Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Saturday 3 September 2011

myelomeningocele and this is the type of spina bifida that will be referred to whenever the term spina bifida is used

Introduction

Children with disability

Dr Sheila Shribman talks about how parents and health professionals can work together to support children with disability.

Spina bifida occulta

Spina bifida occulta is the least serious type of spina bifida. In this type of spina bifida, the opening in the spine is very small, with a gap in one or more vertebrae (disc-shaped bones of the spine). The opening in the spine is covered with skin, so the gap is not visible from the outside.

Spina bifida occulta does not usually cause any symptoms and most people are unaware that they have the condition. In such cases, no treatment is required. In other cases, some symptoms may be apparent, such as bladder and bowel problems, or scoliosis, which is an abnormal curvature of the spine.

Spina bifida meningocele

Spina bifida meningocele is the rarest type of spina bifida. In this type of spina bifida, the meninges, which are the protective membranes that surround the spinal cord, are pushed out between openings in the vertebrae. The membranes can usually be removed during surgery and no further treatment is required.

In spina bifida meningocele, the nervous system is undamaged. However, a person with meningocoele may develop other problems, including bladder and bowel problems.

Spina bifida is a term that is used to describe a series of birth defects that affect the development of the spine and central nervous system. The central nervous system is made up of the brain, nerves and spinal cord. The spinal cord runs from the brain to the rest of the body and consists of nerve cells and bundles of nerves that connect all parts of the body to the brain.

The neural tube

During the first month of life, an embryo (developing baby) grows a primitive tissue structure called the neural tube. As the embryo develops, the neural tube begins to change into a more complicated structure of bones, tissue and nerves that will eventually form the spine and nervous system.

However, in cases of spina bifida, something goes wrong with the development of the neural tube and the spinal column (the ridge of bone that surrounds and protects the nerves) does not fully close. Spina bifida is a Latin term that means split spine.

Types of spina bifida

There are different types of spina bifida, including:

  • spina bifida occulta
  • spina bifida meningocele
  • myelomeningocele

This article focuses on myelomeningocele and this is the type of spina bifida that will be referred to whenever the term spina bifida is used. See the box to the left for information about spina bifida occulta and spina bifida meningocele

Myelomeningocele

Myelomeningocele is the most serious type of spina bifida. It is estimated that it affects one baby in every 1,000 that are born in Britain.

In myelomeningocele, the spinal column remains open along several vertebrae (the disc-shaped bones that make up the spine). The membranes and spinal cord push out to create a sac in the baby’s back. Sometimes the sac is covered with membranes called meninges, although it often remains open, leaving the nervous system vulnerable to infections that may be fatal.

In most cases of myelomeningocele, surgery can be carried out to close the defect. However, extensive damage to the nervous system will usually have already taken place. Damage can result in a range of symptoms including:

Most babies with myelomeningocele will also develop hydrocephalus, which is a condition where there is excess cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). CSF is the fluid that surrounds the brain.

The build-up of CSF is caused by problems with the development of the neural tube. Hydrocephalus needs to be treated with surgery because the extra pressure that the fluid places on the brain can cause brain damage.

See the Health A-Z topic about Hydrocephalus for more information about the condition.

Outlook

Over recent years, advancements in the treatment of spina bifida have resulted in a more positive outlook for the condition.

For example, before the 1960s, most children with spina bifida would die during their first year of life. However, today it is likely that children will survive into adulthood. Spina bifida can be a challenging condition to live with, but many adults with the condition are able to lead independent and fulfilling lives.

See Spina bifida - treatment for information about the range of different techniques that can be used to treat the condition.

