Saturday, 20 July 2013

Controlled insulin delivery via injectable 'smart sponge'

esearchers have developed a drug delivery technique for diabetes treatment in which a sponge-like material surrounds an insulin core. The sponge expands and contracts in response to blood sugar levels to release insulin as needed. The technique could also be used for targeted drug delivery to cancer cells.

"We wanted to mimic the function of health beta-cells, which produce insulin and control its release in a healthy body," says Dr. Zhen Gu, lead author of a paper describing the work and an assistant professor in the joint biomedical engineering program at North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "But what we've found also holds promise for smart drug delivery targeting cancer or other diseases." The research team includes Daniel Anderson, the senior author and an associate professor of chemical engineering and member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT, and researchers from the Department of Anesthesiology at Boston Children's Hospital.
The researchers created a spherical, sponge-like matrix out of chitosan, a material found in shrimp and crab shells. Scattered throughout this matrix are smaller nanocapsules made of a porous polymer that contain glucose oxidase or catalase enzymes. The sponge-like matrix surrounds a reservoir that contains insulin. The entire matrix sphere is approximately 250 micrometers in diameter and can be injected into a patient.
When a diabetic patient's blood sugar rises, the glucose triggers a reaction that causes the nanocapsules' enzymes to release hydrogen ions. Those ions bind to the molecular strands of the chitosan sponge, giving them a positive charge. The positively charged chitosan strands then push away from each other, creating larger gaps in the sponge's pores that allow the insulin to escape into the bloodstream. In type 1 and advanced type 2 diabetes, the body needs injections of insulin, a hormone that transports glucose - or blood sugar - from the bloodstream into the body's cells.
As the insulin is released, the body's glucose levels begin to drop. This causes the chitosan to lose its positive charge, and the strands begin to come back together. This shrinks the size of the pores in the sponge, trapping the remaining insulin.
While this work created hydrogen ions by using enzymes that are responsive to glucose, the technique could be simplified to target cancers by eliminating the enzymes altogether. Tumors are acidic environments that have high concentrations of hydrogen ions. If the sponge reservoir were filled with anticancer drugs, the drugs would be released when the chitosan came into contact with the hydrogen ions in tumor tissues or cancer cells.
"We can also adjust the size of the overall 'sponge' matrix as needed, as small as 100 nanometers," Gu says. "And the chitosan itself can be absorbed by the body, so there are no long term health effects."
In tests using diabetic laboratory mice, the researchers found the sponge matrix was effective at reducing blood sugar for up to 48 hours. However, the researchers published a separate "smart system" for insulin delivery in May that maintained normal blood sugar levels for 10 days.
"But we learned a lot from the promising 'sponge' research and will further optimize it. Meanwhile, we are already exploring applications to combat cancer," Gu says.

Lyrica Side Effects

vMy wife has been off Lyrica for seven weeks and is still suffering side effects, hypersensitivity, blood overheating, itchiness, a feeling at times that someone else is taking over her body. She is getting very depressed. She was only on them for three weeks 50mg twice a day . Has any one else had long term side effects and how long are they likely to last? how do you alleviate the side effects?My wife has been off Lyrica for seven weeks and is still suffering side effects, hypersensitivity, blood overheating, itchiness, a feeling at times that someone else is taking over her body. She is getting very depressed. She was only on them for three weeks 50mg twice a day . Has any one else had long term side effects and how long are they likely to last? how do you alleviate the side effects?

It is now nine weeks since she last took Lyrica, She gets some relief at night if she takes Anphatripalin (Sorry about spelling) or Paracetamol, but gets very depressed and does not want to continue living like this. She has an appointment in ten days with a consultant neurologist it will be interesting to se what he advises. I ma getting very worried. Any body any ideas on how long this will last. My advice the drug should be banned.

Rosacea & Sodium Chloride Effect

Rosacea turned out to be a deficiency of salt, as I found out from doing some experimenting with diet. See if this doesn't make sense.

A patient is on a long-term low-salt diet for any number of reasons: to lose weight, high blood pressure, etc. After years of this there isn't enough chlorine in the system (chlorine molecule in salt [NaCL]) for the stomach to make Hydrochloric acid (HCL). Food won't digest. The blood contains salt so the body flushes larger than usual amounts of blood into the stomach area to aid in digestion. The mouth & nose are part of the digestive system, so extra blood flushes in here as well. This is a chronic problem so large amounts of blood are flushing into the facial area daily, especially after a meal. For people who blush easily (veins & capillaries that stretch easily & become enlarged quickly ) rosacea develops as these blood vessels become increasingly stretched and damaged. By this time the body is quite low on salt and does not contain the usual cup or 3/4 cup of salt that is part of good health. It takes several months of a higher salt diet for the problem to go away.

This extra protein that is produced, well I don't know how that fits in except maybe the body starts making it as kind of a protection for these damaged blood vessels in the face.

Anal Itch

I think I caught something while having anal sex from the Canadian guy who came to visit me and did not use a condom. I met him on Lavalife. He say he never use condoms with any of his encounters.


I started to have anal itching in 1994 and as it continued (because no doctors' prescriptions were effective), my vulvar area itched too. Both itching occurred daily but only when I lied in bed when I slept. Eventually after a few years, both the anus and vulvar area became very painful thoughout the whole day, and particularly more painful when I went to the toilet. I've tried parasites pills, yeast and bacteria tests, non-perfumed soap, cotton underwear, keeping the area dry, and none worked. In around 2002, I found a dermitologist doctor who gave me a cream that stopped the pain and itch, but I have to keep using that cream about once every 4 to 5 days. Finally in July 2010, I began to suspect that the laundry detergent might be the reason. So I started to use an all-natural-ingredients laundry detergent, and I reduced the amount I used for each load from 4/5 of a cup to 1/5 of a cup. And luckily and miraculously, within two weeks, my itchiness has gone, and I did not have to apply the cream any more, and that lasted for 9 months until March this year. Then the itch came back (probably because I have used too much detergent for one or two loads) for about 4 weeks. So I watched the amount of detergent that I put in each load carefully, and the itch has not re-occurred. Will keep you posted.

Innovative smart knife

ascinating article. An amazing innovation that has fantastic potential for surgical procedures involving cancer.

ascinating article. An amazing innovation that has fantastic potential for surgical procedures involving cancer.

