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Shingles
 

shingles
Study: Tai Chi May Help Prevent Shingles 
Washington Post - 2 hours, 1 minute ago
LOS ANGELES -- Tai chi is already known as a good low-impact exercise for older people. Now a recent study suggests it offers benefits beyond improving fitness and balance: It may help prevent shingles, a painful skin condition.
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semen
Regular IVF often best when only one egg available 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Apr 06 9:11 AM
For infertile couples undergoing assisted reproduction when only a single egg is retrieved, a conventional in vitro fertilization approach is adequate when semen quality is good, research suggests.
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sephiroth
Crisis Core Launches a Website 
RPGamer - Apr 07 10:29 AM
Fans of Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core will have likely been looking at all coverage on the game's upcoming PlayStation Portable action RPG these past few months. Square Enix is now giving fans something else to look at.
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serenity
Attorney: Grandmother Knew Grover Never Intended to Kidnap 4-Year-Old 
WIVB Buffalo - Apr 07 3:37 AM
(North Tonawanda, NY, April 6, 2007) - - A North Tonawanda police detective says David Grover told him he never intended to kidnap Serenity Platts.
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sesame street
Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street? 
The Weekly - Apr 05 8:02 PM
ATLANTA, GA (April 5, 2007) - If you love watching Sesame Street on television, imagine stepping right onto 123 Sesame Street. Children will get to experience what its like to be a part of the show!
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sesshomaru
February 3rd - February 9th 
Anime News Network - Feb 03 1:46 AM
Hi guys! It's The Click, arising from its tender week long slumber to hastily and maliciously slather all the newest and foulest TV anime listings across your venerable computer space!
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shag
Shag Fest to raise funds for Alzheimer's research 
The Myrtle Beach Sun News - Apr 07 12:07 AM
Finding a cure for Alzheimer's disease is an issue that strikes close to home for Alan Walters, who lost his father and uncle to the illness.
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shaggy
Sobel: What each contender needs to do (and avoid) 
ESPN - Apr 07 6:54 PM
What does each Masters contender need to do (and avoid) in order to win the green jacket on Sunday? Jason Sobel breaks it down.
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shake
Church Fire Won't Shake The Faith Of Parishioners 
WISH-TV Indianapolis - Apr 07 8:07 PM
By Jennifer McGilvray News 8 @ 11:00 NEW CASTLE, Ind. - A fire at a Catholic Church the day before Easter won't shake the faith of some even after learning it may have been set on purpose. The fire
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shakira
How Shakira's 'Hips' shook the music industry 
Los Angeles Times - Apr 05 6:38 PM
With 50 milllion streams, user-generated clips for "Hips Don't Lie" changed the way artists interact with fans Call it the "Hips Don't Lie" effect.
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shaman king
The Doors 
Nashville City Paper - Apr 06 12:20 PM
Like so many other bands from the 60s and even the 70s, the music of the Doors has increasingly taken second fiddle in recent years to discussion about their personalities and character flaws.
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shannon
Starters: The Shannon Rose in Clifton 
The Record - Apr 06 6:05 AM
Yes, that jumping new restaurant in the Clifton Commons is exactly what you thought: another Irish pub. But what seems to separate the new Shannon Rose Irish Pub from other Irish pubs in the area is its willingness to be different.
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sharapova
Hingis withdraws from Family Circle with injury 
Sports Illustrated - Apr 07 3:42 PM
A hip injury forced Martina Hingis to withdraw from the Family Circle Cup on Saturday.
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shark
Shark Sighting Closes Kauai Beach 
KITV TheHawaiiChannel.com via Yahoo! News - Apr 06 2:18 PM
Kauai officials closed Haena Beach on Friday after a shark was spotted in the area.
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sharon
Sharon baseball honors one of its own - Tournament at Campanelli will aid Jimmy Fund 
The Patriot Ledger - Apr 07 3:39 AM
With months of hard work finished, all they need now is a sunny day next Saturday. Thanks to the effort of a group headed by Sharon High School baseball coach Joel Peckham, the New England High School Baseball Classic is a reality.
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sharon stone
Digital Breakdown: Going back in time with Bobby 
The San Francisco Examiner - Apr 07 2:55 AM
(Courtesy photo) Sharon Stone and William H. Macy portray two of the many characters comprising the historically themed Bobby.
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sheep
'Sheep' finds beauty in brutality 
Daily Bulletin - Apr 06 1:10 AM
For three long decades, Charles Burnett's "Killer of Sheep," a fictional portrait of a working-class black family living in a broken-down home in a bombed-out stretch of Los Angeles, has been largely hidden from view.
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sheet music
Where Mozart Tops the Charts 
New York Times - Apr 07 6:24 PM
These are trying times for the sheet music business, which has been increasingly chipped away at by illegal photocopying and online file sharing.
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sheryl crow
Sheryl Crow performing at global warming event 
The Advocate - Apr 06 11:23 AM
Global warming activist Laurie David and Grammy Award winning singer-song writer Sheryl Crow will kick off the "Stop Global Warming College Tour" in Dallas, TX to urge college students to become part of the movement to stop global warming and demand solutions from themselves, their schools and their country.
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shinedown
ARTS, CRAFTS, COLLECTIBLES 
Northwest Herald - Apr 04 11:13 PM
CRAFT & VENDOR SHOW, first, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 15, St. Charles North High School main gym, 255 Red Gate Road. Featuring local crafters and vendors. Admission: $5. Admission benefits prom 2008 and student activities. Information: (630) 443-5716.
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short
Stocks Climb in a Short Trading Week 
New York Times - Apr 07 4:38 PM
The stock market had a short but splendid week, with gains that brought the three major indexes close to the peaks they had reached before the sharp global sell-off that started on Feb. 27.
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short hair styles
Gels, wax or paste: new styling products for men's hair 
EARTHtimes.org - Apr 04 8:26 PM
Berlin/Frankfurt­ Gel or wax?That used to be a standard question in hair salons but today it's easy to get lost in the quagmire of terms that are applied to hair styling products. Styling Cream , Matt Paste or even Jelly Gel compete with each ot...
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Shingles
 

