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Human Body

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    Feb 26, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Feb 5, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  2. Paying for stem cells: A bad idea

    Like blood and plasma, stem cells are usually obtained through an easy procedure, and the people who donate them quickly generate more. But in other ways, they're markedly different. There might be only one or two potential donors who are a good match for...

    Tags: Food and Drug Administration, Arts and Culture, Health, Genes and Chromosomes, Culture

  3. Jan 6, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  4. Long on decline, whooping cough makes a comeback

    Hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. -- many of them children -- were coming down with whooping cough each year when vaccines against "this menace," as one newspaper called it, were introduced in the 1930s and 1940s.
    Hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. -- many of them children -- were coming down with whooping cough each year when vaccines against "this menace," as one newspaper called it, were introduced in the 1930s and 1940s. "Childhood Cough Is Given...

    Tags: Food and Drug Administration, Hospitals and Clinics, Health and Safety at School, Chemicals, Trine Tsouderos

  5. Feb 10, 2012 |Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  6. Salt therapy: A cure for breathing and skin problems?

    Floridians have easy access to the beach, but some people with allergies and lung conditions say they need even saltier air to clean them out.
    Floridians have easy access to the beach, but some people with allergies and lung conditions say they need even saltier air to clean them out. At spas opening up in Florida and throughout the country, clients sit in special rooms infused with high...

    Tags: Physical Fitness and Exercise, Orlando, Respiratory Disease, Delray Beach, American Lung Association

  7. Dec 31, 2011 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  8. Why we're fat, Part 1: Simple question with many complex answers

    What's making Americans so fat?
    What's making Americans so fat? Many think the answer is that we eat too much and don't exercise enough, but the reasons are more numerous and complex, say obesity researchers. And so are the solutions. In the early 1970s, 14 percent of the adult...

    Tags: Physical Fitness and Exercise, Food Industry, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Bagels, Breastfeeding

  9. Jan 1, 2012 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  10. Why we're fat, Part 2: Heredity plays role in how easily we gain — and lose — weight

    For the many Americans genetically programmed to add pounds, the effort to lose weight can seem doomed from the get-go. Mix in other factors no one can change — age, race, birth order — and the struggle becomes even tougher.
    For the many Americans genetically programmed to add pounds, the effort to lose weight can seem doomed from the get-go. Mix in other factors no one can change — age, race, birth order — and the struggle becomes even tougher. Though innate...

    Tags: Biology, National Institutes of Health, Physical Fitness and Exercise, University of Pennsylvania, Drugs and Medicines

  11. Jan 2, 2012 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  12. Why we're fat, Part 3: Our lifestyle promotes added pounds

    Despite popular belief, a surge of laziness and gluttony is not what's making Americans fat, says science writer and fat researcher Gary Taubes, author of "Why We Get Fat."
    Despite popular belief, a surge of laziness and gluttony is not what's making Americans fat, says science writer and fat researcher Gary Taubes, author of "Why We Get Fat." In looking at the past 30 years, during which time obesity rates have soared,...

    Tags: Cornell University, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Steroids, Chemicals, Human Body

  13. Feb 5, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  14. Project seeks 1 million veterans to give blood, DNA for disease research

    The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is looking for a few good men and women to volunteer for a battle it's waging at home — against disease.
    The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is looking for a few good men and women to volunteer for a battle it's waging at home — against disease. Actually, more than a few are needed. Officials overseeing health care for the nation's veterans are...

    Tags: Schizophrenia, Heart Attack, Lou Gehrig's Disease, Chemicals, University of Maryland, College Park

  15. Jan 30, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  16. New Avastin tests add to confusion over use in breast cancer

    In November, following an emotional public hearing some months earlier, the Food and Drug Administration withdrew approval for the cancer drug Avastin for patients with metastatic breast cancer — the late-stage, incurable form of the disease. The reason: emerging evidence that the drug does not prolong life and also that it's been linked to serious side effects.
    In November, following an emotional public hearing some months earlier, the Food and Drug Administration withdrew approval for the cancer drug Avastin for patients with metastatic breast cancer — the late-stage, incurable form of the disease. The...

    Tags: Food and Drug Administration, Bevacizumab (drug), Colon Cancer, Heart Attack, Virginia Commonwealth University

  17. Feb 9, 2012 |Story| WSBT-TV
  18. FACT FINDER: Michigan crime lab backlog keeping some criminals on the street longer

    <span style=&quot;font-size: small;">CASS COUNTY &ndash; A crime ring involving dozens of home burglaries in four counties.&nbsp; An 11-year-old girl found dead in her bed days after Halloween.&nbsp; Cases like those are taking months to solve because of state funding cuts in Michigan.&nbsp; WSBT&rsquo;s Fact Finder team discovered those cuts lead to a massive backlog in the state police crime lab.</span>
    CASS COUNTY – A crime ring involving dozens of home burglaries in four counties.  An 11-year-old girl found dead in her bed days after Halloween.  Cases like those are taking months to solve because of state funding cuts in Michigan.  WSBT’s...

    Tags: Executive Branch, Prosecution, Politics, Health, Prosecution

  19. Jan 4, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  20. After injury, brain can keep on healing

    Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords recently gave her first public interview since she was shot in the head almost a year ago. Her journey — from critically ill patient to someone whose personality was largely intact but still struggled with words &#...

    Tags: Arts and Culture, Medical Research, Northwestern University, Health, Stroke

  21. Jan 11, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  22. Treating menopause symptoms

    Every woman will experience menopause, some in the normal course of aging and some before. It can bring on a host of symptoms in addition to hot flashes. But there are things that women can do, from improving their diet and exercising to finding the right treatment, explains Dr. Rakhi Gupta, a gynecologist at the Center for Women's Health at Good Samaritan Hospital. She answers some common questions about this life change.
    Every woman will experience menopause, some in the normal course of aging and some before. It can bring on a host of symptoms in addition to hot flashes. But there are things that women can do, from improving their diet and exercising to finding the right...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Hampton Roads Transit, Heart Attack, Symptoms

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Human Body Photos
Matthew Erickson, born with a rare brain tumor, lies on...
(February 2, 2012)
Matthew Erickson
Wanda Smith, a leukemia patient from Texas, has her blo...
(February 1, 2012)
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Lill examines Blouvan-Cervantes, a Jehovah's Witness. S...
(February 1, 2012)
Checkup