Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 3, 2013

Celiac diagnoses rose during 2000s, study finds

  • gluten free foods istock.jpg

The number of Americans diagnosed with celiac disease continued to rise over the past decade but leveled off in 2004, according to a new study.

Researchers analyzed data on a small but representative sample of people living in Olmsted County, Minnesota, and found that between the years 2000 and 2010, the number of new cases of celiac disease increased from about 11 people per 100,000 to about 17 people per 100,000.

"We're finding a lot more celiac disease," said Dr. Joseph Murray, the study's senior author from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

"Some of that is probably that we're better at detecting it, but the fact that we're finding it all the time shows that there are a number of new cases," he added.

In people with celiac disease - which includes about 1 percent of Americans, according to most estimates - the immune system reacts to gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley and rye. Eating foods with gluten damages the small intestine and keeps it from absorbing nutrients.

Classic symptoms of celiac are diarrhea and weight loss, according to Murray's report.

Previous studies have shown that the number of people living with the condition increased over time, but few studies looked at the number of new cases being diagnosed in recent years.

The researchers used medical records for people living in Olmsted County, which is home to the Mayo Clinic and two affiliated hospitals, and where the health of most of the population is tracked through research projects.

Over the entire decade starting in 2000, some 249 people were diagnosed with celiac disease in the county. People as young as one year old and as old as 85 received a diagnosis, and about 63 percent of the new cases were women.

Between 2000 and 2001, 26 people were diagnosed with celiac disease, which works out to about 11 per 100,000 people at the time. By 2002 to 2004, that number had climbed to 67 - or about 18 people per 100,000, and remained about the same from then on.

"This study shows not only did it go up, but it kind of plateaued in 2004 and it remained stable at that elevated level," Murray said.

He and his colleagues write in The American Journal of Gastroenterology that the increased incidence of celiac disease may be partly due to doctors knowing about the signs and symptoms of celiac disease and screening people at risk, but not entirely.

"Something has changed in our environment that's driving an increased incidence of celiac disease," Murray said.

In their report, Murray and his colleagues note that gastrointestinal infections have been linked to the development of celiac disease. So has high consumption of gluten-containing foods, like breads, bagels and pizza.

Dr. Alessio Fasano, director of the Center for Celiac Research at MassGeneral Hospital for Children in Boston, agreed that something in the environment seems to be triggering the various genetic and biological factors that drive celiac disease.

"If you lead the lifestyle of three or four generations ago, you don't see this epidemic. I do believe what we're witnessing with celiac disease is that we're changing the environment way too fast for our body to adapt to it," said Fasano, who was not involved with the study.

"When we're born we are like a marble block. What carves this into a wonderful sculpture is the environment," Fasano added.

Murray told Reuters Health that people should see their doctors if they have a family history of celiac disease, or are experiencing its most common symptoms - including iron deficiency, weakness, tiredness, diarrhea, passing gas and weight loss.


View the original article here

The big ticker: Heart disease

  • 694940094001_1089798798001_healthy-heart-640.jpg

Clench your fist—that’s about the size of your heart. Located in the center of your chest, the heart beats about one hundred thousand times a day, pumping five to six quarts of blood per minute.

Once the blood receives oxygen from the lungs, the heart sends the blood from the aorta through the arteries and into the capillaries, which are smaller, thinner blood vessels. Then, once the capillaries have brought oxygen and nutrients to every cell in the body, the blood is redeposited into the veins, and from there it goes back to the heart for the cycle to begin again.

So what we have here is a plumbing system essentially, a smart pump with different connecting parts that circulates blood throughout the body. The heart itself is made up of four chambers—the two up top are called the atria, the two on the bottom are called the ventricles—connected by a set of valves. And the whole system is set in motion, or beats, thanks to the electrical impulses sent out by a small bundle of specialized cells in the right atrium that act as the heart’s natural pacemaker, causing the muscles of this organ to contract and relax.

Any malfunction of this blood pump is known as heart disease, of which one of the most common types is coronary artery disease. It is the No. 1 killer of both men and women in the United States killing more nearly half a million Americans each year.

Coronary artery disease, also known as coronary heart disease, is a narrowing and obstruction of the coronary arteries, which are responsible for bringing oxygen and nutrients to the heart itself. As early as your teen years, fat deposits begin to develop in some of these arteries, and as time goes by, the fat deposits build up, ultimately creating an obstruction that begins to decrease the amount of blood to the heart and cause an inflammation as the artery tries to heal itself.

Over time the fat deposits in the arteries begin to harden, and you begin to get deposits of small platelets that compound the obstruction. All of this can lead not only to a significant narrowing of the arteries, but to blood clots that may either obstruct the artery or get dislodged and create further obstructions elsewhere in the plumbing system.

One of the consequences of this narrowing or total obstruction of the coronary artery is ischemia, which occurs when there is an insufficient supply of oxygenated blood for the heart muscle. Any activity—eating, excitement, or changes in temperature—can make the problem worse.

One of the most common symptoms of ischemia is angina, which is a discomfort, heaviness, pressure, numbness, or squeezing feeling in the chest. Sometimes it is mistaken for indigestion or heartburn. It is usually felt in the chest, but it can also migrate to the arms, especially the left shoulder. Other symptoms include shortness of breath, irregular heartbeats or palpitation, a very fast heartbeat, nausea, and sweating. If this ischemia is not corrected, if it lasts more than 30 minutes and does not get better, a heart attack may result.

In a heart attack, the heart muscle begins to fail, either through a very erratic electrical stimulation called an arrhythmia or by stopping altogether. It is important to recognize these symptoms because early intervention could save your life.

