US oil spill may cause cancer: Expert

Los Angeles, May 8 (IANS) The massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico may cause cancer and other health hazards, a US-based environment watchdog has warned.

Healthcare workers and general public could face risks by inhaling various components of crude oil such as benzene, toluene and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, all of which may cause cancer, the Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC) said.

Crude oil also contains mercury and lead, both of which can be dangerous if inhaled or swallowed, the group said in a statement.

Short-term effects include skin and respiratory problems while longer-term risks are uncertain, the NRDC said.

It said some people living along the coast were already reporting headaches, nausea, coughing and throat irritation.

‘There are significant health risks associated with this oil spill, and the risks aren’t just to wildlife, they are also to humans,’ Gina Solomon, a senior scientist with the NRDC, was quoted as saying by Xinhua.

The immediate worry, said Solomon, is what are called volatile organic compounds, which include chemicals like benzene that can be released in vapour form from the oil floating in the water.

‘These chemicals can cause acute health effects such as headache, nausea, vomiting, cough, dizziness. The chemicals can also cause longer-term effects, including the potential for miscarriage or low birth weight in pregnant women and risk of cancer over the longer term,’ he said.

Since the BP offshore oil-rig explosion April 20, at least 200,000 gallons of oil a day have been pouring into the Gulf of Mexico.

Coroner urges hospital changes after baby death

A Tasmanian Coroner says the parents of a newborn baby tried for nine hours to alert a hospital to their infant’s breathing problems.

Rod Chandler says the one-day-old baby may have had a better chance of survival if a paediatrician had seen the child.

Mr Chandler says the Hobart Private Hospital is not to blame for the death but has recommended it improve protocols for the observation of babies after birth.

Luc na Champassak showed signs of respiratory problems shortly after his birth three years ago.

His parents noticed he was breathing in an unusual, rasping way and repeatedly asked for him to examined by a paediatrician.

This did not happen before his death almost nine hours later.

In his findings, Mr Chandler said a thorough paediatric examination, in the very least, would have alerted the paediatrician to respiratory problems.

It would have been appropriate for the baby to have been transferred to intensive care where his chances of survival would have been significantly enhanced.

A hospital spokesman says the Coroner’s recommendations have been adopted.

Fire clears shopping centre

The ambulance service says at least 20 people have been treated at hospital after a fire in a shopping centre on the state’s north coast.

Shoppers and staff were ordered from the Ballina Fair complex at lunchtime after a fire in a cafe.

Superintendent Ian Krimmer from the NSW Fire Brigade says they were allowed back in after firefighters checked the air quality and gave the all clear.

“Now when the centre was reopened it appears that a small pocket of smoke which may have been trapped inside an air-conditioning unit has been released and as a result of that a number of people have suffered some ill effects,” Supt Krimmer said.

“They’ve been treated by ambulance and taken to hospital for further treatment,” he said.

The ambulance service says it took 11 people to hospital suffering respiratory problems, and up to 12 others are thought to have sought treatment themselves.

Patient’s bowel was “poking out” after surgery by “Dr. Death”, Brisbane SC told

Brisbane, Mar 25(ANI): The Brisbane Supreme Court has been told that one of the surgeries performed by former Indian-origin surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel aka “Dr. Death” had left a patient with his bowel “poking through” his wound.

Doctor Emma Igras, who served as a junior doctor under the guidance of Dr. Patel at the Bundaberg Base Hospital in 2003, gave evidence on the fourth day of the trial.

She described her and Dr Patel’s care of 75-year-old Mervyn Morris, who died on June 14, 2003, three weeks after Dr. Patel removed part of his colon.

Dr. Igras said that both of them performed a colonoscopy on Morris on May 2, 2003, to try to discover the cause of persistent rectal bleeding.

However, the procedure failed to discover the source of the bleeding and there was no evidence of cancer, she added.

Despite the operation, bleeding continued and Morris was readmitted to the hospital.

Dr. Igras further said that Dr Patel then decided to remove part of his bowel and install a colostomy bag on May 23, 2003, which the prosecution allege was “the wrong thing to do”.

“He was the wrong doctor for this operation, (Morris) was the wrong patient…an elderly man, with co-morbidities,” The Australian quoted Ross Martin, prosecutor, as having told the court on Monday.

Seven days later, Dr. Patel was forced to operate again on Morris, whose wound had begun to break down.

“Part of the bowel was poking out through the wound,” Dr Igras told the court.

The court also heard that following this second operation, Morris continued to have complications, such as blood in his urine, poor nutrition and possible respiratory problems.

