Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Better ovarian cancer screening, still no answers (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? After disappointing results earlier this year, researchers say new study findings from Kentucky offer a bit of hope for ovarian cancer screening.

But they still fall short of answering the important question: does ovarian cancer screening save lives?

One in 72 women will get ovarian cancer at some point, usually when they are older, according to the National Cancer Institute. But in most cases symptoms don't start until the cancer has spread, making the disease harder to treat.

Doctors have hoped that screening women regularly might save lives by catching ovarian cancer earlier. Yet a large trial published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in June found that wasn't the case. (See Reuters Health story, June 6, 2011 http://reut.rs/kijsUc)

Now, researchers say the previous disappointment may have been due to problems with the screening method used.

"Maybe some of the existing trials were started a little bit prematurely," said Dr. John Rensselaer van Nagell Jr., who heads the division of gynecologic oncology at the University of Kentucky Medical Center in Lexington.

For the past quarter century, van Nagell has been part of a study screening thousands of Kentucky women for ovarian cancer. The women were at least 50 years old or had family members with the disease, but none of them had symptoms at the outset of the study.

Out of more than 37,000 screened annually with ultrasound, 76 women had ovarian cancer diagnosed by a biopsy and 47 cases were invasive.

On the other hand, 447 women had a false alarm that ended up not being cancer, while 12 tumors were missed by the screening.

The researchers refined the screening method over time. In the end, one out of every five positive tests turned out to be cancer. Van Nagell said that over the past five years, doctors did an average of five operations per cancer they found.

While that may not sound impressive, an editorial published along with the new findings in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology notes it's better than previous studies. One of those studies, published in 2008, found that among more than 78,000 women, ovarian cancer deaths were not reduced when doctors offered a blood test known as CA-125 and ultrasound.

The Kentucky team also found that screened women survived longer after a cancer diagnosis than women who weren't screened.

Overall, 75 percent of women with invasive cancer detected by screening survived at least five years, compared with just 54 percent of women whose disease was found because they had symptoms.

"The fact is that in Kentucky if you were in this screening trial your survival was significantly higher than if you were from the same geographical area and you weren't screened," van Nagell said.

An ultrasound costs about $50, he added, whereas treatment for advanced ovarian cancer may be as much as $300,000.

He said more research needs to be done before screening can be broadly recommended. But women with a family history of the disease or genetic susceptibility "might consider trying to become a participant in a screening trial like this," he said.

"Screening as a method to obtain early detection is imperfect, but it is far better than just clinical examination," van Nagell told Reuters Health.

But he acknowledged that in fact his study doesn't prove that.

One problem is that simply because screening finds cancer earlier, screened patients automatically survive longer with the disease than people who don't get diagnosed until they notice something is wrong.

As a consequence of this so-called lead-time bias, survival differences don't necessarily mean screening has prolonged anyone's life.

What's more, it's possible that the volunteers in the Kentucky study may have been healthier to begin with.

In an editorial, Dr. Ian Jacobs and Dr. Usha Menon of University College London note that no report so far has showed ovarian cancer screening saves lives, despite the new findings.

"These figures sound encouraging but simply may reflect a combination of lead time of screen detection and a healthy-volunteer effect rather than an effect on the natural history of ovarian cancer, which will translate to a mortality reduction," they say.

The government-backed U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends against routine screening for ovarian cancer.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/s3QYTZ and http://bit.ly/sbP5S6 Obstetrics and Gynecology, December, 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/hl_nm/us_ovarian_cancer

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Connie Mack announcing he's in Florida Senate race (tbo)

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Some saw big results on Small Business Saturday | WLFI - Lafayette ...

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) - Some Lafayette businesses said "Small Business Saturday" was good to them this year. But those crowds may have been limited to the streets of downtown.

"Saturday was something that we have not seen since we've been down here in six years, which was a line, six to eight deep, all day," said Traci Bratton, owner of Walnut Street Traditions in downtown Lafayette.

Bratton said she had to call in her best friend to help at the shop, thanks to Small Business Saturday. She said the extra turnout tripled her profits, compared to the Saturday after Thanksgiving last year.

"It started at 10 and it did not end until 5 o'clock," she said. Bratton said while she saw many of her regulars, she guesses about 75% of the people who stopped in over the weekend were new customers.

This is the second year American Express has led the charge for Small Business Saturday. Business owners said the reason they think things really took off this year was a combination of increased media coverage and a call-out on Facebook."

