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Nov 22
Genetic infertility treated successfully at Mumbai hospital
A woman with a rare genetic disorder 'Robertsonian Translocation', resulting in infertility, has delivered a healthy baby girl at the Jaslok Hospital and Research Center.

"With this first Invitro fertilisation (IVF) using pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), India joins a handful of countries that have accomplished successful management of this disorder," Dr Firuza Parikh, Director, Assisted Reproduction and Genetics at Jaslok and former Professor at the Yale University School of Medicine, USA, said.

The baby girl was delivered yesterday at city's Jaslok hospital, Parikh said adding that this case report was published as a cover article in the peer reviewed 'Journal of Prenatal Diagnosis and Therapy' (January- June 2010).

Attributing the success to her team of 40 individuals particularly Dr Prochi Madon, Dr Arundhati Athalye, Mr Nandkishor Naik and Dattatray Naik, Parikh explained, "We are born with 46 chromosomes which occur in pairs. Each chromosome of a pair is a mirror image of the other. Although this harmony ismaintained in nature, an occasional slip results in a translocation."

"As the name suggests, a segment or an arm of one chromosome transports itself onto another chromosome and one such rearrangement is called a RobertsonianTranslocation after the American geneticist Dr W Robertson," she said.

"The rearrangement can occur in males and females who do not manifest any clinical symptoms. The problem manifests when the couple tries to conceive," Parikh said.

"An embryo derives half its chromosomes from the father and half from the mother. Hence if the chromosome with extra genetic material goes into the embryo, the amount of genetic material of that chromosome triples resulting in miscarriage or mental retardation," the In-vitro fertilization (IVF) expert said.

The embryos were screened using Pre-implantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD).

Eleven years ago, Parikh and Madon established PGD for genetic disorders for the first time in India at the Jaslok Hospital and Research Centre.

Parikh who led this procedure, said, "PGD requires years of perfection, team work and a thorough knowledge of reproductive biology and genetics. The couple first undergoes IMSI (intracytoplasmic morphologically selected sperm injection).

In this procedure the egg and the sperm are magnified 7000 times. With the help of a sharp pipette a single sperm is injected into the egg and the resulting embryo is ready for PGD when it reaches the eight cell stage."

"A laser beam swiftly cuts open the shell of the embryo, a fine glass pipette is advanced towards one of the cells of the embryo. Using gentle suction, a single cell is aspirated. This cell is then processed by the genetics team," Parikh said.

Madon, chief geneticist added, "The cell is put through an overnight procedure called Fluorescence In Situ Hybridisation (FISH), a procedure to zip open the DNA strands and attach coloured probes, to identify the chromosomes of interest."

In this particular couple, the wife had a translocation between chromosomes 13 and 14. Two embryos underwent the procedure of PGD. This embryo was transferred into the mother's womb, resulting in the birth of a healthy baby girl.

"PGD is an effective form of treatment for couples at a risk for Down Syndrome and other chromosomal abnormalities, for women approaching 40, those with repeated failed attempts at IVF/ICSI (Intracytoplasmic sperm injection), those women showing poor quality embryos and for severe male factor infertility. It is also helpful in some rare genetic diseases like haemophilia," Parikh said.

"We are now in the process of setting up a facility for PGD to detect embryos at a risk of Thalassemia. We have also started offering this procedure routinely to couples undergoing IVF/ICSI in order to select normal embryos so that less number of embryos are transferred," she said.

This will increase the chances of a normal pregnancy and decrease the chances of a miscarriage. This technique is called pre-implantation genetic screening (PGS), Parikh added.

Nov 20
Superbug spreading in Europe: health expert
A recently emerged superbug is spreading in Europe and prudent use of antibiotics can be the key to effective prevention, a senior health expert said Thursday.

According to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), the European Union's medical watchdog based in Stockholm, a total of 77 cases of what is known as NDM-1 have been detected in 13 European countries since 2008, Dr. Dominique Monnet, an ECDC program coordinator, told Xinhua in a telephone interview.

Among the reported cases, Britain accounted for 51, or 66 percent, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, a bacterium that can cause pneumonia, was the most frequently reported bacterium harboring NDM-1, Monnet said.

NDM-1 cases have also been found Australia, Canada, Singapore, the United States and a number of other countries and regions. A majority of the cases had a history of recent travel and hospital admission on the Indian subcontinent.

