Friday, September 13, 2013

Estrogen affects male and female waistlines


Middle-Aged Men, Too, Can Blame Estrogen for That Waistline

It is the scourge of many a middle-aged man: he starts getting a pot belly, using lighter weights at the gym and somehow just doesn’t have the sexual desire of his younger years.
The obvious culprit is testosterone, since men gradually make less of the male sex hormone as years go by. But a surprising new answer is emerging, one that doctors say could reinvigorate the study of how men’s bodies age. Estrogen, the female sex hormone, turns out to play a much bigger role in men’s bodies than previously thought, and falling levels contribute to their expanding waistlines just as they do in women’s.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Vaccine 'clears HIV-like virus' in monkeys



By Rebecca MorelleVaccine 'clears HIV-like virus' in monkeys


The team looked at a form of SIV that is up to 100 times more deadly than HIV
A vaccine for the monkey equivalent of HIV appears to eradicate the virus, a study suggests.
Research published in the journal Nature has shown that vaccinated monkeys can clear Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) infection from their bodies.
It was effective in nine of the 16 monkeys that were inoculated.
The US scientists say they now want to use a similar approach to test a vaccine for HIV in humans.
Prof Louis Picker, from the Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute at Oregon Health and Science University, said: "It's always tough to claim eradication - there could always be a cell which we didn't analyse that has the virus in it. But for the most part, with very stringent criteria... there was no virus left in the body of these monkeys."
Search and destroy
The research team looked at an aggressive form of virus called SIVmac239, which is up to 100 times more deadly than HIV.
Infected monkeys usually die within two years, but in some inoculated primates the virus did not take hold.
The vaccine is based on another virus called cytomegalovirus (CMV), which belongs to the herpes family.
It used the infectious power of CMV to sweep throughout the body. But instead of causing disease, it has been modified to spur the immune system into action to fight off the SIV molecules.
"It maintains an armed force, that patrols all the tissues of the body, all the time, indefinitely," explained Prof Picker.
The researchers gave rhesus macaque monkeys the vaccine, and then exposed them to SIV.
They found that at first the infection began to establish and spread. But then the monkeys' bodies started to respond, searching out and destroying all signs of the virus.
Of the monkeys that successfully responded to the vaccine, they were still clear of infection between one-and-a-half and three years later.
Prof Picker said his team was still trying to work out why the vaccination worked in only about half of the monkeys.
"It could be the fact that SIV is so pathogenic that this is the best you are ever going to get.
"There is a battle going on, and half the time the vaccine wins and half the time it doesn't," he said.
Human trials
The researchers are now testing the vaccine to see if it can be used after SIV exposure to treat and potentially cure infected monkeys.
They also want to see if the technique could work in humans.
Prof Picker said: "In order to make a human version we have to make sure it is absolutely safe.
A rhesus macaque monkeyThe researchers now want to move from monkeys to test the vaccine in humans
"We have now engineered a CMV virus which generates the same immune response but has been attenuated [modified to lose its virulence] to the point where we think it is unequivocally safe."
This would first have to pass through the regulatory authorities, but if it does, he said he hoped to start the first clinical trials in humans in the next two years.
Commenting on the research, Dr Andrew Freedman, from Cardiff University School of Medicine, said: "This suggests that prophylactic vaccines - vaccines designed to prevent infection - using CMV vectors may be a promising approach for HIV.
"While they may not prevent the initial infection, they might lead to subsequent clearance, rather than the establishment of chronic infection."

