June 2009 archive

Health Care Series 20090611: Acetaminophen Concerns

THURSDAY NIGHT IS HEALTH CARE CHANGE NIGHT, a weekly Health Care Series (cross-posted at ePluribus Media. I have been invited to contribute this installment. I originally was going to post about high fructose corn sweetener, but between the time of the invitation and now FDA came out with a new warning about acetaminophen. Acetaminophen is one of the most widely used pain and fever relievers in the United States. Much of the widespread use has to do with the fact that it causes less stomach upset and GI bleeding than aspirin or ibuprofen. It is not linked to Reye Syndrome as is aspirin, making it a good choice for children and teens with flu. Another very large reason for widespread use is heavy marketing.

However, acetaminophen has a very dark side.  According to CDC, right at half of all cases of acute liver failure (ALF) in the United States is directly caused by acetaminophen.  I will not be as geeky in this post as I normally am in my regular Sunday evening series, Pique the Geek, where we try to delve fairly deeply into the science of various topics.  However, some scientific and historical background is necessary to understand the process of liver toxicity produced by this material.In 1887 a drug called phenacetin was first marketed for fever and pain. It is actually made from acetaminophen and is metabolized in the body to it.  It was withdrawn from the United States market in 1983 due to concerns over carcinogenicity.  However, acetaminophen had already replaced it in a large share of the market.  The reason that phenacetin was used for so long had to do with sloppy research in the early 20th century.

Acetaminophen was first introduced in 1953 by Winthrop, but in 1955 McNeil began marketing Tylenol Children’s Elixir, and the Tylenol brand is still probably the most widely recognized brand name in the United States.  Now it outsells aspirin, and I believe this is a dangerous situation.

All medications are eliminated from the body, mostly as metabolites of the parent drug.  The major site of metabolism is the great chemical factory of the body, the liver.  There are three major pathways, two of them harmless.  The first one is addition of glucuronic acid (a sugar derivative) in the liver, producing a metabolite that is nontoxic and is eliminated by the kidneys.  It is thought that, in MOST people, about 40% of the drug is eliminated that way.

A second pathway, also harmless, is addition of sulfate in the liver, forming a water soluble metabolite that is carried away by the liver.  In MOST people this accounts for around 20% to 40% of the total load.

The third pathway, accounting for about 15% of drug clearance, involves the cytochrome P450 set of liver enzymes (the ones that are increased by drinking alcohol).  A toxic intermediate called NAPQI is formed, and that is cleared by combination with the natural antioxidant glutathione and eliminated by the kidneys.  Here is where the problem arises.

NAPQI is highly reactive and combines with the lipids in liver cell membranes, killing the cells.  When combined with gluatathione, it becomes nontoxic, but glutathione is essential for liver protection from the thousands of other reactive oxidizing agents that it processes constantly.  Reduction of glutathione thus also damages the liver, since it is not available to protect the liver from other bad actors.

In most people, the recommended dose of acetaminophen does not cause any outward sign of trouble.  However, there are behaviors that increase sensitivity towards toxicity.  As mentioned before, moderate to heavy alcohol intake induces the very enzyme that is responsible for the “bad” pathway, so drinkers are naturally more susceptible.  Besides, alcohol in large doses is a liver toxin in its own right, so that is a double whammy.

Another risk factor is fasting and low protein diets.  Since glutathione is derived from protein, restriction of protein intake reduces its availability, thus decreasing its protective effect on the liver.

A third risk factor may be caffeine.  Some fairly recent work is consistent with the hypothesis that caffeine induces a liver enzyme that also causes the production NAPQI, presumably Cytochrome P450.  Now this is problematic for a couple of reasons.  First, many folks drink a lot of coffee.  Second, caffeine is often added to painkiller medications to increase their potency.  Some of these combinations include acetaminophen.

There are also other drugs that induce these enzymes, particularly anticonvulsants.  The barbiturates are potent inducers, and a few combination products contain a barbiturate, a narcotic, and acetaminophen.

In most normal people with no other risk factors, four grams of acetaminophen will show up on liver function tests after a few days for about a third of the population.  Well, four grams a day is the maximum recommended dose for Tylenol Extra Strength products according to the Tylenol website.  So, recommended doses affect liver function in one third of people with no other risk factors.  This is not good.

