purging behaviors such as self-induced vomiting or laxatives. Anorexia may also include binging and purging, but its hallmark feature is dangerously low body weight.
Some initial findings have suggested that rTMS may reduce short-term binging in people with bulimia, Hall and his colleagues said. However, no longer-term benefits have materialized yet.
When it comes to anorexia, they said the results have been significantly more unclear. For example, Hall and his colleagues noted one study where five women with long-standing anorexia were treated using rTMS. Although some of the patients noted improvements in their anxiety and stress levels, all of the women actually lost weight, averaging more than 5 lbs. (2.27 kilograms).
So far, the bulk of the research suggests that magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is more effective than electrical stimulation (tDCS), the researchers said.
"Direct current stimulation has received quite a bit more media attention, but has demonstrated weaker and less reliable effects on food cravings across studies so far," Hall said. "One implication is that while rTMS is already quite advanced and effective, tDCS may still be a work in progress."
A pattern may be emerging on whether noninvasive brain stimulation will have an effect on people with eating disorders, Hall said. For instance, binge-eating and bulimia are disorders that "involve loss of self-restraint in relation to high-calorie foods, whereas anorexia may arguably involve excessive self-restraint," Hall said.
In any case, noninvasive brain stimulation techniques are not ready yet to treat eating disorders, and should not be seen as a cure-all for these complex problems if they ever do reach patients, Hall said. "Instead, they might be very useful components to more comprehensive treatment packages when used very strategically," he said.
The scientists detailed these findings online March 11 in the journal Appetite.
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Many Parents Stumble Over Giving Kids Allergy Medicine By Rachael Rettner, Senior Writer

Many Parents Stumble Over Giving Kids Allergy Medicine
Credit: Serhiy Kobyakov/Shutterstock.com
When it comes to giving allergy medicine to kids, many parents are doing things that could potentially cause problems, a new poll finds.
Parents who were polled said they had trouble figuring out the right dose of allergy medications to give to their children, and some said they used adult versions of the drugs instead of child versions, according to a new poll.
When using adult allergy medications, "parents should be very careful to give their child the correct dose," Dr. Gary Freed, a pediatrician at the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital in Michigan and co-director of the poll, said in a statement. "Doses greater than recommended for children can result in more severe side effects,” Freed said. (Some side effects of allergy medications for kids are excessive drowsiness and headaches, according to the Food and Drug Administration.)
For the poll, researchers at Mott surveyed a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults who had children ages 6 to 12.
Overall, more than half the parents (55 percent) said they had given allergy medicine to their child in the past year. About 1 in 5 parents (21 percent) reported that it was hard to figure out the right dose of allergy medications for their child.
What's more, 15 percent of parents gave their child an adult form of the allergy medicine. Of these, about one-third gave their child the dose recommended for adults, while two-thirds used a partial adult dose. [How to Cope with Allergies & Asthma in 2017]
Although adult allergy medicines often contain the same ingredients as those for kids, the labels on the adult versions often don't include instructions on how much of the medicine to give children, according to Mott.
The poll also found that 18 percent of parents did not check the expiration date on the allergy medicines before giving them to their children. Although expired medicines are unlikely to be dangerous, they could lose their potency over time, Freed said.
If parents aren't sure which allergy medication is right for their child, or how much to give their child, they should check with their health care provider before using the medicines, Freed said.
Freed advises parents to read medication ingredients to help them choose the right option for their child. It's a good idea to "match" a child's symptoms to the ingredients in the product — for example, antihistamines can help with symptoms such as a runny nose and itchy eyes, while decongestants can help with a stuffy nose, according to Mott.
The poll is based on a survey of 1,066 adults, and was administered in January 2017.
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