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This New Noiseless Blowdryer Needs to Be on Your Radar

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What would you expect from a hairdryer made by a vacuum company? Noise, chaos, bulkiness? Well, let us introduce you to the Supersonic, a new hairdryer from Dyson, purveyors of high-end, sci-fi-looking vacuums. This is Dysons’ first foray into the beauty market, and it is impressive to say the least. The Supersonic is small, looks, and apparently works like a space tool from the future—the head is hollow, the nozzles clip in using magnets and the motor is actually in the handle. BUT the real game-changing feature here is that it’s completely silent. Repeat: IT’S A NOISELESS HAIRDRYER.

RELATED: Top-Selling Korean Beauty Products You’ll Want to Try ASAP

The Supersonic has just been launched in Japan and will debut stateside in August at Sephora. Retailing at $399, it’s a hefty pricetag, but we’re assuming that’s the running price for space gadgets. Plus, the hairdryer basically already has the Kardashian stamp of approval (or it will since Kardashian Glam Crew member and celebrity hairstylist Jen Atkin is on board and ecstatic about it).

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This article originally appeared on InStyle.com/MIMI.




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Got Unwanted Pills? Drug Take-Back Day Is April 30

THURSDAY, April 28, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Have you ever wondered how to get rid of an unfinished bottle of prescription drugs?

Don’t throw it in the trash or flush it down the toilet, advises the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Those methods of dumping your pills can actually be a safety hazard, the DEA says.

Instead, Americans with expired, unused and unwanted prescription drugs can bring them for disposal at drop-off centers nationwide during Drug Take-Back Day, which takes place this year on Saturday, April 30, according to the DEA.

Drop-off sites will be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. You can find one near you by going to the DEA’s Diversion Control website. The service is free and anonymous.

Only pills and patches will be accepted. The DEA will not take liquids, needles or sharps.

The 10 previous take-back events have collected more than 5.5 million pounds (more than 2,750 tons) of pills, according to the DEA.

“This initiative addresses a vital public safety and public health issue. Medicines that languish in home cabinets are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse and abuse,” the DEA said in a news release.

The DEA said rates of prescription drug abuse, overdoses and accidental poisonings due to prescription drugs in the United States are alarmingly high. And, a majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet, previous studies have shown.

More information

To learn more about prescription drug abuse, visit the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse.





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Are People With Rosacea at Higher Risk for Alzheimer’s?

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 28, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Rosacea, the facial redness affecting millions of Americans, may be linked to a higher risk for dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, new research suggests.

However, the study authors were quick to stress that people with rosacea should not be overly worried about the finding.

“It is important for patients to remember that having rosacea does not guarantee that they will develop Alzheimer’s disease,” said lead author Dr. Alexander Egeberg.

“In fact, while the risk in rosacea patients may be slightly increased compared with the general population, the absolute risk [to any one patient] is still quite low,” said Egeberg, of the department of dermato-allergology at Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

According to the National Rosacea Society, roughly 16 million Americans suffer from the skin condition, which is characterized by the appearance of often disfiguring redness and acne-like markings on the face. While treatable, there is no known cure for the disease, which has no clear cause.

In the new study, Egeberg’s team looked at 1997-2012 data from the Danish national health registry system. The nation’s entire population — roughly 5.6 million men and women — were included. About 82,000 had rosacea.

The investigators determined that people with rosacea faced a seven percent greater likelihood for developing any form of dementia, and a 25 percent higher risk for Alzheimer’s disease in particular, than people without rosacea.

Women seemed more affected than men. The data showed that women with rosacea had a 28 percent greater risk for Alzheimer’s, compared with a 16 percent higher odds for men with the skin condition.

Age also seemed to play a role. The study found that Alzheimer’s risk for rosacea patients went up significantly — by 20 percent — for those who were 60 or older when they first enrolled in the study.

Still, Egeberg stressed that the study could only point to an association between dementia and rosacea, and “does not necessarily mean that a causal link exists.”

The findings were published April 28 in the Annals of Neurology.

