By GORDON DEEGAN
LIMERICK CITY and county has the highest public spend on Viagra and other erectile dysfunction drugs in the HSE West area, according to new figures.
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By John LaMattina
Recently, EvaluatePharma published its “World Preview 2018” which analyzes the pharmaceutical market and makes a variety of projections for the status of the industry in 2018.  While a lot can happen over the next six years that can
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By Ryan McBride
From the ashes of Boehringer Ingelheim's female sexual dysfunction research, Sprout Pharmaceuticals has risen and taken in capital from a $20 million round to give BI's female libido drug flibanserin another go with U.S. regulators. A flock of angel
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By People's Daily Online
Even FDA inspectors cannot tell fake Viagra from real ones
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By LISA BOYLE
Stats show 20,000 more men now use the sex aid pills to boost their love lives than five years ago.
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By Georgie Bright Kunkel
In my women’s movement days I never gave up on equality for females even though we women still are not considered equal citizens under the US Constitution. You cannot believe the emotional tirade against passing the federal Equal Rights Amendm
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By Salynn Boyles
Belviq Is First New Prescription Weight Loss Drug in 13 Years
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By Derjung Tarn
Physicians don't do as much as they could to ensure that patients adhere to their medication regimens, highlighting the need to develop better methods for doctors to identify non-adherence and to change that behavior, according to a new study.
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By JM Coburn
Johns Hopkins tissue engineers have used tiny, artificial fiber scaffolds thousands of times smaller than a human hair to help coax stem cells into developing into cartilage, the shock-absorbing lining of elbows and knees that often wears thin from
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By R Boada
Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have found a drug that boosts memory function in those with Down syndrome, a major milestone in the treatment of this genetic disorder that could significantly improve quality of life.
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By E. Y. Hsiao
Scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) pioneered the study of the link between irregularities in the immune system and neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism a decade ago. Since then, studies of postmortem brains and of
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By Brian DeChristopher
A new collection of compounds, called "bryologs" -- derived from a tiny marine organism -- activate hidden reservoirs of the virus that currently make the disease nearly impossible to eradicate.
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By Patrick Scally
Western countries are still suffering from the effects of intense housing bubbles and four years ago China's Pu'er tea market crashed after speculation drove prices to unsustainable levels. Now Chinese herbalists are riding high on the strangest bub
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By Jennifer Warner
Teens Who Play on Multiple Sports Teams Less Likely to be Obese
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By Rita Rubin
Urinary Incontinence Can Trouble Young Women Who’ve Never Been Pregnant
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By Dengfeng Yan and Jaideep Sengupta
Consumers who self-diagnose are more likely to believe they have a serious illness because they focus on their symptoms rather than the likelihood of a particular disease, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. This has signif
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By Charlene Laino
7 Hours Optimal; Too Much or Too Little Sleep May Lead to Memory Problems
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By Johns Hopkins Medicine
Using adult stem cells, Johns Hopkins researchers and a consortium of colleagues nationwide say they have generated the type of human neuron specifically damaged by Parkinson's disease (PD) and used various drugs to stop the damage.
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By Xiaoping Yang
A small, naturally occurring nucleic acid sequence, called a microRNA, known to regulate a number of different cancers, appears to alter the activity of the androgen receptor, which plays a critical role in prostate cancer. Directly targeting microR
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By University of Melbourne
Melbourne researchers are now simulating in 3D, the motion of the complete human rhinovirus, the most frequent cause of the common cold, on Australia's fastest supercomputer, paving the way for new drug development.
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