Six grams a day for two days can cause significant liver function disturbances in normal (that is, no other risk factor) individuals.  Now, I know a lot of folks who have the attitude, “if two tablets will help, three will help more.”  Here is how we start getting into trouble.

What are Progressive Values?

Progressive Values?

Howard Dean – Fairness, Responsibility …



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

What does the Democratic Party stand for?

Howard Dean lists these “Core Values” of the Democratic Party

1) Fairness and Equal Rights for all

2) Strength and Toughness

3) Fiscal Responsibility

These are demonstrated by providing Health Care for all.

Dean stresses the urgent need for us to express these values, on an emotional level, and not just in Policy Statements.

“People vote on their Values — NOT on Position Papers!”

“Dead Indian Creek” & Cultural Hegemony

Why say “Dead Warrior Creek,” when racism fuels cultural hegemony so well?


Source

The official name now is Dead Warrior Lake, ending for some a controversy over the lake’s name that has been going on for almost a decade.

– snip –

The first settlers in the area came up with the name after discovering a Cheyenne burial site. Cottonwoods that lined the creek made for a perfect burial site near the tribe’s winter camp.

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From the Head Down

There is an oft-used expression in the PulpLit of the 20Cen that I love so much and cut my teeth on.

“Life is cheap”

That expression goes very well with what I consider to be the best description of 21Cen America, so far.

“The fish rots from the head down.”

When the Most Powerful Man In The World consistently and unrelentingly demonstrates just how cheap he thinks life is….despite his pious Christianity….. wages unnecessary, aggressive war taking by some estimates, one million lives…

….then human life is devalued even further.

And even worse….somehow, which is felt instinctively but difficult to explain, when he, and by extension America, tortures people, in an organized program, systematically, with infrastructure and instructions on how and when to do so, that cheapens humanity and human life….even more, somehow.

The situation is only exacerbated as well, when the culture of the Most Powerful Nation In The World values SOME life over other life. We all remember what came to be called the Missing Blonde Girl phenomenon. Back in 2005, when we were killing Iraqis by the score, our culture didn’t focus on THAT with horror, but was instead horrified by the circumstances of the life of Natalee Holloway.

Her single….though precious….life was judged by cultural acclaim to be FAR more important than the hundreds or thousands of Iraqis who lost their….equally precious….lives during the time she was missing. The precious life of Terri Schiavo, even though it was technically over, nearly brought our government to a halt. Concern over her precious single life was vital and insistent….unlike the lack of vital concern for thousands of some how LESS precious lives of the folks in New Orleans. And then of course, their is ‘our’ cultural fixation on life in the womb. Life in the womb is so precious that we must take the life of a doctor who preserves the lives of some mothers by ending the lives of the unborn in their wombs.

We are it must be said….confused….at best….as to the value of life.

So where does this confusion come from?

It comes from the top.

When a society, a culture, and indeed human nature as a whole is subject to the concept and effects of Authoritarianism, they consciously or unconsciously take their cues from those in power. And those in power for the last eight years have acted and thus indicated to the rest of the world as if life is cheap. So it is no great wonder that when frustrated, the most adamant adherents of Authoritarianism, the Right Wing, would take out their frustrations through the taking of life.

When life….the lives of Others in particular, is cheap, why NOT take them?

Which brings us to the confluence of Authoritarianism and Other. Authority defines who is accepted and who is Other. Authority defines the ‘penalties’ and ‘punishments’ for being Other. Authority is what makes discriminating and punishing the Others acceptable.

The antidote to Authority is the Rule of Law. The Rule of Law states that there is no Other. That all are equal under the Law. That all are entitled to equal protection under the Law. The Rule of Law does hold life “sacred.” All Life. Equally.

The Rule of Law is essential. But over the last eight years Authority has supplanted the Rule of Law. And we are paying the price for that now. Both in the violence of domestic terrorism, and in the ongoing wars, where innocent life is taken casually with missiles, and in the ‘debate’ on torture.

Bad, misused, and prejudicial Authority has devalued the Rule of Law, bad Authority has devalued the sacredness of every life.

