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Stem cell cures 8-year-old girl of thalassemia - dnaindia.com

Chennai: On March 17, eight-year-old Thamirabharuni underwent surgery to receive the cord blood stem cell of her younger sibling, Pugazhendi. Thamira, as she is called, was suffering from thalassemia, a disorder that affects red blood corpuscles. A thalassemia patientmight require blood transfusion as frequently as once every week, and this disorder can be fatal in children.

Half a year after the successful operation, Thamira is brimming with joy and on the road to full recover. Born on November 21, 2001, in Coimbatore, she was a normal baby till she fell ill a year-and-a-half later and was diagnosed with thalassemia, needing blood transfusion every month.

Later, when her parents, Senthil Kumar, then a carpenter but now a businessman, and Saronjini, a home-maker, visited Chennai for Thamira's treatment, they were advised to have another child with the hope that the umbilical cord blood stem cell could be used to cure her. "Unfortunately, the foetus was thalassemia positive as both of us are carriers of thalassemia and we terminated the pregnancy," Sarojini said.

The parents then met Dr Revathi Raj, paediatric haematologist at Apollo Hospitals, who urged them to consider another pregnancy and go in for umbilical cord blood stem cell banking. Sarojini and Senthil agreed.

A pre-natal test proved that this foetus was not affected with thalassemia. "For a year, the extracted cord blood stem cells were preserved," said Revathi Raj, "The HLA (human leukocyte antigen) test proved that the tissues of both the children matched. The first step was to destroy all the existing bone marrow cells in Thamira which was done by chemotherapy. The donor's stem cells were then injected into Thamira. No surgery was done."

S Abhayakumar, vice-chairman of LifeCell, which helped preserve Pugazhendi's cord blood stem cells in Chennai, said a new-born sibling's umbilical cord blood provided a better chance of HLA matching as there is a 25% chance for a perfect match and 50% chance for partial match. "A sibling's cord blood for transplant lowers the chances of donor rejection. Therefore, it isa preferred source for transplantation," he said.
 

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New Zealand scientists develop wireless heart pump - Yahoo! News

WELLINGTON (AFP) – New Zealand scientists have developed the technology for a wireless heart pump they say could save thousands of lives and offer an alternative to heart transplants.

University of Auckland scientists said Wednesday their technology uses magnetic fields to transfer power to heart pumps through a person's skin rather than using wire cables, which often cause serious infections.

"We would very much like for it to be the preferred choice for patients to be able to choose this type of pump over a heart transplant, said David Budgett of the university's bioengineering institute.

The university has licenced the technology to US medical company MicroMed, which will integrate the wireless technology with its own heart pumps, Budgett told Radio New Zealand.

The technology uses a coil outside the patient's body, which can be placed in a pocket, and another inside the body near the collarbone to pick up the magnetic field and produce the power for the pump, the university said.

A battery inside the body can also store enough power to operate the pump for about an hour.

Heart pumps are used to keep patients alive while they await heart surgery but the wire cable which goes through their stomachs and chests cause serious -- sometimes fatal -- infections in about 40 percent of patients.

The wires can also break and restrict a patient's movement.

Budgett said it was hoped the wireless pump could eventually replace transplants, which involve traumatic surgery and require large amounts of drugs to avoid rejection.

He added about a million people died of heart failure worldwide each year while there were only about 3,000 heart transplants carried out.

Simon Malpas, the chief executive of TETCor, the university company set up to market the technology, said it was hoped to start patient trials within two years.

"These wireless heart pumps could be implanted in about 50,000 people each year around the world within 10 years," Malpas said.

"It's probably the most extreme implantable medical device you can get. If these pumps stop, you only have about one minute to live."

Previous attempts at making wireless heart pumps produced too much heat and would have resulted in "cooking a person from the inside", Malpas said.

The new technology was able to deliver exactly the right amount of power, eliminating the heating problem, he said.
 

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Majority of Indian children suffer from malnutrition: Study

London: Despite India's recent economic boom, at least 46 per cent of its children up to the age of 3 still suffer from malnutrition making the country home to a third of the world's malnourished children, a study said Thursday.

Noting that the country is an "economic powerhouse but a nutritional weakling", the report by the British-based Institute of Development Studies (IDS), which incorporated papers by more than 20 India analysts, said "at least 46 per cent of children upto the age of 3 in India still suffer from malnutrition."

"It's the contrast between India's fantastic economic growth and its persistent malnutrition which is so shocking," Lawrence Haddad, director of the IDS told the reporters.


The UN defines malnutrition as a state in which an individual can no longer maintain natural bodily capacities such as growth, pregnancy, lactation, learning abilities, physical work and resisting and recovering from disease.

The report said India will not meet the UN Millennium Development Goal of halving its number of hungry till 2043 though it had committed in 2001 to reach it by 2015.

The report also highlighted the Government's failure to improve basic living standards for most Indians despite its unprecedented economic growth since 2004.
 

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More than 35 million globally have dementia - report | World | Reuters

More than 35 million globally have dementia - report

Mon Sep 21, 2009 9:59am IST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 35 million people globally will suffer from Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia in 2010, and few will get any treatment at all, according to a report released on Monday.

The problem is worsening especially fast in low- and middle-income countries, where there are few facilities to diagnose or help dementia patients, Alzheimer's Disease International, an umbrella group for Alzheimer's associations globally, said.

"This report and all earlier studies indicate that the current number of people living with dementia is expected to grow at an alarming rate," the report reads.

"An estimated 35.6 million people worldwide will be living with dementia in 2010. This number is estimated to nearly double every 20 years, to 65.7 million in 2030, and 115.4 million in 2050," the report adds.

"Much of the increase is clearly attributable to increases in the numbers of people with dementia in low and middle income countries."

There are few treatments for Alzheimer's, the most common cause of dementia, and other forms such as vascular dementia, caused by clogged arteries in the brain.

Drugs can relieve some of the symptoms for a while, but patients lose their memories, ability to navigate and understand the world, and to care for themselves. There is no cure.

