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Hormone Levels Contribute To Stress Resilience
It is important to understand what biological mechanisms contribute to an individual"s capacity to be resilient under conditions of extreme stress, such as those regularly experienced by soldiers, police, and firefighters. Dr. Charles A. Morgan III and his colleagues from Yale University and the VA National Center for PTSD have worked closely with collaborators at the Special Forces Underwater Warfare Operations Center to study special operations soldiers enrolled in the military Combat Diver Qualification Course (CDQC).

UPMC Sports Medicine Urges Sedentary, Over-40 Adults To Enroll In 'Start' Fitness Program
Start, a lifestyle-changing fitness program at the UPMC Center for Sports Medicine, currently is enrolling adults over age 40 for its summer session. Beginning July 18, sports medicine professionals will guide participants through fitness and education sessions twice weekly for three months, preparing them to run or walk the 5K portion of the Richard S. Caliguiri City of Pittsburgh Great Race on Sept. 27.
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Alzheimer's Disease: Disclosing Genetic Risk Does Not Cause Psychological Distress
Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have shown that disclosing genetic risk information to adult children of patients with Alzheimer"s disease (AD) who request this information does not result in significant short-term psychological distress. The report from the REVEAL Study*, which appears in the July 16 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, is the first randomized trial to disclose to participants whether or not they carried the íµ4 variant of the APOE gene, a variant that has been found to increase the risk of developing AD. The study demonstrated that test-related distress was reduced among those who learned that they were APOE íµ4 negative, and was only transiently increased among those who learned they were APOE íµ4 positive. The study also showed that persons with high levels of emotional distress before undergoing genetic testing were more likely to have emotional difficulties after disclosure.
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A Vaccine For Ear Infections - Without The Needle

Even when she"s well, little Cammy Barber doesn"t like getting her ears checked - and for good reason. She"s only nine months old and has already had eight ear infections. And her mom, Coleen Barber, will tell you, treating them isn"t always easy. "The shots are awful to see the child have to get, but even the medicine alone, they don"t like the flavor of it, at this age, it"s hard to sneak it into anything," says Coleen. So scientists at Nationwide Children"s Hospital are working on an Alternative involving just a single drop of liquid. A drop that"s not injected or even swallowed, but simply rubbed onto the outside of the ear. And best of all, it"s a vaccine designed to stop ear infections before they ever start. Experts say it could someday help kids everywhere, especially those with no other alternatives. And lab test are promising. "It was extremely effective. So we"re very excited about the ability to maybe immunize without needles and deliver this vaccine to the poorest children in the world," says Lauren Bakaletz, PhD, a researcher at Nationwide Children"s hospital who developed the vaccine. Dr. Bakaletz says it works by activating cells just under the surface of the skin, called dendritic cells. When this liquid touches the skin, it touches off a response throughout the body. "These cells deliver it to the lymphoid organs where it can generate an immune response. So really harnessing a power that"s there all the time, but you"re doing it in a way that"s now directed toward a specific disease," says Dr. Bakaletz. Dr. Bakaletz, who is also with the Ohio State University, says work still needs to be done before the vaccine is tested on kids - but if someday could help babies like Cammy live more care-free, pain-free lives. It is estimated that 83% of all kids get ear infections before their third birthday** and another child gets an ear infection every 2.3 seconds in this country.* In fact, it is the number one reason kids are taken to the emergency department.** *New Vaccines Against Otitis MEdia: Projected Benefits and Cost-effectiveness, Pediatrics, Vol. 123 No. 6, June 2009, retrieved from: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/123/6/1452 ** A Novel Transcutaneous Immunization Regimen Elicits a Mucosal and Systemic Immune Response That Confers Protection Against Nontypeable Haemophilus Influenzae-induced Otitis Media, Laura Novotny, Lauren Bakaletz, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, presented at the American Society of Microbiology General Meeting, May 2009 Nationwide Children"s Hospital


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