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Facebook Causes Asthma...

Associated Press November 18, 2010

LONDON - Beware unhappy asthmatics: Italian doctors warn that Facebook could trigger an attack in some susceptible users.

Gennaro D'Amato and colleagues treated an 18-year-old man whose asthma attacks were apparently sparked by logging into Facebook and seeing how many men his ex-girlfriend had friended.

The man had been taking two inhaled steroid drugs several times a day to control his asthma. But when his girlfriend dumped him - and worse, unfriended him on Facebook - his condition deteriorated.

Using a new nickname, the man re-friended his ex-girlfriend on the social networking site. But the stress of seeing her photo on Facebook linked to so many new male friends was too much.

"The sight of this seemed to induce (shortness of breath), which happened repeatedly on the patient accessing her profile," wrote D'Amato of the High Specialty Hospital A Cardarelli in Naples, Italy and colleagues. Their letter was published Friday in the medical journal Lancet.

The man's worried mother measured his breathing patterns before and after his Facebook activity and found a 20 percent difference. After consulting a psychiatrist, the man decided not to log into Facebook any more. That stopped the asthma attacks. D'Amato and colleagues say social networks could cause psychological stress and trigger attacks in depressed asthmatics.

Doctors, however, should not be advising anxious asthmatics to avoid social networking, said Max Blumberg a psychologist and research fellow at Goldsmiths University in London.

"One case study does not make for a good scientific study," he said. "We shouldn't demonize Facebook as the problem."

He said that the man might have had the same reaction if he had heard the gossip about his ex-girlfriend's new boyfriends down at the village bar.

Blumberg also doubted people would refrain from using the popular networking site to snoop for potentially unsettling information. "How many people are going to be able to resist looking into what our ex-partners are doing?"

Exploding Jar Lid Pays Big!

Associated Press November 17, 2010

DETROIT - A grocer and a fruit company have offered a $150,000 settlement to a man who says he was knocked unconscious when a lid exploded off a jar of fruit and hit him in the face.
Del Monte Foods of San Francisco and Cincinnati-based Kroger Co. insist there's no credible evidence the jar was unsafe. They made the offer Tuesday after a judge refused to dismiss the lawsuit by Darryl Alexander of Southfield, Mich.

Alexander's lawyer, Mark Miller, says the offer is too low because Alexander has permanent eye damage.
Alexander says the stubborn lid flew through the air and struck him in the eye after he hit it with the handle of a screwdriver in April 2008. He said he first placed the jar of Orchard Select mixed fruit under warm water.


Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/2010/11/17/20101117detroit-exploding-fruit-lid.html#ixzz15kpovPYU