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Mar 10
Diet in pregnancy and baby gender
Women who eat a full breakfast and a high fat diet at the time of conception are more likely to have a boy, scientists claim.

A low fat diet with periods of long fasts favours girls, the researchers have found.

The findings seem to give some credence to to old wives' tales such as eat "bacon for boys".

Dr Cheryl Rosenfeld, of the University of Missouri, and colleagues said: "High calorie diets generally favour birth of males over females, whereas low calorie diets tend to favour females over males.

"In humans and mice, food restriction and a suboptimal diet during the period around conception and early pregnancy also lead to a surfeit of daughters, most probably due to selective loss of male foetuses, the most vulnerable sex in the womb."

Researchers analysed the genes in placentas of pregnant mice fed diets high in fat or carbohydrates and low calorie diets and found each one had a distinctive effect compared with a third group given normal soybean meal-based food.

As well as the changes in sex, female foetuses were more sensitive to their mother's diet and their genes were more likely to be affected or altered, it was found.

After 12 days - just over half the animals' pregnancy term - there were differences in almost 2,000 genes including those involved in kidney function and smell.

They concluded gene expression in the mouse placenta is "adaptive and shaped by maternal diet" with the biggest effect on the placentas of females.

The research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, follows a study two years ago that found a woman's diet around the time of conception may influence the gender of her baby.

A high-calorie diet at this time - and regular breakfasts - might increase the odds of a boy while women with a lower energy intake were likelier to give birth to a girl.

The research shows a higher calorie intake around the time of conception can shift the odds of having a son from ten to 11 boys in every 20 births.

Sons and daughters are also at different risk for diseases later in life, apparently related to either the mother's diet or body condition while pregnant.

For instance, sons of obese mothers are more likely than daughters to become obese and develop diabetes as they get older, even though no differences in birth weight may be evident.

The researchers added: "The reason why a maternal high fat, low carbohydrate diet favours survival of sons and a maternal low fat, high carbohydrate diet results in more daughters continues to elude us.

"The effect was such that the more women ate the more likely she was to have a boy.

"Women who had sons were also more likely to have eaten a higher quantity and wider range of nutrients including potassium, calcium and vitamins C, E and B12. They were also more likely to have eaten breakfast cereals."

There has been a small but consistent decline of about one per 1,000 births annually in the proportion of boys being born in industrialised countries, including the UK, over the last 40 years.

It could be because women have been consuming low fat foods and skipping breakfast, among other things.

Mar 09
Pain's in the Genes
The difference between a child who laughs off skinned knees and one who cries at the smallest pinch could be in their DNA. Subtle changes to a certain gene seem to determine how sensitive people are to pain, according to new research.

In the past 5 years, researchers have discovered that three rare but serious pain disorders are caused by mutations in a gene called SCN9A. In nerve cells that relay painful sensations in the body's tissues to the central nervous system, SCN9A encodes instructions for sodium channels that help the cells fire. In two of the disorders, people carry faulty versions of the gene and suffer crippling pain because their sodium channels open too easily or can't close. In the third disorder, which leaves patients unable to feel pain at all, SCN9A produces a protein that can't function.

"We wondered if more common, apparently harmless [changes] in the gene might give rise to an altered degree of pain threshold," says Geoffrey Woods, a medical geneticist at Cambridge University in the U.K., who discovered the genetic reason for this third disorder. So he and his colleagues examined differences in SCN9A in 578 patients with osteoarthritis. Controlling for the severity of the condition, they checked whether the patients' pain level was related to any one of 27 subtle genetic variations, known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), in SCN9A.

One SNP, found in 10% of the subjects, caused the greatest increase in reported pain between those who had it and those who didn't. The team then looked for the SNP and compared it to reported pain in four other groups: 195 Finnish people with sciatica; 100 Danish amputees, some of whom experienced phantom limb pain, or pain in the limbs they had lost; 179 people who had had a lumbar disk removed to treat lower back pain; and 200 people with pancreatitis. Sciatica patients and amputees who reported more pain were more likely to have the SNP. The researchers also saw a positive trend, though not a statistically significant one, among the lower-back-pain patients and pancreatitis patients. But when the groups were combined, the statistical link between having the rare SNP and feeling more pain was impressively strong. When the team applied heat stimuli to 186 healthy women, they found that those with the rare version were more likely to have lower pain thresholds. It was as if the normal subjects had taken an ibuprofen, but the subjects with the rare SNP hadn't, Woods says. His team reports the results online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Woods's group also sought to determine how the SNP was causing more pain. When they placed the altered SCN9A gene in kidney cells, which serve as blank slates because they don't have this sodium channel, they found that the cells grew sodium channels that were "slightly less efficient" at squeezing shut after they had let sodium in and triggered the neuron, Woods says.