The charges relate to Dr Patel’s time as director of surgery at the Bundaberg Base Hospital between 2003 and 2005.

Earlier, the Court was told that Dr. Patel was disciplined by an American medical body in August 2000 for “gross acts of negligence.” (ANI)

Koirala”s health condition deteriorates again

Kathmandu, Mar 19 (ANI): Ailing former Nepal Prime Minister and Nepali Congress President Girija Parsad Koirala”s health condition deteriorated again on Friday.

According to Kantipur, Koirala has again suffered from respiratory problems.

A team of doctors has reached Koirala”s residence at Mandikhatar in the capital.
Koirala was discharged from Sahid Gangalal Heart Centre in Bansbari on March 17 after the increase in oxygen level in his blood.

A chronic patient of pulmonary diseases, Koirala has been suffering from chest and urinary tract infection recently. He was bedridden for months. (ANI)

Cars threaten to reverse air quality improvements

The New South Wales Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water says Sydney’s long-term record of improvements in air quality is threatened by increased vehicle emissions.

A departmental report has forecast an increase in ozone levels over the next 15 years, especially in the city’s north-west and south-west.

The opposition’s climate change and environment spokeswoman Catherine Cusack says the geography of south-west Sydney means air becomes trapped.

But she says a lack of public transport there will make matters worse.

“Tragically those are the areas targeted for greatest population growth,” she said.

The department’s deputy director-general Simon Smith agrees that Sydney’s topography is partly to blame, as well as car emissions.

He says the increased ozone emissions could affect those who are vulnerable, particularly asthma sufferers.

“It mainly affects people who have respiratory vulnerabilities those people who are already sick or children or the elderly who have respiratory problems,” he said.

“So it may trigger the need to go to hospital with an extra asthma attack.”

The Asthma Foundation says Sydney’s air quality is deteriorating faster than any solutions being put forward.

‘Toxic cocktail’ in tunnels can increase air pollution levels by up to 1,000 times

Washington, August 28 (ANI): A new study has found that a toxic cocktail of ultrafine particles, which is lurking inside road tunnels, can increase air pollution levels by up to 1,000 times, enough to harm drivers and passengers.

The study measured ultrafine particle concentration levels outside a vehicle travelling through the M5 East tunnel in Sydney.

According to study co-author and director of Queensland University of Technology’s International Laboratory for Air Quality and Health, Professor Lidia Morawska, road tunnels were locations where maximum exposure to dangerous ultrafine particles in addition to other pollutants occurred.

“The human health effects of exposure to ultrafine particles produced by fuel combustion are generally regarded as detrimental,” Professor Morawska said.

“Effects can range from minor respiratory problems in healthy people, to acute myocardial infarction (heart attack) in people with existing heart complaints,” she added.

Professor Morawska said the study involved more than 300 trips through the four kilometres of the M5 East tunnel, with journeys lasting up to 26 minutes, depending on traffic congestion.

“What this study aimed to do was identify the concentration levels found in the tunnel. It generated a huge body of data on the concentrations and the results show that, at times, the levels are up to 1000 times higher than in urban ambient conditions,” she said.

She said that drivers and occupants of new vehicles which had their windows closed were safer than people travelling in older vehicles.

“People who are driving older vehicles which are inferior in terms of tightness and also those riding motorcycles or driving convertibles, these people are exposed to incredibly high concentrations,” she said.

“When compared with similar studies reported previously, the measurements here were among the highest recorded concentrations,” she added.

Professor Morawska said that tunnels were becoming an increasingly necessary infrastructure component in many cities across the world.

“When governments are building tunnels for urban design reasons, they should also consider the impact these tunnels are having on the environment and to people’s health,” she said.

“The study highlights why governments need to consider how they are going to deal with the air pollution levels inside the tunnel and removal of ultrafine particles in the outside environment,” she added. (ANI)

New discovery may lead to therapies for RSV, influenza A

London, Aug 24 (ANI): A research team led by Indian-origin scientist claims to have identified a cellular molecule that not only helps recognize viruses that cause respiratory problems but also direct cells to produce defensive immune response.

Dr Santanu Bose and colleagues have identified a cellular molecule, called NOD2, that detects respiratory viruses and can instruct cells to defend against them.

The team from The University of Texas Health Science Centre at San Antonio hope that the new discovery could lead to therapies for human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza A (commonly known as flu).

“This molecule could be used to boost host immune defenses and stimulate vaccine efficacy against RSV and influenza A, especially among high-risk individuals,” Nature quoted senior author Dr Santanu Bose, assistant professor of microbiology and immunology as saying.