The new study is not the first to link rosacea to neurological disorders. Earlier this year, Egeberg led an investigation that tied the skin condition to a heightened risk for Parkinson’s disease. Those findings were published in the journal JAMA Neurology.

Egeberg called the new study “the first comprehensive investigation of Alzheimer’s disease in a large population of patients with rosacea.”

So, what might explain the possible rise in dementia risk for people with the condition?

“Certain proteins and inflammatory processes have been found in increased levels in the skin of patients with rosacea,” noted Egeberg, “These have also been linked to dementia, in particular Alzheimer’s disease,” he added. However, “while this may be one potential explanation, we cannot say for sure that this is the cause.”

Dr. Anton Porsteinsson directs the Alzheimer’s Disease Care, Research and Education Program at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, in Rochester, N.Y. He agreed that “there may be common processes that put you at risk for both disorders.”

“The important next step leading from this finding,” he said, “is to better understand the underpinning of both conditions and if treatment targets or lifestyle modifications can be discovered that impact the risk of developing these conditions. It will also be interesting to examine if successful treatment of one condition has an impact on the course of the other.”

In the meantime, Porsteinsson advised patients with rosacea, particularly those 60 and older, to pay attention to any meaningful decline in short-term memory, word-finding, decision-making, and/or navigation in their later years — over 60. “Clinicians should [also] be aware of this risk association,” he said.

More information

There’s more on the skin condition at the National Rosacea Society.





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Births of Triplets, Quadruplets on Decline in U.S.: Report

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 28, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Since 1998, births of three or more babies at once have fallen by more than 40 percent in the United States, new government statistics reveal.

Moreover, declines of 50 percent or more were seen in certain states, and among women aged 25 and older, according to the report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).

The falloff appears to be connected to changes in infertility treatments, which result in multiple births far less often now compared with the 1980s and 1990s, experts said.

“This is a very positive development because the risk for moms and babies will be lower,” said Dr. Tomer Singer. He is director of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

“We’ll have healthier babies born closer to term and fewer health complications related to prematurity — like lung disease, heart disease and infections,” said Singer, who wasn’t involved with the new study.

For the report, Joyce Martin of the NCHS and colleagues examined birth statistics in 46 states and Washington, D.C., from 1998 to 2014.

The researchers found the rate of births of triplets, quadruplets or more babies fell 41 percent — from 7,625 in 1998, when such births peaked, to 4,526 in 2014, reaching a rate of one in every 880 births.

In seven states — Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Rhode Island — the rate of these births fell by at least half, the study findings showed.

One doctor welcomed the new numbers.

“Hopefully, this trend will continue,” said Dr. Jennifer Kawwass, an assistant professor with the Emory Reproductive Center in Atlanta.

Kawwass said advances in in vitro fertilization (IVF) have helped stem multiple births.

“The trend toward reducing the number of embryos transferred and transferring a single embryo when possible during IVF cycles is moving in the right direction,” she said. “Reproductive endocrinologists are making a conscious effort to continue improving.”

Singer said most twins do fine, but higher-number multiples face unique medical challenges. When a woman has three or more embryos, some often don’t survive pregnancy, he explained. They die because of abnormalities or because they are aborted for medical or financial reasons, he said.

Those who survive pregnancy are more likely to be premature, suffer from a variety of illnesses or die in their first year, Singer added.

According to the new report, 7 percent of triplets, quadruplets and higher multiple-births born in 2013 didn’t live past one year, compared to one in 200 singletons (less than 1 percent).

Singer explained that as treatment moved from artificial insemination — in which sperm is injected into a womb — to IVF in a lab, doctors gained more control over the number of eggs fertilized.

Also, he agreed that IVF physicians now transfer fewer embryos into the womb, lowering the risk of multiple births. Given the widespread use of IVF, this make a difference, he said.

“We have more than 200,000 women going through [IVF] on an annual basis in the U.S. alone,” Singer said.

The declines in births of three or more babies at once were highest among white women. Rates were lower for Hispanics and unchanged for blacks, the report found.

