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Make Toy Safety a Top Concern

THURSDAY, Dec. 24, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Although toys bring joy to many kids on Christmas morning, about 252,000 children were treated in U.S. emergency rooms for toy-related injuries last year, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

“That’s a large number of potentially avoidable injuries. Children should be enjoying their time with toys, not be placed in jeopardy,” Dr. Natalie Lane, medical director of the emergency department at Children’s Hospital of Georgia, said in a hospital news release.

Seventy percent of those cases involved children 12 and younger, according to the CPSC.

Parents should choose holiday toys with care and heed safety guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics. For instance:

  • Choose toys that match a child’s age, abilities, skills and interest level. Giving younger children toys that are too advanced for them may put them at risk. Also, before buying or allowing a child to use a new toy, read the instructions carefully.
  • If children get a new bike, skateboard, scooter or other riding items, make sure they also get a helmet.
  • To reduce the risk of burns and electrical shocks, don’t buy plug-in electrical devices or toys for kids younger than 10.
  • Don’t give young children toys with pull strings longer than 12 inches because of the risk of strangulation. Also, remove tags, strings and ribbons from toys for children younger than 8. Be aware that young children can also choke on small parts in toys or games or suffocate on uninflated or broken balloons.
  • Watch out for button batteries and powerful magnets, which can cause serious stomach and intestinal problems — even death — if swallowed by children. Besides toys, these batteries and magnets are also used in remote controls, musical greeting cards and other small electronic devices. If a child swallows a button battery or magnet, seek immediate medical help, Lane said.
  • Supervise play and store toys in a designated location, with older children’s toys out of the reach of little kids. Use a toy box with no lid or a lightweight, non-locking lid and ventilation holes.

More information

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has more about toy safety.





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Marijuana Chemical May Help Prevent Epileptic Seizures in Kids, Young Adults

THURSDAY, Dec. 24, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A pill containing cannabidiol (CBD), a key ingredient in marijuana, may reduce seizures for children and young adults with epilepsy, new research suggests.

However, the researchers and outside experts agreed that more investigation is needed before the treatment could be approved for patients.

The finding stems from an investigation led by Dr. Orrin Devinsky, director of the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City. Conducted during 2014 and 2015, the study involved more than 200 patients at 11 epilepsy care centers across the United States.

Patients were between the ages of 1 and 30, and all had been diagnosed with a form of treatment-resistant epilepsy.

All were given CBD as a pill, starting at a dose of between 2-5 milligrams per kilogram (mg/kg) of body weight per day. Doses were gradually increased to a maximum of between 25 and 50 mg/kg per day over the course of a three-month treatment period.

The result: a nearly 37 percent decline, on average, in the number of seizures experienced on a monthly basis.

That meant that for patients who had been experiencing an average of 30 seizures per month pre-treatment, the number fell to under 16 monthly seizures by the end of the study.

CBD treatment appeared to be both safe and generally well-tolerated, Devinsky’s team said. However, some patients did experience mild forms of drowsiness, loss of appetite, diarrhea, fatigue and/or convulsions, while 20 patients experienced serious side effects, including the advent of long-lasting and/or closely timed seizures.

Overall, however, “we are very encouraged by our trial results,” Devinsky said in a Langone news release. “But before we raise hopes for families who regularly deal with the devastation of treatment-resistant epilepsy, more research, including further studies through our ongoing randomized controlled trial, are needed to definitively recommend CBD as a treatment to patients with uncontrolled seizures.”

The investigating team plans to continue its research. In the meantime, however, Devinsky warned parents of children with epilepsy against embarking on marijuana experimentation on their own.

“I empathize with parents who are looking for answers and will try anything to help their children suffering the devastating effects of intractable epilepsy,” he said. “But we must let the science, and not anecdotal success stories and high media interest, lead this national discussion. Taking CBD in a controlled medical setting is vastly different from going to a state where medical marijuana is legal and experimenting with dosing and CBD strains.”

One expert in epilepsy care said the findings were “exciting,” but only a first step.

