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Healthcare online Keeping you up-to-date
VOL.  11     ISSUE:  6 June  2013 Medical Services Department

SQUARE Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Features

EDITORIAL TEAM

OMAR AKRAMUR RAB

MBBS, FCGP, FIAGP,

P G Dip. Business Management

MAHFUZUR RAHMAN

MBBS, MBA

 

EDITORIAL

Dear Doctor:

Welcome to this edition of "e- SQUARE" healthcare online !

This issue features a variety of articles including "Ca-Prostate Risk !", "New Guideline !", "Obesity Alert !", "Pollution & Autism !", "Cancer Prevention !", "Estrogen & UTI !".

In our regular feature, we have some new products information of SQUARE Pharmaceuticals Ltd. as well.

We welcome your feedback regarding "e-SQUARE" ! 

Click on to reply mode.

Yours sincerely,

 

Editorial Team

Reply Mode      : e-square@squaregroup.com

The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of its editor or SQUARE PHARMACEUTICALS LTD.

 Ca-Prostate Risk !

 Prostate Cancer Treatment Tied To Hernia Risk

Prostate removal or radiation therapy to treat cancer is tied to two- to four-fold higher than usual risk of later having a hernia repaired, according to a new study. It's not clear why hernia repairs are more common among these men. There might be tissue damage caused by the cancer treatment, or perhaps doctors are finding hernias that might otherwise go undetected, the author said. "You're looking for this in this population," said the author. "These men are being actively treated for prostate cancer, so they're more in tune with the health system and their providers are picking up these hernias." Whether this is leading to overtreatment of hernias that could be left alone is uncertain. There are various types of hernias, and the researchers included femoral and inguinal hernias, which both occur in the groin, in their analysis. They collected medical information from a Swedish national database on more than 28,000 men who had been treated for prostate cancer between 1998 and 2010. Among them, nearly 15,000 had their prostate removed with standard open surgery, another 4,650 had their prostate removed in a minimally invasive surgery and about 9,000 men had radiation treatment. The research team compared the number of hernia procedures among these men to 105,000 men who did not have prostate cancer. Six years after the cancer treatment, 14 percent of men who had open surgery, 10 percent who had the minimally invasive surgery and eight percent who went through radiation ended up having a hernia repaired. In comparison, just four percent of the men who did not have prostate cancer received a hernia repair, the researchers report in the Annals of Surgery. The results translate to a four-fold higher likelihood of hernia repair among men who had open prostate surgery and a two-fold higher risk with radiation therapy. He said he doesn't know why men who received radiation were also at an increased risk of a hernia repair, but that it might be explained by additional hernia diagnoses. The increased detection could also account for some of the additional hernia repairs among men who had prostate removal surgery, he added. Opting for minimally invasive surgery might be one route; men who had this type of surgery were 18 percent less likely to have a hernia repair than the men who had their prostate removed by a larger incision. "I think there has to be an open discussion with the healthcare providers. Just because it exists doesn't mean it has to be fixed," he said.

SOURCE: Reuters Health, June 2013

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 New Guideline !