We aren't safe anywhere

It seems like everyone day I'm hearing of some hospital, some community center, etc have mercer infection. I find it amazing we haven't been able to solve this problem. We aren't safe anywhere


Do We? Hear our inner voices?

thought that 'hearing voices' was a sign is schizophrenia. (Which I do not have -- just a little tinnitus!) 

When you say 'hear' -- do you REALLY mean "Hear"? Or do you just mean "thinking in words"?

What will they discover next?

Maybe that wives of men who toss and turn every night and snore tlike a freight train going through the bedroom, and more likely to take to the said husband with a base-ball bat? 

Or even, perish the thought, that couples are generally happier if they sleep in different rooms at opposite ends of the house? 

Or that a young Mum getting up several time at might to attend to a crying baby, or cleaning up toddlers and washing out vomit covered sheets and going to be short-temepered the next day! Especially with the husban whose only cntribution to the problems was to want sex when wife fially crashed back into bed

Lilly Humulin L

y sweet dog Mali age 12 has been on Humulin L for 3 years after being diagnosed with Diabetes and was doing just great. Now you discontinue it and the Vet has put her on a new product she has been on now for 2-3 weeks. This morning Mali's Kidneys are failing she is dying and it's because you decided to discontinue what was saving her life. Maybe she is just a dog to you but she is my baby and my life.

I so agree! I have a 10 year old Husky that has been on Humulin L for over a year. She has her ups-and-downs, but Humulin saved her life. Most vets in my area don't have a clue as to what to switch her to. Most of which I can't afford. I'm not ready to give up and neither is my dog Indee. Lilly should have spent some time to see how many canines are currently using Humulin L and given us some solid medical studies as to what would be best to switch to. Shame on Lilly for their lack of heart and professionalism.

Lyrica - reaction

Lyrica - 50mg�1 three times daily. Started PM of 11/07/05 with the higher dosage. This is a new medication I have been started on. Had to be increased to 100mg 3 times a day��. 

However, I have developed a speech problem. It was awful and I would never know when or where I would be when it started. It would last the entire day. 

I also had 2 bad experiences while on this drug with my eyes. The first time it was as if there was a piece of broken glass in it. It then happened a second time to my other eye, but I knew what to do until I could at least drive myself to the eye doctor which the first time I couldn�t. This may or may not have anything to do with this medication. Have not had any problems since I stopped taking Lyrica.


Salmon, Neurological Contaminants Are Organohalogens, Not Mercury In This Species

This article lists Salmon as one of the top 10 healthy foods, and that wild, instead of farmed, fish should be choosen due to potenial mercury contamination. Salmon is a fatty fish, and as such, does not accumulate significant amounts of heavy metals such as mercury in the edible portions of the fish. Tuna and swordfish are known species that mercury is of major concern. 

It is the organohalogen contaminants (dioxins, PCBs, brominated flame retardants, pesticides) that are of major concern in fatty fish, and salmon (both farmed and wild) generally have higher concentrations of these contaminants than lean fish species. These organohalogens are well known to be toxic to the neurological systems of children and adults. When commenting on the potential risks frorm contaminants, real species specific contaminants should be reported. While a salmon filet may show low mercury levels, it may still be quite toxic with regards to the persistant organic pollutants that accumulate in the fat.


How Can This Be Prevented? prednisone and fungal infection

On 28Jul09, after fighting it for a substantial period. I went to an Urgent Care Section of a VA hospital. I was deemed to have pneumonia. I was prescribed the following drugs; 1. Albuterol 90/Ipratrop 18mcg; 2. Codeine 10/GG; 3. Moxifloxacin HCI 400mg tab; 4. Prednisone 20mg tab. I could remember what each thing was for, except #4. I entered it into 'Yahoo Search' and selected the "Prednisone information - health results" The first entry under 'most important information I should know' was

"You should not use this medication if you are allergic to prednisone, or if you have a fungal infection anywhere in your body."

Most of us prior military have toenail fungus. I have tried for years to get rid of it. Drugs that endangered my liver, Grizpeg. Various paint on solutions, including bleach. Any way question is What Now? How would a patient even know this is a question that needs to be asked?

Read the news article that this opinion was posted about:


Acne - prevention and remedies?

n May 18, 2010 I got Botox in my forehead. Within a day or two I had 10 or 12 small bumps between my eyebrows. I have NEVER had a history of acne, I have never taken medication for acne treatment. I don't understand it. It has been almost 5 months, and still, the bumps remain. I try to pop them, exfoliate, I bought a $300 skincare line that I use diligently twice a day, I've put rubbing alcohol on them... nothing even phases these bumps! It's terrible!! I am going to the dermatologist next week to try and find a solution for my suddenly developed acne, that will not go away! It's almost time for more Botox, my wrinkles are returning... I don't know what to do. Seems like I'm going to be stuck with bumps and wrinkles!!

Doctors don't like to use Benzo's in agoraphobia treatment

 has been my experience that psychiatrists don't like to use benzo's in the treatment of agoraphobia. And I find that it is the only thing that helps me. I have tried over 18 different SSIR's over a 12 year period. I understand the cognitive and behavioral side of this therapy and have used the tools taught to me but yet still have panic attacks for no reason that I can figure out.

I'm taking 1mg clonazapam twice a day and Xanax 1 mg 4 times a day "prn". Ive had this for 17 years now and want to know if there is anything else I can try . They have put ne on bi-polar meds and they didn't work either. The only thing that helps is the Benzo's that I'm taking but yet have a hard time find a THERAPIST that will prescribe them.


I am Agoraphobic !

posted by Infected on 27 Aug 2010 at 11:44 am
I think you written an amazing article, I first thought i was reading about myself, I almost have all the symptoms mentioned in your article, how can i be helped... i really want to feel normal again..
my country does not have qualified enough specialist to treat or even identify such a mental disorder...

Please help if you can ..
im desperate ......

back pain

A lot of these tips will deff help me out i hope but when i excercise it increases my back pain, laying down and getting back up also does not work, ive had back pain for almost 3 yeas now and it wont go away, any help you can give me would be great thx.

hanks for an excellent comprehensive article on back pain It would great if you could add a comment on the treatment section,or write an article on the following, research which has shown that using Microcurrent devices offers another alternative treatment for back pain. Unlike TENS. Microcurrent delivers much smaller electrical impulses 1000 times smaller, and this has a proven benefit, by helping tissue repair, while reducing pain, not blocking pain as per the TENS method. this is an alternative option to TENS.