"American Express just blasted it everywhere, so it was really a great day," Bratton said.

But not everyone saw the crowds that turned out in downtown Lafayette. In West Lafayette, JL Records owner Jim Pasdach said he thinks shoppers who were staying local stuck to the convenience of Main Street.

"Saturday and Sunday were less than normal," he said. "Our business doesn't pick up for Christmas business until about the middle of December."

But Pasdach said he did see a large crowd on Friday, for another nation-wide "shopping holiday" -- Independent Record Store Day.

"The first year it happened, it not only caught the customers by surprise, it caught us by surprise," Pasdach said. "But the last two or three Record Store Days, we've been more prepared for it."

Whatever the reason, both Pasdach and Bratton agreed, when customers shop locally, the entire community benefits.

CBS News reported that 89 million consumers planned to take part in Small Business Saturday this weekend. To promote the event, American Express gave away a million dollars in free Facebook advertisements to 10,000 small businesses.

Source: http://www.wlfi.com/dpp/news/local/some-saw-big-results-on-small-business-saturday

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Fitch keeps AAA US credit rating but dims outlook

(AP) ? Fitch said Monday that it will keep its rating for long-term U.S. debt at the top AAA level, despite a congressional panel's failure to agree on long-term deficit cuts. But it is lowering its outlook to negative.

The rating agency said it has less confidence in the federal government's ability to take the necessary steps to rein in the deficit.

A special congressional panel failed last week to reach agreement on $1.2 trillion in deficit cuts over the next decade. The impasse triggered automatic cuts of the same amount, which are scheduled to kick in beginning in 2013.

Moody's Investors Services and Standard & Poor's also left their ratings unchanged last week. But Moody's and S&P warned that they could lower their ratings if Congress backed off the automatic cuts.

S&P downgraded long-term U.S. debt in August to the second-highest level, AA-plus, and switched its outlook to negative. It was the first time the credit rating agency had lowered the nation's AAA rating since granting it in 1917.

Fitch, Moody's and S&P, the three major rating agencies, assess the creditworthiness of debt issued by countries, corporations and municipalities. Ratings are based on the likelihood of default. The AAA rating is the highest available and signifies an extremely low likelihood of default.

Fitch said the switch to a negative outlook meant the credit agency believed there was slightly greater than a 50 percent chance it would downgrade long-term U.S. debt in the next two years. Fitch said it did not expect Congress to reach agreement on deficit cuts until 2013. A failure to enact cuts by then would likely prompt the agency to downgrade U.S. credit, Fitch said.

"By postponing the difficult decisions on tax and spending until after forthcoming congressional and presidential elections, the scale and pace of required deficit reduction will consequently be greater," Fitch said in its statement.

S&P's downgrade came days after Congress barely resolved a prolonged fight over raising the nation's borrowing limit to avoid a potential default on the nation's debt.

U.S. lawmakers ultimately agreed to spending cuts that would reduce the debt by more than $2 trillion. They left much of the details to the newly created supercommittee, which had until Nov. 21 to agree on $1.2 trillion in cuts.

In August, S&P appeared to cast doubt on the committee's ability to meet that goal. It said it lowered the U.S. credit rating because of politics that slowed the debt limit increase and not because it thought the U.S. couldn't pay its bills.

S&P then said that it was "pessimistic about the capacity of Congress and the administration to be able to leverage their agreement this week into a broader fiscal consolidation plan that stabilizes the government's debt dynamics anytime soon."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-28-Fitch-US%20Credit%20Rating/id-f6b034fb949e406996b906243a55e988

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Wall Street ends 7-day slide (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks rebounded from seven days of losses on Monday as investors used the latest effort from European leaders to resolve the region's debt crisis as an opportunity to cover short positions.

Trading was light, a sign skepticism remains high. Just 6.8 billion shares changed hands during the day on U.S. exchanges, below the daily average of 8 billion shares.

After the market's close, Fitch Ratings revised to negative the outlook on the United States' AAA credit rating after a special congressional committee failed to agree on at least $1.2 trillion in budget cuts.

Retailers were among the strong sectors following an robust start to the U.S. holiday shopping season. Record sales over the Thanksgiving weekend buoyed gains in large retailers, including Macy's, which rose 4.7 percent to $30.84.

The gains follow a seven-day string of losses on the benchmark S&P 500. The latest attempt to get the euro zone problems on the path to improvement involve a Franco-German push for tighter budgetary control over euro zone members.

Analysts say the move may not be followed by more buying without an actual plan for euro zone help.

