|
|
|
|
Last Updated: Nov 18, 2006 - 1:55:25 PM |
Latest Research
:
Gynaecology
:
Infertility
:
Letrozole
Fertility drug letrozole given 'all-clear' in new study
Concerns about the use of letrozole, an easy-to-use and inexpensive drug for the treatment of infertility, appear to be unfounded, according to a major study co�authored by Dr. Togas Tulandi, Director of Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, McGill University Health Centre (MUHC) and Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Jewish General Hospital, and Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at McGill University. Their findings, which are currently available in an early online edition of Fertility and Sterility, showed that babies whose mothers were treated with letrozole had the same rate of birth defects as those whose mothers were treated with clomiphene citrate � the low-risk, first-line treatment for infertility for more than 40 years.
Apr 22, 2006 - 6:57:00 PM
[ Visit Website ]
<< prev
next >>
|
|
|
|
Health |
Gathering information about food is not top priority for individuals with high metabolisms
|
NIH renews funding for University of Maryland vaccine research
|
DHA-enriched formula in infancy linked to positive cognitive outcomes in childhood
|
New IOM report lays out plan to determine effectiveness of obesity prevention efforts
|
Vitamin D supplementation may delay precocious puberty in girls
|
Study: Pedometer program helps motivate participants to sit less, move more
|
Fish oil may stall effects of junk food on brain
|
Intake of low energy dense food better than skipping meals
|
Inaugural IOF Olof Johnell Science Award presented to Professor Harry Genant
|
Molecular hub links obesity, heart disease to high blood pressure
|
| Healthcare |
Healthcare experts from UK and India meet at the UK Parliament to discuss ways to improve health care in India, UK
|
Flu pandemic infected one in five
|
Stigma preventing leprosy-cured from getting jobs
|
Measles, Mumps make a comeback in US
|
Melinda Gates calls on Akhilesh Yadav
|
'Movies, TV impact tobacco users more than newspapers'
|
Rockland to open three new hospitals in NCR
|
Spice Global enters healthcare business with hospital in Delhi
|
Delhi to expedite recruitment of doctors
|
India adds spice to US life, keeps it healthy
|
| Latest Research |
How do consumers see a product when they hear music?
|
Drug activates virus against cancer
|
Bone loss associated with increased production of ROS
|
Sound preconditioning prevents ototoxic drug-induced hearing loss in mice
|
Crystal methamphetamine use by street youth increases risk of injecting drugs
|
Johns Hopkins-led study shows increased life expectancy among family caregivers
|
Moderate to severe psoriasis linked to chronic kidney disease, say experts
|
Licensing deal marks coming of age for University of Washington, University of Alabama-Birmingham
|
Simple blood or urine test to identify blinding disease
|
Physician job satisfaction driven by quality of patient care
|
| Medical News |
NHRC issues notice to Kerala over infant deaths
|
Advanced breast cancer detecting machine comes to India
|
'Dispel myths about vitiligo'
|
NHRC summons Odisha chief secretary
|
Woman dies of swine flu in UP
|
Maharashtra, GE to modernise rural health care
|
Hypertension: India's silent killer
|
Need cautious effort to eradicate polio: Experts
|
Ayurveda experts develop online personalised health regimen
|
Soon a detailed study on 'diabesity': Doctors
|
| Special Topics |
MPs express anguish at Delhi gang-rape, Shinde assures fast trial
|
Worrying rise in number of medical students in prostitution over last 10 years
|
Behold India's unfolding democratic revolution
|
Chinese woman cuts open her belly to save surgery cost
|
Improved Sense of Smell Produced Smarter Mammals
|
Two-year-old world's first to have extra DNA strand
|
172,155 kidney stones removed from one patient!
|
'Primodial Soup' theory for origin of life rejected in paper
|
Human species could have killed Neanderthal man
|
History, geography also seem to shape our genome
|
|
|