Woods warns that this effect is so subtle that it might not be directly due to the SNP. But the results do seem to show that sensitivity to pain is hard-wired. "Some people are stoic and some aren't. ...Maybe there's a plausible biological reason for that difference," Woods says.

In the groups Woods studied, between 15% and 18% of patients had one copy of this variant, while 2% to 3% had two copies of the variant, making them even more sensitive to pain. Meanwhile, about 20% of adults develop chronic pain, a statistic that's been "very difficult to link with the severity of injury and the severity of ongoing damage," says MacDonald Christie, a neuroscientist at the University of Sydney in Australia. This genetic variation "could go part of the way to explaining why some people have much more serious chronic pain than others."

Mar 08
AIDS rise may force India to spend more: World Bank
New Delhi spends about 5 percent of its $5.4 billion healthcare budget on treating AIDS patients.

India with 2.5 million patients is among the top three countries with the highest number of HIV cases, alongside South Africa and Nigeria.

But with HIV cases showing signs of rising in the capital New Delhi, in the financial hub of Mumbai, in the north and the northeast, the cost of treatment in India could rise to $1.8 billion by 2020, about 7 percent of the total health expenditure, the World Bank says.

This would pose an enormous burden on the health care services and the budget in a country where malaria still kills hundreds of people every year and other health-sector challenges like non-communicable diseases are as sharp as AIDS, experts say.

More than 15 percent of the 200,000 plus injectible drug users (IDUs) are HIV positive in the country against a global average of 10 percent, AIDS experts say.

In some areas, HIV positive cases among IDUs have been found to be as high as 50 percent, health ministry officials quoting an ongoing survey said.

This rise could fuel the spread of AIDS unless checked, aid agencies say in their reports.

"What we are worried about, are the concentrated epidemics in the country, among vulnerable groups in districts," said Mariam Claeson, World Bank Program Coordinator (HIV/AIDS).

"Those concentrated epidemics can act as wildfires, and therefore need to be targeted with effective prevention efforts," Claeson, an expert on AIDs in South Asia, told Reuters.

Injecting drug users are infected by the virus by sharing needles with an HIV-infected person, and passing it on by having unprotected sex.

The World Bank says the poor risk getting poorer in India as AIDS patients get marginalized and face income loss due to their HIV status.

The World Bank quoting a recent study says in its report that about 36 percent of people living with HIV/AIDS in India reported an income loss and increased expenditure on treatment.

"HIV is not a major threat to the current economic growth of India, but the welfare impact is significant and HIV disproportionately affects the poor," Claeson said.

Mar 08
MCI chalks out anti-gift rules
Even as the Union Health Ministry is planning to bring out a legislation to break the cash-or-gift-for-prescription nexus between doctors and the pharmaceutical industry, the Medical Council of India (MCI) is going ahead to decide the nature and quantum of punishment to be imposed on doctors caught accepting considerations in cash or kind from pharma companies.

MCI chairman Dr Ketan Desai said that this would now be thrashed out in the MCI general body meeting on March 12 and 13.

Not that the doctors bodies have been too eager about it. On the face of it, it took three years and many reminders from the MCI to all medical associations, even to notify this regulation in the official gazette a few months ago.

"MCI had approached all national medical associations in India, including those of physicians, nephrologists and gynaecologists and cardiologists, in an attempt to come up with this new regulation. We had started this process in 2007. We sent no less than four official reminders to these associations, none of them responded," said the MCI chief.

Mar 06
Eye infection could increase stroke risk
People who have had shingles infection that affects the eyes may have a heightened risk of stroke, according to a new study. Ocular shingles is an infection of the eye and the skin around the eye caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox.

To reach the conclusion, researchers identified 658 people diagnosed with ocular shingles and 1974 without the infection. None of these people had a history of stroke at the beginning of the study.

During the one-year study, stroke developed in 8.1 percent of the people with shingles and 1.7 percent of the people without shingles.

The study found people with shingles were four-and-a-half times more likely to have a stroke compared to people without shingles. The results were the same regardless of age, gender, high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease and medications.

"Shingles may represent a marker for increased risk of stroke," said Jau-Der Ho with Taipei Medical University in Taiwan.

The study also found the people with shingles were more likely to have ischemic stroke, such as a blood clot, and less likely to have hemorrhagic stroke, such as bleeding in the brain, compared to people without shingles.

Antiviral drugs are used to treat ocular shingles. The researchers found that there was no difference in the risk of stroke between people who received antiviral drugs and those who did not.

