Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Hair Loss Drug Propecia Carries Risk of Losing Something Else and other top stories.

  • Hair Loss Drug Propecia Carries Risk of Losing Something Else

    Hair Loss Drug Propecia Carries Risk of Losing Something Else
    Two drugs used to treat both hair loss and prostate problems could carry another risk that men might want to know about: long-term sexual problems. It's a low risk— overall, just 1.4 percent of men who took the drugs suffered long-term erectile dysfunction. But it lasted a very long time: more than 3 ½ years after they stopped taking the drugs, the team at Northwestern University found. Balding man, looking up. ozgurdonmaz / Getty Images And 4.5 percent developed shorter-term erec..
    >> view original

  • Jane Austen poisoned with arsenic? Not so fast, experts say

    Jane Austen poisoned with arsenic? Not so fast, experts say
    However, many scholars and medical experts say this theory is bunk, more crime fiction than plausible truth. Austen was born in 1775 and died in 1817. During her four decades of life, she wrote six major novels, including "Emma" and "Pride and Prejudice." According to family lore, the three pairs of glasses on which the arsenic theory is based definitely belonged to their Jane. "The glasses were entrusted to the care of the British Library by Austen's great-great-great-niece in 1999, along with ..
    >> view original

  • 2 fall critically ill after drinking toxic tea in San Francisco

    2 fall critically ill after drinking toxic tea in San Francisco
    SAN FRANCISCO –  Two people are critically sick in San Francisco after drinking tea from the same Chinatown herbalist. The tea leaves bought at Sun Wing Wo Trading Company contained the plant-based toxin Aconite, the Department of Public Health said Friday. A man in his 50s last month and a woman in her 30s this month became critically ill within an hour of drinking the tea, and both remain hospitalized, health officials said. Each person grew weak then had life-threatening abnormal heart rhyth..
    >> view original

  • New Guideline Will Allow First-Year Doctors to Work 24-Hour Shifts

    New Guideline Will Allow First-Year Doctors to Work 24-Hour Shifts
    Photo Doctors from Stroger Hospital in Chicago and medical personnel from the U.S. Navy examining a patient in the trauma unit at the hospital in 2014. First-year doctors in training will now be permitted to work shifts lasting as long as 24 hours. Credit Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press First-year doctors in training will now be permitted to work shifts lasting as long as 24 hours, eight hours longer than the current limit, according to a professional organization that sets..
    >> view original

  • Kansas: 56 mumps cases to date, many linked to attending wrestling tournaments

    Kansas: 56 mumps cases to date, many linked to attending wrestling tournaments
    The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has reported 56 mumps cases from 12 counties as of their latest update on Mar. 4. State and local health departments are working closely together to identify cases and implement appropriate isolation and exclusion policies to prevent further spread of mumps. Image/KDHE screen shot Crawford and Douglas Counties have recorded the most mumps with 13 and 11 cases, respectively. Health officials say many cases have reported attendance to wrestling..
    >> view original

  • Formerly conjoined twins one step closer to going home

    Formerly conjoined twins one step closer to going home
    Formerly conjoined twin girls are one step closer to going home after being released from Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital on Thursday so that they could continue inpatient rehabilitation at UC Davis Children’s Hospital in Sacramento. Eva and Erica Sandoval, who underwent separation surgery on Dec. 6, were thrown a hospital farewell party by members of their 50-person care team before they were released. “I’m over the moon,” Aida Sandoval, the two-year-old twins’ mother, told the hospital’s p..
    >> view original

  • Eating More — Or Less — Of 10 Foods May Cut Risk Of Early Death

    Eating More — Or Less — Of 10 Foods May Cut Risk Of Early Death
    Consuming a diet that contains high amounts of red and processed meat such as bacon was linked to 8 percent of cardiometabolic deaths in the U.S. Paul Taylor/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Paul Taylor/Getty Images Consuming a diet that contains high amounts of red and processed meat such as bacon was linked to 8 per..
    >> view original

  • Trump to select Scott Gottlieb, a physician with deep drug-industry ties, to run the FDA

    Trump to select Scott Gottlieb, a physician with deep drug-industry ties, to run the FDA
    President Trump is expected to nominate physician Scott Gottlieb to be commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Here's what you need to know about him. (Sarah Parnass/The Washington Post) President Trump announced late Friday that he will nominate Scott Gottlieb, a conservative physician and businessman with deep ties to the pharmaceutical industry, to be commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. If confirmed, Gottlieb would bring a strong pro-industry, deregulatory appro..
    >> view original

  • Power struggle over ObamaCare repeal

    Power struggle over ObamaCare repeal
    Who will blink first?House Republican leaders are in a standoff with conservatives over the Republican ObamaCare replacement bill rapidly moving to the House floor. Unless one side gives ground, the bill appears unable to pass.Conservatives have a range of objections, and many of them are vowing to vote against the legislation unless substantial changes are made. Leadership is pushing back, saying that lawmakers will ultimately face a take-it-or-leave-it proposition with the bill.The objecting c..
    >> view original

  • Researchers figured out what's special about the brains of super-memorizers

    Researchers figured out what's special about the brains of super-memorizers
    Johannes Simon/Getty Images We often think of prodigious memory as an arcane skill — almost indistinguishable from magic to those of us who no longer remember more than a few key phone numbers. But the ability to recall an epic poem or the full sequence of a deck of cards may be less mysterious than it seems. According to a study published March 8 in the journal Neuron, the brains of 17 of the world's top 50 memory champions actually look fairly similar to the brains o..
    >> view original

Zika Fears, Opioid Abuse Crisis Top Health News for 2016 .'Hamilton' is coming to the Straz Center in Tampa .
Attempted sexual assault reported in Tampa .City hall construction making Tampa workers sick .

No comments:

Post a Comment