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What is Sepsis and why is it so hard to treat?

What is Sepsis and why is it so hard to treat? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

Every year, severe sepsis strikes more than a million Americans1. It’s been estimated that between 28 and 50 percent of these people die2—far more than the number of U.S. deaths from prostate cancer, breast cancer and AIDS combined.
The number of sepsis cases per year has been on the rise in the United States. This is likely due to a combination of factors, including increased awareness and tracking of the condition, an aging population, the increased longevity of people with chronic diseases, the spread of antibiotic-resistant organisms, an upsurge in invasive procedures and broader use of immunosuppressive and chemotherapeutic agents.
https://www.nigms.nih.gov/Education/pages/factsheet_sepsis.aspx
The most common primary sources of infection resulting in sepsis are the lungs, the abdomen, and the urinary tract. Typically, 50% of all sepsis cases start as an infection in the lungs. No definitive source is found in one third to one half of cases.
Infections leading to sepsis are usually bacterial but can be fungal or viral. While gram-negative bacteria were previously the most common cause of sepsis, in the last decade gram-positive bacteria, most commonly staphylococci, are thought to cause more than 50% of cases of sepsis.
Other commonly implicated bacteria include Streptococcus pyogenes, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Klebsiella species. Fungal sepsis accounts for approximately 5% of severe sepsis and septic shock cases; the most common cause of fungal sepsis is infection by Candida species of yeast.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sepsis

What is Sepsis and why is it so hard to treat?

USA: The most expensive country to be sick

Once you see these prices, you won’t wonder why America is on track to spend 20 percent of its GDP on health care by 2025.

A new report illustrates in graphic terms how health insurers in the United States routinely pay higher — often much higher — prices for certain prescription drugs and common surgeries than those in other developed countries.

The report, issued by the insurance industry group International Federation of Health Plans, notes that a normal delivery of a baby in the United States has an average cost to insurers of more than $10,800. That’s five times what a major insurer pays in Spain for the same kind of a delivery, and more than twice what a major insurer pays in Australia. And some insurers in the U.S. are paying $18,000 or more per normal delivery, the report noted.

And U.S. insurers on average pay nearly $2,670 for a month’s supply of the rheumatoid arthritis medication Humira. That’s about twice what major insurers in the United Kingdom and Spain pay, and three times what an insurer in Switzerland pays.

The head of the federation said the disparities seen between prices in the U.S. and the six other countries examined in the report indicates that competition between American health providers has failed to control costs for consumers, as it has in other business sectors.

“You’re paying higher prices for exactly the same unit of care. … It suggests that the market just is not working,” said Tom Sackville, the federation’s chief executive. “Your whole competition structure doesn’t seem to apply in health care.”


Connie’s comments: My home birth in San Jose CAlifornia with a nurse midwife only costs $2500 and my 80-yr old mom’s arthritis is helped by turmeric, ginger, exercise, fish and veggies, lemon grass, garlic and whole foods.

What products are good to smooth out a rough acne prone skin that has Hyperpigmentation?

What products are good to smooth out a rough acne prone skin that has Hyperpigmentation? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

Whole foods and supplements rich in Vit C, A and E. You can also prepare a home made Vit C serum of Vit C powder and water. This you use after cleaning your face. Sleep, hydration and avoidance of unhealthy food. Balance your hormones with veggies and fish. Do a liver detox, water with lemon.

What products are good to smooth out a rough acne prone skin that has Hyperpigmentation?

Billions saved if obesity, tobacco and alcohol are controlled

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Do not fear about the election, the truth will come out and all young healthy people in the USA will vote for their future.

Healthy future generation knows that major deaths in the USA are contributed by the following: obesity, tobacco use and alcohol use.

1965 vs 2008: More people are aware of the effects of tobacco and obesity that death statistics showed lower number of deaths in many heart and cardio-vascular related deaths.

Please take care of your health so we can save billions in health spending.

Strokes Could Be Prevented in 90 Percent of Cases

By David Oliver

Nine out of 10 strokes are preventable, according a global study that shines light on one of the world’s leading causes of death and disability.

New research published Friday in The Lancet confirms 10 risk factors that can be modified account for 90 percent of strokes — which occur when an area of the brain loses blood flow — across the world. The study, dubbed INTERSTROKE, examined nearly 27,000 people in 32 countries across all continents, building on the breadth of an earlier version of the study that identified the same 10 risk factors.

Hypertension, or high blood pressure, is the leading risk factor; others include physical inactivity, obesity, stress, diabetes and a poor diet.

