...for women's special needs //, p omen's Health Boutique is for women, by women...to meet the special healthcare needs of women. Our goal is to make a positive dif- ference in the way women look and feel about themselves whether their special needs are related to cancer, personal care or special pregnancy and childbirth problems. Our personal fitting service and beautiful decor is just what women deserve. We specialize in: - Mastectomy - External Breast Reconstruction - Wigs and Turbans - Compression Therapy - Personal Care and Hygiene - Maternity and Breastfeeding BRING IN THIS AD AND RECEIVE A 10% DISCOUNT Study Supports Breast-Feeding Lorna Sakalovsky • Distinctive • Collectible • Charming Available at: Tradition! Tradition! OMEN'S HEALTH It E3 O LJ T I 0 557-0109 Alicia R. Nelson 26612 Southfield Road • Lathrup Village, MI • (810) 552-0606 • Nursing • Personal Care Registered Nurses (RN) Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN) • JCAHO Accredited • 24 Hour/ 7 Day Per Week Service Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) Home Health Aide (HHA) Companion/Sitter • Foreign Language & Hearing Impaired Intrepreters Available Abcare's HomeHealth Exchange A Division Of Exchange Services, Inc. 1-800-70-NURSE BEDFORD VILLA NURSING CARE CENTER The Privacy and Comfort of Home Bedford Villa is a charming 61 bed nursing center specializing in Rehabilitative Services. The intimate size of our center allows for personalized attention. Please call us for more information regarding our services. • Private and semi-private rooms • Medicare Certified • Respite care • Specializing in Rehabilitative Services • Hospice service Admissions Office Open Mon.-Fri. 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Admissions Counselors available evenings and weekends 810-557-3333 36 et your dreams go up in smoke Stop smoking today 1"GRANCA RE Commitment to Excellence - Located on 12 Mile, West of Greenfield Road AMERICAN t LUNG ASSOCIATION ® OF SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN 18860 West Ten Mile Road, 'Southfield, Michigan 48075 his space donated as a public service by the publisher DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S. 353-2200 DENTURE CENTER HARVARD ROW MALL 21774 WEST 11 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 EXTRACTIONS DENTURES & PARTIALS RELINES & REPAIRS QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES 30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE The breast-feeding lobby has got- ten a boost from a new study by Weizmann Institute researchers showing that the mammary gland itself produces a key pep- tide hormone regulating the mat- uration and operation of the reproductive system and brain. This study, published in the May 24 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sci- ences (P.NAS., Vol. 91, pp. 4994- 6), was carried out by Prof. Yitzhak Koch and Ms. Nurit Ben Aroya of the Institute's Depart- ment of Hormone Research; and Dr. Aaron Palmon, Professor Yigl Burstein, Professor Mati Frid- kin, and Shoshana Tel-Or of the department of organic chemistry. The finding in laboratory an- imals that lactating breasts man- ufacture that hormone — known as gonadotropin releasing hor- mone or GnRH — resolves a long-debated issue as to whether any of the various peptide hor- mones found in the milk of hu- mans, cows, sheep, goats and rats are made by the mamma- ry itself or merely taken up by breast tissue from the blood. The fact that GnRH is produced by the nursing breast, and in amounts that are presumably regulated by this organ, strengthens the belief that this vital brain hormone is important for a mother's control over her baby's development. This dis- covery also helps explain why GnRH is present in milk at a con- centration at least 10 times that of the other peptide hormones found there. Local synthesis of GnRH in the breast was demonstrated by using the reverse transcription- PCR, an enzymatic process en- abling amplification of the levels of RNA responsible for produc- ing GnRH. The researchers iden- tified GnRH mRNA in lactating breast tissue but not in the breast tissue of virgin rats. Ever since 1977, when Pro- fessor Koch and Fridkin discov- ered GnRH in milk, the first peptide hormone to be identified in this essential fluid, the scien- tists have been convinced that its presence must have crucial im- portance for the neonate, for the mother, or for both. Although re- search into these questions is just beginning, there are already hints of its possible physiological relevance. GnRH is best known for its pivotal role in the regulation of reproduction in adults. For this purpose, GnRH is synthesized and secreted by specialized nerve cells in the brain, stimulating the release from the pituitary gland of hormones acting on the testes and ovaries. Moreover, in early .1.1 , c, the peptide hormone alb°