Health Highlights: April 22, 2013

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

All Boston Bombing Wounded Expected to Survive: Doctors

All the wounded survivors of the Boston Marathon bombings are expected to survive, according to doctors.

More than 180 people were injured in the blasts a week ago, and at least 14 of them lost all or part of a limb. Of the 51 who remained hospitalized on Monday, three are listed as critical and five are in serious condition, the Associated Press reported.

The transit system police officer who nearly bled to death in a shootout with the bombing suspects is also in critical condition, but doctors say he is expected to recover.

Three people died at the scene of the blasts, as did an MIT police officer who was shot by the suspects, the AP reported.

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Alzheimer’s Ends Glen Campbell’s Touring Career

Musician Glen Campbell, who turned 77 on Monday, can no longer tour because his Alzheimer’s disease has progressed too far, his wife Kim says.

Continued touring was something Campbell’s family and management left open after he completed his successful goodbye world tour last year, but that is no longer a possibility.

However, Campbell is still healthy and continues to play golf and his family sometimes invites musicians to the house, the Associated Press reported.

A new album, called “See You There,” is scheduled to be released July 30 and features a reimagining of some of Campbell’s most famous songs. It was recorded in 2011.

Campbell is spending his birthday in Washington, D.C. as an advocate for Alzheimer’s research. His trip will include a fundraising dinner for the Alzheimer’s Association and a visit to the Senate, the AP reported.

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Questions Remain About Bird Flu Outbreak in China: WHO

It’s still unclear how the H7N9 bird flu virus spreads and how dangerous it could become, a World Health Organization team said Monday.

The researchers are in China to study the virus responsible for an outbreak that has killed 20 people and infected more than 100 others, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The team has found no evidence of sustained person-to-person transmission of the H7N9 virus. Such transmission could make it more contagious and more dangerous. But the researchers are still examining the possibility of limited transmission of the virus through people, given the fact that there are small clusters of infections.

“The same question has been looked at by the [local] investigators as well as by ourselves, and I think that we don’t know the answer,” Keiji Fukuda, the WHO’s assistant director general for health security and environment, said at a news conference Monday, WSJ reported.

The situation “remains complex and difficult,” he added.

“It is virtually impossible to predict how many more cases” could occur, Fukuda said. He also noted that “it is important to recognize that if the infection spreads a little bit, it doesn’t mean that things are out of control.”

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Recall of Drug Products Made by Fla. Compounding Pharmacy

Possible bacterial contamination has led a Florida compounding pharmacy to recall all of its sterile non-expired drug products sold in the United States, the Food and Drug Administration says.

The agency said hospitals and other health-care providers who received sterile products, including all injectables, from Balanced Solutions Compounding Pharmacy should immediately quarantine the products and follow the company’s recall instructions, the Washington Post reported.

The company posted the recall on its website but did not specify how many products are affected. Patients who received any sterile drug products made and distributed by the company should contact their health-care providers, the FDA said.

The agency is not aware of any illnesses caused by the recalled products.

Compounding pharmacies custom mix medication for individual patients. Balanced Solutions is one of 30 compounding pharmacies inspected by the FDA between February and April in the wake of a deadly fungal meningitis outbreak last year. The outbreak, which caused 53 deaths, was linked to tainted steroid shots made by the New England Compounding Center, the Post reported.

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NYC Proposal: Raise Minimum Age for Cigarette Purchases to 21

A new proposal would forbid young people in New York City from buying cigarettes until they are age 21. The current minimum age is 18.

It was not clear whether the proposal would make it illegal for people under 21 to possess cigarettes. The proposal was advanced by Dr. Thomas Farley, the city’s health commissioner, and Christine Quinn, the City Council speaker, The New York Times reported.

The move is the latest in the city’s anti-smoking campaign that began soon after Mayor Michael Bloomberg took office in 2001. Bans on smoking in restaurants and bars were recently expanded to cover parks, beaches, plazas and other public places.

Smoking among young people in New York City has been declining, surveys suggest. Some experts say this is because many young people have been influenced by public health campaigns and never took up the habit, the Times reported.

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Creator of First Live-Virus Polio Vaccine Dies

The American scientist who created the first live-virus polio vaccine died recently at age 96.

Dr. Hilary Koprowski used an ordinary kitchen blender to mix the ingredients — including rat brain and a cultivated virus — to create the vaccine. He then took a drink of his concoction to test it and later said that it tasted like cod liver oil, The New York Times reported.

While the vaccine was given to patients in other countries and yielded good results, it was never approved for use in the United States. But by demonstrating that a live-virus polio vaccine could be safe and effective, Koprowski opened the door to the live-virus oral vaccine that was developed by Albert Sabin and introduced in the 1960s.

Koprowski, who died April 11, was considered one of the leading biomedical researchers in the world. Along with the first live-virus polio vaccine, his notable accomplishments included developing a safer, less painful and more effective rabies vaccine that is still widely used, the Times reported.