Wednesday, April 29, 2009

The Preventable Causes of Death in the United States: Comparative Risk Assessment of Dietary, Lifestyle, and Metabolic Risk Factors

http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.
1000058

Background
Knowledge of the number of deaths caused by risk factors is needed for health policy and priority setting. Our aim was to estimate the mortality effects of the following 12 modifiable dietary, lifestyle, and metabolic risk factors in the United States (US) using consistent and
comparable methods: high blood glucose, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and blood pressure; overweight-obesity; high dietary trans fatty acids and salt; low dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids, omega-3 fatty acids (seafood), and fruits and vegetables; physical inactivity; alcohol use; and tobacco smoking.

Methods and Findings
We used data on risk factor exposures in the US population from nationally representative health surveys and disease-specific mortality statistics from the National Center for Health Statistics. We obtained the etiological effects of risk factors on disease-specific mortality, by age, from systematic reviews and meta-analyses of epidemiological studies that had adjusted (i) for major potential confounders, and (ii) where possible for regression dilution bias. We estimated the number of disease-specific deaths attributable to all non-optimal levels of each risk factor exposure, by age and sex. In 2005, tobacco smoking and high blood pressure were responsible for an estimated 467,000 (95% confidence interval [CI] 436,000-500,000) and 395,000 (372,000-414,000) deaths, accounting for about one in five or six deaths in US adults. Overweight-obesity (216,000; 188,000-237,000) and physical inactivity (191,000; 164,000-222,000) were each responsible for nearly 1 in 10 deaths. High dietary salt (102,000; 97,000-107,000), low dietary omega-3 fatty acids (84,000; 72,000-96,000), and high dietary trans fatty acids (82,000; 63,000-97,000) were the dietary risks with the largest mortality effects. Although 26,000 (23,000-40,000) deaths from ischemic heart disease, ischemic stroke, and diabetes were averted by current alcohol use, they were outweighed by 90,000 (88,000-94,000) deaths from other cardiovascular diseases, cancers, liver cirrhosis, pancreatitis,
alcohol use disorders, road traffic and other injuries, and violence.

Conclusions
Smoking and high blood pressure, which both have effective interventions, are responsible for the largest number of deaths in the US. Other dietary, lifestyle, and metabolic risk factors for chronic diseases also cause a substantial number of deaths in the US.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Brown Fat Identified as Heat-Yielding Cells in Humans - NYTimes.com

Brown Fat Identified as Heat-Yielding Cells in Humans
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/09/health/research/09fat.html?_r=2&partne
r=rss&emc=rss

Not about visceral fat or subcutaneous fat, but more information about
brown fat.

For more than 30 years, scientists have been intrigued by brown fat, a
cell that acts like a furnace, consuming calories and generating heat.
Rodents, unable to shiver effectively to keep warm, use brown fat
instead. So do human infants, who do not shiver very well. But it was
generally believed that humans lose brown fat after infancy, no longer
needing it once the shivering response kicks in.

That belief, three groups of researchers report, is wrong.

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Medical Calculator/Unit Converter

Medical Calculator/Unit Converter
Clinical Analyte Unit Conversions
(http://dwjay.tripod.com/conversion.html).
Medical Algorithmas (http://www.medal.org/visitor/login.aspx): More than
12,500 Scales, Tools, Assessments, Scoring Systems, and other Algorithms
intended for Medical Education and for Biomedical Research.
Conversion & Calculation Center
(http://www.convertit.com/Go/ConvertIt/).
Converber (http://www.xyntec.com/): Converber is a unit converter. It is
a powerful software utility that will help make easy conversions between
1241 various units of measure in 33 categories. Converber converts
everything from length and force to flow and temperature. See some of
the features listed below.

Thursday, April 02, 2009

The Diabetes Prevention Program: How the Participants Did It

The Diabetes Prevention Program: How the Participants Did It
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/587049?src=top10

Blood glucose self-monitoring in type 2 diabetes: a randomised controlled trial

Blood glucose self-monitoring in type 2 diabetes: a randomised
controlled trial

This link gets you the EXEC SUMMARY -- better than reading all 72 pages!

http://www.hta.ac.uk/execsumm/summ1315.htm