Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts

Tuesday 19 March 2019

To Get An Interview For A Woman To Be A Better Resume Without A Photo

To Get An Interview For A Woman To Be A Better Resume Without A Photo.
While good-looking men distinguish it easier to go down a craft interview, attractive women may be at a disadvantage, a new study from Israel suggests. Resumes that included photos of substantial men were twice as likely to generate requests for an interview, the turn over found. But resumes from women that included photos were up to 30 percent less like as not to get a response, whether or not the women were attractive.

That good-looking women were passed over for interviews "was surprising," said survey leader Bradley Ruffle, an economics researcher and lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. The declaration contradicts a considerable body of research that shows that good-looking people are typically viewed as smarter, kinder and more whizzo than those who are less attractive.

But Daniel S Hamermesh, professor of economics at the University of Texas at Austin, "wasn't perfectly surprised," noting that other studies, including one of his own, have found looker a liability in the workplace. "I call this the 'Bimbo Effect,'" said Hamermesh, considered an right on the association between beauty and the labor market. The current study appears online on the Social Science Research Network.

In Israel, field hunters have the option of including a headshot with their resumes, whereas that is ordinary in many European countries but taboo in the United States. That made Israel the mythical testing ground for his research.

To determine whether a job candidate's appearance affects the distinct possibility of landing an interview, Ruffle and a colleague mailed 5,312 virtually identical resumes, in pairs, in rejoinder to 2,656 advertised job openings in 10 different fields. One continue included a photo of an attractive man or woman or a plain man or woman; the other had no photo. Almost 400 employers (14,5 percent) responded.

Sunday 24 February 2019

Doctors Recommend A New Treatment For Cancer

Doctors Recommend A New Treatment For Cancer.
The remedy Arimidex reduces the imperil of developing breast cancer by more than 50 percent among postmenopausal women at tainted risk for the disease, according to a new study Dec 2013. The finding, scheduled for appearance Thursday at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium in Texas, adds count that Arimidex (anastrozole) might be a valuable new preventive option for some women. The study will also be published in the journal The Lancet.

So "Two other antihormone therapies, tamoxifen and raloxifene, are in use by some women to prevent breast cancer, but these drugs are not as effective and can have adverse side effects, which determine their use," study lead author Jack Cuzick said in a new release from the American Association for Cancer Research. "Hopefully, our findings will outstrip to an alternative prevention therapy with fewer string effects for postmenopausal women at high risk for developing breast cancer," said Cuzick, climax of the Cancer Research UK Centre for Cancer Prevention and director of the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine at Queen Mary University of London.

About 80 percent of US bust cancer patients have tumors with expensive levels of hormone receptors, and these tumors are fueled by the hormone estrogen. Arimidex prevents the body from making estrogen and is therefore cast-off to treat postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive titty cancer. The study included more than 3800 postmenopausal women at increased endanger for breast cancer due to having two or more blood relatives with breast cancer, having a innate or sister who developed breast cancer before age 50, or having a nourish or sister who had breast cancer in both breasts.

Friday 15 February 2019

Gestational Diabetes In The First And Second Pregnancies Gives A Higher Risk In Subsequent Pregnancies

Gestational Diabetes In The First And Second Pregnancies Gives A Higher Risk In Subsequent Pregnancies.
Women who had gestational diabetes in their triumph and another pregnancies are at greatly increased endanger for the condition in future pregnancies, a new observe finds. Gestational diabetes can lead to early delivery, cesarean section and type 2 diabetes in the mother, and may expand a child's risk of developing diabetes and obesity later in life.

So "Because of the implicit nature of gestational diabetes, it is important to identify early those who are at risk and on the watch them closely during their prenatal care," lead author Dr Darios Getahun, a research scientist/epidemiologist in the fact-finding and evaluation department at Kaiser Permanente Southern California, said in a Kaiser statement release. In this study, researchers analyzed the medical history of more than 65000 women who delivered babies at a Kaiser Permanente Southern California medical center between 1991 and 2008.

Sunday 3 February 2019

Annually Mammography For Older Women Significantly Reduces The Likelihood That It Would Be Necessary Mastectomy

Annually Mammography For Older Women Significantly Reduces The Likelihood That It Would Be Necessary Mastectomy.
Yearly mammograms for women between the ages of 40 and 50 dramatically bring down the take place that a mastectomy will be life-and-death if they develop breast cancer, a untrained study suggests. British researchers studied the records of 156 women in that seniority range who had been diagnosed with breast cancer between 2003 and 2009, and treated at the London Breast Institute. Of these women, 114 had never had a mammogram and 42 had had at least one mammogram within the at two years, including 16 who had had a mammogram within one year.

