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09/10/20

Previous research has demonstrated a variety of health benefits associated with the Mediterranean diet, which is rich in olive oil, cereals, fruit and vegetables, fish, and a moderate amount of dairy, meat, and wine. Now results suggest that the diet may also help prevent rheumatoid arthritis in individuals who smoke or used to smoke.

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The diabetes drug metformin has been prescribed to hundreds of millions of people worldwide as the frontline treatment for type 2 diabetes. Now, researchers have shown the importance of specific enzymes in the body for metformin's function. In addition, the new work showed that the same proteins, regulated by metformin, controlled aspects of inflammation in mice, something the drug has not typically been prescribed for.

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Scientists have completed a wide-ranging set of studies documenting how small changes in DNA sequence can impact gene expression across more than four dozen tissues in the human body. These studies, released in a set of 15 articles, constitute the most comprehensive catalog to date of genetic variations that affect gene expression.

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A recent study has shown that readers' eye gaze behaviors are strong indicators of words that are unexpected, new, or difficult to understand. The study explores the unknown qualities of gaze behavior for 'sign watching' and how these are affected by a user's language expertise and intelligibility of the sign input.

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A team of scientists is shedding new light on the gene regulatory pathways activated by cortisol, a hormone secreted in response to stress. Their research helps explain why exposure to chronic stress early in life shortens lifespan and contribute to age-related chronic diseases later in life -- long after the source of stress has been removed.

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The switch from brand name to generic cholesterol medications that occurred between 2014 and 2018 has saved Medicare billions of dollars, even as the number of people on cholesterol-lowering drugs has increased, scientists have calculated. Their data suggest that policymakers and clinicians could help cut Medicare costs even further by switching more patients to generic drugs.

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Researchers have found that a module of the immune system, best known for causing allergic reactions, plays a key role in acquiring host defense against infections triggered by the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus. This allergy module, constituted by mast cells and Immunoglobulin E, can grant protection and increased resistance against secondary bacterial infections in the body. These findings indicate a beneficial function for allergic immune responses.

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Gut microbes affect human health, but there is still much to learn, in part because they're not easy to collect. But researchers now report that they have developed an ingestible capsule that in rat studies captured bacteria and other biological samples while passing through the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.

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Probiotics may help children and adolescents with obesity lose weight when taken alongside a calorie-controlled diet, according to a new study. The study found that obese children who were put on a calorie-restricted diet and given probiotics Bifidobacterium breve BR03 and Bifidobacterium breve B632, lost more weight and had improved insulin sensitivity compared with children on a diet only.

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Hepatocellular carcinoma is usually treated by blocking the flow of blood to the tumor to induce cancer cell death, but the common treatment, transarterial chemoembolization, is invasive and too imprecise to be a local drug delivery method. Aiming to increase the precision, researchers created a treatment that involves vaporizing tiny droplets of perfluorocarbon, a common organic material composed of carbon and fluorine.

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Early menarche has been associated with many cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, but little is known about its association with overall heart health. One new study suggests that age at menarche plays an important role in maintaining and improving cardiovascular health, although there are a number of age differences.

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You know the type: Loud. Swaggering. Pushy. The alpha male clearly runs the show. Female alphas are often less conspicuous than their puffed up male counterparts, but holding the top spot still has its perks. Now, a study of female baboons points to another upside to being No. 1. A new study of 237 female baboons in Kenya found that alphas have significantly lower levels of glucocorticoids, hormones produced in response to stress.

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Cancer is one of the most frequent causes of death. Chemotherapy is often used as a treatment, but also brings side effects for healthy organs. Scientists are now trying to take a completely different approach: By means of targeted and localized disruption of the cancer cells' structure, its self-destruction mechanism can be activated. In laboratory experiments, they have already demonstrated initial successes.

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Early menarche has been associated with many cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, but little is known about its association with overall heart health. One new study suggests that age at menarche plays an important role in maintaining and improving cardiovascular health, although there are a number of age differences.

from Top Health News -- ScienceDaily https://ift.tt/2Zkc8Bx

Men have roughly twice the risk of developing severe disease and dying from COVID-19 than women. Scientists say this is in part because women mount stronger immune reactions to the disease’s microbial cause: the infamous coronavirus called SARS-CoV-2.

Now research with prostate cancer patients points to another possible explanation, which is that the male sex hormone testosterone helps SARS-Cov-2 get into and infect human cells.

SARS-CoV-2 initiates infections by first latching onto its human cell receptor. But it can only pass into a cell with the aid of a second protein called TMPRSS2. Testosterone regulates TMPRSS2, such that levels of the hormone and the protein rise and fall together in tandem. If testosterone levels are depressed, scientists speculate, then TMPRSS2 levels might also be so low that the novel coronavirus is blocked at the gates.

At least five clinical trials are now investigating if drugs acting on testosterone and its own receptor “could either prevent or cure COVID-19 symptoms,” said Dr. Andrea Alimonti from the University of Lugano in Bellanzona, Switzerland.

Positive results from one study

During a recent study, Alimonti’s team reviewed data from 42,434 men who were being treated for prostate cancer in the Veneto region of Italy. Among them, 5,273 were getting androgen deprivation therapies (ADT) that suppress testosterone. (The hormone fuels prostate tumors, so ADT is for some men a mainstay of treatment.) According to that investigation, coronavirus infection rates in the ADT-treated men were four times lower than they were in men who were not getting ADT. The researchers acknowledged the need for more study, but proposed that ADT “could be used transiently in men affected by SARS-CoV-2.”

And negative results from another

Other scientists are skeptical. Dr. Eric Klein, a urologist at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, argues that testosterone may not regulate TMPRSS2 in the lungs as it does in the prostate. Suppressing the hormone, he says, might therefore have little consequence for preventing SARS-CoV-2 respiratory symptoms. In a recent study of 1,779 men with prostate cancer, Klein and his colleagues generated evidence showing that ADT did not protect from COVID-19. The paper is currently in press at the Journal of Urology and has not yet been published.

Still, Klein stopped short of dismissing the possibility that ADT could be therapeutically useful in treating COVID-19. “Definitive answers will only come from the results of ongoing clinical trials using various forms of ADT in COVID-19 patients,” he said.

Dr. Marc Garnick, the Gorman Brothers Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and editor in chief of HarvardProstateKnowledge.org, agrees. “These studies — some positive and some negative — add to the complexities of fully understanding what affects coronavirus infectivity,” he says. “It is likely to be multi-factorial, and in some patients, testosterone levels may play a role. Pending results from large-scale clinical studies, however, no definitive recommendations about altering testosterone levels for COVID-19 treatment can be made.”

The post Hormonal treatments for prostate cancer may prevent or limit COVID-19 symptoms appeared first on Harvard Health Blog.



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