Repeated exposure to dental X-rays ups thyroid cancer risk

London, June 4 (ANI): Repeated exposure to dental X-rays increases thyroid cancer risk, a new study has revealed.

Analysing 313 cancer patients, scientists from Brighton, Cambridge and Kuwait found the chances of developing cancer rose with increasing numbers of dental X-rays.

“The public health and clinical implications of these findings are particularly relevant in the light of increases in the incidence of thyroid cancer in many countries over the past 30 years,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Anjum Memon, of the Brighton and Sussex Medical School, as saying.

However, Dr Memon was quick to add that the increasing use of sensitive diagnostic techniques does not necessarily account for the entire increase and that other causes warrant investigation. (ANI)

Cycling 180 miles a week may cause infertility

Washington, June 30 (ANI): Men who spend more time riding a bicycle could be pedalling their fertility away, suggests a new study.

The research showed that those riding more than 180 miles a week had fewer than four per cent normal sperm. It means their chance of fatherhood is extremely low.

The research was presented at the 25th annual conference of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology.

Professor Diana Vaamonde, from the University of Cordoba Medical School, Cordoba, Spain, said that the triathletes who did the most cycling training had the worst sperm morphology.

Vaamonde and team had previously shown that both high exercise intensity and high exercise volume may be detrimental to sperm quality. They decided to take a more profound look at the sportsmen who seemed to show the greatest alteration – the triathletes – and assess the correlation between the volume of training in each activity and sperm quality.

Of the three modalities, only cycling, the activity for which triathletes undertake the most training, showed a clear correlation with sperm quality.
he more cycling training the sportsmen undertook, both in time and kilometers, the worse their sperm quality became.

The design of this particular study did not allow the scientists to isolate a single factor responsible for this problem, but Vaamonde believes that it is likely to be mainly due to either the irritation and compression caused by friction of the testes against the saddle, or the localised heat produced by wearing tight clothing.

However, she also believes that reactive oxygen species – small molecules that are a natural by-product of oxygen metabolism and which react to stress by increasing to such an extent that they can damage cell structures – and energetic imbalances may play an important role in the alterations in sperm that the team observed.

“The fact that this effect is greater in triathletes than in other sports practices seems to indicate that it is something to do with the volume of training that they need to undertake to achieve and maintain a high level of fitness,” said Vaamonde.

“We believe that the same effect would be observed in any athletes undertaking a similar amount of cycling training,” she added.

To reach the conclusion, the team studied the semen values of 15 healthy Spanish triathletes, with an average age of 33. They were competing at both national and international level.

Their training routines were analyzed in detail, and particular note taken of the time they spent cycling each week. Sperm was taken after three days of sexual abstinence and analysed for their shape and form.

“We found a statistically adverse correlation between sperm morphology and the volume of cycling training undertaken per week,” said Vaamonde.

“While all triathletes had less than 10 percent of normal-looking sperm, the men with less than 4 percent – at which percentage they would generally be considered to have significant fertility problems – were systematically covering over 300km per week on their bicycles,” she added. (ANI)

Being careful about the future is in our genes

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Humans are genetically programmed to care about the long-term future, say researchers.

Lead researcher Dr Peter Sozou, of the University of Warwick’s Medical School and the London School of Economics and Political Science, revealed that individuals might have an innate tendency to care about the long-term future of their communities, over timescales much longer than an individual’s lifespan.

He said we care at all about the long-term future because we have evolved to value social benefits because in our ancestral environment they tended to deliver local benefits – helping our kin to survive.

However in the modern age, it is this biological preference for social good which gives us an interest in the future of the planet.

“In the modern, global environment, such preferences may cause people to care about global problems such as climate change,” he added

Using a mathematical model, the researchers sought to determine what weight individuals should attach to future benefits.

It is shown that the answer depends on whether the future benefits are social benefits for their community or private benefits for themselves.

The study revealed that individuals could take a long-term view of benefits for their community, but a more short-term view of private benefits to themselves.

Humans, generally value a reward today more highly than a reward tomorrow – in other words they discount future benefits.