“The results of this study stand as a steppingstone toward further studies evaluating the use of marijuana in the treatment of epilepsy,” said Dr. Scott Stevens, attending neurologist at North Shore-LIJ’s Comprehensive Epilepsy Care Center in Great Neck, N.Y.

“Randomized controlled trials are still required prior to using cannabidiol as a potential treatment of our epileptic patients,” he said.

More information

There’s more on the medicinal uses of marijuana at the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.





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All High-Risk Patients Should Get Blood Pressure Meds: Study

THURSDAY, Dec. 24, 2015 (HealthDay News) — People known to be at high risk for a heart attack or stroke should be given blood pressure-lowering medications no matter their blood pressure level, new research suggests.

Current protocols recommend starting medication when readings reach specific levels. The threshold used to be 130/85 mm Hg. But it was recently shifted to 140/90 mm Hg for non-elderly individuals, and 150/90 for the elderly.

The newest and latest call for a new treatment regimen follows a review of 123 studies conducted between 1966 and 2015 that, in total, involved more than 600,000 people.

The new report was published in the Dec. 23 issue of The Lancet.

“Our findings clearly show that treating blood pressure to a lower level than currently recommended could greatly reduce the incidence of cardiovascular disease and potentially save millions of lives if the treatment was widely implemented,” lead author Kazem Rahimi said in a journal news release. Rahimi is deputy director of The George Institute for Global Health at the University of Oxford in England.

At issue are patients with a history of heart disease or heart failure, kidney disease and/or diabetes. These patients are considered at “high risk” for heart attack or stroke.

The overall finding of the new study: For every 10 mm Hg drop in systolic blood pressure achieved through medication, heart disease risk dropped by as much as one-fifth. This was true regardless of the patients’ blood pressure when treatment began, even if it was below 130/85.

The systolic number, the top number in a blood pressure reading, measures pressure in the arteries when the heart beats; the diastolic number, the bottom number, measures pressure between heartbeats.

“The results provide strong support for reducing systolic blood pressure to less than 130 mm Hg, and blood pressure-lowering drugs should be offered to all patients at high risk of having a heart attack or stroke, whatever their reason for being at risk,” Rahimi said.

More than 1 billion people worldwide have high blood pressure, a condition that claims 9.4 million lives a year, the study authors pointed out in the news release.

More information

To learn more about blood pressure medications, visit the American Heart Association.





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Losing Pancreas Fat May Treat Type 2 Diabetes

By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Dec. 24, 2015 (HealthDay News) — British researchers say that losing 1 gram of fat from the pancreas can reverse type 2 diabetes.

The catch? No one has yet figured out how to lose weight just from the pancreas. And, this small study’s findings suggest that to lose that much fat from the pancreas, someone with type 2 diabetes would need to have weight-loss surgery, or diet long enough to lose about 15 percent of their body weight.

While the study doesn’t promise a quick fix for type 2 diabetes, it does add to the understanding of the disease, according to the study authors.

“In people with type 2 diabetes, weight loss over eight weeks [after weight-loss surgery] caused pancreas fat to decrease and insulin production to normalize. But in people with normal sugar control, exactly the same weight loss caused no change in pancreas fat,” said Dr. Roy Taylor, a professor of medicine and metabolism at Newcastle University in England.

“We can conclude that a particular pool of fat in the pancreas has built up in type 2 diabetes, and draining this pool allows function to normalize,” Taylor said.

Findings from the study were published online recently in the journal Diabetes Care.

Type 2 diabetes affects more than 9 percent of the U.S. population, according to background information in the study. The exact cause is still unknown, the researchers said. Experts do know that insulin resistance plays a role in its development.

Insulin is a hormone necessary for the body to use the sugars from food as fuel. When someone is insulin-resistant, the body doesn’t use insulin efficiently. This increases the body’s demand for insulin. Eventually, the cells that produce insulin — beta cells in the pancreas — can’t keep up with demand, and that’s when type 2 diabetes develops, the study authors said.

Excess weight is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes, but it isn’t the only one. “It is very clear that individuals differ in their susceptibility to type 2 diabetes. If an individual is not genetically susceptible to the disease, they can become very obese without fat building up in the pancreas — 80 percent of obese people do not have type 2 diabetes,” Taylor said.