A doctor can tell you if you have coronary artery disease by discussing your symptoms, especially shortness of breath, taking your medical history, and looking at your risk factors, in particular, smoking, cholesterol, blood pressure, and sugar control. There are a host of diagnostic tests your doctor can do, such as an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG); an exercise stress test; an ultrafast CAT scan, which looks for calcium deposits in your coronary artery; and cardiocatheterization, which can help determine the degree of obstruction of the artery.

If you are diagnosed with coronary artery disease, treatment is threefold. The first has to do with lifestyle changes, like quitting smoking, starting to exercise, and keeping to a low-fat, low-sodium, low-cholesterol diet.

The second aspect of treatment is medication, which may be needed to get your heart working more effectively. Other medication will be prescribed to reduce the cholesterol.

The third aspect of treatment has to do with procedures to help improve the blood flow through the coronaries. One possibility is a balloon angioplasty, in which a small balloon-tipped catheter is inserted into the coronary arteries and then inflated to open up the clogged artery. Another possibility is placing a small, metal stent inside the artery to keep it open and improve blood flow.

A heart bypass operation takes place when total replacement of the piece of the coronary that is obstructed becomes necessary.

Plumbing Vs. Electrical Problems

Other types of cardiac disease have nothing to do with obstruction of the coronaries but with the way the electrical system of the heart works. Sometimes the specialized cells that electrically stimulate the heart become dysfunctional, and you can develop an arrhythmia, where the heart beats either too slowly, too quickly, or out of sync. These conditions can be diagnosed with an electrocardiogram, and sometimes medications alone can help to regulate the rhythm.

Another common problem is heart failure. This occurs when the heart can no longer effectively pump all the blood that it receives. Heart failure affects about five million Americans, and it’s the leading cause of hospitalization of people older than 65. Many times, heart failure is due to prior damage caused by coronary artery disease, or by arrhythmias that have weakened the function of the heart. Ultimately, heart failure creates a backlog of pressure into the lungs, and people with heart failure tend to have difficulty breathing. Depending on the cause of the heart failure, different medications are available for treating it.

The valves of the heart are another source of heart problems. The valves can be damaged at birth or through infection. Abnormal or infected valves can interfere with normal blood flow and heart function and can lead to major cardiac disease. Surgery may be needed to replace the valves.

Sometimes the lining of the heart may be infected, a condition called pericarditis. If this membrane is inflamed, the heart may not beat properly. Valve abnormalities, arrhythmias, and heart failure all have a common symptom—shortness of breath or difficulty catching your breath. If you have this problem, see a cardiologist to get the correct diagnosis and treatment.

The heart is a remarkable organ. It is the core of life, and its beat is central to your survival. Keeping it in prime working order is of paramount concern.


View the original article here

Dangerous moves: More kids hurt dancing

  • ballerina istock.jpg

All the leaps, lifts and turns that make dance a breathtaking spectacle to watch also make it a hazardous activity.

A new study finds the number of children and teens injured from dancing is on the rise.

Over a 17-year period, the number of dance-related injuries that sent U.S. children ages 3 to 19 to emergency rooms increased 37 percent, from 6,175 injuries in 1991 to 8,477 injuries in 2007.

Of the 113,000 injuries that occurred during the study period, more than half (52 percent) were strains and sprains, and 45 percent were caused by falls. Forty percent of injured dancers were ages 15 to 19.

About one-quarter of the injury reports included information about the type of dance that the kids were participating in when they were injured. More than half of these injures (55 percent) occurred during classical dancing, such as ballet, tap and jazz.

The reason for the rise is not clear. But the researchers suspect it may be due to an increase in the sports' popularity thanks to recent TV shows and video games that feature dancing, said study researcher Kristin Roberts, a senior research associate for Nationwide Children's Hospital's Center for Injury Research and Policy in Columbus, Ohio.

Older teens are more likely to be injured by dancing because they grow more advanced in their skills and spend more time training and practicing, Roberts said. [Video: Teens Discuss Dancing Injuries ]

The study likely underestimates the true number of dance injuries because it does not account for injuries treated in medical centers other than emergency rooms or injuries treated by the dancers themselves, Roberts said.

Precautions such as staying well hydrated, stretching, warming up and cooling down, using proper technique and getting plenty of rest may help prevent dance injuries, Roberts said.

The study was published in February in the Journal of Physical Activity & Health.

Copyright 2013 MyHealthNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


View the original article here

Angelina Jolie didn't plagiarize 'Blood and Honey,' judge says

  • Angelina Jolie party ret.jpg

    May 29, 2012: Angelina Jolie arrives to Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague ahead of a screening of her new film 'In the Land of Blood and Honey' at the Foreign Commonwealth Office in central London.REUTERS

A federal judge says actress Angelina Jolie didn't steal the story for her movie "In the Land of Blood and Honey" from a Croatian author.

City News Service reports Friday's tentative ruling in Los Angeles will quash the lawsuit accusing Jolie of copyright infringement.

In 2011, author James Braddock sued Jolie and the film company that made the film, saying it was partly based on his book "The Soul Shattering."

U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee wrote in a tentative ruling that the plots, characters and themes in the two works were not "substantially" similar, though both centered on war romances.

Jolie wrote, directed and co-produced the film.

Braddock has been ordered to tell the court why his complaint should not be dismissed with prejudice.


View the original article here

Jim Carrey says Fox News slandered him in its coverage of his comedy web video

  • JimCarrey660.jpg

    March 11, 2013: Actor Jim Carrey arrives at the world premiere of the feature film "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles.AP/Invision

Comedian Jim Carrey attacked Fox News on Friday, claiming the network had slandered him in its coverage of his web video "Cold Dead Hand," which was released on the comedy site Funny or Die.

The "Mr. Poppers Penguins" star said he would have sued Fox News "if I felt they were worth my time or that anyone with a brain in their head could actually fall for such irresponsible buffoonery."

