Abbott recalling certain Similac brand powder infant formulas.

 

Abbott is recalling these products following an internal quality review, which detected the remote possibility of the presence of a small common beetle in the product produced in one production area in a single manufacturing facility. The United States Food and Drug Adminstration (FDA) has determined that while the formula containing these beetles poses no immediate health risk, there is a possibility that infants who consume formula containing the beetles or their larvae, could experience symptoms of gastrointestinal discomfort and refusal to eat as a result of small insect parts irritating the GI tract. If these symptoms persist for more than a few days, a physician should be consulted.


The recall of these powder infant formulas includes:

 

  • Certain Similac powder product lines offered in plastic containers.
  • Certain Similac powder product lines offered in 8-ounce, 12.4-ounce and 12.9-ounce cans.

For more information, visit: Similac.com/recall/

Do video games cause attention problems in kids?

 

Psychologists are saying that long hours in front of the television, whether your child is channel surfing or gaming, may be the cause of attention problems.

 

While researches are divided on the issue, the findings are consistent with earlier studies of the effects of television watching in kids.

 

Researchers studied the results of 1,300 school-aged children who logged their TV and gaming hours over a year with the assistance of their parents. They then worked with teachers to monitor the child's behavior in class and whether they were able to stay on task.


Full Article: Reuters Health

Scientists Developing Blood Test for Down Syndrome

 

Dutch researchers may soon be able to determine whether or not an unborn child has down syndrome through blood tests. The researchers say their test will reveal problems in fetal DNA as early as six to eight weeks in pregnancy. If the study proves to be accurate, the test may be available in a few years. The blood tests could be the first reliable method of diagnosing down syndrome without doing invasive testing.


Full Article: Healthday

Researchers Pinpoint Genetic Tie to Brain Development

 

Researchers have found a gene responsible for regulating human brain development named the Pax6 gene. The Pax6 gene helps to direct stem cells that make up the brain and spinal cord in the early stages of embryonic development. The findings may lead the way towards being able to treat brain diseases such as Parkinson's or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

 

The gene plays a different role in the development in animals than in humans. The Pax6 may also explain why the human brain is larger and more advanced than brains in other species.


Full Article: Healthday

Excess Weight Increases Risk of Miscarriage After IVF

 

According to study including 310 woman who became pregnant after in-vitro fertilization (IVF), woman who are overweight have a higher risk of miscarriage. 22 percent of woman who became pregnant after IVF had a miscarriage, compared to 33 percent of those who were overweight or obese.


Full Article: HealthDay

More Than 1.5 Million Cancer Survivors Have Kids Under 18

 

Researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C., analyzed data from 13,385 adult cancer survivors who took part in the United States National Health Interview Survey between 2000 and 2007. The results showed that more than 1.5 million adult cancer survivors in the United States are parents who live with one or more of their minor children.


Full Article: Healthday

When Parents Smoke, Kids' Weight, Behavior May Suffer

 

According to Healthday News, New studies suggest a connection between parents who smoke and kids who are heavier or misbehave. It may be impossible to prove a cause-and-effect relationship because it's considered unethical to assign some parents to smoke for a study.


Full Article: Healthday

Combo vaccine raises risk of fever-related seizures in kids

 

According to Healthday News, toddlers who receive the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) and varicella (chicken pox) separately in the same visit have a lower chance of having a febrile seizure a week to 10 days after receiving the shot than those children who received the combination MMRV.


Full Article: Healthday
Posted By: admin April 3 2010, 03:05

Susceptibility to Autism Tied to Genes

Researchers identify variations that point to spectrum disorders


 

TUESDAY, March 30 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers have discovered two genes for brain proteins that seem to be linked to autism disorders.

 

"To our knowledge, this is one of the most comprehensive genetic analyses of association between these important genes in brain connections and ASD [autism spectrum disorder] risk," said Anthony Monaco, of the Wellcome Trust Center for Human Genetics at the University of Oxford in England, in a statement.

 

Monaco and an international team of researchers studied genes from 661 families.

 

The genes in question encode proteins that are connected to brain development. One appears to influence the development of the nervous system, and the other is linked to the organization of connections between synapses.

 

Variations in the genes appeared to increase susceptibility to ASD, the researchers said.

 

The study was published March 25 in the journal Molecular Autism.

 

 


Source: Healthday.com

Women who breastfed show lower diabetes risk


By Amy Norton Amy Norton – Tue Mar 30, 11:59 am ET 

 

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Middle-aged and older women who breastfed their children may have a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes than those who bottle-fed, a new study suggests.

 

Australian researchers found that among more than 53,000 women age 45 and older, the odds of having diabetes were similar for women with children and those who had remained childless. But among women with children, each year of breastfeeding was associated with a 14 percent reduction in diabetes risk.

 

The findings, published in the journal Diabetes Care, do not prove that breastfeeding itself is somehow protective against type 2 diabetes later in life.

 

But they are in line with several past studies that have linked breastfeeding to a similar reduction in diabetes risk compared with bottle-feeding, according to lead researcher Dr. Bette Liu, of the University of Western Sydney

 

What's new here, she told Reuters Health in an email, is that the study also included women who had never had children. And compared with these women, women who'd had children and never breastfed were 50 percent more likely to have type 2 diabetes.

 

In contrast, the risk was not elevated among women who had breastfed each of their children for at least three months.

 

"In other words," Liu said, "it appears that having children increases the chances of women developing type 2 diabetes in later life, but breastfeeding can reduce this risk to the same level as that of women who have never had children."

 

The study included 53,726 women who completed questionnaires on various health and lifestyle factors. Of 5,700 women who had never had children, 274 -- or roughly 5 percent -- said they had been diagnosed with diabetes. Similarly, diabetes was reported by 5 percent of the 25,000-plus women who had breastfed each child for more than three months.

 

Meanwhile, of the 6,171 women who'd had children but never breastfed, 591 -- or 9.5 percent -- reported a diabetes diagnosis. And among the 15,400 women who'd breastfed each of their children for three months or less, just under 7 percent said they had diabetes.

 

The researchers then weighed a number of other factors that could affect a woman's likelihood of breastfeeding and/or developing diabetes -- including age, weight, family history of diabetes, reported exercise habits and education and income levels.

 

Breastfeeding itself remained linked to the odds of having diabetes, the investigators say.

 

For any one woman, Liu said, the likelihood of developing type 2 diabetes depends on a range of factors. Some major risk factors -- like age (the risk climbs after age 45), family history and race (black and Hispanic adults have higher risks than whites) -- are unchangeable; but some others, like excess weight, are controllable.

 

If breastfeeding is a factor, that would be important, Liu said, because it's something women can choose.

 

It's not clear why breastfeeding might affect a woman's later risk of type 2 diabetes. Liu speculated that the hormonal changes that come with breastfeeding may have lasting effects on how a woman's body processes blood sugar.

 

For now, Liu said the current findings suggest that lower long-term diabetes risk may stand as an additional benefit of breastfeeding.

 

"I would say to women considering breastfeeding that there are benefits not only for the health of their babies but also for their own longer-term health," she said.

 

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, online March 23, 2010.

 

 

Source: Reuters Health