[sci.med] HICN222 News Part 1/1

ATW1H%ASUACAD.BITNET@oac.ucla.edu (Dr David Dodell) (05/30/89)

Volume  2, Number 22                                             May 29, 1989

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                         Editor: David Dodell, D.M.D.
                   St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
    10250 North 92nd Street, Suite 210, Scottsdale, Arizona 85258-4599 USA
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                       T A B L E   O F   C O N T E N T S

1.  Comments from the Editor
     News from the Editor ..................................................  1

2.  Medical News
     Medical News for week ending May 28, 1989 .............................  2

3.  Articles
     Organ Transplants in 1988 .............................................  9

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===============================================================================
                           Comments from the Editor
===============================================================================

                             News from the Editor

I have temporarily lost my feed to receiving the Center for Disease  Control's
weekly  MMWR  update.  We  hope  to  have  things  worked  out  for next weeks
newsletter.

David

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Volume  2, Number 22                                             May 29, 1989

===============================================================================
                                 Medical News
===============================================================================

                   Medical News for week ending May 28, 1989
            (c) 1989 USA TODAY/Gannett National Information Network
                          Reproduced with Permission

                        DRUG-RELATED CASES INCREASING:

   The nation's emergency rooms  are  reporting  drastic  increases  in  drug-
related  emergencies.  A  new  study released this week by the House Narcotics
Committee reports 15 of 19 cities polled reported increases in the  number  of
drug-related emergencies in 1988.  Lawmakers said the increase could be linked
to an increased availability of cocaine.

                        REPORT - COCAINE PASSES HEROIN:

   A  national  report  on  treatment centers scheduled to be released in June
will show that for the first time admissions to hospital emergency  rooms  for
cocaine  abuse surpassed those for heroin.  Officials from the House Narcotics
Committee said this week that health problems were complicated when users took
more cocaine in more dangerous ways, such as smoking or injecting it.

                          SURVEY - MARIJUANA USE UP:

   Marijuana use is increasing in the nation's big cities, reports a survey by
the House Narcotics Committee and the National Institute on  Drug  Abuse.  The
study  found  increases  in marijuana-related hospital emergency room cases in
1988.  The report also found increased use of cocaine and a decline in  heroin
use.

                        NEW DRUGS FIGHTS HEAD INJURIES:

   In  laboratory  tests,  scientists  at UC San Francisco have shown that the
effects of traumatic brain injury can be lessened and perhaps prevented by  an
new class of drugs. The drugs dextrorphan and CPP block chemicals that destroy
brain  cells during the body's natural response to head injury.  Human testing
of the drug is pending approval by the Food and Drug Administration.

                         TESTS FIND CHEMICAL INCREASE:

   Research for two new drugs proved  conclusively  that  the  levels  of  two
chemicals  increases  after  a  head  injury.  Scientists  at UC San Francisco
revealed that brain-injured lab rats had increased  levels  of  the  chemicals
glutamate and asparate at the injury site.  The chemicals can kill brain cells
in the area of the injury. The findings were published in the current issue of
Nature.

                        HIGH-FAT DIET LINKED TO CANCER:

   Pregnant  women  who eat high-fat diets might predispose children to cancer
in later life,  a  study  shows.  Researchers  at  Michigan  State  University
presented  data  this  week  that  links  high-fat  diet  in  pregnant mice to
incidence of cancer in the offspring's later life. Researcher Dr. Bruce Walker

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decried the common practice of prescribing high-fat diets for pregnant women.

                            NEW LIMITS SET ON MDA:

   The U.S.  Department of Labor proposed restrictions on worker  exposure  to
methylenedianiline, or MDA. The restrictions limit exposure to 10 parts of MDA
per billion parts of air each hour over an eight hour work day. The department
estimates the new standards will eliminate up to 23 work-related cancer deaths
each year and reduce the risk of liver cancer for workers.

                           ADULTS GETTING HEALTHIER:

   Adults  are  getting  healthier,  says  Prevention magazine's annual report
card, which is scheduled to be issued Tuesday. But the magazine said there was
room for improvement.  The overall score,  based on 21 healthy  behaviors  was
65.4 in 1988, up from 64.8 in 1987 and 61.5 in 1983. One hundred points is top
score.