"Dementia care costs are rising fast in low and middle income countries," the report adds.

It cites a 2005 study from Sweden's Karolinska Institute that estimated dementia cost global economies $315 billion a year, $227 billion for rich countries and $88 billion for low- and middle-income countries.

It recommends that:

* National governments should declare dementia a health priority and develop national strategies to provide services.

* Low and medium income countries should create dementia strategies based first on enhancing primary healthcare and other community services.

* High income countries should develop national dementia action plans with designated resource allocations.

Countries should develop services that reflect the progressive nature of dementia.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
 

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The Press Association: Dementia sufferers 'set to double'

Dementia sufferers 'set to double'

(UKPA) – 4 hours ago

The number of people with dementia will almost double every 20 years across the world, researchers predicted.

British experts calculated figures for the number of people worldwide who will suffer dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, in the future.

The fact people are living longer than ever before is a major factor driving the increasing incidence of dementia.

The study estimates that the number of people with dementia and Alzheimer's will almost double every 20 years worldwide, to 65.7 million in 2030 and 115.4 million in 2050.

A total of 35.6 million people will have dementia in 2010, the report said.

At present, some 700,000 people in the UK have a form of dementia, with more than half of these suffering from Alzheimer's.

It has previously been predicted that in less than 20 years nearly a million people in the UK will be living with dementia, soaring to 1.7 million people by 2051.

The latest research - contained in the World Alzheimer's Report 2009 - is published by Alzheimer's Disease International (ADI).

It said that, over the next 20 years, the number of people with dementia is expected to increase by 40% in Europe (44% in Western Europe), 63% in North America, 77% in southern Latin American and 89% in developed Asia Pacific countries.

But the increase will be much sharper in other countries, including 117% in East Asia, 107% in South Asia, 134 to 146% in the rest of Latin America, and 125% in North Africa and the Middle East.
 

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World Alzheimer's Day - Kanpur - City - NEWS - The Times of India

World Alzheimer's Day
TNN 20 September 2009, 09:25pm IST

The world observes both Alzheimer's Day and Dementia Awareness Week together every year. September 21 is observed as World Alzheimer's Day and
the week in which it falls is observed as Dementia Awareness Week (September 20 to 26).

What is dementia?

Dementia is a brain disorder characterised by a decline in several higher mental functions (eg memory, intellect, personality) that causes significant impairment in daily functioning that are apparent to others who know the affected person well. Most types of dementia are progressive and irreversible.

Upto 50 diseases affecting the brain can cause dementia, but the commonest causes are Alzheimer's disease (a degenerative illness in which brain cells become disconnected and die), vascular disease (atherosclerosis of brain arteries leading to strokes), mixed Alzheimer's disease and vascular disease and dementia associated with excessive consumption of alcohol.

The chances of being afflicted with dementia rises with age, doubling every 5 years between the ages of 60 and 90. It involves negative change in the personality, behaviour, cognitive functions and activities of daily living. Personality and behavioural changes include uninhibited behaviour, stubbornness, rigidity, irritability etc. Cognitive changes include loss of memory, language, thinking, judgment etc.

Dementia -- an epidemic by 2040?

Dr S C Tiwari, HOD, Geriatric Mental Department, CSMMU, Lucknow referring to a report published in Alzheimer & Dementia Journal supplement in 2007 informed that it has been estimated that the number of dementia patients world over would be 30 million in 2008, 59 million in 2030 and 104 million in 2050. There will be an increase between 200-500% in different regions of the world (Asian regions 497%) in the number of dementia patients. According to census 2001, in India population of dementia patients was 2.69 million, in which 0.38 million were in UP. It is expected to grow to 10.7 million and 1.15 million respectively in India and UP by the year 2040. Dementia occurs in 3-5% of elderly and the prevalence goes on increasing with advancing age. It is 0.5% at the age of 55 years which goes on doubling every 5 years, like 1% at 60% year of age, 2% at 65 years of age and so on and so forth. Dementia is 1.5 times more common in females than male. Thus, at this rate of increase, dementia is going to be an epidemic around mid 21st century.

Precautions to be taken

Prevention involves avoiding/managing risk factors --

Maximum use of brain Avoiding addiction

Good diet management if suffering from diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, coronary artery disease etc

Dearth of trained hands to handle the disease: Nowadays care and treatment facilities for dementia patients have become an emergent problem of our society. At present the medical practitioners and clinicians, have no specialisation in this area but are treating these patients. This is not only a problematic issue but also an obstacle in the treatment of these patients.

The attendants of the patients need to follow a specific behavioural pattern to avoid the patient from getting pushed into the extremity of this disease. Therefore, the attendants of the patients should not put stress on the mind of the person suffering from this disease. Also, the normal routine followed by the patient in his/her daily life should also not be changed because during the period of this disease, the patient's remote memory remains intact but the recent memory gets lost, therefore, no change in the daily lifestyle of the patient can largely affect him/her.
 

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Alzheimer?s, Dementia Rise Faster Than Expected, Report Says - Bloomberg.com

Alzheimer’s, Dementia Rise Faster Than Expected, Report Says

By Elizabeth Lopatto



Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias will afflict 35.6 million people in 2010, about 10 percent more than previously estimated because of a higher number of cases in developing countries than doctors realized, researchers said.

The number of dementia sufferers may almost double every 20 years to 115.4 million in 2050, researchers at Alzheimer’s Disease International said in a report. The report’s authors had previously projected lower numbers in a 2005 article in the Lancet.

Companies such as Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly & Co., Baxter International Inc. and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. are developing treatments to target the disease. The report recommends that the World Health Organization declare dementia a health priority, and that countries including the U.S. develop a plan for dealing with the greater numbers of dementia patients.

“People, the government, the community need to understand that these numbers are an emergency,” said Daisy Acosta, the chairwoman of the London-based Alzheimer’s patients advocacy group.