Show glossary terms

Monday 29 August 2011

Bacteria stops dengue in tracks

Bacteria stops dengue in tracks

Aedes aegyptii The researchers infected the mosquito Aedes aegypti with bacteria

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Australian scientists say they have discovered a cheap and effective method of preventing the transmission of dengue fever.
They infected mosquitoes that spread the disease with bacteria that block transmission of the dengue virus.
When the resistant insects were released, they successfully interbred with wild mosquitoes and halted their ability to transmit dengue.
Details of the work are published in the journal Nature.
The researchers are hopeful that this could be a viable control for a disease that affects more than 50 million people worldwide every year.
According to the World Health Organization around one third of the world's population is at risk from dengue fever. The incidence and severity of this untreatable, mosquito-borne illness are increasing in many parts of the world.
Pesticides that kill the specific type of mosquitoes that carry the virus have been the most effective method of control to date, but resistance is rising.
Now a team of Australian scientists say that a simple bacterium called Wolbachia that only infects insects could stop dengue in its tracks.
Natural agent
Professor Scott O'Neill from Monash University, Melbourne, is one of the authors of the research.
"The approach is to use a naturally occurring bacterial agent - An intracellular bacteria that only grows within insects, and it's extremely common in the environment, up to 70% of insects naturally carry it."
After a series of laboratory experiments that proved the power of Wolbachia to restrict the abilities of mosquitoes to transmit dengue, the scientists then released several hundred thousand of them in Queensland in northeastern Australia.
Scott O'Neill explained that a critical aspect was getting the consent of the community to the idea of releasing even more mosquitoes into the environment.
"We spent a considerable amount of time preparing the community before we did the open field tests. A key component was an independent risk analysis undertaken by the CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation - Australia's national science agency). It indicated that over a 30 year time frame any potential for a negative risk with these experiments was considered negligible," he said.
"The mosquitoes were placed in containers, we filled up a van with these containers and drove around early in the morning in the neighbourhood and simply lifted the cover off these containers and the mosquitoes would fly out."
Within months, a wave of infection by the bacterium had spread to almost all the wild mosquitoes rendering them incapable of passing on dengue.
The scientists are uncertain as to why Wolbachia blocks the ability to transmit dengue, but Professor O'Neill said they have two theories: "The first relates to the immune system. The data suggests that the presence of Wolbachia boosts the immune system and helps the mosquito fight off the effects of dengue.
"Other evidence suggests that Wolbachia is competing for key sub-cellular molecules that the virus needs to replicate such as fatty acids - the jury is still out, it might be a combination of both."
The researchers say that further field tests are needed in countries like Thailand, Vietnam, Brazil and Indonesia where the disease is endemic.

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Thursday 25 August 2011

Designer vagina

Designer vagina NHS operations unwarranted

Women seek labial reduction surgery for cosmetic reasons

Published on 24/08/11

Women with normal sized labia minora still seek labial reduction surgery for cosmetic reasons finds new research published today in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.

Women with normal sized labia minora still seek labial reduction surgery for cosmetic reasons finds new research published today (24 August) in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.

Female cosmetic genital surgery is increasingly popular and the number of labial reduction procedures in the National Health Service has increased five fold in the past 10 years.

This is the first study looking specifically at the labial dimensions of women seeking cosmetic surgery. It looked at 33 women who had requested labial reduction surgery and who had been referred by their general practitioner. The average age of the group was 23.

All of the women were examined by a gynaecologist and the width and length of the labia minora were measured and compared with published normal values.

The study found that all women seeking surgery had normal sized labia minora, with an average width of 26.9 mm (right), and 24.8 mm (left).

Three women out of the total number were offered surgery to address a significant asymmetry. Of the women who were refused surgery, 12 (40%) of the women still remained keen to pursue surgery by another route, 11 women accepted a referral for psychology and one participant was referred to mental health services.

The women were asked what they would like to achieve with surgery and 20 women (60%) wished to make the labia smaller to improve appearance. Other reasons included reducing discomfort, improving confidence and wanting to improve sexual intercourse.

The study also looked at how old the women were when they first became dissatisfied with the labia minora. Twenty-seven women (81%) were able to pinpoint this. Of these, 5 women (15%) reported this to be under the age of 10, 10(30%) between the ages of 11 and 15, 5 (15%) between 16 and 20, 4 (12%) in their twenties, and 3 (9%) in their thirties.

Reasons for this dissatisfaction included an increasing self awareness of the genital area, physical discomfort, comments from a partner and watching TV programmes on cosmetic genital surgery.

Sarah Creighton, UCL Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Institute of Women’s Health and lead author said:

“It is surprising that all of the study participants had normal sized labia minora and despite this nearly half were still keen to pursue surgery as an option.

“A particular concern is the age of some of the referred patients, one as young as 11 years old. Development of the external genitalia continues throughout adolescence and in particular the labia minora may develop asymmetrically initially and become more symmetrical in time.”

BJOG Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Pierre Martin-Hirsch, added:

“Many women who are worried may have normal sized labia minora. Clear guidance is needed for clinicians on how best to care for women seeking surgery.”

Scalpel About 2,000 genital cosmetic operations are paid for by the NHS each year

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GPs should not refer women who are well but worried for female genital cosmetic surgery on the NHS, say experts.

Specialists at a Central London teaching hospital say they received 30 such referrals, mainly from family doctors, over the past three years.

This included eight schoolgirls - one as young as 11 - the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology reports.

Experts say doctors need clear guidance on how best to care for women who mistakenly believe they need surgery.

The British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons says medics need to determine whether a problem exists or whether an alternative solution may be preferable, but offers no advice on how to judge the problem, say the researchers from University College London's Women's Health Institute.

Start Quote

It's shocking, particularly because we are seeing girls who are really young”

End Quote Lead investigator Dr Sarah Creighton

They say it may be simpler to ban the procedure in the NHS altogether, leaving it to private practices. Some Primary Care Trusts do this.

And private provider Bupa says the procedure is purely cosmetic and does not offer financial cover for the procedure.

The NHS has no such restriction.

The experts who carried out the latest work said: "A private medical insurance company seems to be able to come to a conclusion when professional bodies are reluctant to act.