About 19 percent of the women who'd been screened within one year had a mastectomy, the deliberate over found, compared with 46 percent of those who had not had a mammogram the premature year. Because annual mammograms allowed tumors to be discovered earlier, breast-sparing surgery was attainable for most of the women, said Dr Nicholas M Perry, the study's premier author. Perry, pilot of the institute, at the Princess Grace Hospital in London, was to present the study findings Wednesday in Chicago at the annual engagement of the Radiological Society of North America.

And "You're talking about lowering the mob of mastectomies by 30 percent. That's 2000 mastectomies in the UK every year, and in the US, that's over 10000 mastectomies saved in a year. The numbers are big and impressive, and chest cancer in minor women is a very big issue". Among all women diagnosed with breast cancer at the London institute during the inquiry period, 40 percent were younger than 50.

According to the American Cancer Society, about 207000 experimental cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in women in the United States this year. The organization recommends annual mammograms for women 40 and older, but a report in November 2009 from the US Preventive Services Task Force suggested that screenings begin at epoch 50 and be given every other year.

Monday 24 December 2018

How To Transfer One Or More Embryos Using IVF

How To Transfer One Or More Embryos Using IVF.
Women who weather in-vitro fertilization (IVF) are almost five times more fitting to give birth to a unwed healthy baby following the implantation of a single embryo than are women who choose to have two embryos implanted at the same time, an universal team of experts has found. The finding comes from an analysis of details involving nearly 1400 women who participated in one of eight different embryo transfer studies. Approximately half of the women underwent procedures involving the unmarried transfer of an embryo, while the other half underwent a dual embryo procedure.

Overall, the study authors noted that, relative to a double embryo transfer, a sole embryo transfer appears to significantly increase the chances of carrying a baby to a intense term of more than 37 weeks. In addition to lowering the risk for premature birth, a unique embryo transfer also appeared to lower the risk for delivering a low birth weight baby, DJ McLernon, a scrutiny fellow with the medical statistics team in the section of population healthfulness at the University of Aberdeen in the United Kingdom, and colleagues reported in the Dec 22 2010 online issue of BMJ.

"Our review should be useful in informing decision making regarding the number of embryos to hand in IVF," the authors wrote in their report. They added that their observations could offer hands-on guidance to would-be mothers and doctors who are eager to foster optimal conditions for a successful pregnancy, while at the same adjust hoping to avoid the increased health risks associated with IVF procedures that give take place to multiple-birth pregnancies.

The authors concluded that doctors should advise patients to choose the single embryo transport option over what appears to be the less optimal double embryo transfer option.

At face value, the information seemed to suggest that the double embryo transfer option does, in fact, offer the materfamilias much better odds for giving birth to a single healthy baby. While among study participants just 27 percent of distinct embryo transfer procedures resulted in the birth of a healthy baby, that reckon rose to 42 percent of double embryo transfer births, the investigators found.

However, that varnish was narrowed considerably when the authors focused on those women undergoing an initial single embryo remove procedure who then underwent a second single implant (of a frozen embryo). That script (in which, in essence, two single embryo transfers are conducted in sequence) prompted a 38 percent good rate - a figure just 4 percent shy of the 42 percent good fortune rate attributed to two embryos being implanted simultaneously.

Tuesday 18 December 2018

Reduction The Hormone Estrogen Leads To Mental Decline

Reduction The Hormone Estrogen Leads To Mental Decline.
The younger a abigail is when she undergoes surgical menopause, the greater her chances of developing celebration problems at an earlier age, unexplored research suggests. Surgical menopause describes the end of ovarian perform due to gynecological surgery before the age of natural menopause. It involves the removal of one or both ovaries (an oophorectomy), often in party with a hysterectomy, the removal of a woman's uterus. "For women with surgically induced menopause, beforehand age at menopause was associated with a faster decline in memory," said den author Dr Riley Bove, an instructor in neurology at Harvard Medical School and an confederate neurologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

However "These are very preliminary data". Bove said other exploration suggests a link between a decrease in the hormone estrogen during menopause and mental decline, and the intent of this study was to better understand the relationship between reproductive-health factors and memory changes. The study results will be presented in March at the American Academy of Neurology' annual meeting, in San Diego.

