Medicaid Fraud Bust Goes Down In New York

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A group of individuals was recently busted in New York for a drug fraud scheme related to Medicaid prescriptions.

According to NBC New York, the individuals allegedly bought medication that was legally prescribed to Medicaid participants, used a number of middlemen to move the pills, and then resold the prescription drugs repackaged to a number of pharmacies for a hefty profit. Approximately 48 people have been charged for being involved in the fraud ring. Medicaid is the medical insurance program for those who are disabled and poor.

“The scheme was a theft, pure and simple, from a program funded by taxpayers,” Janice K. Fedarcyk, head of the FBI’s New York office, told the Star Tribune.

In the scheme, Medicaid recipients would receive monthly prescriptions for little or no cost. These individuals then sold their medication that was legally prescribed to aggregators on bodegas and street corners through New York City. Medications included drugs to treat AIDS, asthma, and schizophrenia. Upper level “collectors” and “aggregators” who would peddle the drugs to distribution channels that were based in Alabama, Florida, Nevada, Texas, and Utah would then buy these “second-hand drugs” The drugs were resold to pharmacies and wholesale prescription drug businesses in Arizona, Illinois, Kentucky, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, and South Carolina.

The FBI Health Care Fraud Task Force charged and arrested the individuals for federal Medicaid fraud, mail fraud, and wire fraud charges. Many were based out of New Jersey, New York, and six other states. The FBI, DEA, NYPD, and other state and local agencies participated in the task force. According to the complaint filed in Manhattan federal court, the investigation also relied on a cooperator who was arrested last June during a storage facility raid in New Jersey.

The Star Tribune also stated that the FBI took over 250,000 pills that were worth approximately $16 million. The drug bottles were changed to look as if they came from real distributors; specifically, labels with the patients´ names and backdating expiration dates were removed. Prosecutors believe that the scheme is possibly dangerous for consumers who are unaware as sometimes second-hand prescription have possibly hazardous chemicals during the relabeling process among other factors. Authorities believe that there have not been any reports of anyone harmed by the drugs.

The scheme posed serious health risks at both the collection and distribution ends,” Fedarcyk said in a statement. “People with real ailments were induced to sell their medications on the cheap rather than take them as prescribed, while end-users of the diverted drugs were getting second-hand medicine that may have been mishandled, adulterated, improperly stored, repackaged and expired.”

The scheme has huge costs for the Medicaid. Reuters states that the scheme could lead to a $108 million loss for Medicaid. Over a seven-year period, that could amount to as much as $500 million. The cases are listed as USA v. Alex Oria et al and USA v. Juan Viera et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, Nos. 12-mag-1854 and 11-cr-1072.

Laser Facility Makes Historic 500 Terawatt Shot

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

If all Marty McFly needed was 1.21 gigawatts to travel through time, then one feat accomplished at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory‘s National Ignition Facility (NIF) would provide him enough fuel to travel back to the future 413,223 times.

The team made a historic record-breaking laser shot after 15 years of work on July 15, delivering over 500 terawatts, or 500 trillion watts, of power.

The amount of power generated by the NIF team is 1,000 times more power than the U.S. uses at any instant in time.

The NIF laser system is made up of 192 beams, and on July 5 it shot out 1.85 megajoules (MJ) of ultraviolet laser light at its target. This power is about 100 times what any other laser regularly produces today.

The lasers fired within a few trillionths of a second back to each other onto a 2-millimeter-diameter target. The total energy matched the amount requested by shot managers to within better than 1 percent.

The beam-to-beam uniformity was within 1 percent, making NIF not only the highest energy laser of its kind, but also the most precise.

“NIF is becoming everything scientists planned when it was conceived over two decades ago,” NIF Director Edward Moses said in a statement. “It is fully operational, and scientists are taking important steps toward achieving ignition and providing experimental access to user communities for national security, basic science and the quest for clean fusion energy.”

The July 5 shot was the third experiment in which total energy exceeded 1.8 MJ on the target. On July 3, scientists achieved the highest energy laser shot ever fired, with more than 1.89 MJ delivered to the target at a peak power of 423 terawatts.

A March 15 shot set the stage for the July 5 experiment, by delivering 1.8 MJ for the first time, with a peak power of 411 terawatts.

“The 500 TW shot is an extraordinary accomplishment by the NIF Team, creating unprecedented conditions in the laboratory that hitherto only existed deep in stellar interiors,” Dr. Richard Petrasso, senior research scientist and division head of high energy density physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said in a press release. “For scientists across the nation and the world who, like ourselves, are actively pursuing fundamental science under extreme conditions and the goal of laboratory fusion ignition, this is a remarkable and exciting achievement.”

The facility is helping to make a unique opportunity for scientists to create the same extreme states of matter that exist in the centers of planets, stars and other celestial objects.