Herpes zoster, colloquially known as shingles, is the reactivation of varicella zoster virus, leading to a crop of painful blisters over the area of a dermatome. It occurs very rarely in children and adults, but its incidence is high in the elderly (over 60), as well as in any age group of immunocompromised patients. It affects some 500,000 people per year in the United States. Treatment is generally with antiviral drugs such as aciclovir. Many patients develop a painful condition called postherpetic neuralgia which is often difficult to manage.

Signs and symptoms

Shingles on the forearm

Often, pain is the first symptom. This pain can be characterized as stinging, tingling, numbing, or throbbing, and can be pronounced with quick stabs of intensity. Then 2-3 crops of red lesions develop, which gradually turn into small blisters filled with serous fluid. A general feeling of unwellness often occurs.

As long as the blisters have not dried out, HZ patients may transmit the virus to others. This could lead to chickenpox in people (mainly young children) who are not yet immune to this virus.

Shingles blisters are unusual in that they only appear on one side of the body. That is because the chickenpox virus can remain dormant for decades, and does so inside the spinal column or a nerve fiber. If it reactivates as shingles, it affects only a single nerve fiber, or ganglion, which can radiate to only one side of the body. The blisters therefore only affect one area of the body and do not cross the midline. They are most common on the torso, but can also appear on the face (where they are potentially hazardous to vision) or other parts of the body.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis is visual — very few other diseases mimic herpes zoster. In case of doubt, fluid from a blister may be analysed in a medical laboratory.

Pathophysiology

The causative agent for herpes zoster is varicella zoster virus (VZV). Most people are infected with this virus as a child, as it causes chickenpox. The body eliminates the virus from the system, but it remains dormant in the ganglia adjacent to the spinal cord or the ganglion semilunare (ganglion Gasseri) in the cranial base.

Generally, the immune system suppresses reactivation of the virus. In the elderly, whose immune response generally tends to deteriorate, as well as in those patients whose immune system is being suppressed, this process fails. (Some researchers speculate that sunburn and other, unrelated stresses that can affect the immune system may also lead to viral reactivation.) The virus starts replicating in the nerve cells, and newly formed viruses are carried down the axons to the area of skin served by that ganglion (a dermatome). Here, the virus causes local inflammation in the skin, with the formation of blisters.

The pain characteristic of herpes zoster is thought to be due to irritation of the sensory nerve fibers in which the virus reproduces.

Therapy

Aciclovir (an antiviral drug) inhibits replication of the viral DNA, and is used both as prophylaxis (e.g. in patients with AIDS) and as therapy for herpes zoster. Other antivirals are valaciclovir and famciclovir. Steroids are often given in severe cases.

The long term complication postherpetic neuralgia may cause persistent pain that lasts for years. Pain management is difficult as conventional analgesics may be ineffective. Alternative agents are often used, including tricyclic antidepressants (particularly amitriptyline), anticonvulsants (e.g. gabapentin, and/or topical capscaicin).