For the study, the researchers analyzed medical records of more than 1800 women elderly 53 to 100 who were taking neighbourhood in one of two studies conducted by Rush University Medical Center in Chicago: the Religious Orders Study and the Memory and Aging Project. The researchers assessed reproductive variables, such as when women had their opening period, the numeral of years menstrual cycles lasted, and use of hormone replacement therapies. Measurements from several types of cogitative and thought tests were analyzed, too.

The scientists also assessed the results of knowledge biopsies after death, some of which showed the presence of Alzheimer's plaques. "We had approximately 580 brains elbow for analysis - this speaks to the very unique and rich nature of the data". Thirty-three percent of the reading participants had undergone surgical menopause.

Reasons for these surgeries may include fibroids (noncancerous uterine tumors), endometriosis (growth of uterine fabric outside the womb), cancer of the uterus and ovaries, and queer vaginal bleeding. When the ovaries are gone, ovarian production of estrogen stops, said Bove. However, this contemplation did not include reasons why the women underwent surgical menopause.

Thursday 29 November 2018

Labor Productivity Of Women During Menopause

Labor Productivity Of Women During Menopause.
Women who decline harsh hot flashes during menopause may be less productive on the job and have a lower quality of life, a new muse about suggests. The study, by researchers from the drug maker is based on a survey of nearly 3300 US women old 40 to 75. Overall, women who reported severe hot flashes and evensong sweats had a dimmer view of their well-being. They also were more likely than women with milder symptoms to order the problem hindered them at work. The cost of that lost work productivity averaged more than $6500 over a year, the researchers estimated.

On finest of that women with severe hot flashes burnt- more on doctor visits - averaging almost $1000 in menopause-related appointments. Researcher Jennifer Whiteley and her colleagues reported the results online Feb 11, 2013 in the annual Menopause. It's not surprising that women with onerous hot flashes would visit the doctor more often, or report a bigger contact on their health and work productivity, said Dr Margery Gass, a gynecologist and superintendent director of the North American Menopause Society.

But she said the new findings put some numbers to the issue. "What's practical about this is that the authors tried to quantify the impact," Gass said, adding that it's always virtuousness to have hard data on how menopause symptoms affect women's lives. For women themselves, the findings give reassurance that the belongings they perceive in their lives are real. "This validates the experiences they are having".

Another gynecologist who reviewed the haunt pointed out many limitations, however. The research was based on an Internet survey, so the women who responded are a "self-selected" bunch, said Dr Michele Curtis, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Houston. And since it was a one-time view it provides only a snapshot of the women's perceptions at that time. "What if they were having a debased day? Or a safe day?" she said.

It's also ineluctable to know for sure that hot flashes were the cause of women's less-positive perceptions of their own health. "This tells us that unhappy hot flashes are a marker for feeling unhappy. But are they the cause?" Still, she commended the researchers for exasperating to estimate the impact of hot flashes with the data they had. "It's an compelling study, and these are important questions".

Wednesday 21 November 2018

The Use Of Petroleum Jelly Can Lead To Bacterial Infection

The Use Of Petroleum Jelly Can Lead To Bacterial Infection.
Women who use petroleum jelly vaginally may put themselves at chance of a trite infection called bacterial vaginosis, a nugatory study suggests. Prior studies have linked douching to ill effects, including bacterial vaginosis, and an increased jeopardize of sexually transmitted diseases and pelvic demagogic disease. But little research has been conducted on the possible effects of other products some women use vaginally, said Joelle Brown, a researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, who led the fresh study.

She and her colleagues found that of 141 Los Angeles women they studied, half said they'd reach-me-down some personification of over-the-counter product vaginally in the past month, including sexual lubricants, petroleum jelly and mollycoddle oil. Almost as many, 45 percent, reported douching. When the researchers tested the women for infections, they found that those who'd cast-off petroleum jelly in the history month were more than twice as likely as non-users to have bacterial vaginosis.

Bacterial vaginosis occurs when the normal compensate between "good" and "bad" bacteria in the vagina is disrupted. The symptoms include discharge, pain, itching or seething - but most women have no symptoms, and the infection usually causes no long-term problems. Still, bacterial vaginosis can judge women more vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV.

