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05/01/2009
'Levelling' the spread of malaria
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02/01/2009
Blood-screening product given US approval
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09/01/2009
Doctor-to-patient HIV transmission unlikely, say US experts
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07/01/2009
Europe-wide surge in measles cases
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06/01/2009
Gel doesn't protect against HIV
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05/01/2009
Giving HIV 'the shoe'
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08/01/2009
GP body launches flu guidance
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09/01/2009
GPs urged to prepare for flu pandemic
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08/01/2009
HIV figures distorted by varying susceptibility
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08/01/2009
Judge issues deadline for hepatitis death answers
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09/01/2009
Kenyan malaria drug supply 'secure'
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09/01/2009
Measles on the rise in London
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09/01/2009
More Africans acquiring HIV in UK than previously thought
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05/01/2009
Mosquito bacteria could 'limit' dengue impact
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06/01/2009
New bird flu cases after six year absence
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07/01/2009
NHS set for "rollercoaster" flu season
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06/01/2009
Special bacteria engineered to cut mosquito lifespans
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07/01/2009
US authority green lights new AIDS screening method
Fluvastatin found to lower hepatitis C virus
A new study has found an effective way to lower levels of the hepatitis C virus.
Researchers at the OU Health Sciences Centre found that the drug Fluvastatin significantly lowered the viral load of hepatitis C for up to six weeks when used alone.
Fluvastatin has been used since 1993 as treatment for elevated cholesterol and millions of Americans has taken the drug without difficulty.
The study involved 31 veterans at the Administration Medical Centre in Oklahoma City and although Fluvastatin did not completely clear the virus, researchers have started a second phase trial combining the drug with a standard hepatitis treatment of peg-interferon and ribavirin.
Ted Bader, principal investigator on the project, said that additional drugs need to be tested to improve the cure rate.
"When patients are cured, they feel dramatically better, their health care costs plummet, their risk of liver cancer drops dramatically, and if they do not have cirrhosis, they will not need a liver transplant," he explained.
Recently, as many as 40,000 people who used a Las Vegas clinic were urged to be tested for hepatitis C after the centre was found to be responsible for "unsafe injection practises", reports the BBC.
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