Top Pop Catalog for the 4/10/2010 issue

Now Last Weeks Peak

1 1 6 1 See The Morning – Chris Tomlin (/Sparrow)

2 153 1 The Sickness – Disturbed (/Warner Bros.)

3 2 124 1 Number Ones – Michael Jackson (/Sony Music)

4 3 763 1 Journey’s Greatest Hits – Journey (/Sony Music)

5 30 17 5 Oracular Spectacular – MGMT (/Sony Music)

6 4 3 4 Taylor Swift – Taylor Swift ()

7 8 922 1 Legend: The Best Of Bob Marley And The Wailers – Bob Marley And The Wailers (/UMe)

8 6 675 1 Chronicle The 20 Greatest Hits – Creedence Clearwater Revival (/Concord)

9 7 47 1 The Essential Michael Jackson – Michael Jackson (/Sony Music)

10 9 172 1 Greatest Hits – Guns N’ Roses (/IGA)

Malawi kids ‘taking in 50 ciggies a day’

London, August 25 (ANI): Thousands of kids in Malawi are taking in 50 cigarettes worth of nicotine a day due to their employment as child labourers on the country’s tobacco fields, warns an organisation.

According to a study by Plan, the kids showed an array of nicotine poisoning symptoms, such as severe headaches, abdominal pain, muscle weakness and breathlessness.

California university medical professor Neal Benowitz explained nicotine poisoning, also called Green Tobacco Sickness, was more severe in youngsters due to their underdeveloped tolerance level against smoking as compared to adults.

“The brain of a child or adolescent is particularly vulnerable to long-lasting adverse neurobehavioral effects of nicotine exposure,” Sky News quoted Benowitz as saying.

The report said: “Child labourers, some as young as five, are suffering severe physical symptoms from absorbing up to 54mg a day of dissolved nicotine through their skin – the equivalent of 50 average cigarettes.”

Plan also revealed that some of the kids toiled up to 12 hours a day, without protective clothing and were paid less than the equivalent of 1p an hour.

The study further pointed towards a lack of research into the long-term effects of Green Tobacco Sickness in kids, but “experts believe that it could seriously impair their development”. (ANI)

Patrick Swayze battled cancer like a ‘beast’, says book

New York, May 8 (ANI): A new biography of Patrick Swayze has revealed how the actor bravely battled his cancer like a ‘beast’, after he was diagnosed with the illness.

In the book, titled ‘Patrick Swayze: One Last Dance’, the ‘Ghost’ star has confessed that It was on New Year’s Eve 2007 that he realised how his health was deteriorating.

And then, his wife Lisa, was informed that Swayze had pancreatic cancer and was given just a 5 percent chance to live.

However, Swayze didn’t give up on his career because of his poor health, but he was even more determined to work.

After receiving the news of his illness, Swayze called Sony executive Jamie Erlicht, whose company was co-producing his A and E show, ‘The Beast’.

“He told us, ‘Guys, I have some horrible news. But if you can be patient and stand by me, I’m going to come back and do the show. I’m in great condition. I’m a cowboy. I’m a dancer. I’ll beat this,’” the New York Daily News quoted Erlicht as saying.

And, while filming the TV series in Chicago, Swayze stayed focused on his work despite his sickness.

In fact, crewmembers have cited that he worked as long as 12 hours at a time, all while refusing painkillers.

And finally, the star completed every one of his 12 episodes, and when the show wrapped on Nov. 21 last year, Swayze was hopeful for the future and his survival.

He said: “My big regret is the physical damage I’ve done to my body. I can do almost anything physically and I used to believe I was invincible, breaking bones over and over, playing football, doing gymnastics, diving, ballet, doing my own stunts, kick boxing, staging fights … it all seems a little stupid to me now.” (ANI)

JLo still struggling to lose post-baby flab

New Delhi, May 5 (ANI): Singer-and-actress Jennifer Lopez, who gave birth to twins Max and Emme last February, is still trying to lose her baby weight.