Very comprehensive and informative

`ve enjoyed reading the article, it is very comprehensive, covering all aspects of back pain. I have been experiencing back pain on and off but never took it seriously until one morning i woke up with it. That is the day I turned my life around and started to pay more attention to it. 

I believe that the number of future back pain sufferers can be cut down if more effort was put into the prevention and education of people. Often, we start taking care of our health when we start losing it. 

I would even go as far as suggesting that proper posture and exercise education should be a part of our school education. We learn all kinds of nonsense in the school, so why not learn how to live a healthier and better life...? 

finally

Fianlly! I'm a freshman in my marching band and everybody I tell to join says it's stupid, or they don't want to wear the uniforms. I tell them it's really fun, and that it's also a sport, and that's when they all go ballistic on me. Everyone who is not in it says it is not a sport when it really is and it's also very physically demanding.

Thank you very much. Everyone always says marching band isn't a sport and that its the easiest thing to do but its a lot harder then that you have to memorize multiple sheets of music, anywhere for 30 to over a 100 different positions, hit sets, and movements, it takes most of the summer and alot of after school practices not to mention how long the practices are with no brakes can you image repeated going over one spot in the music for two hours whole playing your horn expected to roll your feet stay in step watch your spacing watch the major and everyone leave on the same count at the same time? It's hard and competitive, its a sport get over it.

Scare Tactic

 am always amazed how quickly we publish a pharmacy based study that shows how "about 5-10 times" the recommended dosage of a particular holistic health care product (in this case, glucosamine) might damage insulin producing cells. At the same time, the Medically based chemicals found in Celebrex, Viox, Tylenol, and Motrin are KNOWN to cause, in standard dosage amounts, Heart disease, liver damage, gastrointestinal ulcers, degenerative joint disease, heart attacks, blood thinning issues, etc. 

It is important to be careful with all substances, and I am anxious to hear of more information and studies regarding glucosamine or any other holistic products, but we, as consumers, must keep everything in perspective. 

Oh... I guess if you don't kill yourself with pain medications, and if you still have pain, you can always attempt surgery (1/2500 surgeries result in death).

I agree with Keith

posted by Bryan on 04 Nov 2010 at 11:04 am

Everything in moderation. Like Keith says in his post too much of anything can be bad for you. If I were to drink 4 gallons of water in 2 hours my kidneys could fail. I don't see anyone suggesting not to drink water. All of these articles are designed to make people think "if high doses can cause diabetes maybe I shouldn't take it at all". "The key point of our work is that glucosamine can have effects that are far from harmless and should be used with great caution" The second quote is taken straight from the article. What a joke! By the way, how long is an extended period of time? Not very specific for a scientist.

shunt revisions

My first diagnosis was in 1990 and the VP shunt worked well for 20 years.I suddenly collapsed and needed a new shunt.Since the operation I have experienced gait/balance issues and a fear of falling.I hope that this is only temporary as the neurosurgeon has suggested it is pschological.

I have many of the symptoms elders get

posted by Rosemarie on 25 July 2011 at 1:54 pm
I do get confused. I have had a brain M.R.I. and was told I have what they called it, (water on the brain). Frightening outcome for me. As I read through this article I realize now why I stagger at times and my vision can't be corrected. I have had three prescriptions within one years time. I changed doctors and she told me my eyes are perfectly healthy and sent me for the scan. At times I am not hungry and would rather take a nap. Only yesterday I really wanted to eat. I have many of the symptoms and now it makes me nervous. I will see a Neurosurgeon a.s.a.p.

This is ridiculous!

Are you sure you are only eating 1600 calories? Your BMR without adjustment for activity is 1875. At 1600 calories you should lose weight. Make sure all of your calories are accounted for. 

Perhaps you should bump up your calories a little more. Sometimes people who consume too few calories slow their metabolism and the result is no weight loss. 

finesteride side effect


On July 12, 2012, Matt Lauer of NBC’s Today Show discussed the association between the hair loss drug Propecia and persistent and/or permanent sexual side effects.

According to the NBC Today Show report, researchers from George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences have found that Propecia may cause prolonged sexual side effects even after discontinuation of the drug. Lauer interviewed Dr. Nancy Snyderman regarding the research on Propecia’s persistent sexual side effects. Dr. Snyderman stated that these sexual side effects are not “new”, since Merck had warned about sexual side effects for some men who use the hair loss drug.

Bipolar, PTSD and Panic Disorder Recipient

I am now in recovery from Bipolar, PTSD, and Panic Disorders. It took 11 years of therapy and medications. I agree with this article, and you helped me see myself a little more clearly. I have a host of physical problems that complicated my recovery process. So many of us do. I have never been hospitalized for my mental state, and have a wonderful therapist. The work it takes to be able to function with these disorders is great. From day to day, coping skills are tested. Thank you for giving the American public more information. Education is the key. Please, keep us informed on anything new!!

What Is AIDS? What Is HIV?

I want to congratulate this site information for a good and useful work done. 

I am a Ghanaian Nurse. ActuaCly my research area was on Prevention of Mother to child Transmission of HIV. I have also had the opportunity of working for an NGO-Projects Abroad Ghana, educating schools and orphanages on HIV/AIDS. 

Locally, there is this practice ('Bantua') similar to enema in the hospital, where a whole family and sometimes, some public toilets keep or share the same 
'Bantua'. The 'Bantua' is filled with locall preperations belived to be able to wash out certain unfriendly abdominal contents through defaecation. The route of access is the anus. This tube-like 'Bantua' is pushed through the anus without any kind of lubrication, thus dispossing a person to anal injuries or bleeding. Although the practice is believed to be helpful, it is scaring when it has to be shared by both somewhat healthy and clinically sick people altogther unknowingly.Because blood, most of the times, is seen on the tube upon withdrawal, people who share the 'Bantua' may contract HIV OR AIDS without knowing the source. I believe this practice is done somewhere in the world. Reducing and or preventing HIV/AIDS infection is a global concern and therefore require global efforts. I believe you will find this piece of information useful and helpful. 

e-cigs vs cigs

The main problem I have with the study is the explanation of the resistance percentages. E-cigarettes raise resistance to over 200% while smoking lowers resistance numbers to below that of non-smokers. If smoking is known to cause lung damage, why are its resistance numbers better than the extrapolation would tend to suggest?The main problem I have with the study is the explanation of the resistance percentages. E-cigarettes raise resistance to over 200% while smoking lowers resistance numbers to below that of non-smokers. If smoking is known to cause lung damage, why are its resistance numbers better than the extrapolation would tend to suggest?