Lower and middle-income countries have the fastest increase in prevalence in the next 20 years, the report said. The poorest countries in Latin America will see the biggest increases of 134 to 146 percent. The new numbers are due to better data available since there weren’t many studies of Latin America, Africa, Russia, the Middle East, and Indonesia, the report said.

Care Costs Rising

Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias cost $315 billion a year, according to an estimate from Sweden’s Karolinska Institute cited by the paper. Dementia care costs are rising fastest in low and middle income countries, where per capita income is $11,905 or less, the report found.

Patients and their families currently have few options. The drugs approved in the U.S. to treat Alzheimer’s ease symptoms for 6 to 12 months at most, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. If U.S. health officials and the WHO develop plans for dealing with the increase of dementia, other countries will follow suit, Acosta said.

It has been difficult to get attention from global health organizations, because they often focus on reducing deaths rather than on treating disability, said Alzheimer’s Association Chief Executive Officer Harry Johns.

“The very fact that people are older works against them,” Johns said. Many Alzheimer’s patients have spouses or children who provide their care, quitting their jobs to do so, he said. Between 15 percent and 32 percent of caregivers develop depression, as a result of the strains of providing for the needs of Alzheimer’s patients.

WHO Priority

“We already think dementia is a priority within WHO,” said Tarun Dua, a medical officer at the WHO’s department of mental health and substance abuse. WHO included Alzheimer’s disease as a priority condition when it launched the Mental Health Gap Action Program in October 2008 to bolster care for a range of ailments including mental health, neurology and substance abuse, she said.

“The burden of these disorders is very high and the resources are scarce, especially in low and middle income countries,” Dua said in a telephone interview.

About 5.2 million people in the U.S. have Alzheimer’s disease, according to the Chicago-based Alzheimer’s association. The first symptom of Alzheimer’s may be mild forgetfulness. As the condition progresses, it begins to interfere with patients’ lives as they forget how to brush their teeth, change their clothes, or recognize once-familiar people.

“We’ll be spending the equivalent of the stimulus package every two years if we don’t address this,” Johns said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Lopatto in New York at [email protected].
Last Updated: September 21, 2009 00:01 EDT
 

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Office restrictions can reduce sick leave by 20% - Bangalore - City - NEWS - The Times of India

Office restrictions can reduce sick leave by 20%
Jayashree Nandi, TNN 27 September 2009, 12:40am IST

BANGALORE: Better food and tobacco restrictions at offices can reduce sick leave by 20% and prevent heart diseases up to 60%. Leading health agencies such as World Health Organization (WHO), World Heart Federation and the World Economic Forum have called for healthier workplaces to reduce risk of heart disease and stroke.

Nearly 17.2 million people globally die every year from heart disease and stroke -- the world's leading cause of death. Workplace wellness programmes that encourage healthy diet, physical activity and restrictions on tobacco use are a cost-effective way to save lives and improve productivity.

"There is still widespread misconception that heart disease and stroke are `rich-country' problems. In fact, over 80% deaths from cardiovascular disease occur in low and middle-income countries. We need a global effort if we want to make a significant impact," says director of department of chronic diseases and health promotion at WHO, Dr Fiona Adshead.

The World Economic Forum has identified chronic diseases as a major threat in the next decade. "Some of the world's leading companies and members of the World Economic Forum have workplace wellness programmes. Such a programme also makes good business sense because productivity suffers due to chronic diseases. Fall in productivity has been estimated to be four times greater than the cost of disease prevention or treatment," points out executive chairman of World Economic Forum, Prof Klaus Schwab.

Take care of your heart. Consultant cardiologist of AIIMS and Wockhardt Hospitals, Dr Sunil Dwivedi, has tips on preventing heart diseases:

* Avoid tobacco completely, control drinking: Smoking is one of the major factors that can lead to heart disease. Smoke and chemicals from tobacco can damage the heart and cause a build-up of plaque along the artery walls, leading to narrowing of blood vessels. Carbon monoxide displaces oxygen in the blood, forcing the heart to work harder. Nicotine from tobacco can restrict blood vessels, putting extra pressure on the heart to maintain blood flow. All tobacco products have a detrimental effect on the heart, not to mention various other health risks that stem from it.

* Regular physical activity and health check-ups: Just 30 minutes of regular physical activity can go a long way in reducing heart-related ailments. Brisk walking for five days a week or any other equivalent exercise such as cycling, jogging or treadmill can be helpful. Studies have proven weight-bearing exercise to be extremely beneficial for overall cardiovascular conditioning.

* Detect signs of heart disease early: People with diabetes, blood pressure or those having a family history of heart disease are advised more frequent health check-ups, starting earlier in life. The regularity of check-ups is best decided by the physician.

* Avoid junk food: Junk food contains excess fat and salt, which can directly and indirectly affect the heart. Tran's fatty acids (unsaturated fat) commonly found in junk food can be harmful as it is known to increase risk of coronary heart disease.

* Regular and adequate sleep: Ensure that your body gets the rest that it needs. Eight hours of sleep a day is recommended for a healthy heart. Those working in night shifts need to ensure that they form a pattern of sleep during the day to allow the body clock to adjust.

* Control obesity: It has long been suspected that obesity and heart disease are correlated. Popular perception suggests that heart disease and heart failure is generally the direct result of diabetes, high blood pressure and coronary artery disease __ all associated with obesity. But recent studies have shown there is a far more direct relationship between the two. Obesity itself and not just some associated disease has been established as a definite cause of heart failure. Even excess weight in people who are not considered obese can lead to heart failure.

The road to a healthy heart ultimately depends on the individual, and sometimes tough decisions need to be taken. A change in dietary and sleep habits, exercise routines, regular health check-ups and lifestyle changes can only be achieved through one's firm resolve. With India poised to have 60% of all heart-related ailments by 2010, it's time for people to act.
 

