viernes, 13 de noviembre de 2015

Ivanhoe.com Top 10 Viewed Reports 11/13/2015

Medical Breakthroughs: Ivanhoe Insider

This Week's Top 10 Viewed Stories
         1. Obesity, Diabetes: Blame Gut Bacteria? (2nd week)
Oct. 29, 2015 - An excess of bacteria in the gut can change the way the liver processes fat and could lead to the development of metabolic syndrome, according to health researchers. Metabolic syndrome is a group of ...
         2. Long-Term Aerobic Exercise Good for the Brain (2nd week)
Oct. 29, 2015 - New findings help demonstrate the evolutionary basis for allergy. Molecular similarities in food and environmental proteins that cause allergy (such as pollen), and multicellular parasites (such as ...
         3. Dishwasher Don’ts (2nd week)
ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Experts say more than 40 percent of American couples fight about loading the dishwasher. Should you pre-rinse or not? Place utensil handles up or down? Simple questions that can have multiple opinions. So what’s the right way to load your dishwasher for the ultimate clean?
         4. Obese People Need More Vitamin E, but Get Less (2nd week)
Nov. 2, 2015 - Obese people with metabolic syndrome face an unexpected quandary when it comes to vitamin E -- they need more than normal levels of the vitamin because their weight and other problems are causing ...
         5. Mammogram for the Heart: Coronary Calcium Score
NEW YORK. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- When you think about heart attack, you probably assume if you have normal blood pressure and no problem with cholesterol you’re in the clear. Think again. In fact, experts say 80 percent of the people who suffer heart attacks have normal cholesterol. New research shows a quick preventive test, like a mammogram for the heart, may give patients the best information yet.
         6. MSA: Looking for Answers -- Research Summary
BACKGROUND: Described as Parkinson’s disease (PD) on steroids, multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a degenerative neurological disorder. Where Parkinson’s disease can take up to 20 years to run it’s course, MSA will do the same thing in five or six years, according to Gregory Petsko, PhD, Professor of Neuroscience Weill-Cornell Medical Center.
         7. Fight Alzheimer’s With Brain’s Immune System
Nov. 5, 2015 - The brain’s immune system could potentially be harnessed to help clear the amyloid plaques that are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease, new research suggests. The findings are the culmination of years ...
         8. Alzheimer’s Spouses Study
MIAMI. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Right now more than five million people in the U.S. have Alzheimer’s disease. That number is expected to increase to more than seven million in 10 years. Most of the caregivers are spouses. A new study looks at communication between married couples affected by Alzheimer’s, with some surprising results.
         5. New Treatment for Lupus: Medicine’s Next Big Thing? -- Doctor’s In-depth Interview (2nd week)
Tyler Curiel, M.D., M.P.H., Oncologist and Immunologist at the Cancer Therapy and Research Center at the University of Texas Health Science Center talks about advances in lupus research.
         10. Sticky Mittens: Give Infants An Edge
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Newborns don’t look like they can do much more than flail their arms and look around. But what if they could actually pick things up? Researchers wanted to answer that question so they invented Sticky Mittens.

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