The new study included 18 people who’d had type 2 diabetes for fewer than 15 years. The average time since diagnosis was about seven years. For comparison, the researchers also recruited nine people with similar weights and ages, but without type 2 diabetes.

The researchers used a novel type of MRI that could measure fat lost from the pancreas and from the liver.

Eight weeks after surgery, weight loss was similar in both groups — about 13 percent of initial weight. But, when the researchers compared fat lost from the pancreas and liver, they saw a big difference between the groups. People with type 2 diabetes lost weight from the pancreas and the liver, while people without diabetes saw little change in the amount of fat in these organs.

Insulin production returned to normal in people with type 2 diabetes, the study found. In those without diabetes, the research showed no changes in insulin production.

Although the study looked at weight loss brought about by surgery, Taylor said dieting to lose about 15 percent of your body mass would probably produce similar results.

Dr. Joel Zonszein is director of the Clinical Diabetes Center at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. He said, “In people who have fat where it doesn’t belong — in the pancreas and in the liver — removing that fat improves diabetes. Even after seven years or more, the pancreas can recover very nicely.”

Taylor and colleagues “were able to show an amazing restoration of the beta cells. They’re not dying, they’re just knocked out, and can come back to normal. That’s really nicely documented in this study,” Zonszein explained.

“This study shows how a dramatic change in weight can change metabolism and improve type 2 diabetes,” he added.

More information

Learn more about the risk of type 2 diabetes from the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.





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More Computer Time May Be Causing Nearsightedness in U.S. Kids

By Julianne Cuba
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Dec. 24, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Children who spend lots of time indoors and on computers and other electronic devices may be raising their risk for nearsightedness, a panel of U.S. ophthalmology experts suggests.

The prevalence of Americans with nearsightedness — also known as myopia — has nearly doubled over the last 50 years, the ophthalmologists noted.

The ophthalmologists suspect the increase is due to “near work” — focusing on something close to your eyes — and the decreased amount of time spent outdoors in natural light.

“Kids are spending much more time doing indoor activities with their cellphones, iPads, computers, and so on,” said Dr. Rohit Varma, director of the University of Southern California Eye Institute in Los Angeles.

“Especially when children are young, when they play these games indoors where they’re seeing things very close to them and doing it in low-light level — that combination of doing near activities in low light is what contributes to these children becoming very nearsighted,” Varma said.

A panel of 10 ophthalmology experts discussed the global increase of childhood myopia at the American Academy of Ophthalmology’s (AAO) recent annual meeting in Las Vegas. Information presented at meetings is usually viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Anyone can be nearsighted, but it’s more common in people whose parents are nearsighted, said Dr. K. David Epley, a spokesman for the AAO. The condition is also much more prevalent in industrialized and urban areas than in rural areas, he added.

Children of East Asian descent are genetically predisposed to nearsightedness, but children’s habits in those regions may be increasing the rates of myopia even more. The current rate of myopia in young people in China is 90 percent compared to about 10 to 20 percent 60 years ago, the experts said. That compares to a rate of 42 percent for Americans between the ages of 12 and 54, according to previous research.

The ophthalmologists noted the difference in Chinese and American work habits. Children in China spend up to 12 hours a day doing near work, compared to their U.S. peers, who spend about nine hours a day on near work, the eye experts said.

Dr. David Hunter, chief of ophthalmology at Boston Children’s Hospital, explained that nearsightedness is when your eyes are capable of focusing up close but not far away. It generally happens when the eye grows too long, and the best focus point no longer aligns well with the area at the back of the eye called the retina. Hunter likened the retina to the film of a camera.

If the lens isn’t focusing the light on the film, then the image is going to be blurry, Hunter said. In the case of myopia, the retina is too far away from the focal point until objects are closer.

While myopia is not reversible — or even stoppable — its progression can be slowed, the eye experts said.

“We want to encourage our kids to read, but it’s not a great thing to read for hours straight without looking up from the page,” Epley said. “Encourage kids to take breaks. Every 20 minutes, take a 20-second break. Get your eyes off the page with something that’s farther away.”