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Have a heart: 20-40 age group is at high risk - Jaipur - City - NEWS - The Times of India

Have a heart: 20-40 age group is at high risk
Malathy Iyer, TNN 27 September 2009, 06:48am IST

When it comes to heart diseases, the thirties, it seems, are the new fifties. If the typical heart patient until five years back was in his mid-fifties, doctors say this no longer holds true. Now, the man with blockages in his heart is most probably in the 30-39 age group and with another health complication such as diabetes or hypertension.

The Saffolalife Study 2009, covering 8,469 people, found that 49.1% Indians were at high risk for developing heart diseases. On the eve of World Heart Day, the multi-city survey found that this bunch’s vital heart statistic — the ratio of total cholesterol and good cholesterol (called HDL) — is too high at 4.5 to be termed healthy. The American Heart Association holds the ideal ratio between total cholesterol and HDL is 3.3. The survey also found most men in the 30-39 age group fell in the high risk category.

Men from Mumbai and Chennai were worst off (with a high risk ratio of 49.6% and 53.8% respectively) as compared to men in Kolkata and Delhi (32% and 29.7% respectively). The survey attributed the difference in the risk rates for Mumbai’s men to longer commuting time, long working hours, unhealthy eating habits, lack of physical activity and erratic eating schedules. Others had better lifestyle habits.

According to Dr Shashank Joshi, endocrinologist with Lilavati Hospital in Bandra, who was associated with the survey, “The survey only underlines what we are seeing now — abnormal cholesteral and trigylcerides in the younger age group. In fact, the 20-40 age group is the new vulnerable group as far as heart disease goes.’’ He blames the high levels of stress and disrupted sleep patterns for the development.

Dr N O Bansal, who heads the cardiology department of J J Hospital in Byculla, says, “There is no more denying the fact that as compared to a Caucasian youngster, the Indian youngster is more prone to heart diseases.’’ It is a combination of genetic and lifestyle factors, he says. Stating that the “younger phase’’ of heart diseases was apparent about five years back, he says his department — a referral centre for the entire state — gets men under 30 as well.

Cardiologist Dr Manjeet Juneja, who consults at Wockhardt Hospital, Mulund, says heart diseases are happening 15 years too early for most people because of “preventable causes’’. He recalls a 23-year-old brought to the hospital from Nashik. “The boy was tense about admission to an MBA course and smoked a cigarette 30 minutes before collapsing,’’ says Dr Juneja. He was managed with medicines alone.
 

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Finally, a vaccine to combat HIV?- Pharmaceuticals-Healthcare / Biotech-News By Industry-News-The Economic Times

Finally, a vaccine to combat HIV?
25 Sep 2009, 0054 hrs IST, ET Bureau

MUMBAI: An experimental combination of two vaccines from Paris-based Sanofi Pasteur and US-based VaxGen has made significant progress in finding a way to combat the illness, researchers said.

Results of a six-year long phase III clinical trial in Thailand has proved that the combination of Sanofi-Pasteur’s ALVAC canary pox vaccine and the failed HIV vaccine AIDSVAX of VaxGen can lower the rate of HIV infection by 31.2%. But its application may be limited and a commercial vaccine may require more time,
researchers said.

The HIV vaccine trial was executed by the Thai Ministry of Public Health
and included a team of leading Thai and US researchers. The trial was sponsored by the US army and conducted by the Thai Ministry of Public Health. The trial involved 16,000 volunteers.

In a press statement, which was jointly issued by the vaccine makers, Michel DeWilde, senior vice president (research) of Sanofi Pasteur said: “This is the first concrete evidence that a vaccine against HIV is eventually feasible. There is still a lot to be done. These results are significant, but do not provide a definitive answer. On the other hand, they do provide a number of possibilities for exploration and the scientific base for new studies.”

The WHO, UNAID and both the vaccine firms feel that results of the combination provide a lot of possibilities for research as well as a new scientific base for studies. “The HIV virus is similar to the cold virus in that the base is unstable and keeps changing. If scientists have managed to isolate a portion of this base which is stable and can work on that it can be very significant for future studies,” said a scientist working with an Indian firm, who did not want to be named.

WHO and UNAID said that while no vaccine safety issues were observed in the trial, licenser at this point in time may not be possible solely on the basis of this study’s results.

“It remains to be seen if the two specific vaccine components in this particular regimen would be applicable to other parts of the world with diverse host genetic backgrounds and different HIV subtypes driving different regional sub-epidemics. Once an HIV vaccine does become available, it will need to be universally accessible by all persons at risk,” the statement said.
 

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The Associated Press: Notable dates in the AIDS epidemic

Notable dates in the AIDS epidemic

By The Associated Press (AP) – 2 days ago

Key dates in the AIDS epidemic:

_June 5, 1981: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports five *** men in Los Angeles are suffering from a rare pneumonia found in patients with failing immune systems.

_May 1983: The virus that causes AIDS is identified.

_May 26, 1988: The U.S. government mails "Understanding AIDS," an educational pamphlet to 110 million American homes.

_Aug. 18, 1989: The number of AIDS cases reported in the United States reaches 100,000.

_June 1991: By the 10-year anniversary of AIDS, more than 250,000 Americans have been diagnosed with it and up to 1.5 million more people are infected with HIV.

_Dec. 7, 1995: The FDA approves a new class of drugs for treating HIV, protease inhibitors, a move the government calls some of the most hopeful news in years for AIDS patients. The drugs help transform the disease to a manageable chronic illness.

_Feb. 27, 1997: The government reports a 13 percent drop in AIDS deaths in the first half of 1996, the first significant drop in the epidemic's history.

_Jan. 31, 1999: Researchers report they have convincing proof that the AIDS virus has spread three separate times from chimpanzees to people in Africa — one of the transmissions starting the worldwide epidemic.

_June 2001: At the 20th anniversary of AIDS, the number of Americans diagnosed with the disease tops 700,000. More than 420,000 have died. Worldwide, more than 36 million people are infected with the AIDS virus, with more than 16,000 new infections each day.