Kids' Sinusitis Might Not Need Antibiotics, New Guidelines Say

Doctors don't have to automatically prescribe an antibiotic to treat children who appear to have acute sinus infections, according to new guidelines issued by a leading group of pediatricians. Instead, they can take a "watch and wait" approach if it appears the infection might clear on its own, according to the new American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines. "The practitioner can either treat immediately or consider waiting for a couple of days," said the chairwoman of the academy's subcommittee on acute sinusitis. "If the kid doesn't look dramatically ill, you can wait an extra couple of days to see if they improve on their own." The previous guidelines, passed in 2001, recommended antibiotic therapy for all children diagnosed with acute bacterial sinusitis, which is defined as persistent signs of sinus infection lasting more than 10 days. Doctors now can observe kids for up to an additional three days past that 10-day period to see if their symptoms will ease without antibiotic treatment. "There's nothing absolutely sacred about 10 days. It could be 11 days. It could be 12 days," she added. "In the child who looks sicker, we wouldn't do that. We would start on antibiotics immediately." The new guidelines, published online June 24 in the journal Pediatrics, are driven primarily by concern over antibiotic resistance, she said. There is a lot of overlap between the common cold and acute sinusitis, and some children who are not suffering from a bacterial infection may be receiving antibiotics. "If we prescribe fewer antibiotics, then the problem of antibiotic resistance is controlled," she said. "If you can avoid the use of antibiotics, then that is reasonable." Between 6 percent and 7 percent of children who visit doctors seeking care for a respiratory condition have acute sinusitis, according to the report. Most cases of acute sinusitis develop from a common cold. Colds usually last five to seven days and peak within two or three days, she said. Acute sinusitis does not often develop into a life-threatening illness, but it can be very uncomfortable and even painful. Symptoms of sinusitis include a runny nose, a persistent daytime cough, headache and fever. "I think cases of acute sinusitis resolve on their own, by and by," the chairwoman said. "There are not children who are dying left and right from sinusitis. But there is a quality-of-life issue too. You get better more quickly with treatment." The new guidelines for acute sinusitis also discourage the use of imaging tests to help diagnose the condition in uncomplicated cases.

SOURCE: HealthDay News, June 2013

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 Obesity Alert !

Obesity Linked To Greater Risk Of Hearing Loss In Teens

In addition to the well-known health risks of being overweight, a new study finds that obese teens may be at increased risk for hearing loss. For the study, researchers analyzed data from nearly 1,500 adolescents, aged 12 to 19, who took part in the 2005 to 2006 U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Obese adolescents had greater hearing loss across all frequencies and were nearly twice as likely to have one-sided, low-frequency hearing loss, compared to their normal-weight peers. "This is the first paper to show that obesity is associated with hearing loss in adolescents," study first author said. He and his colleagues theorized that obesity-caused inflammation may contribute to hearing loss. "These results have several important public health implications," author said. "Because previous research found that 80 percent of adolescents with hearing loss were unaware of having hearing difficulty, adolescents with obesity should receive regular hearing screening so they can be treated appropriately to avoid [brain] and behavioral issues." The nearly twofold increased risk of one-sided, low-frequency hearing loss in obese teens is particularly concerning because it suggests early, and possibly ongoing, injury to the inner ear that could progress as obese teens become obese adults, the researchers said in the news release. Further research is needed to determine how hearing loss in obese teens affects their social development, school performance, behavior and thinking skills. 

SOURCE: HealthDay News, June 2013

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 Pollution & Autism !

Polluted Air Linked To Autism Risk

Pregnant women who live in smog-filled areas may be twice as likely to have children with autism, a new study suggests. "The study does not prove that pollution increases risk for autism. It found an association," said the  lead author. "It adds to the weight of the evidence that there may be something in air pollution that increases risk for autism." Researchers compared exposure to air pollution among 325 women who had a child with autism and 22,000 women who did not. The women were participants in the Nurses' Health Study II. Pollutants measured included diesel particulate matter, lead, manganese, mercury, methylene chloride, and a combined measure of metal exposure. Twenty percent to 60 percent of the women lived in areas considered highly polluted. And the study showed that: those women who lived in the 20 percent of locations that had the highest levels of diesel particulates or mercury in the air were twice as likely to have a child with autism, compared to those who lived in the 20 percent of areas with the lowest levels of these pollutants. In addition, those who lived in the 20 percent of locations with the highest levels of lead, manganese, methylene chloride, and combined metal exposure were about 50 percent more likely to have a child with autism than those who lived in the 20 percent of areas with the lowest concentrations. The findings held even after the researchers took into account other factors known to affect autism risk, such as income, education and smoking during pregnancy. Overall, the association was stronger for boys than it was for girls, but the number of girls included in the new study was too low to draw any firm conclusions. Exactly how, or even if, air pollution affects the developing brain is murky. "By definition, pollution is stuff that is not good for us," the author said. Still, the overall increase in autism risk that may be attributed to pollution is low. "Let's say a woman's risk for having a child with autism is one in 100, women who live in the most polluted cities have a risk that is about one in 50, which means that 49 children would not have autism," researcher added.