Although there are no conclusive studies that say dim light is harmful, Epley said, it does require more accommodation and focus, which can lead to a strain on the eyes. So always make sure your kids are reading in bright light.

There’s no specific number of hours shown to be too much time spent on near work, Varma said. But having kids spend more time playing outdoors is an important way to help prevent myopia, he noted, adding that playing outside may benefit every aspect of a child’s growth, including their eyes.

“When you’re outdoors there’s more stuff that’s far away, and when you’re indoors the furthest thing away is still probably about 20 feet away,” Hunter pointed out.

Another benefit to kids spending time outdoors is the exposure to natural light. If kids do need to stay indoors, having large, glass windows in the home is helpful so kids can still get the benefit of seeing objects at a distance, and get exposure to bright light, Varma said.

More information

To learn more about myopia, head to the U.S. National Eye Institute.





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A Fast 6-Move Circuit to Get You Total-Body Toned

Gallery_6 Power Moves to tone your body

Whether you’re a mom chasing after your kids or a busy executive chasing hard deadlines (or both!), we all have one thing in common: we don’t have much free time. As the holiday season starts to wind down and resolution-season begins to ramp up, now is the best time to have this routine handy.

Here, I share my favorite total-body toning moves that get the job done fast. As you re-commit to your fitness goals, there will be days in the coming weeks when you just don’t have the time for say, a full group fitness class. But you will have time for this quick circuit.

You’ll complete 10-12 reps of each exercise. Rest for 1-2 minutes, and then repeat the circuit 2-3 more times.

RELATED: Train Like an Olympian With Lindsey Vonn’s Lower-Body Workout

Medicine ball squat to throw

Stand with your feet slightly wider than shoulder-width apart, about 2 feet from a sturdy wall. While holding a medium-weight medicine ball at your chest, squat down to parallel and as you’re standing back up, extend your arms to release the medicine ball up and into the wall. Catch the medicine ball as it comes down and move right back into your squat.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Starfish to crunch

Setup: Start with your right knee and right hand on the floor, with your body rotated out externally. Hold a dumbbell in your left hand straight above your head, and straighten your left leg so that your foot is about 6 inches off the floor. From here, bend your left leg and lower your left arm into the left side of your body, squeezing your left obliques. Return to your starting position and once you’ve completed all reps for that side, repeat on the other side.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Front lunge with wood chop

Stand straight up with your feet together, holding a dumbbell over your left shoulder. Step out with your right foot and bring the dumbbell across your body and onto the other side of your right leg as you lunge down. Your back knee should lower to about 1 inch from the floor. Step your right foot back and bring the dumbbell back over your left shoulder to complete the rep. Repeat all reps on this side before switching to the other side.

RELATED: Drop an Entire Dress Size With This Speedy Strength Workout

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Suicides

While holding two dumbbells at your sides, stand straight up with your feet shoulder-width apart, chest out, and shoulders back. From here, squat down and place the dumbbells on the floor. Jump back into a push-up position, perform a push-up, and then jump your feet back to your hands. Lastly, stand straight up again and this time bring the dumbbells over your head for a shoulder press. Bring your hands back down by your sides and repeat for the allotted reps.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Push-up to rotation

Get into a plank position with your arms straight and two dumbbells in your hands, placed on the floor. From here, perform a push-up. When you’ve complete the push-up, rotate your body to the right, allowing your feet to roll over to their sides and raise your left arm straight up above your body. Return to plank position and repeat on the other side.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

RELATED: The Better Sex Workout

Walking lunge with medicine ball rotations

Stand with your feet together, shoulders back, and chest out. While holding a medicine ball at your chest, step out with your right foot into a lunge. Hover here with your back knee about 1-inch from the floor, and rotate your upper torso to the right. Return to center and step your left leg forward to meet your right foot. Repeat on the other side and alternate through until you’ve completed your allotted reps.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Looking for a good way to close out this workout? Check out The 5 Best Stretches to Finish a Workout (and Stop Soreness)

Jennifer Cohen is a leading fitness authority, TV personality, entrepreneur, and best-selling author of the new book, Strong is the New Skinny. With her signature, straight-talking approach to wellness, Jennifer was the featured trainer on The CW’s Shedding for the Wedding, mentoring the contestants to lose hundreds of pounds before their big day, and she appears regularly on NBC’s TodayExtraThe Doctors, and Good Morning America. Connect with Jennifer on FacebookTwitterG+, and Pinterest.




