How do you think this winner should be treated?
clipped from blogs.usatoday.com How do you think this winner should be treated?
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clipped from blogs.usatoday.com How do you think this winner should be treated?
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clipped from blogs.wsj.com The WSJ reports, some researchers are now trying to use grapefruit juice to their advantage. An enzyme that lives in the gut, charmingly named CYP3A4, breaks down drugs before they enter the bloodstream. Grapefruit juice has a compound that temporarily gets rid of CYP3A4 — which allows more of a drug to enter the bloodstream. That can be a bad thing in some cases. Patients shouldn’t take statins (such as Pfizer’s Lipitor or Merck’s Zocor) with grapefruit juice, because doing so can cause the drug to build up to unhealthy levels in the body. It’s too early to tell how far this sort of thing might go, and standardizing grapefruit juice as part of a drug regimen could be tricky. But some docs think the grapefruit effect could ultimately allow patients to take lower doses of drugs. Oral oncology therapies are costing $3,000 to $5,000 a month If we can lower the costs of those by 50%, you’re talking about hundreds of millions of dollars saved.” |
clipped from alzheimersreadingroom.blogspot.com It was at large gatherings that the Holladay family first noticed their mother was suffering from dementia. She couldn't find the bathroom in a family member's home. She sat at the edges of a party, too confused to interact with the family. A diagnosis of Alzheimer's followed for the now 75-year-old woman.
Other real-life examples of dementia surfacing around the holidays: A patient who forgot to buy presents for all of her grandchildren. Another who bought every grandchild, boys and girls, the same gift. A father who flew to meet his son for Christmas and didn't recognize him at the airport. Stick with the familiar. Maintain routines and skip strange and noisy restaurants. |
clipped from www.space.com For military and intelligence communities, outer space has become a highground, hide-and-seek arena -- a kind of "now you see me, now you don't" espionage playing field. One lawmaker, Jay D. Rockefeller (D-WV), the vice chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, openly criticized the program on the floor of the U.S. Senate. He said the program "is totally unjustified and very wasteful and dangerous to national security," adding that he has voted to terminate the program for two years, with no success. "I think this episode suggests that secrecy is sometimes used not to protect national security, but to line someone's pockets The MISTY effort was broached in Richelson's first-rate book on the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), The Wizards of Langley: Inside the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology several U.S. senators openly blew the whistle on a mystery spy satellite program, critical of its high cost while calling to question its utility in today's post-9/11 world. |
clipped from www.cleveland.com As the world's largest private employer, Wal-Mart is But the 6,000-plus people who applied for jobs at the new When thousands of people compete for a few hundred ordinary The huge number of applicants wouldn't have caught It could have been worse. In Illinois recently, Masten But these were regular retail jobs with low-to-average
reflection on economy |
clipped from afp.google.com Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton Friday slammed China for calling her criticism of made-in-China toys "slander," and urged Washington to take "immediate, decisive steps" to protect US children. "This is the same government that just this month revoked the licenses of more than 750 of its toy companies because of quality control problems and ordered another 690 to renovate or improve their facilities, even as it asserted that 99 percent of toy exports met quality standards," Clinton said in her statement. "And the Chinese government's watchdog agency reported earlier this year that 20 percent of the toys made and sold in China pose safety risks. That is unacceptable." Clinton also took up China's claim that the majority of problems with Chinese toy exports were due to "design faults by (foreign) importers and designers." China is the world's top toy exporter, selling 22 billion toys overseas last year, or 60 percent of the globe's total. |
clipped from www.usatoday.com At least 20,000 U.S. troops who were not classified as wounded during combat in Iraq and Afghanistan have been found with signs of brain injuries, according to military and veterans records compiled by USA TODAY. The data, provided by the Army, Navy and Department of Veterans Affairs, show that about five times as many troops sustained brain trauma as the 4,471 officially listed by the Pentagon through Sept. 30. These cases also are not reflected in the Pentagon's official tally of wounded, which stands at 30,327. Fort Hood, Texas, home of the 4th Infantry Division, which returned from a second Iraq combat tour late last year. At least 2,700 soldiers suffered a combat brain injury Fort Carson, Colo., where more than 2,100 soldiers screened were found to have suffered a brain injury Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, where 1,737 Marines were found to have suffered a brain injury More than 150,000 troops may have suffered head injuries in combat Marine didn't recognize signs of brain injury |
clipped from bfads.net BestBuy has just released their list of Secret Black Friday Doorbuster Items that are good in-store only. Among the items are Toshiba Laptop w/ Canon Printer Package for $229 and a Sony Cybershot 7.2MP Digital Camera for $99.99. Once again, these are extra Black Friday deals that do not appear in the Best Buy Black Friday ad and are only available in-store. It's been a long 20+ days, but we have just posted the 202-item Walmart Black Friday Sale Information and the 46-page Walmart Black Friday Advertisement Scan which is available on our advertisement scans page. Currently, 30 of the Walmart Black Friday items are currently available online at Walmart.com for their Black Friday price. |
clipped from web.mit.edu Indicates housing woes, credit crunch 'may be spreading' The value of U.S. commercial real estate owned by big pension funds fell 2.5 percent in the third quarter of 2007, according to an index produced by the MIT Center for Real Estate. The drop in the MIT quarterly transaction-based index (TBI) may not only spell the end of a five-year rally that saw commercial property prices effectively double, but it may also signal that weakness in the housing market is spilling over into commercial real estate. "The fall in our index is the first solid, quantitative evidence that the subprime mortgage debacle, which hit the broader capital markets in August, may be spreading to the commercial property markets," stated MIT Center for Real Estate Director David Geltner. The TBI is based on transaction price data from the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF). the index of commercial real estate prices is updated quarterly and published on the Center's website, web.mit.edu/cre. |