Only the Rule of Law can restore the value of human life. And in today’s world, where bad Authority has destroyed the Rule of Law and the value of human life….where we are deeply confused over the value of human life …only GOOD Authority can restore the Rule of Law and thus the sacredness of life.

We are waiting, Mr. President.

And not patiently.

Bruce Covers The Clash

No comment needed.

The Timing of it all Seems Strange to Me.

I’ve been thinking about something, and I thought maybe this site could be a place to get the thought out in the open.  On a day when the holocaust museum was attacked by a white supremacist nazi who claimed what he claimed about Jewish people, we hear of the disgraced reverend Wright, expounding his views on the Jewish people.  These two men, maybe a generation apart in age. One is a fan of Hitler, the other a proponent of black empowerment.

These are stories on the news right now.  Then there is the two state issue in the middle east.  The president took a ‘hardline’ position with Israel last week.  Netanyahu, may have to capitulate.  The mood in Israel toward the US is a little defensive and guarded.

Is this coincidence?  Does anyone else out there feel oddly about these recent events?

Four at Four

  1. Well the U.S.-China climate talks have ended and the AFP reports China says no to binding greenhouse gas emissions cuts. China position is that since they see themselves as a developing nation, they have the right to increase emissions as they develop their economy and “raise the living standard of its people”.

    For the U.S. response, US climate change envoy Todd Stern acknowledged, “we understand China’s paramount need to grow and develop for its people… our demand is that the development with the available technologies is based on low carbon growth.” The U.S. negotiators “backed down on insisting that China adopt a binding cap on emissions.”

  2. The Guardian reports Climate change may be slowing U.S. winds. “The great gusting winds of the American midwest – and possibly the hopes for the most promising clean energy source – may be dying, in part because of climate change”.

    A study, due to be published in August in the peer-reviewed Journal of Geophysical Research, suggests that average and peak winds may have been slowing across the midwest and eastern states since 1973…

    “We have noted there have been some periods in the past … where there was a pretty substantial decrease in wind speed for 12 consecutive months,” Eugene Takle, the director of the climate science initiative at Iowa State University and one of the authors of the study, said. “We suspect that it’s some large-scale influence that we don’t yet understand.”

    Areas of the midwest have seen a 10% decline in average wind speed over the past decade. Some places – such as Minnesota – have seen a jump in the number of days where there was no wind at all.

    Takle said climate modelling suggested a further 10% decline in wind levels could occur over the next four decades. “Generally we expect there will probably be a decline in wind speeds due to climate change.”

    The sharpest fall off in wind speeds recorded in the study occurred in the eastern United States including Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Illinois, Louisiana, northern Maine, western Montana and Virginia.

    The findings are “preliminary” and the study has some “ambiguous” data, caution the authors.

Four at Four continues with five more stories today: Obama administration reinstating oil and gas leases, mountaintop removal, nuclear power lobby hijacking climage change legislation, Kyrgyzstan demands the U.S. military leave, and typhoons can cause earthquakes.

Obama uses his LoudVoice on Health Care

We have speculated a lot here on Obama’s methods, intent, and being touchy feely treehugging DFH’s….his heart.

I just watched him speaking in Green Bay on health care, and he was, as much as I have ever seen him so……pissed.

He was stern looking, he was loud, and he was biting his words off.

He is, as much as he ever does….Yelling Louder.

I think it is safe to say that he knows he is in a fight. And unlike his fight against the weak ass and stupid CongRepubs on the budget or supplement that were easily and effectively dismissible….I think he knows that this time he has a truly formidable foe.

Everyone in the Blogosphere has wondered what will happen when he comes up against a real fight….and we are about to find out.

Docudharma Times Thursday June 11

In Memoriaum

Stephen T. Johns  




Thursday’s Headlines:

24 charged in crackdown on Native American artifact looting

West blamed as aid agencies threaten to desert Pakistan’s Swat valley  

China backs plan to search North Korean ships and halt arms deals

Rival seeks to lick Lindt in battle of the chocolate bunnies

Alarm in Baltic as Kremlin seizes control of Soviet past

Has President Ahmadinejad finally met his match in Mrs Mousavi?