SOURCE: HealthDay News, June 2013

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 Cancer Prevention !

Aspirin May Guard Against Cancer :Scientists Explore 

 Aspirin and related drugs may fight cancer by lowering rates of DNA mutation, a new study suggests. It's known that aspirin reduces the risk for some cancers, and these findings point to a possible explanation, according to the researchers. They analyzed tissue samples from 13 patients with a condition called Barrett's esophagus, which can lead to esophageal cancer. The patients were followed for between six and 19 years. Patients took aspirin at different times during the study. Mutations in tissue samples collected while patients were on aspirin had accumulated an average of 10 times more slowly than in samples obtained when patients were not taking aspirin, according to the study.  The study did not, however, prove a cause-and-effect link between aspirin and slower rates of gene mutations. "Aspirin and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which are commonly available and cost-effective medications, may exert cancer-preventing effects by lowering mutation rates," researcher said. "This is the first study to measure genome-wide mutation rates of a pre-malignant tissue within patients for more than a decade, and the first to evaluate how aspirin affects those rates," he added. Researcher said aspirin may lower DNA mutation rates by reducing inflammation, and plans to further investigate this theory.

SOURCE: HealthDay News, June 2013

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 Estrogen & UTI !

Estrogen May Help Prevent Urinary Tract Infections After Menopause

Estrogen treatment delivered vaginally may help prevent repeat urinary tract infections in postmenopausal women, new laboratory research suggests. Urinary tract infections are common among women, with one-quarter experiencing recurring infections. And age-related changes increase the likelihood of these infections developing after menopause, when estrogen production plummets. Until now, taking antibiotics prophylactically -- to ward off recurrent urinary tract infections -- has been the gold standard for these women, research instructor said. "But antibiotic resistance is increasing, and some women are resistant to everything we have," he said. "We need other options. We need non-antibiotic options." Working in the laboratory and with animal models, the researchers identified a number of ways that estrogen -- the female sex hormone -- helps keep recurrent urinary tract infections at bay. "This study presents some underlying mechanisms for the beneficial effect of [topical estrogen formulations] after menopause and supports the application of estrogen in postmenopausal women suffering from recurrent UTIs," wrote the study's authors. About half of all women will experience at least one urinary tract infection in their lifetime, according to the study. For about 25 percent of these women, the infection will come back again within six months. Low estrogen levels have previously been linked to recurrent infections, and the new study sought to identify exactly how estrogen might affect a woman's risk of recurrent urinary tract infections. For the study, the researchers used human cells from postmenopausal women who had used supplemental vaginal estrogen for two weeks. They also worked with mice that were given bacteria that would cause urinary tract infections like those in humans. They found that estrogen encourages production of natural antimicrobial substances in the bladder. The hormone also makes the urinary tract tissue stronger by closing the gaps between cells that line the bladder. By gluing these gaps together, estrogen makes it harder for bacteria to penetrate the deeper layers of the bladder wall, the study authors said. Estrogen also helps prevent too many cells from shedding from the top layers of the bladder wall. According to the study, estrogen promotes the redistribution of cells and prevents excessive loss of cells during an infection.

SOURCE: HealthDay News, June 2013

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New Products of SQUARE Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

  Product Camlosart®
  Generic Name Amlodipine+ Olmesartan Medoxomil
  Strength 5 mg+ 40 mg
  Dosage form Tablet
  Therapeutic Category Antihypertensive
  Product Afun VT®
Generic Name

Clotrimazole

Strength

200 mg

Dosage form Vaginal Tablet
Therapeutic Category Antifungal
  Product Emolent®
  Generic Name Light liquid Paraffin+White soft Paraffin
  Strength 60 mg+ 150 mg per gm
  Dosage form Cream
  Therapeutic Category Emolient  

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