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New Drug for Severe Form of Arthritis Shows Promise in Trial

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A drug recently approved for the skin condition psoriasis may also help people with a debilitating form of arthritis that attacks the spine, a new clinical trial finds.

The condition, called ankylosing spondylitis, causes inflammation around the vertebrae, which can lead to chronic pain and stiffness in the back and neck — and, in some people, eventually cause some vertebrae to fuse into an immobile position.

In the new trial, researchers found that a drug called secukinumab (Cosentyx) helped control symptoms in 61 percent of spondylitis patients who were given the highest dose.

Experts said the results, published Dec. 24 in the New England Journal of Medicine, could open up a new option for managing spondylitis.

And new options are needed, said Dr. Scott Zashin, a fellow with the American College of Rheumatology who was not involved in the study.

“Currently, there are two classes of medications used to treat [spondylitis],” Zashin said.

Namely, they are nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as prescription-strength ibuprofen and naproxen; and drugs called TNF-blockers, which include Humira, Remicade and Enbrel.

For some patients, Zashin said, those medications are enough. But others get no benefit.

Cosentyx, which is taken by injection, works differently from TNF-blockers, Zashin explained. Both drugs block part of the immune system’s inflammatory response, but they have different targets: Cosentyx inhibits a protein called IL-17, which tends to be elevated in people with spondylitis.

So, Zashin said, that “unique mechanism of action” could offer an alternative to spondylitis patients who don’t respond to standard therapy.

Almost 3 million Americans have ankylosing spondylitis, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disease is usually diagnosed in young people, before the age of 40.

The exact cause is unknown, but spondylitis does involve abnormal immune system activity that triggers chronic inflammation in the spine. A few gene variants have been linked to an increased risk of the disease — and it’s thought that some mix of genes and environment is to blame, according to the Spondylitis Association of America.

One theory, the association says, is that spondylitis arises when the defenses of the intestines start breaking down, and bacteria escape into the area of the sacroiliac joints. Those are the joints where the base of the spine meets the pelvis, and where people with spondylitis commonly have pain.

That theory stems, in part, from studies that have linked frequent gastrointestinal infections to a heightened risk of spondylitis.

While anti-TNF drugs do help many people with spondylitis, about one-third of patients “do not respond at all,” said lead researcher Dr. Dominique Baeten, a professor at the University of Amsterdam, in the Netherlands.

Plus, he said, TNF-blockers reduce inflammation, but do not halt the progress of structural damage to the spine. There is preliminary evidence that Cosentyx might, Baeten said.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Cosentyx for treating psoriasis — an inflammatory skin condition that is also caused by abnormal immune activity.

The FDA has not yet OK’d the drug for ankylosing spondylitis. But European regulators approved it for that indication last month.

The current study, which was funded by Cosentyx maker Novartis, involved 590 adults with ankylosing spondylitis from around the world.

The patients were randomly assigned to receive one of two doses of the drug, or a placebo. For the first few weeks, the Cosentyx patients either took a weekly injection, or had three infusions of the drug; after that, they had one injection every four weeks.

Four months in, 61 percent of patients on the higher drug dose — 150 milligrams — had responded to the treatment. That meant they’d had at least a 20 percent improvement in how they rated problems such as back pain, morning stiffness and difficulty with daily activities.

The improvements were still apparent after one year, Baeten said.

“This drug means new hope for patients with ankylosing spondylitis, as we now have not only more therapeutic options, but also a good option for patients who’ve failed a TNF-blocker,” Baeten said.

There can be side effects: Since the drug affects the immune system, infections are a potential risk. In this study, Cosentyx patients tended to get more infections, including yeast infections, than patients on the placebo.

Zashin saw the results as encouraging for spondylitis patients who are not getting relief from current treatments. “There is an entirely new class of drugs on the horizon that might be of benefit for them,” he said.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health has more on ankylosing spondylitis.





