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Reducing cholesterol; liquid after exercise; ear implants and meningit

News

* Diet as good as drugs for reducing cholesterol
The Food and Drug Administration, the American drugs regulator, has admitted that plant sterols in oils, viscous fibres (oats and barley) and almonds can all reduce cholesterol. When researchers tested these foods against the drug lovastatin, the diet was just as effective, reducing cholesterol levels by 28 per cent (JAMA, 2003; 290: 501-10).

* Don’t drink too much liquid after exercise
Drinking fluids to excess during and after exercise in order to rehydrate the body could be a dangerous practice. At least seven athletes have died recently after drinking too much liquid following exertion, and another 250 have required treatment in hospital (BMJ, 2003; 327: 113-4).

* Hearing implants can cause meningitis
Twenty-six out of 4264 children given cochlear implants have developed bacterial meningitis, which works out to around 30 times the expected rate for a healthy population. Children who received an implant with a positioner were four times as likely to develop meningitis as those without, the study found (N Engl J Med, 2003; 349: 535-45).

* Vitamin E can reduce the worst effects of chemotherapy
Researchers testing the antioxidant vitamin E on 27 patients being treated with chemotherapy have found that only a third of the vitamin-E group suffered serious side-effects compared with 85 per cent of the controls (J Clin Oncol, 2003; 21: 927-31).

* Aspirin increases miscarriage risk
Aspirin and other NSAIDs (non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs) can increase the risk of miscarriage by up to 80 per cent, a study found. This risk was increased if the woman was taking an NSAID either when she conceived or for longer than a week. The risk was just as strong if she had regularly and continually taken an NSAID before conceiving (BMJ, 2003; 327: 368-71).

WDDTY Blog Speak

Nsaid use increases risk of miscarriage - NSAIDs (non steroidal anti inflammatory drugs) taken during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage by up to seven times. ...

Vitamin e: - For 'dangerous', read the small print - 'People still take dangerous vitamin E', said a headline in a recent medical journal. Dangerous? Of course, they're referring to the recent major st...

Nsaids: - How about giving them to cancer patients? - It's truly wonderful the way that drugs companies can reinvent their products, even those that are discredited. The most creative example of this rei...

Vitamin E supplements: They’re good—but they could be even better - Vitamin E has had a slippery ride since its discovery in 1922, when it was hailed as a virtual cure-all. Our bodies can’t make vitamin E; we have to o...

Cox-2 inhibitors - The COX (cyclooxygenase)-2 inhibitors, also known as ‘selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs’ (NSAIDs), have long been touted as being safer...

Nsaids: - The risks outweigh the benefits for osteoarthritis sufferers - Most osteoarthritis sufferers are still on long-term therapy either with one of the painkilling NSAIDs (non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs) or a...

Arthritis: nsaid overkill - Paracetamol and simple analgesics are probably just as effective as non steroidal anti inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for relieving pain in osteoarthriti...

Nsaid cream: kidney damage - Non steroidal anti inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) applied to the skin as a cream to reduce pain and swelling may cause potentially lethal kidney damage....