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Keyword: hormones

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  • Combination of Treatments on Prostate Is Promising

    08/18/2004 6:48:41 PM PDT · by neverdem · 1 replies · 333+ views
    NY Times ^ | August 18, 2004 | NA
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Men with prostate cancer that does not appear to have spread have better survival chances when they get short-term hormone treatment along with standard radiation, rather than radiation alone, a small study has found. Almost five years after treatment, 88 percent of men who received the combined treatment were still alive, compared with 78 percent who had only radiation. The study involved about 200 men and was conducted by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. An article on the study appears in the current issue of The Journal of the...
  • Sex Change Can Cause Headache

    08/18/2004 2:51:43 PM PDT · by Pharmboy · 17 replies · 1,194+ views
    Reuters to My Yahoo! ^ | 8-18-04 | Karla Gale
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - New research involving male-to-female transsexuals lends further credence to the theory that sex hormones are involved in migraine generation, physicians report in the medical journal Neurology. "We know that migraine is more frequent in women than in men," co-investigator Dr. Tamara Pringsheim told Reuters Health, "so a lot of research goes into what estrogen does to the brain." A new way to examine this issue, she added, is to look at a population of genetic males who take antiandrogens and estrogen to induce female sex characteristics. Pringsheim, at the University of Toronto, and Dr. Louis...
  • New Risks Tied to Hormone Therapy

    06/28/2004 8:02:12 PM PDT · by neverdem · 32 replies · 2,841+ views
    NY Times ^ | June 29, 2004 | NA
    WASHINGTON, June 28 (Reuters) - Hormone replacement therapy may be especially dangerous for older women with diabetes, researchers said Monday. A group of doctors led by Barbara Howard, president of MedStar Research Institute in Washington, studied 423 women past menopause who had atherosclerosis, a hardening of the arteries. The women who had abnormal glucose tolerance - meaning that they had diabetes or a precursor - and who took hormones had changes in their blood suggesting they had a higher risk of heart disease, Dr. Howard's team reported in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. The study was based on an...
  • Hormones converge for couples in love

    05/05/2004 3:23:11 PM PDT · by ckilmer · 4 replies · 202+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 19:00 05 May 04
          Hormones converge for couples in love   19:00 05 May 04   Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.   Men are from Mars and women from Venus - except when they are in love. During this intense period, men and women become more like each other than at any other time.We already know that falling in love is a bit like going crazy. Donatella Marazziti of the University of Pisa in Italy showed in 1999 that levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin, which has a calming effect, dip below normal in those who say they...
  • Threat of women's pee no piddling problem for humanity

    05/03/2004 9:40:57 AM PDT · by SteveH · 26 replies · 669+ views
    Mainichi Daily News ^ | April 27, 2004 | Ryann Connell
    Threat of women's pee no piddling problem for humanity By Ryann Connell Staff Writer April 27, 2004 Women's weewee has the potential to wipe the Japanese off the face of the earth, screams Weekly Playboy (5/11-18). And changes in the Tokyo Bay environment suggest this is no piddling problem. "Marine life (in Tokyo Bay) has gradually been developing female characteristics for years and it was generally thought that this was caused by hormone balancing disrupting substances in the environment that people have been talking about for a few years now," a scientific journalist tells Weekly Playboy. "Actually, though, a Tokyo...
  • Studies on a Mouse Hormone Bear on Fatness in Humans

    04/01/2004 10:29:31 PM PST · by neverdem · 6 replies · 337+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 2, 2004 | GINA KOLATA
    New studies in mice suggest that the hormone leptin can fundamentally change the brain's circuitry in areas that control appetite. Leptin acts during a critical period early in life, possibly influencing how much animals eat as adults. And later in life, responding to how much fat is on an animal's body, it can again alter brain circuitry that controls how much is eaten. Researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, are a surprise and add new clues to why weight control is so difficult in some humans. Scientists knew that leptin is released by fat cells and...
  • Study: Hormone can curb appetite

    09/04/2003 8:34:23 AM PDT · by presidio9 · 6 replies · 195+ views
    <p>When 24 volunteers sat down for a buffet lunch, they knew every calorie would be counted. But they didn't know whether researchers gave them an extra dose of a hormone that curbs the appetite. The results showed that the hormone worked, telling their brain that they were full and cutting their appetite by nearly a third.</p>
  • Hormone link to lesbianism

    07/03/2003 1:34:30 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 62 replies · 920+ views
    BBC News | 30 June 2003 | Mark Hutchinson
    Lesbians are more than twice as likely to suffer from a hormone-related condition, fuelling theories that hormones play a role in developing their sexuality. The latest research, presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology conference in Madrid on Monday, came from a clinic which is one of only two in the UK to offer fertility treatment to lesbian women. Doctors there noticed a "staggering" number of lesbian women, who, on investigation, were found to be suffering either from polycystic ovary syndrome, or a less serious but related condition in which their ovaries showed many of the same...
  • New Study: Hormone Pills May Spur Breast Cancer

