More Kids Treated for Gender Issues

More children are seeking support and treatment for gender identity disorder, new research finds. These children are at high risk of psychological illness, the articles say. The journal Pediatrics published the articles. One reports that Children’s Hospital in Boston is treating 19 patients a year for gender identity disorder. This compares with about 4 per year in the late 1990s. In a commentary, a doctor from Galveston, Texas, reports a similar increase. Treatment includes counseling. Children also can take drugs to stop puberty from occurring. Later, they can get hormones for the opposite sex. This can continue until they are old enough to decide whether to make the change permanent with surgery. The Boston study took a close look at 97 patients. Before entering the program, 45% had been treated for a psychological disorder.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Women Have Less Chest Pain, More Deaths

Not only are women with heart attacks less likely to have chest pain than men, but those without this symptom are more likely to die, a new study finds. The difference was especially strong among younger women. Recent research has shown that women and men may have different heart attack symptoms. The new study provided more information. It used records from 1.1 million heart attack patients. They were seen at U.S. hospitals between 1994 and 2006. About 42% of women and 31% of men did not have chest pain or pressure. Nearly 15% of women died in the hospital, compared with 10% of men. The average woman having a heart attack was 74, compared with 67 for men. But younger women, under age 65, were 24% to 30% more likely to die in the hospital than men the same age. Both men and women were more likely to die if they did not have chest pain.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Heart Risk Higher after Pregnancy Problems

Some pregnancy problems may signal a higher risk of heart disease or stroke later, a new study suggests. The research focused on more than 3,400 women in a long-term health study. About 30% had some kind of problem with their pregnancy. About 5% had 2 problems. These included preeclampsia, which causes high blood pressure and other health problems. Some other women had gestational diabetes. This is high blood sugar that occurs only during pregnancy. At about age 50, all of the women received health checkups. Factors that increase the risk of heart disease were 31% more common among those who had preeclampsia while pregnant. For example, they tended to have more excess weight and higher blood pressure than other women. Heart disease risk factors were 26% more common in women who had gestational diabetes. In particular, they tended to have higher blood sugar than other women.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Simple Injection May Stop Long Seizures

A pre-loaded injector may deliver drugs to halt long seizures more easily than the intravenous drugs used now, researchers say. A study published February 16 compared two ways of treating severe seizures called status epilepticus. Some can be life-threatening. To stop the seizures, drugs usually are given through a vein in the arm. But it can be difficult to insert an intravenous (IV) line while someone is having a seizure. Researchers trained more than 4,000 paramedics to treat patients with both an IV drug and an auto-injector. The injector shot was given in a muscle, usually the thigh. Half of the time, the injector was filled with a fake drug and the IV drug was real. For the other cases, the injector drug was real and the IV drug was fake. In all, 893 patients were treated.

Content restricted. Requires subscription