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Mar 24
India still home to quarter of global TB cases
Despite having a strong public sector programme to contain the disease, tuberculosis still remains a cause of concern for India, which has nearly a quarter of the global burden of TB, health experts said.

Experts said measures which can help strengthen the fight against the disease include involvement of the private sector, more political commitment to create awareness and containing risk factors like malnutrition.

"TB is still a cause for concern. It is the sheer numbers in India and the associated problems like poverty which are responsible for this," Soumya Swaminathan, director, National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis, an organization under the health ministry, told IANS.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are 2.2 million tuberculosis patients in India, which makes it the world's highest TB-burden country. TB killed 1.3 million people worldwide in 2012 and India alone accounted for 26 percent of the total cases.

She said that China and Brazil have done better in controlling TB in their respective countries and India needs to do more.

"In eight years, India has made tremendous progress as far as containing TB. But it needs to do much more," she added.

But R. S. Gupta, deputy director general (TB) in the health and family welfare ministry, said: "Treatment success rates have been above 85 percent for several years in the country."

Gupta told IANS that the overall quality of TB services, including human resources and systems for financial management are being strengthened.

To achieve the National Tuberculosis Programme's (NTP) ambitious goal of universal health care access for all people with TB by 2017, financial commitments must be maintained by all partners, including international agencies, he said.

The state-run tuberculosis control initiative of the government, NTP provides free of cost, quality anti-tubercular drugs across the country. More than 1.5 million people avail the facility at 13,000 centres.

Gupta said that the private sector should be involved more as most patients are being treated in private clinics.

Agreed Swaminathan, who said that the government needs to work in tandem with the private sector.

"Standard procedures need to be followed for notification of the disease and diagnosis, especially by private practioners," Swaminathan told IANS.

In 2012, India declared TB to be a notifiable disease. It means that with immediate effect all private doctors, caregivers and clinics treating a TB patient had to report every case to the government.

According to a recent WHO report, India has achieved the Millenium Development Goal (MDG) target for TB which says that the incidence of the disease should be falling. It is on track to reach the 2015 targets for reductions in TB prevalence and mortality.

But it added that India accounts for 31 percent of the estimated 2.9 million missed TB cases -- people who were either not diagnosed or diagnosed but not reported to NTP.

It is estimated that about 40 percent of the Indian population is infected with TB bacteria, the vast majority of whom have latent rather than active TB.

Listing the other steps needed, Swaminathan said: "Getting more political commitment and activism from civil society to create awareness about TB like it was done in the case of HIV/AIDS would be a great help."

India also needs to contain the risk factors associated with the disease. The biggest among them is malnutrition, which makes people more susceptible to the development of active TB. Tuberculosis patients have lower Body Mass Index (BMI), muscle mass and subcutaneous stores of fat.

"Malnutrition is the biggest risk factor and it has been overlooked," she said, adding that the "disease needs to be fought on a common platform by all stakeholders."

Mar 24
Sitting all day? Check extra fat on your buttocks
For all those couch potatoes or workaholics out there, forget belly fat as sitting for long hours does add extra fat on your buttocks too.

In the sitting posture, fat cells in buttocks expand up to 50 percent, making the bottoms appear rounder and larger.

This "cellular expansion" played a vital role in fat production, researchers from Tel Aviv University in Israel have said.

"We found that fat cells when exposed to sustained pressure while sitting accelerated growth of lipid droplets - molecules that carry fats," said Amit Gefen, professor from the department of biomedical engineering at Tel Aviv University.

To prove their point, the researchers analysed the accumulation of fat cells in the body and found that nutrition only played a small role in keeping people slim.

"Expanding cells deform neighbouring cells, forcing them to differentiate and expand further," Gefen said in the study published in the Biophysical Journal.

It's time to stand up and move around for a while!

Mar 21
New method boon for kidney stone treatment
Modern fast paced lifestyle is leading to rising incidence of kidney stones in the world. Giving new hope to kidney stone patients engineers from Duke University in Durham have devised a way to improve the efficiency of lithotripsy .Lithotripsy is the medical procedure of demolishing kidney stones using focused shock waves.