"Unfortunately, these rallies are short-lived until real dollars or real euros are injected into the financial system," said Chad Morganlander, portfolio manager at Stifel, Nicolaus & Co in Florham Park, New Jersey.

Germany and France pushed to acquire powers to reject national budgets in the euro zone that breach European Union rules ahead of an EU summit on December 9.

An Italian newspaper report suggested the International Monetary Fund was preparing a rescue plan for Italy, but the IMF denied the report.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 291.23 points, or 2.59 percent, at 11,523.01. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 33.88 points, or 2.92 percent, at 1,192.55. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 85.83 points, or 3.52 percent, at 2,527.34.

Stock futures showed little movement after the announcement from Fitch, and analysts said it was probably expected by the market.

"I don't think we're going to see much of a market reaction. It's generally confirmation of what's been built into the market," said Fred Dickson, chief market strategist at The Davidson Cos in Lake Oswego, Oregon.

During the regular session, all 10 S&P sectors were up sharply, but energy and consumer discretionary stocks were among sectors with the biggest gains. The S&P energy index was up 3.6 percent, while the S&P consumer discretionary index was up 3 percent and S&P financials rose 3 percent.

Weak consumer spending has been a worry for investors, and the holiday period would likely confirm whether there's been any improvement in that area.

A report on consumer confidence in November, which is expected to have risen, is due Tuesday.

The S&P retail index advanced 3.1 percent, including Best Buy Co Inc, which added 3.4 percent to $26.49.

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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Protests against military rule cloud Egypt election (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? Protesters rallied again in Cairo on Sunday to try to evict Egypt's ruling generals, in a trial of strength that has muddied the run-up to Egypt's first vote since a popular revolt deposed former leader Hosni Mubarak.

The parliamentary election that gets under way on Monday and Tuesday is the first step in a transfer to civilian rule, promised by the ruling army council that replaced Mubarak.

The course of transformation in Egypt, the Arab world's most populous nation, will reverberate across a region where a new generation demanding democratic change has risen up against autocratic governments that have ruled for decades.

Some Egyptians yearn for stability after a week of bloodshed that has killed 42 people and wounded more than 2,000, preferring for now to let the generals run a nation whose prolonged political turmoil has thrust the economy deeper into crisis.

But the demonstrators gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square want the council to make way for a civilian interim administration immediately. They reject its promise to complete the handover by July and its choice of 78-year-old Kamal Ganzouri to form the next cabinet.

Activists had called for a mass rally to pile pressure on the generals, and by mid-afternoon there were thousands in the square, hub of the unrest that toppled Mubarak.

Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, head of the council, said the army would ensure security at the polling booths.

"We are at a crossroads. There are only two routes, the success of elections leading Egypt toward safety or facing dangerous hurdles that we in the armed forces, as part of the Egyptian people, will not allow," he declared.

Abdel Moneim Aboul Futuh, an Islamist presidential candidate who opposes military rule, said: "The nation is larger than Field Marshal Tantawi and Lieutenant General Sami Enan and the military council. A government with revolutionary leadership must be formed to meet the demands of Tahrir Square."

State television quoted Tantawi as saying the army's role in the new constitution would be unchanged: to protect the nation.

The outgoing cabinet angered many Egyptians by floating proposals that would have given the army sweeping national security powers and protected it from civilian scrutiny.

The generals have received tacit support from Islamist parties eager that nothing should disrupt voting in the first of three rounds of an election in which they expect to do well.

In what appeared to be a gesture to the protesters, the ruling generals agreed to the formation of "a civilian consultative council" that would work with the military and the government to run the country.

The move fell short of the protesters' demand for the generals to hand all power to a civilian council.

GANZOURI'S RECORD

Bassam Sharaf, among protesters outside parliament, said the objection to Ganzouri was not his age, but the policies he pursued as prime minister under Mubarak from 1996 to 1999.

"Two-thirds of the ministers that Ganzouri appointed in his day are now in Tora prison," he said, referring to Mubarak-era officials accused of corruption and other offences who were put on trial after an uprising swept Mubarak from power in February.

Alarmed by Egypt's latest bout of unrest, the United States and the European Union have condemned the "excessive force" used by the authorities and urged a swift handover to civilian rule.

Some protesters favor Mohamed ElBaradei, former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, who has offered to drop his campaign for the presidency and to lead a government of national unity.

ElBaradei is respected among pro-democracy campaigners and has a high international profile, but many Egyptians view him as out of touch because he spent much of his career abroad.

MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD

Mohamed Badie, leader of the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood, which hopes the election will catapult it into a strong place in mainstream politics, offered Ganzouri qualified support, depending on the powers and makeup of his cabinet.

He said conspirators were behind the unrest. "There are powers inside and outside Egypt that don't want stability for Egypt or development, and this is something that is being pushed and paid for," he said late on Saturday.

Al-Gama'a al-Islamiya group, which has now renounced violence but led an armed insurgency against Mubarak during Ganzouri's government in the 1990s, said it would not join the protesters in Tahrir, criticizing them for trying to "force a certain prime minister on Egypt," a reference to ElBaradei.

The Salafi Islamist Nour Party said it would meet Ganzouri in the next few days to propose names for his cabinet.

Protesters appear split over the election. Some do not trust the military to ensure a free vote. Others say the poll should not be a casualty of the campaign against military rule.

"This is one thing, that is something else. Everyone will be in the polling stations come Monday," said Abdul Aal Diab, a 46-year-old state employee protesting in Tahrir.

"Why are you so sure?" interrupted Mustafa Essam, 27. "I won't go. I have no faith in anyone."

Groups chanted slogans against the generals in Tahrir as people wandered among banners, tents and tea stalls with chairs and tables that lent the protest an air of permanence.

The complex, drawn-out election to parliament's lower house concludes in early January. Voting for the upper house and the presidency will follow before the end of June. A confusing array of candidates and parties, and fears of bullying, bribery and violence at polling stations set voters a daunting challenge.

The British government urged the Egyptian authorities to make sure the elections were fair, credible and free from violence.

"What happens in Egypt will be crucial for the whole region and the world will be watching closely in the days and months ahead," British Foreign Secretary William Hague said.

Ahmed Abdul Fattah, 40, said he would vote for the moderate Islamist Wasat Party, but with no enthusiasm for what he said were poorly timed elections. "Why should we have them? So the Muslim Brotherhood can dominate us?" he asked.

(Additional reporting by Marwa Awad, Maha El Dahan, Omar Fahmy and Edmund Blair; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111127/wl_nm/us_egypt_protests

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

BOJ's Nishimura warns of risk of broad credit crunch (Reuters)

KYOTO, Japan (Reuters) ? There is no quick fix to Europe's debt woes that threaten to escalate into a more widespread credit crunch, Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Kiyohiko Nishimura warned on Wednesday, voicing policymakers' growing concern about the deepening damage from the crisis.

Nishimura, known as one of more pessimistic board members, also said Tokyo must take resolute action if currency moves are out of line with economic fundamentals in an attempt to keep markets on guard against another yen-selling intervention in the event of a renewed yen spike.

"Europe's sovereign debt problems are essentially the result of expanding imbalances in the region ... thus we need to be aware that there is no immediate silver bullet for solving its problems," Nishimura said in a speech to business leaders in Kyoto, western Japan.

"We need to brace ourselves for global financial market tension remaining high for a long time. We must be mindful of the risk of some shock triggering a widespread credit crunch," said Nishimura, who is one of the BOJ's two deputy governors.

Nishimura became the latest of the BOJ's nine-member policy board to warn that the euro zone debt crisis posed the biggest risk to Japan's economy with repercussions already felt widely across the globe.

IMF ROLE

Japan's economy has rebounded from a recession triggered by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami but is expected to slow sharply this quarter as the initial spurt driven by companies restoring supply chains and production facilities tails off.

Data released earlier on Wednesday showed factory output rose more than expected as automakers continued to restock inventory overseas after restoring supply chains hit by the March earthquake.

Nishimura stuck to the BOJ's view that the world's third largest economy is set to resume a moderate recovery supported by the strength of emerging economies and reconstruction work.

But he added that the forecast faced various uncertainties with Europe's debt crisis seen weighing on global growth and on Japanese exports as the yen continues to draw safe-haven demand.

"We need to be mindful of the fact that the yen will likely draw demand as a relatively safe currency as risk aversion increases among global investors amid continued tensions in global markets," Nishimura said.

"If the yen rises sharply in a way that deviates from economic fundamentals, companies may accelerate the pace at which they shift production overseas in an irrecoverable way."

Concern about the impact of the yen's strength and Europe's debt crisis on Japan's economic recovery prompted its rating agency R&I announce a review for a possible downgrade of its AAA rating for the nation's debt.