New Roadmap Suggests Proven Routes To Ending Health Disparities

Analysis of interventions in 5 diseases offers guidelines to help close the gap
Major disparities exist along racial and ethnic lines in the United States for various medical conditions, but guidance is scarce about how to reduce these gaps. Now, a new “roadmap” has been unveiled to give organizations expert guidance on how to improve health equity in their own patient populations.
Finding Answers, a national program based at the University of Chicago and funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, seeks evidence-based solutions to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities. Its new roadmap, outlined as part of a symposium of six papers published today in the Journal of General Internal Medicine (JGIM), builds upon seven years of administering grants, reviewing literature, and providing technical assistance to reduce health disparities.
The roadmap’s architects hope it can provide direction on creating effective and sustainable interventions as the health disparities field shifts from measuring the problem to taking action.
“Often when you say the challenge is to reduce disparities, people feel overwhelmed. It’s a big challenge,” said Marshall Chin, MD, director of Finding Answers and Richard Parrillo Family Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago Medicine. “But the roadmap provides order so that people can avoid missing what’s necessary to create the change.”
The paper highlights the initial need for recognizing disparities and commitment to their reduction, and suggests that programs to reduce disparities should be integrated into broader quality improvement efforts at clinics, hospitals and other health systems.
“In the past, people did disparities work or quality work, but the two wouldn’t touch one another,” Chin said. “We’re merging the quality improvement field and the disparities field.”
The roadmap also contains advice on designing interventions to address disparities, drawing upon systemic reviews of disparities research in various diseases. Five such reviews – on HIV, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer, prostate cancer and asthma – accompany the roadmap article in the JGIM symposium. [Fact sheets for each review article are available on request.]
Researchers identified characteristics of successful interventions across the five new articles and previously published reviews of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression and breast cancer. Effective projects were found to utilize team approaches to care, patient navigation, cultural tailoring, collaboration with non-health care partners such as families or community members, and interactive skill-based training.
The reviews also identified potential targets for reducing health disparities that have yet to be examined. For example, in colorectal cancer, reviewers found that projects concentrated only on improving minority screening rates but did not include post-screening follow-up or adherence to treatment. Many interventions also exclusively targeted patient knowledge and behavior to reduce disparities, instead of looking at other components of the health care system.
“Most interventions have been focused on the patient, essentially asking the patient to change rather than looking at the people who are serving the patient and saying, ‘What can we change with that system,'” said Amanda Clarke, MPH, project manager for Finding Answers and co-author of the roadmap paper. “There’s opportunity to do more research and more interventions that are targeting the organization, the immediate care team, and how the team dynamics work.”
While offering general guidelines for best practices, the authors point out that the specifics of any organization’s effort to reduce disparities must be custom-fit to the patient population and community.
“What may work in one setting, may not work in another,” said Scott Cook, PhD, deputy director of Finding Answers and a co-author on the paper. “We thought the roadmap would be a good idea because it would provide guidance and some sort of rail guards to keep people from going way off the path and losing track of addressing disparities in a way that will work.”
The roadmap also emphasizes the need to continually evaluate whether a particular intervention is working, making adjustments as needed. Organizations — and policymakers — also should consider the financial sustainability of efforts to reduce disparities and be mindful of unintended consequences for disparities as health care reforms are implemented.
“You need to have the financial mechanisms in place to make these efforts sustainable,” Chin said. “You can have a very motivated health care organization that knows what to do to reduce disparities, but if in the long run the organization can’t afford to support that work, then it’s going to be really hard for the work to be done. From a policy perspective, you need to put in place the incentives so people are able to do the right thing — what they want to do, and what they know will work to reduce disparities.”

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Is This The First Case Of Cybernetic Hate-Crime?

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Steve Mann, often referred to as the “Father of wearable computing” has posted a very interesting story on his blog. According to Mann, he was “physically assaulted” in a Parisian McDonald’s for wearing his “EyeTap Digital Eye Glass” invention. Similar to the prototypes created by Google and Olympus, the EyeTap is a wearable camera, resembling a pair of spectacles. Instead of using the device for skydiving, Mann has unspecified medical reasons for wearing this device everyday. According to his personal account, when he and his family visited a McDonald’s restaurant in Paris on July 1, 3 employees aggressively questioned him before assaulting him as they tried to remove the glasses from his face. Mann is more than just the father of wearable computing, he´s also a pioneer in this area.

Working as a professor at the University of Toronto in the department of electrical and computer engineering, Mann´s inventions have helped blind and visually impaired people see. More than a philanthropic inventor, Mann is also a bit of an activist against the rising trend of ever-present surveillance cameras.

For instance, in 2002, Mann was strip-searched and questioned by security at his hometown airport, St. John´s International. During this 3-day incident, Mann said $56,800 worth of equipment was damaged, including his futuristic eyeglasses, which he was using at the time to enhance his vision and track his vital signs.

Mann was on his way to the premier of his documentary, Cyberman, in Austin, Texas. In a Wired article just after the documentary premier, Mann explains an experiment he had conducted with his EyeTap glasses. To conduct this experiment, he streamed, in real-time, everything he saw through his camera-equipped glasses, effectively turning the “establishment´s” cameras back on the shooter. His experiment, entitled Shooting Back, was often met with suspicious questioning and funny looks. During a virtual presentation for Shooting Back, Mann explained his experiment thusly: “We explored what happened when we’d bring an ordinary handheld camera into places with surveillance.

“I was often told only criminals were afraid of cameras (by store employees), but then I was told that I couldn’t record in those stores.”

One particular scene in Shooting Back shows Mann being questioned by 3 Wal-Mart employees about his EyeTap camera and the handheld camera he carried throughout the shoot. When the employees tell Mann he´s not allowed to record inside the store, Mann says he should be allowed to record if the store is recording their customers via their surveillance cameras. Mann and his filmmakers are run out of the Wal-Mart when the store´s assistant manager is unable to explain the difference between surveillance cameras and Mann´s cameras.

The most recent McDonald’s incident is just another to add to Mann´s storybook.

Mann gives an exhaustive account on his blog, giving the unnamed McDonald’s employees titles such as “Possible Witness 1 and 2,” and “Perpetrators 1,2 and 3.”

By his account, Mann and his family had just spent the day visiting museums and historical landmarks and, as such, was carrying documentation and a doctors note for his EyeTap device. When Mann and his family first walked in to the McDonald’s on 140, Avenue Champs Elysees, an employee asked him about his eye camera. He presented the documentation and doctors letter and was allowed to remain in the store.

However, as he was eating his food, another employee (referred to as “perpetrator 1,”) tried to forcibly remove the glasses from Mann´s face.

“He angrily grabbed my eyeglass, and tried to pull it off my head. The eyeglass is permanently attached and does not come off my skull without special tools,” Mann writes in his blog.

He once again presented his documentation to Perpetrator 1, who brought Mann to two other employees. Perpetrator 1 then handed the papers to Perpetrator 2 and Perpetrator 3. After they all had studied the papers for a while, Perpetrator 2 “angrily crumpled and ripped up the letter from my doctor.”

Perpetrator 1 then pushed Mann from the restaurant and onto the street.

The McDonald’s employees likely didn´t expect Mann´s camera to be capturing every moment of this altercation. According to the EyeTap inventor, when the computer is damaged by falling or, in Mann´s case, by physical assault, the camera buffers each image and stores them in its memory. The images are not overwritten.

Mann has clear a image of every person involved in this altercation, from the witnesses to the perpetrators and even innocent passers-by.