Vitiligo cure - would like to know more about this treatment

I have tried various remedies for vitiligo for many years. I even tried lengthy laser treatment, to no avail. Makeups that purport to be waterproof come off on your clothes, furniture and cars. I have found a makeup that is a bit better, supposedly a second skin, but it doesn't last. 

Most treatments do not work on hands, which is my primary problem, although now the condition is spreading to my face, which terrifies me. 

I am very self-conscious. I spend a lot of money on manicures, but my hands look horrible. I would be willing to participate in a study, or, if this compound is available, to use the treatment. If it is available in the United States, please let me know. 

I would even be willing to travel to England, though, if that is the only place I could get it. I would like more information on this treatment, such as length of treatment needed, as well as side-effects, and price.

not surprising


This study shows that the presence and active fast response of an anesthesiologist was the key component of improving the survival probability of the patients. According to this study the chance of surviving was more if cardiac arrest occured in OR or PACU vs ICU. I wonder whether in those ICUs an anesthesiologist was in charge according to which it can be implied definitely that even if the other personnels' knowledge about CPR or ACLS might be high enough to support the patients but anesthesiologist can  do CPR more effectively and manage critical patients better. In  Iran we have the experience that anesthesiologist who continue their career as fellowship in Critical Care Medicine are more successful in managing critically ill patients. 

can oral sex cause cancer


Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most commonly diagnosed sexually transmitted infection. It is associated with condyloma acuminata, anogenital (cervical, vaginal, vulval, penile, anal) squamous intraepithelial lesions and malignancy, and head and neck cancer.

HPV is a small deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) virus and can be classified into high risk and low risk types (Strains).

HPV infection may also play a role in the pathogenesis of squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck. Like penile and vulvar cancer, oropharyngeal cancers consist of two broad categories of disease:

HPV-associated and non-HPV-associated. HPV-associated oral cancers are primarily found in the oropharynx and base of the tongue and tonsil. HPV has also been linked to cancer of the larynx.

Over53 studies,have shown that men who have sex with men (MSM) had almost 67 chance of contracting the virus and increase the risk of having cancer caused by the virus.

Personal experience with Ketamine

About 6 years ago I had some surgery that was done using Ketamine and a local anesthetic. 

As described above I had some hallucinations, however what I also experienced was a feeling of a raised level of happiness which lasted for weeks afterward. 

I have a reputation of being a jolly person with a great sense of humor, however the Ketamine kicked it up to a whole new level. 

During the surgery I started cracking jokes and the whole surgical team was howling with laughter to the point where my surgeon had to say, "hold the jokes for a few minutes, I have to do some cuts", then he would, "go ahead with the jokes again, till I say stop" and so it went for the rest of the operation, no one remembered ever laughing so much during an operation. 

I studied the effect by surfing the internet and found some data on the effect and several years later recommended it to a friend who was bi-polar, she informed me that she was being reared with Ketamine and that she was better than she had ever been. 

I have read that the Ketamine effect may change theories regarding the underlying causes of depression. 

Ketamine is off patent and cheap, this should reduce the cost of treating depression, however I find the delay in accelerating testing and bringing it into standard clinical practice worrying. 

Hopefully it will not fall into the category of ignored 
treatments which may be highly efficacious, but with no great profit margin. 

Air Pollution - 2 millions deaths annually

Co-author of the study, Jason West, from the University of North Carolina, said: "Our estimates make outdoor air pollution among the most important environmental risk factors for health. Many of these deaths are estimated to occur in East Asia and South Asia, where population is high and air pollution is severe." 

Not only in these countries. Come to Tasmania, Australia when forestry is burning it's waste and back yard burning is being carried out to save money. 

Thank you for the article and for the study.

Stem cells - engineered ?

Stem Cell research has led us to know that everyone of us has reserves of stem cells in our bodies. Our bodies are able to activate these stem cells when we get the proper nutrition. God gave us all the elements we need to live & be healthy on this earth. On the right track about stem cells, but scary that you think of it as engineering. Wouldn't it be easier to find the natural elements that will activate these stem cells we all posses, instead of engineering the procedure?

Missing information - Xanax

Long term use of Alprazolam cause more serious and longer side effects than mentioned in this article. The reason a person tapers off is because of the seriousness of the side effects which can include seizure and death. I researched this subject for an assignment in a drug and alcohol class for master degree mental health course. The length of time of withdrawal symptoms for long term users are two weeks to a month and are just like alcohol withdrawal(which one of the drugs used to treat the alcohol withdrawal is alprazolam because of the risk of seizures). I have references and the assignment paper to show the danger of this drug in withdrawal of long term users so please don't sugar coat this. 

Thank you

Estrogen article - wholly miesleading

This information is not based on any clinical or national mortality data - it is a mathematical model based off of an unreliable secondary analysis of the WHI trial in which researchers went back, spliced up the patients by age, and then tried to tease out a benefit for estrogen not seen in the group as a whole. Sarrel, who created these dubious calculations, is a paid consultant for Noven Pharmaceuticals, which just HAPPENS to manufacture an estrogen patch. 

The WHI has been maimed repeatedly by critics who simply didn't like the study's results, which showed 

Molecular Relative Of P53 Tumor Suppressor Protein Also Helps Cancer Cells Thrive