NDM-1, or New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase, refers to an enzyme that renders bacteria resistant to almost all known antibiotics. As its name suggests, it originated from the Indian capital of New Delhi.

ECDC statistics showed that 31 of the infected had previously traveled or been admitted to a hospital in India or Pakistan, and five had been hospitalized in the Balkan region.

The gloomy picture "is very serious because the NDM-1 bacteria and some other types like them are resistant to even the most powerful class of antibiotics known as carbapenems," Monnet said. "The options for treatment is very limited."

While there is almost no way to treat these cases, he said, there are ways to prevent it from spreading, such as improving the hygiene situation in hospitals and health care places and promoting public awareness.

"One should use antibiotics only when it is necessary," Monnet said, noting that bacteria began to have resistant effects since the first type of antibiotics, or penicillin, was introduced.

Nov 20
Pomegranate juice could help kidney patients
There may be a seed of truth amidst the many health claims for pomegranate juice, researchers from Israel said Thursday, at least for kidney patients on dialysis.

They found that such patients who gulped a few cups of the tart liquid every week lowered their chances of infections, the second-leading killer of the more than 350,000 Americans on dialysis.

The findings were presented at the American Society of Nephrology's meeting in Denver -- aka Renal Week -- and have not yet been vetted by independent experts.

"It's a very intriguing study," said Dr. Frank Brosius, who heads the nephrology division at the University of Michigan Health System and was not involved in the research.

"I certainly don't know of anything else that would have such a profound effect," he told Reuters Health, cautioning at the same time that the study needed to be replicated by other centers.

The results come in the wake of a U.S. crackdown on allegedly false advertising by POM Wonderful, which claims its pomegranate products can help everything from heart disease to prostate cancer and erectile dysfunction.

The Israeli researchers, led by Dr. Batya Kristal of Western Galilee Hospital in Nahariya, did not use POM juice, but a brand sold by Naturafood.

In lab tests, Kristal told Reuters Health, that brand ranked highest in polyphenol antioxidants, which can reduce cell damage caused by so-called free radicals.

Antioxidants are found in different levels in fruits and vegetables, such as blueberries or broccoli.

"Pomegranate juice was shown in the last three years to contain the highest levels of polyphenols among a variety of products," Kristal said. "Much higher than red wine, for instance."

The researchers figured an antioxidant-rich diet might help patients with kidney failure, because the level of free radicals in their blood increases as the blood circulates through the dialysis device. That, in turn, may rev up inflammation in their tissues.

In the study, funded by the Israeli Ministry of Health, 101 patients were randomly assigned to either a concoction without pomegranate juice, or the real thing.

After downing about half a cup three times a week over a year, those who drank the real thing had a reduction of inflammatory molecules in their blood.

They also made fewer trips to the hospital.

"We found significant reductions in hospitalization due to infections, with more than 40 percent reduction in the first hospitalization and 80 percent in the second," said Kristal.

However, the researchers were only able to rule out chance as the cause of the reduction in the second visit to the hospital.

According to the findings, among 50 patients drinking pomegranate juice for a year, about two would have to go to the hospital at least twice. By comparison, that number would be nearly 11 in patients not drinking the juice.

The researchers say they don't know if their results extend to other brands as well, and suggest squeezing your own juice. A 16-oz bottle of POM Wonderful sells for about $4.

She said her team had found no side effects, but added that kidney patients should be aware of the high potassium content in the juice, given the delicate balance of nutrients in their blood, and talk to their doctor if they consider drinking it.

Brosius was skeptical of the benefits, although he said the juice was unlikely to cause harm.

"I would prefer to see this validated at other centers before we come out and say this is the thing to do," he said. Even if the findings hold up, he said, it is still unclear what accounts for them. "Who the heck knows what the active ingredients are?"

Marion Nestle, a nutrition expert at New York University, said the effects might not be unique to pomegranate juice.

"This study does not demonstrate anything special about pomegranate juice," she told Reuters Health in an e-mail. "The effects of juice were compared to a placebo, not to any other kind of juice that might have exactly the same effect."

"The pomegranate people are spending millions to prove what I could have told them in the first place," she added. "Pomegranate juices -- like most if not all fruit and vegetable juices -- have antioxidant activity. Does this make pomegranates better than any other fruit? Investigators have yet to show this."

Nov 19
Genetic mutation that causes most common form of eye cancer identified
An international, multi-centre study has found a novel oncogene that is associated with uveal melanoma, the most common form of eye cancer.

