Health Highlights: Nov. 10, 2015

By on November 10, 2015

Health Highlights: Nov. 10, 2015

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Pamela Anderson Says She’s Cured of Hepatitis C

Model and actress Pamela Anderson says she’s been cured of hepatitis C after taking a new anti-viral medication.

She was diagnosed with the infection in 2002 and began a new FDA-approved drug regimen in the summer, People magazine reported.

“I am CURED!!! I just found out,” Anderson, 48, wrote on Instagram Saturday. “I pray anyone living with Hep C can qualify or afford treatment. It will be more available soon. I know treatment is hard to get still…#dontlosehope.”

She tried a number of alternative medicines before beginning treatment with the new anti-viral drug, People reported.

“I don’t have any liver damage and I don’t have any side effects,” Anderson said. “I’m living my life the way I want to but it could have eventually have caused me some problems and so it was a real blessing that I was able to get the medicine.”

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FDA Should Investigate Caffeinated Peanut Butter: Senator

A new caffeinated peanut butter aimed at the fitness and athletic market should be investigated by the Food and Drug Administration, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer says.

Each two-tablespoon serving of STEEM Peanut Butter contains as much caffeine as two cups of coffee, the Associated Press reported.

Currently, the product is sold mostly online and at a few small shops and fitness centers in Connecticut and Massachusetts. Schumer said the peanut butter may pose a health risk, especially to children.

“Caffeinated peanut butter should spur the agency to address the issue of caffeine,” he told journalists Sunday, the AP reported. “They should put limits on how much is allowed, particularly in snack foods … And they should certainly require warning labels.”

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New Compound Shows Promise Against Cataracts

A chemical that shows promise in clearing cataracts is being developed for use as an eye drop, researchers say.

The chemical — called compound 29 — cleared cataracts in the eyes of mice and in human eye lens tissue in laboratory tests, said the scientists at the University of California, San Francisco and the University of Michigan, United Press International reported.

The study was published in the journal Science.

The compound has been licensed to a company to develop it into an eye drop for people with cataracts, UPI reported.

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