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Heavy drinkers have high stroke risk

According to a story in the Los Angeles Times, a recent study showed that heavy drinkers are at a higher risk of stroke.

Researchers in France concluded that heavy drinkers who consume three or more servings of alcohol per day are at an increased risk of a type of stroke called an intercerebral hemorrhage, and are more likely to have that stroke at an earlier age than non-drinkers.

Intercerebral hemorrhage is caused ...

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Surgeon General issues ‘Call to Action’ on blood clots

The Surgeon General has issued an official “Call to Action” to reduce the number of cases of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in the United States.

Deep vein thrombosis is a blood clot in a deep vein — most commonly in the lower leg or thigh — that can block blood flow and cause pain, swelling, and skin discoloration.

But it can turn deadly when deep vein thrombosis develops into pulmonary ...

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Troubled J&J appoints new executive

According to a story in the Boston Globe, Johnson & Johnson has appointed Bayer executive Sandra E. Peterson to oversee the company’s troubled consumer health and manufacturing operations.

The move is an attempt by Alex Gorsky, who became CEO of Johnson & Johnson in April, to address a host of quality, legal and ethical problems involving products and sales practices.

Those problems include what the article characterizes as “an eye-popping series of ...

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Woman’s death linked to birth control pill

According to a report in the Belfast Telegraph, a 33-year-old woman who had been taking a birth control pills died suddenly after developing a blood clot in her lungs.

The story quotes a pathologist as saying that the woman died of a pulmonary venous thromboembolism, or a massive clot that traveled to her lungs, in association with a contraceptive pill. Genetics and the pill were both factors, the doctor said.

A family ...

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Research: Blood clots greater danger than hospital infections

Although many patients are worried about a hospital-acquired infection, blood clots are a far greater danger during a hospital stay, UPI reports.

The report cites British research concluding that hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism, or blood clot, kills more people than breast cancer, road traffic accidents, HIV/AIDS and Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, a hospital-acquired infection, combined.

The report says venous thromboembolism includes deep vein thrombosis, or a large clot in the leg; and pulmonary embolism, ...

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Blood clots a risk in lung cancer treatment

According to an article on About.com, the risk of developing a blood clot is a real but often overlooked factor in lung cancer treatment.

The report says that between 3 percent and 15 percent of people with lung cancer develop blood clots during their treatment. Clots are more common in those with non-small cell lung cancer than with small cell lung cancer, and people with adenocarcinoma appear to be at the ...

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