Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Daily News: Reuters Health News Headlines - Supreme Court denies convicted Missouri killer's appeals

Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 08:06 PM PST
Today's Reuters Health News Headlines - Yahoo News:

Supreme Court denies convicted Missouri killer's appeals 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 08:06 PM PST
Missouri Department of Corrections photo of Herbert Smulls who was scheduled to be executedThe U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday lifted a temporary stay of execution for a Missouri man convicted of killing a jewelry store owner during a 1991 robbery, denying last-minute appeals that in part challenged the drug to be used. The Supreme Court late Wednesday also vacated a stay from the Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of appeals that had prevented the execution of Herbert Smulls, 56. Lawyers for Smulls filed another request with the U.S. Supreme Court for a stay late on Wednesday, and it was not immediately clear whether Missouri would be allowed to carry out his execution before the state's death warrant expires at midnight. Smulls was convicted of shooting jewelry-store owner Stephen Honickman to death while robbing his store in July 1991.
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University of Missouri president wants probe of rape claim response 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 04:00 PM PST
By Kevin Murphy KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - The University of Missouri's president called on Wednesday for an independent counsel to investigate how school officials responded to the alleged 2010 rape of a student on the female swim team who later committed suicide. The Missouri case comes in the wake of growing concern about sexual assaults in schools and in the military. Last week, President Barack Obama announced the creation of a White House task force to look into the problem of sexual assaults on campus. University president Tim Wolfe said at a news conference that he wants to determine if the university acted properly in matters related to Sasha Menu Courey.
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Wisconsin man sentenced for starving, imprisoning daughter 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 03:56 PM PST
By Brendan O'Brien MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - A Wisconsin man was sentenced on Wednesday to five years in prison for imprisoning his teenage daughter in a basement for six years and forcing her to eat her own excrement, a local prosecutor said. Chad Chritton, 42, was also sentenced in Dane County Circuit Court to an additional five years of extended supervision after a jury found him guilty in November of four felonies, including child abuse and neglecting a child, according to district attorney Ismael Ozanne. His wife Melinda Drabek-Chritton, 44, was sentenced to five years in prison in July on similar charges. Prosecutors had accused the Madison couple of holding the girl in the basement of their home for about six years.
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Off reeking cruise ship in NJ, passengers recall nightmare trip 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 03:09 PM PST
A member of the media wears a face mask as he holds a boom pole after Royal Caribbean's cruise ship, Explorer of the Seas arrived back at BayonneBy Victoria Cavaliere BAYONNE, New Jersey (Reuters) - Passengers staggered off a Royal Caribbean ship reeking of vomit and diarrhea at its home port on Wednesday after their cruise was cut short by an apparent stomach bug that felled nearly 700 vacationers and crew. Cheers erupted from the Explorer of the Seas as the vessel pulled into Bayonne, New Jersey, in New York Harbor. Passengers disembarking soon afterward recalled the nightmare of falling ill during the Caribbean cruise, being quarantined in their rooms, and putting everything they touched into biohazard bags. "I had three days of sickness and quarantine," recalled Susan Rogutski of Catawissa, Pennsylvania, who came down with gastrointestinal symptoms so severe the first day of the trip that she had to be physically dragged to the sick bay.
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KaloBios Pharma pulls plug on asthma drug, shares plunge 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 03:04 PM PST
(Reuters) - Shares of KaloBios Pharmaceuticals Inc fell nearly 50 percent in extended trade after the company said it would stop developing an asthma drug that failed in a mid-stage study. The drug, KB003, failed to bring about a clinically meaningful improvement in the pulmonary function of patients with severe asthma when tested against a placebo in 160 patients. The San Francisco-based company said it would focus on developing other treatments in its pipeline, which include a drug for cancer and another to prevent a common gram negative bacterium. KaloBios shares fell to a low of $2.65 in extended trading.