clipped from blogs.usatoday.com
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel says Mark Spradley will receive the money because he led investigators to Michael Mazza, a bank robbery suspect who is accused of killing the deputy who was bringing him to court on Nov. 7 in Broward County, Fla. Spradley, a Las Vegas resident living out of his car, had picked up Mazza in Hollywood and drove him to a soup kitchen, where the two had lunch. Spradley has said he took pity on Mazza because his shirt was bloodied and he was walking with a limp. ... The two drove to the pawn shop, where Spradley hoped to buy new car speakers. It was there that he recognized Mazza after seeing his mug shot on a store television set. "This is overwhelming. I wasn't expecting that much," Spradley tells the paper. "But to tell you the truth, I think I deserved it." |
clipped from money.aol.com In the past year, billionaire investors Warren Buffett and Ernest Rady, socialite Anne Bass and professional basketball players Eddy Curry and Antoine Walker all have joined a group to which they would rather not belong: victims of home invasion. Being extremely wealthy is not immediately protection from home invasions, as Warren Buffett found out in September, when an intruder tried to get into his house in Omaha but was thwarted by a security guard. One particularly gruesome case in July underscored the dangers for many, when a home invasion in Cheshire, Conn., ended in the deaths of a doctor's wife and his two daughters. In home-invasion robberies -- unlike burglaries -- thieves hope to confront the occupants, often intending to force victims to open a safe or divulge bank-card PIN numbers. According to San Diego police, Mr. Rady was stunned with the Taser, bound with duct tape, and cut with a sharp object as the intruder tried to force the couple to produce cash and valuables. |
clipped from www.usatoday.com Every souvenir shop in Paris sells miniature Eiffel Towers, but one lucky bidder will soon be able to buy a piece of the real thing. A section of the winding iron staircase that Gustave Eiffel climbed to inaugurate the monument in 1889 will be sold at the Hotel Drouot auction house on Monday. In 1983, the 1,911-step staircase was removed to make room for new elevators and was cut into 24 pieces that were auctioned off to museums and collectors around the world. The 14-foot piece for sale once helped link the monument's second and third levels, and is expected to sell for between $29,000 and $44,000, said auctioneer Remi Ader. The Eiffel Tower was built for the 1889 World's Fair that celebrated the centennial of the French Revolution. About 6 million people visit the Paris landmark every year. |
clipped from blogs.usatoday.com Army desertions skyrocket This year, 4,698 U.S. Army soldiers have deserted, an increase of 42% from last year and 80% since the 2003 Iraq invasion, the Pentagon says. Soldiers who are absent without leave for more than 30 days are declared to be deserters and discharged. The Army Times and the Associated Press have filed the most detailed stories so far. The Army Times calls the 2007 desertions "the highest annual total since fiscal year 2001, when 4,399 troops deserted." Regardless, for those among the AWOL looking for a safe haven, scratch Canada off the list. Yesterday, that country's Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal from two deserters seeking asylum. They now face deportation. |
clipped from blogs.wsj.com How much has the war in Iraq cost the U.S.? The most-basic estimate covers only spending to date, and is limited to budgetary items of military and diplomatic operations in Iraq. The Congressional Budget Office put those costs at about $400 billion in testimony last month before a House panel. But start projecting forward 10 years and you get a wide range of figures, all the way up to $3.5 trillion. The latest estimate came this week from Congressional Democrats. The Joint Economic Committee’s majority staff released a report estimating the costs incurred so far in Iraq and Afghanistan at $1.6 trillion, and pegs costs through 2017 at $3.5 trillion. The report received widespread press coverage, including on CNN and in the Washington Post. Republicans responded by criticizing the report for “errors and poor methodology,” but didn’t offer their own estimate. The CBO estimated total budget costs through 2017 between $1.2 trillion and $1.7 trillion interest costs between $600 and $700 billion |
clipped from www.reuters.com "Whether you're a healthy young adult, an infant or an elderly person, this virus can cause severe respiratory disease at any age," said John Su, who investigates infectious diseases for the CDC and contributed to the report. Two of the 10 people who have died from the new strain were infants, Su said. The CDC report said about 140 people have been sickened by the virus and more than 50 hospitalized, including 24 admitted to intensive care units. Adenoviruses frequently cause acute upper respiratory tract infections like the common cold, but also can cause other illnesses including inflammation of the stomach and intestines, pink eye, bladder infection and rashes. A new and virulent strain of adenovirus, which frequently causes the common cold, has spread in parts of the United States, killing 10 people Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report detailed cases of people ill since May 2006 with a strain of the virus called adenovirus 14 in New York, Oregon, Washington state and Texas. |
clipped from www.nytimes.com The incidence of gonorrhea, which had declined sharply, has risen in the last two years in this country while the number of chlamydia and syphilis cases continue to rise, federal health officials said yesterday. Chlamydia and gonorrhea are the two most common diseases among those doctors must report in the United States. And the 1,030,911 cases of chlamydia in 2006 are the highest ever recorded for any nationally reported disease in any year, the officials said in releasing their annual report on sexually transmitted diseases. They said that because of underreporting, a more accurate estimate is 2.8 million new chlamydia cases annually. About 19 million new cases of all kinds of sexually transmitted diseases occur in this country each year Genital herpes, papillomavirus and trichomonas infections account for the vast majority of cases, but doctors are not required to report them nationally. |