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HEISY000081

A collection of news and information related to Skin Lesion published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 27, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Armadillos pass leprosy to humans, study finds

    They're cute. They're often roadkill. Some gourmands say they're tasty, whether baked or barbecued.
    They're cute. They're often roadkill. Some gourmands say they're tasty, whether baked or barbecued. Now Louisiana researchers have learned something else about nine-banded armadillos. "A preponderance of evidence shows that people get leprosy from these...

    Tags: Human Body, Allergies, Tuberculosis, Genes and Chromosomes, Medical Research

  2. Jul 30, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. A Primeval Tide of Toxins

    Times Staff Writer
    The fireweed began each spring as tufts of hairy growth and spread across the seafloor fast enough to cover a football field in an hour. When fishermen touched it, their skin broke out in searing welts. Their lips blistered and peeled. Their eyes...

    Tags: Water, Waterway and Maritime Transportation Industry, Environmental Politics, Fishing, Forests

  4. May 16, 2013 |Story| McClatchy-Tribune
  5. Inmates sue, claim cleaners poisoned them

    Philadelphia Daily News
    AS AN INMATE laborer at the Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility, Chal D. Kennedy Sr. worked in the kitchen, heating and serving meals for nearly 400 inmates and then cleaning up after them. That meant scrubbing down two giant ovens once or twice a...

    Tags: Asthma, Crime, Law and Justice, Prisons, Laws, Justice System

  6. Jan 26, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Gatorade to drop BVO after consumer complaints

    Responding to consumer concerns, PepsiCo announced Friday that it will remove brominated vegetable oil, an emulsifier, from citrus-flavored Gatorade sold in the U.S. Mississippi teenager Sarah Kavanagh launched an online petition in November that drew...

    Tags: Food and Drug Administration, New Products, Coca-Cola Co., Japan, Health Organizations

  8. Oct 10, 2012 |Story| CNN
  9. Pennsylvania company is in the early stages of a cervical cancer vaccine

    The most common sexually transmitted disease is often silent and invisible: human papillomavirus (also called HPV). But in some people HPV leads to genital warts and cancers -- notably, cervical cancer.
    CNN
    The most common sexually transmitted disease is often silent and invisible: human papillomavirus (also called HPV). But in some people HPV leads to genital warts and cancers -- notably, cervical cancer. The vaccines Gardasil and Cervarix were designed as...

    Tags: Pharmaceuticals, Disease Prevention, HIV, Immune System, Preventative Medicine

  10. Sep 14, 2012 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  11. Two More Young Tourists Suffer Gruesome Deaths in Asia (Graphic Video)

    NHA TRANG, Vietnam -- The mysterious deaths of 2 more young tourists in Asia has prompted increase concerns over the possiblilty of poisonings.
    KTLA News
    NHA TRANG, Vietnam -- The mysterious deaths of 2 more young tourists in Asia has prompted increase concerns over the possiblilty of poisonings. The latest victims, Kari Bowerman, 27, and Cathy Huynh, 26, were backpacking in Vietnam while on break from...

    Tags: New Zealand, Television Networks, Health Organizations, Vietnam, Bangkok (Thailand)

  12. Jul 31, 2012 |Story| CNN
  13. Bird flu has mutated and is killing baby seals, scientists discover

    A new strain of avian flu that jumped from birds to mammals is responsible for the death of more than 160 seals off the New England coast last year, <a href="http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-07/cums-aaf073012.php" target="_blank">scientists announced Tuesday</a>.
    CNN
    A new strain of avian flu that jumped from birds to mammals is responsible for the death of more than 160 seals off the New England coast last year, scientists announced Tuesday. The virus could theoretically pose a threat to human health, they said....

    Tags: Wildlife, Swine Flu, Environmental Issues, Health and Safety at School, Diseases and Illnesses

  14. May 7, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  15. Hopkins engineer students create devices to help keep babies alive

    Johns Hopkins University Engineering students unveiled devices Monday that they hope will lower the number of still births and deaths from fever-related illnesses in developing countries. FeverPoint is a screening test that uses a cotton thread and a...

    Tags: Biotechnology, Engineering, Pneumonia, Science and Technology, Biotechnology Industry

  16. May 17, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  17. Finding more gluten-free alternatives

    The need for gluten-free foods has grown so rapidly that local grocery stores are dramatically expanding their product lines.
    jnatalie-lees@aberdeennews.com
    The need for gluten-free foods has grown so rapidly that local grocery stores are dramatically expanding their product lines.  Ken's SuperFair Foods recently tripled the size of its gluten-free packaged foods and plans to add 50 to 60 frozen gluten-...

    Tags: Allergies, Celiac Disease, Genes and Chromosomes, Breads, Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.

  18. May 2, 2012 |Column| Hartford Courant
  19. My Pill-Popping, Vitamin-Junkie Past Is Over

    I take just five pills a day now.
    The Hartford Courant
    I take just five pills a day now. This is down from the handfuls I used to take back when I was a health junkie. I don't think I was a hypochondriac, but then I may have been taking a pill for that. Mostly I was into supplements and vitamins. I don't...

    Tags: Mouth, Vitamin C, Nobel Prize Awards, Vitamin D, Entertainment Events

  20. Jan 10, 2012 |Story| WTXX-LTV
  21. Are the benefits of natural gas worth the dangers of fracking?

    A politically sexy ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new pro-environment fueling station in Bloomfield, Conn., took place on Dec. 9. Three weeks later, on New Year's Eve, a scary 4.0 magnitude earthquake rocked Youngstown, Ohio.
    A politically sexy ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new pro-environment fueling station in Bloomfield, Conn., took place on Dec. 9. Three weeks later, on New Year's Eve, a scary 4.0 magnitude earthquake rocked Youngstown, Ohio. The link between those events...

    Tags: New Year's Day, Conservation, Natural Gas, Richard Blumenthal, Environmental Issues

  22. Dec 20, 2011 |Story| KCPQ-LTV
  23. Strange disease killing Alaska seals and walruses

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared a recent rash of seal deaths to be an "unusual mortality event" on Tuesday. More than 60 seals have died and 75 found diseased in Alaska&nbsp; with skin sores and patchy hair loss.
    Q13 FOX News Online
    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared a recent rash of seal deaths to be an "unusual mortality event" on Tuesday. More than 60 seals have died and 75 found diseased in Alaska  with skin sores and patchy hair loss. The Fish and...

    Tags: Human Body, Lab Tests, Lymphatic System, Health, Symptoms

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