They say you can pick your friends, but not your family. The same may hold true for related proteins. The protein TAp73 is a relative of the well-known, tumor-suppressor protein p53. It shares extensive common gene sequences with p53 and, as suggested by some previous studies, it may function similar to p53 to prevent tumorformation. However, unlike p53, which is the most commonly mutated gene in human tumors, TAp73 is rarely mutated, and instead is frequently overexpressed in a wide range of human tumors, including breast, colon, lung, stomach, ovarian, bladder, liver, neuroblastoma, glioma, and leukemias. In other words, cancer cells may have too many copies of the TAp73 gene.
Researchers still do not know whether TAp73 enhances tumor cell growth and, if so, exactly how it may give an advantage to tumor cells. But, in a new study that appears inNature Cell Biology, Xiaolu Yang, PhD, professor of Cancer Biology at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, and the Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute, and colleagues found that TAp73 supports the proliferation of human and mouse tumor cells. They also identify an important mechanism by which TAp73 gives tumor cells a growth advantage: it activates the expression of an enzyme called glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), the rate-limiting molecule of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP).
To fuel the proliferation of tumor cells, their metabolic pathways are fundamentally reprogrammed. This reprogramming allows for rapid generation of macromolecules such as nucleic acids, lipids, and proteins. It also enables tumor cells to reduce the oxidative stresses they experience. The PPP is important for both biosynthesis and anti-oxidant defense, and tumor cells need this pathway for their high rate of replication.
The study was led by Peng Jiang, PhD, and Wenjing Du, PhD, two postdoctoral fellows in the Yang lab. They and the rest of the team found that by stimulating G6PD, TAp73 increases PPP activity and directs the sugar glucose to pathways for synthesizing macromolecules for replication and detoxifying reactive types of oxygen molecules to protect cells from harm.
The team also found that the decrease in replication in cells without TAp73 can be rescued by either enforced expression of G6PD, or adding basic molecules called nucleosides (the precursor for nucleic acids) and a reactive oxygen species scavenger to mop up these deleterious molecules, two outcomes of the PPP. These data provide the evidence that stimulating the PPP is a main proliferative effect of TAp73.
This is the first evidence that TAp73 is needed for tumor growth, as seen in the mouse and human colon, lung and other cancers studied.
Previous work by Yang's lab, also led by Jiang and Du, found that p53 has the exact opposite effect on the PPP. They found that p53 physically binds to and inhibits G6PD. Through this inhibition, p53 normally dampens synthesis of molecules and cell reproduction by forcing the cell to take up less glucose. If p53 can't do its intended job, cells grow out of control. In tumors, more than half of which carry mutations in the p53 gene, this routing function is abolished, enabling cells to build biomass and divide with abandon. The opposing effect of two members of the p53 family on the G6PD underlines this importance of this enzymes and the pathway it controls, the PPP, in tumor cells.
"These findings establish a critical role for TAp73 in regulating metabolism and connect TAp73 and the PPP to cancerous cell growth," says Yang.
The prevalence of p53 inactivation and TAp73 up-regulation indicate that modulating the pathways that these two proteins control could bring substantial benefit to tumor therapy. However, targeting these pathways has proven to be difficult as most proteins in the p53 and TAp73 pathway operate via protein-protein interactions, which are generally poor drug targets.
In contrast, metabolic enzymes are among the best drug targets. The identification of G6PD as an enzyme that becomes hyper-activate in tumors with p53 inactivation and/or TAp73 over-expression, two of the most common genetic alterations in cancer cells, suggests inhibition of this enzyme, or its related enzyme in the PPP pathway, may be highly beneficial for the therapy of a wide range of tumors.
The Yang lab has previously identified another set of enzymes that are both regulators and responders of p53. They hope that their work will give a strong impetus for developing high specific compounds for p53 and TAp73-regulated enzymes and testing them for cancer therapy, says Yang.

Rat model reveals that information in brain cells' electrical activity combines memory, environment, and state of mind

The information carried by the electrical activity of neurons is a mixture of stored memories, environmental circumstances, and current state of mind, scientists have found in a study of laboratory rats. The findings, which appear in the journal PLoS Biology, offer new insights into the neurobiological processes that give rise to knowledge and memory recall.
The study was conducted by Eduard Kelemen, a former graduate student and post-doctoral associate at the State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center, and André Fenton, a professor at New York University's Center for Neural Science and Downstate Medical Center. Kelemen is currently a postdoctoral fellow at University of Tuebingen in Germany.
The idea that recollection is not merely a replay of our stored experiences dates back to Plato. He believed that memory retrieval was, in fact, a much more intricate process - a view commonly accepted by today's cognitive psychologists and couched in the theory of constructive recollection. The theory posits that during memory retrieval, information across different experiences may combine during recall to form a single experience. Such a process may explain the prevalence of false memories. For example, studies have shown that people mistakenly recalled seeing a school bus in a movie if the bus was mentioned after they watched the movie.
In addition, other scholarship has shown that a subject's mindset can also influence the retrieved information. For example, looking at a house from the perspective of a homebuyer or a burglar leads to different recollections - potential purchasers may recall the house's leaky roof while would-be burglars may remember where the jewelry is kept.
But while the psychological contours of retrieval are well-documented, very little is known about the neural activity that underlies this process.
With this in mind, Fenton and Kelemen centered their study on the neurophysiological processes rats employ as they solve problems that require memory retrieval. To do so, they employed techniques developed during the last two decades. These involve monitoring the electrical activity of neurons in the rats' hippocampus - the part of the brain used to encode new memories and retrieve old ones. By spotting certain types of neuronal activity, researchers have historically been able to perform what amounts to a mind reading exercise to decode what the rat is thinking and even comprehend the specifics of the rats' memory retrieval.
In their experiments, Fenton and Kelemen tested the viability of a concept, "cross-episode retrieval" - stimulating the brain activity in a given circumstance that was also activated in a previous, distinctive experience.
"Such cross-episode expression of past activity can create opportunities for generating novel associations and new information that was never directly experienced," the authors wrote.
To test their hypotheses, rats were placed in a stable, circular arena, then in a rotating, circular arena of the same size, followed by a return to the stable arena. In the rotating arena condition, the surface turned slowly, making it necessary for the rat to think about its location either in terms of the rotating floor or in terms of the stationary room.

Rat model reveals that information in brain cells' electrical activity combines memory, environment, and state of mind

