A Q Khan may be hospitalized for swollen legs and feet

Lahore, Sep.2 (ANI): Disgraced Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr AQ Khan maybe admitted to hospital, as doctors have advised him to seek special medical attention for his swollen legs and feet.

According to a private television channel, Dr.Khan is not able to walk properly and speculations are that he might be admitted to KRL Hospital here on Wednesday (today).

Dr. Khan has also cancelled his address to the Rawalpindi Bar Association, which was scheduled for today.

“Dr AQ Khan would not address lawyers due to the ailment and has rescheduled the address on September 26,” The Daily Times quoted District Bar President Tauseef Asif, as saying. (ANI)

Common blood test may help predict diabetes nerve loss

Washington, May 19 (ANI): A common blood test for triglycerides can help doctors identify which diabetes patients are more vulnerable to serious, common complication of neuropathy, say researchers.

Neuropathy is a condition in which nerves are damaged or lost with resulting numbness, tingling and pain, often in the hands, arms, legs and feet.

The study from University of Michigan and Wayne State University showed if a patient had elevated triglycerides, he or she was significantly more likely to experience worsening neuropathy over a period of one year.

The researchers have revealed that diabetes patients with neuropathy should control lipid counts as rigorously as they do glucose levels.

And the most efficient way to control blood triglyceride levels is by avoiding harmful fats in the diet and exercising regularly.

“In our study, elevated serum triglycerides were the most accurate at predicting nerve fibre loss, compared to all other measures,” said Dr Kelli A. Sullivan, co-first author of the study and an assistant research professor in neurology at the U-M Medical School.

Dr Eva L. Feldman, senior author of the study and the Russell N. DeJong Professor of Neurology at the U-M Medical School said that with a readily available predictor for nerve damage – triglycerides are measured as part of routine blood testing – doctors and patients can take pro-active steps when interventions can do some good.

The findings appear in the journal Diabetes. (ANI)

World’s tallest man still undecided about entering Guinness Book of Records

London, May 1 (ANI): The ‘world’s tallest man’ has yet to decide if he would like the Guinness Book of Records to officially enter his name in their records.

Zhao Liang, 27, who is from China, is four inches taller than the current holder of the title, 2.36-metre herdsman Bao Xishun, and he needs two beds to rest his 8ft, 1in frame, reports the Telegraph.

As he recuperates in hospital on a makeshift iron bed in the northern city of Tianjin after an operation on his foot, he seems almost bored with his fame.

The hospital was forced to put together two standard-sized iron beds to accommodate the giant from central Henan province whose parents are of average height, but he still has trouble fitting his large frame onto the narrow mattresses.

His shoulders, hands, legs and feet are all oversized, and he finds it difficult to find clothes and shoes to fit. (ANI)

Chicken soup with matzoh balls ‘fights high BP’

Washington, Apr 3 (ANI): Chicken soup with matzoh balls can help combat high blood pressure, say researchers.

According to lead researcher Ai Saiga, from Japan, the popular home remedy also used to treat common cold sometimes can help fight high blood pressure.

Previous studies have shown that chicken breast contains collagen proteins with effects similar to ACE inhibitors, mainstay medications for treating high blood pressure.

But there are such small amounts of the proteins that it could not be used to develop food and medical products for high blood pressure.

However, the new study suggests that chicken legs and feet, often discarded as waste products in appear to be a better source.

During the study, Saiga extracted collagen from chicken legs and tested its ability to act as an ACE inhibitor in the laboratory studies.

They identified four different proteins in the collagen mixture with high ACE-inhibitory activity.

When they were given to rats used to model human high blood pressure, the proteins produced a significant and prolonged decrease in blood pressure.

The findings are published in the American Chemical Society’s Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. (ANI)