Mann has reached out to McDonald’s seeking restitution for his broken glasses, but has been unable to do so. As such, he´s asked for help from anyone who has any contact. His attempts to reach out to the Consulate, Embassy and Police were met without any luck.

There are a few questions left unanswered in Mann´s retelling. First, what condition does Mann have which would necessitate the EyeTap device? He does say he was wearing the EyeTap during his 2002 incident at St. John´s International to enhance his vision and track his vital signs, but he doesn´t say much more. While he doesn´t have to explain his conditions, any explanation could bring more sense to the somewhat puzzling account. He does say the device is affixed to his skull, which makes the part of the story about the employee trying to remove them from his head particularly cringe-worthy.

Secondly, Mann doesn´t say specifically what problem the McDonald’s employees had with his EyeTap device. At the end of his blog post, he does mention reaching out to an American who was physically assaulted in another Parisian McDonald’s for taking pictures of their menu. Were the employees simply upset that Mann may have been violating a McDonald’s “no photography” policy? Furthermore, why did they become so irate so quickly? As Mann´s is the only account of the incident we have, these questions will likely go unanswered until another witness speaks up.

McDonald’s has issued a comment to Forbes, saying only that they, “take the claims and feedback of our customers very seriously. We are in the process of gathering information about this situation and we ask for patience until all of the facts are known.

For now, many are wondering: Is this the first case of cybernetic hate-crime? If these EyeTap devices become commonplace in the future, as Mann suggests, will there be more altercations like this in the coming years? Will this incident give McDonald’s and other retail chains a reason to review their surveillance and “no photography” policies?

California Current Along The West Coast Of The United States

The California current flows along the West Coast of the United States and is classified as a cold ocean current. The current flows from North to South bringing colder waters from the North to the south. Some climate impacts that this current has on the West Coast include stronger longer periods of rain showers and t-storm activity. The reason for this is because of the waters being colder not allowing for strong convection to occur.

The second impact this current has is that it keeps the immediate coastline from Seattle to San Diego cooler than the rest of the region. For example San Diego might only get to 70F while just to the east the temp may increase rapidly into the 90’s.

This current is also responsible for what is known as a “Marine Layer” of fog that hampers the coast in the summer and can be really dense depending upon how warm the air is right above the region.

This current is strongest during the winter allowing for the region to not get as cold during winter.

EL-Nino’s impact is that it alters the southern portion of the current just enough allowing for very intense weather systems to form in Southern California during the winter months.

The flow of the current changes just near Central California as it starts to push westward back into the Pacific.

Ghost-faced Bat, Mormoops megalophylla

The ghost-faced bat (Mormoops megalophylla) is one of two living species within its genus. It has a large range that includes Peru, Belize, Trinidad and Tobago, Mexico, Ecuador, and Colombia. In the United States, it can be found in Texas, and there have been records of it appearing in California and Arizona. It prefers a habitat within warm and humid environments.

The ghost-faced bat is small, and is typically reddish-brown or dark brown in color. As the bat ages, this red becomes more noticeable. Every year, between the months of June and September, these bats will molt their fur. Because the nose is not developed, these bats have a face that appears to be smashed. Its ears are large and seem to join at the forehead, and coupled with the thick skin on the bats face, it has a very strange appearance.

The ghost-faced bat will gather in large colonies, although they do not prefer to roost together, and instead will roost about 5.9 inches away from other bats. These roosts are usually within caves, tunnels, or mines. When foraging, these bats will form large clusters that split once a feeding ground has been located. Large moths are the preferred food for this bat, and they can be seen flying over bodies of stagnant water searching for the moths.

The typical birthing season for the ghost-faced bat occurs between the months of March and June, when the average birth consists of only one pup.  Because of their sensitivity to the cold, nursing mothers and their young will reside farther back in the roosts in order to retain body heat.

This bat is unique in that it keeps its body temperature a few degrees higher than average, but this leads them to be sensitive to cold temperatures. They cannot survive temperatures less than 50 degrees Fahrenheit for more than two hours. Because of its tendency to roost in large colonies, it is susceptible to disease and parasites, which are reasons known to wipe out entire colonies. The ghost-faced bat appears on the IUCN Red List with a conservation status of “Least Concern”.

Image Caption: Mormoops megalophylla. Credit: Alex Borisenko, Biodiversity Institute of Ontario/Wikipedia(CC BY-SA 3.0)

Composite Fillings Found To Affect Child Behavior

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Researchers recently found that children who receive dental fillings made of bisphenol-A (BPA), a plastics chemical, could have behavioral changes that are small but be significant over a long period of time.

In the study, researchers examined 534 children in New England who had fillings for a minimum of two cavities. They looked at their social skills as part of the New England Children´s Amalgam Trial (NECAT) before the fillings and five years after having the fillings. The fillings were made up of two different kinds of material; one material is called amalgam, a silver blend that is longer used due to its use of mercury; and a second material made of bisGMA, which is based off of BPA.

“Some tooth-colored fillings known as composites were associated with worse social behavior in children age 11 to 16 at the end of the study,” researcher Nancy Maserejian, an epidemiologist and senior research scientist at the New England Research Institutes, told WebMD.

In particular, those children who had the highest amount of fillings made of bisGMA demonstrated more emotional problems five years after the procedure than children who had fewer bisGMA fillings. They were also more likely to do badly on exams regarding anxiety or friendships. No behavioral problems occurred with children who had fillings of amalgam. The findings were recently featured online and will be published in the August print edition of Pediatrics.

“It was actually kind of a surprise that instead of seeing any possible adverse associations with amalgam, that the trends seem to go the other way and the children in the composite group seemed to have more problems,” noted Maserejian in a U.S. News article. “On average, the difference in social behavior scores were very small and would probably not be noticed for each individual child“¦ But imagine a huge group of children around the country; you’d probably notice a difference.”

Interesting enough, previous research has shown a relationship between BPA exposure and aggressive activity or hyperactive among adolescents. Composite fillings, such as those made from BPA, were popular to treat children´s cavities in the 1990s as many thought they were safer than amalgam fillings. Patients also thought that the BPA-based fillings looked more natural.

