Monday, Feb. 09, 1998
Health Report
By Janice M. Horowitz
THE GOOD NEWS
LUNG RESCUE Finally, a way to treat a condition in which blood pressure in the lungs soars: use intravenous doses of the drug prostacyclin. The malady can show up in people who have taken the diet pills fen/phen or Redux--that's one reason they are off the market.
CANCER CARE Researchers now say it's best to follow a lumpectomy for noninvasive breast cancer with radiation therapy. An eight-year study shows that women who've had the X-ray treatments cut their odds of a relapse in half.
INFANT AIDS A genetic mutation present in a small percentage of infants born with HIV may help keep AIDS from progressing.
Sources: New England Journal of Medicine; Clinical Oncology; Journal of the American Medical Association
THE BAD NEWS
MS MESS Contrary to long-held views, doctors now find that multiple sclerosis not only damages the sheaths surrounding nerves but also severs the nerves. Once nerves are cut, function is gone.
EARLIER, NOT BETTER A recent trend toward having amniocentesis performed early--11 to 12 weeks into pregnancy instead of the usual 15 or 16--may raise the risk that the baby will be born with a clubfoot or that mom will miscarry.
SNIFF, SNIFF A nasal spray newly popular among doctors--made of water, baking soda and, well, pickling salt--doesn't alleviate acute sinusitis any better than a placebo.
Sources: New England Journal of Medicine; Lancet; Archives of Family Medicine
--By Janice M. Horowitz