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Hepatitis C May Be Tied to Greater Risk for Parkinson’s Disease

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Hepatitis C is an infection that affects the liver, but people with the virus may also be at greater risk for Parkinson’s disease, a new report shows.

“Many factors clearly play a role in the development of Parkinson’s disease, including environmental factors,” study author Dr. Chia-Hung Kao, of China Medical University in Taichung, Taiwan, said in a news release from the American Academy of Neurology.

“This nationwide study, using the National Health Insurance Research Database of Taiwan, suggests that hepatitis caused specifically by the hepatitis C virus may increase the risk of developing [Parkinson’s] disease,” Kao said.

However, the association seen in the study does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship. And “more research is needed to investigate this link,” Kao added.

One expert in Parkinson’s disease agreed that it’s too soon to draw firm conclusions from the study.

“While these results are intriguing, it is too early to suggest that people living with hepatitis C should be concerned about their risk of developing Parkinson’s,” Beth Vernaleo, associate director of research programs at the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation, said in a foundation news release.

“That said, this study highlights one potential risk factor, which should be further investigated,” she added. “If the finding holds up to further studies, it could have significant public health implications for the early screening and treatment of hepatitis C.”

For the study, researchers divided nearly 50,000 people with hepatitis into three groups: 71 percent were infected with hepatitis B; 21 percent had hepatitis C; and 8 percent had both. The study also included just under 200,000 people without hepatitis.

The researchers followed the participants for an average of 12 years. Among those with hepatitis, 270 developed Parkinson’s disease. Of these patients, 120 had hepatitis C, according to the report published online Dec. 23 in the journal Neurology.

Among the participants who didn’t have hepatitis, 1,060 developed Parkinson’s disease, the investigators found.

After taking age, gender and other health factors (such as diabetes) into account, the study authors concluded that people with hepatitis C are nearly 30 percent more likely to develop Parkinson’s than those without the virus. However, the findings suggested that people with hepatitis B or both hepatitis B and hepatitis C were not at greater risk for Parkinson’s.

An estimated 150 million people worldwide have hepatitis C, according to the World Health Organization. The virus, which can be spread via contaminated needles or passed on during childbirth, can cause serious complications. But many infected people have few symptoms and are unaware they have the condition.

Because hepatitis can also be transmitted through blood transfusions, all donated blood in the United States has been screened for the virus since 1992.

More information

You can find out more about hepatitis C from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.





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Noisy Electronic Toys May Hamper Babies’ Verbal Skills

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) — As parents scramble to find the perfect gifts for their children this Christmas, new research suggests that electronic toys that light up, talk or play music might slow language development in toddlers.

These pricey toys may seem ideal for developing minds, but researchers at Northern Arizona University said they found just the opposite: when toys talk and sing, babies don’t.

“These results provide a basis for discouraging the purchase of electronic toys that are promoted as educational and are often quite expensive,” according to the report published in the Dec. 23 online edition of JAMA Pediatrics.

The study involved 26 pairs of parents and their children aged 10 months to 16 months. Using audio equipment, the researchers recorded the sounds in the participants’ homes to monitor their playtime.

Each family received three sets of toys. The first set included electronic toys, such as a baby laptop, a talking farm and a baby cellphone. The second set contained traditional toys, including wooden puzzles, a shape-sorter and rubber blocks with pictures. The participants also received five board-books with farm animal, shape or color themes.

The electronic toys that talked, lit up and sang songs were less beneficial for language development than the traditional toys or books, the researchers said. These flashy and popular playthings produced a lower quantity and quality of language among the babies than other traditional toys, the study revealed.

While the children were playing with electronic toys, their parents spoke less. There were also fewer verbal exchanges between the parents and their babies, and the parents responded less often to the kids. The babies were also less vocal and produced fewer content-specific words while playing with noisy electronic toys, the researchers, who were led by Anna Sosa, said in a journal news release.

Books, on the other hand, produced the most verbal exchanges between parents and their babies, the investigators found.

“These results add to the large body of evidence supporting the potential benefits of book reading with very young children. They also expand on this by demonstrating that play with traditional toys may result in communicative interactions that are as rich as those that occur during book reading,” the study authors wrote.