“This study raises enough concern about the alternative of amalgam to revisit the value of amalgam,” remarked Dr. Burton Edelstein, a pediatric dentist and professor of dentistry at New York´s Columbia University, in the U.S. News article.

Based on the findings, public health professional believe that more research needs to be done.

“This study is a call for more research,” commented Dr. Mary Hayes, a pediatric dentist in Chicago and a spokeswoman for the American Dental Association, in the U.S. News article.

Apart from the study, researchers believe that parents can work with their dentists to reduce exposure with instructions like asking the dentist to vacuum around the tooth following the application of the filling. Parents can also work to prevent cavities in their children by assisting them in brushing their teeth, taking them to the dentist twice a year, and offering water instead of sugary drinks for consumption.

“If you´ve got to have a filling, you´re better to go with one that does not have BPA, but that is not a panacea,” explained Edelstein in the U.S. News article. “The only real solution is to realize that no material is better than the material that Mother Nature gave us and to do a better job of [cavity] prevention.”

Dementia Symptoms Linked To Naps, Sleep Quality

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online
Even though information on Alzheimer´s is relatively sparse, researchers are ramping up their projects to find out more about the disorder. In particular, representatives at the Alzheimer´s Association International Conference in Vancouver recently stated that there´s a possible correlation between sleep quality and quantity with the risk of cognitive decline. Based on a number of studies, they concluded that naps could be linked to dementia and that the sleeping patterns of the elderly could help diagnose dementia.
According to the U.S. National Library of Medicine, Alzheimer´s is a form of dementia that affects behavior, memory, and thinking.
“The studies presented today at AAIC suggest that cognitive health declines over the long term in some people with sleep problems. The good news is that tools already exist to monitor sleep duration and quality and to intervene to help return sleep patterns to normal. If we do this, there is the possibility that we may also help people preserve their cognitive health, but that needs to be tested,” commented William Thies, the chief medical and scientific officer of the Alzheimer’s Association, in a prepared statement
Past studies have shown that the risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes can increase when individuals sleep longer or shorter than the recommended seven hours a night.
“We know that sleep patterns change as people age and that poor sleep affects overall health. What we don’t know for certain is whether poor sleep has long-term consequences on cognitive function,” remarked Thies in the statement.
In one study, researchers at Brigham and Women´s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts set out on a project that analyzed data of over 15,000 participants who were involved in the Nurses´ Health Study. The individuals were 70 years of age or older during the first cognitive exam that was taken between 1995 and 2000. They took follow-up cognitive assessment every six years after the first exam. The scientists categorized the participants based on their daily sleep.
The team of investigators found that those who slept five hours or less had lower average cognition than those who had seven hours of sleep per day. As well, those who slept nine hours or more a day also had lower average cognition than those who had seven hours or day. For women specifically, the researchers saw that a change in two hours of sleep or more resulted in poorer cognitive function than those who demonstrated no change in their sleeping patterns.
After obtaining data, the researchers worked to understand the relationship between sleep duration and changes in the ration of a particular set of proteins in the brain that signal the development of Alzheimer´s. They looked at a subset of women who provided blood samples in 1999 and 2000. The team saw that the women who slept more or less than the recommended seven hours had a decline in the proteins that were studied.
“Our findings support the notion that extreme sleep durations and changes in sleep duration over time may contribute to cognitive decline and early Alzheimer’s changes in older adults,” explained lead author Elizabeth Devore in the statement. “The public health implications of these findings could be substantial, as they might lead to the eventual identification of sleep- and circadian- based strategies for reducing risk of cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s.”
Based on these findings, researchers believe that as people age, they are more likely to have problems with sleeping like insomnia and sleep apnea. However, scientists still do not completely understand the connection between sleep problems and the risk of developing dementia or changes in cognitive function. As such, in the second study, a group of researchers from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) examined the cognitive function and clinical cognitive status of over 1,300 women in a multi-center study that analyzed the link between sleep quantity and declining cognitive ability. The study took place over five years and measured sleep parameters such as total sleep time, nighttime wakefulness, and sleep apnea.
“We believe that these results indicate that the relationship between sleep disordered breathing and dementia may be connected to the decrease in oxygen associated with sleep apnea and not to disrupted patterns of sleep,” noted Dr. Kristine Yaffe of UCSF in the statement. “Overall, our findings support a relationship between sleep disturbances and cognitive decline in late age. They suggest that health practitioners should consider assessing older people with sleep disorders for changes in cognition.”
The third study that was discussed at the conference focused on sleep quantity and how the quantity decreases as people become older. Dr. Claudine Berr of INSERM in Montpellier, France led a team of researchers to study data from the French Three-City Study, a long-term ongoing multisite study that looked at the connection between vascular disease and dementia in individuals who were 65 years of age or older. In total, 4,898 study participants completed sleep questionnaires. The researchers discovered that excessive daytime sleepiness was related to an increase in the risk for cognitive decline.
“These results suggest that excessive daytime sleepiness may be an early predictor of cognitive decline and that sleep complaints should be adequately evaluated in older persons,” remarked the study’s researchers in the statement.
The last study released at the conference, a project by researchers from the Washington University of School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, highlighted the theory that increased production or decreased degradation of amyloid protein could lead to dementia as changes in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amyloid-beta 42 have been identified as biomarkers for Alzheimer´s disease. The researchers took hourly CSF and plasma samples over 36 hours from individuals with dementia, age-matched participants, and younger participants. They looked at the changes in amyloid-beta levels as well as the effects of amyloidosis on sleep patterns and aging.
“Our study suggests amyloid proteins are dynamic and regulated in a circadian pattern that is part of the normal control of amyloid-beta concentrations. Regulatory mechanisms of these proteins may be altered with aging and amyloidosis,” explained Dr. Yafei Huang in the statement.
The WU researchers noted that more research needs to be done in the area.
“These findings indicate that circadian rhythms and age should be studied further and better understood as research in CSF biological markers moves forward to ensure standardized, accurate measurements of key Alzheimer’s proteins for future early detection of the disease,” Thies concluded in the statement.

