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VIDEO: Ginger Eases Chemo-Related Nausea, New Tool Predicts Alzheimer's Risk, Cytomegalovirus Linked to High Blood Pressure
VIDEO: Ginger Eases Chemo-Related Nausea, New Tool Predicts Alzheimer

(May 15, 2009 - Insidermedicine) From Rochester - According to research presented to the American Society of Clinical Oncology, ginger may ease chemotherapy-related nausea. In a study of over 600 cancer patients, researchers found that half a teaspoon of ground ginger each day reduced nausea by 40% when taken with standard anti-nausea medications. Ginger is widely used as a folk remedy for upset stomach and diarrhea.

From San Francisco - According to research in the journal Neurology, a new tool may make it easier to predict which patients over the age of 65 will develop Alzheimer's disease. A 15-point index that includes both conventional and newly identified risk factors was able to correctly classify 88% of patients according to their risk of developing some form of dementia within six years.

And finally, from Boston - According to research in PLoS Pathogens, a common virus has been linked to high blood pressure. In a study of mice, researchers found that infection with cytomegalovirus was associated with an increase in blood pressure regardless of diet. This virus affects 50% to 80% of adults in the U.S., and so these findings may provide doctors with a new approach to treating hypertension.

For Insidermedicine in 60, I'm Dr. Susan Sharma.

 
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