The information carried by the electrical activity of neurons is a mixture of stored memories, environmental circumstances, and current state of mind, scientists have found in a study of laboratory rats. The findings, which appear in the journal PLoS Biology, offer new insights into the neurobiological processes that give rise to knowledge and memory recall.
The study was conducted by Eduard Kelemen, a former graduate student and post-doctoral associate at the State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center, and André Fenton, a professor at New York University's Center for Neural Science and Downstate Medical Center. Kelemen is currently a postdoctoral fellow at University of Tuebingen in Germany.
The idea that recollection is not merely a replay of our stored experiences dates back to Plato. He believed that memory retrieval was, in fact, a much more intricate process - a view commonly accepted by today's cognitive psychologists and couched in the theory of constructive recollection. The theory posits that during memory retrieval, information across different experiences may combine during recall to form a single experience. Such a process may explain the prevalence of false memories. For example, studies have shown that people mistakenly recalled seeing a school bus in a movie if the bus was mentioned after they watched the movie.
In addition, other scholarship has shown that a subject's mindset can also influence the retrieved information. For example, looking at a house from the perspective of a homebuyer or a burglar leads to different recollections - potential purchasers may recall the house's leaky roof while would-be burglars may remember where the jewelry is kept.
But while the psychological contours of retrieval are well-documented, very little is known about the neural activity that underlies this process.
With this in mind, Fenton and Kelemen centered their study on the neurophysiological processes rats employ as they solve problems that require memory retrieval. To do so, they employed techniques developed during the last two decades. These involve monitoring the electrical activity of neurons in the rats' hippocampus - the part of the brain used to encode new memories and retrieve old ones. By spotting certain types of neuronal activity, researchers have historically been able to perform what amounts to a mind reading exercise to decode what the rat is thinking and even comprehend the specifics of the rats' memory retrieval.
In their experiments, Fenton and Kelemen tested the viability of a concept, "cross-episode retrieval" - stimulating the brain activity in a given circumstance that was also activated in a previous, distinctive experience.
"Such cross-episode expression of past activity can create opportunities for generating novel associations and new information that was never directly experienced," the authors wrote.
To test their hypotheses, rats were placed in a stable, circular arena, then in a rotating, circular arena of the same size, followed by a return to the stable arena. In the rotating arena condition, the surface turned slowly, making it necessary for the rat to think about its location either in terms of the rotating floor or in terms of the stationary room.
Overall, the results showed district neural activity between the stable and rotating conditions. However, during the rotating task, the researchers intermittently observed "cross-episode retrieval" - that is, at times, neurons expressed patterns of electrical activity under the rotating-arena condition that were similar to those activity patterns that were used in the stable-arena condition. Notably, cross-episode retrieval occurred more frequently when the angular position of the rotating arena was about to complete a full rotation and return to the same position as in the stable condition, demonstrating that retrieval is influenced by the environment.
To show that cross-episode retrieval was influenced by current state of mind, Fenton and Kelemen took advantage of an earlier finding from their experiments: during the arena rotation, neural activity switches between signaling the rat's location in the stationary room and the rat's location on the rotating arena floor. Cross-episode retrieval was also more likely when neuronal activity represented the position of the rat in the stationary room than when it represented positions that rotate with the arena. This showed that retrieval is influenced by internal cognitive variables that are encoded by hippocampal discharge - i.e., a state of mind.

"These experiments demonstrate novel, key features of constructive human episodic memory in rat hippocampal discharge," explained Fenton, "and suggest a neurobiological mechanism for how experiences of different events that are separate in time can nonetheless comingle and recombine in the mind to generate new information that can sometimes amount to valuable, creative insight and knowledge."

Rat model reveals that information in brain cells' electrical activity combines memory, environment, and state of mind

The information carried by the electrical activity of neurons is a mixture of stored memories, environmental circumstances, and current state of mind, scientists have found in a study of laboratory rats. The findings, which appear in the journal PLoS Biology, offer new insights into the neurobiological processes that give rise to knowledge and memory recall.
The study was conducted by Eduard Kelemen, a former graduate student and post-doctoral associate at the State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center, and André Fenton, a professor at New York University's Center for Neural Science and Downstate Medical Center. Kelemen is currently a postdoctoral fellow at University of Tuebingen in Germany.
The idea that recollection is not merely a replay of our stored experiences dates back to Plato. He believed that memory retrieval was, in fact, a much more intricate process - a view commonly accepted by today's cognitive psychologists and couched in the theory of constructive recollection. The theory posits that during memory retrieval, information across different experiences may combine during recall to form a single experience. Such a process may explain the prevalence of false memories. For example, studies have shown that people mistakenly recalled seeing a school bus in a movie if the bus was mentioned after they watched the movie.
In addition, other scholarship has shown that a subject's mindset can also influence the retrieved information. For example, looking at a house from the perspective of a homebuyer or a burglar leads to different recollections - potential purchasers may recall the house's leaky roof while would-be burglars may remember where the jewelry is kept.
But while the psychological contours of retrieval are well-documented, very little is known about the neural activity that underlies this process.
With this in mind, Fenton and Kelemen centered their study on the neurophysiological processes rats employ as they solve problems that require memory retrieval. To do so, they employed techniques developed during the last two decades. These involve monitoring the electrical activity of neurons in the rats' hippocampus - the part of the brain used to encode new memories and retrieve old ones. By spotting certain types of neuronal activity, researchers have historically been able to perform what amounts to a mind reading exercise to decode what the rat is thinking and even comprehend the specifics of the rats' memory retrieval.
In their experiments, Fenton and Kelemen tested the viability of a concept, "cross-episode retrieval" - stimulating the brain activity in a given circumstance that was also activated in a previous, distinctive experience.
"Such cross-episode expression of past activity can create opportunities for generating novel associations and new information that was never directly experienced," the authors wrote.
To test their hypotheses, rats were placed in a stable, circular arena, then in a rotating, circular arena of the same size, followed by a return to the stable arena. In the rotating arena condition, the surface turned slowly, making it necessary for the rat to think about its location either in terms of the rotating floor or in terms of the stationary room.
Overall, the results showed district neural activity between the stable and rotating conditions. However, during the rotating task, the researchers intermittently observed "cross-episode retrieval" - that is, at times, neurons expressed patterns of electrical activity under the rotating-arena condition that were similar to those activity patterns that were used in the stable-arena condition. Notably, cross-episode retrieval occurred more frequently when the angular position of the rotating arena was about to complete a full rotation and return to the same position as in the stable condition, demonstrating that retrieval is influenced by the environment.
To show that cross-episode retrieval was influenced by current state of mind, Fenton and Kelemen took advantage of an earlier finding from their experiments: during the arena rotation, neural activity switches between signaling the rat's location in the stationary room and the rat's location on the rotating arena floor. Cross-episode retrieval was also more likely when neuronal activity represented the position of the rat in the stationary room than when it represented positions that rotate with the arena. This showed that retrieval is influenced by internal cognitive variables that are encoded by hippocampal discharge - i.e., a state of mind.
"These experiments demonstrate novel, key features of constructive human episodic memory in rat hippocampal discharge," explained Fenton, "and suggest a neurobiological mechanism for how experiences of different events that are separate in time can nonetheless comingle and recombine in the mind to generate new information that can sometimes amount to valuable, creative insight and knowledge."