Topographic Impacts of Mt. Fuji in Japan

Image Credit: Joshua Kelly

Mt. Fuji is the highest mountain in the country of Japan. It does have a large impact on the weather in the region. The first impact is shown in the image to the left. This is known as a cap cloud as it sits snuggly on top of the mountain. This feature can be indicative of strong turbulence in the area for aviation purposes.

The second impact that Mt. Fuji can have is the winter weather in the Tokyo area. When storm systems come in from the west they tend to get trapped behind Mt. Fuji. West of Mt. Fuji, Snowfall amounts are incredible every winter, while to the east, in Tokyo, they barely get any snow on a yearly basis.

A third weather impact is when colder air travels in from the Northeast off the waters of the Pacific. It gets trapped in the Tokyo area so that cold air forms a dome over the region creating a colder air environment. Mt. Fuji, with its height, can also play a huge impact in weakening a tropical system that travels up the coast.

Subsequent ACL injuries Linked To Pre-Injury Cartilage Biomarkers

Army researchers made a surprising discovery while examining the impact of an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear (a common knee injury), on four serum biomarkers associated with cartilage health. The researchers found that pre-injury concentrations for all but one of the four serum biomarkers studied were associated with the subsequent likelihood of ACL injury. The findings were presented Saturday at the annual meeting of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM).

“We expected to see post-injury differences in biomarkers, but were astonished that the biomarkers showed measurable differences months or years prior to injury,” said U.S. Army Lt. Col. Steven Svoboda, M.D., during his presentation, titled The Association between Serum Biomarkers of Cartilage Turnover and Subsequent Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture. “If we can identify people predisposed to ACL tears, one day we may be able to prevent injuries before they occur.”

Svoboda, an orthopedic surgeon at Keller Army Community Hospital in West Point, N.Y., is director of the John A. Feagin, Jr., Sports Medicine Fellowship and head team physician for the West Point football program. Svoboda presented the Army research findings at the AOSSM’s O’Donoghue Sports Injury Research Award Presentation. This award is given annually to the best overall paper that deals with clinical based research or human in-vivo research.

Researchers measured pre-injury levels of four biomarkers of cartilage turnover and metabolism in 45 ACL-injured subjects and 45 control subjects who were matched to the injured subjects by height, sex, weight and age to see if there were differences. Pre-injury samples for all subjects were stored in the Department of Defense Serum Repository, which maintains serum samples drawn from service members at various points during their military careers.

They found that small differences (1 nanogram/milliliter) in pre-injury levels of three of the four biomarkers were associated with being more likely to sustain a subsequent ACL injury than the control group. In fact, an increase in one biomarker was associated with being 19 times more likely to sustain a later injury.

ACL tears are endemic, with 150,000 ACL injuries in the U.S. each year among military personnel, athletes and others with physically demanding careers or pursuits. Several recent studies have shown that high-risk biomechanical movement patterns, specifically excessive knee valgus angle during landing — or landing knock-kneed — causes increased pressure on the joint. “Our study adds to existing knowledge by raising the possibility of a link between risky movement patterns and biochemical processes associated with cartilage metabolism,” added Dr. Svoboda. “Coaches and athletic trainers of the future may help athletes with high biomarker levels reduce their risk of ACL injury by improving their balance and motor control or correcting how they jump and land.”

The study also has implications for the study of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) because a high percentage of those who experience ACL tears go on to develop PTOA. An imbalance in the ability of cartilage to regenerate itself has been theorized as a critical component in the development of osteoarthritis.

The ACL injured cases for this study were 45 of 71 subjects from an existing clinical trial comparing outcomes for ACL reconstructions performed with two different autograft techniques. Patients were predominately male (86.7 percent) with a mean age of 20.26 years. The study was supported by a grant from the Orthopaedic Research & Education Foundation.

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Facebook “Seen By” For Groups Makes Things A Bit Awkward

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Life had enough potentially awkward moments before Facebook. Now, there´s a whole new etiquette just for social networking as people mind their Ps and Qs online. For instance, which of us haven´t spent an inordinate amount of time dissecting the possible ramifications of de-friending a “friend.” How disturbing is it, by the way, that the word “de-friending” is now a part of our accepted lexicon? This act of making relationships – friendship or otherwise – “official” and announcing them to your network is only scratching the surface of a very awkward rash.

There´s also the danger of outing yourself to a “friend” whose invitation to dinner you´ve declined. For instance, a friend asks you to have dinner. Not really enjoying this friend´s company, you decline and say, “Oh, sorry! I´ve already got plans for that evening!”

Then, without realizing it, you find yourself on the night of said proposed dinner home alone, updating your status to something along the lines of “Doing nothing at home! Who´s up for drinks?”

Of all its warts, one of Facebook´s most largest downfalls is the ease with which it walks us into awkward moments.

Now, the Social Giant has pushed out another feature which could make things a little more uncomfortable next time you actually see your friends face-to-face: The ability to see whom has read group posts. Announced in a July 11th release, Facebook said users can now see who has read posts in a group. Now, every friend in your groups will know if you read the post about your friend´s party or the time everyone was supposed to get together for a movie, removing one more possible excuse for simply skipping out on plans.

Gone are the days when one could simply blame technology and say, “Oh, I´m sorry! I never saw that post!” Now, we´ll all have to come up with better excuses when we show up just in time for pizza and beer, missing the hard labor of helping a friend move.

More than just a facilitator of awkward moments, Facebook also has the practiced knack of pushing the boundaries of its user´s privacy, one inch at a time. While this new feature can make things a little more clumsy, it also represents another way in which Facebook not only keeps an eye on you, but broadcasts your behaviors (friend connections, wall posts, comments, etc) to the world. It´s worth noting that many of your actions can be more or less “hidden” from Facebook, meaning they won´t post them to your wall or announce them to your friends. On the other hand, finding these settings is a notorious chore, sending users to a complicated and confusing list of privacy settings that often change. Have you ever wondered why so many privacy advocates encourage users to frequently check your Facebook privacy settings?

Without constant monitoring, your friends end up seeing every comment, every connection and even some websites you visit. Like a dog prone to jump the fence and terrorize the neighborhood, users must constantly keep one eye on their privacy settings to make sure they don´t run away, dumping over garbage cans and relieving themselves on the neighbors´ lawns.

