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Saturday, 30 May 2015

Taking numerous medications to control blood pressure just as dangerous as uncontrolled hypertension for stroke risk

© GETTY

    
Untreated high blood pressure, or hypertension, wreaks havoc on the body, leading to heart disease and stroke. New research from the University of Alabama at Birmingham published in the journal Stroke shows that, although HBP medications are beneficial, it is as risky to wait for the condition to develop and then treat it to a controlled level.

A cohort of 26,785 black and white participants ages 45-plus from the Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study were followed for 6.3 years by a research team led by George Howard, Dr.P.H., a professor in the Department of Biostatistics in the UAB School of Public Health. At baseline, 12,327 participants were successfully treated hypertensives, meaning their HBP treatment had their systolic blood pressure < 140 mm HG, the goal level set by the American Heart Association, and 4,090 unsuccessfully treated hypertensives.

At the conclusion of the follow-up period, more than 820 participants had experienced a stroke.

The harder hypertension is to control, the higher the risk for stroke, even if the treatment is successful. Howard says the risk of stroke went up 33 percent with each blood pressure medicine required to treat blood pressure to goal. Compared to people with systolic blood pressure below 120 mmHg without treatment, hypertensive individuals on three or more blood pressure medications had a stroke risk of 2.5 times higher.

"You're in as much trouble by the time you are on three medications that achieve excellent control as you are when you have hypertension and it is untreated, which is amazing," Howard said. "We want to raise the issue that, despite great advances in a pharmaceutical approach, relying solely on this approach is going to come at a dear price of people's lives."

The way to curb the problem, Howard says, is to prevent hypertension in the first place. There are a number of proven approaches to prevent or greatly delay the development of hypertension including: 1) taking part in moderate physical activity, 2) keeping weight in normal rages, 3) reducing salt intake, and 4) eating a diet rich in fruits, vegetables and low-fat dairy products and reduced in saturated and total fat.


"It's everything we know we should be doing," Howard said. "And over the past 14 years, stroke deaths are down 42 percent, likely because of this general shift of everybody in the population working toward having lower blood pressures."

Howard suggests that some future efforts to prevent the development of hypertension will have to be made through policy changes, such as targeting reductions in sodium levels; however, he says other changes such as increasing activity and limiting body weight require individual commitment.

"We need to keep the pressure to keep good things happening from a policy standpoint," Howard said. "Also, as individuals, we need to take the right actions for our health. Individuals and society need to work together to keep people from becoming hypertensive."

Study co-authors include Virginia J. Howard, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Paul Muntner, Ph.D., professor and vice chair in the Department of Epidemiology, and Suzanne Oparil, M.D., professor in the Division of Cardiovascular Disease.

Former NYPD cop trashes 14-year-old boy shot by police in psychopathic Facebook exchange

Three former NYPD police officers discussed the murder of a 14-year-old gang member on Facebook and the exchange was awful as one could expect, according to an exclusive report by Mic News.

When 14-year-old Christopher Duran left his home in the Bronx for school last Friday morning, a red bandana-wearing gunman shot him to death. Former police officer and current CNN contributor Thomas Verni posted a story of Doran's murder on his Facebook page, where the three former cops basically blamed the young boy for his own death.

Here is exchange, per a screenshot captured by Mic News:

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Yep, these men once wore the uniform and had the authority to arrest (and shoot) New Yorkers.

(Side note: this Facebook exchange should not surprise you. AlterNet's Max Blumenthal previously reported the racist exchanges between current and former cops)

An NYPD representative told Mic News that Joseph Gasparre and Andrew Blethen were the names of two of its ex-cops. Though the NYPD could not confirm if Brian Charles was a former member of its force, his Instagram account shows him wearing an NYPD uniform in 2006. The account owner has since removed that photo.

These men are no longer cops, so they can't be held accountable for their words, but it does inform the wider conversation over the mentality that many cops have towards minorities. The repeated use of the word "thug" during the exchange reminds us of NFL cornerback's Richard Sherman's statement that "thug" is the new n-word.

Given the "Stop and Frisk" was just recently ruled unconstitutional, it would be interesting to know if Gasparre, Charles and Blethen stopped black and Latino New Yorkers (or, in their language, "thugs") without legal grounds.

The death of a 14-year-old is a terrible tragedy, but when former cops speak of the boy as a "thug" and nothing more, it makes you wonder how many current cops feel the same.

Swordfish kills Hawaii fisherman trying to reel it in

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© Kona patrol

    
A swordfish killed a Hawaii man on Friday during a fishing accident in Kailua-Kona.

At about 10:48 a.m., police received a call about a swordfish being spotted in Honokohau Harbor and a man jumping into the water with a spear gun. Randy Llanes, 47, was then seen being punctured in the chest by the sword fish, which measured about 3 feet long and weighed approximately 40 pounds.