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Brahimi says no substantive progress on Syria but hopeful 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 02:36 PM PST
Members of Syrian opposition delegation speak to journalist as they arrive for first meeting face to face with Syrian government delegation and U.N.-Arab League envoy for Syria Brahimi at U.N. office in GenevaBy Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Mariam Karouny GENEVA (Reuters) - International mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said on Wednesday that he does not expect to achieve anything substantive in the first round of Syria talks ending on Friday, but hoped for a more productive second round starting about a week later. "We talked about the TGB (Transitional Governing Body), but of course it is a very, very preliminary discussion and more generally of what each side expects," Brahimi told reporters. Opposition and government sides said they agreed to use the "Geneva communiqué", a document endorsed by world powers at a conference in June 2012, and which sets out the stages needed to end the fighting and agree on a political transition. "We have agreed that Geneva 1 is the basis of the talks," opposition spokesman Louay al-Safi told reporters.
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Being overweight in kindergarten sets stage for later obesity 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 02:09 PM PST
By Gene Emery NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Children who are overweight when they start school are far more likely to be obese by the time they become teenagers, according to a new study of nearly 8,000 children. Overweight five-year-olds were four times more likely to be obese by age 14 than children who started kindergarten at a healthy weight. "Half of childhood obesity occurred among children who had become overweight during the preschool years," researchers led by Solveig Cunningham of Emory University in Atlanta wrote. "If we're just focused on improving weight when kids are adolescents, it may not have as much of an impact as focusing on the preschool-age years," Cunningham told Reuters Health.
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ADHD tied to more traffic accidents; medication may help 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 01:22 PM PST
By Andrew M. Seaman NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are more likely to be in a serious traffic accident, but medication may counteract that risk for some, according to a new study from Sweden. Researchers found that people with ADHD are about 50 percent more likely to be in serious traffic accidents, compared to people without the condition. But taking medication to control some of the symptoms may help reduce that increased risk - at least among men, according to the study's lead author. "It has been known for a while that ADHD is associated with traffic accidents and traffic violations," Zheng Chang said.
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Lilly CEO: 'It's time to go back on offense' 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 01:21 PM PST
Eli Lily and Company's President and CEO Lechleiter speaks during the APEC CEO summit in HonoluluAfter three years of seeing major drugs like Zyprexa for schizophrenia lose patent protection and wipe away billions of dollars in revenue, Eli Lilly and Co Chief Executive Officer John Lechleiter wants to change the game plan. "It's time to go back on offense," Lechleiter said in a recent interview. New treatments for diabetes and cancer now awaiting approval and increased sales of animal-health products and drugs in China and Japan are some of the aggressive moves he has in mind. "We're on the cusp of launching products in cancer and diabetes, two therapeutic areas where we're well established and where we have built out the infrastructure we need," Lechleiter said.
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Passengers stagger off cruise ship reeking of vomit at NJ dock 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 01:15 PM PST
Passengers wait in the departure lounge after Royal Caribbean's Explorer of the Seas arrived back at BayonneBy Victoria Cavaliere BAYONNE, New Jersey (Reuters) - Cheers erupted aboard a Royal Caribbean cruise ship reeking of vomit and diarrhea as it pulled into its home port in New Jersey on Wednesday, ending a trip cut short because illness felled more than 600 people. Passengers disembarking the "Explorer of the Seas" recalled the nightmare of getting sick during the Caribbean cruise, being quarantined in their rooms, and putting everything they touched into bio-hazard bags. "I had three days of sickness and quarantine," recalled Susan Rogutski of Catawissa, Pennsylvania, who came down with gastrointestinal symptoms so severe the first day of the trip that she had to be physically dragged to the sick bay. Carl Kern of Franklin Lakes, New Jersey, said the ship's hallways smelled of diarrhea and vomit.
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Fourth Canadian farm hit by pig killing virus: Ontario official 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 11:34 AM PST
(Reuters) - The piglet killing Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus has spread to a fourth farm in the Canadian province of Ontario, the provincial government said on Wednesday, despite the hog industry's efforts to stop it by disinfecting delivery trucks and clothing used on farms. The virus has killed more than 1 million piglets in the United States but it has so far been contained within Canada to southern Ontario farms. The fourth case has been confirmed in Norfolk County along the north shore of Lake Erie, said Mark Cripps, a spokesman for Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne. Ontario confirmed the first Canadian case last week.