Researchers looked at the proportion of strokes per factor and quantified them through population attributable risk factors. This means that for each one of these 10 risk factors, there’s a corresponding percentage of reduced stroke risk if one risk factor didn’t exist. For example, without hypertension, a person’s stroke risk is down 47.9 percent; 35.8 percent reduction for physical inactivity; and 23.2 percent reduction for poor diet. Since many of these risks can overlap, when added together, this translates to a 90.7 percent reduction probability. This was comparable for each region studied and all age ranges in both men and women.

However, PARs were different across regions. The PAR for hypertension, for instance, was 38.8 percent in western Europe, North America and Australia — but 59.6 percent in Southeast Asia.

Researchers anticipate the study will help overarching initiatives to reduce strokes.

“Our findings will inform the development of global population-level interventions to reduce stroke, and how such programmes may be tailored to individual regions, as we did observe some regional differences in the importance of some risk factors by region,” said study author Salim Yusuf, of the Population Health Research Institute at McMaster University, in a press release. “This includes better health education, more affordable healthy food, avoidance of tobacco and more affordable medication for hypertension and dyslipidaemia.”

Stroke symptoms include difficulty with walking and talking and numbness of the face, arm or leg. About 85 percent of strokes are ischaemic, caused by blood clots. The rest are haemorrhagic, prompted by bleeding in the brain

Obsessive -compulsive disorder controlled by mGluR5 brain receptor

A single chemical receptor in the brain is responsible for a range of symptoms in mice that are reminiscent of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), according to a Duke University study that appears online in the journal Biological Psychiatry.

The findings provide a new mechanistic understanding of OCD and other psychiatric disorders and suggest that they are highly amenable to treatment using a class of drugs that has already been investigated in clinical trials.

“These new findings are enormously hopeful for considering how to approach neurodevelopmental diseases and behavioral and thought disorders,” said the study’s senior investigator Nicole Calakos, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor of neurology and neurobiology at the Duke University Medical Center.

OCD, which affects 3.3 million people in the United States, is an anxiety disorder that is characterized by intrusive, obsessive thoughts and repeated compulsive behaviors that collectively interfere with a person’s ability to function in daily life.

In 2007, Duke researchers (led by Guoping Feng, who is now at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) created a new mouse model of OCD by deleting a gene that codes for Sapap3, a protein that helps organize the connections between neurons so that the cells can communicate.

Similar to the way some people with OCD wash their hands excessively, the Sapap3-lacking mouse grooms itself excessively and shows signs of anxiety. Although researchers praised the new model for its remarkable similarity to a human psychiatric disorder, and have begun using it to study OCD, questions remain about how the loss of the Sapap3 gene leads to the grooming behaviors.

In the new study, Calakos’s team found that overactivity of a single type of receptor for neurotransmitters — mGluR5, found in a brain region involved in compulsive behaviors — was the major driver for the abnormal behaviors. When researchers gave Sapap3-lacking mice a chemical that blocks mGluR5, the grooming and anxiety behaviors abated.

“The reversibility of the symptoms was immediate — on a minute time frame,” Calakos said. In contrast, the original study describing Sapap3-lacking mice found that antidepressants could help treat symptoms but on the time scale of weeks, as is typical with these drugs in patients.

The immediate effects seen in the new study were also surprising, given that the brains of these mice appear developmentally immature and neurodevelopmental diseases are not typically thought of as being easily reversible, Calakos said.

Intriguingly, by taking normal laboratory mice and giving them a drug that boosted mGluR5 activity, Calakos’s team could instantaneously recreate the same excessive grooming and anxiety behaviors they saw in the Sapap3-lacking mice.

The researchers found that without a functioning Sapap3 protein, the mGluR5 receptor is always on. That, in turn, makes the brain regions involved in compulsion overactive. In particular, a group of neurons that give the “green light” for an action, like face-washing, is working overtime. (These same neurons can promote a habit, such as eating sweets, according to a study published by Calakos’s team earlier this year.)

Calakos said that mGluR5 should be considered for the treatment of compulsive behaviors. “But which people and which compulsive behaviors? We don’t know yet,” she added.

Other lines of research have explored targeting mGluR5 with drugs to move its activity up or down in the brain. For example, mGluR5-blockers are being considered for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. But because mGluR5 inhibitors have not always panned out in clinical trials, it may make sense to target different parts of the mGluR5 pathway or identify specific patient subsets, Calakos said. New non-invasive imaging technologies now make it possible to measure mGluR5 activity in humans.

Other authors on the study are Kristen Ade, Yehong Wan, Harold Hamann, Justin O’Hare, Weirui Guo, Anna Quian, Sunil Kumar, Srishti Bhagat, Ramona M. Rodriguiz, William Wetsel, P. Jeffrey Conn, Kafui Dzirasa, and Kimberly Huber.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NS064577, ARRA supplement to NS064577, NS04571, T32NS051156), the Brain and Behavioral Research Foundation, and the FRAXA Research Foundation