"National care standards are urgently needed."

Boom industry

Dr Sarah Creighton and colleagues believe the future demand for so-called "designer vagina" operations or labial reductions is potentially infinite and is driven by society's wider and growing desire for cosmetic surgery in general and changing expectations about what is a desirable appearance for women.

"It's shocking, particularly because we are seeing girls who are really young. They are asking for surgery that is irreversible and we do not know what the long-term risks of the procedure might be."

She said latest figures for England show about 2,000 of the procedures are paid for by the NHS each year.

"That's probably just the tip of the iceberg. It's a massive boom industry in the private sector."

For the study, they reviewed all 33 women referred to their clinic between 2007 and 2010 with requests for a labial reduction.

Most of the women were seeking help because they were concerned about appearance. Only a fifth wanted the surgery to reduce discomfort. One woman said she felt compelled to have the surgery after seeing a television programme on cosmetic genital surgery.

Start Quote

If the concerns are aesthetic, that should probably be seen in the private sector”

End Quote Paul Banwell British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons

A third of the women said they had looked at advertisements about the surgery before seeing a doctor.

Upon examination, all of the women were deemed to have "normal" genitalia by the doctors. But three were offered surgery to address "a significant asymmetry". The remaining 30 were refused any procedure.

All of the women were offered the options of sessions with a clinical psychologist to explore issues leading to their request for surgery.

Twelve of the women said they would be seeking a second opinion and would consider going private to get the surgery if they still could not get it on the NHS.

Paul Banwell, of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, said the operation was merited for some women, particularly those with functional concerns like discomfort.

"But if the concerns are aesthetic, that should probably be seen in the private sector."

He said he often dissuades patients from having the surgery and explains to them that there is a spectrum of 'normal' when it comes to female anatomy.

"We welcome the opportunity to be involved in suggesting guidelines and help for healthcare professionals seeing patients who are interested in labiaplasty."

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Monday 22 August 2011

how the body stops C. diff from being toxic

Gut's hospital bug defence found

Clostridium difficile bacteria Researchers show how the body stops C. diff from being toxic

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The way cells in the gut fight off toxins produced by a hospital bug has been discovered by US researchers.

Writing in Nature Medicine, they showed how a chemical - GSNO - deactivated a toxin from Clostridium difficile which causes inflammation and diarrhoea.

They hope to use their findings to develop a treatment for C. difficile.

A specialist in the bacterium said the discovery was "exciting", but any treatment was still a long way off.

C. difficile is one of many bacteria which can live in the human gut without causing health problems.

No competition

Start Quote

Understanding how this mechanism deactivates toxins provides a basis for developing new therapies that can target toxins directly”

End Quote Dr Jonathan Stamler Case Western Reserve University

A course of antibiotics, which wipes out other bacteria in the gut, can allow C. difficile to multiply and run rampant in the bowels.

They produce large numbers of toxins which enter the cells lining the bowel. This damages the cells resulting in inflammation, cramps, fever, diarrhoea and blood-stained stools.

It is particularly a problem in hospitals as the bacteria can spread, and many patients could be taking antibiotics or have a weakened immune system.

In hospitals in England there were 10,414 C. difficile infections during the financial year 2010-11, down from 33,442 in 2007-08.

Access denied

The whole toxin is unable to penetrate cells so it needs to cleave off a smaller chunk.

Scientists have identified the chemical GSNO - S-nitrosoglutathione - which is produced by the bowels in response to inflammation. It can bind to the toxin, preventing cleavage, so the toxin cannot enter cells.

One of the researchers Dr Jonathan Stamler, from the Case Western Reserve University, said: "Understanding how this mechanism deactivates toxins provides a basis for developing new therapies that can target toxins directly and thereby keep bacterial infections, like C. diff, from spreading."

In experiments on mice, the study showed giving the chemical orally increased survival. Researchers now want to begin clinical trials.

The report's lead author Prof Tor Savidge, from the University of Texas, believes the technique could be used on other infections.

"Along with its potential to provide a much-needed new approach to treating Clostridium difficile infection, the discovery could be applied to developing new treatments for other forms of diarrhoea, as well as non-diarrheal diseases caused by bacteria," he said.

Prof Nigel Minton, from the Clostridia Research Group at the University of Nottingham, said: "This is an exciting discovery.

"Anything that can add to our scant arsenal of available treatments for combating this devastating disease is an important step forward.

"Having said that, one imagines that an actual therapeutic based on this discovery is some way off, either from being developed, and more importantly, from entering the clinic."

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Thursday 18 August 2011

Trainee doctor changeover 'impacts on patient safety'

Trainee doctor changeover 'impacts on patient safety'

Doctors The survey looked at the month when trainee doctors take up their posts

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The vast majority of doctors believe patient safety is compromised by the August intake of medical trainees, a survey has suggested.

The latest intake of medical trainee doctors start their training posts in the NHS at the beginning of the month.