The researchers acknowledged that their study was small and lacked diversity; most of the families came from similar backgrounds. But they suggested that parents with busy schedules should try to make the most of the quality time they do have with their young children.

“Electronic toys that make noises or light up are extremely effective at commanding children’s attention by activating their orienting reflex. This primitive reflex compels the mind to focus on novel visual or auditory stimuli,” Dr. Jenny Radesky, of the University of Michigan Medical School, and Dr. Dimitri Christakis, of Seattle Children’s Hospital, wrote in a related editorial in the journal.

“Conversational turns during play do more than teach children language,” the editorialists explained. “They lay the groundwork for literacy skills, teach role-playing, give parents a window into their child’s developmental stage and struggles, and teach social skills such as turn-taking and accepting others’ leads.”

The bottom line: toys with lots of bells and whistles may be appealing, but they could actually prevent children from engaging in the world around them and making what they learn meaningful, Radesky and Dimitri concluded.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics has more on early childhood language development.





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New HIV Treatment Shows Promise in Early Research

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Preliminary new research raises the prospect that a recently discovered antibody — an important component of the immune system — could be enlisted to boost the body’s response to HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

A single injection of the antibody, currently dubbed VRC01, dramatically reduced the level of HIV in the blood of people who hadn’t yet been given antiretroviral drug treatment (ART). ART is the current standard treatment for managing HIV infections, according to the study’s authors from the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md.

But in people who’d already been treated with ART, the antibody injection had no effect on HIV levels, presumably because the ART therapy had already reduced the levels of HIV virus in their blood, the researchers said.

And the researchers were quick to note that the study was small and even patients who respond may not be completely rid of HIV.

Still, “this offers a potential alternative to antiretroviral therapy,” said Julian Ma, director of the Institute for Infection and Immunity at St. George’s Hospital Medical School in London. “We desperately need them given our dependence on a relatively small number of antiretroviral therapy drugs.”

Eventually, this new approach could be combined with other treatments aimed at lowering levels of HIV in the body and preventing dangerous strains from emerging, Ma said. He wasn’t part of the research but was familiar with the study findings.

But many questions still remain. The study was small, and at this stage, little is known about the side effects, benefits and potential cost of the treatment. Still, experts are hopeful about the early results that suggest patients can tolerate treatment with the antibody well.

The study appears in the Dec. 23 issue of Science Translational Medicine.

The new research included 14 people with HIV. Six were already receiving ART therapy.

Those six who were already being treated received two infusions of the new antibody treatment, but didn’t have a significant response to the treatment, the study showed.

People who hadn’t yet received HIV treatment — eight patients — were given a single infusion of the drug, the study said.

Levels of the virus in the blood dropped or even vanished in six out of the eight HIV patients who hadn’t been taking ART. That doesn’t mean they were cured of HIV. The virus still remains in the body, just at undetectable levels. Those who didn’t respond to the treatment had strains of HIV that were resistant to the treatment, the study authors said.

The researchers didn’t see signs of side effects. However, the research is in the early stages, representing only the first of three stages of research needed before drugs are typically approved in the United States. Future studies need to look in greater detail at how the drugs work in people who have varying levels of the virus, and what concentration of the antibody is most effective at suppressing the virus, the study authors noted.

The treatment’s costs are unknown, although Ma said these kinds of drugs are generally expensive, which potentially limits their use in poor countries.

Dr. James Crowe, director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Center in Nashville, Tenn., said the study is impressive and promising. But he cautioned that the effects of single doses of the antibody treatment are “relatively minor and temporary,” and some patients quickly developed immunity to it. As a result, the antibody on its own isn’t likely to work as a long-term treatment, he said.

Ma praised the study but also cautioned about the challenge of HIV strains that are immune to the treatment. “This points to the need to combine this antibody with other antibodies or drugs,” he said.

Going forward, he said, the treatment could be used in conjunction with existing medications, or in cases when those drugs don’t work. Or, Ma said, it could help HIV-infected pregnant women avoid transmitting the virus to their unborn children.

More information

For an overview of HIV treatments, try AIDS.gov.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1OLDpgX