Valproate Anti-Epilepsy Drug In Pregnancy Linked To Lower IQ In Children

Thursday 16 April 2009 3:00 am

A study found that children born to women who took the anti-epilepsy drug valproate while pregnant tended to score significantly lower in IQ tests by an average of 6 to 9 points at age 3 than children born to mothers who took other anti-epilepsy drugs.

Newborn hearing screen

Thursday 16 April 2009 1:00 am

Newborn hearing screen: Testing of the newborn baby’s ability to hear. Newborn screening of hearing is done with automated auditory brainstem response tests or, less often, with what are called otoacoustic emission or conventional auditory brainstem response tests. The aim is to detect those babies with hearing deficits and teach them sign language in infancy or give them hearing aids or cochlear implants.


The general purpose of all newborn screening tests is to detect treatable diseases. Most of these disorders are genetic (inherited). Which screening tests should be done is decided in the U.S. on a state-by-state basis. The most common screening tests now include those for hypothyroidism (underactivity of the thyroid gland), PKU (phenylketonuria), galactosemia, and sickle cell disease. Only a handful of states in the U.S. mandate newborn hearing screening and only about 15% of all newborns were tested for their hearing in the hospital where they were born.


The overall rate of hearing loss found in one study in the U.S. was about 1 in 330 newborns. The frequency of congenital hearing loss (hearing loss at birth) was 260 per 100,000 births. This is a much higher incidence than for other conditions that are routinely screened in newborns.

MedTerms (TM) is the Medical Dictionary of MedicineNet.com.
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Drug Resistant Tuberculosis Is More Evident In China And Former Soviet States Than In Developed Countries

Thursday 16 April 2009 1:00 am

An article published Online First and in a future edition of The Lancet, documented by Dr Abigail Wright, Dr Dennis Falzon and colleagues from the World Health Organization in Switzerland, reports that in the fourth round of data from the Global Projection on Anti-Tuberculosis Drug Resistance, greate

Common Gene Variant Linked To Increased Stroke Risk, Study

Thursday 16 April 2009 1:00 am

A large team of scientists from the US and Europe examining data from four studies found that millions of people have a genetic variant that makes them more susceptible to ischemic stroke, with about 20 per cent of white people and 10 per cent of black people having at least one copy of the gene, with each copy raising the risk by 30 per cent.

For the skepics who think Health 2.0 tools don’t matter…

Wednesday 15 April 2009 11:43 pm

By Matthew HoltRead this

Stem Cells Freed Type 1 Diabetes Patients From Daily Insulin

Wednesday 15 April 2009 11:00 am

A research team comprising scientists in the US and Brazil implanted recently diagnosed diabetes type 1 patients with their own stem cells so that they became insulin free and then showed that this was due to preserved beta cell function because their C-peptide levels went up significantly after transplant.

What is the Physician’s Role in a Web-based World?

Wednesday 15 April 2009 9:36 am

By JAY PARKINSON, MD With all of the super accessible health information now available, consumers have turned into the equivalent of first year medical students, armed with too much information but not enough objective experience. The ideal doctor patient relationship…

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