The figures come in a study from the Society of Acute Medicine and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.

It found that 90% of doctors who responded said the changeover had a negative impact on patient safety.

The report authors called for an urgent reform to the system to be examined by the UK and Scottish governments.

On the same day trainees start doctors already in training rotate into other positions.

An estimated 50,000 doctors in the UK change over on the first Wednesday in August.

Start Quote

August is always a nightmare”

End Quote Survey respondent

The RCPE said evidence in recent years had also suggested that there may be a higher early death rate for patients admitted at this time than at other times.

The survey of just under 750 doctors throughout the UK, published in the journal Clinical Medicine, found:

  • 93% believed the August changeover had a negative impact on patient care
  • 90% believed the changeover had a negative impact on patient safety
  • 58% believed the changeover had a negative impact on doctors' training

The effects of the changeover on care and training were perceived to last for up to one month.

Start Quote

Consideration must be given to making the changeover in training safer”

End Quote Dr Neil Dewhurst RCPE

Most doctors believed a staggered transition by grade, over a period of over a month, could mitigate the impact. One respondent reported: "August is always a nightmare."

Dr Louella Vaughan, honorary consultant physician in acute medicine, and lead author of the study, said: "The results of this survey add to the emerging evidence base which indicates that the current August changeover system increases a number of risks for patients, including an increased early death rate for patients admitted to hospital at this time."

She called for "urgent reform" to the current system.

Dr Neil Dewhurst, president of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, added: "Formal evidence in support of our concerns has, however, been limited, but is now increasing and has reached the level where it should not be ignored.

"Other changes to established systems within healthcare have been shown to deliver real improvements for patients and similar consideration must be given to making the changeover in training safer.

"We would urge the Scottish and UK governments to review this matter as a matter of urgency."

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Monday 15 August 2011

Fat 'disrupts sugar'

Fat 'disrupts sugar sensors causing type 2 diabetes'

Man eating hotdog

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US researchers say they have identified how a high-fat diet can trigger type 2 diabetes, in experiments on mice and human tissue.

Writing in the journal Nature Medicine, they say that fat interferes with the body's sugar sensors.

The authors argue that a deeper understanding of the processes involved could help them develop a cure.

Diabetes UK said the study was interesting and a "theory worth investigating further".

One of the main risk factors for type 2 diabetes is being overweight - rising obesity levels have contributed to a doubling of diabetes cases in the last 30 years.

Fat and sugar

Sugar in the blood is monitored by pancreatic beta cells. If sugar levels are too high then the cells release the hormone insulin, which tells the body to bring the levels back down.

Key to this is the enzyme GnT-4a. It allows the cells to absorb glucose and therefore know how much is in the blood.

Start Quote

The identification of the molecular players in this pathway to diabetes suggests new therapeutic targets and approaches towards developing an effective preventative or perhaps curative treatment”

End Quote Dr Jamey Marth Lead researcher

Researchers at the University of California and the Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute say they have shown how fat disrupts the enzyme's production.

Experiments on mice showed that those on a high-fat diet had elevated levels of free fatty acids in the blood.

These fatty acids interfered with two proteins - FOXA2 and HNF1A - involved in the production of GnT-4a.

The result: fat effectively blinded cells to sugar levels in the blood and the mice showed several symptoms of type 2 diabetes.

The same process also took place in samples of human pancreatic cells.

Lead researcher Dr Jamey Marth said: "The observation that beta cell malfunction significantly contributes to multiple disease signs, including insulin resistance, was unexpected."

He suggested that boosting GnT-4a levels could prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes: "The identification of the molecular players in this pathway to diabetes suggests new therapeutic targets and approaches towards developing an effective preventative or perhaps curative treatment.

"This may be accomplished by beta cell gene therapy or by drugs that interfere with this pathway in order to maintain normal beta cell function."

Dr Iain Frame, Director of Research at Diabetes UK, said: "This is a well-executed study into possible factors responsible for the events that lead to type 2 diabetes.

"The researchers have linked their results in mice to the same pathways in humans and although they did not show they could prevent or cure type 2 diabetes they have shown it is a theory worth investigating further.

"We will watch this with great interest and hope this early work will eventually lead to some benefit to people with type 2 diabetes."

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Sunday 7 August 2011

MRSA rates fall to record level

MRSA rates fall to record level

Hospital cleaning Rates of MRSA infection have come down

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MRSA rates in England have hit their lowest level since records began, official statistics show.

The Health Protection Agency data showed there were 97 cases in the NHS in June - the first time the monthly figure has dropped below 100.

Twenty-five hospital trusts have also been free of MRSA for a year.

It marks a significant milestone in the battle against the superbug which at one point threatened to undermine confidence in the health service.

In the early 2000s the issue dominated the headlines with cases peaking in 2003-4.

During that period the numbers were recorded on a quarterly basis, with the figure hovering around the 2,000 mark.

