Category Archives: Disease

Disease

Experts hope H1N1 will spur effort on universal jab

in.reuters.com

Experts hope H1N1 will spur effort on universal jab

The H1N1 swine flu pandemic should spur pharmaceutical researchers to renew efforts to develop a universal flu vaccine and rethink ways of dealing with future pandemics, scientists said on Friday.

Flu experts from the World Health Organization, Swiss drug giant Novartis AG, the U.S. National Institutes of Health and others noted that the arrival of H1N1 had prompted a jump in the potential output of vaccine manufacturing to 900 million doses from 400 million.

But in a letter to the journal Science, they urged drug and health industries to be more proactive in developing and distributing vaccines — and in particular to speed up the search for a universal flu vaccine.

“Although the H1N1 pandemic has the potential to cause a social and economic emergency, it also provides an opportunity to rethink our approach to influenza virus disease and to develop more effective vaccines and economically sustainable solutions for developing and developed countries,” they wrote. “Research toward development of a universal vaccine should be accelerated.”

A universal flu vaccine which would combat all strains of the virus has so far eluded pharmaceutical firms and scientists.

Inovio Biomedical Corp, which is working on such a vaccine, said this week that it expects initial evidence early next year on whether the technology it is using can help to fight diseases.

Johnson & Johnson, the world’s biggest diversified health care company, recently bought a stake in Dutch biotech firm Crucell partly to get hold of flu-mAb, a universal antibody engineered to prevent and treat infections from various influenza A strains.

The swine flu outbreak was declared a pandemic in June and has already infected millions of people around the world. Drugmakers and governments have been scrambling to make and supply vaccines targeting the new H1N1 strain before a feared second wave of infection hits as the northern hemisphere heads into winter.

Experts hope H1N1 , Experts hope H1N1  Health, Experts hope H1N1  Health Latest, Experts hope H1N1  Health Information, Experts hope H1N1 Health information, Experts hope H1N1  Health Photo,Experts hope H1N1  for Weight Health photo, Experts hope H1N1  Health Latest, Experts hope H1N1  Health latest, Experts hope H1N1  for Weight  Health Story, Experts hope H1N1  Video, Experts hope H1N1  video, Experts hope H1N1  Health History, Experts hope H1N1  Health history, Experts hope H1N1  over Picture, history, Experts hope H1N1  Asia, Experts hope H1N1   asia, Experts hope H1N1  Gallery, Experts hope H1N1  for Weight gallery, Experts hope H1N1 Photo Gallery, Experts hope H1N1  Picture, Experts hope H1N1  picture, Experts hope H1N1  Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, cancer, medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1,

Cancer drug crosses key hurdle in brain: study

sunbather_061609_m

Cancer drug crosses key hurdle in brain: study

An experimental drug appears to cross a protective barrier in the brain that screens out most chemicals, offering potentially better ways to treat brain tumors, U.S. researchers said on Sunday.

The drug, made by privately held Angiochem Inc of Montreal was safe and showed evidence it could shrink tumors in two separate early phase studies totaling more than 100 people with a brain cancer called glioblastoma.

It also worked among people whose cancers had spread or metastasized to the brain, the researchers reported at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Chicago.

In both studies, tumors shrank in patients who got a higher dose of the drug, called ANG1005. The drug also showed signs of working in patients whose cancers resisted the chemotherapy drug taxane.

“It is highly encouraging to see that ANG1005 has shown the potential to be effective in metastatic brain cancers and against drug-resistant tumors,” Dr. Jan Drappatz of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who is studying the drug, said in a statement.

Drappatz said tumors shrank significantly in some patients and some neurological problems were reversed in several.

Studies of brain tumor samples showed concentrations of the drug in the tumors, proving it successfully crossed the blood-brain barrier and accumulated.

Made up of a network of blood vessels, the blood-brain barrier prevents 95 percent of all chemicals from leaving the bloodstream and entering the brain.

Cancer drug, Cancer drug Health, Cancer drug Health Latest, Cancer drug Health Information, Cancer drug Health information, Cancer drug Health Photo,Cancer drug   for Weight Health photo, Cancer drug Health Latest, Cancer drug  Health latest, Cancer drug Video, Cancer drug  video, Cancer drug  Health History, Cancer drug   Health history, Cancer drug over Picture, history, Cancer drug  Asia, Cancer drug  asia, Cancer drug  Gallery, Cancer drug   for Weight gallery, Cancer drug   Photo Gallery, Cancer drug    Picture, Cancer drug  picture, Cancer drug Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, Cancer drug, medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1,

Swine flu could overload U.S. hospitals: report

in.reuters.com

Swine flu could overload U.S. hospitals: report

Fifteen states could run out of hospital beds and 12 more could fill 75 percent of their beds with swine flu sufferers if 35 percent of Americans catch the virus in coming weeks, a report released Thursday said.

The study, based on estimates from a computer model developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, shows the strain hospitals and health departments could face as a second wave of swine flu surges.

“Our point in doing this is not to cry Chicken Little but really to point out the potential even a mild pandemic can have and how readily that can overwhelm the healthcare delivery system,” Jeffrey Levi, director of Trust for America’s Health, which sponsored the report, said in a telephone briefing.

According to the report, the number of people hospitalized could range from 168,025 in California to 2,485 in Wyoming, and many states may face shortages of beds.

Some may need to cut back on hospitalizations for elective procedures.

“States around the country will also have to figure out how to manage the influx of people in doctors’ offices and ambulatory care settings, in addition to the surge in hospitalizations,” Levi said.

He said state and local health departments are scrambling to set up distribution systems for the H1N1 vaccine as it becomes available this month, but challenges remained.

“These systems are untested, and glitches are sure to arise along the way,” Levi said.

Swine flu , Swine flu  Health, Swine flu  Health Latest, Swine flu  Health Information, Swine flu  Health information, Swine flu  Health Photo,Swine flu  for Weight Health photo, Swine flu  Health Latest, Swine flu  Health latest, Swine flu  for Weight  Health Story, Swine flu  Video, Swine flu  video, Swine flu  Health History, Swine flu  Health history, Swine flu  over Picture, history, Swine flu  Asia, Swine flu   asia, Swine flu  Gallery, Swine flu  for Weight gallery, Swine flu Photo Gallery, Swine flu  Picture, Swine flu  picture, Swine flu  Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, cancer, medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1