In the video, Carrey plays a country singer on the popular 1970s show "Hee Haw," as well as former Oscar-winner and NRA president Charlton Heston, who shoots his own foot off at the end of the video.

Carrey, 51, said his video was made to spotlight his "stand against large magazines and assault rifles."

Calling Fox News "Fux News" in the press release sent out by his publicist, the "Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls" star also labeled the number one cable news channel "a media Colostomy bag."


View the original article here

FDA OKs first-of-a-kind diabetes drug from J&J

  • Johnson and Johnson_Reuters_Feb 22 2013.jpg

The Food and Drug Administration says it has approved a first-of-a-kind diabetes drug from Johnson & Johnson that uses a new method to lower blood sugar.

The agency cleared J&J's Invokana tablets for adults with Type 2 diabetes, which affects about 26 million Americans.

The drug is a once-a-day medicine designed to lower blood sugar levels in patients by eliminating more sugar in their urine. The drug works by blocking the reabsorption of sugar by the kidneys, which occurs at higher levels in patients with diabetes.

J&J has touted the drug as the first in a new class of medications to help address the nation's growing diabetes epidemic. The drug differs from older drugs that work by decreasing the amount of sugar absorbed from food and stored in the liver.


View the original article here

Rapper Lil Wayne says his epilepsy caused recent seizures

  • Lil Wayne_Reuters.jpg

    REUTERS/Andrew Innerarity

Lil Wayne says he’s an epileptic and has had seizures for years.

In an interview with Los Angeles-based radio station Power 106 on Thursday, the 30-year-old rapper said epilepsy caused his most recent health scare earlier this month, when he was rushed to a hospital. Wayne said he had three back-to-back seizures.

The Grammy winner says: “I’ve had a bunch of seizures, y’all just never hear about them.”

Wayne says he “could’ve died” and that the recent seizures were a result of “just plain stress, no rest, overworking myself.”

He released his 10th album, “I Am Not a Human Being II,” this week. He’ll embark on a 40-city tour in July with rappers T.I. and Future.

The New Orleans native, whose given name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr., is one of the biggest stars not only of his genre but in all music.


View the original article here

Deadly blood type solves 60-year-old medical mystery

  • 061106_blood_clot_02

    People with the rare Vel-negative blood type can die if they receive a Vel-positive transfusion, and now scientists know why.Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation

A blood type that can turn blood transfusions deadly has proven a perplexing mystery for 60 years. Now researchers have finally identified the secret behind the blood type known as "Vel," findings that could help make blood safer for hundreds of thousands of people worldwide.

The mystery began in 1952, when a 66-year-old woman in New York, sick with colon cancer, received a blood transfusion and unexpectedly suffered from a severe and potentially fatal rejection of the blood. Investigators referred to her, using her last name, simply as Patient Vel.

Further research found that Mrs. Vel had developed a potent immune response against some unknown compound found on the red blood cells she had received. However, scientists could not identify this compound, opening the mystery of a new blood type, "Vel-negative."

"The molecular basis of the Vel-negative blood type remained elusive for more than 60 years despite intense efforts worldwide," researcher Bryan Ballif, a biochemist and mass spectrometrist at the University of Vermont, told LiveScience. [The 9 Most Bizarre Medical Conditions]

How Vel works

Most people in the world are Vel-positive, but soon investigators discovered that Mrs. Vel was not alone; more than 200,000 people in Europe and more than 100,000 in North America share the Vel-negative blood type. For the 1 in 2,500 people of European descent with the rare blood, receiving a Vel-positive transfusion can easily result in kidney failure and death.

Everyone's red blood cells are coated with molecules that can serve as what are called antigens, compounds that prompt the immune system to respond. It does so by pumping out proteins known as antibodies that latch onto and neutralize those antigens. However, people do not normally produce antibodies to their own red blood cell antigens, only to foreign ones — such as when they receive blood from another person who has a different blood type, and therefore an antigen they lack.

The most commonly known blood antigens make up the major human blood groups: A, B, AB and O. However, many less-common blood groups also exist, such as Vel, which can potentially make transfusions dangerous for patients.

Vel-negative blood is one of the most difficult blood types to supply in many countries. This is partly due to its rarity, but also to the dearth of any systematic way to screen for Vel-negative blood from donors. Previously, to identify whether someone was Vel-negative or Vel-positive, doctors had to use antibodies generated by the few known Vel-negative people after their bodies had rejected transfused blood. Many hospitals and blood banks lack access to these antibodies and thus any way to test for Vel.

Understanding rare blood types

Now Ballif, along with molecular biologist Lionel Arnaud of the French National Institute of Blood Transfusion and their colleagues have found the mysterious culprit behind Vel.

"Our findings promise to provide immediate assistance to health care professionals should they encounter this rare but vexing blood type," Ballif said.

To find the missing piece, the international team used antibodies from Vel-negative patients to purify the Vel protein from human red blood cell membranes. Ballif and his colleagues then identified the culprit, a tiny molecule researchers had never before observed, andwhich is now dubbed small integral membrane protein 1, or SMIM1. Genetic analysis of 70 Vel-negative people revealed that each such patient was missing a short gene that instructs cells how to make SMIM1. [7 Biggest Mysteries of the Human Body]

Last year, the same researchers identified the proteins responsible for two other rare blood types, Junior and Langeris. With Vel, the global count of understood blood types now rises to 33.

"While there are still a couple of rare blood types whose molecular basis remains to be elucidated, the Vel-negative blood type was surely the most vexing mystery," Arnaud told LiveScience.

The researchers developed DNA-based tests for identifying Vel-negative patients. These tests can easily be integrated into existing blood testing procedures and clinicians can complete them in two hours or less, the researchers said.