Dr. Evan Myers, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University Medical Center, said this may reflect lower numbers of black women undergoing costly infertility treatments. Blacks were less likely than whites to have health insurance, at least before the Affordable Care Act, and tend to have lower incomes, he said. That’s an important consideration for those whose insurance doesn’t cover infertility treatment, Myers added.

The report is published in the April issue of the NCHS Data Brief.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about assisted reproductive technology.





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VIDEO: 10 minute morning workout

 

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WH&F Head Trainer Sheena-Lauren shares her 10 minute workout to kickstart your mornings.



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Hearing Aids May Help Keep Seniors’ Minds Sharp

WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A hearing aid may do more than help you hear better: New research suggests that the devices might also help prevent mental decline in elderly people with hearing loss.

“We know that hearing aids can keep older adults with hearing loss more socially engaged by providing an important bridge to the outside world,” Dr. Anil Lalwani, a professor of otolaryngology/head and neck surgery at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City, said in a center news release.

“In this study, we wanted to determine if they could also slow the effects of aging on cognitive function,” he added.

The study included 100 adults, aged 80 to 99, with hearing loss. The 34 who regularly used a hearing aid had much better scores on tests of mental function than those who didn’t use a hearing aid.

The researchers also found that mental function was directly linked to hearing ability in those who didn’t use a hearing aid.

The study was published online April 25 in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

“Our study suggests that using a hearing aid may offer a simple, yet important, way to prevent or slow the development of dementia by keeping adults with hearing loss engaged in conversation and communication,” Lalwani said.

More than half of people older than 75 have hearing loss. But, fewer than 15 percent of those with hearing loss use a hearing aid, the researchers said.

Previous research has shown that hearing-impaired elderly people are at increased risk for fall- and accident-related death, social isolation and dementia, compared to those without hearing loss.

Previous studies have also found that hearing aid use can improve hearing loss-related social, functional and emotional problems, the researchers said.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders has more on hearing aids.





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1 in 4 Hospitalized Newborns Gets Heartburn Drugs, Despite Risks

WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Despite reported risks, nearly one in four infants in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) are given stomach acid-suppressing drugs, researchers report.

However, they noted that the use of these medications has started to decline some in recent years.

A number of studies have linked the use of stomach acid-suppressing drugs in hospitalized high-risk infants with infections, necrotizing enterocolitis (a serious disease where intestinal tissue begins to die off) and increased risk of death, the researchers said.

These drugs include histamine-2 receptor antagonists such as ranitidine (Zantac), and proton pump inhibitors such as esomeprazole (Nexium).

Researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, analyzed data from 43 children’s hospitals across the United States from 2006 to 2013. They found that nearly 24 percent of roughly 122,000 newborns received either a histamine-2 receptor antagonist or proton pump inhibitor.

“The number is surprising, because there are now multiple studies that say these drugs are associated with harmful effects,” said study author Dr. Jonathan Slaughter, a neonatologist at Nationwide Children’s.

Babies most likely to be given the drugs were those diagnosed with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD); congenital heart disease; and ear, nose and throat conditions, according to the study published April 27 in The Journal of Pediatrics.

But, “there’s actually little evidence that acid suppression helps in the NICU at all,” Slaughter said in a hospital news release.

The researchers did find that the percentage of babies treated with histamine-2 receptor antagonists declined some during the study period. While the percentage of babies treated with proton pump inhibitors rose until 2010, it declined afterward.

“It’s encouraging that doctors are starting to pay attention to the warnings and decrease usage,” Slaughter said.

“In the small premature babies who are prescribed acid-suppressive medications, doctors are waiting longer, until they are a little older. That’s promising,” Slaughter said.

“But I think the numbers should be declining faster, and the research community should continue to devote resources to study the drugs’ effectiveness and safety,” he added.

More information

The Mayo Clinic has more about reflux in infants.





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Gotta Minute? Get a Good Workout

WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Couch potatoes, there are no more excuses.

New research from Canada contends that just one minute of high-intensity exercise can boost your health as much as 45 minutes of a moderate workout. That means you can’t claim that you don’t have enough time to get in shape.