"R&I positively views the fiscal consolidation stance of the (Prime Minister Yoshihiko) Noda administration, which took office at the end of August," it said in a statement.

"Nevertheless, with a delay in implementing measures for earthquake reconstruction and the persistently strong yen, the economic recovery lacks strength. Furthermore, the deepening European sovereign debt crisis and other factors are increasing uncertainty about external demand."

The BOJ, which meets for a rate review on December 20-21, could offer additional stimulus to help sustain the economy's recovery depending on how share prices and the yen perform, analysts say.

Europe's sovereign debt crisis has shown little sign of letup with investors fleeing the euro-zone bond market, causing yields in Italy to spike.

In Brussels, European finance ministers agreed to strengthen the euro zone's bailout fund and said they could ask the International Monetary Fund about more aid as bond yields surge across the region.

Nishimura said it would be natural to expect the International Monetary Fund to play a role in helping resolve Europe's debt woes, adding that in general Japan should do what it can to expand the global lender's functions.

Japan intervened in the currency market and eased monetary policy in October to ease the pain on the export-reliant economy from sharp yen rises and slowing overseas growth.

The BOJ kept monetary settings unchanged this month but has signaled its readiness to ease policy again if Japan's economic recovery comes under threat.

Nishimura surprised markets by proposing unsuccessfully in April that the BOJ should boost its asset purchases. He did not repeat the proposal in subsequent meetings and has voted with the majority.

(Editing by Michael Watson and Tomasz Janowski)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111130/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_boj

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Police mull charges in Walmart pepper spray case

By msnbc.com staff and wires

Los Angeles police are still deciding whether to pursue charges against a woman who allegedly used pepper spray while shopping at a Walmart Thanksgiving night in Porter Ranch, according to a report in the Los Angeles Times.

"We have a ton of witnesses and victims to interview," Los Angeles Police Officer Bruce Borihanh told the newspaper. "We know who she is."

The woman turned herself in Friday night after the incident?allegedly caused minor injuries to 20 shoppers, including children. ?She was?released pending further investigation after she refused to discuss the incident, police said Saturday.

The woman's identity was not released.?

The alleged attack took place about 10:20 p.m. Thursday, shortly after doors opened for shopping. Employees brought out a crate of discounted Xbox video game players, and a crowd formed to wait for the unwrapping. Valle said the woman began spraying people in order to get an advantage.

Wal-Mart officials called it "an unfortunate situation."

?

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/27/9049828-police-mull-charges-in-walmart-pepper-spray-case

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Pet Care Poll: Most Owners Took Animals To The Vet In Past Year

LOS ANGELES -- Eight in 10 pet owners have taken their animals to the vet in the past year, with an overall average expenditure of $505, according to a new AP-Petside.com poll.

Sixty percent of those who took their pets to the vet spent $300 or less, but the average expenditure was boosted higher by the one in eight pet owners (13 percent) who spent $1,000 or more.

About one in six pet owners say their pet faced a serious illness during the year, and those pet owners spent an average of $1,092 on vet care. One percent say they took their pets to the vet and spent no money.

Thomas Klamm, 76, of Boone, Iowa, says he and his wife Beverly spent $3,000 on their two Chihuahuas, sisters Kati and Keli, and he would have spent more if necessary, even though his annual income is under $50,000.

The biggest bills resulted from a spinal condition Kati had, but Klamm says he has a lot of confidence in the vets and senior students at Iowa State University's Veterinary Teaching Hospital in nearby Ames, where the little dogs have been going since they were pups.

According to the poll, most pet owners have faith in the treatment vets recommend. Overall, 52 percent say vets do not often recommend excessive treatment, 26 percent say that happens moderately often, 17 percent extremely or very often.

Those whose pets had been seriously ill in the past year were no more likely than others to say that vets suggest treatments that go beyond what is reasonable and necessary.

Among those who did not take their pets to the vet last year, 52 percent say they only take their pets to the vet "when they're really sick" and a third say they can't afford it at all.

Luis Calderon, 56, of El Monte, Calif., couldn't afford to take Buddy, his 3-year-old German shepherd, to the vet last year. Buddy was given to Calderon when the dog was 6 months old. "We have become best friends," he says.

Calderon, a self-employed handyman, has a wife and two kids and says work is scarce. If Buddy needed a vet, Calderon says he would have to go through public services or use credit. "We would have to get him help."

How much would be too much? It would depend on what was wrong and what the vet said, Calderon says. "At that point I would have to consider whether to keep him or let him go, put him to sleep," he says.

