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FDA Approves Expanded Use Of Lilly's FORTEO(R) [teriparatide (rDNA Origin) Injection] To Treat Glucocorticoid-Induced Osteoporosis
Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new use for its osteoporosis drug FORTEO((R)) [teriparatide (rDNA origin) injection] to treat osteoporosis associated with sustained, systemic glucocorticoid therapy in men and women at high risk of fracture. Glucocorticoid therapy is the most common cause of secondary osteoporosis, leading to bone loss and an increased risk for fracture.(1)
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$500,000 Gruber Neuroscience Prize Awarded To Hall, Rosbash And Young
The 2009 Neuroscience Prize of The Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation is being awarded to Jeffrey Hall, professor of neurogenetics at the University of Maine; Michael Rosbash, professor and director of the National Center for Behavioral Genomics at Brandeis University; and Michael Young, professor and head of the Laboratory of Genetics at Rockefeller University. On October 18, at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Chicago, Illinois, these three distinguished scientists will receive this prestigious international award for their groundbreaking discoveries of the molecular mechanisms that control circadian (daily) rhythms in the nervous system. Their research was the first to establish a simple relationship between single genes and a complex behavior.
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St. Jude Medical Announces Leading Sponsorship Of Landmark Clinical Trial To Study Atrial Fibrillation
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE:STJ) today announced that it is the leading sponsor of the Catheter Ablation Versus Anti-arrhythmic Drug Therapy for Atrial Fibrillation (CABANA) Trial. The pivotal trial, announced by Mayo Clinic, is intended to determine the effectiveness of catheter ablation (using long, narrow tubes to non-invasively reach and destroy abnormal heart tissue) in eliminating atrial fibrillation (AF), a condition in which the upper chambers of the heart beat quickly and erratically.
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News From GP Conference, UK

GPs have warned that the reorganisation of health visitor services is putting children at risk and underlined the importance of them remaining in practice based teams. The call came at the Annual GPs Conference being held in London. Recognising the important role that health visitors play in the primary care team, Dr Michael Haughney, a GP in Newton Mearns said: "We are concerned that patient care is being compromised. Health visitors are key members of the practice team who provide vital care, particularly for mothers with young babies. There is a real danger that this high quality care will be lost if they are removed from our practices." Later today the conference will debate the need for early screening for HIV in primary care. Dr Georgina Brown, a GP in Springburn Glasgow, said: "A quarter of all HIV deaths in the UK are directly attributable to the HIV diagnosis being made too late for effective treatment. If we could identify these patients and screen them earlier their chances of survival would improve dramatically. "There"s compelling evidence in favour of early screening. We need to move away from seeing HIV as a taboo issue and offer our patients opportunistic testing as a matter of course, where appropriate. The availability of antiretroviral therapy has transformed the outcome for patients diagnosed with HIV, it is essential that we ensure that more patients benefit from them." Notes The Annual Conference of Representatives of Local Medical Committees is being held in London on Thursday 11 and Friday 12 June. Motion: That conference (i) deplores the demise of primary care teams (ii) believes the safeguarding of children has been put at risk by the reorganisation of health visitor services from practice based to area based teams (iii) demands a move back to practice based primary care teams (iv) believes primary care teams should include at least community nurses, health visitors, and community psychiatric nurses Motion 386 That conference calls on the Department of Health to: (i) recognise that due to improved treatment, most patients with HIV infection no longer die from AIDS related complications, but that a good prognosis is dependent on early screening which is best done opportunistically in primary care and (ii) to invest res through the enhanced services programmes into early testing for HIV. The British Medical Association


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