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Global Health Promotion And Health Education The Focus Of Special Journal Issues
The International Union for Health Promotion and Education (IUHPE) and the Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE) are pleased to release special, complementary peer-reviewed journals containing ten articles on strengthening standards and quality assurance systems of global capacity in health promotion and health education.
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Chemists Explain The Switchboards In Our Cells
Our cells are controlled by billions of molecular "switches" and chemists at UC Santa Barbara have developed a theory that explains how these molecules work. Their findings may significantly help efforts to build biologically based sensors for the detection of chemicals ranging from drugs to explosives to disease markers.
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Gpx5: Sperm Shouldn't Leave The Testes Without This Protein
Joel Drevet and colleagues, at Clermont Universitç©, France, have identified a protein that helps protect immature mouse sperm after they have been released into a region of the testis known as the epididymis, which is where they undergo maturation. Although male mice lacking this protein, Gpx5, had normal looking sperm and were equally as efficient as normal male mice at fertilizing female mice, an increased incidence of miscarriages and fetal developmental defects were observed when normal female mice were mated with Gpx5-deficient males over 1 year old compared with normal male mice of the same age. Further analysis indicated that Gpx5 acts as an antioxidant in the epididymis, protecting the sperm from oxidative stress. As discussed by the authors, and, in an accompanying commentary, John Aitken, at the University of Newcastle, Australia, these data have immense clinical relevance as age-related DNA damage to human sperm has been associated with a range of adverse outcomes including decreased fertility, and increased rates of miscarriage and childhood disease.
Oncology

Alzheimer's Society Comments On New Alzheimer's Test

A new self administered cognitive screening test for detecting Alzheimer"s disease has been developed by researchers at Addenbrooke"s Hospital in Cambridge, according to a study in bmj.com. Test Your Memory (TYM) is a series of 10 tasks including ability to copy a sentence, semantic knowledge, calculation, verbal fluency and recall ability. The ability to do the test is also scored. The test was completed by 540 healthy individuals (controls) aged 18 to 95 years of age with no history of neurological disease, memory problems or brain injury. A further 139 patients with diagnosed Alzheimer"s or mild cognitive impairment were also tested. The test was compared with the commonly used mini-mental state examination. The TYM detected 93% of patients with Alzheimer"s disease, while the mini-mental state examination detected only 52% of patients. "A test that helps detect dementia sooner in local health care facilities could help more people access vital care and support earlier. However, more research is needed to see if this test works in different settings with different groups of people and establish whether it is more effective than the most sensitive existing tests. One million people will develop dementia in the next 10 years and currently only a third of people with the condition ever receive a diagnosis. We must start investing in research if we are to radically improve the current picture and defeat this devastating condition." Professor Clive Ballard Director of Research Alzheimer"s Society Alzheimer"s Society


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