Judge orders release of 3 U.S. contractors held in Iraq

WITNESS: Third time lucky in crime-ridden Johannesburg

Indigenous Peruvians vow more attacks over control of the Amazon

In Iran Race, Ex-Leader Works to Oust President



By ROBERT F. WORTH

Published: June 10, 2009


TEHRAN – In a makeshift campaign war room in north Tehran, two dozen young women clad in head scarves and black chadors are logging election data into desktop computers 24 hours a day, while men rush around them carrying voter surveys and district maps.

This nerve center in the campaign to unseat Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s hard-line president, is not run by any of the three candidates who are challenging him in a hotly contested election on Friday.

Instead, it is part of a bitter behind-the-scenes rivalry that has helped define the campaign, pitting Mr. Ahmadinejad against the man he beat in the last election, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a two-term former president and one of Iran’s richest and most powerful men.

Swine flu ‘pandemic’ announcement imminent

The World Health Organisation prepares to hold an emergency meeting on the current state of swine flu outbreaks across the world

Associated Press

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 11 June 2009 06.30 BST


The World Health Organisation is gearing up to declare a swine flu pandemic, a move that could trigger both the large-scale production of vaccines and questions about why the step was delayed for weeks as the virus continued to spread.

WHO chief Dr Margaret Chan quizzed eight countries with large swine flu outbreaks yesterday to see if a pandemic, or global epidemic, should be declared. The agency then announced that an emergency meeting with its flu experts would be held at 10am today.

Since swine flu first emerged in Mexico and the United States in April, it has spread to 74 countries around the globe. On Wednesday, WHO reported 27,737 cases including 141 deaths. Most cases are mild and require no treatment.

The world is in phase 5 of WHO’s pandemic alert scale, meaning a global outbreak is imminent. Moving to phase 6, the highest level, means a pandemic has begun. If that declaration is made, it will push drugmakers to fast-track production of a swine flu vaccine.

USA

At a Monument of Sorrow, A Burst of Deadly Violence

Guard Killed, Suspect Injured Amid Scene Of Fear, Chaos

By Michael E. Ruane, Paul Duggan and Clarence Williams

Washington Post Staff Writers

Thursday, June 11, 2009


At 12:40 p.m. yesterday a man stepped through the doors of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. He took two paces, lowered his rifle at a security guard and, before anyone could react, opened fire in a popular national landmark.

The guard, who did not have time to draw his gun, fell bleeding and fatally wounded to the polished floor. Other guards fired back, cutting down the assailant. Terrified patrons, many of them children, dived for safety. And what moments before had been a bright weekday in June became a tableau of violence.

As described by bystanders and authorities, the attack inside the famed Holocaust museum turned the crowded building and Washington’s nearby tourist-thronged Mall into a scene of fear and chaos, with black-clad SWAT teams, hovering helicopters and racing emergency vehicles.

Muse in the Morning

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Muse in the Morning

Who offends the inoffensive,

the innocent and blameless one,

upon that fool does evil fall

as fine dust flung against the wind.

–The Dhammapada, 125

Phenomena XIX: comparing


Groove Thing

Are we there yet?

We can spend our time

counting the days

living metronomes

beating out the hours

minutes or seconds

but in the end

the important question

is whether or not

tomorrow will be

a better day

than today

and perhaps

we could wonder

for whom

that may be

and for whom

it will not

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–April 2, 2008

Late Night Karaoke

Nikai Thursday



State Secrets… really?

State Secrets.  Vital to the National Security of America.  No, this isn’t about torture, but, about a trade agreement.

The Office of U.S. Trade Representative (USTR), part of President Barack Obama’s office, has denied a company’s request for information about a secretive anticounterfeiting trade agreement being negotiated, citing national security concerns.

The USTR this week denied a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request from Knowledge Ecology International, an intellectual-property research and advocacy group, even though Obama, in one of his first presidential memos, directed that agencies be more forthcoming with information requested by the public.

The USTR under Obama seems to be taking the same position about the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) as it did under former President George Bush, that the treaty documents are not open to the public. One of Obama’s campaign promises was to make government more open and responsive to the public.

The USTR, in a letter to Knowledge Ecology International’s director James Love, said information in ACTA, an anticounterfeiting and antipiracy pact being negotiated among the U.S. and several other nations, is “properly classified in the interest of national security.”

I highlighted the “and antipiracy” for a reason…

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