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

Around 2 queries a week to UK poisons service concern...snakebites

Half enquiries generated by UK's only native poisonous snake, the adder

2012-12-20
(Press-News.org) [Snakebite enquiries to the UK National Poisons Information Service: 2004-2010 doi 10.1136/emermed-2012-201587]

Snakebite injuries account for around two phone queries every week to the UK National Poisons Information Service, indicates an audit published online in Emergency Medicine Journal.

Changes in data recording mean that these figures are probably an underestimate of the true numbers of snakebite injuries in the UK, suggest the authors.

They audited telephone enquiries made to the Cardiff, Edinburgh, Birmingham and Newcastle units of the UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS) between 2004 and 2010.

Some 510 calls about snakebites were made during this period, over half of which (52%) concerned the European adder (Vipera berus), the only poisonous snake that is native to the UK.

Although poisonous, an adder snakebite is rarely fatal, with only 14 deaths attributed to its bite since 1856, but a bite can nevertheless be serious because of its effects on the heart and consequently other organs, and excessive localised swelling.

One in four of the enquiries (26%) were about exotic snakes that had been imported and kept as pets. The most common of these were corn or rat snakes (27%), boas (20%), pythons (20%) and western hognose (11%).

Three per cent of the exotic snake bites were from poisonous snakes, including rattlesnakes and green mambas. The rest of the cases concerned other UK native, non-poisonous snakes (4%) and unidentified snakes (18%).

The average age of the injured was 32, but ranged from under a year to 87, with two thirds of them occurring in men and boys. Enquiries peaked in August (19%).

Almost half the enquiries (42%) concerned the consequences of a poisonous bite, with 85 cases deemed in need of anti-venom. ###

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gene therapy cocktail shows promise in long-term clinical trial for rare fatal brain disorder

Gene therapy cocktail shows promise in long-term clinical trial for rare fatal brain disorder
2012-12-20
(Embargoed) CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Results of a clinical trial that began in 2001 show that a gene therapy cocktail conveyed into the brain by a molecular special delivery vehicle may help extend the lives of children with Canavan disease, a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disorder. A report of the trial appears in the Dec. 19, 2012 online edition of the journal Science Translational Medicine. The form of gene therapy was created and developed at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. The work was spearheaded by R. Jude Samulski, PhD, a study senior author, ...

New study sheds light on dinosaur size

2012-12-20
Dinosaurs were not only the largest animals to roam the Earth - they also had a greater number of larger species compared to all other back-boned animals - scientists suggest in a new paper published in the journal PLOS ONE today. The researchers, from Queen Mary, University of London, compared the size of the femur bone of 329 different dinosaur species from fossil records. The length and weight of the femur bone is a recognised method in palaeontology for estimating a dinosaur's body mass. They found that dinosaurs follow the opposite pattern of body size distribution ...

Stem cell research shows ALS may be treatable

2012-12-20
Boston – Results from eleven independent ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease) research studies are giving hope to the ALS community – showing for the first time that the disease may be treatable by targeting new mechanisms revealed by neural stem cell-based studies. A decade of research conducted at multiple institutions, shows that when neural stem cells were transplanted into multi-levels of the spinal cord of a mouse model with familial ALS, disease onset and progression slowed, motor and breathing function improved and treated mice survived three to four times longer than untreated ...

Impaired melatonin secretion may play a role in premenstrual syndrome

2012-12-20
A new study by Douglas Mental Health University Institute researchers shows altered body rhythms of the hormone melatonin in Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) women with insomnia. This finding may help explain some of the sleep disruptions experienced by women with PMDD, also known as premenstrual syndrome. PMDD is a mood disorder which appears in the week preceding menses, and affects about 3-8% of women. PMDD sufferers can experience depression, tension, and irritability of sufficient intensity to interfere with daily activities and relationships. Disturbed sleep ...

Genomic frontier: The unexplored animal kingdom

Genomic frontier: The unexplored animal kingdom
2012-12-20
HOUSTON -- (Dec. 19, 2012) -- A new report in the journal Nature unveils three of the first genomes from a vast, understudied swath of the animal kingdom that includes as many as one-quarter of Earth's marine species. By publishing the genomes of a leech, an ocean-dwelling worm and a kind of sea snail creature called a limpet, scientists from Rice University, the University of California-Berkeley and the Department of Energy's Joint Genome Institute (JGI) have more than doubled the number of genomes from a diverse group of animals called lophotrochozoans (pronounced: LOH-foh-troh-coh-zoh-uhns). Lophotrochozoans ...