While these notifications can be toggled on and off (even if it is difficult to do so) there exists no option to turn off the “seen by” notification in a group post. Some cynical Facebookers may be concerned that if this feature exists for group posts, then it could easily exist for the News Feed, leaving behind digital footprints for anyone who has read a user´s content. When asked about this, Facebook told TechCrunch they were “not going to discuss what we might (or might not) do in the future.”

It bears repeating: Mind your Facebook privacy settings often. You may also want to think twice before reading any group posts from a friend you´ll likely try to avoid.

An alternate solution would be to simply “de-friend” this person, or just be upfront and honest with them when you decline their invitation“¦but where´s the fun in that?

Difference Between Onshore And Offshore Flow

Onshore flow describes the movement of any weather feature moving towards the shore. The most common weather features that are affiliated with onshore flow are Hurricanes and the daily sea breeze. What happens with a hurricane is the Northeast side of the storm will produce winds out of the Southeast to South which will force the ocean water (Storm Surge) towards the coast along with all the extensive precipitation shields. Another feature is known as the Sea breeze. The sea breeze happens during the afternoon when the ocean waters and the land are at different temps. The air over the land is warmer than the water causing the air to rise vertically over the land and the air from the ocean moves in to shore and fills in the empty space along the coast, this creates afternoon t-storms just about 5-10miles on shore near the coast.

Offshore flow describes the movement of any weather feature moving away from land and to the sea. The most common weather features are again with a hurricane. If you recall during Hurricane Katrina, remember that places in Louisiana were dealing with the winds and water of the lakes. The reason for this is that the winds were blowing from the North-Northeast forcing all the air and water away from the shore. Another feature is the land breeze which occurs during the evening hours. This is when the land gets cooler than the water creating the air over the water to go upwards and then the cooler air over the land moves out over the water to fill in the space.

Women Are Smarter Than Men

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

“Woman brane reel gud, better then men brane.”

Here´s another study for the “obvious” file: Women are smarter than men. As you reach for this file (which by now should be located in an easy-to-reach spot on your desk) you´ll likely notice several other stories bearing the same headline.

For example, a 2008 Higher Education Policy Institute report said women are not only more likely to get into better schools, they´re also more likely to outperform the men once there.

Then, in 2009, a British researcher named Adrian Furnham released a report which said men and women likely have the same levels of intelligence, but men are more apt to think they are smarter than women. Another story for the “Obvious” file.

In 2010, some researchers created an online version of the popular board game “Trivial Pursuit” to study which sex has the better brain. Five months and more than 15 million questions later, the researchers said women answered more questions correctly than men.

Today´s report says women, on average, score 5 points higher than men in IQ tests. According to James Flynn, an expert on IQ tests, this is the first time in over 100 years women have scored higher than men, and it´s likely due to all that multi-tasking women are so gosh-darned good at.

“In the last 100 years the IQ scores of both men and women have risen but women´s have risen faster,” said Flynn.

“This is a consequence of modernity. The complexity of the modern world is making our brains adapt and raising our IQ,” he added.

Mr. Flynn’s research suggests taking care of kids, holding down a job, and keeping up with the resulting schedules of each can really pump up a woman´s brain power. Though women have always had this mental power (a point raised in Furnham´s 2009 research) Mr. Flynn says they´re only now realizing it.

“The full effect of modernity on women is only just emerging,” said Flynn. He plans to alert the women of the world about their mental super powers in an upcoming book. He also says he plans to conduct more research to fully explain the ever-rising intelligence of the fairer sex.

Looking to women from Argentina, Canada, Estonia, western Europe, New Zealand and the United States, Mr. Flynn´s report shows that the gap, though minimal, is more apparent in westernized countries where women are more likely to work and take care of families.

When Mr. Flynn studied the IQs of women in Australia, he found men and women were almost identical.

It´s all a part of evolution, says Mr. Flynn, who also suspects British women are smarter than British men, though there isn´t enough data to prove him right.

“As the world gets more complex, and living in it demands more abstract thought, so people are adapting.”

While a peer-reviewed study is always a nice “so there!” to end any Battle-of-the-Sexes argument, it´s also worth noting that anyone married to a woman is likely already well aware of this fact.

It´s also interesting to note that the majority of these studies are performed by men, calling into question their ability to ever learn anything.

Watching TV Leads To Weight Gain And Physical Weakness

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Watching too much TV is generally considered unhealthy by many experts, and that could be no more true than in a new study published in BioMed Central℠s ℠International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity´ (IJBNPA) that has found the more hours young children spend in front of the screen, the more they are adding to their waist line as they continue to grow.

Children under the age of two should not spend any more than two hours per day watching TV, recommends the American Academy of Pediatrics. However, growing evidence suggests that parents may be relying more on TV as an “electronic babysitter,” a consequence that could be detrimental to their children´s´ physical well-being as they age.

According to researchers, led by Dr. Caroline Fitzpatrick from New York University and senior author Dr. Linda Pagani from the University of Montreal, two- to four-year-olds who spend too much time watching TV are inadvertently contributing to their waist size by the end of the fourth grade, and perhaps hindering his or her ability to play in sports.

“We already knew that there is an association between preschool television exposure and the body fat of fourth grade children, but this is the first study to describe more precisely what that association represents,” said Pagani.

For their study, Pagani and Fitzpatrick used participants from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development, and assessed parental reports of the number of hours their kids spent watching TV per week at 2-and-half-years (29 months) and 4-and-a-half years old (53 months).

“Trained examiners took waist measurements and administered the standing long jump test to measure child muscular fitness. We found, for example that each weekly hour of TV at 29 months of age corresponds to a decrease of about a third of a centimeter in the distance a child is able to jump,” explained Pagani.

Not only did the standing long jump test reveal important clues about muscular fitness, it also revealed an individual´s athletic ability, as sports such as football, skating, and basketball require the “explosive leg strength” measured by the test.

The team found that for each hour of TV viewing per week at 29 months, a 0.14 inch decrease in the standing long jump test was seen, indicating loss of muscle strength. An extra hour´s increase in weekly TV exposure correlated to an extra 0.11 inch reduction in performance in the test.