                         NEW TECHNIQUE TREATS UNBORN:

   A  new  method  for  sampling  fetal  blood  is improving the detection and
treatment of serious health problems before birth,  doctors  reported  Monday.
PUBS  -  percutaneous  umbilical  blood  sampling  - involves guiding a needle
through a woman's abdomen into her baby's umbilical cord.  Blood can be  drawn
for testing and medications can be given through the cord.

                          STUDY SHOWS AIDS ON CAMPUS:

   Two  of  every  1,000 college students tested on 19 campuses nationwide are
infected with the AIDS  virus,  researchers  announced  Monday.  The  American
College  Health Association conducted the study with a $300,000 grant from the
federal Centers for Disease Control. Researchers said the rate of infection is
similar to the general population.

                        EXCESS IRON MIGHT CAUSE CANCER:

   Research released this week indicates a link between excessive  amounts  of
iron  and  cancer.  Scientists  at  the  Fox  Chase  Cancer  Center and Thomas
Jefferson University Hospital,  both in Philadelphia,  said  Monday  that  lab
tests  showed  an  increased  incidence of cancer in laboratory rats that were
given iron supplements. Research is continuing, officials said.

                         BETA-CAROTENE FIGHTS CANCER:

A nutrient found in  common  vegetables  appears  to  prevent  development  of
potentially deadly cancers, researchers reported Monday. It is the first study
offering scientific proof that beta-carotene reverses pre-cancers of the mouth
that can develop into full-fledged cancers.  Beta-carotene occurs naturally in
carrots and leafy vegetables.

                        BETA-CAROTENE MIGHT AID 30,000:

   The American Cancer Society said Monday that new  cancer  research  on  the
nutrient  beta-carotene gave hope to 30,000 Americans suffering from cancer of
the mouth.  A new study released Monday indicates  the  nutrient  -  found  in

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carrots  and green leafy vegetables - can reverse development of pre-cancerous
lesions.

                         ENZYME COULD AID TRANSPLANTS:

   A Baltimore company will distribute superoxide dismutase  (SOD)  minic,  an
enzyme  that  occurs  naturally  in the human body and can neutralize damaging
oxygen-free atoms in the body.  Nova Pharmaceutical Corporation hopes  to  use
SOD  minic  in  cardiovascular  and  sepsis  patients  and  kidney  transplant
recipients. Other potential targets are arthritis, inflammation and colitis.

                        NEW CANCER TREATMENT UNVEILED:

   A promising new cancer therapy was unveiled in San Francisco Monday at  the
annual  meeting  of  the  American Society of Clinical Oncology.  The Genetics
Institute's M-CSF research team said lab animals  treated  with  M-CSF  showed
increases in cancer-fighting white blood cells. Adding the monoclonal antibody
3F8 enhanced the white cells' ability to combat cancer, researchers said.

                            M-CSF OCCURS NATURALLY:

   M-CSF,  the  key  element in a promising new cancer treatment unveiled this
week, is a protein found naturally in the human body. The protein controls the
production of cancer-fighting white blood cells.  Scientists at  the  Genetics
Institute  said  this week that supplements of M-CSF could increase the body's
ability to fight cancer, especially when coupled with the antibody 3F8.

                         EXERCISE DECREASES BLOOD FAT:

   Exercise can lower the level of fat in blood  and  decrease  heart  disease
risk,  new research shows.  Researchers at Rockefeller University, N.Y., found
that the level of triglycerides - the basic form of fat  that  stores  energy,
dropped  32 percent in men who regularly jogged on a treadmill.

                        NURSES POOR HEALTH ROLE MODELS:

   A new University of Buffalo study found that student nurses were poor  role
models  when  it  comes  to health practices.  The study quizzed 1,081 nursing
students at 10 schools.  Findings:  90 percent drank alcohol;  25  percent  of
those  drank  five or more drinks per occasion.  Students scored well on sleep
and exercise,  but poorly on diet and seat belt use.