He hates the idea of putting limits on Buddy's health. "But we have to survive. At this point, my mortgage is No. 1. This month is really close to the edge," Calderon adds.

Fifty-eight percent of those who did not take their pets to a vet in the past year said they "have a type of pet that doesn't need much veterinary care." Among them, 52 percent have dogs, 52 percent cats, 10 percent fish, and 5 percent birds.

Not surprisingly, higher-income pet owners (household incomes over $50,000) were more apt to take their pets to the vet than those with incomes below $50,000 ? 90 percent versus 74 percent. Forty percent of those with household incomes below $50,000 who didn't take their pets to the vet say they can't really afford to do so.

Art Jones, 62, of Alameda, Calif., says two of his family's cats died in the last year. He estimates he spent $600 on vet bills ? half of that to euthanize one of the cats. The other cat died at home.

"But we are not so wealthy we can spend thousands on a house pet. That's unfortunate, but that's the truth," Jones says.

He says he has family friends whose dog is getting cancer treatment and the cost is nearing $10,000. "To me, that's insane," Jones says.

Over the past few years, Jim Salsman, 51, of Las Vegas, paid for several $500 trips to the vet for his neighbors' cat, Mau, after the declawed feline got in fights with other animals. Last year, the neighbors left and gave the cat to Salsman. He ended up paying another $400 in vet bills, but says he didn't mind because his neighbors were in foreclosure and struggling, and the cat became an important member of the family.

"He means everything to us," Salsman said.

According to the poll, dog owners were a bit more likely to take their pets to the vet than cat owners ? 85 percent of dog owners compared with 79 percent of cat owners. But dog owners spent a bit less ? an average of $537 ? than cat owners, who spent an average of $558.

The AP-Petside.com Poll was conducted Oct. 13-17, 2011, by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,118 pet owners. Results among pet owners have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.

___

AP Global Director of Polling Trevor Tompson, Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

___

Online:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/29/pet-care-poll-most-owners_n_1118076.html

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Witness says Mass. men discussed mall shooting (AP)

BOSTON ? A former friend of a Massachusetts man accused of conspiring to help al-Qaida has testified that they traveled overseas with a third friend in 2004 to try to get into a terrorist training camp.

Kareem Abu-zahra, testifying Monday in the trial of Tarek Mehanna (TEH'-rek meh-HAH'-nah), said the men also discussed shooting people at a shopping mall, attacking an Air Force base and shooting prominent U.S. officials.

Prosecutors allege that Mehanna tried unsuccessfully to get terrorist training in Yemen.

Abu-zahra, testifying under a grant of immunity, said the men had several discussions about domestic terrorism in 2003. He said Mehanna was present for a conversation about shooting former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft. Abu-zahra said he and the third man had a brief conversation about shooting former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, but Mehanna was not present for that.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_us/us_massachusetts_terror_charge

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Primal Wisdom: Study Indicates Prostate Cancer Is Reversible By Diet

According to the National Cancer Institute, each year in the U.S., 240,890 men get diagnosed with prostate cancer, and 33,720 men die from it.

According to the American Cancer Society,

"About 1 man in 6 will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime. More than 2 million men in the United States who have been diagnosed with prostate cancer at some point are still alive today.

"Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in American men, behind only lung cancer. About 1 man in 36 will die of prostate cancer."

I have a family history of prostate cancer, so I have a personal interest in prevention and remedy for this disease of civilization.

According to some people, whole grains and legumes cause or promote the diseases of civilization, including cancer.

If this disease is caused by eating grains and legumes, then any diet based on grains and legumes should promote cancer.? If you give men living with prostate cancer a diet rich in whole grains and legumes, you should see a promotion of the cancer.

My friend, Gordon Saxe, M.P.H., Ph.D., M.D., professor of medicine at U.C.S.D.,? has actually tested this hypothesis, albeit unintentionally.

Gordon has lead pilot research in which men with diagnosed with prostate cancer were taught to eat a diet consisting of whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds, while eliminating animal? products, based on evidence [discussed here] that this dietary pattern may reduce the risk or progression of prostate cancer.