The stunner, who gained over 60lbs during pregnancy, said: “It’s funny, once I gave birth I dropped 30lbs immediately and then the next 20lbs came off right away.

“When I did a triathlon, I dropped another 10, and with the last 10 I’m still struggling with. I probably have 5-6lbs more to go.”

Despite gaining a large amount of weight, the 39-year-old beauty said she and husband Marc Anthony would love to add to their family, reports The China Daily.

She said: “I think we’ll have more children. I mean, it’s fun to do all the things we do, but nothing feels like what it is to have children and to have that joy and purpose in your life of raising another human being.

“I had a great pregnancy, but I probably won’t be as lucky the second time. It was great, though. I didn’t have any of the bad symptoms, no morning sickness or anything.” (ANI)

Wanted: a doctor to counsel Britain’s stressed, tired spies

London, May 3 (ANI): Britain’s secret service, Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), is looking for an occupational health adviser to counsel spies, who are feeling worse for wear after taking on enemies such as Al-Qaeda and Chinese cyber-spies.

MI6 is advertising for the 40,000-pound job on the Secret Intelligent Service (SIS) website, which reads: “Here at SIS (or MI6 as you may know us), we operate across the globe. The variety of challenges extends to every corner of our organisation and occupational health is no exception.

“We are looking for a qualified occupational health adviser to cover an interesting mix of work, from specialised health surveillance and pre-travel briefings and clearances to sickness absence management.”

The new recruit will be given guidance on foreign travel – which might include checking for enemy tarantulas before settling down to sleep, reports The Times. Foreign Office spokesman said: “The SIS may be involved in some unique situations but they have a duty to protect their staff.”

An intelligence source said: “This is a very stressful job, especially as one cannot confide in your family. Many people turn to alcohol or even recreational drugs to cope.”

The post is based at the SIS’s Vauxhall Cross offices. (ANI)

Liv Tyler ‘dating her personal trainer’

New Delhi, Apr 24 (ANI): Liv Tyler is romancing her personal trainer, it has emerged.

The ‘Lord of the Rings’ star was snapped hugging and kissing David Hirsch after an intimate lunch in Westwood, New Jersey on April 22.

Apparently, the pair couldn’t keep their hands off each other as they walked to his car, stopping in the parking lot several times to kiss and cuddle.

The 31-year-old actress has been single since last year, when she announced she was divorcing British musician Royston Langdon – with whom she has a four-year-old son, Milo, reports The China Daily.

Recently, Liv revealed she felt physically sick when she split from her husband last May, and still finds the break-up difficult to come to terms with.

She said: “There’s nothing worse than heartache, being lovesick. It’s like there’s a physical sickness. You go through a couple of weeks where you think, ‘Oh, I’m OK, I feel better,’ and then suddenly, out of nowhere, it hits you again.

“The hardest part is when they move out. It also brings up a lot of issues – you might feel like a failure, or like there is something wrong with you. You can’t run away from yourself – you kind of have to just deal with it.” (ANI)

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)

Fish get seasick too, says scientist

London, Apr 21 (ANI): A German researcher has claimed to have solved the mystery that intrigued the science world for decades: hether or not fish get seasick?

Well, according to Dr Reinhold Hilbig, a zoologist from Stutgart, the answer is yes.

The boffin studied the effects of weightlessness in water as part of research into how humans are affected in space.

To reach the conclusion, forty-nine fish in a mini aquarium were sent up in a plane that went into a steep dive, simulating the loss of gravity astronauts encounter in space flight.

He said eight of the fish began turning around and around in circles.

“They completely lost their sense of balance, behaving like humans who get seasick,” The Telegraph quoted Hilbig, as saying.

“The fish lost their orientation, they became completely confused and looked as if they were about to vomit. In the wild such a “seasick” fish would become prey for others because they are incapable of fleeing from danger,” the expert added.

Later, the eight seasick fish were culled and their brains were analysed to try to determine the exact cause of their sickness.