That has fallen to just above 300 - a fall of more than 80%.

In recent years, monthly monitoring was introduced to give more timely data on progress. For the past year there has been regularly between 100 and 120 cases, but in June it dropped below 100.

Clostridium difficile figures are also falling - the 1,681 cases recorded in June are down 16% compared with a year ago.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: "The sustained pattern of falling infections across the health service is good news.

"However, the variation between the very best in the country and the very worst is still unacceptably high. So while progress has been made we must do better to shrink this gap and improve standards for all."

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Salmonella superbug on the rise

Salmonella superbug on the rise

Salmonella Most Salmonella infections are mild

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A strain of Salmonella resistant to the most powerful antibiotics has been found in the UK, France and Denmark.

The outbreak emerged in Africa then spread to Europe, picking up antibiotic resistance along the way, says a team of international researchers.

They are calling on health officials to step up monitoring to stop the "superbug" spreading globally.

Cases have grown from a handful in 2002 to 500 worldwide in 2008, they report in The Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Co-researcher Dr Simon Le Hello of Institut Pasteur in Paris, France, said: "We hope that this publication might stir awareness among national and international health, food, and agricultural authorities so that they take the necessary measures to control and stop the dissemination of this strain before it spreads globally, as did another multidrug-resistant strain of Salmonella, Typhimurium DT104, starting in the 1990s."

Most of the millions of Salmonella infections a year are not serious, causing only mild stomach upsets. Occasionally, however, particularly in the elderly or in people with weakened immune systems, they can be life-threatening and may need treatment with antibiotics.

Start Quote

We recommend people follow some basic food safety rules: wash hands properly and keep them clean, cook food thoroughly, chill foods properly and avoid cross-contamination”

End Quote Spokesperson Food Standards Agency

The strain, known as S. Kentucky, has developed resistance to the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin, often used for treating severe Salmonella cases.

French researchers started monitoring the strain after noticing a handful of cases in travellers returning from Egypt, Kenya and Tanzania.

Data from other countries suggests S. Kentucky arose in poultry in Egypt in the 1990s, and then spread to farm animals in various parts of Africa and the Middle East.

Although the first infections outside Africa seem to be in international travellers, more recent cases seem to have been acquired in Europe, perhaps through contaminated food, say the researchers. Cases have been seen in England, Wales, Denmark and France.

Hygiene care

The Health Protection Agency said there had been 698 cases of S. Kentucky from 2000 to 2008, 0.6% of all Salmonella cases reported in England and Wales .

Just 244 of the cases had resistance to ciprofloxacin.

Altogether, there are around 13,000 cases of Salmonella each year. Infections are only treated with antibiotics when they become invasive, and there are a number of drugs which can be used.

A spokesman said: "The number of cases we have been seeing in England and Wales has shown some increase but remained fairly stable over the latter part of the study.

"Care should be taken with hand and food hygiene particularly while travelling as over 50% of S.Kentucky cases reported in England and Wales are known to be travel-related."

A spokesperson from the UK's Food Standard's Agency (FSA) said human Salmonella infections are rarely treated with antibiotics, and cooking food thoroughly will destroy any bacteria irrespective of whether the organism is resistant to antibiotics or not.

He added: "As part of the FSA strategy to reduce foodborne illness we recommend people follow some basic food safety rules: wash hands properly and keep them clean, cook food thoroughly, chill foods properly and avoid cross-contamination.

"These principles, which are designed to reduce the risk from pathogens, such as Salmonella, are equally applicable whether these pathogens are resistant to antimicrobials or not."

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Back pain and disc health 'linked' to lack of nutrients

Back pain and disc health 'linked' to lack of nutrients

Lower back pain Degenerative discs are a significant cause of lower back pain

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Heavy lifting, twisting and bending can do damage to the discs in the back by reducing the flow of nutrients to the disc cells, a study says.

Disturbing the balance of nutrients in the discs can then lead to the onset of degenerative disease.

Writing in PLoS Computational Biology, Spanish experts say a normal level of physical activity helps cell nutrition.

Lower back pain, which is linked to degenerative spinal discs, could be caused by this lack of nutrients.

Previous research has shown that 80% of the active population suffers from low back pain at some point in their lives.

But little was known about the chain of events which changes normal, healthy ageing discs into degenerative discs.

Using computer models of the human disc in their study, a team of scientists from Barcelona's Institute for Bioengineering looked at the nutritional and mechanical effects of stress on the discs of the lower back.

Start Quote

A degenerated disc is like a collapsed sponge which needs to be restored to its normal size.”

End Quote Dr Jerome Noailly IBEC

By using the models, the researchers were able to see what happened when they changed disc height, cell density and made degenerative changes to the disc.

It would not have been possible to carry out this quality of research in a living person.

'Collapsed sponge'

The results showed that external loads on the disc influenced the solute concentration - the amount of glucose and lactate present in the disc.