If whole grains and legumes promote prostate cancer then these men should have had an accelerated progression of their cancers.? However, in the first study, over six months, this intervention produced just the opposite effect:? a 100-fold reduction in the rate of rise of their disease, as measured by the rate of change in levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA).? As stated by Saxe et al:

"The rate of PSA increase decreased in 8 of 10 men, while 3 had a decrease in absolute PSA. Results of the signed rank test indicated a significant decrease in the rate of increase in the intervention period (p = 0.01). Estimated median doubling time increased from 6.5 months (95% confidence interval 3.7 to 10.1) before to 17.7 months (95% confidence interval 7.8 to infinity) after the intervention. Nine of 10 participants in the study had reduction in the rate of rise of their PSA, a marker for progression of disease."
When 9 of 10 people respond in the very same way to an intervention, in this case with a reduction in rate of rise of PSA, this tends to suggest that the effect is no accident and most likely indicates a definite therapeutic effect of the intervention.

In the second study, involving 14 men, Saxe et al produced a similar result.? In this second study they explored the biological mechanisms involved:

"During the first 3 months of the intervention, as both median WHR and body weight declined significantly, the median rate of PSA rise not only declined but became negative, reflecting a slight reduction in absolute PSA and possibly disease regression in patients with absolute reductions. Conversely, during the second 3 months of the intervention, when median body weight increased (though not significantly), median PSA began to rise again, albeit more slowly than during the period prior to Baseline."
This second study suggested that weight-related metabolic changes may have mediated the reduction in rate of PSA increase.? In other words, the intervention resulted in a loss of body fat and concommitant metabolic changes related to reduction of body fatness, including an increase in sex hormone binding globulin, that influence prostate cancer.
"Assuming that the attenuation of PC progression was mediated by weight-related metabolic changes, a question arises as to what aspect of intervention brought about the observed reduction in adiposity. Earlier 53, we described large increases during months 0?3 in intake of whole grains and vegetables, food groups which are fiber and water-rich, very low in fat, and therefore of low energy density. However, intake of these foods declined slightly during months 3?6. Weight loss during the first three months may possibly have resulted from replacing energy-rich foods with energy-poor foods, and the slight increase in body weight during the second three months may have resulted from a small degree of dietary recidivism."?
So this intervention, based on increasing intake of whole grains, legumes, etc., resulted in body fat reduction during the period when the subjects ate the most of these foods, and body weight increased during the period when these subjects ate less of these foods.? This clearly undermines the idea that diets rich in grains and legumes cause two of the major diseases of civilization, i.e. obesity and cancer.

Saxe et al consider the possibility that any diet that induces weight loss may reduce cancer progression.

"A second question that naturally arises regarding the reduction in adiposity is whether it matters, in terms of effects on prostate cancer progression, how it is achieved. One aspect of this question has to do with the preferred dietary strategy for reducing energy intake. Another facet regards whether it is more desirable to increase energy expenditure or decrease intake to achieve this end. Although our study and its findings did not address these issues, they remain important ones that warrant consideration in the planning and design of future behavioral approaches to the management of progressive PC. What can be said is that while both a plant-based diet and a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet high in foods of animal origin (such as the popular Atkins diet) may both result in weight loss, the former is far more consistent with the dietary cancer prevention guidelines of various agencies (69).54 "
Some people reject those cancer prevention guidelines of various agencies, which emphasize increased consumption of whole plant foods and decreased consumption of animal products, claiming that whole grains and legumes are the true causes of diseases of civilization.?? These two studies, among others, weaken that claim.?

So far, the only studies I can find testing the effect of a low-carbohydrate diet on prostate cancer were done with mice, not men.? In this one, researchers from Duke Prostate Center fed mice with prostate cancer either a "Western" diet,? "low-fat high-carbohydrate" diet, or a zero-carbohydrate diet.? The results:

"Fifty-one days after injection [with xenograft tumors], NCKD mice tumor volumes were 33% smaller than Western mice (rank-sum, P = 0.009). There were no differences in tumor volume between low-fat and NCKD mice. Dietary treatment was significantly associated with survival (log-rank, P = 0.006), with the longest survival among the NCKD mice, followed by the low-fat mice."
I don't have access to the full text, but if done in a typical fashion, all diets would have been pellets made from isolated nutrients (e.g. casein, starch, sugar, etc.) so this can't tell us much about what would happen in humans if we compared a whole foods vegan diet (whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds) to a zero-carbohydrate diet (meat and fat only).? The effects of a casein-based zero-carbohydrate diet on mice might be very different from the effects of a meat-based zero-carbohydrate diet on humans.

In a second study, Masko et al fed mice diets containing 0, 10, or 20 percent carbohydrate and again injected them with prostate cancer cells.? As a 'control' they fed a group of mice a 12% fat diet, but they did not inject cancer cells into these mice--which to me means they weren't much of a control group, because they differed from the others not only in dietary composition but also in absence of tumor injection.

