Friday, June 10, 2016

Cancer Clues in the Breath: Test Could Ease Screening and other top stories.

  • Cancer Clues in the Breath: Test Could Ease Screening

    Cancer Clues in the Breath: Test Could Ease Screening
    The right lung is shorter than the left lung to make room for the liver. The left lung is narrower than the right to make room for the heart. Credit: Shutterstock A simple breath test can detect changes in people who have undergone surgery for lung cancer, a new study reports. Researchers found that three chemical markers known as carbonyl compounds, which are gases released when people exhale, were reduced in patients with lung cancer after they had an operation to remove their tumor..
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  • Investigator: FDA still taking months to recall tainted food

    Investigator: FDA still taking months to recall tainted food
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal health officials failed to force a recall of peanut butter and almond products for three months after advanced DNA testing confirmed salmonella contamination, government investigators reported Thursday.Despite new legal powers to compel recalls and sophisticated technology to fingerprint pathogens, the Food and Drug Administration allowed some food-safety investigations to drag on, placing consumers in jeopardy of death or serious illness, according to the inspector ge..
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  • Scientists discover unique pattern of hidden brain damage in male soldiers exposed to high explosive blasts

    Scientists discover unique pattern of hidden brain damage in male soldiers exposed to high explosive blasts
    Scientists have identified a distinctive pattern of injury in the brains of eight deceased military personnel who survived high explosive attacks and died between 4 days and 9 years later from their injuries or other causes. The findings published in ...
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  • State and feds say Carolinas HealthCare drove up costs by curbing competition

    State and feds say Carolinas HealthCare drove up costs by curbing competition
    Patients in the Charlotte region face higher health care costs and fewer choices because of efforts by the state’s largest hospital chain to prevent competition, the U.S. Justice Department and the N.C. Attorney General’s office contend in a newly filed lawsuit.The federal antitrust lawsuit against Carolinas HealthCare System alleges the chain illegally reduces competition in the local health care market.“Pushing medical costs artificially higher and limiting choices harms North Carolina famili..
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  • FDA, International Authorities Shutter Thousands of Illegal Online Drug Stores

    FDA, International Authorities Shutter Thousands of Illegal Online Drug Stores
    Posted 09 June 2016 By Michael Mezher The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other international regulators and law enforcement on Thursday announced the results of a series of actions to combat illegal and counterfeit medicines.For its part, FDA says it requested the closure of 4,402 websites that illegally marketed or sold drugs or other chemical products to US consumers, and issued 53 warning letters to website operators "for offering unapproved and misbrand..
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  • US researcher contracts Zika during experiment: media

    US researcher contracts Zika during experiment: media
    A United States laboratory researcher was back at work after contracting the Zika virus by pricking herself with a needle during an experiment last month, broadcaster ABC News said on Thursday. There is no vaccine or treatment for Zika, which is a close cousin of diseases such as dengue and chikungunya, and causes mild fever, rash and red eyes. An estimated 80 percent of those infected have no symptoms. The unidentified researcher at the University of Pittsburgh pricked herself on May 23 and s..
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  • Heroin, Opioid Death Rates Rose Faster in New York Than Almost All Other States: Comptroller

    Heroin, Opioid Death Rates Rose Faster in New York Than Almost All Other States: Comptroller
    As the heroin crisis continues to grip the nation, a new report revealed grim news: Overdoses related to heroin and opioids rose faster in New York State than in other areas in 2014.The statistics were found in a report, "Prescription Opioid Abuse and Heroin Addiction in New York State," issued Thursday New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. Overdose death rates in New York increased faster over the preceding decade than in nearly every other state for which data was available, the repor..
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  • Who May Die? California Patients and Doctors Wrestle With Assisted Suicide

    Who May Die? California Patients and Doctors Wrestle With Assisted Suicide
    Ms. Allan has already defied some predictions. When her 30-year-old daughter got engaged last spring, she wondered whether she would make it to the wedding. But she did, designing and sewing her mother-of-the-bride dress herself, and baking desserts for the reception.Ms. Allan has spoken to her husband and her two adult children about the decision.“They’ve always been in support of me. They’ve never asked, ‘Are you sure?’ or challenged me. Last year they said there was a new drug available that..
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  • What killed Muhammad Ali?

    What killed Muhammad Ali?
    Photos: Boxing legend Muhammad AliSince winning a gold medal in the 1960 Olympics, Muhammad Ali has never been far from the public eye. Take a look at the life and career of Ali, the three-time heavyweight boxing champion who called himself "The Greatest." Photos: Boxing legend Muhammad AliAli, then known as Cassius Clay, poses in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, prior to his amateur boxing debut in 1954. He was 12 years old and 85 pounds. As an amateur, he won 100 out of 108 fights. Photo..
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FC Cincinnati fans snapping up tickets for Crystal Palace match .5 dead, 4 injured after truck plows into bicyclists .
Cincinnati Gorilla Killing: Mother Not Charged in Shooting of ... .Liquid Biopsy May Help Doctors Track Changes in Tumors .

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