“It would seem the loss of eye contact with water movement and vibrations plays a large part in their disorientation,” Hilbig said. (ANI)

Striking Sri Lankan Tamil in Canada hospitalised

Ottawa, April 15 (IANS) A Sri Lankan Tamil protesting ‘genocide’ against the community in the island nation was hospitalised even as his colleagues continued their hunger strike outside the Canadian parliament here.

Five Tamils went on a hunger strike opposite the House of Commons building April 7, seeking Ottawa’s intervention in the Sri Lankan conflict. While one woman protestor was hospitalised last Friday, paramedics took a Tamil man to hospital Tuesday as he complained of stomach sickness.

‘Thirty-four-old James Jolues was taken to hospital by paramedics as he developed some complications. He is a diabetic and suffers from other medical problems,’ Canadian Tamil Congress leader David Poopalapillai told IANS.

However, he said the hunger strike will continue till the Canadian government listens to their demands.

The Sri Lankan Tamils, who have for weeks been staging huge rallies in Toronto and Ottawa, want Canada to seek Sri Lanka’s ouster from the Commonwealth, withdrawal of its high commissioner from Colombo and pressure to end its military campaign against the Tamil Tigers.

The striking Tamils were visited by the mayor of the Canadian capital Monday.

‘The strikers were visited by the mayor and by thousands of Tamils from across this country. They want our voice to be heard by Canadian leaders,’ said Poopalapillai.

However, there is hardly any Canadian leader to meet as parliament is recessed because of the Easter holidays.

The Ottawa hunger-strike is part of the Tamils’ joint global campaign to seek intervention in Sri Lanka.

Almost a third of the one million Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora live in Canada.

Wrist acupuncture can prevent nausea from anesthesia

Washington, Apr 15 (ANI): A new study has found that wrist acupunture or acupressure can significantly reduce vomiting and nausea symptoms, which are generally experienced after surgery.

The researchers have found that by stimulating an acupoint called the Pericardium (P6) point in the patients’ wrists can help reduce these symptoms.

Lead researcher Anna Lee of the Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care at The Chinese University of Hong Kong revealed that stimulating the P6 point can occur by several methods such as acupuncture or acupressure.

Acupuncture involves penetrating the skin with thin, metallic needles at defined points. One type of acupressure involves wearing a wristband that presses down on the P6 point.

“After a stimulation on the acupuncture point, the nerve system is then activated and signals the brain to release certain chemicals known as neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, dopamine or endorphins,” said Lixing Lao, a licensed acupuncturist and director at the Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

“These then block the other chemicals that cause the sickness, nausea and vomiting, in this case, in the central nerve system. Therefore, the patient won’t feel that sick or nauseated,” Lao added.

Lee and her colleague reviewed 40 studies comprising 4,858 patients. Most of the studies involved healthy adults undergoing elective surgery with general anesthesia.

The studies compared the stimulation of the P6 acupoint with sham (placebo) treatment or anti-nausea or antiemetics drug

“Of the 40 trials included, the most common method of stimulation was wristband alone, in 17 studies,” said Lee.

“The wristbands used to prevent both postoperative nausea and vomiting are the same sold for seasickness, travel sickness, morning sickness and chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting,” she added.

Lee said “for 100 people, of whom 80 would vomit or feel sick after surgery if given sham treatment, about 25 people would benefit from P6 stimulation and 75 would not.”

She said that reducing nausea and vomiting for surgery patients through P6 point stimulation could reduce costs, such as the cost of antiemetic medication and length of hospital stays, and improve the quality of patient care.

The review appears in the current issue of The Cochrane Library. (ANI)

Sickness certificates can lead to unemployment

Melbourne, Mar 27 (ANI): Doctors providing sickness certificates might be doing more harm than good for ailing people, according to a new study.

Dr Debra Dunstan of the University of New England in Armidale said that extended absence from work can put a relatively well person in long-term unemployment.

In the new study, Dunstan showed an alarming rise in sickness certification with a 70pct increase in requests in Australia, during the past nine years.

Doctors might think that they are doing a patient a favour by giving them extended work leave but the long-term worklessness might have an adverse impact on people’s health.