Chemical contaminants in food evaluated by Danish survey

n general, Danes have no reason to worry about unwanted chemical compounds in the food they put on their table - especially not if they eat a varied diet. However, a monitoring survey puts focus on certain compounds - e.g. inorganic arsenic and acrylamide, the intake of which should be reduced due to health risks. These findings are presented in the latest report on chemical contaminants in food prepared by the National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark.
The National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark has evaluated the content of chemical contaminants in food in the period 2004-2011 at the request of the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. The content of chemical contaminants is evaluated in relation to which specific foods Danes eat, and how much. The latest monitoring report includes even more compounds than the one from 2003.
"Monitoring of unwanted compounds is performed to ensure that the food eaten by the Danish people does not contain too many harmful compounds. In general, Danes should not be concerned about unwanted chemical compounds in food products. However, it would be advantageous if the intake of certain compounds was reduced", says Annette Petersen, senior adviser at the National Food Institute.
The report shows that it would be an advantage to focus efforts on reducing Danes' intake of inorganic arsenic, acrylamide, the metals lead and cadmium as well as the environmental toxicants PCB and dioxin. The intake of lead and cadmium remains more or less unchanged since the last monitoring survey in 2003. In contrast, the intake of dioxin and PCB shows a falling tendency, however, focused efforts are still necessary.
Acrylamide in food may cause cancer
In recent years, the National Food Institute has indicated that Danes' intake of acrylamide constitutes a health risk as it increases the risk of developing cancer. Acrylamide is formed when you fry, bake, grill or broil carbohydrate-rich foods at temperatures above 120 degrees.
The report shows that on average a Danish adult takes in 16 micrograms acrylamide per day. This is a decline compared to the latest calculations from 2007, where the intake was 24 micrograms on average. The decline is mainly due to the fact that the contribution from fried potatoes has been reduced. In calculating the intake it was presumed that Danes meet the recommendation of preparing the potatoes at a maximum of 175 degrees until they are gold brown.
The National Food Institute has calculated that even an average intake of 16 micrograms constitutes a health risk and thus considers this amount too high. Adults get most of their acrylamide from potato products (36 %), while 30 % comes from coffee and 13 % from bread. Children get 43 % from potatoes, 20 % from chips and chocolate and 16 % from bread.
Based on new results concerning the risk associated with acrylamide, the National Food Institute in cooperation with several European sister institutes in 2012 asked the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) to undertake a new assessment of acrylamide. The institute continuously works on accelerating international work in this regard.
Inorganic arsenic in rice products
The intake of inorganic arsenic is also mentioned in the media. Particular focus has been put on babies' and young children's exposure to inorganic arsenic from rice crackers and rice porridge. In Denmark, rice is a significant source of inorganic arsenic for all age groups. After a long period of intake, inorganic arsenic may increase the risk of developing cancer. The National Food Institute has assessed that the dietary intake of inorganic arsenic is so high that seen from a health point of view it should be reduced.

"For all compounds mentioned it holds true that if you eat a varied diet you reduce health risks. You may vary your intake of meat and fish as well as your side order of potatoes, vegetables, rice and bread", says Christine Nellemann, head of division.

Personality dispositions affect health and happiness

Research from the University of Southampton has shown that young adults, who are more outgoing or more emotionally stable, are happier in later life than their more introverted or less emotionally stable peers.
In the study, published in the Journal of Research in Personality, Dr Catharine Gale from the Medical Research Council's Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton and a team from the University of Edinburgh and University College London, examined the effects of neuroticismand extraversion at ages 16 and 26 years on mental wellbeing and life satisfaction at age 60 to 64 and explored the mediating roles of psychological and physical health.
They found that personality dispositions by the time of early adulthood have an enduring influence on well-being decades later.
Dr Gale, Reader in Epidemiology, comments: "Few studies have examined the long-term influence of personality traits in youth on happiness and life satisfaction later in life. We found that extroversion in youth had direct, positive effects on wellbeing and life satisfaction in later life. Neuroticism, in contrast, had a negative impact, largely because it tends to make people more susceptible to feelings of anxiety and depression and to physical health problems. "
The study examined data on 4,583 people who are members of the National Survey for Health and Development, conducted by the Medical Research Council. All were born in 1946; they completed a short personality inventory at age 16, and again at age 26.
Extroversion was assessed by questions about their sociability, energy, and activity orientation. Neuroticism was assessed by questions about their emotional stability, mood, and distractibility.
Decades later, when the participants were 60 to 64-years-old, 2,529 of them answered a series of questions measuring well-being and their level of satisfaction with life. They also reported on their mental and physical health. Their answers point to a distinct pattern.
Specifically, greater extroversion, as assessed in young adulthood, was directly associated with higher scores for well-being and for satisfaction with life. Neuroticism, in contrast, predicted poorer levels of wellbeing, but it did so indirectly. People higher in neuroticism as young adults were more susceptible to psychological distress later in life and to a lesser extent, poorer physical health.
Dr Gale adds: "Understanding what determines how happy people feel in later life is of particular interest because there is good evidence that happier people tend to live longer. In this study we found that levels of neuroticism and extraversion measured over 40 years earlier were strongly predictive of well-being and life satisfaction in older men and women. Personality in youth appears to have an enduring influence on happiness decades later."