Researchers have isolated an oncogene called GNA11 and have discovered that it is present in more than 40% of tumour samples taken from patients with uveal melanoma.

"These findings are significant because we now have a much better understanding of the precise mechanism of this disease, which may yield targets and treatments in the future, said Boris C Bastian, senior author of the study.

"Currently, once this type of melanoma has spread beyond the eye, therapeutic options are extremely limited," added Dr Bastian.

Most frequently, melanomas of the eye occur in the part of the eye known as the uveal tract-the vascular layer that includes the iris (the pigmented cells surrounding the pupil), the ciliary body (the ring-shaped muscle that changes the size of the pupil and the shape of the lens when the eye focuses), and the choroid (the pigmented layer under the retina).

Most patients with melanoma of the eye experience no symptoms until the tumor has become large enough to cause vision problems.

In this study, DNA was extracted from tumor samples of patients and genetic sequencing was performed. To validate this new oncogene, immunocompromised mice were injected with cells engineered to harbor the mutated genes and monitored for the formation of tumors.

Based on this latest research and recent studies, 83 percent of uveal melanomas are now known to have an active mutation in the GNAQ or GNA11 oncogenes.

Nov 18
Speech monitoring could track Parkinson's: study
The severity of Parkinson's disease symptoms could be monitored remotely by analyzing speech patterns, saving health authorities time and money and easing the burden on patients, scientists said Wednesday.

Researchers from Britain and the United States analyzed almost 6,000 speech recordings from 42 people with Parkinson's and developed algorithms using the data to estimate how bad the symptoms were.

The results, published in the Royal Society's journal Interface, showed the algorithms were close to assessments made by doctors.

"Currently, monitoring requires frequent visits to hospital where people with Parkinson's are physically examined by expert clinicians in order to assess their symptom severity, putting a strain on both patients and hospital resources," said Max Little of Britain's Oxford University, who worked on the study.

The researchers said they believed the technique, which could be used with patients' speech recordings or over the telephone, could help ease the resource burden on health systems and make it possible to run large-scale trials of experimental treatments for Parkinson's.

Parkinson's is a fatal and incurable brain disease that affects between one percent and two percent of people over the age of 65. It often affects the patient's ability to speak clearly, and sufferers also have tremors, sluggish movement, muscle stiffness and difficulty with balance.

Little said the study provided good evidence that speech impairment and the average overall severity of other Parkinson's disease symptoms are very closely linked, suggesting that symptom severity can be measured just by analyzing speech.

"This sort of remote monitoring -- or 'telemonitoring' -- of people's health is particularly important for people with Parkinson's who may find it difficult to make frequent hospital visits," he said in statement.

"The hope is that our research could pave the way for very large clinical studies of new treatments for Parkinson's where the sort of frequent monitoring required would not otherwise be affordable."

The researchers compared estimates made using the new technique with assessments made by doctors and rated on a standard measure for Parkinson's severity called the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS).

They found that, based on around 140 speech samples from each of the 42 patients, the estimates made using the algorithms differed from doctors' UPDRS ratings by around two points.

Nov 18
Inhalable dry powder antibiotic may reduce TB treatment time
New research has indicated that an inhalable dry powder antibiotic that when used alone or with current treatments may significantly reduce treatment for tuberculosis (TB) and multi-drug resistant TB.

Lead researcher J'aime Manion and her colleagues from the University of Colorado developed the inhalable dry powder, comprised of fine particles of antibiotics. These particles are targeted to the deep lung where TB enters in early stages of infection. The goal of this method is to distribute a larger fraction of antibiotic to protected TB lesions that are difficult to access by current treatments.

"Combining this novel treatment with more traditional methods may increase the targeted dose to the lung airspace and tissue, potentially reducing treatment time and systemic side effects," said Manion.

"As an inhalable powder, it eliminates the storage, disposal and contamination challenges that developing countries face with a needle delivery method."

The research will be presented at the 2010 International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) Pharmaceutical Sciences World Congress (PSWC) in association with the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS) Annual Meeting and Exposition.

Nov 17
World COPD Day to be observed today
World COPD Day is an annual event organised by the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) to create awareness about the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) around the world. World COPD Day 2010 is going to take place on Wednesday (November 17) with a theme "2010 - The Year of the Lung: Measure your lung health - Ask your doctor about a simple breathing test called spirometry."

