Latest Health News

Red Yeast Rice is Effective for Reducing LDL Cholesterol

News image

Red yeast rice (RYR) has been shown to significantly reduce total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol. RYR is a traditional Chinese cuisine and is prepared by fermenting Monascus purpureus yeast with rice. The extracts from RYR contain starch, sterols, isoflavones, and compounds called monacolins, substances known to inhibit cholesterol synthesis. In...

Chinese Medicine Appears Effective in Treating Psoriasis

News image

An ointment made from indigo naturalis, a dark blue plant-based powder used in traditional Chinese medicine, appears effective in treating plaque-type psoriasis, according to a report in the November issue of Archives of Dermatology. Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease for which no cure exists, only therapies that bring it...

Researcher Identifies Key Contributor in Development of Alzheimer's

News image

Walter J. Lukiw, PhD, Associate Professor of Neuroscience and Ophthalmology at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans, is the lead author of a paper identifying, for the first time, a specific function of a fragment of ribonucleic acid (RNA), once thought to be no more than...

Intervention Program Improves Survival in Breast Cancer Patients

News image

A study at Ohio State University's Comprehensive Cancer Center provides the best evidence to date that a psychological intervention program designed for breast cancer patients not only improves their health, it actually increases their chance of survival. The researchers found that patients participating in an intervention program reduced their risk...

Hibiscus Tea Good for High Blood Pressure

News image

Drinking hibiscus tea lowered blood pressure in a group of prehypertensive and mildly hypertensive adults, and may play a role in controlling high blood pressure. Hypertension or high blood pressure is a condition in which blood pressure is chronically high, and high blood pressure affects one-third of all U.S. adults....

Fitness Articles

Beta Alanine Supplementation Improves Muscle Endurance in the Elderly

News image

Ageing is associated with a significant reduction in skeletal muscle carnosine, which has been linked with a reduction in the buffering capacity of muscle and in theory, may increase the rate of fatigue during exercise. Supplementing beta-alanine has been shown to significantly increase skeletal muscle carnosine. In a 90-day double-blind...

Vigorous Exercise Reduces Breast Cancer Risk

News image

Normal-weight women who carry out lots of vigorous exercise are approximately 30% less likely to develop breast cancer than those who don't exercise vigorously. A study of more than thirty thousand postmenopausal American women, reported in BioMed Central's open access journal Breast Cancer Research, has revealed that a sedentary lifestyle...

The Numerous Health Benefits of Strength Training Exercise

News image

Strength training exercise programs involve exercises that cause the muscles to contract against external resistance either by means of weight training, high-resistance machines, rubber tubing or your own body weight with exercise that is limited to a few repetitions (generally less than 20) before exhaustion. Weight training, resistance training and...

Nutritional Benefits of Regular Exercise

News image

Nutritional benefits of regular exercise include the control of obesity and its complications, the improvement of blood lipid profile, the optimization of micro nutrient intake and the assurance of a maximum quality adjusted life expectancy. While epidemiologists interpret various weight for height ratios in terms of obesity, such data can...

Developing a Lean, Flat Stomach

News image

Developing a lean, flat stomach takes time and patience, especially when it comes to those last few pounds in those hard to lose places. The lower abs and "love handles" can be two of the most stubborn and exercise-resistant areas from which to burn fat. In fact, it can sometimes...

Prescribed Medications May Increase the Frequency of Migraines
migraineResearchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have discovered that certain commonly prescribed medications may have the unintended effect of increasing the frequency of migraine attacks. This important discovery could change the way doctors prescribe migraine medicines. The study, which was recently published in the journal Headache, of more than 8,000 migraine sufferers nationwide, found that the use of medications containing barbiturates or narcotics, which relieve migraine short-term, might make migraine worse if these medications are overused. Treatment with these classes of medicines was associated with an increased risk of transformed migraine headaches, a form of migraine characterized by 15 or more days of headache per month.
The finding is significant because 35 million Americans suffer from migraine headaches and an additional 5 million suffer from transformed migraine. Migraine symptoms include throbbing head pain, most commonly on one side. The pain can worsen with physical activity. Attacks most commonly last from 4 to 72 hours, but may persist for longer. More severe attacks are overwhelming and hinder daily activities. In addition to personal suffering, lost labor costs in the U.S. due to migraine are in excess of $13 billion per year, according to an earlier study from the Einstein team.

Senior author of the study, Richard Lipton, M.D. said, "This confirms the longstanding feeling among many doctors that certain medications used to treat migraine may increase the frequency of headaches if overused. These findings have important public health implications." Dr. Lipton is professor and vice chair of neurology at Einstein and also directs the Montefiore Headache Center.

The objective of the study was to assess the role of specific classes of acute medications in the development of transformed or chronic migraine in people with episodic migraine. In the study, 8,219 people with episodic migraine were followed for one year; 2.5% developed transformed migraine over the course of the year. The use of commonly prescribed medications, particularly narcotics (such as acetaminophen with codeine or Percocet), or barbiturates (such as Fiorinal, Fioricet and Esgic) were associated with a dose-dependent increased risk of new onset of transformed migraine. That means episodic or occasional migraine sufferers who took narcotics or barbiturates more frequently were more likely to develop transformed migraine.

Conversely, for those study participants that suffered less than 10 headaches per month (episodic migraine sufferers), a class of drugs called triptans, known to relieve migraine, did not increase the risk of transformed migraine. NSAIDs (ibuprofen and naproxen sodium, for example) were protective against transition to transformed migraine for those suffering less than 10 headache days per month, but were associated with increased risk of transition to transformed migraine for those with high levels of monthly headache days.

Natural treatments for migraine headaches.
Source:
Richard Lipton, et al. Overuse of narcotics and barbiturates may make migraine worse. Albert Einstein College of Medicine. November 2008.
 

The information within this website is intended as reference material only and not as medical or professional advice.
Your use of this website indicates your agreement to these terms.