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

It’s Apple’s Big Day: Get Ready for a Ton of New Stuff

http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/09/apple-iphone-live-blog/

Calif. neuroscientist helps light up Hart's shows

http://health.yahoo.net/news/s/ap/calif-neuroscientist-helps-light-up-hart-s-shows

Earlier is better for mammograms


Earlier is better for mammograms

Earlier is better for mammograms
Earlier is better for mammograms
HealthDay News -- More than two-thirds of breast cancer deaths occur in unscreened women or those with an interval of two years or more between mammograms, study findings indicate.
Women who had not undergone screening with mammogram accounted for 71% of breast cancer deaths during an 18-year period, Blake Cady, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and colleagues reported in Cancer.
Median patient age was 49 years, compared with 72 for women who died of other causes, supporting the initiation of mammogram screening before the age of 50.
"Even with effective adjuvant therapies, the best method for women to avoid death from breast cancer is to participate in regular mammography screening," the researchers wrote. "Regular screening increases the likelihood of detecting nonpalpable cancers, and annual screening further increases the likelihood relative to biennial screening."
Although studies show detecting breast cancer early reduces the risk for fatal breast cancer, the optimal age for initiating mammograms, as well as intervals between screens, has been debated.
Current United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommendations state routine screening with mammography should begin at age 50 and be optional for younger women, and favor biennial over annual mammograms for average-risk women.
However, organizations including the American Cancer Society and the American College of Radiology continue to push for annual screening and the emphasize the importance of catching breast cancer early.
To better understand the survival benefit of mammography among women who have been screened, Cady and colleagues analyzed data from 7,301 patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer from 1991 to 1999. Patients were followed through 2007.
Demographics, mammography use, surgical and pathology reports, recurrence and death dates were evaluated. Medical records were used to characterize mammograms as screening or diagnostic based on absence or presence of breast signs or symptoms.
A total of 1,705 documented deaths from breast cancer (609 deaths) or other causes (905 deaths) occurred during the study period.
Screen-detected tumors accounted for 118 breast cancer deaths, 111 of which involved tumors that were detected after two screening mammograms that occurred no more than two years apart. "Interval cancers," or tumors that occurred in women with at least one negative mammogram performed no more than two years previously, accounted for 60 deaths.
Comparatively, 395 breast cancer deaths involved unscreened women, and 36 occurred in "off-program" women -- those with a history of mammography, but who had not been screened for more than two years. 
Half of all breast cancer deaths occurred in women younger than 50 years and 69% before the age of 60, the researchers found. Consequently, 83% of all non-breast cancer related deaths occurred in women older than 60 years.
"To maximize mortality reduction and life-years gained, initiation of regular screening before age 50 years should be encouraged," the researchers concluded.

References

  1. Webb ML et al. Cancer. 2013; doi:10.1002/cncr.28199.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Yale Scientists Discover Alzheimer’s Missing Link

September 9, 2013 by Staff
Alzheimers Missing Link Found
In a newly published study, Yale researchers reveal that a protein within the cell membrane called metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 is the missing link in the complicated chain of events that lead to Alzheimer’s disease.
Yale School of Medicine researchers have discovered a protein that is the missing link in the complicated chain of events that lead to Alzheimer’s disease, they report in the September 4 issue of the journal Neuron. Researchers also found that blocking the protein with an existing drug can restore memory in mice with brain damage that mimics the disease.

Better fathers have smaller testicles

NATURE 

Better fathers have smaller testicles

Study finds evolutionary trade-off between mating prowess and parenting involvement.

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Men with larger testes were rated lower in surveys of their parenting involvement, and brain scans showed they had lower activity in an area that is part of the brain's reward system.
SAM EDWARDS/ALAMY
Fathers with smaller testes are more involved in child care, and their brains are also more responsive when looking at photos of their own children, according to research published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences1.
Evolutionary biologists have long observed a trade-off in male primates between mating efforts to produce more offspring and the time males spend caring for their progeny. For instance, male chimpanzees, which are especially promiscuous, sport testes that are twice as big as those of humans, make a lot of sperm and generally do not provide paternal care. By contrast, male gorillas have relatively small testes and protect their young. The latest study suggests that humans, whose paternal care varies widely, show evidence of both approaches.
The analysis1 incorporates measures of testicular volume, brain activity and paternal behaviour, notes Peter Gray, an anthropologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who was not involved in the study. “We’ve got something that pulls those strands together, and it does so in a really interesting way.”