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Blogs

New approach in bid for fuller lips

This week’s blog post brings news from the United States of how some women are using cosmetic surgery to get the perfect pout.

A team from the Aesthetic Surgery Centre in Florida claim they have achieved good results in using muscles from a patients neck to perform a lip graft, making the lips appear fuller and less puckered.

The attempts to get fuller, more voluptuous lips has been a major part of cosmetic surgery on both sides of the Atlantic with many procedures being introduced since collagen injections in the 1980s. Actress Leslie Ash was a high profile casualty when she suffered a reaction to a lip filler injection and was widely ridiculed for her ‘trout pout’. Her lips have never been the same since.

Experts at the centre in Florida say the new procedure offers improved appearance for at least two years and claim that the surgery is simple and the recovery straightforward.

A more guarded response came from Douglas McGeorge, cosmetic surgeon and past president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons. He said: “There are lots of ways to increase the volume of the lips. This is another way. It’s not necessarily any better, but it may give a more permanent result. However, further augmentations may be required. And as with any procedure, things can go wrong, although this is rare.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8567937.stm

NICE says no to azacitidine

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence is no stranger to controversy, especially in relation to the drugs which it has denied to patients in recent years, most notably Herceptin. It is now back in the headlines for not making available a drug for treating rare blood cancers.

It is not recommending azacitidine or Vidaza for treating myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), a debilitating bone marrow disease on the grounds that it is too expensive. The move has angered cancer charities. Celgene UK, which manufactures the drug has said that it plans to appeal the ruling and David Hall, Chairman of the MDS UK Patient Support Group said that the decision is a huge blow to MDS patients.

He said: “A total of only 700 patients a year in England and Wales would require treatment with azacitidine so we do not believe that providing this life-extending treatment would make a huge impact on the NHS budget.” The cost of azacitidine is estimated to be £45,000 per patient.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8548114.stm

NHS £4million homeopathy funding

The post this week follows on from the comments made by the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee in which it said that the NHS should stop funding homeopathy.

In a move widely criticised by manufacturers and supporters of homeopathy, the committee said that the practice only worked because of the placebo effect, it amounted basically to sugar pills and was not enough to justify the estimated £4m that is spent on homeopathy by the NHS each year.

The committee also said that the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency should not allow labels on homeopathic medicines to carry medical claims. The committee is backed in this war of words by the British Medical Association which has also expressed concern about the funding going into homeopathy and has called for an official review into its effectiveness.

Supporters of homeopathy are passionate in their beliefs so it will be interesting to see how the debate proceeds. Will there be greater analysis into the benefits or otherwise of homeopathy. We are likely to see impassioned arguments on both sides. It will be fascinating to see this develop over the coming days and weeks.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8524926.stm

Male breast reductions on the increase

The BBC is running a story on the fact that the fastest growing part of the cosmetic surgery industry is male breast reductions. The figures, from the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, show that these procedures rose 80% from the figures in 2008 with pressure generated by men’s magazines being at least partly responsible.


Although 9 out of 10 cosmetic procedures were still carried out on women, according to the figures, there was a big rise in breast reductions for men. The top two procedures on men are still nose jobs and work on the skin around the eyes.


Consultant plastic surgeon Rajiv Grover agreed that increased coverage in the media could at least partly account for the demand in surgery amongst men. He said: "Many men are feeling the pressure from men's magazines that weren't even being published five or six years ago. In addition, they are just realising that they can get something done about it."

Cancer stem cell research

This week’s blog post concerns new research from Oxford University which has developed a new way of looking at cancer cells and which is being seen as a really significant finding in the fight against the disease.


The research [Stem cell research could weed out cancer] involves isolating cancer stem cells, keeping them in a laboratory and using them to test against possible new drug treatments. This is a far quicker way of using them effectively; the previous way of using cancer biopsies from human patients, enriching their number in samples and waiting to see if they produced tumours in mice was laborious by comparison.


Dr Trevor Yeung, from the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine at the university was even for claiming that this new development could lead to a cure. He said: “Cancer stem cells drive the growth of a tumour. If we could target treatments against these cells specifically, we should be able to eradicate cancer completely."


He said that people previously assumed that cancer stem cells made up a small proportion of the cells in a tumour but this wasn’t correct and the most aggressive tumours are composed mainly of cancer stem cells.


Important new research which could in time, prove crucial to our understanding of how tumours develop and spread, and which could even lead to a breakthrough in our knowledge of how to beat cancer? Or are these claims from the university premature and intended mainly to grab headlines?


Your views matter too! Let me know what they are.

MRSA Research

Noticed this on the BBC website, a story from the Netherlands claiming that MRSA is mainly spread by patients moving between hospitals.


The study looked at different strains of the disease across 26 European countries and found that they were geographically concentrated. Hajo Grundmann from the University Medical Centre in Groningen in the Netherlands, said that:


“MRSA appears to be spread by patients who ping-pong around between hospitals. These are often frail or elderly people with on-going health problems."


“The exciting thing is that if we know that MRSA is spread by this core group who are going back and forth between hospitals, we can do something about it and we may ultimately be able to eradicate MRSA."


“The message of this report is that doctors should try to identify people who often move between hospitals or other health care institutions such as nursing homes and they should be screened for MRSA.”


Has there been any research already done specifically on MRSA and its spread?


It’s an interesting new development which does appear to add towards our understanding of the disease although the report contains comments from Dr Richard James from the University of Nottingham in which he says that the study found few community-acquired strains of MRSA because it concentrated on invasive infections.


He says: “Community-acquired MRSA strains cause infections in younger people in the community who have had little contact with healthcare systems. These are unfortunately much less likely to be controlled by interventions that reduce transmission of hospital-acquired MRSA strains.”


So, a partial breakthrough in understanding MRSA?


Let me know what you think.