_Aug. 23, 2001: The growing scale of the AIDS epidemic in China is acknowledged for the first time by its government.

_Oct. 16, 2001: South African health officials issue a report on the devastating impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in that country.

_Nov. 7, 2002: The FDA approves an easy-to-use 20-minute HIV test.

_Jan. 28, 2003: President Bush in his State of the Union address proposes $15 billion in funding in the next five years for emergency AIDS relief in Africa and the Caribbean.

_February 2003: Two big studies find that AIDSVAX, an experimental vaccine made by VaxGen, did not protect against infection with HIV.

_Feb. 17, 2004: A U.N. report warns of the growing AIDS crisis in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.

_March 24, 2004: The FDA approves an oral HIV test that gives results in 20 minutes.

_September 2007: An international test of Merck & Co.'s experimental vaccine is stopped early, because the shots seemed to offer no protection. Further study of the results found potential increased risk of HIV infection among certain men who received the vaccine, although the vaccine itself did not cause infection. A second study also was halted.

_July 2008: UNAIDS estimates the number of deaths worldwide from AIDS in 2007 at 2 million; the number of people living with the AIDS virus is estimated at 33 million. Nearly 7,500 people worldwide become infected each day, UNAIDS estimates.

_Sept. 24, 2009: Researchers say an experimental vaccine — a combination of two previously unsuccessful ones — cut the risk of becoming infected with HIV by 31 percent in a trial of more than 16,000 volunteers in Thailand. But officials caution it likely will be many years before a vaccine might be available.
 

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/303040_Prevalence-of-heart-disease-among-Indians-high--experts

Prevalence of heart disease among Indians high: experts

STAFF WRITER 17:2 HRS IST

Patiala, Sept 27 (PTI) With nearly 100-million affected people, India is on the verge of becoming the "heart disease capital of the world", experts warned today.

The disease is having an increasing prevalence among the youth, especially from Punjab, where the mortality rate due to heart ailments is highest in the country, they said.

"The country is set to be the heart disease capital of the world in a few years," noted Cardiologist Manmohan Singh said while speaking at a function held on the occasion of the 'World Heart Day'.

Punjabi diet is very rich compared to that of south Indians. It is for this reason that more youths from the state are affected by heart ailments, Singh said.

"We have seen people from Punjab who had migrated to the west had higher prevalence of heart diseases 10-15 years back.
 

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/309608_Delhi-govt-launches-scheme-for-senior-citizens

Delhi govt launches scheme for senior citizens

STAFF WRITER 19:3 HRS IST

New Delhi, Oct 1 (PTI) Delhi Government today launched a scheme under which hearing-aids and spectacles will be made available to senior citizens at 21 Delhi Government hospitals.

Launching the scheme, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit distributed glasses and hearing-aids to over 40 senior citizens at a function here organised on the occasion of international day for older person.

Health department officials said the spectacles and hearing-aids have been prepared keeping in view the requirement and level of deficiency in sight and hearing of older people.

Dikshit said her government has been taking all possible steps to make lives of senior citizens more comfortable in the city.

Health Minister Kiran Walia said the facilities at Sunday Clinics for senior citizens, earlier available in 10 Government hospitals, have now been extended to all Delhi Government hospitals.
 

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AFP: Today's babies could live to 22nd century: study

Today's babies could live to 22nd century: study

(AFP) – 3 hours ago

PARIS — More than half of the babies born today in rich countries will live to 100 years if current trends of life expectancy continue, a study appearing in the medical journal The Lancet said on Friday.

In the 20th century, most developed countries saw an increase of around 30 years in life expectancy, according to the paper led by Kaare Christensen, a professor at the Danish Ageing Research Centre at the University of Southern Denmark.

In 1950, only 15-16 percent of 80-year-old women, and just 12 percent of octogenarian men, made it to the age of 90 in advanced economies.

In 2002, this had risen to 37 percent and 25 percent respectively. In Japan, the survival rate from 80 to 90 is now more than 50 percent for women.

"If the pace of increase in life expectancy in developed countries over the past two centuries continues through the 21st century, most babies born since 2000 in France, Germany, Italy, the UK, the USA, Canada, Japan and other countries with long life expectancies will celebrate their 100th birthdays," the review said.

Evidence also suggests that, today, the extra years are less encumbered by disabilities and dependence than in the past.

The paper warned, though, that longer lifespans pose major social, economic and medical challenges as the very elderly become a greater proportion of the community.

One solution could be to spread employment more evenly across populations and ages of life, the authors said.

Instead of working for a long, intense spell and then retiring, "individuals could combine work, education, leisure and child-rearing in varying amounts at different ages."

"The 20th century was a century of redistribution of income. The 21st century could be a century of redistribution of work," they argued.
 

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Delhi govt launches scheme for senior citizens

STAFF WRITER 19:3 HRS IST

New Delhi, Oct 1 (PTI) Delhi Government today launched a scheme under which hearing-aids and spectacles will be made available to senior citizens at 21 Delhi Government hospitals.

Launching the scheme, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit distributed glasses and hearing-aids to over 40 senior citizens at a function here organised on the occasion of international day for older person.

Health department officials said the spectacles and hearing-aids have been prepared keeping in view the requirement and level of deficiency in sight and hearing of older people.

Dikshit said her government has been taking all possible steps to make lives of senior citizens more comfortable in the city.

Health Minister Kiran Walia said the facilities at Sunday Clinics for senior citizens, earlier available in 10 Government hospitals, have now been extended to all Delhi Government hospitals.
Not only heart diseases India already has largest number of diabetic patients .These are kind of diseases We can reduce them only by public awarness . and life style modification is major factor in these.
 

Pintu

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Agreed zolpidam, there is a step taken by GoI in this regard:

http://www.ptinews.com/news/313750_Govt-to-use-stem-cell-therapy-to-treat-diabetics

Govt to use stem cell therapy to treat diabetics

STAFF WRITER 19:18 HRS IST

New Delhi, Oct 4 (PTI) The government is contemplating the use of stem cells for treatment of diabetes especially for rural citizens of the country.