                       STUDY - KIDS IGNORE NOISE RISKS:

   Many teen-agers are tuning out warnings about what high noise levels can do
to their hearing,  a study of 1,529 Ohio high school students revealed.  Sixty
percent of those studied said they knew the hazards of listening to  extremely
loud  music  at a rock concert or through earphones,  but 72 percent said they
used portable radio and cassette earphones.

                          OSHA - NOISE RISKS COMMON:

   The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said this week that noise
levels above 85 decibels could cause hearing damage. A study by researchers in
Philadelphia suggests that all of us expose our  ears  to  harmful  levels  of

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noise  every  day.  Three popular stereo headphone sets,  at only half volume,
were found to emit an average noise level of 104 decibels.

                         AGE NO GREAT RISK IN SURGERY:

   Surgery doesn't pose any unique dangers  to  the  elderly,  says  the  Mayo
Clinic  in  a  study  released  Tuesday.  The  five-year  survey by the clinic
followed 795 patients - all at least 90 and 2 percent  older  than  100.  Five
years  after  their surgeries,  survival rates for the patients were about the
same as people of similar ages who didn't have surgery.

                           NEW DRUG FIGHTS LEUKEMIA:

   A drug treatment is showing promise for patients with  chronic  lymphocytic
leukemia  (CLL).  A  study at the University of Texas shows that 10 percent of
CLL patients treated with fludarabine  combined  with  prednisone  achieved  a
total remission.  Another 48 percent achieved partial remission.  The data was
released Tuesday  at  the  American  Society  of  Clinical  Oncology's  annual
meeting.

                             FDA CLEARS NEW DRUG:

   The  U.S.  Food and Drug Administration designated fludarabine phosphate as
an orphan drug for the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.  Fludarabine is  a
chemically  synthesized pharmaceutical compound getting attention this week at
the American Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting.  Orphan drugs  are
those that treat diseases that afflict a small portion of the population.

                         MALARIA VACCINE TO BE TESTED:

   Clinical  trials  of a new malaria vaccine will begin by month's end at the
University of Maryland  in  Baltimore.  MicroGeneSys  announced  Tuesday  that
trials  of  its VaxSyn PfCSA will begin.  The vaccine was cleared earlier this
year by the Food and Drug Administration for  human  trials.  The  vaccine  is
based on a protein derived from genetic material taken from tha protozoan.

                         NEW DRUG GIVEN FREE TO NEEDY:

   Searle announced Tuesday that its newest product, Cytotec, will be provided
free  to  needy patients.  The drug is for the prevention of stomach ulcers in
patients  who   take   common   arthritis   medications.   The   Chicago-based
pharmaceutical company initiated its program for the needy about two years ago
and  has provided about 200,000 free prescriptions to about 65,000 patients so
far.

                            CANCER GENE UNCOVERED:

   The location of a gene believed  responsible  for  the  inherited  form  of
cancer might have been found, a new study in Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine suggests.  Researchers at the National Cancer institute said the gene
could be responsible for all inherited cases of deadly skin cancer  and  about
10 percent of all cancer cases.

                         FIBER INHIBITS COLON CANCER:

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   One  of  the  first  human  studies to document how a high-fiber diet helps
prevent colon cancer has shown that it cuts the unusually high  rate  of  cell
growth that leads to cancer. Results released Wednesday from the University of
Arizona  study  showed that nine of 16 cancer patients eating wheat bran daily
showed slower cell growth after two months.

                       COLON CANCER SECOND MOST COMMON:

   Colon cancer is the No.  2 cause of cancer  death  in  the  United  States,
killing  60,000  of  the  150,000 people diagnosed with it each year.  A study
released Wednesday at the annual meeting of the American Society  of  Clinical
Oncology  shows  that a high-fiber diet significantly slows the growth rate of
cells.  Abnormally fast growth rate can lead to cancer.

                        AIDS DEATH TOLL ESTIMATE RISES:

   The Centers for Disease Control reported this week that the expected number
of  deaths  from  acquired  immune  deficiency  syndrome  will  be higher than
previously thought.  The agency constructed a mathematical model in 1986  that
estimated  270,000  newly  diagnosed  cases  between  then  and 1992.  Figures
released this week place the estimate at 365,000,  with 263,000 deaths by  the
end of 1992.

