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Dr. Reubin Andres, gerontologist
Dr. Reubin Andres, a retired gerontologist who challenged commonly circulated height-weight tables for the elderly and conducted diabetes research, died of complications from heart disease Sunday at his Lake Roland-area home. He was 89.
Dr. Andres...Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Science, Arts and Culture, Hormones and Metabolism, Johns Hopkins Hospital
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Salem woman takes part in diabetes research
WDBJ-TV Anchor/ReporterPeople with Type One Diabetes have to manage their disease every day. They're tied to insulin pumps and blood sugar monitors. But one local woman is taking part in clinical research she hopes will one day give more freedom to people with diabetes. "I...Tags: Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, Medical Research, Research, Technology, Insulin Injections
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Some health experts sour on fructose
Just as recent science has divided dietary fats into good, bad and really bad categories, some scientists now think different sugars also may deserve individual scrutiny. Most experts agree that Americans eat too much sugar, period. But studies in recent...
Tags: Consumer Goods Industries, Coca-Cola Co., Science, American Heart Association, Overweight
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Monitoring sugar levels in recent research
In Wednesday's Tribune, we look at the growing body of research into potentially dangerous effects of fructose in our diet. Along with glucose, fructose is one of the two main simple sugars in our food, composing about of half of the contents of table...
Tags: Health Organizations, Food and Drug Administration, Media Industry, Diabetes, National Institutes of Health
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For women, reproductive rights are economic issues
Sensing, perhaps, that they are losing the public relations battle after Senate candidate Todd Akin's forehead-slapping views on "legitimate rape" and the female body's magical ability to guard against pregnancy, Republicans are trying now to focus on the...Tags: Family Planning, 2012 Democratic National Convention, Abortion Issue, The Washington Post, Georgetown
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Bariatric surgery to cure Type 2 diabetes better understood
Days after undergoing gastric bypass surgery, Brenda Maker's diabetes was gone — her body producing enough of the hormone insulin to turn sugar into fuel.
It's a phenomenon seen in recent years by doctors who increasingly are using the operation...Tags: University of Maryland, College Park, Hormones and Metabolism, Pancreas, Physical Conditions, Health
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Planning for the diabetic
The number of individuals with diabetes or pre-diabetes is continuing to increase. In 2010 the CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, reported that 6.9% of South Dakotans have been told by their physician that they have diabetes. Diabetes is...Tags: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American Diabetes Association, Whole Wheat Bread, Diabetes
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Business People - Sept. 16
Carson Institutional Advisory OMAHA, Neb. — Scott Ford, chief executive officer and founder of Cornerstone Wealth Management Group in Hagerstown, recently was added as a member of Carson Institutional Advisory’s Investment Committee. As a...Tags: Osteoporosis, Cancer, Hershey (Dauphin, Pennsylvania), Chiropractic, Frederick (Frederick, Maryland)
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The AGE-less Secret to a Flat Belly
HealthThe past two months have brought us a delicious smorgasbord of weight loss news, and perhaps the most intriguing finding this: your grill could be making you fat. This piece of sad news comes to us from researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New... -
Gut bacteria linked to obesity-related health problems
The answer to why some obese people develop diabetes and other health problems may be found not in just a love for junk food, but in the bacteria that thrive deep in the human gut.
Scientists at the University of Maryland School of Medicine have...Tags: Science, Psoriasis, University of Maryland, College Park, Viral Diseases and Infections, High Blood Pressure
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Charlie Kimball talks about racing with diabetes
Charlie Kimball was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes in 2007, news that upended his personal and professional life. But the 27-year-old English-born, California-raised open-wheel racing veteran didn't just work to get his career back on track, he's worked...Tags: Vehicles, Chip Ganassi Racing, Auto Racing, Chemical Industry, Open-Wheel Racing
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Pumping Iron: Study finds lifting weights may defend men against Type 2 Diabetes
CW33 NewsRoyal Wright is just like millions of American men--fighting type 2 diabetes. He was diagnosed in 1991 and now he plans to build more muscle to tear down his type 2 diabetes. "I'm going to start to notice you know from this point to check and see that...Tags: Weightlifting, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Diabetes, Science and Technology
Sep 28, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 21, 2012
|Story| WDBJ7
Sep 19, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Sep 19, 2012
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Sep 17, 2012
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Sep 16, 2012
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Sep 14, 2012
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Sep 12, 2012
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Sep 6, 2012
| Allentown Morning Call
Sep 2, 2012
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Aug 31, 2012
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Aug 31, 2012
|Story| KDAF-LTV
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