PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for April 30, 2013

2013-04-30
(Press-News.org) Task Force Says Screen All Adults, Adolescents, and Pregnant Women for HIV

New recommendations from the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) urge physicians to screen all adults and adolescents aged 15 - 65 for HIV. In addition, all pregnant women should receive screening, even those who are in labor but have not yet been screened. Rapid screening tests and conventional tests are considered equally accurate for screening. In 2005, the Task Force recommended that doctors offer HIV screening to all adults and adolescents at increased risk for infection (men or women having a blood transfusion from 1978 to 1985; men or women having unprotected sex with multiple partners; men who have had sex with men after 1975; men and women who have exchanged sex for money or drugs, or who have sex partners who have done so; men or women whose past or present sex partners were HIV-infected, bisexual, or intravenous drug users; and men or women with other sexually transmitted diseases). For patients with no risk factors, the Task Force recommended that doctors discuss the benefits and harms of testing. For pregnant women, the Task Force recommended HIV screening at their initial prenatal visit unless they specifically decline testing. Since then, the Task Force reviewed the literature for new studies, specifically those focusing on key research gaps identified in the earlier evidence review. A significant difference since 2005 is that researchers reviewed the data to assess the benefits and harms associated with universal screening. The research showed that screening for HIV infection improves clinical outcomes versus no screening, and is associated with very little risk for harm. In contrast, targeted screening misses a substantial number of HIV cases due to undisclosed or unknown risk factors. HIV screening in pregnant women dramatically reduces rates of mother-to-child transmission. The full recommendation will be posted to http://www.annals.org.

### Note: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Steve Majewski, Megan Hanks, or Angela Collom. To speak with the author please contact Ana Fullmer at ana.fullmer@edelman.com or 202-350-6668.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Adults lack stem cells for making new eggs

2013-04-30
Baltimore, MD.—Mammalian females ovulate periodically over their reproductive lifetimes, placing significant demands on their ovaries for egg production. Whether mammals generate new eggs in adulthood using stem cells has been a source of scientific controversy. If true, these "germ-line stem cells" might allow novel treatments for infertility and other diseases. However, new research from Carnegie's Lei Lei and Allan Spradling demonstrates that adult mice do not use stem cells to produce new eggs. Their work is published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ...

Cancer studies often lack necessary rigor to answer key questions

2013-04-30
DURHAM, N.C. – Fueled in part by an inclination to speed new treatments to patients, research studies for cancer therapies tend to be smaller and less robust than for other diseases. This raises some questions about how cancer therapies will work in practice, according to researchers at Duke Medicine, who published an analysis of nearly 9,000 oncology clinical research studies online April 29, 2013, in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. The studies they looked at were registered on the ClinicalTrials.gov website from 2007-10. The analysis is part of the Clinical Trials ...

More evidence suggests eating omega 3s and avoiding meat, dairy linked to preserving memory

2013-04-30
MINNEAPOLIS – The largest study to date finds that eating foods that contain omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish, chicken and salad dressing and avoiding saturated fats, meat and dairy foods may be linked to preserving memory and thinking abilities. However, the same association was not found in people with diabetes. The research is published in the April 30, 2013, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. "Since there are no definitive treatments for most dementing illnesses, modifiable activities, such as diet, that may delay ...

Relationship of medical interventions in childhood and prevalence of later intellectual disability

2013-04-30
A study by Jeffrey P. Brosco, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Miami, Florida, and colleagues examines the relationship between medical interventions in early childhood and the increasing prevalence of later intellectual disability (ID). (Online First) Researchers reviewed medical literature and other data from 1950 through 2000 to construct estimates of the condition-specific prevalence of ID over time in the United States and Western Europe in populations of children who received a life-saving intervention within the first 5 years of life and were evaluated for ID ...

Study suggests US children born outside the United States have lower risk of allergic disease

2013-04-30
A study by Jonathan I. Silverberg, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., of St. Luke's—Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, and colleagues suggests children living the in the United States but born outside the U.S. have a lower prevalence of allergic disease that increases after residing in the United States for one decade. (Online First) The cross-sectional questionnaire used for the study was distributed to 91,642 children aged 0 to 17 years enrolled in the 2007-2008 National Survey of Children's Health. The main outcomes measured were prevalence of allergic disease, including asthma, ...