                        CDC - AIDS TO COST $5 BILLION:

   Treatment  of AIDS patients will cost between $5 billion and $13 billion in
1992, the Centers for Disease Control reported this week. The agency estimated
that by 1992,  172,000 Americans will require medical treatment for AIDS.  The
actual number could be lower, the center said, because mathematical models did
not consider several new treatments for the disease.

                          NEW SURGERY CALLED SUCCESS:

   Doctors  in Inglewood,  Calif.,  are reporting the successful recovery this
week of a 54-year-old Hawthorne woman who underwent innovative heart  surgery.
Betty Delgado had superventricular tachycardia - a potentially fatal irregular
heart  beat.  Doctors  at  Centinella Hospital used a cryoprobe to selectively
kill excess heart tissue that caused the irregular beating by freezing it.

                         CLOCK HELPS LIFT DRUG STUPOR:

   A nurse in Jerusalem has developed an ingeniously simple way  to  test  the
awareness of patients regaining consciousness from anesthesia.  Hospital staff
now ask recovering  patients  to  read  the  time  on  a  clock  at  10-minute
intervals.  The  simple  technique  now  frees  up  specialists who previously
decided when to move patients from the recovery room to their regular room.

                         GOVERNMENT ISSUES AIDS BOOK:

   The federal government released its new  AIDS  Prevention  Guide  Thursday,
targeting  parents and youth in an effort to fight the disease.  The guide was
designed to help parents and other adults,  such as clergy and civic  leaders,
talk  to  young  people  about  the  dangers  of  AIDS  and methods to protect
themselves from it, officials said.

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                          DOCTORS USE TELERADIOLOGY:

   Doctors in rural areas are using X-ray images  transmitted  over  telephone
wires  to make timely diagnoses,  a study shows.  According to a report issued
this week by the Journal of the American Medical  Association,  new  telephone
technology  has  improved  the image quality of the technique "teleradiology,"
making images more accurate and reliable.

                         SOUND MIGHT DETECT KNEE WOE:

   Measuring sound waves transmitted  through  the  kneecap  might  help  spot
osteoporosis  in women,  according to a report in Friday's New England Journal
of Medicine.  The technique,  using ultrasound,  was found to measure not only
bone mass in the kneecap,  but also a component of bone fragility,  doctors at
Omaha's Creighton University said.

                        STUDY - COFFEE, CVD NOT LINKED:

   Coffee consumption does not increase the risk of cardiovascular disease,  a
study in the current issue of Archives of Internal Medicine reports. The study
tracked 2,648 men and 3,566 women and found that caffeine had no direct impact
on  the incidence of cardiovascular disease in the group.  The issue of coffee
consumption and CVD has been the subject of long-running debate.

                          FDA ISSUES VITAMIN WARNING:

   The Food and Drug Administration this week warned parents not to give their
children the prescription multivitamin:  Goldline Poly Vitamins with Fluoride,
lot  0190086,  expiration date 2/91.  The vitamin is so high in Vitamin D that
it could be dangerous in continuous  use.  The  vitamin  product  is  a  buff-
colored,  orange-flecked  chewable tablet marked "SL320" on one side,  the FDA
said.

                       RESEARCHERS FIND GROWTH PROTEIN:

   Scientists have uncovered a single protein believed  to  control  the  most
basic of the body's cycles - the single cell growing and dividing. Researchers
at  UC-San  Francisco  now have shown conclusively that a single protein plays
the key role in controlling this cycle.  Scientists said  the  findings  would
affect several areas of research, from cancer to brain injuries.

                        PROTEIN MIGHT HAVE CANCER CLUE:

   A  growth  protein  uncovered  by scientists at UC-San Francisco could help
find cures to several diseases,  scientists said  Thursday.  Researchers  will
look  for  a possible link between the still-unnamed protein and cancer cells.
Abnormally rapid growth rate is a trait of cancer cells.

                        X-RAY MACHINES GETTING SMALLER:

   A new method of charging capacitors in power supplies could shrink the size
of hospital X-ray machines,  a San Diego company  reported  Thursday.  Maxwell
Laboratories  Inc.  and  Auburn  University have developed an electrical power
converter for space-program applications that will make X-ray machines smaller
and more electrically efficient, company officials said.