The team also found that waist circumference at fourth grade increased by 0.01 inches for every hour of TV watched between the ages of 29 and 53 months. That, in turn, corresponded to a 0.16 inch increase in waist size by age 10, or a 0.29 inch increase for those who watched more than 18 hours of TV per week.

“TV is a modifiable lifestyle factor, and people need to be aware that toddler viewing habits may contribute to subsequent physical health.” warned Fitzpatrick. “Further research will help to determine whether amount of TV exposure is linked to any additional child health indicators, as well as cardiovascular health.”

While the team stresses that further research is needed to establish that TV exposure is the direct cause of the health issues observed, this study should encourage authorities to develop policies targeting environmental factors associated with childhood obesity.

“The bottom line is that watching too much television — beyond the recommended amounts — is not good,” Pagani concluded.

“These findings support clinical suspicions that more screen time in general contributes to the rise in excess weight in our population, thus providing essential clues for effective approaches to its eradication,” the American Academy of Pediatrics said.

Walking Ability Precursor To Alzheimer’s Disease

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online
A person´s walking patterns or ability to do so could be an early warning sign of cognitive decline and warrants advanced testing, according to researchers at a health conference on Sunday.
The findings are the result of three studies linking changes in walking ability to a weakening mental state, an early sign of dementia or Alzheimer´s disease. The findings were reported at the Alzheimer´s Association International Conference (AAIC) in Vancouver, Canada yesterday.
The findings are the first to make a physical connection to the disease, which previously required lengthy neurological exams and diagnoses. Experts say changes in a person´s walking patterns may occur well before cognitive decline surfaces. They noted that the evidence from the studies is “robust.”
The report, which came on the opening day of the week-long conference, follows a plan by the US government announced back in May that will help train doctors to detect earlier signs of Alzheimer´s and find a cure by 2025.
“Monitoring deterioration and other changes in a person´s gait is ideal because it doesn´t require any expensive technology or take a lot of time to assess,” said Bill Thies, chief medical officer for the Alzheimer´s Association.
Alzheimer´s affects more than 5 million Americans and is expected to increase to 16 million by 2050 as the Baby Boomer generation ages.
In one of the studies, researchers, led by Dr. Stephanie Bridenbaugh from the Basel Mobility Center in Switzerland, tracked the walking abilities of nearly 1,200 elderly memory clinic outpatients and compared the results to the walking ability of healthy persons.
The results from the four-year study showed that a slowing pace and a change in gait was associated with  progressed mental decline — either mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or advanced Alzheimer´s disease.
“Those with Alzheimer’s dementia walked slower than those with MCI, who in turn walked slower than those who were cognitively healthy,” explained Bridenbaugh in a news release issued by AAIC.
In the second study, researchers, led by Dr. Rodolfo Savica of the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging in Rochester, Minnesota, also looked at walking patterns among more than 1,300 patients over a 15-month period.
Their results showed that a decline in mental skills, including memory loss and executive function, were associated with a slowed walking pace and shortening of stride.
“Walking and movements require a perfect and simultaneous integration of multiple areas of the brain,” said Savica. “These results support a possible role of gait changes as an early predictor of cognitive impairment.”
Walking changes occur because the disease interferes with the circuitry between areas of brain. Savica ruled out other diseases, such as Parkinson´s and arthritis, as possible causes in his study findings.
In the third study, researchers from the Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine in Sendai, Japan, followed 525 men and women 75 and older, conducting neurological, psychological and physical tests to assess the potential of a connection between gait and dementia.
In that study, led by Kenichi Meguro, the results mirrored both studies from Swiss and American researchers. Meguro´s team found that as walking abilities declined, so too did the mental skills of the patients.
“Gait velocity was significantly decreased as the severity of dementia symptoms increased,” Meguro noted in the new release. “Gait should no longer be considered a simple, automatic motor activity that is independent of cognition. They are linked.”
Lisa Silbert, a physician at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, said that a single test might not work with everyone, however. “You´d be surprised how many people say to me ‘He doesn´t walk that well at home’ when I give them a gait test in the office,” she told Janice Lloyd at USA Today.
Silbert, who conducted a separate study on 19 dementia-free volunteers, measured gait speed during MRIs and gait speeds at home. She found that participants walked faster in the lab than they did at home. Slower in-home walking speed was associated with smaller total brain size. Dementia causes brain shrinkage, she noted.
The three studies reported at the AAIC may have uncovered a link between walking patterns and dementia, but did not prove a cause-and-effect connection.

FDA Caught Spying On Whistleblowers

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) secretly kept critics of its policy under surveillance, secretly recording thousands of emails that the individuals sent privately to lawmakers, attorneys, labor officials, members of the media, and even the President of the United States.

The operation, detailed by New York Times‘ reporters Eric Lichtblau and Scott Shane on Saturday, originated with an investigation into the possible leaking of confidential FDA information by a quartet of agency scientists.

Over time, however, it grew “into a much broader campaign to counter outside critics of the agency´s medical review process” and generated more than 80,000 pages of computer documents, according to Lichtblau and Shane.

“Moving to quell what one memorandum called the ‘collaboration’ of the FDA’s opponents, the surveillance operation identified 21 agency employees, Congressional officials, outside medical researchers and journalists thought to be working together to put out negative and ‘defamatory’ information about the agency,” they wrote.

“FDA officials defended the surveillance operation, saying that the computer monitoring was limited to the five scientists suspected of leaking confidential information about the safety and design of medical devices,” Lichtblau and Shane added. “While they acknowledged that the surveillance tracked the communications that the scientists had with Congressional officials, journalists and others, they said it was never intended to impede those communications, but only to determine whether information was being improperly shared.”

While the FDA is legally permitted to monitor activity on its own computers, the Daily Mail claims that they may have broken the law by intercepting certain types of documents with confidential privileges, including correspondence between an attorney and a client, a whistleblower complaint sent to members of Congress, or workplace grievances filed with the federal government.

“The discovered documents reveal that the FDA used spy-software which enabled them to track messages line by line as they were being written,” the UK newspaper added. “The surveillance began with a dispute between FDA scientists and their bosses over the scientists´ assertion that the agency had approved medical imaging devices which exposed patients to dangerous radiation levels.”