"For those rare Vel-negative individuals in need of a blood transfusion, this is a potentially life-saving time frame," Ballif said. "Even if you are that rare one person out of 2,500 that is Vel-negative, we now know how to rapidly type your blood and find blood for you."

The scientists detailed their findings online March 18 in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


View the original article here

Brian McKnight: I am not as romantic as you think

Brian McKnight’s music makes him seem like the ultimate romantic guy. But he said that’s not the case.

“I am just like all the jerks and idiots you know,” he told FOX411's In the Zone. “I am just a guy that watches sports all day.”

But his sensual music, which has earned him 16 Grammy nomination, has definitely garnered him a devoted female fan base.

For his latest album, “More Than Words,” McKnight said he decided to get serious with his lyrics and “get back to the love of music.”

“I decided I am not going to say things I do not mean anymore,” he said. “’More Than Words’ is really about the next time I really get into a situation where I feel [in love] I am going to mean it when I say it.”

And the now 43-year-old singer said his attitude toward relationships, like many other things, has changed a lot in during his time in the spotlight. McKnight hit the music scene when he was just 19 years old and has since collaborated with some of today’s most celebrated artists like Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera, and Mariah Carey.  

He said his latest album, which will be his twelfth, is reminiscent of his earlier work.

“I think this album resembles my first few albums… more than the last ten things I’ve done.”

McKnight also said that throughout his time in the business he has seen the landscape of the music industry change, especially with the onslaught of singing competition shows like “American Idol.”

“Those shows to me in my opinion are not about the artist,” he said. “Those shows are about the personalities on the show which is great for them. It’s also about their ratings for that particular show.”

However, one thing remains unchanged for aspiring artists according to McKnight.

“If you want to do this and you love it, you have to love it. You really do because it’s going to let you down. It’s going to bring you up too but you have to be prepared for those times when it’s not what you hoped it would be.”


View the original article here

Savannah Guthrie appears to give Matt Lauer middle finger on air

  • Savannah Guthrie middle finger Today Reuters 660.jpg

    Savannah Guthrie seemingly gave Matt Lauer the middle finger on "Today."TODAY/NBC and Retuers

Are things really that bad at the "Today" show?

Friday on the morning show’s broadcast, host Savannah Guthrie appeared to give her co-host Matt Lauer the middle finger during a segment about vacuum cleaners.

The blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment happened after Guthrie struggled maneuver a vacuum during a demonstration, and Lauer quipped: “By the way this is the first time Savannah has ever vacuumed.”

“That is not true. That is not true,” she replied, then turning and scowling while holding a finger up at Lauer.

The question is, exactly which finger was it?

Viewers seemed to think Guthrie angrily gave her co-host the middle finger, assuming cameras weren’t on her.

But she denied flipping Lauer off, taking to Twitter to voice her side of the story.

“Folks!! That was my INDEX finger! Photo evidence proving my innocence coming! #fingergate #TGIF “

Guthrie posted a blurry photo later, calling the incident a “faux controversy.”

Lauer then tweeted a photo of himself leaving a room along with the message: “Me storming out of the office after after your middle finger salute.”

His message, though seemingly meant as a joke, fueled rumors that Guthrie was indeed firing the obscene gesture at Lauer.

“It may have been your #indexfinger but your face says #middlefinger,” one user tweeted.

Another added: “@SavannahGuthrie what message does the backwards index finger send?”

“@SavannahGuthrie, [Matt Lauer] glad something so immature is so flippant to you. Shows your real character. #offensive,” another user posted along with a close up photo of the moment.

Click here to see a video of the moment

A rep for the "Today" show did not return FOX 411's request for comment. 


View the original article here

'America's Most Wanted' likely ending a quarter-century run

  • Americas Most Wanted 660 AP.jpg

    This March 12, 2009 file photo shows John Walsh, host of the television show "America's Most Wanted," in New York. "America's Most Wanted" may have come to an end after 25 years. Lifetime network has confirmed it won't be picking up the crime-fighting series for another season.AP

"America's Most Wanted' may have come to an end after 25 years.

Lifetime network has confirmed it won't be picking up the crime-fighting series for another season.

But the network says it's developing a pilot for a new project with John Walsh, who created "America's Most Wanted" in 1988.

Hosted by Walsh, the series was a fixture on the Fox network until its abrupt cancellation in June 2011. During that run, the show helped bring almost 1,200 fugitives to justice.

Lifetime revived the series in December 2011, ultimately airing 44 episodes. It most recently aired on the network last October.

Walsh originally launched his crime-busting crusade in 1981, in the aftermath of the abduction and murder of his 6-year-old son, Adam.


View the original article here

Kirsten Dunst says kissing Brad Pitt was 'disgusting': Nastiest celeb kiss?

  • Kirsten Dunst 660 Reuters.JPG

    Cast member Kirsten Dunst poses during a photocall for the film "On The Road", in competition at the 65th Cannes Film Festival, May 23, 2012.Reuters

Millions of women have dreamed of locking lips with Brad Pitt, but Kirsten Dunst says smooching the actor in "Interview With the Vampire" was "disgusting."

In fairness to Brad, she was only 11 at the time.

"Everyone at the time was like, 'You’re so lucky you kissed Brad Pitt,' but I thought it was disgusting," she tells Bullett magazine of kissing the former Sexiest Man Alive, who is 19 years her senior, in the 1994 movie. "I didn’t kiss anyone else until I was 16, I think. I was a late bloomer."

SODAHEAD SLIDESHOW: See the nastiest celebrity kisses.

Reese Witherspoon also thought kissing Robert Pattinson in "Water for Elephants" was "disgusting." "Rob possibly had the most hideous horrible cold of any costar I've ever had to do a love scene with ever in my entire life. He was literally snorting and snotting through every second of it — and it was not appealing. I'm talking green, infectious, disgusting — I'm not kidding!" she said, according to In Touch Weekly.

