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All the News That’s Fit: Sympatico docs, Alzheimer’s medication and blushing chickens

This week in health news from Scott LaFee of the Sanford Burnham Prebys research institute

Back pain is a common ailment.
Injurymap/Wikimedia Commons
Back pain is a common ailment.
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UPDATED:

They feel your pain

A new study suggests that patients whose doctors are more empathetic to their suffering tend to feel less lower back pain that patients whose doctors don’t create much of an emotional connection.

Levels of improvement among the patients reporting the most empathetic care were higher than for such treatments as exercise therapy, yoga, massage, spinal manipulation, acupuncture, cognitive behavioral therapy, opioid therapy and lumbar spine surgery.

“If we address only the biological aspect, by putting needles, doing the surgeries, … we might actually miss some opportunities to improve patient care,” Dr. Shiqian Shen, a pain management physician at Massachusetts General Hospital, told STAT.

Get me that. Stat!

In 2025, Medicare estimates it will spend $3.5 billion on the Alzheimer’s drug, Leqembi, which received formal FDA approval last year. That’s a huge jump from the $550 million Medicare expects to cover in 2024.

Clinical trials have found that Leqembi slows cognitive decline caused by Alzheimer’s, but the benefits are deemed modest — and some safety concerns persist. Nonetheless, Leqembi is the first and only approved, disease-modifying therapy for early-onset Alzheimer’s. Nearly 7 million Americans, most age 65 or older, have the neurologic condition.

Stories for the waiting room

Researchers report that the onset of daylight-saving time is associated with increased consumption of processed snack foods and fewer trips to the gym. Apparently, the additional daylight hours lead to less bright ideas like skipping the gym to eat more junk food.

Doc talk

Greenstick fracture — a fracture in a young, soft bone in which the bone bends and breaks only on the outer edge of the bend.

lls.”

Observation

“I was once thrown out of a mental hospital for depressing the other patients.”

Medical history

This week in 2004, a study led by Richard Doll was published in the British Medical Journal quantifying for the first time the physiological damage caused by a lifetime of smoking. The 50-year study involved 35,000 smoking British doctors, and found that almost half were killed by their habit, one-quarter dying before age 70.

Those who quit smoking by age 30 had the same life expectancy as nonsmokers. Even quitting at age 50 saved six more years of life over those who continued smoking.

At age 80, 65 percent of nonsmokers in the control group were still alive, but only 32 percent of smokers.

Perishable publications

Many, if not most, published research papers have titles that defy comprehension. They use specialized jargon, complex words and opaque phrases like “nonlinear dynamics.” Sometimes they don’t, and yet they’re still hard to figure out. Here’s an actual title of actual published research study: ” Exploration of skin redness and immunoglobulin A as markers of the affective states of hens.”

Published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science, researchers reported that a group of French chickens blushed when emotionally aroused, such as becoming angry, excited or eager for a tasty mealworm treat.

The scientists did not answer the question of whether chickens of other nationalities were more or less stoic or why chickens of any ilk cross the road.

Sum body

Three words with surprising origins related to the human body:

1. Gargoyle — From the Old French word for throat, gargoule, which explains why they are often represented with mouths open.

2. Recalcitrant — An adjective derived from the verb recalcitrate or calcitrate, which originally meant to “kick out angrily” and which alludes to the Latin word “calx” or heel.

3. Supercilious — An adjective used to describe haughty, condescending behavior and related to the supercilium, the region of the forehead containing the eyebrows, which might rise when observing such behavior.

Fit to be tried

There are thousands of exercises and you’ve only got one body, but you can still try them: The “inchworm” provides whole-body benefits without requiring anything beyond your body.

  • Stand up tall with your legs straight, making sure your knees aren’t locked.
  • Slowly lower your torso toward the floor, then walk your hands forward.
  • Once in a push-up position, start taking tiny steps so your feet meet your hands.
  • Repeat 4 to 6 times.

Epitaphs

A GAY VIETNAM VETERAN

When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one.

— Unnamed (1943-1988)

LaFee is vice president of communications for the Sanford Burnham Prebys research institute.

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