Health News

Spending less time in bed can help beat insomnia

Spending less time in bed can help beat insomniaWellington, Mar 15 : Can''t get to sleep? Well, then stay up, say researchers at Auckland University who have discovered a potential breakthrough treatment for insomnia.

According to scientists, the key to sleeplessness is to force bad sleepers to spend less time in bed.

First, insomniacs are first told to keep a detailed diary of the time they spend in bed asleep and awake. Then, they are told to change their habits, reducing the time they spend in bed each night by the number of hours they would usually spend lying awake.

Johnson''s Baby Shampoo ‘contains cancer-causing chemicals’

Johnson''s Baby Shampoo ‘contains cancer-causing chemicals’London, Mar 15 : Popular bath products for kids contain cancer-causing chemicals, says a new study.

According to a research carried out in the United States, many of the top-selling brands contain formaldehyde, which is used to embalm corpses.

Out of the 28 products tested for formaldehyde in an independent laboratory, 23 contained it, reports Sky News.

Health programs for employees can reduce companies'' medical claim costs

Washington, March 15 : Companies can improve their bottom lines if they invest in health programs for employees, with an eye on reducing medical claim costs, according to a study.

"It''s a win-win opportunity - employers and employees can benefit from a healthier workforce," said LuAnn Heinen, vice president of the National Business Group on Health and the lead author of the study paper.

Describing their study in The Milbank Quaterly, Heinen and co-author Helen Darling revealed that they analysed four employer-sponsored wellness programs targeting a combined 75,000 employees.

Imbalance of iron linked to prion disease-related neuronal demise

Washington, March 15 : An Indian-origin researcher at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine has found that imbalance of iron homeostasis is a common feature of prion disease-affected human, mouse, and hamster brains.

Dr. Neena Singh, who worked in collaboration with researchers from Creighton University, says that her team's findings provide new insight into the mechanism of neurotoxicity in prion disorders, and novel avenues for the development of therapeutic strategies.

Unlike other neurodegenerative conditions, prion disorders are sporadic, inherited, and infectious, and affect both humans and animals.

Mad cow disease in cattle, scrapie in sheep, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans are some of its examples.

Viagra could turn willy ‘wonky’!

Viagra could turn willy ‘wonky’!London, Mar 15: Viagra might help men rise to the occasion, but its side effects can be oddly devastating, which include - wonky willies flatulence, toothache and hiccups!

According to a health watchdog, the drug is responsible for 109 deaths in the UK.

In Britain, more than 1,000 reports of problems are logged in a huge database listing more than 1,500 side effects.

The drug is prescribed more than one million times a year.

Potential therapeutic target for Down’s syndrome identified

Washington, Mar 14 : Researchers from Salk Institute for Biological Studies have identified a molecular pathway that can be a potential therapeutic target for Down's syndrome, the most frequent cause of mental retardation.

The study showed that synaptojanin-1, a central component of the pathway, is essential to production of glia, brain cells that act as neurons'' personal assistants.

Down''s syndrome, spinal cord injury, Alzheimer''s disease, and stroke all are linked by an overproduction of glia.

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