It also once in a while leads to pelvic inflammatory disease, which can cause infertility. The new findings, reported in the April son of Obstetrics & Gynecology, do not prove that petroleum jelly promptly increased women's risk of bacterial vaginosis. But it's possible, said Dr Sten Vermund, numero uno of the Institute for Global Health at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tenn.

Petroleum jelly might strengthen the growth of bad bacteria because of its "alkaline properties," explained Vermund, who was not elaborate in the study. "An acidic vaginal environment is what protects women from colonization from aberrant organisms". He noted that many studies have now linked douching to an increased risk of vaginal infections. And that may be because the style "disrupts the natural vaginal ecology".

Wednesday 14 November 2018

Mammography Is Against The Lifetime Risk Of Breast Cancer

Mammography Is Against The Lifetime Risk Of Breast Cancer.
The concealed cancer chance that radiation from mammograms might cause is slight compared to the benefits of lives saved from antiquated detection, new Canadian research says. The study is published online and will appear in the January 2011 printed matter issue of Radiology. This risk of radiation-induced knocker cancers "is mentioned periodically by women and people who are critiquing screening and how often it should be done and in whom," said muse about author Dr Martin J Yaffe, a senior scientist in imaging inquiry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and a professor in the departments of medical biophysics and medical imaging at the University of Toronto. "This sanctum says that the good obtained from having a screening mammogram far exceeds the hazard you might have from the radiation received from the low-dose mammogram," said Dr Arnold J Rotter, most important of the computed tomography section and a clinical professor of radiology at the City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, in Duarte, Calif.

Yaffe and his colleague, Dr James G Mainprize, developed a arithmetical subject to estimate the risk of radiation-induced breast cancer following exposure to dispersal from mammograms, and then estimated the number of breast cancers, fatal breast cancers and years of zing lost attributable to the mammography's screening radiation. They plugged into the model a typical shedding dose for digital mammography, 3,7 milligrays (mGy), and applied it to 100000 hypothetical women, screened annually between the ages of 40 and 55 and then every other year between the ages of 56 and 74.

They deliberate what the danger would be from the radiation over time and took into account other causes of death. "We used an rank risk model". That is, it computes "if a certain number of people get a determined amount of radiation, down the road a certain number of cancers will be caused".

Monday 1 October 2018

Women Can Take Antidepressants During Pregnancy

Women Can Take Antidepressants During Pregnancy.
Women who deduce non-fluctuating antidepressants while pregnant do not raise the risk of a stillbirth or death of their baby in the first year of life, according to a colossal new study. The findings stem from an analysis involving 30000 women in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, who gave family to more than 1,6 million babies, in total, between 1996 and 2007. Close to 2 percent of the women took instruction selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), such as Prozac (fluoxetine) and Paxil (paroxetine), for depressive symptoms during their pregnancy.

The investigating team, led by Dr Olof Stephansson of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, reports in the Jan 2, 2013 delivery of the Journal of the American Medical Association that initially women taking an SSRI for the dumps did seem to be familiar with statistically higher rates of stillbirth and infant death. However, that uptick in hazard disappeared once they accounted for other factors, including the threat posed by bust and the mother's history of psychiatric disease or hospitalizations, the authors noted in a journal news release.

Tuesday 25 September 2018

Lifestyle Affects Breast Cancer Risk

Lifestyle Affects Breast Cancer Risk.
Lifestyle changes such as losing weight, drinking less liquor and getting more make nervous could lead to a substantial reduction in breast cancer cases across an unalloyed population, according to a new model that estimates the impact of these modifiable risk factors. Although such models are often utilized to estimate breast cancer risk, they are usually based on things that women can't change, such as a derivation history of breast cancer. Up to now, there have been few models based on ways women could moderate their risk through changes in their lifestyle.

US National Cancer Institute researchers created the archetypal using data from an Italian study that included more than 5000 women. The prototype included three modifiable risk factors (alcohol consumption, physical activity and body group index) and five risk factors that are difficult or impossible to modify: family history, education, vocation activity, reproductive characteristics, and biopsy history. Benchmarks for some lifestyle factors included getting at least 2 hours of performance a week for women 30-39 and having a body mass clue (BMI) under 25 in women 50 and older.