The cells need glucose but do not want too much lactate, an acid which hinders the nutrition process and can kick-start the degenerative process.

Dr Jerome Noailly, study author and expert in the biomechanics and mechanobiology group at the Institute, said the study showed that nutrients could be the key factor.

"If we know that lack of nutrition is involved in accelerating the degenerative process and the properties of a degenerative disc hinder nutrition, then this will increase cell death and the disc tissue will start to degenerate more and more.

"In order to bring back the function of the degenerated disc, we must address the nutrition problem.

"This means restoring the water content of the disc and the volume of the disc. A degenerated disc is like a collapsed sponge which needs to be restored to its normal size."

The research team says the findings could open up new areas of research in the field of disc regenerative medicine.

Dr Brian Hammond, chair of the charity BackCare, said: "We are what we eat and the spine is no exception. A balanced diet, adequate fluid intake and regular exercise are essential for a healthy back and neck.

"There is little doubt that poor diet, being immobile for long periods and bad habits like smoking contribute to spinal degeneration and the high incidence of back and neck pain in the UK."

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Wednesday 27 July 2011

Rickets cases reported in Cardiff by health workers

Rickets cases reported in Cardiff by health workers

Coloured X-Ray of the legs of a child with rickets Rickets can lead to bone deformities and stunted growth

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Cases of the crippling children's bone disease rickets are being seen in Cardiff, BBC Wales has learned.

Caused by a lack of vitamin D, the disease can lead to deformities like bowed legs and stunted growth, but it largely disappeared last century.

Eye on Wales has learnt health professionals working in communities in south Cardiff are reporting incidents.

Public Health Wales does not hold statistics on the number of cases as rickets is not a notifiable disease

Dr Elspeth Webb, a reader in child health at Cardiff University, spends half her time working as a paediatrician within Splott and Tremorfa in the city.

She told the programme: "We're still seeing rickets in children in Cardiff in the 21st Century - which a lot of people might be very shocked and surprised by, thinking of it as a Victorian illness. But no, it's not.

"You get women living in certain communities that perhaps don't go out much because of religious, cultural traditions.

"They're covered up when they do. They don't get enough access to sunlight. So they get vitamin D deficient."

Start Quote

You don't see rickets in rich, advantaged, educated, middle-class South Asian people”

End Quote Dr Elspeth Webb Cardiff University

"Every pregnancy, you use up your vitamin D stores and if you're not making enough to replenish them, you gradually get more and more depleted.

"By your third or fourth child, that child is born already without enough vitamin D."

"So they'll be presenting with rickets at around 18 months."

While her experience suggests that rickets is confined within certain communities in south Cardiff, Dr Webb says that poverty and poor access to services are also reasons why the disease is occurring.

"You don't see rickets in rich, advantaged, educated, middle-class South Asian people. So it's a mixture of religious, cultural practices with poverty."

'Quite startling'

As co-ordinator of the Butetown Communities First project, Nathan Evans has been involved in the response to rickets and believes progress can be made towards eradicating the disease.

"For me this is something from the past. This is something that is alive and kicking in the 21st Century? This was quite startling for me."

Start Quote

Within Cardiff you've got quite dramatic contrasts between the northern area of Cardiff and the old docks area where life expectancy is considerably lower”

End Quote Prof Gareth Williams Cardiff University School of Social Sciences

"But then some of the remedies surrounding it are around that up-take of Vitamin D. So it's around diet, it's around lifestyle."

"The Local Health Board have this big drive around vitamin up-take. This has proved quite successful locally."

"As long as active promotion of where people can access vitamins, how they can maybe modify their behaviour in order to attract more sunlight into their lives then I believe this is something that can be reversed."

The cases of rickets serve to highlight the health inequalities - and differences in life expectancy - that exist within Wales' capital city.

Those differences have always existed, but Gareth Williams - a professor of sociology at Cardiff University - said the gap was widening, not shrinking.

"Within Cardiff you've got quite dramatic contrasts between the northern area of Cardiff and the old docks area where life expectancy is considerably lower. There's a 10-year life expectancy difference."

"Everyone's life expectancy is getting better. The life expectancy of people in poor communities has been getting better very slowly.

"Whereas the life expectancy of people in wealthier places is getting better quite quickly."

Earlier this month, First Minister Carwyn Jones committed the Welsh Government to passing a Public Health Bill to deliver improved life expectancy and reduce health inequality within the life of this assembly.