The engineers after intensive research devised that all it took was cutting a groove near the perimeter of the shock wave-focusing lens and changing its curvature,

"We've developed a simple, cost-effective and reliable solution that can be quickly implemented on their machines," said Pei Zhong, professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Duke University.

In laboratory tests, the researchers sent shock waves through a tank of water and used a fiber optic pressure sensor to ensure the shock wave was focusing on target.

They broke apart synthetic stones in a model human kidney and in anesthesised pigs and used a high-speed camera to watch the distribution of cavitation bubbles forming and collapsing - a process that happens too fast for the human eye to see.

During the past two decades, lithotripter manufacturers introduced multiple changes to their machines, but they couldn't improve effectiveness of kidney stone treatment.

While the current commercial version reduced 54 percent of the stones into fragments less than two millimeters in diameter, the new version pulverised 89 percent of the stones while also reducing the amount of damage to surrounding tissue.

Mar 21
Chronic sleep disturbances could trigger early Alzheimer's onset
Researchers have suggested that people, who experience chronic sleep disturbance - either through their work, insomnia or other reasons - could face an earlier onset of dementia and Alzheimer's.

Domenico Pratico, professor of pharmacology and microbiology/immunology in Temple's School of Medicine, who led the study, and his team looked at longitudinal studies which indicated that people who reported chronic sleep disturbances often developed Alzheimer's disease.

For the study, they used a transgenic Alzheimer's mouse model that begins developing memory and learning impairment at about one year-the equivalent of a human that is mid-50-60 years in age-and at 14-15 months have the typical human brain pathology of Alzheimer's, including amyloid plaques and tau protein tangles, the two major brain pathological/lesion signatures for the disease.

The eight week study began when the mice were approximately six months old, or the equivalent of an adult human in their 40s. One group of mice was kept on a schedule of 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness, while a second group was subjected to 20 hours of light and only four hours of darkness, greatly reducing their amount of sleep.

Pratico said that at the end of the eight weeks, when they tested the mice for memory, the group which had the reduced sleep demonstrated significant impairment in their working and retention memory, as well as their learning ability.

The researchers then examined the mice's brains to look at the different aspects of the Alzheimer's pathology - mainly the amyloid plaques and tau protein tangles.

Pratico said that because of the tau's abnormal phosphorylation, the sleep deprived mice had a huge disruption of this synaptic connection, asserting that this disruption will eventually impair the brain's ability for learning, forming new memory and other cognitive functions, and contributes to Alzheimer's disease.

Mar 20
Fried foods linked to obesity in people with genetic risk
A new study suggests eating fried and junk foods, that most of us love to gorge on, have enough trans-fats, salt and sugar to lead us to an early onset of obesity and related chronic diseases, in people with genetic risk.

Salt in fried food, however, is not the real problem, but, consuming trans-fats, or the 'bad fats' is a big threat.

A team of US researchers analysed data from 9,623 women in the Nurses' Health Study, 6,379 men in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study and 21,426 women in the Women's Genome Health Study.

Participants filled out food frequency questionnaires, which was based on how often they ate fried food consumption - both at home and away from home. Body mass index (BMI) and lifestyle factors, such as physical activity, were also assessed. Genetic risk scores were calculated based on genetic variants associated with BMI.

The results of the study showed that regular consumption of fried foods was associated with higher BMI, after taking into account other dietary and lifestyle factors.

In addition, the study showed that the association between overconsumption of fried foods and obesity was particularly pronounced among people with a greater genetic predisposition to obesity. On the other hand, the genetic effect on BMI among those who ate fried foods more than four times a week was about twice as large compared with those who ate them less than once a week.

The study has been published in the British Medical Journal.

Mar 20
Researchers to study if chocolates prevent heart attacks
Almost all of us like chocolates and love to indulge in them. Here is some more good news for all the chocolate lovers as dark chocolates are believed to help prevent heart attacks and stroke.

Chocolate is a derived product of the seeds of the cacao tree. Now, researchers from Louisiana State University have discovered cocoa flavanols, from that seed, which is believed to have nutrients that halt the risk of stroke and heart disease.

