Resverlogix Bolsters ApoA-I/HDL Clinical Review Committee With…
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The News Review:

- Resverlogix Bolsters ApoA-I/HDL Clinical Review Committee With…
- Montrose Student Had Congenital Heart Defect
- Products Containing Lavender Oil Linked to Breast Growth in Boys
- Media Coverage of Autism Differs Dramatically from Scientific Focus,…
- New Evidence on Infection as Chronic Disease Trigger Published,…

Resverlogix Bolsters ApoA-I/HDL Clinical Review Committee With…
CCNMatthews - CCNMatthews (press release) - Jan 30, 2007
Rader is an Associate Professor of Medicine and Pathology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is Director of Preventive Cardiology and the Lipid Clinic and Associate Director of the General Clinical Research Center. Rader runs a basic research laboratory focused on genetic regulation of lipoprotein metabolism and atherosclerosis and directs a clinical research program focused on human genetics of lipid disorders and atherosclerosis, imaging of atherosclerosis, and novel approaches to treatment of dyslipidemia and regression of atherosclerosis… He is an Established Investigator of the American Heart Association and a recipient of the Burroughs Wellcome Trust Clinician-Scientist Award in Translational Research. Rader is on the editorial boards of Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology, American Journal of Physiology (Endocrinology and Metabolism), Circulation, Circulation Research, and Trends in Molecular Medicine and is a reviewer for many journals, including Nature, Nature Medicine, Science, New England Journal of Medicine, and Journal of Clinical Investigation. Rader has authored over 120 peer-reviewed publications as well as many reviews and book chapters.

Montrose Student Had Congenital Heart Defect
Washington Post - Jan 30, 2007
A spokesperson from the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner disclosed Wise’s death was caused by “anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the right sinus. ” The cause of death was natural.

Products Containing Lavender Oil Linked to Breast Growth in Boys
Washington Post - Jan 31, 2007
Korach also worked on the three cases and is an author of a report on the boys in the Feb. 1 issue of theNew England Journal of Medicine. Results of the study were first reported last June at the annual meeting of Endocrine Society, in Boston. “I don’t know how many pediatric endocrinologists would have the time or interest to delve into the source of this type of condition,” Korach said… “We have to await further study or analysis. Now that it is coming out in this publication, other clinicians may hear about it. “But Bloch, who is also an associate clinical professor of medicine at the University of Colorado, said the condition is “not terribly common but not as rare as you think it might be. I have seen the same phenomenon in girls as well. “Bloch said he was initially at a loss to explain the breast growth in the first boy he saw, so he began asking his mother about anything she was putting on the boy’s skin. “She said she was using a homeopathic mixture that contained lavender oil, and that got me interested,” he said. “When I saw the subsequent patients, I asked the same questions.

Media Coverage of Autism Differs Dramatically from Scientific Focus,…
Free with registration - Business Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jan 30, 2007
But the truth is quite different. The efforts of the scientific community to explore autism lie predominantly in brain and behavior research. This disconnect between the scientific community and the popular media is starkly laid out in a study published in the February issue of Nature Reviews Neuroscience by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The researchers found that while 41 percent of research funding and published scientific papers on autism dealt with brain and behavior research, only 11 percent of newspaper stories in the United States, United Kingdom and Canada dealt with those issues. Instead, 48 percent of the media… This disconnect between the scientific community and the popular media is starkly laid out in a study published in the February issue of Nature Reviews Neuroscience by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The researchers found that while 41 percent of research funding and published scientific papers on autism dealt with brain and behavior research, only 11 percent of newspaper stories in the United States, United Kingdom and Canada dealt with those issues. Instead, 48 percent of the media.

New Evidence on Infection as Chronic Disease Trigger Published,…
Free with registration - Business Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Jan 31, 2007
– Nanobac Pharmaceuticals Inc. (OTCBB:NNBP) ("Nanobac" or "the Company") announces new evidence that may help solve one of the great puzzles of 21st century medicine was published toda.

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