Other celebrity smooches have made us cringe. Angelina Jolie shocked fans at the 2000 Oscars by kissing her brother James Haven and announcing, "I am so in love with my brother right now."

In what wound up to be one of the most crash-and-burn celeb relationships of all time, Jennifer Lopez's then-boyfriend Ben Affleck kissed her famous rear end in the video for her 2002 song "Jenny From the Block."

It was actually pretty groundbreaking only ten years ago, but some have said Madonna gave Britney the "kiss of death" career-wise when she planted one on her during a performance at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards.

As part of their mission of proving they had a "real marriage," Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley shared an awkward kiss at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards.

PHOTOS: See the latest celebrity pictures to hit the Internet.

We also felt a little uncomfortable watching Adrien Brody maul Halle Berry at the 2003 Oscars. But Liza Minnelli and David Gest's wet one at their 2002 wedding was even worse ... click through our slideshow and let us know: Who shared the nastiest celeb kiss?


View the original article here

Teen nearly blinded after parasite latches onto contact lens

When 18-year-old Ashley Hyde started to have throbbing and redness in her eye, doctors couldn’t figure out what was wrong with her.

"They did multiple cultures where they scrape your eye," Ashley, from South Florida, told Local10.com. "One time, they had to drill into my eye. It was really nasty."

Eventually, doctors discovered the sickening source of Ashley’s pain.  A rare parasite had grown on her contact lens and was trying to eat its way through her cornea, Local10.com reported.  Had they not discovered it in time, Ashley could have lost the use of her eyesight.

Ashley had what is called an acanthamoeba infection.  A tiny parasite, commonly found in fresh water and soil, acanthamoeba are capable of spreading through contact lens infections, cuts or being inhaled into the lungs.

Acanthamoeba infections are just one possible side effect of improper cleaning of contact lenses.  Many ophthalmologists recommend using daily disposable contact lenses, to better avoid contracting infection and disease.

Ashley, who has to go through several more months of treatment, advocates to others the importance of thoroughly cleaning their contacts.

"It hurts," she told Local10.com. "I wouldn't risk it."

Click for more from Local10.com.


View the original article here

Flu-like 'Valley Fever' increases in Arizona, California

A fungal infection called Valley Fever is on the rise in the Southwest United States, according to a new report.

There were more than 22,000 cases of Valley Fever reported in the Southwest in 2011, up from 2,265 cases in 1998, according to the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The report is based on cases in Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah; the fungus that causes the condition is also found in Texas, but infections there are not reported to the CDC.

Most cases (66 percent) occurred in Arizona, and that state also saw the biggest rise in occurrences, from about 1,500 in 1998 to more than 16,000 in 2011. California saw the second-largest increase in cases. Less than 1 percent of cases over the study period occurred in states where the fungus is not endemic.

The infection, formally called Coccidioidomycosis, is caused when people inhale the spores of the Coccidioides fungi, which live in the soil. The disease cannot spread from person to person.

"Because fungus particles spread through the air, it’s nearly impossible to completely avoid exposure to this fungus in these hardest-hit states," CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden said in a statement. "It’s important that people be aware of Valley Fever if they live in or have travelled to the southwest United States," he said.

People in endemic areas should consider trying to reduce exposure to dusty air, which might contain spores of the fungus, the report said.

The respiratory infection causes flu-like symptoms, the report said. Valley Fever is rarely fatal, but it can be debilitating; nearly 75 percent of patients miss work or school, and more than 40 percent require hospitalization, according to the report.

It's not clear why cases of the infection are increasing, but it may be that changes in precipitation or temperature have increased spore dispersal, according to the report. Disruption of soil by construction might also be a contributing factor. Some changes in testing and reporting practices may also have played a role.

More research is needed to understand the reasons for the increase, the report said.

"Health care providers should be aware of this increasingly common infection when treating persons with influenza-like illness or pneumonia who live in or have traveled to endemic areas," the report said. Rates of Valley Fever were highest among people ages 60 and over.

Cases of Valley Fever might be "greatly underreported" the report said. Scientists have estimated that the fungus causes 15 to 29 percent of pneumonia cases in highly endemic areas; however, only a small proportion of patients with symptoms are tested for the disease.

The report used data collected from 1998 through 2011 by the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System.

.

Copyright 2013 MyHealthNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


View the original article here

Demi Lovato returning as 'X Factor' judge

  • Demi Lovato Reuters 660.JPG

    Recording artist Demi Lovato performs "Give Your Heart a Break" during the VH1 Divas 2012 show in Los Angeles, December 16, 2012.Reuters

As expected, Demi Lovato is returning as a judge of "The X Factor," Fox confirmed on Thursday. 

The singer-songwriter will be back alongside series creator Simon Cowell when the singing competition begins its third season this fall.

Although he has called Lovato "really, really annoying," Cowell said he enjoys working with her. She joined the panel of judges last year.

Thursday's announcement comes as the panel is being revamped. Britney Spears and record producer Antonio "L.A." Reid departed after Season 2.

For season 2, reality star Khloe Kardashian and former "Saved By The Bell" star Mario Lopez were brought on to host the live episodes of the series. 

It has not been confirmed yet whether or not the hosts will return for another season. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


View the original article here

OFFER REJECTED:Prosecutors Not Ready to Agree to Holmes Guilty Plea

  • JHolmes.jpg

    July 23, 2012 FILE: James E. Holmes appears in Arapahoe County District Court in Centennial, Colo.

Prosecutors in the Colorado theater shooting on Thursday rejected an offer from suspect James Holmes to plead guilty in exchange for avoiding the death penalty and accused defense lawyers of a serious breach of court rules by making the offer public.