The researchers believe that certain bacteria in the stomach gobble the chocolate up and ferment it into anti-inflammatory compounds that are good for the heart.

John Finley, Ph.D., who led the work, said that both components are poorly digested and absorbed, but when they reach the colon, the desirable microbes take over, asserting that in their study they found that the fiber is fermented and the large polyphenolic polymers are metabolized to smaller molecules, which are more easily absorbed. These smaller polymers exhibit anti-inflammatory activity.

Finley also noted that combining the fiber in cocoa with prebiotics is likely to improve a person's overall health and help convert polyphenolics in the stomach into anti-inflammatory compounds.

Mar 19
Better-tasting, low-fat desserts are set to debut
Many people dieting to reduce flab are put off by low-fat desserts, sauces and salad dressings for one simple reason: they are also low on flavour.

But help is at hand. Researchers have found a way to reduce fat without killing flavour or affecting the appearance and texture of these foods. And these items could soon hit the market.

The key to developing new, better-tasting, more eye-appealing and creamier reduced-fat sauces, desserts and salad dressings could lie in adjusting their calcium and acidity levels, according to a new study.

The study was conducted as part of the 247th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society.

As part of the study, the team reduced the fat content and calories in a model white sauce from 10 percent to 2 percent without sacrificing the look and feel of the food, an ACS statement said.

"By controlling pH and calcium content, we are able to regulate the interactions among fat droplets," Bicheng Wu, a graduate student and a member of the study team, was quoted as saying.

"This makes them stick together and form flocs, or clumps. We believe the water trapped inside these flocs makes the sauce seem fattier than it really is and preserves the look, feel and flavor."

Wu explained that fat plays various roles in determining the overall sensory attributes of food products.

"It carries flavors, so cutting the fat content lessens the intensity of the flavor. The appearance, meaning the opacity or lightness, of a food mixture largely depends on light scattering by fat droplets, so high fat content gives a milky appearance to a sauce or dressing."

She added that high fat content is also related to the thick, smooth and creamy feel in your mouth of many products, like pudding, due to the effect of fat droplets on how the liquid flows.

Yet another problem with cutting the fat content is that it doesn't make people feel as full, said D. Julian McClements of the University of Massachusetts Amherst and team leader.

"Due to the high calorie count in fat and how the body digests it, fat also affects the feeling of satiety," Wu said.

"Often we see people reacting to the texture of our low-fat sauce sample even before they taste it," he said. "They say, 'Wow! No way it's only 2 percent fat. It looks like custard! Can I try it?'"

McClements said the team soon plans extensive taste and smell tests. "Then we will be able to adjust the composition and incorporate other seasoning ingredients into the foods.

"Since this fat reduction is easy for us now, and the fact that our new products contain healthy ingredients that can be used in a wide range of products means there's a great potential to reach the market in the near future."

Mar 19
75% seasonal, pandemic flu sufferers have no symptoms
Researchers have said that around 1 in 5 of the population were infected in both recent outbreaks of seasonal flu and the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic, but just 23 per cent of these infections caused symptoms.

The Flu Watch study tracked five successive cohorts of households across England over six influenza seasons between 2006 and 2011. The researchers calculated nationally representative estimates of the incidence of influenza infection, the proportion of infections that were symptomatic, and the proportion of symptomatic infections that led to medical attention.

Participants provided blood samples before and after each season for influenza serology, and all participating households were contacted weekly to identify any cases of cough, cold, sore throat or 'flu-like illness'. Any person reporting such symptoms was asked to submit a nasal swab on day 2 of illness to test for a variety of respiratory viruses using Real-Time, Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) technology.

The results show that on average 18per cent of the unvaccinated community were infected with influenza each winter season-19per cent during prepandemic seasons and 18per cent during the 2009 pandemic. But most (77per cent) of these infections showed no symptoms, and only around 17per cent of people with PCR-confirmed influenza visited their doctor. Compared with some seasonal flu strains, the 2009 pandemic strain caused substantially milder symptoms.

The study has been published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine journal.

Mar 18
Snail venom could be answer to chronic nerve pain relief
Scientists have created at least five new experimental substances, based on a tiny protein found in cone snail venom, that could someday lead to the development of safe and effective oral medications for treatment of chronic nerve pain.