The Hawaii County Fire Department responded and attempted CPR on Llanes before transporting him to Kona Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at around 11:30 a.m.

According to Acting Sgt. David Matsushima of the Kona patrol, "the fish got wrapped around a mooring anchor, came back and swam at him [Llanes]."

Llanes's friend Dale Leverone called him "just a great local boy. A good attitude, good person, a help-anybody kind of guy. He had a heck of a lot of friends. It's pretty sad, pretty tragic.

"Randy has been fishing all his life. He's a pretty accomplished fisherman. He actually caught a 500-pound marlin yesterday out of his skiff."

Leverone also said Llanes leaves behind a wife, whom he married a few years ago, and a son who is about 5-years-old.

It's rare for a swordfish to swim in shallow waters similar to those where Llanes was killed, but Dr. Andrew Rossiter, director of the Waikiki Aquarium, provides some explanations.

"There are two possible reasons," Rossiter said "One, maybe the fish was following a school of fish into the shallow water. The other reason is maybe the fish was injured in some way or somehow impaired."

These ‘Big 6′ Chemical Companies Now Make 50,000 Different Pesticides

In the UK, it has been estimated that enough pesticide is used to account for 420g for every woman, man, and child. In the US, the numbers are similar, if not even more extreme.

Globally, there are now more than 50,000 different pesticides being manufactured with over 600 ‘active’ ingredients – and yet we still have pests. How can this be?

The alarms have been sounding about the over-use of pesticides and herbicides for years now, and recently, the UK press has noted excessive pesticide levels in vegetables like carrots and lettuce, but they aren’t just in the obvious places. The Association of Preconceptual Care has discovered that pesticide dangers lurk in everything we put on our tables.

Almost everything we eat in the conventional diet is subject to manifold doses of the chemicals – pesticides, fungicides, herbicides, and more. Some crops get the brunt of pesticide contamination with cereal crops such as wheat being baptized an estimated five to eight times during just one growing season, while other foods are subject to lower doses. (Check out the Environmental Working Group’s 2015 Dirty Dozen list to discover the 12 most pesticide-laden produce as well as the 15 cleanest produce.

Other vegetables and fruit crops will be treated with 10 to 15 sprays, and that’s considered the norm. Add to this ridiculous amount of toxins we’re exposed to, the pesticides used in raising livestock (even arsenic compounds), pesticides used at parks and even on protected forestland, and you have a recipe for environmental devastation and human health problems like we are seeing today.

Even modern building practices have incorporated pesticide use into their normal business. Lindane is used in wood preservation and an insecticide called aldrin is often applied to electrical cables.

It seems there is no end to what we will spray, and its gone way beyond any explainable practicality.

Nearly seven billion pounds of pesticides are used annually around the world for these various ‘treatments’ to rid our environment of pests. Twenty five million agricultural workers (minimally) experience pesticide poisoning every year, and the rest of us are likely affected adversely – even if negative health effects don’t show up until several years after exposure.

Big 6 Chemical Companies Producing 50,000 Pesticides

We are leaning toward having more pounds of pesticides in use than people on this planet. Who makes all these chemicals? The same “Big 6 Companies” that oppose food labeling. They are:

  • 1. Monsanto
  • 2. Bayer
  • 3. Syngenta
  • 4. Dow
  • 5. Dupont
  • 6. BASF

big6_prop37chart

Though there are other companies poisoning the planet, these six companies alone account for much of the problem since GMO crops require more pesticide and herbicide use.

With 50,000 types of pesticides, who are the real vermin here.

Truck pulled out of sinkhole in south Huntsville, Alabama

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© Alexandra Carter
Truck stuck in sinkhole

    
A large truck has been pulled out of a sinkhole on Marlin Drive, in the Camelot subdivision in south Huntsville. This area is just east of the intersection of Bailey Cove Road and Green Mountain Road.

The truck got stuck about 8:30 a.m. Thursday. WHNT News 19's Alexandra Carter talked with the driver, who wasn't hurt, just surprised.

A recovery vehicle came to pull it out of the hole, but crews had to use caution because the second vehicle was also at risk of collapsing in the hole when it got too close.

Crews say it looks like the sinkhole was caused by an underground stream from Wednesday's heavy rains. Crews say they could be on the street for one to five hours as they fill in the hole with asphalt.

Veteran research scientist warns 'Ebola will return'

© Agence France-Presse/Matthieu Alexandre
Director of the National Institute of Biomedical Research (INRB), Jean-Jacques Muyembe, from Democratic Republic of Congo speaks to the press on May 28, 2015 in Paris

    
Congolese expert Jean-Jacques Muyembe may be little known to the public, but he has been one of the world's top Ebola investigators since the first epidemic erupted in central Africa in 1976.

Now, amid a decline in a west African outbreak that has taken more than 11,000 lives, Muyembe warns that Ebola will strike again in the future and that the deadly virus poses "a threat to the whole world".