Friday 21 September 2018

Physicians In The USA Recommend To Make A Mammography To All Women

Physicians In The USA Recommend To Make A Mammography To All Women.
More than three years after debatable redesigned guidelines rejected way annual mammograms for most women, women in all age groups continue to get yearly screenings, a unusual survey shows. In fact, mammogram rates actually increased overall, from 51,9 percent in 2008 to 53,6 percent in 2011, even though the mortify rise was not considered statistically significant, according to the researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. "There have been no significant changes in the charge of screening mammograms centre of any age group, but in particular among women under seniority 50," said the study leader, Dr Lydia Pace, a global women's healthfulness fellow in the division of women's health at Brigham and Women's.

While the study did not look at the reasons for continued screening, the researchers speculated that conflicting recommendations from various licensed organizations may play a role. In 2009, the US Preventive Services Task Force, an non-aligned panel of experts, issued further guidelines that said women younger than 50 don't need routine annual mammograms and those 50 to 74 could get screened every two years. Before that, the encouragement was that all women age-old 40 and older get mammograms every one to two years.

The recommendations ignited much controversy and renewed reflection about whether delayed screening would increase breast cancer mortality. Since then, organizations such as the American Cancer Society have adhered to the recommendations that women 40 and older be screened annually. To notice what make the new task force recommendations have had, the researchers analyzed details from almost 28000 women over a six-year period - before and after the new task force guidelines.

The women were responding to the National Health Interview Survey in 2005, 2008 and 2011, and were asked how often they got a mammogram for screening purposes. Across the ages, there was no loss in screenings, the researchers found. Among women 40 to 49, the rates rose slightly, from 46,1 percent in 2008 to 47,5 percent in 2011. Among women superannuated 50 to 74, the rates also rose, from 57,2 percent in 2008 to 59,1 percent in 2011.

Thursday 20 September 2018

50 Years Is The Most Dangerous Age For Women

50 Years Is The Most Dangerous Age For Women.
Breast cancer jeopardy in women may be tied to the rank at which their breast-tissue density changes as they age, a revitalized study suggests Dec 2013. Researchers examined 282 breast cancer patients and 317 women without the contagion who underwent both mammography and an automated breast-density test. Breast cancer patients under epoch 50 tended to have greater breast density than healthy women under period 50, the researchers said Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, in Chicago. Overall, the wholesome women also showed a significant, steady decline in their breast density with age.

There was considerably more modulation in the amount of density loss among the breast cancer patients. "The results are interesting, because there would appear to be some cut of different biological density mechanism for normal breasts compared to breasts with cancer, and this appears to be most indisputable for younger women," study senior initiator Nicholas Perry, director of the London Breast Institute in the United Kingdom, said in a friendship news release. "Women under age 50 are most at risk from density-associated breast cancer. Breast cancer in younger women is many a time of a more aggressive type, with larger tumors and a higher jeopardize of recurrence".

Breast density, as determined by mammography, is already known to be a strong and independent risk factor for teat cancer. The American Cancer Society considers women with extremely dense breasts to be at in some measure increased risk of cancer and recommends they talk with their doctors about adding MRI screening to their regular mammograms. "The findings are not likely to diminish the current American Cancer Society guidelines in any way. But it might sum a new facet regarding the possibility of an early mammogram to form an obvious risk factor (breast density), which may then lead to enhanced screening for those women with the densest breasts".

Monday 3 September 2018

Doctors Recommend That Pregnant Women Have To Make A Flu Shot

Doctors Recommend That Pregnant Women Have To Make A Flu Shot.
Pregnant women were urged to get a flu snapshot during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, and fresh suggestion supports that advice. Norwegian researchers have found that vaccination in pregnancy was safe for materfamilias and child, and that fetal deaths were more common among unvaccinated moms-to-be. Influenza is a serious forewarning to a pregnant woman and her unborn child, said Dr Camilla Stoltenberg, director vague of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in Oslo, lead researcher of the new study. "Our contemplate indicates that influenza during pregnancy was a risk factor for stillbirth during the pandemic in 2009".

And "We feel no indication that pandemic vaccination in the second or third trimester increased the risk of stillbirth". With this year's flu pummeling many persons across the United States, experts vote the best way a pregnant woman can protect her unborn baby from flu complications is by getting a flu shot. "In ell to protecting the mother against severe influenza, the vaccine protects the fetus and the teenager in the first months after birth, when the child is too young to be vaccinated".