    06/24/2003 2:11:51 PM PDT · by Dr. Scarpetta · 37 replies · 277+ views
    AP - Yahoo ^ | 6/24/03 | Lindsay Tanner
    Estrogen-progestin pills may cause an aggressive form of breast cancer and make it harder to find tumors until they have reached a later, less-curable stage, according to one of the biggest, most authoritative analyses yet. The study is part of a run of bad news recently about the hormones routinely taken by millions of women after menopause. "Hopefully, it will convince women to reconsider," said Dr. Susan Hendrix of Wayne State University in Detroit, a co-author of the new analysis. "We've got to find a better way to help women with their menopausal symptoms." Some previous studies suggested breast tumors...
  • State(PA)helping inmate change sex

    06/14/2003 11:09:44 PM PDT · by buzzyboop · 13 replies · 394+ views
    Pittsburgh Tribune-Review ^ | June 15, 2003 | Karen Roebuck
    Pennsylvania taxpayers are paying for hormone treatments to help an imprisoned child rapist become a woman. Inmate Jessica Elaine Wolfe, who had her name legally changed from James Elliot Wolfe Jr., is serving a five- to-15 year sentence for raping a 9-year-old girl in 1995. Wolfe, 39, formerly of Oakdale, is in a single cell in the protective unit at the men's state prison at Graterford, outside Philadelphia. Wolfe told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review she had always felt like a woman. "I've been this way all my life," said Wolfe, a former construction worker who fathered three children. "I've been dressing...
  • Unproven Elixir - Headed Downhill - Can Hormones Counter Aging?

    05/15/2003 8:31:27 AM PDT · by TaxRelief · 6 replies · 271+ views
    Science News ^ | Week of May 10, 2003; Vol. 163, No. 19 | Ben Harder
    If this article seems too long, or you are wondering what the conservative angle is, just jump to the summary in the comment field, below. Unproven Elixir Hormone therapy tempts aging men, but its risks haven't yet been reckoned With each passing birthday, Mr. Y feels increasingly frail. His bones have grown fragile, his strength has slipped, and his muscles have given way to fat. His sex drive has waned, and his once-keen mind seems perpetually fogged. He often feels gloomy. Vigor has turned to fatigue, zest to melancholy. In body and in mind, he has grown old. While advanced...
  • DEPO-PROVERA LEADS TO 100 TIMES GREATER HERPES SUSCEPTABILITY

    04/28/2003 4:11:02 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 15 replies · 368+ views
    HAMILTON, ON, April 25, 2003 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Researchers at McMaster University have found that the abortifacient injectable birth-control drug Depo-Provera caused mice to be 100 times more susceptible to infection with herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2). The study, published in the current issue of the Journal of Virology (2003;77:4558-4565), also found that the mice injected with the drug had a significantly weaker immune response when exposed to the virus. While spokesman for Pfizer, the pharmaceutical which manufactures Depo-Provera, were quick to condemn the study, the researchers noted that the study merely confirmed former research noting the drug increased risk...
  • Motherhood Makes Women Smarter, Study Suggests

    11/07/2002 2:06:14 PM PST · by Pharmboy · 22 replies · 368+ views
    Reuters Health via Yahoo ^ | 11-7-02 | Maggie Fox
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Motherhood may make women smarter and may help prevent dementia in old age by bathing the brain in protective hormones, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday. Tests on rats show that those who raise two or more litters of pups do significantly better in tests of memory and skills than rats who have no babies, and their brains show changes that suggest they may be protected against diseases such as Alzheimer's. University of Richmond psychology professor Craig Kinsley believes his findings will translate into humans. "Our research shows that the hormones of pregnancy are protecting the brain, including...
  • Hormones vs. Culture

    06/13/2002 8:03:45 PM PDT · by vannrox · 9 replies · 378+ views
    Psychology Today ^ | FR Post 06-13-02 | By Michael Lamb, Ph.D.
    --> Hormones vs. Culture By Michael Lamb, Ph.D. The view that fathers are reluctant caregivers may be a thing of the past. New findings show that hormonal changes of parenting are not limited to mothers. The reason we haven’t discovered the hormonal changes in human fathers before now lies in a combination of scientific progress and cultural change. Early studies on rats found that males could learn to become involved fathers after prolonged exposure to their pups but did not experience any hormonal changes. The fact that these reluctant dads could learn to nurture led to the so-called bonding hypothesis....