“Most people cite ‘lack of time’ as the main reason for not being active,” said study author Martin Gibala, a professor of kinesiology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. “Our study shows that an interval-based [intense] approach can be more efficient — you can get health and fitness benefits comparable to the traditional approach, in less time.”

The study included 27 inactive men who were randomly assigned to do either intense or moderate workouts three times a week for 12 weeks, or to a control group that did not exercise.

The intense exercise was so-called sprint interval training, which involved three 20-second “all out” sprints on exercise bikes. It also included a two-minute warmup, a three-minute cool-down, and two minutes of easy cycling for recovery between the intense sprints. Total time: 10 minutes per workout.

The men in the moderate workout group did 45 minutes of continuous cycling at a moderate pace, plus the same warmup and cool-down as those in the sprint interval group.

After 12 weeks, both exercise groups had similar measures of heart/lung fitness and insulin sensitivity, a measure of how the body regulates blood sugar.

Interval-based training “is a very time-efficient workout strategy. Brief bursts of intense exercise are remarkably effective,” Gibala said in a university news release.

“The basic principles apply to many forms of exercise. Climbing a few flights of stairs on your lunch hour can provide a quick and effective workout. The health benefits are significant,” he added.

The study findings were published online April 27 in the journal PLoS One

More information

The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute offers a guide to physical activity.





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Sleep Doesn’t Come Easy to Those With Brain Injuries

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Many people who suffer a traumatic brain injury struggle with sleep problems they may not be aware of, Swiss researchers report.

These patients also can suffer daytime sleepiness for as long as 18 months after their injury, the small study found.

And these sleep problems may adversely affect daytime performance at work or school, the researchers said.

“Sleep-wake disorders are highly prevalent after traumatic brain injury of any severity but are difficult to diagnose because many affected patients are unaware of their disorder,” said lead researcher Dr. Lukas Imbach.

It’s not known why sleep problems in traumatic brain injury patients are underestimated, he said.

Every year in the United States, 1.7 million people suffer a traumatic brain injury, and evidence suggests that number is rising worldwide, the researchers said.

Sleep problems are known to be related to mood changes and depression, and also to learning and memory difficulties, said Imbach, who’s with the department of neurology at University Hospital Zurich.

“A link between these neuropsychiatric problems and sleep disturbances after traumatic brain injury is absolutely possible, although our study did not test this hypothesis,” he noted.

This study provides evidence that sleep-wake disturbances after traumatic brain injury persist over a long period of time, Imbach said, but they are neglected by the majority of affected patients.

“Therefore, we believe that our observations are important for any clinicians and neurologists involved in the management of [brain] trauma patients,” he said.

The report was published April 27 in the journal Neurology.

For the study, Imbach and his colleagues followed 31 people for 18 months who had experienced a first traumatic brain injury. Their injuries ranged from mild to severe. The researchers compared these patients with 42 healthy people.

Imbach’s team found that 67 percent of the brain-injured patients suffered from excessive daytime sleepiness, compared with 19 percent of healthy people. In addition, when asked about sleepiness during the day, people with a brain injury said they didn’t feel any sleepier than those without a brain injury.

People with mild traumatic brain injury were as likely to have sleep problems as people with severe brain injury, Imbach said. No other medical conditions accounted for these sleep problems, he said.

The researchers also found that brain-injured patients needed an average of eight hours of sleep a night, compared with healthy people, who needed an average of seven hours of sleep each night.

Dr. Brian Edlow is a member of the neurocritical care staff at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “Doctors who take care of patients with post-traumatic sleep disorders often rely on patients to report their own symptoms when deciding whether to perform a formal diagnostic sleep study,” said Edlow, who co-authored an accompanying journal editorial.

“However, if patients are not recognizing their own sleep disorders or their own daytime sleepiness, we as clinicians need to rethink our approach to the assessment and diagnosis of post-traumatic sleep disorders,” he said.

Earlier studies have suggested that as many as 50 percent of patients with traumatic brain injury experience sleep disturbances or daytime sleepiness. And, since many of these patients may not recognize their own symptoms, the fundamental question is whether all patients with traumatic brain injury should be tested for sleep problems, Edlow said.