The soaring costs of treating dizziness in the emergency room

A new Johns Hopkins research report says emergency room visits for severe dizziness have grown exponentially in recent years, with costs topping $3.9 billion in 2011 and projected to reach $4.4 billion by 2015. The investigators say roughly half a billion a year could be saved immediately if emergency room physicians stopped the routine and excessive use of head CT scans to search for stroke in dizzy patients, and instead used simple bedside physical exams to identify the small group of patients that truly needs imaging.
After analyzing records from two large, national public databases, the Johns Hopkins research team concluded that a large percentage of patients who come to the emergency department with dizziness are suffering from a benign inner-ear disorder, while just 5 percent of those whose major complaint is dizziness are having a stroke. Nearly half of all patients with dizziness now get CT scans, according to the report, published in the July issue of the journal Academic Emergency Medicine.
"A lot of resources are expended trying to diagnose dizzy patients, mostly to rule out stroke or other dangerous disorders," says study leader David E. Newman-Toker, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "What our study shows is that we need to realign our resources so that we image only the patients who need it, not the ones who don't. We need our emergency physicians to be able to confidently identify patients with benign ear conditions who can be safely treated and sent home, without imaging. Accurately and efficiently separating inner-ear patients from the other dizzy patients who probably have strokes will save lives and money."
In their analysis of information from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, Newman-Toker and his colleagues found that while the number of annual emergency room visits for all complaints nationally increased by 44 percent (from 70.7 million to 101.9 million) from 1995 to 2011, the annual number of visits for dizziness jumped even more, by 97 percent (from 2 million to 3.9 million) over the same period.
They also found that the proportion of dizziness visits that involved advanced imaging technology increased from 10 percent in 1995 to nearly 40 percent in 2011, while the use of imaging increased even more in patients without dizziness, whose scans increased from 3.4 percent to 19 percent over the study period.
Newman-Toker says CT scans are useful in detecting hemorrhagic stroke - a bleed in the brain - but this is rarely the cause of dizziness. When it is, patients almost always have other telltale symptoms, such as weakness or confusion, which make it clear that CT scans are the correct choice, he adds. For diagnosing the vast majority of strokes - ischemic strokes, which occur when blood flow is cut off from part of the brain - CT is the wrong diagnostic tool, he says, missing an estimated 85 percent of strokes in the first 24 hours after symptoms begin, and about 60 percent in the days that follow.
Newman-Toker says CT is particularly poor in diagnosing abnormalities in the back part of the brain, which controls balance and is usually involved if dizziness is the main stroke symptom. About one in three strokes whose primary symptom is dizziness is missed in the emergency room, sometimes with tragic consequences, including preventable deaths, he says. Newman-Toker believes unwarranted faith in a CT scan's ability to detect stroke may contribute to these misdiagnoses by creating a false reassurance for both physician and patient that a normal scan means a stroke has been "ruled out."
Although they are technically noninvasive tests, CT scans are not without risk. CT scans combine a series of X-ray views taken from different angles and computer processing to create cross-sectional images of the bones and soft tissues. Since a single scan can represent the equivalent of up to 500 regular X-rays, there is enough radiation exposure that patients undergoing CT may have an increased chance of cancer later in life, he says.
Ideally, Newman-Toker says, fewer than 5 percent of dizzy emergency room patients would get CTs. MRIs, which do not involve damaging forms of radiation, take clearer pictures of the brain and are much more accurate for stroke diagnosis. But MRIs cost up to four times as much as CT scans and take longer, so they are only used in 1 to 2 percent of dizzy ER patients. Newman-Toker believes MRIs could be used on about 6 percent of dizzy ER patients to accurately diagnose strokes and other dangerous brain conditions, improving diagnosis while still cutting costs. The added costs for this subset of patients would be more than offset by reductions in unnecessary CT and hospital admissions in patients with benign inner-ear disorders, netting an estimated $1 billion in cost savings annually, he projects.
"The trick is figuring out which patients need which imaging tests and which need none at all," he says, and the key there is clinical skill.
The answer is in the eyes, he points out. To distinguish stroke from a more benign condition, such as vertigo linked to an inner-ear disturbance, specialists typically use three eye movement tests, essentially stress tests for the balance system. In experienced hands, these bedside clinical tests have been shown in several large research studies to be extremely accurate - "nearly perfect, and even better than MRI in the first two days after symptoms begin," says Newman-Toker.
One of those tests, known as the horizontal head impulse test, is the best predictor of stroke. To perform it, doctors or technicians ask patients to look at a target on the wall and keep their eyes on the target as doctors move the patients' heads from side to side. But, says Newman-Toker, it requires expertise to determine whether a patient is making the fast corrective eye adjustments that would indicate a benign form of dizziness, as opposed to a stroke.
Another option, studied by Newman-Toker and his colleagues, allows doctors to perform the same test using a small, portable device - a video-oculography machine that detects minute eye movements difficult for most physicians to notice. The machine includes a set of goggles, akin to swimming goggles, with a USB-connected webcam and an accelerometer in the frame. The webcam is hooked up to a laptop where a continuous picture of the eye is taken. Software interprets eye position based on movements and views of the pupil, while the accelerometer measures the speed of the movement of the head. In a small study published earlier this year in the journal Stroke, strokes were distinguished from benign inner-ear conditions with 100 percent accuracy.
Newman-Toker says funding is needed to study how to best educate more emergency room doctors to do the lower-cost eye movement tests, with or without the goggles and computer technology. With appropriate training, he believes fewer patients will need expensive imaging, and quality of care will be enhanced by improving diagnostic accuracy. By using existing medical evidence to guide diagnosis, he predicts 50,000 to 70,000 patients a year whose strokes are missed could be properly diagnosed quickly.
"This is not a problem without a solution," he says. "Experts can do this now, and the ability to transfer that expert knowledge to the front lines of health care is a realistic possibility in the next couple of years.
"These are high-stakes judgment calls that emergency physicians make every day, to send someone home or to order expensive and potentially risky imaging. They're still uncomfortable about making the wrong decision and the fear of causing harm or getting sued plays no small part. We want to help doctors make better decisions for patients, while providing the best value for the money."

Life expectancy varies by sex and race

For males, HLE estimates at 65 years ranged from a low in Mississippi of 10.1 years, to a high in Hawaii of 15 years. But for females, those numbers were 11.4 years in Mississippi and 17.3 years in Hawaii.
According to the report, healthy years lived beyond age 65 were:
  • Greater for females than for males, and
  • Ranged from 0.7 years in Louisiana, to 3.1 years in the Dakotas.
  • Life expectancy - figure 1 diagram
    Healthy life expectancy for males and females in years from age 65, by state, 2007-2009. Source: CDC
    In terms of information by race, the study admits that "HLE estimates for Hispanics, Asians, and American Indians/Alaska Natives were not presented because sufficient reliable data were not available at the state level."
    The report does, however, analyze the state-by-state numbers for both blacks and whites, and it reveals that HLE was greater for whites than blacks in almost every state, with the exceptions of Nevada and New Mexico. Iowa had the largest difference in HLE between whites and blacks at 7.8 years.

    Why the state-by-state difference in life expectancy?

    While the CDC says it is not possible to flesh out why some states have a higher or lower HLE, the report does, however, suggest that several factors can influence health status later in life:
  • Safe and healthy living environments
  • Healthy behaviors, such as getting exercise and not smoking
  • Receiving proper clinical preventive services, such as vaccines, screenings and blood pressure checks)
  • Having access to good health care when needed.
  • Life expectancy - figure 2 diagram
    As a general trend, HLE rates from 2007-2009 were lowest in the Southeast, with higher rates dotted in the Southwest, Northeast, Northwest, Florida and Hawaii. Source: CDC
    Knowing which regions are falling behind the health care curve is an important component of improving overall health care in the country. A recent study revealed that the US has fallen behind other wealthy nations on health, which is why understanding these health trends is so vital.
    Written by Marie Ellis