Estimated costs of environmental disease in children at $76.6 billion per year – EurekAlert (press release)


Green Prophet

Estimated costs of environmental disease in children at $76.6 billion per year
EurekAlert (press release)
Leonardo Trasande, MD, Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine and Pediatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, analyzed the costs of conditions – including lead poisoning, childhood cancer, asthma, autism, and attention deficit hyperactivity
Environmental Pollution Poses Costs to Children and EconomySOS Children’s Villages Canada
$76B in Pediatric Healthcare Costs Linked to Environmental FactorsHealthLeaders Media
Annual Health Care Costs Rise Dramatically, Says New StudyMedical News Today (press release)
UPI.com –ShortNews.com –OzarksFirst.com
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Environmental Toxins Cost Billions in Childhood Disease – TIME


GreenAnswers

Environmental Toxins Cost Billions in Childhood Disease
TIME
Philip Landrigan and a team of other researchers at Mount Sinai Medical School estimated the annual cost of four childhood conditions — lead poisoning, cancer, developmental disabilities and asthma — that could be connected to environmental
Estimated costs of environmental disease in children at $76.6 billion per yearEurekAlert (press release)
Environmental Illness in US Kids Cost $76.6 Billion in One YearEnvironment News Service
Environmental Pollution Poses Costs to Children and EconomySOS Children’s Villages Canada
HealthLeaders Media –UPI.com –OzarksFirst.com
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Asthma drug could help control or treat Alzheimer’s disease – The Virtual Medical Centre


The Virtual Medical Centre

Asthma drug could help control or treat Alzheimer's disease
The Virtual Medical Centre
A drug used to treat asthma has been shown to help reduce the formation of amyloid beta, a peptide in the brain that is implicated in the development of Alzheimer's disease, according to researchers at Temple University's School of Medicine.

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Scientists Discover Possible Treatment For Alzheimer’s Disease In Asthma Drug – Inventorspot

Scientists Discover Possible Treatment For Alzheimer's Disease In Asthma Drug
Inventorspot
by T Goodman Researchers at Temple University's School of Medicine have reported the results of their experiments using an asthma drug, Zileuton, in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease in mouse models. Their discoveries may lead to a major
Asthma drug could help fight Alzheimer's diseaseSify

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Study Ties Asthma to Higher Odds for Diabetes, Heart Disease – BusinessWeek


ModernMedicine

Study Ties Asthma to Higher Odds for Diabetes, Heart Disease
BusinessWeek
SUNDAY, March 20 (HealthDay News) — People with asthma may have a higher risk of developing diabetes and heart disease, according to a new study that looked at the relationship between asthma and four other inflammatory conditions.
Asthma May Raise Risk of Diabetes, Heart DiseaseWebMD
AAAAI: Asthma Tied to Higher Risk of Certain DiseasesDoctors Lounge
AAAAI: Asthma Patients More Likely to Have DiabetesMedPage Today
Pediatric SuperSite –AccentedTouch –CalorieLab Calorie Counter News
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Asthma may be linked to increased incidence of diabetes, heart disease – Pediatric SuperSite


ModernMedicine

Asthma may be linked to increased incidence of diabetes, heart disease
Pediatric SuperSite
Asthmatics were more than twice as likely to develop diabetes mellitus as non-asthmatics, according to findings presented at the 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology in San Francisco.
Asthma May Raise Risk of Diabetes, Heart DiseaseWebMD
AAAAI: Asthma Tied to Higher Risk of Certain DiseasesDoctors Lounge
AAAAI: Asthma Patients More Likely to Have DiabetesMedPage Today
Diabetes.co.uk –U.S. News & World Report
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Grading the Severity of Obstruction in Mixed Obstructive-Restrictive Lung Disease.

Grading the Severity of Obstruction in Mixed Obstructive-Restrictive Lung Disease.

Chest. 2011 Mar 17;

Authors: Gardner ZS, Ruppel GL, Kaminsky DA

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: The severity of obstructive pulmonary disease is determined by the percent predicted FEV(1) based on ATS/ERS guidelines. In patients with coexisting restrictive lung disease, the decrease in FEV(1) can overestimate the degree of obstruction. We hypothesize that adjusting the FEV(1) for the decrease in TLC results in a more appropriate grading of the severity of obstruction. METHODS: We examined a large PFT database and identified patients with both restrictive (TLC < 80% predicted) and obstructive (FEV(1)/FVC < the lower limit of normal) lung disease. FEV(1) percent predicted was adjusted for the degree of restriction by dividing it by percent predicted TLC. We compared the distribution of severity grading between adjusted and unadjusted values according to ATS/ERS criteria, and determined how the distribution of severity would change based on asthma and COPD guidelines. RESULTS: We identified 199 patients with coexisting restrictive and obstructive lung disease. By ATS/ERS grading, the unadjusted data categorized 76% of patients as having severe or very severe obstruction, and 11% as having mild or moderate obstruction. The adjusted data classified 33% with severe or very severe obstruction, and 44% with mild or moderate obstruction. Of the corrected values, 83% resulted in a change to less severe obstruction by ATS/ERS guidelines, and 44% and 70% of patients, respectively, would be reclassified as having less severe obstruction by current asthma and COPD guidelines. CONCLUSIONS: This method results in a more appropriate distribution of severity of obstruction, which should lead to more accurate treatment of obstruction in these patients.

PMID: 21415132 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Asthma may be linked to increased incidence of diabetes, heart disease – Endocrine Today


ThirdAge

Asthma may be linked to increased incidence of diabetes, heart disease
Endocrine Today
Asthmatics were more than twice as likely to develop diabetes mellitus as non-asthmatics, according to findings presented at the 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology in San Francisco.
Fatty acids may protect infants against allergiesPediatric SuperSite

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