Sweet: Mother’s kiss also makes a handy tool

Sweet: Mother’s kiss also makes a handy tool

Whoever said laughter is the best medicine didn’t know about a “mother’s kiss.” As it turns out, a recent case review study of nasal foreign bodies found that a mother’s kiss is the best and safest way to remove the object from the nose of a small child or infant. Using this technique an adult known and trusted by the child blocks the unaffected nostril and blows into the child’s mouth. The blowing should be gentle at first until the…

Read More Read More

Yin and yang of inflammation – play opposite roles in infection and serious diseases

Yin and yang of inflammation – play opposite roles in infection and serious diseases

Get an infected cut or sprain an ankle and you will experience the healing benefit of inflammation. However, with the benefit also come the redness, swelling, heat and pain that are inflammation’s hallmarks. Although unpleasant, these symptoms dissipate rapidly and are reassuring that the immune system is doing its job to clear infection and guide repair of damaged tissue. The journal  Science  had a recent review of inflammation as it pertains to chronic diseases. The review looked at new research…

Read More Read More

Egg-free flu vaccines available soon:

Egg-free flu vaccines available soon:

Dear Dr.: I heard there might be a new flu vaccine that is egg-free. You’re right. In fact you’re double right as there are two egg-free flu vaccines soon to be available. The first one is called Flucelvax, produced by Novartis. Canine kidney cells culture is used to grow the virus instead of chicken eggs. Tested in 11,000 patients, this new vaccine was 84 percent effective in preventing influenza. The second is Flublok, offered by Protein Sciences. This one is…

Read More Read More

ACE Inhibitors

ACE Inhibitors

Dear Doc: ACE inhibitors do their job well, but cause big problems for some patients Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors comprise one of the safest and most effective treatments for hypertension (elevated blood pressure). They work by inhibiting conversion of angiotensin I to its active form, angiotensin II (which leads to hypertension). Unfortunately, they also inhibit the conversion of the peptide bradykinin to its inactive form. Hence, in some people this can lead to a build-up of the peptide which can…

Read More Read More

Pesticides indicated in increased incidence of food allergies

Pesticides indicated in increased incidence of food allergies

Widely used pesticides and chlorinated water may be contributing to the increased frequency of food allergy.  Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine have found a strong correlation between urinary levels of dichlorophenols and the incidence of food allergy. Both children and adults who had measurable levels of the chemicals in their urine were much more likely to have food allergy. Dichlorophenols are commonly found in household pesticides, those used on fruits and vegetables and also in chlorinated tap water….

Read More Read More

OJ now known to cause FPIES

OJ now known to cause FPIES

Food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) has recently been reported to occur from orange juice, a previously unrecognized cause.  FPIES mimics food allergy, but it is not mediated by IgE (Immunoglobulin E), the usual allergic mechanism. It is an acute inflammation of the GI tract, caused by a food protein that leads to nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.  Frequently, affected children become dehydrated and require IV fluids.  The condition is often mistaken for a GI flu until the causal association with a…

Read More Read More

Popular foods, pancake batter linked to pesky syndromes

Popular foods, pancake batter linked to pesky syndromes

Food ingestion anaphylaxis caused by mites is a newly described syndrome, as detailed by the World Allergy Organization in this month’s Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. Until recently mite allergy was best recognized as a major cause for allergic rhinitis and asthma via the inhalation of the microscopic mites. Millions of allergy sufferers actually receive allergy shots for this mite allergy.  Over the years occasional case reports would appear in the medical literature about airway anaphylaxis;  that is, sudden…

Read More Read More

MRSA Precautions

MRSA Precautions

Taking precautions in known MRSA environments worth it  From football locker rooms to ALF patient rooms, there is a surge in the number of otherwise healthy people developing Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus, better known as MRSA.  The dreaded MRSA is a difficult- to-treat, multi-drug-resistant staph infection. One way to protect yourself if your school or your mother’s nursing home is having an outbreak is to practice good hand-washing, and to use Mupirocin (Bactroban), anintranasal prescription topical antibiotic that kills MRSA.

Water Damage related Illness

Water Damage related Illness

Dear Dr. K: With the massive damage still being shown on TV from the flooding by Hurricane Sandy, what illnesses are those residents facing?  A timely study recently released by the medical College of Wisconsin recently reported  on a study of patients developing Vocal Cord Dysfunction (VCD), a mimic of asthma, due to  environmental exposure in water-damaged work environments.  Water-damaged environments have long been recognized as a cause for a variety of respiratory illnesses, including infections, rhinitis, sinusitis and asthma….

Read More Read More