It can lead to people smoking 10 packets of cigarettes a day.

It is also “said to have more impact on life expectancy than killer diseases such as cardiovascular illness and cancer”.

Dunstan has raised concerns over people with common ailments such as musculoskeletal problems and mild to moderate mental health issues, who are receiving extended certified absences from work.

“The level of work disability attributed to commonly occurring conditions is on the rise,” ABC Online quoted Dunstan as saying.

After 12 weeks off work, the risk of becoming long-term unemployed rises dramatically.

By six months, a person on extended sick leave has only a 20pct chance of being in the workforce in five years’ time.

“Adults are meant to work,” she said.

“They get their social connectedness, a sense of identity and a sense of purpose from work,” she added.

With long-term unemployment people’s quality of life and physical and mental health also deteriorates. They are also at an increased risk of suicide.

Dunstan said for work-related mental health problems, such as stress and anxiety, absence from work is the wrong treatment. (ANI)

Ashley Cole fumes over ‘drunk and disorderly behaviour’ claims

London, Mar 7 (ANI): English footballer Ashley Cole has protested claims that he chatted to a blonde bombshell, and was then arrested for drunk and disorderly behaviour at a top restaurant.

Cole, 28, who wanted to prove his innocence, ordered his people to track down the lady in question so as to prove that he did not misbehave with her.

“They had never met before and he has instructed his representatives to track her down to prove he didn’t do anything wrong. He insists nothing went on and apparently the girl also says it was entirely innocent. She is very credible and is backing his story,” the Mirror quoted a source as saying.

Lawyers have reportedly flown the woman out of the country.

The Chelsea player is already in trouble after his wife Cheryl, 25, discovered that he had broken his solemn promise not to go drinking with teammates while she was away.

The Girls Aloud singer is said to have given him a piece of her mind on March 5 when she called him up from Tanzania, where she is climbing Mount Kilimanjaro with eight other celebs for Comic Relief.

“It’s been really hard physically and mentally, but I haven’t once thought of giving up,” Cheryl, who has struggled with altitude sickness, said. (ANI)

Treasure trove of stolen Afghan artifacts returned to Kabul

Washington, March 7 (ANI): Antiquities that were pillaged from more than 1,500 ancient sites around Afghanistan by scavengers, looters, and thieves, have been returned to Kabul.

Across the war-shattered nation, thieves have been pillaging antiquities from more than 1,500 ancient sites around the country and smuggling them abroad.

“It’s like a sickness that kills us slowly,” said Omara Khan Masoudi, director of the National Museum of Afghanistan. “Every day, we lose a bit more of our cultural heritage,” he told National Geographic magazine.

But now, Afghanistan is finally getting something back.

The British government, with the help of the National Geographic Society and the British Red Cross, has returned 3.4 tons of stolen antiquities that were confiscated over the past six years at London’s Heathrow Airport.

On February 17, a Red Cross freighter plane touched down at the Kabul Airport, carrying the looted treasure back to its homeland.

The artifacts are now at the National Museum.

Returning the enormous shipment took more than a year to organize, and involved the cooperation of participants from around the globe.

The Heathrow collection includes more than 1,500 objects spanning thousands of years of Afghan culture: a 3,000-year-old carved stone head from the Iron Age and hand-cast axe heads, cut rock crystal goblets, and delicate animal carvings from the Bactrian era, another thousand years earlier.

The oldest artifacts in the collection include a marble figure of an animal showing similarities to artifacts dating to the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods, dating as far back as 8,000 years.

The collection also contains gilded bronze pieces, coins, and ornately inscribed slabs dating from Afghanistan’s early Islamic period (8th-9th centuries A.D.) and treasures from the Medieval Islamic period (10th-14th centuries A.D.) that serve to replace the decimated collection at the National Museum, which was hit by a rocket in 1993 during the civil war, then repeatedly looted.

Through a quarter-century of violence, Masoudi and his staff somehow managed to save about 90 percent of the National Museum’s masterpieces, an incredible feat.