Muyembe studied medicine in Kinshasa and at the University of Leuven in Belgium. He returned home to the Democratic Republic of Congo -- then known as Zaire -- in 1976, when the northern village of Yambuku was struck by a mysterious disease.

"They said many people were dying, and the health ministry asked me to go investigate," Muyembe told AFP.

He initially thought it could be a case of typhoid fever but he decided to continue investigating until he got to the bottom of it.

"I drew blood, and had no protective gloves or clothing," Muyembe said.

Accompanied by a Belgian nun suffering from fever, he returned from Yambuku to Kinshasa.

It was her blood samples, shipped in a makeshift cooler to the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, that enabled scientist Peter Piot to identify the worm-looking virus for the first time.

© Agence France-Presse/Francisco Leong
File picture taken on November 15, 2014 shows nurses wearing personal protective equipment while treating ebola patients at the Kenama treatment center run by the Red Cross Society, in eastern Sierra Leone.

    
It was then named after the Ebola river, located near the area first hit by the epidemic.

"Then there was total silence until 1995," Muyembe said.

That year, he was summoned to Tikwit in the south of DR Congo where a bloody diarrhoea outbreak was decimating the population, including medical staff.

"I examined an Italian nun and saw signs that reminded me of the Yambuku incident," Muyembe said.

He discovered that contamination "had taken place in the operation room -- in other words, from the patient's blood".

Muyembe's discovery that the virus is transmitted through bodily fluids was a key find.

"From then on, we put in place strategies to fight against the disease, isolating patients, following up on people they had been in contact with, and mobilising communities," he said.

"These are strategies that the World Health Organization practises today."

Professor Muyembe's team then started testing serotherapy on patients.

"We drew blood from people recovering from Ebola, and injected it into eight sick patients. Seven of them survived, even though there was an 80 percent mortality rate," he said.

This type of treatment is now being studied for its potential.

- 'Ebola can strike anywhere' -

Even after decades fighting the deadly virus, Muyembe said he was "surprised" by the sheer size of the resurgence in Guinea in late 2013.

© World Health Organization
There have been 26,933 reported cases of Ebola, with 11,120 reported deaths, up to May 1, 2015.

    
"We thought Ebola epidemics could be brought under control quickly," he said.

Previously, DR Congo had successfully put an end to seven epidemics.

"These countries (in west Africa) believed that Ebola was a central and eastern African problem. They weren't prepared," he added.

The epidemic has now ended in Liberia, and is declining in Sierra Leone.

But in Guinea, "new cases continue to appear", Muyembe said.

"We need to find the most recent cases, even if they are hidden deep in the forest, because if the disease becomes endemic, it would be terrible for the whole world," he warned.

"In 10 or 20 years' time, this epidemic will return, and we need to be prepared," he said.

"Ebola can strike anywhere, and we need to be vigilant. The United States and Europe must understand that Africa is their shield."

This year's winner of the prestigious Christophe Merieux award for researchers studying infectious diseases in developing countries, Muyembe sees the 500,000 euros ($550,000) in prize money as a "boost" to help him study Ebola reservoir hosts.

"Monkeys, bats, we aren't certain," he said.

Muyembe also sees the prize as a way to encourage young Africans studying abroad to return to work.

"I have made my career in DR Congo, despite all the conflicts my country has known," the researcher said.

"We must build up labs and research centres in Africa," he added, "so that when the danger arrives, we can stop it in time. This is the lesson we must learn from this epidemic."

Putin concerned over shelling of civilian facilities by Ukrainian army

© Alexei Druzhinin/Russian presidential press service/TASS

    
Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a phone conversation with French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, expressed concern over shelling by Ukrainian servicemen of civilian facilities, the Kremlin reported Friday.

"The Russian side stressed its concern in connection with more frequent incidents of shelling by the Ukrainian army of civilian facilities that resulted in deaths of civilians," the statement said.

"They exchanged opinions on possible additional measures designed to ensure strict observation of the ceasefire regime and de-escalation of tensions," it said.

The Kremlin said "the crisis situation in Ukraine was discussed in the context of the necessity to implement by southeast conflict participants of all items of the Package of Measures agreed in Minsk on February 12 this year."

"It was noted that rigorous implementation of the agreements on withdrawal of heavy armaments under OSCE supervision and establishment of demilitarized zones at the contact line is important," the statement said.

The Kremlin said "special attention will be paid to the activity of four working subgroups in the framework of the Contact Group."

"The leaders discussed the course of implementation of the Minsk agreements, including the schedule of continuation of contacts at the expert level," presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

The Kremlin press service used only that wording. As for the Elysee Palace in Paris, it said the agreement has been reached that the next meeting in the Normandy format (Russia, France, Germany, Ukraine) at the level of deputy foreign ministers or political directors will be held June 10 in Paris.