The study showed that mice lacking the sensor survive for only 10 days after infection, compared with up to eight weeks for normal animals.

Researchers said that identifying this sensor and understanding its key role could result in therapies that activate the NOD2 gene during or prior to infection, leading to enhanced protective immunity.

The NOD2 sensor also has the potential to recognize other viruses, such as West Nile virus, yellow fever, Ebola and rabies.

The findings appear in the journal Nature Immunology. (ANI)

Low birth weight ‘ups long-term respiratory problems risk’

Washington, July 8 (ANI): A new study has shown that infants who weigh less than five and a half pounds at birth often enter the world with a host of medical complications, including respiratory problems.

The study has also shown that these respiratory problems may persist well beyond their infancy and childhood and into adulthood.

“We report a previously unrecognized excess risk of hospitalization for respiratory illnesses in young adults with a history of low birth weight,” wrote lead researcher Eric C. Walter, M.D., of the University of Washington Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care.

“Our findings suggest that not only are [low birth weight] survivors at increased risk for long-term respiratory disorders, but that these disorders are clinically significant and associated with increased health care utilization,” Walter added.

The researchers used hospitalization records from the Washington State Comprehensive Hospital Abstract Reporting System’s discharge database between January 1, 1998 and December 31, 2007.

They selected as potential cases any person who was 18 years old at the time of hospitalization and who was discharged with a respiratory code listed among the top four diagnoses.

They then linked these cases to birth weight data listed on birth certificates where possible. Control subjects were randomly selected from birth certificate data.

They found that individuals with very low birth weight (less than 1.5 kg, or 3.3 lbs.) or moderately low birth weight (1.5 to 2.5 kg or 3.3 to 5.5 pounds) had a 83 and 34 percent higher risk of hospitalization for respiratory diagnoses respectively.

Those who had a history of very low birth weight had twice the risk of being hospitalized for asthma or respiratory infection and 2.6 times the risk of respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation.

After adjusting for covariates, including demographic characteristics and maternal smoking, the significant association between birth weight and risk of hospitalization persisted.

Furthermore, while the data could not definitively prove a linear link, researchers did note a trend toward greater risk of respiratory problems with lower birth weights.

“In our study the percentage of respiratory disease attributable to moderately or very low birth weight was estimated to be 1.8 percent. If this were extrapolated to the 1.2 million U.S. hospitalizations for respiratory illnesses per year for ages 18 to 44, low birth weight may account for over 22,000 adult hospitalizations per year, with charges in excess of 225 million dollars per year,” said Dr. Walter.

The study appears in the July 15 issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. (ANI)

Bollywood, British celebs ditch pants for chemical campaign

London, July 7 (ANI): Bollywood stars as well as British celebrities are ditching their pants to protest against the use of harmful pesticide in underwear production.

British TV presenter Dermot O’Leary and Coco de Mer founder Sam Roddick have joined the ‘Pants To Poverty’ protests, which are taking place in 16 countries around the world.

The celebrities are calling for ban on the use the harmful pesticide endosulfan, used in cotton production, which can cause cancer, birth defects, respiratory problems, and sterility among cotton farmers and their families.

Pants To Poverty, a Fairtrade underwear company, said that cotton pants containing traces of the chemical are being sold on the UK high street.

Its use has also been banned in 62 countries due to its high toxicity, but is still permitted in India and other developing nations.

“Using pants as our metaphor, this campaign explains both the good and the bad about the cotton industry and points towards a brighter future,” Sky News quoted Ben Ramsden, the founder of Pants To Poverty, as saying.

“The proof against endosulfan is comprehensive. With this new research, we can finally prove that replacing it not only dramatically improves people’s health, but also enables farmers to earn more money and support their communities,” said Dr. Mohan Kumar, the campaign’s doctor.

“The Indian government must stop producing and exporting this dangerous pesticide. It can still make a profit, but this time also for our people and our environment,” he added. (ANI)

Bal Thackeray undergoes angiography

Bal Thackeray undergoes angiography

Mumbai, July 7 (IANS) Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray underwent an angiography on Tuesday morning and is likely to operated upon, a party insider said.

Thackeray, 83, was admitted to the Lilavati Hospital here Monday following breathing problems.

After the angiography and the medical panel’s expert advice, Thackeray may undergo a surgery later Tuesday, a party insider said, requesting anonymity.

The Lilavati Hospital had set up a five-member panel to treat him – Jaleel Parker, who has been regularly treating him; J.J. Dalal, Samuel Mathew, Ajit Menon and Prakash Jindani, who examined the senior leader to determine the course of treatment Monday.