However, the model shows that the discount rate is lower for social, rather than individual, benefits.

“This analysis shows that the social discount rate is generally lower than the private discount rate,” said Dr Sozou.

“An individual’s valuation of a future benefit to herself is governed by the probability that she will still be alive in future.

“But she may value future benefits to her community over a timescale considerably longer than her own lifespan,” he added.

According to Sozou, evolution is driven by competition. Caring about the future of your community makes evolutionary sense to the extent that future members of your community are likely to be your relatives.

The findings are published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Weight loss competitions really do work

Washington, May 2 (ANI): A new study has shown that weight loss competitions prove effective in fight against obesity.

The research team led by Rena Wing from Brown University evaluated the Shape Up Rhode Island 2007 weight loss competition developed by Indian origin scientist Rajiv Kumar a medical student at Alpert Medical School could successfully lose weight at minimal cost.

“We evaluated the results and showed that this is an effective way to reach large numbers of people,” said Wing.

Shape Up Rhode Island reduced the percentage of patients in the study who were obese from 39 percent to 31 percent.

The researchers found that individuals who increased their activity the most achieved the best weight losses.

The study looked at 4,717 people who participated in Shape Up Rhode Island’s 2007 effort, which Kumar designed to feature team competition in an effort to encourage more exercise and weight loss.

They found that team-based weight loss competition could promote modest weight loss in large numbers of people.

The authors also suggest possible improvements, such as the inclusion of diet and exercise education, teaching ways to change behaviour or offering access to health coaches.

The study appears in journal Obesity. (ANI)

Alcoholism drug may curb urges of kleptomaniacs

Washington, Apr 1 (ANI): A drug commonly used for treating alcoholism and drug addiction has been found to curb the compulsive behaviour of kleptomaniacs, say researchers.

The research team from the Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry has found that drug Naltrexone significantly reduced kleptomaniacs urge to steal.

During the study, the researchers conducted an eight-week, double-blind trial among 25 men and women ages 17-75, who spent an average of at least one hour a week stealing.

The researchers found that those who took the drug Naltrexone reported significantly greater decline in stealing behaviour compared to those taking placebo.

“It gets rid of that rush and desire,” said Dr Jon Grant, J.D., M.P.H., a University of Minnesota associate professor of psychiatry and principal investigator of the study.

“The difference in their behaviour was significant, and these people were really troubled by their behaviour,” he added.

While the drug is not a cure for kleptomania, Grant said it offers hope to those who are suffering from the addiction.

He also said the drug would most likely work best in combination with individual therapy.

“These are people who steal even though they can easily afford not to,” Grant added.

The research appears in Journal of Biological Psychiatry. (ANI)

Indian student knifed in Belarus town, university demonstrate

Indian student knifed in Belarus town, university demonstrateMinsk – An Indian student was knifed and hospitalized in serious condition in a provincial Belarusian town, sparking a rare university demonstration and class boycott, the Belapan news agency reported on Tuesday.

The racially-motivated attack by a reported gang of Slavic nationalists took place in the central city Gomel near the town’s medical school.

The male victim, a medical student, was expected to recover fully, according to the report.

Dozens of medical school attendees demonstrated in central Gomel to protest what they called chronic racist attacks on members of the university population, and lack of police attention to the problem.

Most forms of public protest are banned in Belarus, and are frequently broken up by police.

Law enforcers monitored the student march but did not interfere with it.

Hundreds more students refused to attend classes. The Gomel State Medical School has one of the largest foreign student populations in Belarus, with nationals from India, Nepal, Nigeria, and Sri Lanka most prominent.

A police spokesman said suspects had been taken into custody and that police would in future be permanently stationed on campus.

Violent racism in Belarus in contrast to neighbouring Russia and Ukraine is an infrequent occurrence, and violent crime of any form is rare due to a powerful police force and authoritarian government.

The relatively low numbers of foreign nationals in Belarus has however made the few visitors from Africa and Asia stand out amongst Belarusians, and sometimes targets for xenophobic attacks.

Lingering Soviet racial stereotypes repeated by Belarus’ state-run mass media exacerbate the problem. (dpa)