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Patients In St. Jude Medical Deep Brain Stimulation For Depression Pilot Study Demonstrate Sustained Improvement In Depression Symptoms
According to the latest data in a clinical study supported by St. Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE:STJ), deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy for depression may provide sustainable improvement in depression symptoms among patients with major depressive disorder. Study results will be presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) meeting in San Francisco.
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Dems' Health Care Reform Plans Would Include Abortion Coverage, Washington Times Opinion Piece States
As lawmakers work to pass health reform legislation, "few are talking about" the "essential question" of whether "health reform will force taxpayers to pay for abortions for the first time in 30 years," Family Research Council President Tony Perkins writes in a Washington Times opinion piece. According to Perkins, "the short answer is yes" because there is no "explicit provision" in any Democratic health plan that would "[p]revent taxpayer funding of abortions as part of the health care benefit Congress is considering"; avert "delays in health care services that result in the death of the patient waiting for care"; or allow health care providers "to refuse to participate in health care-related action that violates their conscience." Perkins continues that the House"s reform proposal would provide federal coverage for ""family planning," the well-worn buzz word that includes abortion unless specified to the contrary." He adds that "it would be naive to assume, unless there is an explicit prohibition in the bill, that [HHS] Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will not use her discretion to fund abortions with taxpayers" money." Perkins also writes that the Democratic reform plans, "in short, ... attempt to be silent on the key question of whether or not to allow the U.S. government to fund abortions with taxpayers" money," and also give the HHS secretary "the power to allow taxpayer-funded abortions."He writes, "The Family Research Council"s answer is clear: There must be a permanent prohibition on taxpayer-funded abortions," as well as "provision to allow a right of conscience for doctors and nurses and other health care providers" to refuse to participate in treatments they oppose. He adds that "there can be no system of denial or delay or rationing of care." Perkins concludes, "Euthanasia by any other name is a poison pill in the health reform debate" (Perkins, Washington Times, 7/5)
News of the day
Intubation For Emergency Airway Control In Critically Ill Patients Is Safer With Ketamine As A Sedative
An article published Online First and in a future edition of The Lancet reports on the use of Ketamine as a safe and valuable substitute to conventional etomidate. It is used as a sedative during intubation. Critically ill patients frequently require tubing inserted into their airways to help control their breathing during treatment. The article is the work of Professor Frederic Adnet, SAMU 93, of the Hç´pitaux de Paris, France, and his team.
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A Combination Of Common Genetic Variations Can Lead To Schizophrenia

A multi-national group of investigators, including a scientist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has discovered that nearly a third of the genetic basis of schizophrenia may be attributed to the cumulative actions of thousands of common genetic variants. The effects of each of these genetic changes, innocuous on its own, add up to a significant risk for developing both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The finding, published online July 1, 2009, in the journal Nature, suggests that schizophrenia is much more complex than previously thought, and can arise not only from both rare genetic variants but also from a significant number of common ones. "This is an enormous first for our field," said co-author Patrick Sullivan, M.D., Ray M. Hayworth and Family Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry in the department of genetics at the UNC School of Medicine. "You could say that we now have the outline of the puzzle, and we just need to take all of these pieces that we have identified and see how they fit them together." Schizophrenia is a chronic and often devastating mental illness that affects one person in every 100 in the course of their lives. Scientists have long recognized that the disease which can run in families -- has a strong genetic component. However, only recently have they begun to pinpoint the exact spots in our genetic material that contribute to the illness. Last year, the International Schizophrenia Consortium found that rare chromosomal structural variants elevate the risk of developing schizophrenia. In this study, Sullivan and other investigators in the Consortium used "genechip" technology to identify 30,000 genetic variants (single nucleotide polymorphisms or "SNPs") that were more common in 3,000 individuals with schizophrenia than in 3,000 comparison subjects without schizophrenia. This pattern was found in three separate samples of individuals with schizophrenia and two samples with bipolar disorder indicating a previously unrecognized overlap between the two diseases. These risk variants were not present in patients with other non-psychiatric diseases, such as hypertension or diabetes. "While our study finds a surprising number of genetic effects, we fully expect that future work will assemble them into meaningful pathways that will teach us about the biology of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder," says senior author Pamela Sklar, MD, PhD, associate director of the Department of Psychiatry and Center for Human Genetic Research at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and a senior associate member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. The researchers are also investigating how genes and environment interact to cause the disease. One additional finding of their study was the identification of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) locus as a possible risk factor. Because this region plays an important role in immune response to infection, it could suggest that exposure to an infectious agent increases risk of developing psychiatric disease. Funding for the studies led at UNC came from the National Institutes of Mental Health, the Sylvan C. Herman Foundation and the Stanley Medical Research Institute. In addition to those from UNC, the consortium includes investigators from the University of Aberdeen, Cardiff University, University of Edinburgh, Karolinska Institutet, Massachusetts General Hospital, the Queensland Institute of Medical Research, University of Southern California, Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, Trinity College Dublin and University College London. University of North Carolina


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