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===============================================================================
                                   Articles
===============================================================================

ORGAN TRANSPLANTS IN 1988 SHOWED DRAMATIC INCREASE IN MOST CATEGORIES, KIDNEY
                  TRANSPLANTS UP SLIGHTLY, ACCORDING TO UNOS

Organ transplants increased dramatically in most categories in 1988, according
to newly released statistics compiled by the United Network for Organ  Sharing
(UNOS).

Major increases were recorded in liver, heart,  pancreas,  heart/lung and lung
transplants  in  1988;  a  small  increase  was reported in kidney transplants
reversing a one-year decrease reported in 1987.

While the increase in transplants performed was impressive, UNOS also reported
at the same time the list of Americans presently on the waiting list for  life
saving,  or  life  enhancing  transplants,  had grown to more than 16,000,  up
nearly 1,000 over 1987.

Dr.  William Vaughn,  UNOS director of technical services,  who  oversees  the
compilation of data in the national organ transplantation registry, urged that
"caution  should  be  used  in  comparing  1988  statistics to previous years"
because it was the  first  year  "every  organ  procurement  organization  and
transplant center (was) required to report each transplant performed."

UNOS  President  Dr.  Keith  Johnson,  put  the increased number of transplant
candidates in perspective.  "Technology has moved very rapidly in the past few
years  and  patients who would not have considered transplantation a few years
ago  are  now  candidates  because  new  immunosuppressive  agents  and  other
developments have made the results better so they want to get transplanted."

There were a total of 12,798 organ transplants performed in the U.S.  in 1988,
UNOS  reported.  The  statistics  include  all  transplants  performed at U.S.
transplant  centers,   including  Veteran's  Administration  facilities.   The
numbers  reflect  transplants covered by Medicare as well as those paid for by
private insurers and individuals and includes military personnel and  non-U.S.
citizens receiving transplants in the United States.

The  major  increases  in  organs  transplanted that just a few years ago were
considered experimental was most  dramatic  and  would  seem  to  indicate  an
increase in the number of multiple organ donors procured.

For  example,  in  1988  there  were 31 lung transplants (21 double lungs,  10
single lungs),  an increase of more than 300 percent over  the  nine  reported
transplanted in 1987.

Heart/lung transplants reported in 1988 totaled 71, a 43 percent increase over
the reported 43 in 1987.

A total of 243 pancreas' transplants were performed in 1988, an increase of 71
percent over the 142 in 1987.

The  number of livers transplanted continued to grow at a rapid pace with 1160
performed in 1988,  compared to 1199 reported  in  1987,  an  increase  of  40

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percent.

And  heart  transplants continued to rise steadily with 1647 reported in 1988,
an increase of 14 percent over the 1438 performed in 1987.

Kidney transplants showed the smallest gain with a total of 9,123 reported  in
1988,  an  increase  of 1.7 percent over the 8967 reported in 1987.  That news
was encouraging,  however,  since 1987 represented the first  year  since  the
passage  of the End-Stage Renal Disease Program was passed in 1972 that kidney
transplants did not show any increase at all.

A breakdown of the waiting list revealed that as of April 10,  1989 there  the
following number of people waiting for a transplant by organ:

     14,507 - kidney transplant
     1,231 - heart transplant
     744 - liver transplant
     223 -  heart/lung  transplant
     208  -  pancreas transplant
     67 - lung transplant

                  1988 Transplantation Statistics according to UNOS

     *9,123 kidney transplants (7,278 cadaver, 1,845 living-related)
     *1,680 liver transplants
     *1,647 heart transplants
     *243 pancreas transplants
     *74 heart/lung
     *31 lung transplants (21 double lung, 10 single lung).

The  UNOS  Scientific  Registry  is a comprehensive organ transplantation data
system that has been in operation  since  October  1,  1987.  (For  additional
information  contact:  United  Network for Organ Sharing,  3001 Hungary Spring
Rd., P.O. Box 28010, Richmond, VA 23228)

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