Tuesday, 26 August 2008

Burning incense increases cancer risks: study

Inhaling incense fumes all over long periods increases the risk of developing cancers of the respiratory nerve pathway, a finding that applies to Asian populations worldwide, researchers warn.


Burning incense � a mix of set materials and oils � is an integral part of daily life in large parts of Asia, as well as in North Africa and among Inuit populations.


Incense releases large amounts of smoke containing particulate matter that gets caught in the lungs, as well as possible carcinogens such as polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), carbonyls and benzene.


Indoor concentrations of particulate matter from burning incense has been found to far outmatch outdoor air quality standards, and privy potentially produce more particulate matter than second-hand tobacco smoke, premature studies have shown.


Burning incense almost twofold the risk of squamous cell carcinomas in the upper respiratory tract, such as the nose and sinuses, tongue, mouth and larynx, said the researchers led by Dr. Jeppe Friborg of the epidemiology department at Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen, Denmark.


Their findings are promulgated in the Oct. 1 issue of the journal Cancer.


"Given the widespread and sometimes involuntary exposure to smoke of burning incense, these findings carry significant public health implications," the study's authors concluded.


"Besides initiatives to reduce incense smoke exposure, future studies should be undertaken to identify the least harmful types of incense."


While a cause-and-effect relationship could not be established in this type of study, experts suggest burning incense less a great deal and improving ventilation to minimize the long-term risks.


The risk increased in both smokers and non-smokers, the study of more than 61,000 Singaporean Chinese found. The intensity and duration of incense utilisation were likewise both coupled to the levels of risk, Friborg's team found.


The overall risk of lung cancer did not appear to gain with incense use, only the study did intimate a link to increased risk of a specific type of disease, squamous cell carcinoma of the lung.


Participants were aged 45 to 74 and were free of cancer when they were first interviewed in 1993-1998. They were followed until 2005.


Over that time, a total of 325 upper respiratory pathway cancers (including nasal/sinus, tongue, mouth, laryngeal and former cancers) and 821 lung cancers were found.







More information

Saturday, 16 August 2008

Amy Winehouse Runs Riot In Camden

...more Amy Winehouse �

If you were having Amy Winehouse withdrawal symptoms, hurt no more - the screeching trainwreck was back on manikin last night as she was mauled by photographers during her first public appearance in almost two weeks.


Amy, nail with grubby orange tan, was accompanied by bodyguards as she visited the Dingwalls saloon in Camden.


But the Rehab star - who was at the pub to help raise money for the fire ravished Hawley Arms - left after ten minutes following a row with a DJ.


According to photographers, she then �ran riot� with her god-daughter before one of her bodyguards became mired in an altercation with paparazzi.


Winehouse's net stop of the nox was at a local petrol station - where she failed to pick up some playing cards - before returning to her theater in the district.


Get your Wino situate here.

Thursday, 7 August 2008

'Twilight' Mania Kicks Into Full Gear In NYC With The Release Of 'Breaking Dawn'





NEW YORK � With "Breaking Dawn," the last installment of Stephenie Meyer's "Twilight" lamia series, define to hit stores at midnight (and the start night of the "Breaking Dawn" concert series set to premier at the Nokia Theatre in Times Square), the city seemed to be filled with homemade Cullen T-shirts in support of the first vampire