Mar 05
Pneumonia vaccine protects HIV patients
A seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine can protect adults with HIV against recurrent pneumococcal infection, according to research published in the March 4 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Neil French, Ph.D., of the Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme in Blantyre, Malawi, and colleagues analyzed data from 496 patients, aged 15 years and older, who had recovered from invasive pneumococcal disease. Most (88 percent) were HIV-positive. Subjects were given two doses of vaccine four weeks apart or placebo. The main end point was another episode of pneumococcal disease caused by a vaccine serotype or serotype 6A.

The researchers found that all episodes of disease were in individuals with HIV. Twenty-four patients developed episodes of pneumococcal disease caused by vaccine serotypes or the 6A serotype. Of these, 19 occurred in the placebo group and five occurred in the vaccine group, for a vaccine efficacy of 74 percent. Deaths weren't statistically different in the vaccine and placebo group (73 and 63, respectively).

"We have shown that HIV-infected adults can have a clinically relevant response to a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, leading to protection against a common and serious co-infection. The ability of a conjugate vaccine to generate protective responses in patients with a low CD4+ count is of particular note and merits further study to elucidate the immune mechanisms involved and how such mechanisms may be used to produce other vaccines for this population," the authors write.

Mar 05
H1N1 shots from next week
Mass vaccination against the deadly H1N1 swine flu virus are likely to begin in India next week. The 1.5 million doses of vaccines imported by the government from Sanofi Pasteur have passed the safety test.

The French vaccine manufacturers submitted the results of their clinical bridge study -- conducted in Delhi and Pune on 100 adult subjects -- to the Drug Controller General of India on Wednesday. The trials were completed on February 21. The results were then checked thoroughly in Lyon before being submitted to DCGI.

DCGI Dr Surinder Singh said, "The trials of the vaccine have proven its safety profile. By Friday, we will vet the results and give its clearance for use on humans in India. By next week, the vaccination should begin."

According to Union health ministry officials, 10 lakh doses of the vaccine will be sent to all Central government hospitals for administering on all frontline health workers and those at highest risk of getting infected.

The rest will be given to the armed forces while some doses will be retained by the ministry.

The ministry was more concerned about the vaccine's safety. The vaccine's safety profile was checked twice -- first for seven days and then for 21 days. The trials took place in Kalavati Saran Hospital in Delhi and Bharatiya Vidyapith in Pune and the vaccines were found to be safe.

Dr Singh said, "We didn't want it to cause side-effects like the Guillain-Barri syndrome (GBS) -- a rare disease in which the body damages its own nerve cells, causing muscle weakness and sometimes paralysis. The company will, however, continue to check the vaccine's immunogenecity results, which will come in six weeks time."

Meanwhile, India's indigenous H1N1 vaccine is expected to be available by April 15 and could cost between Rs 80 and Rs 100.

Cadila Healthcare had on January 3 started human trials of India's live and inactivated indigenous H1N1 vaccine on 200 subjects. Three other Indian companies -- Serum Institute (Pune), Bharat Biotech International (Hyderabad) and Panasia Biotec (New Delhi) -- were also given clearance by DCGI to conduct human trials in January. These are expected to start soon.

While Serum will test the trials on around 350 people, Panacea has a subject size of over 1,100 and Bharat of 160.

Dr Singh said, "If all goes well with the Indian vaccines and they prove safe and effective, they should be available commercially between April 15 and 30.

Experts, however, say no vaccine is 100% safe for everyone. People with allergies to eggs, for example, can't take flu vaccines because eggs are involved in the manufacturing process.

H1N1 has spread to 210 countries. In India, it has infected over 29,710 people and killed 1,376 among them.

The World Health Organisation recently came out with a new warning that the H1N1 pandemic may not have peaked as yet. It also said that H1N1 has been by far the dominant virus round the world over the past year and all indications are that the virus will be around for quite a long time.

Over 300 million people have been vaccinated globally so far against influenza, and the shots, which have an excellent safety record, have proved 70-75% effective.

Mar 04
Soluble fibre boosts immune system
In an experiment, laboratory mice consumed low-fat diets that were identical except that they contained either soluble or insoluble fibre. After six weeks on the diet, the animals had distinctly different responses when the scientists induced illness by introducing a substance (lipopolysaccharide) that causes the body to mimic a bacterial infection.

"Two hours after lipopolysaccharide injection, the mice fed soluble fibre were only half as sick as the other group, and they recovered 50 per cent sooner. And the differences between the groups continued to be pronounced all the way out to 24 hours," said Christina Sherry, who worked on the study.

The new University of Illinois study touts the benefits of soluble fibre. It reduces the inflammation associated with obesity-related diseases and strengthens the immune system.

"Soluble fibre changes the personality of immune cells - they go from being pro-inflammatory, angry cells to anti-inflammatory, healing cells that help us recover faster from infection," said Gregory Freund, a professor in the University of Illinois' College of Medicine. This happens because soluble fibre causes increased production of an anti-inflammatory protein called interleukin-4, he said.