"Stem cells can now be grown and transferred into specialised medical therapies and this can be an answer to diabetes treatment," Union health and family welfare minister Ghulam Nabi Azad today said.

Azad, while speaking at a diabetes conference in the national capital said, it is important to take care of the rural population and help them to keep a check on the growing menace of the lifestyle disease.

"We are formulating a scheme to facilitate mandatory check up of the rural population above the age of 40 years for diabetes... if diabetes cases could be easily detected and awareness created among them about its implications, then a substantial dent can be made to this disease," he said.
Regards
 

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Unfettered by regulation, India pulls ahead on stem cell treatments

A controversial New Delhi clinic deploys advanced therapies that are unavailable in the U.S. to cure Americans suffering from MS, diabetes, paralysis, Alzheimer's, Lyme disease and cerebral palsy.

By Mridu Khullar
Published: October 9, 2009 15:35 ET
-A+A
NEW DELHI, India — In December 2007, Californian Amy Scher got on a plane to India, wheeled herself into the Nu Tech Mediworld hospital in New Delhi, and started the first phase of an experimental embryonic stem-cell treatment.

Her American doctor had warned her against this untested procedure. But 27-year-old Scher was making no progress with conventional medicine, and she was fed up with the constant visits to hospital emergency rooms.

Scher suffered from chronic Lyme disease, which had gone undiagnosed initially, causing serious damage her nervous system. After researching her options for months, talking to several people who had benefitted from these treatments in India, and reading up about therapies available stateside, Scher decided the American medical system couldn't help her. She chose to travel to India.

For eight weeks, she was injected with stem cells and underwent extensive physical therapy. The treatments cost an average of $20,000 to $30,000 for a first round of injections. They were not covered by insurance.

Today, Scher's U.S. physician, Dr. Steven Harris considers her "asymptomatic." He is uncertain whether the disease has been eradicated, or if it’s just dormant, but he says the treatments appear to have helped.

From India, Scher brought back a SPECT scan, which measures blood flow in the brain. Before India, Harris says, the blood flow in her brain was impaired. "At the end of her stay, a repeat scan showed normalization of her blood flow — in effect, an improvement in brain function." Scher no longer takes nerve stabilizers or cardiac medication. The chronic pain, a constant companion since 2001, is gone.

Unknown risks

But some scientists and stem cell researchers in the West believe that patients like Scher are putting themselves at a huge risk by coming to India to get these experimental treatments. The problem, they say, is the lack of legislation governing the use of stem cells in the developing world.

The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) allows the use of embryonic stem cells if the condition or disorder is considered incurable. But Dr. Satish Totey, Chief Scientific Officer at Stempeutics, a private stem cell company, and the Secretary of the Stem Cell Research Forum of India (SCRFI) believes there needs to be tighter regulation.

"There is nothing in those ICMR guidelines that can actually be called a guideline," he says.

Unlike in the West, there has never been a controversy about the manipulation or destruction of human embryos in India, giving the country’s doctors a head start in the field.

The growth of private hospitals providing stem cell therapies, however, is breeding a rift of a different kind. Given that most of these treatments have not been proven safe or effective, medical professionals dispute whether these clinics should be allowed to exist at all.

A controversial doc

At the heart of the controversy is Dr. Geeta Shroff, the doctor who treated Scher.

Being both fiercely independent and intelligent has earned Dr. Shroff the criticism and scorn of many. A pioneer in many ways, she developed a technology through which, by the use of a single donated embryo, she has been able to treat 600 patients for conditions such as Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, renal failure, cerebral palsy, and diabetes. What's also unique about Dr. Shroff's technique is that's she's been able to grow embryonic stem cells without the use of any animal products.

Dr. Shroff converts the stem cells into a clear substance that can be injected into her patients. The treatments include four to eight weeks of injections with intense physical therapy. In a progressive disorder, such as multiple sclerosis, the aim is to first stabilize the patient, in order to stop further deterioration, and then eventually, to start rebuilding through the use of stem cells.

The greater the damage to the body, the longer it takes for the stem cells to start regeneration. In a static injury, such as a stroke or a spinal cord injury, the stem cells have to bypass the thick scar tissue and form connections around it. Patients who come seeking a "miracle cure," are often disappointed, she says. The stem cells need time to regenerate the body, and often take months or years depending on the injury.

Dr. Shroff started out as an infertility specialist. That, and her practice as a gynecologist, helped fund her early work, which was carried out in her garage. It also gave her insight into embryonic stem cells.

In the nine years that she's been treating patients using this technology, she says that not one has reported any side effects. For GlobalPost Passport, several of her patients were happy to lay out their medical reports, wiggle their toes where they once had no feeling, and share details of their stay in the hospital — including complaints about the food. The scientific community, however, remains unconvinced.

In what is probably her most controversial move, instead of publishing her findings, Dr. Shroff decided to patent her technology. (Her patent application is available online.)

Totey says Shroff is taking advantage of her patients’ desperation. "Under the pretext of patents, she says that nothing can be shown," he says. "Why does she not publish a paper?" He believes that by not doing so, she is putting her patients at a risk of getting a teratoma — a type of tumor “that may contain several different types of tissue and sometimes mature elements such as hair, muscle, and bone,” as defined by medterms.net. (Teratomas are a common challenge for embryonic stem cell researchers.)

Initially, Dr. Shroff explains that she did think about publishing her results. "You do try and get out there and at the end of the day, I am a doctor," she says. She tried to present at some conferences, but was rejected and told that there were already too many people presenting on embryonic stem cells. That's when she decided to patent her work instead. "With the patent, I could protect the technology. I could make sure that somebody who doesn't understand the business can't stop it." Once the patent is granted, Dr. Shroff will be able to move forward with the next step.