SSRIs in perioperative period associated with higher risk for adverse events

2013-04-30
A study by Andrew D. Auerbach, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of California, San Francisco, suggests that receiving selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the perioperative period was associated with a higher risk for adverse events. (Online First) The study included 530,416 patients aged 18 or older who underwent major surgery from January 2006 through December 2008 at 375 U.S. hospitals. The main outcomes researchers studied were in-hospital mortality, length of stay, readmission at 30 days, bleeding events, transfusions and incidence of ventricular arrhythmias. According ...

New subtype of ataxia identified

2013-04-30
Researchers from the Germans Trias i Pujol Health Sciences Research Institute Foundation (IGTP), the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), and the Sant Joan de Déu de Martorell Hospital, has identified a new subtype of ataxia, a rare disease without treatment that causes atrophy in the cerebellum and affects around 1.5 million people in the world. The results have been published online on April 29 in the journal JAMA Neurology. The cause of ataxia is a diverse genetic alteration. For this reason it is classified in subtypes. The new subtype identified described ...

Obesity in early 20s curbs chances of reaching middle age

2013-04-30
Young men who are obese in their early 20s are significantly more likely to develop serious ill health by the time they reach middle age, or not even make it that far, suggests research published in the online journal BMJ Open. It's well known that obesity in adulthood poses a risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but it's not been clear whether obesity in early adulthood strengthens that risk. The authors tracked the health of 6500 Danish 22 year old men for 33 years up to the age of 55. All of them had been born in 1955, and had registered with the Military ...

Be alert to blind cord strangulation risk, parents of young children warned

2013-04-30
Window blind cords pose a particular risk of accidental strangulation for young children, doctors have warned in Archives of Disease of Childhood. Children between the ages of 16 and 36 months seem particularly vulnerable, they say. The warning comes after they treated a 22 month old boy who was brought into the emergency department. He had been found hanging on the pull chain of a window blind cord. His mother found him blue and not breathing after leaving him with his sister in a bedroom for a few minutes. He had clear strangulation marks on his neck and extensive ...

Carnegie Mellon neuroscientists use statistical model to draft fantasy teams of neurons

2013-04-30
PITTSBURGH—This past weekend teams from the National Football League used statistics like height, weight and speed to draft the best college players, and in a few weeks, armchair enthusiasts will use similar measures to select players for their own fantasy football teams. Neuroscientists at Carnegie Mellon University are taking a similar approach to compile "dream teams" of neurons using a statistics-based method that can evaluate the fitness of individual neurons. After assembling the teams, a computer simulation pitted the groups of neurons against one another in a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New tectonic geodynamics textbook bridges scientific disciplines

Tiny and powerful – metamaterial lenses for your phones and drones

Study used AI models to improve prediction of chronic kidney disease progression to end stage renal disease

Peanut shell biochar composite shows promise for removing antibiotic-resistant bacteria from aquaculture wastewater

Compact genetic light switches transform disease control

Sunglasses for plants, and sustainable agriculture

Nearly half of those with diabetes unaware they have the disease

Emergency department visits by uninsured children in Texas soar 45% after COVID-era federal funding ends

Bright children from poorer backgrounds twice as likely to receive hospital mental health treatment than affluent high-achievers

‘Artificial cartilage’ could improve arthritis treatment

Breathing device could have profound impact on survival for people with sleep apnoea and type 2 diabetes

Artificial intelligence assessment indicates stress levels in farmed Amazonian fish

Keith Cole receives grant to conduct integrated research on mobility, cognition and aging

Internationally recognized malaria researcher Stefan Kappe, Ph.D., appointed new director of the UM School of Medicine's Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health

Lung cancer genetics study launches open-source data platform to research community

Pre-conception radiation exposure from CT scans increases risk for miscarriage and birth defects

Boston University appoints Kenneth Lutchen to top research job

For video-on-demand platforms, release strategy matters: streaming episodes gradually boosts consumers’ searches, subscription rates

Sleep strengthens muscle and bone by boosting growth hormone levels. Here's how

Only 1 in 7 online health images show proper technique to accurately measure blood pressure

Children receiving biofeedback speech therapy improved faster than with traditional methods

Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people

The salmon superfood you’ve never heard of

How does chemotherapy disrupt circadian rhythms?

A new bystander effect? Aggression can be contagious when observing it in peers.

Do you see what I see? People share brain responses for colors.

Blood test could streamline early Alzheimer's detection

New and simple detection method for nanoplastics.

Young children are not the main drivers of language change

Tarlatamab with anti-PD-L1 as first-line maintenance after chemo-immunotherapy for ES-SCLC demonstrates acceptable safety profile and unprecedented overall survival

[Press-News.org] Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for April 30, 2013