In a scathing court document, prosecutors said the defense has repeatedly refused to give them the information they need to evaluate the plea offer, so the offer can't be considered genuine.

No plea agreement exists, prosecutors said, and one "is extremely unlikely based on the present information available to the prosecution."

They also said anyone reading news stories about the offer would inevitably conclude "the defendant knows that he is guilty, the defense attorneys know that he is guilty, and that both of them know that he was not criminally insane."

Neither the defense nor the prosecution immediately returned phone calls Thursday.

Holmes is charged with multiple counts of murder and attempted murder in the July 20 shootings in a packed theater in the Denver suburb of Aurora. Twelve people were killed and 70 were injured.

Holmes' attorneys disclosed in a court filing Wednesday that their client has offered to plead guilty, but only if he wouldn't be executed.

Prosecutors criticized defense attorneys for publicizing the offer, calling it a ploy meant to draw the public and the judge into what should be private plea negotiations.

Prosecutors did not say what information the defense refused to give them, but the two sides have argued in court previously about access to information about Holmes' mental health.

Karen Steinhauser, a former prosecutor who is now a law professor at the University of Denver, said prosecutors clearly do not want to agree to a plea deal without knowing whether Holmes' attorneys could mount a strong mental health defense.

"One of the issues the prosecution needs to look at is, is there a likelihood that doctors, and then a jury, could find that James Holmes was insane at the time of the crime?" she said.

Prosecutors also criticized comments to The Associated Press by Doug Wilson, who heads the state public defenders' office.

Wilson told the AP Wednesday that prosecutors had not responded to the offer and said he didn't know whether prosecutors had relayed the offer to any victims as required by state law.

Prosecutors said that violated the gag order.

They also said they have repeatedly contacted "every known victim and family member of a victim -- numbering over one thousand" about possible resolutions of the case, including the death penalty and life in prison without parole.

George Brauchler, the Arapahoe County district attorney, is scheduled to announce Monday whether he will seek the death penalty for Holmes. Brauchler hasn't publicly revealed his plans. He has refused repeatedly to comment on the case, citing the gag order.

Pierce O'Farrill, who was shot three times, said he would welcome an agreement that would imprison Holmes for life. The years of court struggles ahead would likely be an emotional ordeal for victims, he said.

"I don't see his death bringing me peace," O'Farrill said. "To me, my prayer for him was that he would spend the rest of his life in prison and hopefully, in all those years he has left, he could find God and ask for forgiveness himself."

A plea bargain would bring finality to the case fairly early so victims and their families can avoid the prolonged trauma of not knowing what will happen, said Dan Recht, a past president of the Colorado Criminal Defense Bar.

"The defense, by making this public pleading, is reaching out to the victims' families," he said.


View the original article here

Taylor Swift to appear on 'New Girl' alongside Zooey Deschanel

A new girl is coming to Fox's "New Girl" and her name is Taylor Swift.

A representative for the Grammy-winning singer said Thursday that Swift will appear on the May 14 season finale of the hit show. No other details were provided.

"New Girl" stars actress-singer Zooey Deschanel as the awkward, but bubbly Jessica Day, who lives with three male roommates.

Swift appeared in the 2010 romantic comedy "Valentine's Day" and guest starred on "CSI" in 2009. The 23-year-old launched her "Red" world tour this month.


View the original article here

North Korea Vows to 'Settle Accounts' After US Sends B-2s to Region

  • b2bomber12z.jpg

    UNDATED: This photo shows a B-2 Spirit.(U.S. Air Force/Bobbie Garcia)

The U.S. military announced Thursday that two B-2 stealth bombers were sent to South Korea to participate in a training exercise, demonstrating the Pentagon's commitment to defend its ally against threats from North Korea.

The two B-2 Spirit bombers flew more than 6,500 miles from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri to South Korea, dropping inert munitions before returning to the U.S., according to a statement released by U.S. Forces Korea.

"The United States is steadfast in its alliance commitment to the defense of the Republic of Korea, to deterring aggression, and to ensuring peace and stability in the region," the statement said.

The B-2 Spirit is capable of delivering both conventional and nuclear weapons. The Pentagon said the mission was part of its ongoing Foal Eagle training exercise series, which began March 1 and ends April 30.

The exercise was announced a day after North Korea said it had shut down a key military hotline usually used to arrange passage for workers and goods through the Demilitarized Zone.

The hotline shutdown follows a torrent of bellicose rhetoric in recent weeks from North Korea, which is angry about annual South Korea-U.S. military drills and U.N. sanctions over its nuclear test last month. North Korea calls the drills rehearsal for an invasion; Seoul and Washington say the training is defensive in nature and that they have no intention of attacking.

North Korea's threats and provocations are seen as efforts to provoke the new government in Seoul, led by President Park Geun-hye, to change its policies toward Pyongyang. North Korea's moves at home to order troops into "combat readiness" are seen as ways to build domestic unity as young leader Kim Jong Un strengthens his military credentials.

North Korea previously cut Red Cross phone and fax hotlines with South Korea, and another communication channel with the U.S.-led U.N. command at the border between the Koreas. Three other telephone hotlines used only to exchange information about air traffic were still operating normally Thursday, according to South Korea's Air Traffic Center.

North Korea said there was no need for communication between the countries in a situation "where a war may break out at any moment."

In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell told reporters that North Korea's "latest threat to cut off communication links coupled with its provocative rhetoric is not constructive to ensuring peace and stability on the peninsula."

Although North Korea has vowed nuclear strikes on the U.S., analysts outside the country have seen no proof that North Korean scientists have yet mastered the technology needed to build a nuclear warhead small enough to mount on a missile.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


View the original article here

ECONOMIC STANDSTILL:Americans Impatient Amid Meager Recovery

  • jobfair_boston_022513.jpg

    Feb. 25, 2013: Job seekers line up to speak with a State Department employee about job opportunities in the federal government during a job fair in Boston.AP

The U.S. economy is teetering further on the edge of recession, with revised numbers showing economic growth clocking in at an anemic rate at the end of 2012. 

