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New Medicare Data Compare Hospitals Based On Readmissions
New data regarding hospital readmission rates have emerged "amid a national debate over how to reduce" these numbers, "which cost the federal government billions of dollars a year in Medicare reimbursements," the New York Times reports. The data, posted on Medicare"s Hospital Compare Web site, examines the number of patients "readmitted to hospitals within a month of being discharged after treatment for heart attack, heart failure or pneumonia between July 2005 and June 2008."
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Results And Additional Analyses From Efficacy And Safety Study Of Corthera's Relaxin In Acute Heart Failure To Be Presented At Heart Failure Congress
Results and additional analyses from the Phase II portion of a Phase II/III clinical trial of Corthera"s investigational drug relaxin for the treatment of acute heart failure will be presented at the Heart Failure Congress, the annual meeting of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology in Nice, France.
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Agencies And Health Departments Prepare For Swine Flu
Governments and drug companies are struggling with efforts to prepare for a possible resurgence of swine flu in the fall as well as questioning who should receive swine flu vaccines as they ramp up production.
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New Support For A Controversial Mechanism Underlying An Irregular Heart Beat

The most common form of human heart beat irregularity (atrial fibrillation) can be fatal if left untreated. It has been suggested that it is caused, in part, by calcium leaking from a cellular store in heart cells, potentially through the RyR2 channel, although this mechanism remains controversial. However, a team of researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, and Dresden University of Technology, Germany, has provided support for this hypothesis by showing that the protein CaMKII can enhance RyR2-mediated calcium leak, promoting atrial fibrillation in mice. The team, led by Xander Wehrens and Dobromir Dobrev, studied mice engineered to express a mutant form of RyR2 associated with calcium leak. Although these mice did not spontaneously develop atrial fibrillation, they were more likely to develop atrial fibrillation than normal mice if their heart rate was forced up. This was related to the functional interaction of CaMKII with RyR2, and blocking CaMKII function in these mice prevented them from developing atrial fibrillation when their heart rate was forced up. As a functional link between CaMKII and RyR2 was observed in heart biopsies from patients with chronic atrial fibrillation, the authors suggest that enhanced CaMKII function might increase calcium leakage via RyR2 and initiate clinical atrial fibrillation. TITLE: Calmodulin kinase II - mediated sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ leak promotes atrial fibrillation in mice AUTHORS: Xander H.T. Wehrens Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA. Dobromir Dobrev Dresden University of Technology, Dresden, Germany. View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci.org/article.php?id=37059 Karen Honey Journal of Clinical Investigation JCI online early table of contents: June 15, 2009


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