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Scientists hail breakthrough in embryonic-like stem cells 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 11:18 AM PST
By Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent LONDON (Reuters) - In experiments that could open a new era in stem cell biology, scientists have found a simple way to reprogram mature animal cells back into an embryonic-like state that allows them to generate many types of tissue. Chris Mason, chair of regenerative medicine bioprocessing at University College London, who was not involved in the work, said its approach in mice was "the most simple, lowest-cost and quickest method" to generate so-called pluripotent cells - able to develop into many different cell types - from mature cells. The researchers took skin and blood cells, let them multiply, then subjected them to stress "almost to the point of death", they explained, by exposing them to various events including trauma, low oxygen levels and acidic environments. Within days, the scientists found that the cells had not only survived but had also recovered by naturally reverting into a state similar to that of an embryonic stem cell.
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Modern humans more Neanderthal than once thought, studies suggest 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 11:13 AM PST
An exhibit shows the life of a neanderthal family in a cave in the new Neanderthal Museum in the northern town of KrapinaAlthough Neanderthals became extinct 28,000 years ago in Europe, as much as one-fifth of their DNA has survived in human genomes due to interbreeding tens of thousands of years ago, one of the studies found, although any one individual has only about 2 percent of caveman DNA. "The 2 percent of your Neanderthal DNA might be different than my 2 percent of Neanderthal DNA, and it's found at different places in the genome," said geneticist Joshua Akey, who led one of the studies. Put it all together in a study of hundreds of people, and "you can recover a substantial proportion of the Neanderthal genome." Both studies confirmed earlier findings that the genomes of east Asians harbor more Neanderthal DNA than those of Europeans. According to the paper by geneticists at Harvard Medical School, published in Nature, about 1.4 percent of the genomes of Han Chinese in Beijing and south China, as well as Japanese in Tokyo come from Neanderthals, compared to 1.1 percent of the genomes of Europeans.
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Antioxidants including vitamin E can promote lung cancer: study 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 11:01 AM PST
By Sharon Begley NEW YORK (Reuters) - A decades-old medical mystery - why antioxidants such as vitamin E and beta carotene seemed to accelerate the growth of early lung tumors in high-risk populations such as smokers, rather than protect them from cancer, as theory suggests - may have been solved, according to research published on Wednesday. In essence, "antioxidants allow cancer cells to escape cells' own defense system" against tumors, biologist Per Lindahl of Sweden's University of Gothenburg and a co-author of the study told reporters. The findings imply that "taking extra antioxidants might be harmful and could speed up the growth of (any) tumors," said biologist and co-author Martin Bergo of Gothenburg, adding, "If I had a patient with lung cancer, I would not recommend they take an antioxidant." The study, published in Science Translational Medicine, did not examine whether antioxidants can also initiate lung cancer, rather than accelerate the growth of existing tumors.
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Biogen profit rises as new multiple sclerosis drug shines 
Wednesday, Jan 29, 2014 10:05 AM PST
A pedestrian passes the sign outside the headquarters of Biogen Idec Inc. in CambridgeBiogen Idec Inc said on Wednesday its new, high-profile oral multiple sclerosis drug Tecfidera had sales of $398 million in the fourth quarter, easily exceeding estimates for a third successive quarter and keeping it on track to top $1 billion in its first year on the market. Biogen said underlying patient demand for the drug represented about $348 million of the U.S. sales, still ahead of analysts' consensus expectations of about $335 million. Biogen provided forecasts for 2014 that were likely to be viewed as a mixed bag, with revenue growth projections ahead of Wall Street expectations but an earnings outlook that fell short of the current analysts' view. The company forecast revenue growth of about 22 percent to 25 percent and earnings of $11 to $11.20 per share, excluding items.
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