Inside the head of a dinosaur

2012-12-20
An international team of scientists, including PhD student Stephan Lautenschlager and Dr Emily Rayfield of the University of Bristol, found that the senses of smell, hearing and balance were well developed in therizinosaurs and might have affected or benefited from an enlarged forebrain. These findings came as a surprise to the researchers as exceptional sensory abilities would be expected from predatory and not necessarily from plant-eating animals. Therizinosaurs are an unusual group of theropod dinosaurs which lived between 145 and 66 million years ago. Members ...

Alzheimer's Disease: Inflammation as a new therapeutic approach

2012-12-20
The number of Alzheimer's patients will continue to dramatically increase in the next several decades. Various teams of researchers worldwide are feverishly investigating precisely how the illness develops. A team of scientists under the guidance of the University of Bonn and University of Massachusetts (USA) and with the participation of the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases have discovered a new signaling pathway in mice which is involved in the development of chronic inflammation which causes nerve cells in the brain to malfunction and die off. The results ...

Multi-tasking whales sing while feeding, not just breeding

2012-12-20
DURHAM, NC -- Humpback whales are famed for their songs, most often heard in breeding season when males are competing to mate with females. In recent years, however, reports of whale songs occurring outside traditional breeding grounds have become more common. A new study may help explain why. Humpbacks sing for their supper -- or at least, they sing while they hunt for it. The research, published December 19 in PLoS ONE, uncovers the whales' little-understood acoustic behavior while foraging. It also reveals a previously unknown behavioral flexibility on their ...

Scientists construct first map of how the brain organizes everything we see

2012-12-20
Our eyes may be our window to the world, but how do we make sense of the thousands of images that flood our retinas each day? Scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, have found that the brain is wired to put in order all the categories of objects and actions that we see. They have created the first interactive map of how the brain organizes these groupings. The result – achieved through computational models of brain imaging data collected while the subjects watched hours of movie clips – is what researchers call "a continuous semantic space." Some relationships ...

Are bacteria making you hungry?

2012-12-20
Over the last half decade, it has become increasingly clear that the normal gastrointestinal (GI) bacteria play a variety of very important roles in the biology of human and animals. Now Vic Norris of the University of Rouen, France, and coauthors propose yet another role for GI bacteria: that they exert some control over their hosts' appetites. Their review was published online ahead of print in the Journal of Bacteriology. This hypothesis is based in large part on observations of the number of roles bacteria are already known to play in host biology, as well as their ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What causes some people’s gut microbes to produce high alcohol levels?

Global study reveals widespread burning of plastic for heating and cooking

MIT study shows pills that communicate from the stomach could improve medication adherence

Searching for the centromere: diversity in pathways key for cell division

Behind nature’s blueprints

Researchers search for why some people’s gut microbes produce high alcohol levels

Researchers find promising new way to boost the immune response to cancer

Coffee as a staining agent substitute in electron microscopy

Revealing the diversity of olfactory receptors in hagfish and its implications for early vertebrate evolution

Development of an ultrasonic sensor capable of cuffless, non-invasive blood pressure measurement

Longer treatment with medications for opioid use disorder is associated with greater probability of survival

Strategy over morality can help conservation campaigns reduce ivory demand, research shows

Rising temperatures reshape microbial carbon cycling during animal carcass decomposition in water

Achieving ultra-low-power explosive jumps via locust bio-hybrid muscle actuators

Plant-derived phenolic acids revive the power of tetracycline against drug-resistant bacteria

Cooperation: A costly affair in bacterial social behaviour?

Viruses in wastewater: Silent drivers of pollution removal and antibiotic resistance

Sub-iethal water disinfection may accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance

Three in four new Australian moms struggle with body image

Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study

Cardiovascular risk score predicts multiple eye diseases

Health: estimated one in ten British adults used or interested in GLP-1 medications for weight loss

Exercise to treat depression yields similar results to therapy

Whooping cough vaccination for pregnant women strengthens babies’ immune system

Dramatic decline in new cases of orphanhood in Uganda driven by HIV treatment and prevention programs

Stopping weight loss drugs linked to weight regain and reversal of heart health markers

Higher intake of food preservatives linked to increased cancer risk

Mass General Brigham–developed cholera vaccine completes phase 1 trial

First experimental validation of a “150-year-old chemical common sense” direct visualization of the molecular structural changes in the ultrafast anthracene [4+4] photocycloaddition reaction

Lack of support for people on weight loss drugs leaves them vulnerable to nutritional deficiencies, say experts

[Press-News.org] Around 2 queries a week to UK poisons service concern...snakebites
Half enquiries generated by UK's only native poisonous snake, the adder