Analysts expect the numbers to pick up this quarter, but a succession of revisions for the final months of last year give a bleak picture. The Commerce Department estimated Thursday that the gross domestic product, the total output of goods and services, grew at an annual rate of 0.4 percent in the October-December quarter. That was just slightly better than the previous estimate of 0.1 percent, and an estimate before that showing the economy actually contracted in that period. 

Technically, the economy has been in recovery since 2009. But for many, it doesn't feel like it -- recent public opinion surveys reflect the dour mood several years after the last recession's end. 

A Pew Research Center survey earlier this month found 33 percent reporting that they hear "mostly bad news" about the economy, with just 7 percent saying they hear good news. Fifty-eight percent said it was "mixed." 

On the job front, the public mood was worse. Roughly 45 percent said they were hearing mostly bad news, while just 15 percent said they heard mostly good news. 

The bright spots at the moment appear to be in the financial markets, where the Dow is still riding a surge, and in real estate. Sales of previously occupied homes rose in February to the highest level in nearly three years, while builders broke ground on more houses and apartments. Annual home prices jumped in January by the most since June 2006, according to a closely watched measure. 

Despite the recent slack, analysts think the economy is now growing at a rate of around 2.5 percent in the current January-March quarter, which ends this week. The government will release its first look at first quarter growth on April 26. 

Steady hiring has kept consumers spending this year. And a rebound in company stockpiling, further gains in housing and more business spending also likely drove faster growth in the first quarter. 

But the 0.4 percent growth rate for the gross domestic product was the weakest quarterly performance in almost two years and followed a much faster 3.1 percent increase in the third quarter. The fourth quarter was hurt by the sharpest fall in defense spending in 40 years. 

For all of 2012, the economy grew 2.2 percent after a 1.8 percent increase in 2011 and a 2.4 percent advance in 2010. Since the recession ended in mid-2009, the economy has been expanding at sub-par rates as a string of problems from higher gas prices to Europe's debt crisis have acted as a drag on the U.S. economy. 

The economy continues to face headwinds. Though lawmakers averted the full brunt of the so-called fiscal cliff at the beginning of the year -- which would have been the double-blow of sweeping tax hikes and automatic spending cuts -- some of those provisions ended up going into effect eventually. 

A payroll tax cut ended at the beginning of 2013, and taxes rose for some top earners. Then the automatic spending cuts known as sequester took effect on March 1 despite last-minute attempts to avert them. 

The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the combination of tax increases and spending cuts could trim economic growth this year by about 1.5 percentage points. The CBO is predicting just 1.5 percent growth for 2013. 

Employers have still added an average of 200,000 jobs a month since November. That helped lower the unemployment rate in February to 7.7 percent, a four-year low. 

But weekly numbers released Thursday showed the number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits jumped by 16,000 last week, the second straight weekly increase. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


View the original article here

Barbara Walters reportedly set to retire in 2014

  • Barbara Walters

    May 22: Broadcast journalist Barbara Walters attends the Museum of Modern Art's "Party in the Garden" dinner in New York City.REUTERS

Barbara Walters is set to retire in May 2014 after more than five decades as one of the most prominent television journalists in the U.S., Reuters reports citing a source familiar with her plans.

Walters, 83, is reportedly planning to announce her retirement in the next few weeks.

"It was very much her decision. I think she will best explain it herself," the source told Reuters.

A spokesman with ABC's "The View," which Walters created and hosts, gave no comment to Fox News.

Walters has suffered a series of health issues recently. She was hospitalized in January after fainting and hitting her head, and then came down with the chicken pox.

Walters is best known as one of the U.S.' top interviewers. Her subjects have included Fidel Castro, Margaret Thatcher, Saddam Hussein and every U.S. president since Richard Nixon.

Reuters contributed to this report. 


View the original article here

Justin Timberlake openly discusses his past drug use

  • Justin Timberlake 660 Reuters.JPG

    Singer Justin Timberlake arrives at the 55th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California February 10, 2013.Reuters

Justin Timberlake has admitted he dabbled in different 'substances' in the past.

The now clean-cut singer and husband of Hollywood star Jessica Biel, made his debut performing at SXSW Festival this week.

Click here for more on Timberlake from The Sun.

But he opened up about his experiences at another festival in a new interview with Myspace.

He said: "This is my first time here. I’ve been to Coachella many times, on many different, um, substances.

"I’ve been to Coachella many times but not remembered a lot of it, I’ll leave it at that.

"Like, I stood in an open field and one year I saw Nine Inch Nails and the next year I saw Weezer and I was standing in the middle of the field, you know, like tripping my mind out."

Click here for more on Timberlake from The Sun.


View the original article here

NYC doctor who performed fatal liposuction turns himself in on manslaughter charges

The Park Avenue doctor who performed a risky liposuction that killed a gorgeous Manhattan woman has been indicted on manslaughter charges and turned himself in this morning, authorities said.

Dr. Oleg Davie, 51, ignored the medical form where Isel Pineda, 51, marked that she received a heart transplant in 2004 and falsified the document after she died to cover up his negligence, according to the Brooklyn District Attorney.

“Any medical professional would clearly know if a patient has previously had heart transplant surgery because of the obvious scar on the chest,” said Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes. “It is shameful that a medical professional would disregard his patient’s safety, putting her in serious danger.”

Pineda’s grieving family members slammed the doctor as they remembered her.

“It’s deplorable,” said ex-husband Jeffrey Mayer, who added, “She was stunning. She would walk into a room and the music would stop.”