COPD is a substantially under diagnosed disorder, whose diagnosis is delayed until the condition reaches in advanced state. Spirometery is the most frequently used pulmonary function test and enables health professionals to make an objective measurement of airflow obstruction and assess the degree to, which it is reversible, said Dr SK Agarwal, senior professor of department of chest disease, Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University. According to him, the COPD is projected to be the third leading cause of death by 2020.

"The Indian Chest Society (ICS) is seriously concerned about the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of COPD by means of spreading awareness and education about the disease," said Dr JK Samaria, honorary secretary of ICS and senior consultant at the department of chest, IMS-BHU. The society had been continuously performing training and research activities to minimise the impact of the disease, he added. According to him, the COPD is a disease appearing similar to Asthma but much more lethal and different from it. The COPD is characterised by prolonged cough with excess sputum production and breathlessness. Initially the breathlessness is observed after light work out but gradually it may occur even while sitting idle as well. The breathlessness caused due to Asthma can be completely cured after proper medication, but unfortunately same is not the case with COPD.

The chest experts said that the COPD was a major cause of chronic morbidity and mortality throughout the world. It is the fourth leading cause of death in the world, and further increase in its prevalence and mortality can be predicted in coming decades. The GOLD defines COPD as a preventable and curable disease with some significant extra pulmonary effect that may contribute to the severity in individual patients, said Agarwal.

Citing a report from WHO Samaria said that more than 90 percent of COPD mortality involved poor countries with people having lower per capita income. In India the COPD among the rural families is a major cause of concern. Among these females cooking on cow dung and wooden fire is one of the major causes of COPD. The COPD spreads rapidly among people living in rural and semi-urban localities due to use of kerosene stoves for cooking, lack of proper ventilation and usage of mosquito coil. Atmospheric air pollution is yet another major cause of COPD and ever increasing quantum of automobiles and pollution due to their exhaust is making the matter worst.

According to the chest experts, in India clear data is not available but it is suspected that COPD may be one of the major cause of mortality here as well. A survey performed in 2006 at various centres of the country revealed the fact that there were over 40 million COPD patients in India, said Samaria adding that the prevalence of COPD in non-smoking female patients was quite significant. The ratio of male to female COPD patients is as high as 1.5:1 in India.

Nov 16
Doc removes a record 1.72 lakh kidney stones
Dr Ashish Patil, an urosurgeon and andrologist from Dhule has entered the Guinness Book of World Records for removing the most kidney stones from a patient's kidney. Dr Patil, director of Tejnaksh Healthcare's Institute of Urology, removed more than 1.72 lakh kidney stones from the left kidney of
a Dhule resident, Dhanraj Wadile, last December.

Dr Patil's entry to the Guinness Book was declared on October 20. "The Guinness team took time to verify world-wide records. The earlier record holder, a doctor from Nashik, had removed 14,098 kidney stones," said Dr Patil.

Wadile, 45, was suffering from severe lower abdominal pain for the last six months. "I had stopped eating and going to work," said Wadile, a paan shop owner. When Wadile was referred to Dr Patil he discovered that Wadile had an uncommon birth defect where his kidney was abnormally positioned in the pelvic and had an obstruction. Approximately 2 to 4 per 1,000 population in the world suffer from this Pelvi-Ureteric Junction obstruction.

"We made a detailed plan of the surgery because it was revealed after the investigations that patient had a huge number of renal stones," said Dr Patil.

During the four-hour operation, doctors used both open surgery and flexible endoscopy. "The surgery was complicated due to the number of kidney stones. It was difficult to remove so many stones from his kidney. These stones were anywhere between the size of 1mm to 2.5cm," said Dr Patil.

"The possibility of leaving some stones behind was one of the risks as it could have jeopardised the surgery. Bigger stones had to be tackled individually. We also did a plastic surgery to widen the opening of the kidney," said Dr Patil.

"This condition is seen from time to time but is not very common. I have not come across such a huge number of stones in a patient," said Dr Vinod Joshi, consultant, urologist, PD Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai.

Nov 15
A long, complication-free life with diabetes
The big news this World Diabetes Day is one of hope - the possibility of a long, complication-free life with diabetes. Success cases of people who have lived over 40 years after being confirmed as diabetic, even 50 years and 60 years have been documented by city diabetologists.

A study done at Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre (DMDSC) here, by V. Mohan, R.M. Anjana, Ranjit Unnikrishnan and B. Parthasarathy has proven just this.

