Can the tonsils influence oral HIV transmission?

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Current research demonstrates that the tonsils may possess the necessary factors to act as a transmission site for the spread of HIV. The related report by Moutsopoulos et al, “Tonsil Epithelial Factors May Influence Oropharyngeal Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission,” appears in the August issue of The American Journal of Pathology.


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All News summaries for July 26, 2007

Flu vaccine not associated with reduced hospitalizations or outpatient visits among young children

10 minutes ago | User rating: not rated yet
Use of the influenza vaccine was not associated with preventing hospitalizations or reducing physician visits for the flu in children age 5 and younger during two recent seasons, perhaps because the strains of virus in the ...

Individuals with social phobia see themselves differently

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Magnetic resonance brain imaging reveals that patients with generalized social phobia respond differently than others to negative comments about themselves, according to a report in the October issue of Archives of General ...

Occasional memory loss tied to lower brain volume

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People who occasionally forget an appointment or a friend's name may have a loss of brain volume, even though they don't have memory deficits on regular tests of memory or dementia, according to a study published in the October ...

Racial differences for brain bleeds suggest stroke risk greater than thought for blacks

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Small, clinically silent areas of bleeding in the brain appear to be more common in black versus white stroke patients hospitalized for new brain bleeds, say researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center. These findings ...

ADHD stimulant treatment may decrease risk of substance abuse in adolescent girls

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Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers have found that treatment with stimulant drugs does not increase and appears to significantly decrease the risk that girls with ADHD will begin smoking cigarettes or using ...