The dream, she says, is to make stem cell injections available in pharmacies across the world, so that the process of stabilization and treatment can be started right at the onset of disease. She likens it to the discovery of penicillin. "That was the beginning of the antibiotic era, and it changed the entire face of infection around the world. This is similar to that."

Favorable outcomes

Of her 600 patients, 30 percent are either doctors or have physicians in the family, she says. Despite her critics' claims, Dr. Shroff says she has always put the well being of her patients first. An ethics committee at her hospital evaluates every case that comes in. The first two years, she says, were spent exclusively in the lab, testing repeatedly to make sure the treatments were safe.

In time, she's sure the controversy will die out, as laws will come into effect. "It's important to have certain guidelines or laws, but they shouldn't curb research," she says. "The law has to be such that the work does not stop."

But Dr. Totey rejects proceeding with treatments before the science has been published and vetted. He points out that no one knows what she is putting into those injections. "If it is intravenous, I can use river water and inject that," he says. Until she shows the scientific community what she is putting in there, he says he'll remain unconvinced.

Some doctors argue that the U.S. puts up too many barriers, and that India's regulations are appropriate in allowing stem cell treatments for incurable and terminally ill patients. One such physician is Dr. Laurance Johnston, who in 2007 was the first American scientist to visit the Nu Tech Mediworld clinic.

Dr. Johnston’s credentials make him well-placed to judge: he is the director of the Spinal Cord Research and Education Foundations, Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA); and he was formerly director at the Division of Scientific Review at the U.S. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, a division of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). He told GlobalPost Passport that he's convinced she's sincere and conscientious in her endeavors.

"As you probably expect, there are a lot of politics, agendas, and economic interests when it comes to various emerging stem-cell programs," he says. "In general scientists think they are being good scientists if they point out what is wrong with a program rather than its potential."

Dr. Harris, Scher's physician, is also impressed. After advising his patient not to go, and being pleasantly surprised on her return, he decided to travel to India himself to see Dr. Shroff's work. "She has been able to accomplished two feats quite advanced in the field of stem cells," he says. "The ability to freeze and thaw her cells to allow storage and transport and the creation of an immortal cell line without animal feeder cells." Harris was most impressed with Shroff’s success treating patients with spinal cord injuries, and children with cerebral palsy.

According to a report by the SCRFI, India’s stem cell industry — including mainly research, but also stem cell therapies deployed by Shroff, and other stem cell therapies — is expected to grow at a rate of 15 percent, to $540 million by 2010.

"I think India is at the forefront of emerging stem-cell treatments in many ways," says Dr. Johnston. "Convinced of their superiority, American scientists hate the notion that the hottest breakthroughs may be happening in other parts of the world and vociferously denigrate them."

Dr. Totey agrees that it would be a mistake to base India's stem cell guidelines on those of the U.S. "The way we work is different," he says. "We should look at our own system and make our own guidelines. There is no point in looking at the U.S. and thinking that they're the best."

Scher, who spent years going in and out of U.S. hospitals, shares this sentiment. "I had really tried," she says. "I had tried all the traditional things, but I had also tried alternative therapies. And then, when you don't have any of that left, you have to be open-minded. It's ignorance to not look anywhere else. You can't think that the U.S. has the only good treatments in the world.

 

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By 2010, India will have maximum no. of diabetics

NEW DELHI: Only 7 out of every 100 adult Indians are diabetic.


This may appear to be a blessing, given that we do almost everything possible -- from sedentary lifestyle, faulty diet to high stress -- to attract such an affliction.

The global projections by International Diabetes Federation (IDF) also show that India has a much lesser prevalence of the disease than most other countries including US.

But that is just about the only satisfying bit of statistics unveiled in IDF's latest Diabetes Atlas.

IDF, which tracks the global spread of this scourge, says that by next year, the country will be home to 50.8 million diabetics, making it the world's unchallenged diabetes capital. And the number is expected to go up to a whopping 87 million -- 8.4% of the country's adult population -- by 2030.

China stands second in this infamous table with 43.2 million diabetes cases at present, which is expected to increase to 62.6 million by 2030.

The disease will prove costly for India, both in terms of lives lost and money wasted. In India, it will kill around 10.07 lakh people in the age group of 20-79 years every year -- the majority being women (5.81 lakh) from 2010.

Diabetes will cost the world economy dear -- $376 billion in 2010, or 11.6% of total world healthcare expenditure. Though India will spend only 1% of the total diabetes spending worldwide, the amount itself is staggering -- $2.8 billion. US, on the other hand, will account for $198 billion or 52.7% of the total diabetes spending worldwide. By 2030, diabetes is expected to cost the world economy $490 billion.

According to the latest figures released on Tuesday night at Montreal, Pakistan, which now stands 7th in the "top 10 worst affected countries with diabetes" list with 7.1 million diabetics, will jump three places by 2030 to become the 4th worst affected with 13.8 million diabetics.

Another of India's neighbours, Bangladesh, which at present does not figure in this list, will make an entry in another two decades, to claim the 7th worst affected country slot with 10.4 million diabetics.

Globally, the number of diabetes patients has risen sharply. While in 1985, 30 million people had diabetes, the number rose to 150 million in 2000. In 2010, 285 million people (6.6% of the global population in the age group 20-79) were found to be diabetic. However, by 2030, an estimated 435 million people are expected to suffer from this disease -- 7.8% of the adult population.

Dr Anoop Misra, director of the department of diabetes at Fortis Healthcare, told TOI from Montreal, "It is certain that India is on the ascending curve of the diabetes epidemic. The effort to prevent it in India must, therefore, start early with proper nutrition in pregnancy, prevention of low birth weight and proper physical activity from 10 years of age."

IDF president Prof Jean Claude Mbanya said, "The data from the atlas shows that the epidemic is out of control. No country is immune and no country is fully equipped to repel this common enemy."

Region-wise, Western Pacific records the highest number of diabetics at present (77 million), followed by South-East Asia (59 million).