A vaccine called live attenuated Oka/Merck VZV that has been developed by Merck & Co. has proven successful in preventing half the cases of herpes zoster in a study of 38,000 people who received the vaccine. The vaccine also reduced by two-thirds the number of cases of postherpetic neuralgia (Oxman et al., 2005). However, prior to the vaccine, it has long been known that adults received natural immune boosting from contact with children infected with varicella. This helped to suppress the reactivation of herpes zoster. In Massachusetts, herpes zoster incidence increased 90%, from 2.77/1000 to 5.25/1000 in the period of increasing varicella vaccination 1999-2003 (Yih et al., 2005). The effectiveness of the varicella vaccine itself is dependent on this exogenous (outside) boosting mechanism. Thus, as natural cases of varicella decline, so has the effectiveness of the vaccine (Goldman, 2005).

Often the same treatment given to burn victims relieves the pain of shingles. [1] One example is Vitacel GH7 - an herbal supplement. The same effect can also be achieved with over-the-counter moist burn pads.

Prognosis

The rash and pain usually subside within 3 to 5 weeks. Sometimes serious effects including partial facial paralysis (usually temporary), ear damage, or encephalitis may occur. Shingles on the upper half of the face (the first branch of the trigeminal nerve) may result in eye damage and require urgent ophthalmological assessment.

Since shingles is a reactivation of a virus contracted previously—often decades earlier—it cannot be induced by exposure to another person with shingles or chickenpox. However, those with active blisters can spread chickenpox to others who have never had that condition or who have not been vaccinated against it.


Study: Tai Chi May Help Prevent Shingles 

Washington Post - 2 hours, 1 minute ago
LOS ANGELES -- Tai chi is already known as a good low-impact exercise for older people. Now a recent study suggests it offers benefits beyond improving fitness and balance: It may help prevent shingles, a painful skin condition.
Save

Study: Tai Chi May Help Prevent Shingles 
ABC News - Apr 08 10:46 AM
Study Suggests Tai Chi May Help Prevent Shingles, Painful Skin Condition, in Older Adults
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Study suggests tai chi may help prevent shingles in older adults 
KESQ - Apr 08 7:59 PM
LOS ANGELES A recent study suggests that tai chi may help prevent shingles.
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Study: Tai chi may help prevent shingles 
KING 5 Seattle - Apr 08 10:53 AM
Researchers found older people who performed the slow, graceful movements of tai chi had a better immune response against the virus that causes shingles than those who only got health education.
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T'ai Chi Boosts Immune System Against Shingles in Older Adults 
HealthDay via Yahoo! News - Apr 06 9:01 AM
FRIDAY, April 6 (HealthDay News) -- T'ai chi, an exercise that features slow martial arts-like movements and meditation, significantly improves the ability of older adults' immune systems to fight the virus -- varicella zoster -- that causes shingles, a new study says.
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Study suggests tai chi ¿ might help prevent shingles in older adults 
Southeast Missourian - 2 hours, 31 minutes ago
LOS ANGELES -- Tai chi is already known as a good low-impact exercise for older people. Now a recent study suggests it offers benefits beyond improving fitness and balance: It may help prevent...
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Tai Chi Boosts Immunity to Shingles Virus in Older Adults 
Kansas City InfoZine - Apr 07 2:58 AM
Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese form of exercise, may help older adults avoid getting shingles by increasing immunity to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) and boosting the immune response to varicella vaccine in older adults, according to a new study published in print this week in the "Journal of the American Geriatrics Society".
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Tai Chi boosts immunity to shingles virus in older adults, NIH-sponsored study reports 
EurekAlert! - Apr 06 9:52 AM
Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese form of exercise, may help older adults avoid getting shingles by increasing immunity to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) and boosting the immune response to varicella vaccine in older adults, according to a new study publishsed in print this week in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
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In brief 
Kansas City Star - 24 minutes ago
Tai chi may boost immunity to shingles
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Tai Chi Boosts Immunity to Shingles Virus in Older Adults, NIH-Sponsored Study Reports 
[Press Release] National Institutes of Health - Apr 06 6:04 AM
Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese form of exercise, may help older adults avoid getting shingles by increasing immunity to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) and boosting the immune response to varicella vaccine in older adults, according to a new study published in print this week in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society . This National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded study is the first ...
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Last Update: 2007-04-09 00:34:58