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends a flu sharpshooter for everyone over 6 months of age. Besides expectant women, the CDC says the elderly and anyone with a chronic condition such as asthma or diabetes are especially vulnerable to infection.

For the study, published Jan 16, 2013 in the New England Journal of Medicine, Stoltenberg's tandem serene data on more than 117000 women in Norway who were pregnant between 2009 and 2010 - the opportunity of the H1N1 pandemic. The investigators found the rate of fetal deaths was almost five per 1000 women.

Breast Cancer Treatment Tablets For Osteoporosis

Breast Cancer Treatment Tablets For Osteoporosis.
The bone remedy zoledronic acid (Zometa), considered a potentially heartening weapon against breast cancer recurrence, has flopped in a imaginative study involving more than 3360 patients. The drug, long used to defy bone loss from osteoporosis, did not appear to prevent breast cancer from returning or to boost disease-free survival overall. British researchers presented the pathetic findings Thursday at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium in Texas.

And "As a whole, the ponder is negative," study author Dr Robert Coleman, a professor of medical oncology at the University of Sheffield in England, said during a Thursday scoop discussion on the findings. "There is no overall difference in recurrence rates or survival rates between patients who got the bone narcotize and those who did not, except in older patients, defined as more than five years after menopause".

That was a possible glittering spot in the results. "In that population, there is a benefit". The older women had a 27 percent increase in recurrence and a 29 percent improvement in overall survival over the five-year follow-up, compared to those who didn't get the drug.

And "There was tremendous foresee that this drug approach would be a major leap forward. There have been other trials that suggest this is the case". In one aforementioned study, the use of the drug was linked with a 32 percent reform in survival and lowered recurrence in younger women with breast cancer. Other research has found that shape women on bone drugs were less prone to develop breast cancer, so experts were hoping the drugs had an anti-tumor effect.

Zometa, marketed by Novartis AG, is one of a elegance of drugs used to treat osteoporosis and also to diminish pain when cancers have spread to the bone - in part, by slowing bone erosion caused by the disease. It is given intravenously, while other bisphosphonates such as Actonel, Fosamax or Boniva can be bewitched orally.

Sunday 26 August 2018

Doctors Advise How To Avoid Breast Cancer

Doctors Advise How To Avoid Breast Cancer.
If a sweetheart develops heart cancer, having larger breasts and being sedentary might increase her risk of sinking from the disease, a large, long-term study suggests. Experts have long known that being physically effective reduces the risk of getting breast cancer by about 25 percent. The new study, however, looked at how both bring to bear and breast size might predict survival if breast cancer does develop, said go into researcher Paul Williams, a staff scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, in Berkeley, California Williams found a nearly 40 percent reduced risk of dying from heart of hearts cancer in physically active women compared to those who didn't meet exercise guidelines.

The meditate on was published online Dec 9, 2013 in the journal PLoS One. For the study, Williams and his set followed nearly 80000 women for 11 years. All were participants in national studies on runners' and walkers' health. About 33000 of the women were walkers and about 46000 were runners. When they entered the study, none of the women had been diagnosed with mamma cancer.

All reported the distances they walked or ran each week, as well as their bra cup greatness and body manipulate and height. During the 11-year follow-up period, 111 mug up participants died from breast cancer. They were in their mid-50s, on average, when they died. Those who met ongoing exercise guidelines were about 42 percent less likely to die of breast cancer compared to those who did not dispose of the guidelines.

These guidelines recommend two and a half hours of moderate activity, an hour and 15 minutes of fit activity or an equivalent combination weekly. The supply of exercise found to be protective against breast cancer was about seven miles of brisk walking or nearly five miles of management each week. "It's not a lot of exercise. "This is more evidence of yet another benefit of exercise.

Saturday 25 August 2018

The Relationship Between Heart Disease And Dementia Exists

The Relationship Between Heart Disease And Dementia Exists.
Older women with soul contagion might be at increased risk for dementia, according to a new study. Researchers followed nearly 6500 US women, superannuated 65 to 79, who had healthy brain function when the study started. Those with spunk disease were 29 percent more likely to experience mental decline over hour than those without heart disease. The risk of mental decline was about twice as high among women who'd had a understanding attack as it was among those who had not.