Age-wise, the IDF report says, the worst affected are the 40-59-year-olds. By 2010, 132 million people in this age group are expected to suffer from diabetes. However, by 2030, this number will increase to 188 million.

The report points out another interesting trend -- women are the worst affected by this disease. In 2010, one million more women than men have diabetes (143 million women as against 142 million men). The difference is expected to increase to six million by 2030 (222 million women against 216 million men).

The urban population, as expected, has a higher incidence of the disease. By 2010, the number of people with diabetes in urban areas will be 113 million compared to 78 million in rural areas. By 2030, it is expected that this discrepancy will increase to 228 million people with diabetes in urban areas and 99 million in rural communities.

Globally, by 2010, four million deaths in the 20-79 age group will be due to diabetes -- 6.8% of global all-cause mortality in this age group. Majority of these deaths will be in India, China, US and Russia.

By 2010, India will have maximum no. of diabetics - India - The Times of India
 

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The Canadian Press: International Diabetes Foundation releases guidelines for health providers

International Diabetes Foundation releases guidelines for health providers

By Sheryl Ubelacker Health Reporter (CP) – 20 hours ago

TORONTO — The International Diabetes Federation has released three sets of guidelines for health providers aimed at improving patient care and stemming the growing worldwide incidence of the disease.

The clinical guidelines - dealing with pregnancy, diabetics' oral health and patient monitoring of blood sugar levels - were announced Thursday at the World Diabetes Congress in Montreal.

"The new data that was released at this meeting through the IDF atlas indicates that things are worse than we thought they were," said Dr. Stephen Colagiuri, chair of the IDF task force on clinical guidelines, noting that an estimated 285 million people around the world have diabetes, a figure that's predicted to soar to 435 million within 20 years.

"And unfortunately diabetes is responsible for four million deaths a year and this is at a cost globally of $376 billion," Colagiuri, a professor of metabolic health at the University of Sydney in Australia, told a teleconference from Montreal.

Health-care professionals must be equipped with the latest improvements and standards in diabetes care to tackle the spiralling epidemic, he said. Type 2 diabetes, also sometimes known as adult-onset diabetes, represents up to 95 per cent of all cases of the disease.

The IDF issued its first guidelines on pregnancy, which are intended to set a global standard for the care of gestational diabetes and for women who already have the condition and become pregnant, said Dr. Lois Jovanovic, who penned the recommendations.

"The reason the guidelines were necessary is because the prevalence of diabetes in pregnancy or hyperglycemia complicating pregnancy is now over 10 per cent worldwide, which extrapolates to the major medical complication today in pregnancy," said Jovanovic, CEO and chief scientific officer of Sansum Diabetes Research Institute in Santa Barbara, Calif.

"A lack of identification of diabetes or hyperglycemia (high blood sugar) during pregnancy produces myriads of complications to both the mother and the infant," she said. "The most dreaded complications include fetal malformations, fetal death and abnormal growth and development - both interuterine growth retardation and overgrowth."

"Both the conditions are associated with adult metabolic syndrome or frank diabetes."

The IDF also released new guidelines on proper oral hygiene and for encouraging diabetics with non-insulin-treated Type 2 diabetes to perform regular self-monitoring of blood glucose.

Diabetics need to be taught to properly care for their teeth and gums because poor oral hygiene is associated with gingivitis, which can progress to more severe infection and inflammation causing periodontal disease. Inflammation can decrease insulin sensitivity and potentially worsen blood-sugar control.

"This is definitely a neglected area in the routine care for people who have diabetes," said Dr. Massimo Massi-Benedetti, IDF vice-president and chair of the group's committee on oral health guidelines.

Although a link has yet to be proven through research, there are suggestions that diabetes "might facilitate the onset and the progression of periodontitis," he said.

"People with diabetes need to be strongly advised to strictly follow the already existing guidelines for oral health for the general population."
 

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India heading for diabetes explosion, warns global meet- ET Cetera-News By Industry-News-The Economic Times

India heading for diabetes explosion, warns global meet
20 Oct 2009, 0932 hrs IST, IANS

MONTREAL: India leads the world in the looming epidemic of diabetes, the 20th annual World Diabetes Congress of the International Diabetic Federation (IDF) was told here on Monday.

In its annual report, the IDF said India currently has the highest number of 50.8 million people suffering from diabetes, followed by China with 43.2 million and the US with 26.8 million. The report projected 58.7 million diabetes cases in India by 2010 - almost 7 per cent of its adult population.

By 2030, over 8.4 per cent of the Indian adult population will suffer from diabetes, thanks to the increasing life expectancy and urbanisation, the report said.

Warning Indian policy makers, the report said, "Evidence suggests that in more affluent parts of the country, the rural prevalence is higher than in less affluent rural areas, indicating that increasing economic growth will raise diabetes prevalence in India even more than these possibly conservative estimates have indicated.''

The rampaging diabetes will impose a huge economic burden on India and other countries, it added. Apart from losing billions in lost productivity, the report said, India will also be spending $2.8 billion annually on diabetes control measures by 2010.

There are estimated to be 285 million diabetes cases worldwide, accounting for seven per cent of the world's population.

Diabetes, along with cardiovascular disease, cancer and chronic respiratory diseases, accounts for 60 per cent ff all deaths worldwide.

"Diabetes imposes a large economic burden on the individual, national healthcare system and economy. Healthcare expenditures on diabetes are expected to account for 11.6 per cent of the total healthcare expenditure in the world in 2010,'' the report said.

"Estimated global healthcare expenditures to treat and prevent diabetes and its complications are expected to total at least $376 billion in 2010.''

Addressing the congress, Martin Silink, outgoing president of the International Diabetic Federation, said the epidemic of diabetes will increase from 7 million new cases a year in 2007 to 10 million new cases this year.

The epidemic is getting out of control, said incoming IDF president Jean-Claude Mbanya. He said if the trend continues unchecked, there will be 435 million people with diabetes worldwide by 2030.

More than 12,000 delegates and 400 speakers from around the world are attending the congress.
 

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