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Friday 22 July 2011

Teens 'not getting enough fruit and vegetables'

Teens 'not getting enough fruit and vegetables'

Strawberries The government recommends that five portions of fruit and vegetables are eaten each day

Just one in 13 teenage girls is getting their recommended five portions of fruit and vegetables a day, official government data shows.
But boys in the 11 to 18 age group did little better, with just one in eight eating the right amount, the National Diet and Nutrition Survey found.
Adults ate more on average, with a third getting their five-a-day.
The poll of more than 2,000 adults and children also raised concerns about other areas of diet.
Consumption of saturated fats for adults aged 19 to 64 was a tenth above recommended levels, while the majority of participants were found to be not getting enough oily fish.
But it was the diet of teenagers that raised the most concern.
The average consumption of fruit and vegetables for girls aged 11 to 18 was 2.7 portions with just 7% getting five-a-day. Nearly half of them are not getting enough iron in their diet either.
For boys, the average was 3.1 portions with just 13% getting five-a-day.
'Long way to go'
Chief Medical Officer Professor Dame Sally Davies said she was concerned about the figures for teenagers.
"Eating and being active can help prevent serious illnesses such as cancer and heart disease later in life," she added.

The five-a-day challenge

  • Girls aged 11 to 18 eat 2.7 portions of fruit and vegetables a day on average. Just 7% get five-a-day.
  • Boys in the same age group consume 3.1 portions on average with 13% getting the right amount.
  • Adults under 65 eat 4.2 portions with 30% getting five-a-day.
  • Those 65 and over fair a little better with the average daily consumption standing at 4.4. Some 37% get five-a-day.
The survey drew on findings from interviews, diaries and blood and urine samples taken during 2008 and 2010. It marks the start of an ongoing programme of research which will inform government policy.
As such, direct comparisons with previous studies are difficult - although similar research was carried out in the 1990s which showed on most counts eating habits were improving slightly.
But Dr Alison Lennox, one of the nutrition experts involved in the research, said there was still a "long way to go".
However, she did highlight the progress being made with younger children who seemed to be eating fewer sweets, fizzy drinks and chocolate.
Health minister Paul Burstow said the government was rolling out a a new campaign to increase fruit and vegetable consumption.
He added: "We have not seen the improvements we should have."


Monday 11 July 2011

“salt is safe to eat”, and that, after years of lecturing, the “health fascists” have been proved wrong.

The Daily Express has today claimed that “salt is safe to eat”, and that, after years of lecturing, the “health fascists” have been proved wrong.

This news is based on asystematic review that combined data from seven earlier studies looking at how reduced-salt diets affected the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), blood pressure and death. The authors of this combined study wanted to examine this because, although there is evidence that reducing salt leads to a reduction in blood pressure, no reviews had directly looked at these outcomes.

Although the studies provided data on nearly 6,500 participants, the researchers found that the number of participants who died or developed outcomes such as heart attacks was low, making it hard to estimate the impact of salt reduction in a meaningful way. The researchers concluded that there is not enough evidence to say with certainty that advising a reduced-salt diet is linked to reductions in death and CVD events, but crucially they have not said that salt reduction has no effect, as the coverage in the Express might suggest.

The review’s authors have called for further high-quality, long-term research to determine conclusively the effects of salt reduction. The NHS’s current advice, that adults should limit their salt intake to 6g a day, remains unchanged.

Where did the story come from?

The study was carried out by researchers from the University of Exeter, the University of Bristol, Florida Atlantic University, the University of East Anglia and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, as part of the Cochrane Collaboration. The study was funded by the UK National Institute for Health Research, as part of the Cochrane Collaboration.

The study was published in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Hypertension.

The findings of this study were overstated by media outlets, with the Daily Express commenting that a pool of 6,489 people from across seven studies was large enough to draw conclusions from. However, although the number of people included in the studies was relatively large, the researchers say that the number of events seen during these trials was too small to detect a reduction in risk with sufficient certainty. In email bulletins from the Cochrane Library, one of the reviewers, Professor Rod Taylor, estimates that data from at least 18,000 individuals would be required before any clear health benefits could be revealed.

What kind of research was this?

This was a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials that had examined the effects that salt-restricted diets have on outcomes including death, heart attacks, blood pressure, angina and stroke.

When conducting a systematic review, researchers pull together and analyse all appropriate studies relating to a particular topic, regardless of their findings. A meta-analysis, which pools the findings of included trials and analyses the data as an aggregate, is used to increase the ability (or “power”) of the study to detect an effect. This ability is improved as the number of participants studied increases. In this instance, the published study included nearly 6,500 participants.

What did the research involve?

The researchers conducted a literature search and included studies for analysis if:

  • The design was a randomised control trial with a follow-up period of at least six months.
  • The intervention being tested was a reduced-salt diet or advised reduced-salt diet.
  • The outcomes of interest included death due to cardiovascular disease (CVD) or any cause of CVD events, such as heart attack, angina, stroke or heart failure, or hospitalisation due to CVD. Data on blood pressure and estimated salt intake were also analysed where available.

The researchers assessed the quality (risk of bias) in each of the selected studies, and analysed the data by pooling the results in several different ways.

Researchers analysed the data in three separate groups, depending on the characteristics of the population under study at the start of the study:

  • people with normal blood pressure
  • people with high blood pressure
  • a mixed population of the two.

The only trial that included a mixed group was carried out in people diagnosed with heart failure who had been hospitalised within the previous month.