The full text of this study tells us the components of all diets:? corn oil, lard, milk fat, casein, dl-methionine, dextrine, maltodextrine, corn starch, sucrose, and isolated vitamins and minerals.?

In the low-fat arm, 72% of calories came from carbohydrate, and 50% of total calories came from sucrose, which means that about 25% of total calories came from refined fructose.? Meanwhile, in the 10% and 20% carbohydrate arms, all of the carbohydrate was provided in the form of corn starch.?

This makes me wonder again about diet composition in the other Duke University study cited above.? Were those mice on the low fat diet also eating a 50% sucrose/25% fructose diet?? If so, did this rig the study, intentionally or not, so that the low fat group would have more body fat and shorter lifespan than the zero-carbohydrate group??

Moving on, all the mice got all of their protein from casein-plus-methionine, none ate any meat.? Most people eating low carbohydrate diets eat cooked meats, not isolated casein, as their main protein source.? Meat is nutritionally complex, and affected by cooking process, in ways that may result in it having a different effect on prostate cancer than casein-plus-methionine.? For example, unlike the casein-methionine mix fed to these mice, meat contains heme iron and if cooked at high heat, heterocyclic amines, all of which have been linked to prostate cancer causation or promotion [e.g. Sinha et al full text].? So it is not clear how a study of mice eating a low carbohydrate diet wherein casein is the main protein will apply to people eating low carbohydrate diets wherein cooked meat, poultry, and fish are the main protein sources.

Masko et al found that the survival rates of the mice in the 0, 10, and 20 percent carbohydrate groups were similar.? They liked this finding because, as they say, people find it extremely difficult to follow zero-carbohdyrate diets, so now they are ready to test the 20 percent carbohydrate diet on human prostate cancer patients.?

Masko et al also found that the mice in the 20% carbohydrate group had the lowest insulin level, about which they comment:

"It was unexpected that the lowest levels of insulin were observed in mice fed with 20% carbohydrate, but there are possible explanations for this phenomenon. First, there is always the possibility for a type I error in the analysis. Second, it is known that low-carbohydrate diets promote insulin sensitivity in animals (38) and humans (39, 40). Thus, it is possible that a diet containing a small amount of carbohydrates may actually improve insulin sensitivity compared with a diet completely lacking of carbohydrates."
Perhaps unknown to Masko et al, it is also 'possible' that a diet containing an even large amount of carbohydrate may actually improve insulin sensitivity compared to a diet with only 20% carbohydrate. In 1971, Brunzell et al [abstract only] evaluated the effect of increased dietary carbohydrate at the expense of fat in humans, both non-diabetic and mildly diabetic.? In the New England Journal of Medicine they reported that after feeding these subjects a diet providing 85 percent of energy as carbohydrate for 10 days,
"Fasting plasma glucose levels fell in all subjects and oral glucose tolerance (0 to 120-minute area) significantly improved ..... Fasting insulin levels also were lower on the high carbohydrate diet; however, insulin responses to oral glucose did not significantly change. These data suggest that the high carbohydrate diet increased the sensitivity of peripheral tissues to insulin."
?An diet supplying 85 percent of energy as carbohydrate is by necessity very low in fat, so perhaps Brunzell et al could have emphasized that this very low fat diet increased insulin sensitivity.? The mice of Masko et al that got the 20 percent carbohydrate diet had a lower fat intake than the mice on the zero-carbohydrate diet; rather than increasing carbohydrate being responsible for promoting insulin sensitivity, perhaps it is reducing fat (replacing it with starch) that does the trick.?

Anyway, the Masko et al study has a few features that make me skeptical that they will have similar results in humans.? I feel curious to see if their approach will have results as good as those found by Saxe et al.

Source: http://donmatesz.blogspot.com/2011/11/study-indicates-prostate-cancer-is.html

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Jay-Z & Kanye West ? Watch The Throne ? Montreal, Canada [Video]

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Chinese Police vs Islamic Uyghur Terrorists

Don't bring knife to a gun fight:

This is the full footage of the incident : The incident which took place in China, Xinjiang 2009 when a small group of Uyghur separatists after a gathering in the local mosque decided to attack the chinese local authorities... as you can see it didn't turn out too well...

(I want clarify - this is the full footage and should not be the same footage posted on LL earlier which was taken from chinese news)

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Source: http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=37e_1322395235

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