Women who had a heart bypass operation, surgery to take off a blockage in a neck artery or peripheral artery disease also were at increased risk for mental decline. Heart disability risk factors such as high blood pressure and diabetes also increased the jeopardy for mental decline, but obesity did not significantly boost the risk, according to the study, which was published in the Dec 18, 2013 child of the Journal of the American Heart Association. "Our study provides further new deposition that this relationship between heart disease and dementia does exist, especially among postmenopausal women," study inventor Dr Bernhard Haring said in a journal news release.

Sunday 5 August 2018

Obesity Can Be A Barrier To Pregnancy

Obesity Can Be A Barrier To Pregnancy.
Women should be tabled at least one year after having weight-loss surgery before they attempt to get pregnant, researchers say. The portliness rate among women of child-bearing age is expected to rise from about 24 percent in 2005 to about 28 percent in 2015, and the reckon of women having weight-loss surgery is increasing, the researchers noted. In a review, published Jan 11, 2013 in The Obstetrician & Gynaecologist, investigators looked at c whilom studies to assess the safety, limitations and advantages of weight-loss ("bariatric") surgery, and brass of weight-loss surgery patients before, during and after pregnancy.

Obesity increases the jeopardy of pregnancy complications, but weight-loss surgery reduces the chance in extremely obese women, the consideration authors said. One study found that 79 percent of women who had weight-loss surgery capable no complications during their pregnancy. However, the review also found that complications during pregnancy can occur in women who have had weight-loss surgery.

Saturday 14 July 2018

Small Doses Of Alcohol Reduce The Risk Of Heart Disease

Small Doses Of Alcohol Reduce The Risk Of Heart Disease.
Moderate drinking may be moral for your fitness - better, in fact, than not drinking at all, according to a triune of studies presented Sunday at the American Heart Association annual meeting in Chicago. Not only did manly coronary bypass patients fare better with a little alcohol, but women's form was also boosted by a cocktail now and then. Still, while the studies are "reassuring," they should not be seen as "a cause for action or change of patterns," said Dr Sharonne Hayes, a cardiologist and supervisor of the Women's Heart Clinic at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. "We do have to be cautious. This is not shown to be a cause-and-effect relationship".

Men who had undergone coronary artery ignore surgery (CABG) to circumvent clogged arteries who drank two to three alchy beverages a heyday had a 25 percent lower risk of having to undergo another course of action or suffering a heart attack, stroke or even dying, compared to teetotalers, researchers found. Too much demon rum appear to have a negative effect, however: Men with left ventricular dysfunction (problems with the heart's pumping mechanism) who drank more than six drinks a daytime had double the risk of dying from a kindness problem compared with people who didn't drink at all.

And "A light amount of booze intake, about two drinks a day, should not be discouraged in male patients undergoing CABG, but the further is less evident in patients with severe pump dysfunction," said study lead author Dr Umberto Benedetto, of the University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy, who spoke Sunday during a report discussion at the meeting. Light-to-moderate drinking for women is defined as about one glass a day and, for men, two glasses daily.

The professed BACCO (Bypass surgery, Alcohol Consumption on Clinical Outcomes) study, named for Bacchus, the Roman demiurge of wine, followed 2000 bypass patients (about 80 percent men and 20 percent women) for three-and-a-half years. "What the scrutiny does guess is that people who drink a lot, just as we've seen before, increase their risk, and very because we know that alcohol directly affects heart pumping function. It decreases contraction of nub muscle".

Thursday 12 July 2018

Sustainable Increase In Weight Increases In The Later Stages Of The Life Risk Of Breast Cancer

Sustainable Increase In Weight Increases In The Later Stages Of The Life Risk Of Breast Cancer.
Women who load on the pounds over their lifetime steadily multiply their danger for postmenopausal breast cancer, compared with women who stand by their weight, a new study finds. Earlier studies have linked excess weight with an increased peril for breast cancer in postmenopausal women, but this is one of the few studies that traces the risk as a function of ballast gain over time.

So "Among women who had never used postmenopausal hormone therapy, those who had a body-mass guide (BMI) gain between age 20 and 50 had a doubling of breast cancer risk," said restraint researcher Laura Sue, a cancer research fellow at the US National Cancer Institute. Sue was expected to furnish the findings Tuesday at the American Association for Cancer Research's annual meeting, in Washington DC.

For the study, Sue's group collected data on more than 72000 women who took limited in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial. When the reading began, the women were between 55 and 74 years old. Among these women, 3677 had developed a postmenopausal mamma cancer.