Concerned about his advanced age and frail health, the medicos have discussed the treatment options available with Thackeray’s family.

Son Udhav has cut short his trip to the US and is expected return to Mumbai later Tuesday to be with his father, who underwent a heart surgery a few years ago.

Thackeray’s estranged nephew and Maharashtra Navnirman Sena chief Raj Thackeray, senior party leaders like Manohar Joshi, party MPs, legislators and senior leaders of the ally Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have been thronging the hospital to inquire after his health.

Thackeray had been admitted to the same hospital June 18 for treating similar respiratory problems, causing concern among family and party members. He was discharged after six days in hospital.

Earlier, in March this year, Thackeray had spent 11 days in Lilavati Hospital for similar health complaints.

US father gets 100 years for poisoning kids’ soup

JONESBORO, Georgia: A Georgia man has been sentenced to 100 years in prison for poisoning his children to extort money from Campbell’s Soup Co.

William Cunningham was sentenced Thursday after a jury found him guilty on seven counts of aggravated assault for forcing the children in 2006 to eat soup laced with prescription drugs and lighter fluid.

His 3-year-old son and 18-month-old daughter were hospitalized twice. A family member said the youngsters may suffer lifelong respiratory problems from lung damage caused by the lighter fluid.

Cunningham’s wife has since divorced him. Cunningham pleaded guilty in 2007 to a federal charge of making false claims against Campbell’s Soup by threatening to sue them over the contaminated soup.

Florida probes sudden deaths of 21 polo ponies

MIAMI (Reuters) – Florida launched an investigation on Monday into the deaths of 21 polo ponies from a Venezuelan team competing at the U.S. Open Polo Championship.

The horses collapsed after appearing dizzy and disoriented as the Lechuza Caracas team prepared for an afternoon match on Sunday at the International Polo Club of Palm Beach in Wellington, Florida, officials said.

“Because of the very rapid onset of sickness and death, state officials suspect these deaths were a result of an adverse drug reaction or toxicity,” Florida’s Department of Agriculture said in a statement announcing its investigation.

“At this time there is no evidence that these horses were affected with an infectious or contagious disease,” it said.

The horses were kept at the Lechuza Caracas equestrian facility near the polo grounds in Wellington, about 70 miles north of Miami, and did not show any signs of illness on Sunday morning, officials said.

But when they were offloaded from trailers at the polo club, some had died and the others were “showing severe symptoms of depression, respiratory problems, incoordination and recumbency,” the agriculture department said.

“It could be the water, hay, bedding, we just don’t know,” John Wash, president of club operations, told local media.

The Lechuza Caracas team is owned by millionaire Venezuelan banker Victor Vargas, who has been playing polo since he was 24, according to the North American Polo League’s website. Vargas was re-elected president of the Venezuelan Banking Association in April.

His team withdrew from the championship following the deaths, the league said.

Lechuza Caracas team veterinarian James Belden said the horses died one by one, “almost certainly of an intoxication of some sort that they consumed,” the Palm Beach Post reported.

Belden said it was unlikely that the horses had died from tainted medication or had been given anabolic steroids because they are banned in England, where the team competes.

“I’ve been in practice 50 years. I’ve never seen anything like this,” he told the newspaper.

Necropsies and toxicology tests were being performed on the horses, but it could take several days to learn the results.

“This is a tragic situation and we are working hard to determine what happened,” Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson said. “But it would be irresponsible to speculate on what may have killed the horses. We will wait until the facts are in before making any specific comments on the case.”

(Reporting by Jim Loney; Editing by Jane Sutton and Eric Walsh)

Cleaning fluids in hospitals ‘pose respiratory risk’

Washington, Mar 27 (ANI): Cleaning fluids used in hospitals might put patients at an increased risk developing respiratory problems, according to a new study.

In the study, the research team led by Anila Bello from University of Massachusetts Lowell Sustainable Hospitals Program found potentially hazardous chemicals in the agents including disinfectants, surfactants, solvents, and fragrances used in several different hospitals.Cleaning products may impact worker, and possibly patient, health through air and skin exposures,” said Bello.

“Because the severity of cleaning exposures is affected by both product formulation and cleaning technique, a combination of product evaluation and workplace exposure data is needed to develop strategies that protect people from cleaning hazards,” she added.

According to Bello, the ingredients of concern identified in the study included quaternary ammonium chlorides or “quats” that can cause skin and respiratory irritation.

Some products also contain irritant glycol ethers that can be absorbed through the skin, as well as ethanolamine – another respiratory and dermatological irritant.