Now Freund has a new question: Could soluble fibre offset some of the negative effects of a high-fat diet, essentially immunizing obese persons against the harmful effects of fat?

Scientists have long known that obesity is linked to inflammatory conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease.

Yet, in a recent study, the University of Illinois scientists demonstrated that fat tissue produces hormones that appear to compensate for this inflammation. "There are significant anti-inflammatory components in fat tissue and, if they were strategically unleashed, they could potentially protect obese people from further inflammatory insults, such as a heart attack or stroke. In obese animals, you can see the body compensating in an effort to protect itself," he said.

Not all fat is bad, the researcher noted. The Mediterranean diet, which receives high marks for its health benefits, includes such foods as olive oil; salmon, tuna, sardines, and trout, which contain important omega-3 and -6 fatty acids; and plant sources of fat, such as flaxseed.

"Now we'd like to find a way to keep some of the anti-inflammatory, positive effects that develop over time with a high-fat diet while reducing that diet;s negative effects, such as high blood glucose and high triglycerides. It's possible that supplementing a high-fat diet with soluble fibre could do that, even delaying the onset of diabetes," he said.

This study is one of the first to provide two valuable lessons, said Sherry. The first, already noted, is that soluble fibre has direct anti-inflammatory effects and builds up the immune system. The second is that the amount of soluble fibre necessary to achieve these health benefits is a reasonable, not a pharmacological, amount, according to a University of Illinois press release.

Mar 03
New discovery paves way for Alzheimer's treatment
Scientists at UMass Lowell have identified a new mechanism by which a key protein linked to Alzheimer's disease can spread within the human brain. According to the researchers, the finding gives new hope that the disease may someday be cured.

It provides a new explanation of how the protein tau, a normal human protein that becomes toxic in Alzheimer's patients, can appear in their cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).

"My team has discovered two different ways in which tau is secreted by neurons, or brain cells. This might explain how tau-containing lesions seem to propagate between adjacent, interconnected parts of the brain during the development of the disease," UMass Lowell biological sciences professor and study's lead author Garth Hall said.

Until very recently, it was universally assumed by scientists that tau is never secreted from or transferred between neurons, and that CSF-tau only appears after many neurons have died and irreversible harm has been done to the brain.

"That tau secretion can occur via two distinct mechanisms strongly indicates that it is biologically 'real' and is not just tau protein leaking out of dead neurons," said Hall.

"The fact that it occurs in a pattern that reproduces what is seen in the CSF of Alzheimer's patients holds out hope that patients in early stages of the disease might someday be cured.

"If we can distinguish secreted tau from tau that is released from dying neurons in CSF samples, then maybe we can diagnose Alzheimer's in time to stop the disease before the neurons die," Hall added.

Mar 02
Gene test aid to cancer treatment
Scientists have developed a gene test which predicts how well chemotherapy will work in cancer patients.

Starting with 829 genes in breast cancer cells, the team whittled down the possibilities to six genes which had an impact on whether a drug worked.

They then showed that these genes could be used to predict the effectiveness of a drug called paclitaxel in patients.

It is hoped the approach, reported in The Lancet Oncology, can be replicated for other cancers and treatments.

The international project, including researchers from Cancer Research UK's London Research Institute, opens the way for breast cancer treatment to be targeted to those who will benefit the most.

To find which genes, if missing or faulty, could prevent the drug from working, they deleted them one by one from cancer cells in the laboratory.

They eventually highlighted the six genes which if absent or not working prevent paclitaxel from properly killing breast cancer cells.

Spare treatment

More than 45,500 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK each year - and it is estimated that around 15% of these women will be prescribed paclitaxel.

The researchers estimate they could potentially spare half of the patients currently receiving this drug from treatment which would not be effective.

Study leader, Dr Charles Swanton, head of translational cancer therapeutics at the Institute, said one of the great challenges in cancer medicine is determining which patients will benefit from particular cancer drugs, which are in themselves toxic and carry severe side effects.

"Our research shows it is now possible to rapidly pinpoint genes which prevent cancer cells from being destroyed by anti-cancer drugs and use these same genes to predict which patients will benefit from specific types of treatment."

Further studies will now be done to see if the technique can be developed into a simple diagnostic test to be given to patients to help inform doctors about whether or not to prescribe paclitaxel.

He said the challenge will be to apply these methods to other drugs in cancer medicine.

"These could include treatments that are currently deemed too expensive to fund on the NHS - however, in the future, treating only the patients that will benefit from certain treatments will save the NHS money in the long term."

Dr Lesley Walker, Cancer Research UK's director of cancer information, said: "New techniques such as these can enable drugs to be tailored to individual patients, and this could potentially improve cancer survival in the long term.

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