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What Is Mental Health? What Is Mental Disorder?
Mental health refers to our cognitive, and/or emotional wellbeing - it is all about how we think, feel and behave. Mental health, if somebody has it, can also mean an absence of a mental disorder. Approximately 25% of people in the UK have a mental health problem during their lives. The USA is said to have the highest incidence of people diagnosed with mental health problems in the developed world. Your mental health can affect your daily life, relationships and even your physical health. Mental health also includes a person"s ability to enjoy life - to attain a balance between life activities and efforts to achieve psychological resilience.

Ambulance Diversion Studied
When a hospital"s emergency department is overcrowded with seriously sick and injured patients, it may "go on diversion," re-routing ambulances to other emergency departments. But the benefits of "diversion" are largely unproven. Often those emergency departments are just as crowded, and the greater distance to that other hospital can worsen the condition of some patients.
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AdvanDx Receives FDA 510(k) Clearance For GBS PNA FISH(R) For Rapid Detection Of Group B Strep From Lim Broths
AdvanDx announced it received FDA 510(k) clearance for GBS PNA FISH(R) for detection of Streptococcus agalactiae, aka Group B Strep, from turbid Lim Broths inoculated with vaginal and rectal swabs obtained from pregnant women between 35 and 37 weeks gestation. The 90 minute molecular diagnostic test enables rapid and highly sensitive detection of Group B Strep from Lim Broths to help detect colonization in pregnant women.
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Mri Data Showing Tysabri® Promoted Remyelination Presented At The 61st Annual Meeting Of The American Academy Of Neurology

Biogen Idec (NASDAQ: BIIB) and Elan Corporation, plc (NYSE: ELN) announced results of a study demonstrating that TYSABRI® (natalizumab) promoted regeneration and stabilization of damage done to the myelin sheath, as measured by advanced MRI technology. Damage to the myelin sheath causes the symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS). Additional posters will also be presented during the Congress highlighting the ability of TYSABRI, in some patients, to improve physical function and patient reported outcomes on cognition, quality of life, and fatigue. TYSABRI is the first approved MS therapy with reported data suggesting that some of the signs of disease progression can be stopped. The strong efficacy profile demonstrated in clinical trials is enhanced further from these data and may help redefine success in MS. "What we have seen in these MRI data suggest that TYSABRI may have the capacity to repair and possibly restore some of the damaged myelin sheath that protects nerve fibers. Results from this study support the continued investigation of the potential effects of TYSABRI on this process," said Robert Zivadinov, M.D., of the Jacobs Neurological Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., the lead investigator for the remyelination study. "TYSABRI is changing the way neurologists and patients define success in the treatment of MS," said Michael Panzara, M.D., M.P.H., vice president and chief medical officer of neurology, Biogen Idec. "These MRI data presented at AAN provide early evidence that TYSABRI may not just slow the progress of MS, but may also be able to reverse the damage inflicted by the disease." "Everyday, more patients understand that TYSABRI can represent a new way of looking at - and managing - their disease," stated Carlos Paya, M.D., Ph.D., president, Elan Corporation. "These latest analyses further build on the impressive data we have seen to date with TYSABRI." TYSABRI helped stabilize and restore damage to the myelin sheath The imaging study, which included a total of 110 subjects, used an advanced MRI technology called the Voxel-Wise MTR to measure lesions and normal brain tissue. The study showed that TYSABRI promoted remyelination when compared to those receiving interferon beta-1a IM and normal controls. The effect of TYSABRI on lesions and NABT in relapsing MS was evaluated with a Voxel-Wise (VW) imaging method using magnetization transfer ratio (MTR). VWMTR is recognized as a powerful instrument for monitoring MS disease activity and effectiveness of therapeutic interventions in patients with MS. In the study, 62 MS patients who received TYSABRI were followed for 12 months together with 26 MS patients who received interferon beta-1a IM and 22 age-matched and sex-matched normal controls. For each subject, baseline and follow-up MTR volume maps were placed in a common halfway-space. The resulting VW subtraction map was then enhanced via threshold-free cluster enhancement (TFCE) algorithm, and a significance threshold was determined based on subject-specific Monte Carlo simulation. Supra-threshold volumes (95th percentile) were quantified for both areas of increasing (remyelinating) and decreasing (demyelinating) MTR voxels, which represent a volume value. There was no significant difference in decreasing VWMTR NABT volume over the follow-up between TYSABRI-treated and normal control groups. Relapsing-remitting patients on both therapies showed higher remyelination potential and less evident demyelination than relapsing secondary progressive patients. The volume of VWMTR changes in NABT (decreasing or increasing) was almost 3-5 times higher than the amount of changes observed for T2-lesion volume. This indicates that the VWMTR method might be a much more sensitive approach to capture demyelination/remyelination changes over time than the lesion-based volume measures. The poster describing the study Natalizumab (Tysabri®) Promotes Remyelination in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis. A Voxel-Wise Magnetization Transfer Imaging Case-Control Study (P03.071) is available for viewing on Tuesday, April 28, 2009, at 4:00 p.m. PDT. TYSABRI significantly increased the cumulative probability of achieving sustained improvement in disability in patients with relapsing MS The poster describing the study Sustained Improvement in Physical Disability with Natalizumab in Patients with Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis (P06.131) will be available for viewing on Wednesday, April 29, 2009, at 4:00 p.m. PDT. Data from this post-hoc analysis was previously presented at the 2008 World Congress on Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis. The data showed TYSABRI produced significant results on the cumulative probability of sustained improvement in physical disability in those treated over two years compared with placebo. In patients with a baseline expanded disability status scale (EDSS) score ò‰¥ 2.0, treatment with natalizumab significantly increased the probability of sustained improvement in disability by 69 percent relative to placebo. In the same patients, the probability of achieving sustained improvement was 29.6 percent with TYSABRI (n=417) compared with 18.7 percent with placebo (n=203) (p=0.006). In patients with an EDSS score ò‰¥ 2.0 and highly active disease at baseline, the difference between groups was even greater, 35.5 percent for TYSABRI (n=103) and 15.4 percent for placebo (n=40) (p=0.045). Patient-Reported Outcomes Study In this study, patients with relapsing-remitting MS were asked after three months of treatment to rate their improvement, using validated outcomes tools. The posters presented at AAN show that overall, patients reported significant improvement in cognitive function, general and disease-specific health-related quality of life, and lower-levels of fatigue after the third infusion of TYSABRI. The ongoing one-year longitudinal study assesses health outcomes from the perspective of the patient before starting TYSABRI and at predetermined timepoints thereafter. One of the posters, Early Effects of Natalizumab on Patient Reported Fatigue and Cognitive Function (P02.142) was made available for viewing on Tuesday, April 28 at 11:30 a.m. PDT and a second poster, Change in Health-Related Quality of Life in Multiple Sclerosis Patients Receiving Natalizumab (P05.144) will be available for viewing on Wednesday, April 29, 2009, at 11:30 a.m. PDT. About TYSABRI TYSABRI is a treatment approved for relapsing forms of MS in the U.S. and relapsing-remitting MS in the European Union. According to data that have been published in the New England Journal of Medicine, after two years, TYSABRI treatment led to a 68 percent relative reduction (p


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