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

Antibiotic use and decrease in INR levels among patients taking vitamin K antagonists

2015-07-21
(Press-News.org) Researchers have found an association between treatment with the antibiotic dicloxacillin and a decrease in international normalized ratio (INR; a measure of blood coagulation) levels among patients taking the vitamin K antagonists warfarin or phenprocoumon, according to a study in the July 21 issue of JAMA.

A challenge in the use of vitamin K antagonists (VKAs) is the potential for drug-drug interactions, resulting in insufficient or excessive anticoagulation. Solid data are lacking for most alleged interactions. In case reports, the commonly used antibiotic dicloxacillin has been reported to lower the anticoagulant effect of warfarin, the most used VKA, according the background information in the article.

Anton Pottegard, M.Sc.Pharm., Ph.D., of the University of Southern Denmark, Odense, and colleagues identified patients currently taking warfarin via the anticoagulant database Thrombobase, a clinical database of all VKA-treated patients (n = 7,400) followed up by 3 outpatient clinics and 50 general practitioners in Funen, Denmark. The researchers included all patients who filled a prescription for dicloxacillin while receiving warfarin therapy between March 1998 and November 2012. INR results were grouped by the week relative to dicloxacillin exposure. The last INR measurement before dicloxacillin exposure was compared with the first measurement within weeks 2 to 4 after dicloxacillin exposure. The authors also assessed the use of dicloxacillin among patients taking another VKA, phenprocoumon.

Of 519 patients taking warfarin and initiating treatment with dicloxacillin, 236 met inclusion criteria. The average INR level prior to dicloxacillin exposure was 2.6 compared with 2, 2 to 4 weeks after dicloxacillin exposure, an average decrease of 0.6. In total, 61 percent (n = 144) experienced sub-therapeutic INR levels ( END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chaos is an inherent part of city traffic

Chaos is an inherent part of city traffic
2015-07-21
WASHINGTON, DC, July 21, 2015 - It's not unusual for two drivers to depart from the same location, head out to the same destination, drive more or less the same speed and nevertheless arrive at dramatically different times, with one driver taking significantly longer to arrive. While this can simply be bad luck, sometimes the reason isn't an obvious external event. And if you are a world traveler, you've likely noticed the fact that transportation works like a charm in some countries, in the sense that you can plan your commute or trip via public bus with confidence. ...

Elderberry benefits air travelers

Elderberry benefits air travelers
2015-07-21
The negative health effects of international air travel are well documented but now it seems that the common elderberry can provide some relief. Associate Professor Evelin Tiralongo and Dr Shirley Wee from Griffith's Menzies Health Institute Queensland (MHIQ) have completed a clinical trial showing that an elderberry supplement can provide some protection from cold and flu-like symptoms following long-haul flights. Intercontinental air travel can be stressful and affect a passenger's physical and psychological wellbeing. Whilst jet lag and fatigue remain the best known ...

Bust up big kidney stones with tamsulosin

2015-07-21
WASHINGTON --Tamsulosin works no better than placebo on small kidney stones, but does improve passage of more large kidney stones than placebo does. The results of this large clinical trial evaluating tamsulosin versus placebo were published online Friday in Annals of Emergency Medicine ("Distal Ureteric Stones and Tamsulosin: A Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized, Multi-Center Trial (The DUST Trial)"). "Kidney stones bring more than a million Americans a year to emergency departments because they are excruciatingly painful," said lead study author Jeremy Furyk, ...

Satellites peer into rock 50 miles beneath Tibetan Plateau

Satellites peer into rock 50 miles beneath Tibetan Plateau
2015-07-21
COLUMBUS, Ohio--Gravity data captured by satellite has allowed researchers to take a closer look at the geology deep beneath the Tibetan Plateau. The analysis, published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports, offers some of the clearest views ever obtained of rock moving up to 50 miles below the plateau, in the lowest layer of Earth's crust. There, the Indian tectonic plate presses continually northward into the Eurasian tectonic plate, giving rise to the highest mountains on Earth--and deadly earthquakes, such as the one that killed more than 9,000 people in Nepal ...

Yeast byproduct inhibits white-nose syndrome fungus in lab experiments

Yeast byproduct inhibits white-nose syndrome fungus in lab experiments
2015-07-21
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A microbe found in caves produces a compound that inhibits Pseudogymnoascus destructans, the fungus that causes white-nose syndrome in bats, researchers report in the journal Mycopathologia. The finding could lead to treatments that kill the fungus while minimizing disruption to cave ecosystems, the researchers say. The yeast Candida albicans produces the compound: trans, trans-farnesol. Candida species are already present in caves where bats hibernate and have been isolated from the bodies of healthy, hibernating bats, said University of Illinois ...

