Kids who play the new breed of “active” video games like the Wii and Dance Dance Revolution can burn as many calories as they could with moderate exercise, according to scientists the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. They compared calories burned while kids played physically active video games to calories burned while watching TV and walking on a treadmill at different speeds. The study was published online in the journal Pediatrics.
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Adult obesity rose in 23 states last year, a new report says. Obesity rates didn’t fall in any state. And baby boomers are fatter than older adults, the Associated Press said. The report came from the Trust for America’s Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. It found that Mississippi still has the highest adult obesity rate, 32.5%. Three other states have rates of 30% or higher. In every state, the oldest baby boomers, ages 55 to 64, are heavier than people 65 or older, the report said. Obesity costs money when it comes to health care. Medicare spends $1,400 to $6,000 more each year for an obese person than for someone thinner, the report said.
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Human growth hormone (HGH), one of the substances at the center of so many recent doping scandals in professional sports, does not improve athletic ability. There’s even some evidence to suggest that HGH may worsen athletic performance. That’s according to a review of multiple studies.
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Sharply cutting calories extends life for some of humans’ closest relatives, researchers say. The finding is based on a 20-year study of 76 rhesus monkeys. Researchers divided them into two groups. One group ate the normal diet of a captive monkey. The other group ate a nutritious diet with 30% fewer calories. So far, 37% of the monkeys on the regular diet have died of age-related diseases, researchers said. This compares with just 13% of those on the lower-calorie diet. A few other monkeys died of causes not considered to be age-related. Monkeys eating fewer calories also had less than half of the cancer and heart disease of the normal-diet group. They had less brain shrinkage and muscle loss as well. The study was published in the journal Science. The Associated Press wrote about it July 10.
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A blood test for ovarian cancer is being sold illegally, U.S. drug regulators say. The OvaSure test is made by the Laboratory Corporation of America. In a September 29 letter, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has warned the company that the test needs FDA approval. Not all medical tests need this approval. But the FDA said OvaSure does need it. OvaSure was first sold in June. It looks for six proteins in the blood. Based on the protein levels, the woman gets an estimate of her chance of having ovarian cancer. But some experts say the test has not been studied enough to prove it works. The New York Times wrote about the warning letter October 9.
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If your parents had a stroke by age 65, you’re more likely to have an early stroke, too, a new study suggests. The study looked at data on 3,443 people in the long-term Framingham Heart Study. They were all children of the original study participants. Researchers also looked at data on their parents. Among the parents, 106 people had strokes by age 65. Among the children, 128 had strokes during a 40-year period. Researchers then adjusted the numbers to account for other factors, such as high blood pressure, that increase stroke risk. People whose parents had early strokes were nearly 3 times as likely as others to have strokes themselves. They were 4 times as likely to have strokes by age 65. The study was published online by the journal Circulation. HealthDay News wrote about it March 8.
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Scientists have found a better way to make red blood cells in the lab, a new study suggests. They used human embryonic stem cells. Red blood cells carry oxygen throughout the body. The manufactured blood cells act like natural red blood cells. The scientists said that this process could be used someday to make large amounts of red blood cells needed for transfusions. The red blood cells they made have an O negative blood type. This type is the most rare but can be transfused into anybody in an emergency. More study is needed. The Associated Press wrote about the study August 20. It appeared online in the journal Blood.
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Most women should start getting tests for breast cancer later, and be tested less often, new guidelines say. The advice comes from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. This expert group provides advice to doctors and others. The new guidelines say women should get mammograms every two years, starting at age 50. In the past, the group had said the tests should begin at 40 and come every one to two years. There’s also no benefit from doctors teaching women to examine their own breasts, the task force said. Several medical groups still endorse mammograms beginning at age 40. But the task force said they may do more harm than good. Women may get biopsies they don’t need. They may get surgery for cancers that will never grow. Older women are more likely to get breast cancer. So mammograms of women ages 50 to 74 are most likely to prevent a death, the task force said.
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Family history is known to affect a person’s risk of heart disease. But gene tests may not predict that risk, new research suggests. The study included 19,000 women, who received gene tests. The tests looked for 101 specific gene mutations. Previous research had linked the mutations to a higher risk of heart disease. The women were given a score based on how many mutations they had. In the next 12 years, women with high risk scores were no more likely than others to have a heart attack or stroke. This was true after researchers adjusted the numbers for other risks such as high cholesterol. But women with a family history of early heart attack were much more likely to have a heart attack themselves. Family history might be related to shared behaviors and environment, as well as genes. The study appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
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On June 13, Tim Russert died suddenly of a heart attack. He was 58 years old. Russert was NBC’s Washington bureau chief, and a moderator on the news show “Meet the Press.” He had been diagnosed with coronary artery disease, but had no symptoms. He appeared to be taking the usual medications, and had a normal stress test in April. His heart attack was caused by a blood clot in an artery. The clot blocked the flow of blood to the heart.
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