In about two lakh patients from various DMDSC units whose medical records were analysed, over 200 people have lived 40 years with diabetes. Over 20 have lived for over 50 years, and though smaller in number, there are people who have lived over 60 years after they were diagnosed.

"We ensured that we picked up only those who had confirmed diabetes and were on treatment, all types of diabetes - Type 1, Type 2, Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young (a genetic disorder inherited that causes disruptions in insulin production) and fibrocalculous pancreatic diabetes (caused by pancreatitis)," Dr. Mohan says.

He goes on to add, "It is generally believed that diabetes affects the lifespan. There is not too much data on this, particularly from India. A couple of Western studies estimated that diabetics live 8-10 years less. In 2006, our CUPS study that followed up 1,262 individuals for six years concluded that the overall mortality among diabetics was higher in Chennai." In Chennai it was 18.9 per 1,000 person-years; comparatively among the non-diabetic population it was 5.3.

However, no one looked at the other side - the longevity of patients with diabetes, Dr. Mohan says. "We now know it is possible among a significant group of people." While genetic studies to see if this group has a protective longevity gene will be done, there is much to learn from their life and control of diabetes, he adds.

Dr. Unnikrishnan, director, DMDSC, says: "They are certainly not sick, or dying, they have a fairly good quality of life. Over 25 per cent of the people who have lived for over 40 years have no complications - of the heart, kidney, eyes, or foot."

Children who had Type 1 diabetes detected as early as three years are now grandparents and great grandparents. Dr. Anjana, director, DMDSC, says: "This busts the myth that kids with Type 1 diabetes will not live long enough or even that they will be unable to bear children."

Another myth - that over time every diabetic moves to insulin - has also been busted. Dr. Unnikrishnan says, "Almost 25 per cent of the T2 who have completed over 40 years of living with diabetes are still taking only tablets."

However, the key is to focus on what is common between the members of this group.

According to Dr. Mohan, "One thing is very clear. They have all been meticulous with treatment for their condition. It also does not matter what the type of treatment is. Some of our older patients had none of the sophisticated, expensive drugs that are available now and, they have lived to tell the tale."

The pattern is clear: They have all been somewhat careful with diet, had regular exercise, periodic blood sugar tests, kept their three month average (HbA1C) as close to 7 as possible.

The key, Dr. Mohan explains, is to keep the blood sugar under control for the first 10 years.

"If you don't do this, whatever else you try later, the game is lost. The message is that if you take your disease seriously right from the beginning, a long and healthy life is indeed possible."

Nov 15
23 lakh kids aged below 5 died in one year in India
Around 23 lakh children, aged 1-59 months, died in India in 2005 alone. Of these, more than 60% were from five causes - pneumonia, prematurity and low birthweight, diarrhoeal diseases, neonatal infections and birth asphyxia and birth trauma. Two causes accounted for 50% (6.7 lakh) of all deaths at 1-59 months - pneumonia 3.7 lakhs and diarrhoeal diseases 3 lakhs. This has been revealed in a study by the Registrar General of India published in British medical journal " The Lancet" on Saturday morning.

According to its authors, each of the major causes of neonatal deaths can be prevented or treated with known, highly effective and widely practicable interventions, raising concerns that the neonatal death rate in India is not falling fast enough.

The study says that in children aged 1-59 months, girls in central India had a five times higher mortality rate (per 1000 livebirths) from pneumonia than did boys in south India and four times higher mortality rate from diarrhoeal diseases than did boys in west India.

The study makes another vital observation - social preference for boys probably affects survival for girls. States with higher mortality rates in girls than in boys aged 1-59 months were also those with lower female-to-male sex ratio for second births after a boy (a measure of selective abortion of girls).

This finding also implies that less frequent use of health services by girls than by boys occurs in the same states in which selective abortion of female fetuses is common. Professor Prabhat Jha, director of the Centre for Global Health Research in Toronto and one of the study's lead authors, says the yearly child mortality rates in India have fallen between 1.77% and 2.73% in the past two decades.

Despite this decrease, the United Nations estimates that about 23.5 lakh children died in India in 2005 - 20% of all deaths in children younger than 5 years worldwide, more than in any other country. Prof Jha said, "Large differences in overall child survival between India's diverse regions have been previously documented. However, no direct measurement of the major causes of death in neonates (less than one month) and at ages 1-59 months has been done and how these causes of death vary across India's regions is unknown."

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