After the five-foot-nine and 130-lb Pineda – whose heart transplant was performed by Dr. Oz – went into cardiac arrest and collapsed in Davie’s office, he took her medical history form and removed the line where she had alerted him of her 2004 heart transplant.

Davie’s forgery was discovered when the friend who was to pick up Pineda after the surgery last year found the original forms in her purse.

“The documents were the smoking gun,” said Hynes, adding that Davie’s forgery proved he knew he shouldn’t have performed the surgery.

Click for more from the New York Post.


View the original article here

Mancini concedes EPL title, again

Roberto Mancini

Throwing in the towel ... Mancini insists the title race is over. Source: AAP

Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has finally admitted that his team's defence of their Barclays Premier League title is over.

City's 2-0 defeat at Everton in the last game before the international break left neighbours and rivals Manchester United 15 points ahead at the top of the table with nine matches left to play.

Although United must still play City at Old Trafford on April 8, Alex Ferguson's team need only 13 points from their remaining matches to clinch a 20th English league title.

Mancini famously wrote off his side's chances towards the end of last season, before a goal in the last seconds of the final game against Queens Park Rangers by Sergio Aguero snatched the title from United's grasp.

But this time he is adamant: "It is definite this time. It is over. We are disappointed that we can't win the title but United have been better than us.''

However, Mancini insisted that there will be no let-up from his players, with London rivals Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur both in a position to claim the runners-up spot should City take their foot off the pedal.

"It is over but it doesn't change anything because we have to do our best to the end," Mancini said.

"We should try to play well and win all the games, and we also have the FA Cup semi-final (against either United or Chelsea).

"We have Chelsea four points behind and Tottenham five points behind. For this reason it is important that we have to keep working hard and well.

"We know that in football it is difficult to win the title for the second year. But we still have the FA Cup and can get second position."

Mancini, whose side begin the last leg of a frustrating season against Newcastle United at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday, gave no interviews after the defeat by Everton that ended the slim hopes of a recovery in the title race.

He admitted: "I didn't want to say any bad things. I was disappointed, I was really upset.

"In the end we shot 22 times at goal and did not score. We have that as a problem. This is the problem we have had this year - we don't score enough goals."

But the manager is sure that his disappointed players will have the mentality and attitude to finish the campaign with their heads held high.

He said: "When you are a top team with good players, you should be very strong whether you win or lose.

"When you can't win a title, you have another situation that you can improve. It's very important that we do our best for the next nine games."


View the original article here

CDC launches new batch of graphic anti-smoking ads

  • Terrie.jpg

    Terrie, 52, of North Carolina; diagnosed with oral and throat cancers at 40.CDC

Government health officials are launching the second round of a graphic, emotional ad campaign designed to push smokers into kicking the habit.

The $48 million campaign involves TV, radio, online, print and billboard ads. It's the second year the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has spent tens of millions to get people to quit smoking. In previous years the agency relied on public service announcements.

Last year's campaign which cost a few million more triggered an increase of 200,000 calls to quit smoking lines. CDC officials believe it prompted tens of thousands of smokers to kick the habit.

Watch videos and testimonials from former smokers from the CDC.


View the original article here

Singer Michelle Shocked sits in at canceled show

  • shocked12z.jpg

    March 28, 2013: Alternative folk singer Michelle Shocked sits outside Moe’s Alley nightclub in Santa Cruz Calif., and strums her guitar.

Face covered and mouth taped shut, alternative folk and rock singer Michelle Shocked staged a sit in outside a Santa Cruz nightclub that canceled her show because she made an anti-gay slur at a San Francisco club earlier this month.

The tape across her mouth said "Silenced By Fear." When asked a question, Shocked shook her head vigorously and strummed her guitar while seated on the ground outside popular music venue Moe's Alley. She pointed to a sign inviting people to pick up a Sharpie marker and write on the white disposable safety suit she was wearing.

Earlier in the day, she had tweeted her plans: "Moe's in S Cruz tonight ok? Its an art project `My Summer Vacation' I want your autograph. Bring Sharpie."

Moe's Alley owner Bill Welch, who talked with Shocked as she strummed her guitar outside his club, had replaced her with bands Beaver Fever and Frootie Flavors.

"We will not be bashing Michelle Shocked," he said. "Rather we will celebrate music, diversity and send some healing Santa Cruz energy her way."


View the original article here

Brazilian doctor may have killed up to 300 patients, investigators say

  • de_souza_032813.jpg

    Feb. 19, 2013: In this photo, Virginia Helena Soares de Souza, center, is escorted by police officers to a temporary prison in Curitiba, Parana state, Brazil. According to Brazil's health ministry, Soares de Souza, who's a medical doctor, and seven assistants are suspected of killing seven terminally ill patients in a southern Brazilian hospital, injecting them with "drug cocktails" and of tampering with their respirators.AP/Gazeta do Povo/Agencia O Dia

A Brazilian doctor charged with killing seven patients to free up hospital beds may be responsible for up to 300 deaths, according to investigators.

Prosecutors claim that Dr. Virginia Soares de Souza, a 56-year-old who worked at the Evangelical Hospital in Curitiba, killed patients through asphyxia by giving them muscle relaxing drugs before reducing their oxygen supply, Reuters reports.

Investigators are analyzing 1,700 medical records of patients who died at the hospital for links to de Souza. Three hundred cases are being probed, a Brazil Health Ministry official told Globo TV.

De Souza has been charged with seven counts of murder, while three other doctors, three nurses and a physiotherapist where also hit with murder charges, Reuters reports.

De Souza was arrested last month but was released last week on bail pending the results of the investigation.

Her lawyer said prosecutors are misunderstanding how an intensive care unit operates.

Click for more from Reuters.


View the original article here