Young South African women can adhere to daily PrEP regimen as HIV prevention, study finds

2015-07-21
A clinical study funded by the National Institutes of Health has found that young, single black women in South Africa adhered to a daily pill regimen to prevent HIV infection--an HIV prevention strategy known as pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP. This finding is the first strong indication that this population at substantial HIV risk could accept and reliably adhere to daily PrEP dosing. Men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) in New York and Thailand also successfully adhered to daily dosing. PrEP--which consists of a daily dose of two antiretrovirals, ...

Thriving in the tropics of Borneo: 2 new Hoya species on the third largest island

Thriving in the tropics of Borneo: 2 new Hoya species on the third largest island
2015-07-21
Dr. Michele Rodda describes two new tropical plants species from the Hoya genus, found on the world's third largest island Borneo. The genus is one of the largest and most complex plant groups in Asia. The first to be described in the paper, H. ruthiae, is characterised with its lack of coloured milk-like sap typical for most of the Hoya species, and H. bakoensis - with its strict preference for growing epiphytically (without causing any harm to its host) and rooting inside ant nests. The study is published in the open-access journal PhytoKeys. Collected by Ruth Kiew ...

Controlled burns increase invasive grass in hardwood forests

Controlled burns increase invasive grass in hardwood forests
2015-07-21
URBANA, Ill. - Controlled burning is widely used to maintain biodiversity and enhance regeneration of important deciduous tree species such as oak and hickory, but a recent University of Illinois study found that this practice also increases the growth of an aggressive species of invasive grass. Microstegium vimineum (also called Japanese stiltgrass or Nepalese browntop) is an abundant non-native grass in southern Illinois where the study was conducted. "We found that fire promotes the recruitment and growth of M. vimineum, particularly under moist soil conditions," ...

Dr. Fauci at IAS 2015: Comprehensive global prevention can end HIV/AIDS pandemic

2015-07-21
Although much progress has been made in combating the global HIV/AIDS pandemic, to halt new infections and end the pandemic, a combination of non-vaccine and vaccine prevention modalities will be needed. Even with these tools, significant implementation gaps must be closed, including the targeted deployment of proven prevention methods to the populations that need them most, says Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Fauci addressed a special session at the 8th International ...

Economic slump, not natural gas boom, responsible for drop in CO2 emissions

2015-07-21
Irvine, Calif., July 21, 2015 - The 11 percent decrease in climate change-causing carbon dioxide emissions in the U.S. between 2007 and 2013 was caused by the global financial recession - not the reduced use of coal, research from the University of California Irvine, the University of Maryland, and the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis shows. Experts have assumed that the drop in emissions reflected a shift toward natural gas, which produces roughly half as much carbon dioxide per unit of energy as coal and was made cheap by the hydraulic fracturing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Deep-learning framework advances tissue analysis in spatial transcriptomics

From dormant to danger: How VZV reactivation is driving CNS infections

DNA barcodes narrow down possible sources of introductions of an invasive banana skipper butterfly pest

Transforming clinical care for children with rare genetic diseases

Polar bear cubs emerging from their dens for the first time: New study captures rare footage

Turning waste organic compound into useful pharmaceuticals and energy using a technique inspired by photosynthesis

Violence alters human genes for generations, researchers discover

Scientists discover key protein in resilience to stress

Nasal spray shows preclinical promise for treating traumatic brain injury

Cambridge initiative to address risks of future engineered pandemics

Unmasking inequalities in AI: new research reveals how artificial intelligence might reinforce inequality

Taking sports science in her stride: How Dr. Nerea Casal García aims to maximize performance on the track

Pioneering work generates feline embryonic stem cells in boon for cats

Decoding the link between colorectal cancer risk and steatotic liver disease

Controlling conformational changes in protein aromatic side chains

Experimental and numerical analysis of the potential drop method for defects caused by dynamic loads

Chinese researchers make breakthrough in artificial chiral structural-color microdomes

Intermittent fasting inhibits platelet activation to reduce thrombosis risk

A clear game-changer: Curtin’s water-repellent glass breaks new ground

Are our refrigerants safe? The lingering questions about the chemicals keeping us cool

How nitrogen reshapes root system architecture in plants?

‘Fluorescent phoenix’ discovered with persistence rivaling Marie Curie’s

A rapid and reproducible method for generating germ-free Drosophila melanogaster

Aging and the brain’s sugar-coated shield

Better poverty mapping: New machine-learning approach targets aid more effectively

An emissions tale of two cities: Salt Lake City vs. Los Angeles

WVU nursing faculty aim to enhance rural home care for chronically ill through NIH award

New screening tool for stroke survivors with visual perception problems

Influencer marketing can help tourism industry mitigate waste, pollution

Tufts named a top producer of U.S. Fulbright students

[Press-News.org] Antibiotic use and decrease in INR levels among patients taking vitamin K antagonists