But the museum still lost about 70,000 objects, most of them from the reserve inventory kept in storage.

Helped by Carla Grissmann, an American expert on Afghan cultural heritage who has been working with the National Museum since 1973, and a British Museum curatorial team, U.S. archaeologist Fredrik Hiebert compared the objects in the Heathrow hoard to tens of thousands of missing items from the museum’s collection.

“None of the Heathrow objects came from the museum,” Hiebert said. “They are from recently illegally excavated sites exported without permit,” he added. (ANI)

Pawar inaugurates conference of VCs of Agricultural Universities

New Delhi, Feb 16 (ANI): Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar inaugurated a two-day conference of Vice-Chancellors of the agricultural universities on Monday.

Inaugurating the conference, Pawar said that the Integrated Farming System needs a good fertilizer policy for its support.

“The Integrated Farming System needs a good fertilizer policy for its support, the Government has recently taken a historical decision by moving to nutrient-based pricing and subsidy, and allowing additional cost of fortification and coating of fertilizers to manufactures,” Pawar said.

Pawar informed that the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) is going to launch an Integrated Farming System Project at 31 locations in the country.

“In the Integrated Farming System approach, there is appropriate combination of crop husbandry, livestock, horticulture, vegetable, goatry, piggery, fishery, apiculture, mushroom, sericulture etc. This project will help to improve the livelihood of the farmers,” Pawar said.

The Minister also informed the new policy would broaden the basket of fertilizers and enable fertilizer use as per soil and crop requirements.

“The freight subsidy on actual basis would ensure wider spread of fertilizers and their availability in distant areas from the manufacturing sites. The upward revision of rate of concession on SSP would revive SSP industry suffering sickness for long, due to ad hoc and low rate of concession. Needless to say, the SSP containing 11% sulphur would correct widespread sulphur deficiency in Indian soils as well, besides serving as a source of phosphorus, ” he added.

The two-day Conference is being attended by representatives from different central ministries and institutions engaged in agricultural research and education besides the Vice-Chancellors of Agricultural Universities. (ANI)

‘Heart broken’ Liv Tyler sizzles in figure-hugging leotard for photoshoot

London, Feb 7 (ANI): Stunning Liv Tyler showed of her sultry figure in sexy tights and figure-hugging leotard during a photoshoot for Wonderland magazine.

The 31-year-old actress also graced the cover of the magazine in sexy tux jacket and baker boy cap.

Tyler, who stars in the 2008 movie The Incredible Hulk, said that split from her husband of five years Royston Langdon has left her “physically sick”.

“There’s nothing worse than heartache, being lovesick. It’s like there’s a physical sickness,” The Sun quoted her as saying.

“You go through a couple of weeks where you think , ‘Oh, I’m okay, I feel better,’ and then suddenly, out of nowhere, it hits you again,” she added.

Tyler also revealed the confusion about her parentage for she grew up thinking musician Todd Rundgren was her father.

“Todd basically decided when I was born that I needed a father so he signed my birth certificate. He knew that there was a chance that I might not be his,” she said.

But she after first meeting with her real dad Steve Tyler, Liv revealed she fell madly in love with him.

“I had no idea who he was,” she added. (ANI)

Barmy council faces flak for ‘boob-job leave’ policy

London, Jan 15 (ANI): The Barmy council bosses’ decision to grant paid leave for staff to have boob jobs has been condemned by critics, who claim that the move is a wastage of taxpayers’ money.

As part of a Life Choices policy, workers could take the time off apart from their holidays to have liposuction, Botox and other cosmetic surgery.

However, critics claim that the scheme is blowing public money while the country struggles to cope with the recession.

They insist staff should use their paid holidays if they want to have surgery to enhance their assets.

“No-one would begrudge time off for ill-health or important medical treatment,” the Daily star quoted Eric Pickles, 56, Tory Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, as saying.

He added: “But at a time when private sector jobs are increasingly insecure, taxpayers will be sceptical about forking out for paid leave so town hall workers can have boob jobs. This is yet another sign of Left-wing town halls wasting our money.”

