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Grapefruit Benefits

Improvement In Diabetes Patient Care With Electronic Tracking System
A recent study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) reports that diabetes care and clinical outcomes are improved by an electronic system with personalized patient information shared by diabetes patients and their primary care providers.
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Successful Neurosurgery With Transcranial MR-Guided High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound
The Magnetic Resonance Center of the University Children"s Hospital Zurich has achieved a world first break through in MR-guided, non-invasive neurosurgery. Ten patients have been successfully treated by means of transcranial high-intensity focused ultrasound. This fully non-invasive procedure opens new horizons for neurosurgery and the treatment of different neurological brain disorders.
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Health Costs, Availability Hurt U.S. Entrepreneurship Innovation
Reuters reports that, due to the difficulties in getting or paying for health insurance, "countless workers in the United States are trapped in jobs they would like to leave ... calcifying innovation and mobility in the world"s largest economy." Reuters notes that when he was head of the National Federation of Independent Businesses, "Todd Stottlemeyer frequently encountered would-be entrepreneurs who let their ideas go stale and their products languish on the workbench because they did not want to shoulder their own health care costs. "
Diagnostics

NIH Deepens Investment In Combination Study Of MS Drugs

The first large-scale "CombiRX" clinical trial testing the combined use of FDA-approved interferon beta-1a (Avonex®) and glatiramer acetate (Copaxone®) to treat relapsing-remitting MS has just received a $19-million renewal grant from the National Institutes of Health. This is the largest MS trial ever supported by the NIH, with a cumulative investment of more than $44 million. The long-term trial is led by principal investigator Fred Lublin, MD, (Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Multiple Sclerosis Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY). The study is now fully enrolled, with more than 1,000 participants at 67 medical centers across the United States and Canada. Dr. Lublin is a member of the National Board of Directors of the National MS Society and the Society"s National Clinical Advisory Board and the New York City Chapter Clinical Advisory Committee. Combination therapy is being compared to the use of either agent alone for 36 months. All participants are receiving at least one active medication and there is not a placebo-only treatment arm. Each of these treatments is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of relapsing MS. A previous, smaller pilot trial of the combination therapy suggested it was safe and warranted further study. An important ancillary study to this trial, the NIH-sponsored biomarker project, is examining genetic and other biological markers at baseline and at a minimum of one additional point during the study. The hope is that these biological markers will provide a means for identifying, in the future, those patients with more aggressive disease as well as those who respond or fail to respond to therapy. Such markers would have considerable value in the management of MS. Read more about this study in its listing on clinicaltrials.gov. MS Society


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