Vol. 140 No. 2797, October - October 2011
Index
- "Sexy" costumes inappropriate for young girls.
- "Quiet" disease shows symptoms late.
- A good scare is hard to shake.
- Do ghosts and the "undead" really exist?
- A natural form of vitamin E.
- A protein previously thought not to exist.
- Diagnosis methods keep improving.
- Family history proves vital.
- Inhalant abuse.
- It seems the stereotype is true.
- October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
- Participation in school athletics.
- Postural control problems.
- Under investigation.
- Diabetes impacts patients and spouses.
- Finding cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, etc.
- Insulin dependence to be eliminated?
- New ways of treating type 1 diabetes.
- New drug therapy improves kidneys.
- Paper strips serve as laboratory.
- Recommended for obese type 2 diabetics.
- Doctors lagging in automation.
- Parent-toddler relationship a factor.
- Three meals a day proves successful formula.
- 3D workouts in a virtual world.
- Gene reprogramming has become possible.
- Overexercising a growing disorder.
- Sit-ups do not reduce belly fat.
- Billions of dollars lost each year.
- Pregnancy can provide needed protection.
- Warriors' angels brought to light.
- Getting ready with vaccinations.
- Memory loss: patients worried, not so doctors.
- Survival improves with new method of CPR.
- Aging brains similar to diseased ones.
- Devices help hearts keep the pace.
- Lack of symptoms could prove deadly.
- Cooling may help after cardiac arrest.
- Genetic variation linked to sudden cardiac arrest.
- Lung flute copes with COPD.
- Solution causes same symptoms as condition.
- Blood test can tip off smokers.
- Cervical ripening more than accelerates.
- Water pipe epidemic among young people.
- Higher radiation doses, fewer treatments.
- New app allows for self-testing.
- Pounded football players sustain brain changes.
- Secondary mutations make cancer more lethal.
- Busting myths about concussions.
- Lower levels linked to testicular varicoceles.
- Used face shields susceptible to breaking.
- The food police have arrived: "... when it comes to policing the American diet this Administration takes the cake (quite literally).".