Guest guest Posted December 17, 2003 Report Share Posted December 17, 2003 Molecular Medicine MedPulse® www.medscape.com/molecularmedicinehome MedPulse is a weekly index of key news and features on Medscape's specialty sites compiled by Medscape's Editors. Medscape: The Web's #1 source for on-line CME CLICK HERE for CME in your specialty ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:NEWSMEMBER NEWSUSER SUPPORT NEW FEATURES THIS WEEK Conference Report - Global Vaccines -- What Are the Challenges? In 2001, 1.5 million deaths occurred among children below 5 years of age that could have been prevented by vaccination. How can we immunize every child, everywhere?Medscape General Medicine 5(4) 2003 Conference Report - II. Investigating New Vaccines: SARS Sophisticated coronavirus vectors are being refined for use as SARS vaccines.Medscape General Medicine 5(4) 2003 Detection of Mature T-Cell Leukemias by Flow Cytometry Using Anti-T-Cell Receptor VB Antibodies Evaluation for T-cell monoclonality often is necessary for the diagnosis of T-cell malignancy.Am J Clin Pathol 120(5) 2003 Decreased Response to IL-12 and IL-18 of Peripheral Blood Cells in Rheumatoid Arthritis Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic disorder of unknown aetiology primarily affecting joints and leading to their progressive destruction.Arthritis Res Ther 6(1) 2003 FOCUS ON ACID-RELATED DISORDERS The use of PPIs has dramatically altered management of acid-peptic disorders. Cash, MD, discusses latest findings on clinical applications and outcomes associated with use of both IV and oral PPIs, in "Proton-Pump Inhibitors: Clinical Applications," a featured conference report in the Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease Resource Center. NEWS U.N. Puts off Cloning Ban Treaty Talks for a Year The U.N. General Assembly on Monday decided to put off for a year negotiations for a controversial global treaty banning human cloning that the Bush administration wants to extend to research on stem cells.Reuters Health Information 2003 Red Blood Cells Implicated in Disruption of Coronary Plaques New research suggests that by contributing free cholesterol, erythrocytes play an important role in the progression of coronary atherosclerotic plaques. This finding helps establish a link between intraplaque hemorrhage and plaque progression.Reuters Health Information 2003 Islet Transplantation May Be Justified for Only Most Severe Type 1 Diabetes A research team at the US National Institutes of Health suggests that pancreatic islet transplantation may be appropriate only for those patients with severe "end-stage" type 1 diabetes resistant to an optimal treatment regimen.Reuters Health Information 2003 Germ Stem Cell-Derived Sperm Cells Capable of Fertilizing Oocytes Fertile, male haploid germ cells now join the ranks of cell types that can be generated from embryonic stem cells, scientists in Massachusetts report in the early edition of Nature, available online December 10. Reuters Health Information 2003 Iceland's DeCODE Finds Two More Obesity Genes Icelandic biotech company deCODE genetics Inc said on Thursday it had isolated two more genes that can predispose people to obesity, offering new targets for drug intervention in the future.Reuters Health Information 2003 EGFR Expression in Breast Cancer Linked to Aggressive Disease Researchers said on Friday they have found epidermal growth factor receptor, or EGFR, expression in breast tumors is associated with poorer prognosis.Reuters Health Information 2003 BP1 Linked to Aggressive Breast Cancer Gene is found in 89% of African-American women.Medscape Medical News 2003 Vaccination With Virus-Like Particles Protects Mice From Ebola Vaccination with Ebola virus-like particles (eVLPs) can completely protect mice from a subsequent challenge with the virus, according to a report published in the December 8th early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.Reuters Health Information 2003 First Validated Breast Cancer Gene Assay Score accurately predicts 10-year risk for node-negative, ER-positive women treated with tamoxifen.Medscape Medical News 2003 Animal Studies Indicate That Cocaine and Ecstasy Cause DNA Mutations Cocaine and Ecstasy not only cause addiction and raise the risk of cancer but also provoke genetic mutations, Italian scientists said on Friday.Reuters Health Information 2003 M. tuberculosis Proteasome Needed for Nitric Oxide Resistance The proteasome found in Mycobacterium tuberculosis plays a key role in protecting the organism against nitric oxide and other reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) produced by the host, new research indicates.Reuters Health Information 2003 Anti-IL-5 Therapy Shows Promise as Treatment for Eosinophilic Dermatitis Findings from three case reports suggest that mepolizumab, an anti-interleukin-5 (IL-5) antibody, is a safe and effective treatment for eosinophilic dermatitis in patients with elevated IL-5 levels. Reuters Health Information 2003 New Animal Model Could Unlock Secrets of Early Pancreatic Cancer US researchers have created a murine model of invasive pancreatic ductal cancer that more closely mimics the human disease than previous models. Reuters Health Information 2003 MEMBER NEWS COMPREHENSIVE, PRINTABLE DRUG INFORMATION Medscape DrugInfo provides clinical information on drug indications, adverse effects, interactions, and other cautionary guidance, as well as handouts for your patients. Click DrugInfo from the top of any page, or search by drug name. Not a member? Click here to sign up for FREE Medscape membership. USER SUPPORT Unsubscribe from this newsletter. Subscribe to this newsletter. Forgot your login info? Cannot read this newsletter? Prefer the TEXT version? www.medscape.com/px/registration/updateemail Difficulty linking to a news story? Need additional support? .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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