They say that the substances could potentially be stronger than morphine, with fewer side effects and lower risk of abuse.

"This is an important incremental step that could serve as the blueprint for the development of a whole new class of drugs capable of relieving one of the most severe forms of chronic pain that is currently very difficult to treat," David Craik, Ph.D., who led the study, said.

His presentation is one of more than 10,000 scheduled to occur at the 247th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society.

Craik, who is at the University of Queensland, explained that acute pain occurs when the nervous system is stimulated by a wound or injury and naturally subsides over time. In contrast, chronic neuropathic pain kicks in when the nervous system itself is damaged.

This type of pain - which is often triggered by diabetes, multiple sclerosis and other diseases - can last for months, years or even decades. Current treatments for chronic neuropathic pain have serious side effects and provide relief to only about one in every three patients, he said.

One possible solution that Craik and his colleagues are investigating comes from an unlikely source, the cone snail.

Cone snails are marine animals that use venom to paralyze their prey. This venom contains hundreds of peptides (small proteins) known as conotoxins. But in humans, Craik says some of these conotoxins appear to have analgesic effects.

So far, however, only one conotoxin-derived medication has been approved for human use. This drug, ziconotide, has one big drawback: It has to be infused directly into the lower part of the spinal cord - a clearly invasive procedure.

The team is working to develop a conotoxin-based drug that can be taken orally, which would be much more practical for patients. In previous research, they found a way to modify conotoxin peptides so they formed circular chains of amino acids. As a result, the modified peptides - which are essentially tied into a loop - are extremely stable and resistant to enzymes in the body.

In laboratory rats, a common stand-in for humans in many experiments, a single, small oral dose of a prototype drug based on one of these looped conotoxins appeared to significantly reduce pain, as measured by a standard protocol.

Based on this research, the scientists concluded that this prototype drug was about 100 times more potent than morphine or gabapentin, the two drugs that are considered the "gold standard" treatments for chronic nerve pain.

Mar 18
New gene linked to heart attack risk identified
Scientists, including two of Indian origin, have discovered a previously unrecognized gene variation that can help humans maintain healthier lipid levels and cut the risk of heart attack.

The gene, which, according to the US and Norwegian scientists who identified it, was "hiding in plain sight", and had eluded previous hunts for genes that influence cardiovascular risk.

The newly identified gene could now be factored into the testing or treatment of high cholesterol and other lipid disorders, according to a paper published in the journal 'Nature Genetics'.

Among its more than half-dozen authors are Santhi K. Ganesh and Subramaniam Pennathur.

The region of DNA where the gene was reported as important in controlling blood lipid levels in a study by several members of the same research team in 2008.

But although this DNA region had many genes, none of them had any obvious link to blood lipid levels. The promise of an entirely new lipid-related gene took six years and a new approach to find, the report said.

The scientists, from the University of Michigan and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, said they zeroed in on the gene in an entirely novel way.

The team scanned the genetic information available from a biobank of thousands of Norwegians, focusing on variations in genes that change the way proteins function.

Most of what they found turned out to be already known. But one gene, dubbed TM6SF2, wasn't on the radar at all.

In a minority of the Norwegians who carried a particular change in the gene, blood lipid levels were much healthier and they had a lower rate of heart attack.

And when the researchers boosted or suppressed the gene in mice, they saw the same effect on the animals' blood lipid levels.

"While genetic studies that focused on common variations may explain as much as 30 percent of the genetic component of lipid disorders, we still don't know where the rest of the genetic risk comes from," Cristen Willer of the University of Michigan and lead author of the paper, was quoted as saying.

"(Our) approach of focusing on protein-changing variation may help us zero in on new genes faster."

Willer was aided by gastroenterologist Kristian Hveem of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

Said Hveem: "More research into the exact function of this protein will be needed to understand the role it plays in these two diseases, and whether it can be targeted with new drug therapies to reduce risk -- or treat -- one or both diseases."

The success of the experiment was due to efficient screening of thousands of Norwegian samples and clinical information amassed over a 30-year period.

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