Additional studies are needed to establish the link between sleep-wake disturbances and impaired daytime performance at work or school, which is the most important indicator of how these disturbances are affecting a patient’s quality of life, Edlow said.

More information

Visit the Brainline.org for more on traumatic brain injuries.





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Psoriasis Tied to Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The chronic skin disease psoriasis may be linked to excess weight and type 2 diabetes, results of a new study suggest.

Danish researchers found that people with type 2 diabetes had more than 50 percent greater odds of having psoriasis compared to people without diabetes.

The study also found that the rate of psoriasis went up with increasing weight. For example, obese people with a body mass index (BMI) over 35 had almost double the odds of psoriasis than normal weight people did. BMI is a body fat measurement based on height and weight. A BMI of 30 or over is considered obese.

Exactly how these conditions might be connected isn’t clear, but the study authors suggested that genetics, smoking, drinking alcohol, or inflammation might play a role.

“Psoriasis is a complex disorder,” said lead researcher Dr. Ann Sophie Lonnberg, of the University of Copenhagen. “The genetic background for the disease and its many comorbidities [co-existing conditions] have not yet been fully uncovered,” she said.

This study can’t prove that psoriasis causes type 2 diabetes or obesity or vice versa, Lonnberg added. However, the study suggests the association between psoriasis and obesity could partly be tied to a common genetic cause, she explained.

“The reason psoriasis and obesity are associated is not only due to a common lifestyle, but they are also associated due to common genes,” Lonnberg said. “It is important to treat psoriasis and obesity and diabetes, since they are risk factors for heart disease and could have serious effects on overall health.”

For the study, Lonnberg and her colleagues collected data on nearly 34,000 twins, aged 20 to 71. Just over 4 percent had psoriasis, slightly more than 1 percent had type 2 diabetes and over 6 percent were obese, the findings showed.

Among the nearly 460 individuals with type 2 diabetes, about 8 percent also had psoriasis. Among people without type 2 diabetes, just 4 percent had psoriasis, the investigators found.

People with psoriasis tended to weigh more than those without the skin condition, the researchers said. The risk for obesity was also greater among those with psoriasis — 11 percent of people with psoriasis were obese, but only 8 percent of non-obese study participants had psoriasis, the findings showed.

The researchers also looked at 720 twin pairs in which one twin had psoriasis and the other didn’t. The twins with psoriasis weighed more than the twins without psoriasis, and were also more likely to be obese, the study found. The prevalence of type 2 diabetes, however, was the same in twins with and without psoriasis, according to the report.

The study was published in the April 27 online edition of the journal JAMA Dermatology.

“Psoriasis is not just a disease of the skin — patients and health care professionals need to be aware of systemic health issues associated with psoriasis,” said Dr. Joel Gelfand. He’s an associate professor of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia, and author of an accompanying journal editorial.

Other studies have suggested that people with psoriasis are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes even if they don’t have major risk factors for the blood sugar disease, and that this risk increases with the severity of the psoriasis, Gelfand said.

“Some of this risk may be due to shared genetics between psoriasis and diabetes. It is also thought that chronic inflammation in psoriasis may predispose patients to diabetes,” Gelfand explained.

He suggested that people with psoriasis — particularly those aged 40 to 70 with more extensive skin disease — should receive medical screenings for diabetes.

“Patients with psoriasis who are overweight or obese may lower their risk of diabetes while making the skin disease less active if they are able to achieve and maintain a more healthy body weight,” Gelfand said.

Another doctor thinks genetics may help explain what she has seen in her own practice.

“I have seen that psoriasis is linked with diabetes, which suggests that a genetic link may help explain why it’s a lot harder to control diabetes in patients with psoriasis,” said Dr. Doris Day. She is a dermatologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

“We are understanding more about psoriasis and coming up with better treatments for it,” she said. “If you have psoriasis, you need to see a dermatologist, a cardiologist and an endocrinologist to make sure you have other conditions under control,” Day advised.

More information

For more on psoriasis, visit the American Academy of Dermatology.





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