However, a spokesman for Tameside Council, Gtr Manchester, where the policy is to operate, said: “Tameside is a top performer for the management of sickness absence.

“The guidance is aimed at finding the best balance when managing absences between providing our employees with the most appropriate support and providing best value to local council taxpayers.

“Medical absences may occur where, for example, someone could be having reconstructive surgery following treatment for breast cancer.”

According to reports, the scheme may be approved next Tuesday. (ANI)

Salmonella-based vaccine candidates can help fight infant pneumonia

Washington, January 13 (ANI): Scientists at Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute have come up with two vaccine candidates that may prove very helpful in dealing with infant bacterial pneumonia.

Research leader Roy Curtiss, an investigator of vaccines and infectious diseases, has revealed that the two vaccine strains draw on the properties of an unlikely vaccine carrier-one generally associated with causing sickness rather than safeguarding the body against it.

Salmonella typhimurium, a rod-shaped motile pathogen, is one of over 2000 strains or serotypes of the Salmonella constellation of bacteria, which are responsible for causing serious and oft-fatal diseases to which children under two years of age are particularly vulnerable.

Due to this fact, Salmonella’s choice as the principal component in a new vaccine for babies has been something of a hard sell.

“People said ‘you gotta be kidding,’” says Curtiss, noting that twenty years ago, Salmonella outbreaks were a grave concern in nurseries and hospitals, sometimes leading to the deaths of over half the children in such facilities.

Now, Curtiss and lead author Yuhua Li have led the development of two new vaccine candidates, labeled x9088 and x9558, under grants from the NIH and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

The researchers say that the novel strains belong to a family known as recombinant attenuated Salmonella vaccines (RASVs). They say that the critical component boosting their effectiveness is a delayed mechanism of attenuation.

According to them, Salmonella’s notorious virulence is essentially short-circuited, but only after it has stimulated a robust systemic immune response to pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA), a vital bacterial pneumonia antigen.

The researchers say that this feat is achieved by using genetic trickery to tame S. typhimurium, producing altered bacterial strains requiring mannose and/or arabinose-sugars available in the lab, but absent in the human body.

After roughly seven cell divisions, the bacterium exhausts its stores of specialized sugar. Unable to sustain the integrity of its cell wall, it bursts.

This approach can help place Salmonella on a self-destruct timer, one that may be sensitively tuned to achieve maximum immunogenicity following colonization of host tissues.

Describing the technique in PNAS, the researchers revealed that an initial version of the new vaccine is soon to begin the first pre-clinical trials in human subjects. (ANI)

Childhood disease unlikely to have killed Travolta’s son, say docs

New York, January 3 (ANI): Doctors say that the childhood illness that Oscar-winning Hollywood star John Travolta’s son Jett had been suffering from, scientifically called Kawasaki disease, could not be blamed for his death because it was unlikely to cause the boy’s reported seizure.

“Seizures are not part of Kawasaki disease,” the New York Daily News quoted Dr. Stanford Shulman, a specialist in the disease at Northwestern University””””””””s Feinberg School of Medicine, as saying.

“If a teenager had a seizure and died, that would not commonly be due to Kawasaki disease,” the expert added.

Kawasaki disease leads to fever, rash, red eyes and swollen hands and feet.

The sickness is more common in young boys, and its cause is controversial.

While some, like Jett’s actress mother Kelly Preston, think that environmental toxins trigger the symptoms, others blame a virus.

Kawasaki can lead to blood clots and heart attacks later in life if left untreated.

“Nowadays, no more than 2 or 3 percent of cases develop significant coronary artery abnormalities, so deaths are rare, but they do occur,” Shulman said.

Studies conducted in recent past have suggested that seizures may occur in kids suffering from acute Kawasaki disease.

Jett’s parents have revealed that their child was rushed to hospital when he was just 2, and diagnosed with the disease.

His mother Kelly Preston revealed that the boy recovered following a detoxification program, though he still had “allergies.”

Police in the Bahamas said on Friday that they were told Jett had a history of seizures.