The authors said, “Hazardous exposures related to cleaning products are an important public health concern because these exposures may impact not only cleaning workers, but also other occupants in the building.”

The study is published in BioMed Central’s open access journal Environmental Health. (ANI)

Adulterated festival colours land 74 children in hospital in Maharashtra

Thane, Mar 12 (ANI): Over 74 children in Thane in Maharashtra were admitted to hospital with chemical-related “poisoning”, allegedly after using powdered colour to play ‘Holi’.

Reports said that the children were admitted to the hospital with symptoms of vomiting, chest pain and respiratory problems.

The affected were then rushed to the Central Hospital in Ulhasnagar town of hane.

“Near about 74 people came here with a history of vomiting, chest pain and respiratory problems. Out of 74 boys, 20 boys are so severe that they are in a bad state. We are successful to recover these patients,” said S N Waghmare, Chief Medical Officer, Central Hospital.

Children who were admitted to the hospital said that after coming in contact with colours, they felt giddiness. The children also complained of irritation and itching.

“They (revelers) applied that colour on my face, my skin felt some irritation and then it was a burning sensation. After that I started feeling dizziness,” said Sumit Kaul, a victim.

Investigations are being carried out and local shops are being questioned for any clues. (ANI)

Tooth Successfully Removed From Man’s Right Lung

Doctors of the ENT department of a government hospital, on Tuesday, successfully removed a molar tooth from the lung of a 65-year-old man.

Dr. R. Hasda, one of the surgeons who operated on the man, said that Mr. Rajendra Prasad Gupta, a resident of Garulia in North 24-Parganas, gulped a loose molar mistakenly three years back, and it got stuck in the in the right bronchus.

The doctor said, “He started having respiratory problems following that. He also suffered from recurrent chest infection.”

After complete clinical tests, it was discovered that a foreign object was stuck in the patient’s right lung.

Doctors removed the tooth through bronchoscopy.

“We performed the surgery without administering anaesthesia… The man’s condition is stable and he will be discharged from hospital in a few days.” Dr. Hasda said.

Jacko in great health, says pal

London, Mar 09 (ANI): Pop star Michael Jackson’s pal and business manager Dr. Tomhe has dismissed claims that his health is deteriorating, emphasizing that the singer is doing fine.

Dr. Tomhe has laughed off reports claiming that the ‘Heal the World’ hitmaker is suffering from respiratory problems, and has been struck by deadly superbug MRSA.

He instead says that Michael took time off his musical career to care for his three children – Prince, 11, Paris Katherine, 10, and Prince Michael II, five.

“(Jackson) has come back to put an end to all the bulls**t rumours about his health. I think he has answered his critics,” the Daily Express quoted Tomhe as telling Brit tabloid the Mirror.

“He is back to his old self – he’s fine, and couldn’t be in better shape. He was away for all this time because he was dedicating his life to his children and being a single parent. This is the reason he took a break from music,” he added.

Tomhe is adamant that Jackson will use his huge comeback concerts in London in July (09) to prove his doubters wrong.

“It was his idea to make a comeback because he misses his fans and his fans have missed him. He is very excited and the shows this summer are going to be more spectacular than ever before,” he said. (ANI)

Smokers more likely to kick the butt for pet pooches’ health sake

Washington, Feb 10 (ANI): Want your partner to kick the butt? Well, then buy him a pooch, for a new study has found that smokers are more likely to quit cigarettes for the sake of their pet’s health rather than their own.

Studies have shown that second hand tobacco smoke can be as dangerous for pets as it is for the non-smoking partners of smokers.

Exposure to passive smoking has been associated with lymph gland, nasal, and lung cancers; allergies; eye and skin diseases; as well as respiratory problems in cats and dogs.

For the study, the researchers set up an online survey for pet owners resident in south eastern Michigan, quizzing them about their and their partners’ smoking behaviours, and what they knew about the effects of second hand smoke on their pets.

The findings revealed that nearly one in three of the smokers i.e. 28.4 pct said that knowing that smoking was bad for their pets’ health would spur them to give it up.

Almost one in 10 said this would prompt them to ask their partners to quit, while around one in seven said they would tell their partner to smoke outdoors.

These figures were even higher among non-smokers, more than 16pct of whom said they would ask their partner to quit, while around 24 pct said they would tell their partner to smoke outdoors.

According to the authors, public health campaigns targeting smokers would do well to focus on the detrimental impact of second hand tobacco smoke on pets.

The research is published in Tobacco Control. (ANI)