Across the seven studies, the treatments offered to the intervention and control groups varied. The interventions included group counselling sessions, advice and information leaflets, dietary counselling and specially prepared meals in which regular table salt was swapped for low-sodium salt. Across the control groups, some received no active behavioural intervention or advice, while others received specially prepared meals containing regular table salt.

What were the basic results?

The analysis included seven trials comprising a total of approximately 6,500 participants. These trials had formed the basis of 39 separate published research papers.

A total of 665 deaths from all causes (including 98 deaths from CVD) and 293 CVD events were reported across the included trials. Data was analysed separately for trials of people with normal blood pressure, high blood pressure and a mix of the two.

Trials of those with normal blood pressure showed:

  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of deaths (from any cause) in the intervention group
  • no evidence of reduction in CVD events in the intervention group
  • weak evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (maximum pressure exerted with each heart beat) of 1.1 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to control group participants
  • evidence for an average reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) of 0.80 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to control group participants
  • evidence for a reduction in estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) of 34.19 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants, suggesting compliance with the interventions

Trials of those with high blood pressure showed:

  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of deaths (due to any cause) in the intervention group
  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of CVD deaths in the intervention group
  • no evidence of reduction in CVD events in the intervention group
  • evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is beating) of 4.1 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • no evidence for a reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) in the intervention group compared to the control group evidence for a reduction in estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) of 39.11 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants

The single trial looking at people with heart failure, who had either normal or high blood pressure, showed:

  • evidence for an increase in the number of deaths (from any cause) in the intervention group
  • evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is beating) of 4.0 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • no evidence for a reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • evidence that estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) reduced by 27.00 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants

How did the researchers interpret the results?

Researchers concluded that, within the pooled research they analysed, there was no strong evidence that a restricted salt diet reduced death due to any cause, or reduced the number of CVD events in people with normal or high blood pressure. They also say that there was an increase in death due to any cause in people with heart failure who were on a restricted-salt diet.

The researchers say that they found consistent evidence for a reduction in urinary sodium levels, indicating that the participants continued to comply with the salt-restricted diet. However, they do say that this adherence is likely to decline over time.

The researchers also say that the observed reductions in blood pressure (between 1 and 4 mm Hg) would, according to current risk models, generally predict a reduction in death due to CVD by 5% to 20%. However, only two trials included data on CVD death, and the number of events reported was small. This increased the uncertainty surrounding the observed effect.

Researchers say that the small number of events observed across the seven trials is a limitation of their review. More observed events would be needed in order to reduce the uncertainty surrounding the estimated effects of salt reduction. They also say that since most of the participants knew whether they were on a reduced salt or regular salt diet, other lifestyle and dietary behaviours may have simultaneously been taken up by the control group, thus weakening the observed effect.

Conclusion

Performing a systematic review and meta-analysis can increase the statistical power of research on a topic, helping to detect differences in outcomes. However, although the number of individuals pooled in the analysis was large (approximately 6,500 people), the number of events which occurred was relatively small, reducing certainty as to what impact the interventions may have had. One of the study authors has estimated that at least 18,000 participants would need to be analysed in order to identify any effects clearly.

Points to note are that:

  • The reduced-sodium interventions did actually produce the expected positive effect, but the researchers could place little confidence in those measurements due to the relatively small number of events observed.
  • The researchers were not able to detect a clear effect, which is very different from detecting that no effect exists: the review did not find that salt reduction was not beneficial; it found that there was not enough evidence to determine conclusively the effect of salt reduction on death and CVD events.
  • The pooled studies varied quite widely in terms of their size, length of follow-up and intervention methods. Although the researchers have taken steps to analyse how well these differing studies can be pooled, these variations are likely to have had an effect on the accuracy of the results.
  • The studies followed participants for between 6 and 36 months – a relatively short time to observe outcomes such as CVD risk, which is partly determined by health choices made over several years. Although two of the studies also performed additional analyses several years after their original research, five of the studies did not.
  • These researchers were focusing on dietary advice and interventions that reduce salt intake in individuals. There is a well-described relationship between population levels of salt and cardiovascular disease. Small changes in salt at a population level are likely to have an effect on blood pressure and the link between blood pressure and cardiovascular disease is strong. This suggests that although the effect is small, large numbers of people might benefit from population approaches to reducing salt.

As the authors of this review have noted, further research into the long-term effects of a sustained low-salt diet would reduce the uncertainty surrounding the effects of dietary interventions to reduce salt intake.

Links to the headlines

Now salt is safe to eat. Daily Express, July 6 2011

Cutting back on salt 'does not make you healthier' (despite nanny state warnings). Daily Mail, July 6 2011

Links to the science

Taylor RS, Ashton KE, Moxham T et al. Reduced Dietary Salt for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials (Cochrane Review). American Journal of Hypertension, 2011 [Awaiting publication

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