Reportedly, the issue began as a dispute between the quartet of scientists and superiors at the FDA, in which the former accused the latter of “faulty review procedures” which led to the approval of medical imaging devices used to conduct mammograms and colonoscopies. Those devices exposed patients to dangerous levels of radiation, according to a story published on the website of the San Francisco Chronicle.

“The documents captured in the surveillance effort — including confidential letters to at least a half-dozen Congressional offices and oversight committees, drafts of legal filings and grievances, and personal e-mails — were posted on a public Web site, apparently by mistake, by a private document-handling contractor that works for the FDA,” Lichtblau and Shane reported, adding that the New York Times “reviewed the records and their day-by-day, sometimes hour-by-hour accounting of the scientists´ communications.”

“With the documents from the surveillance cataloged in 66 huge directories, many Congressional staff members regarded as sympathetic to the scientists each got their own files containing all their e-mails to or from the whistle-blowers. Drafts and final copies of letters the scientists sent to Mr. Obama about their safety concerns were also included,” they added. “Last year, the scientists found that a few dozen of their e-mails had been intercepted by the agency. They filed a lawsuit over the issue in September“¦ But the wide scope of the FDA surveillance operation, its broad range of targets across Washington, and the huge volume of computer information that it generated were not previously known, even to some of the targets.”

‘Exergames’ Alone Do Not Improve Fitness Levels

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

So-called ℠active´ video games that involve moving, dancing, karate chopping, or drumming help gamers to burn more calories than sedentary games, but they are no substitute for physical exercise, according to a new study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

That´s because the active gamers in the study tended to take in more calories by snacking than they burned by playing the games. Researchers found that they ate 376 more calories than they burned. That compared to around a 650-calorie surplus among study participants that chose to watch television or play inactive games instead.

The latest study builds on previous research that highlighted the unhealthy nature of spending hours on the couch in front of a television.

“There have been a couple of studies that have shown that TV watching and video playing increase eating, and they increase eating when compared to doing nothing,” lead author Elizabeth Lyons, a researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), told Reuters Health.

In the study, Lyons and her team allowed 120 experienced gamers to watch TV, play sedentary games, or active video games. The participants were asked not to eat for 2 hours before their mealtime-scheduled appointments. Researchers recorded appetite levels before each session began, and then observed them for one hour.

As participants watched shows or played games such as Street Fighter IV or Dance Dance Revolution – chocolate, chips, trail mix, and sodas were easily accessible.

Lyons and her team found that sedentary video gamers ate the most, averaging over 747 calories during the hour long session. The study said that active gamers ate only slightly less, taking in around 553 calories on average.

“People will always find a way to eat,” Lyons told Reuters reporter Natasja Sheriff. “No matter what group they were in they still ate a remarkable amount.”

Study participants took in an average of 672 calories per one hour session, which is the equivalent of about a third of the daily intake recommended for women by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and just under a one-fourth of the recommendation for men.

Researchers also noted that men tended to eat more than women, with some sedentary gamers eating in excess of 1000 calories. Participants´ weight did not play a factor in how many calories they consumed, the researchers added.

This study comes on the heels of another report on ℠exergames´ published earlier this year by a joint team of American and Chinese researchers that attempted to determine if active games encourage more physical activity.

In that study, the participants wore accelerometers periodically to measure their physical activity over the course of 13 weeks. The researchers then distributed the consoles and games without instructions on exercising.

The study found “no evidence that children receiving the active video games were more active in general, or at any time, than children receiving the inactive video games.”

“When you prescribe increased physical activity, overall activity remains the same because the subjects compensate by reducing other physical activities during the day,” said study co-author Anthony Barnett, an exercise physiologist who is a consultant at the University of Hong Kong.

Skinny Jeans Could Cause Testicular Problems, Other Health Issues

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

The tight pants lovingly known as “skinny jeans” might be a big fashion trend right now, but new research suggests that wearing them could pose a bevy of health risks, including low sperm count, urinary tract infection, abdominal discomfort and heartburn.

According to the UK newspaper The Telegraph, general practitioner, television personality and medical writer Dr. Hilary Jones and other experts have reported an increased amount of injuries to men caused by the denim slacks, which have become popular thanks to a number of celebrities.

Jones, who is working with TENA, a manufacturer of incontinence and bladder weakness supplies, to highlight the potential dangers of the tight pants, which include bladder issues, urinary tract infections, low sperm count, fungal infections, and a condition known as twisted testicles — a condition in which the snug-fitting slacks prevent the spermatic cord from moving freely, potentially cutting off blood supply to the testicles and requiring surgery to prevent gangrene from setting in.

“I have seen several cases of men who have twisted their testicles due to wearing jeans that are far too tight,” Jones said, according to the New York Daily News. “My advice would be to make sure you leave plenty of room around the groin area and that your pants and trousers feel comfortable so you’re not being restricted in any way.”

The advisory comes on the heels of a TENA-sponsored study of 2,000 British men which revealed that 10% of them had experienced “an unpleasant side-effect” from wearing skinny jeans, according to the Telegraph. Half of those individuals had reported groin discomfort, more than 25% had experienced bladder issues, and 20% of them had suffered from a twisted testicle.

Men aren’t the only ones who put their health at risk to look thinner or more fashionable because of their tight jeans. The Daily News reported that women wearing the snug-fitting slacks can increase their risk of developing vaginal yeast infections, and both sexes are at an increased risk of nerve compression, which can result in numb or tingling thighs, the newspaper also reported.

That condition is known as meralgia paresthetica, Columbia University Medical Center vascular surgeon Dr. Nicholas Morrissey told Michelle Castillo of CBS News on Thursday, and is caused when the skinny jeans constrict a sensory nerve that originates from the pelvis.

“People who wear skinny jeans sometimes say they feel a numbness going down their leg because of the constriction. Their thigh then goes to sleep, and when they stand up, it feels like their foot isn’t under them,” Castillo said. “Morrissey said that the condition itself isn’t dangerous, but if you keep having repeat episodes it can cause permanent damage.”

The best way to avoid these health complications, Morrissey said, was to avoid wearing restrictive clothing in an attempt to make yourself look more fit. “When you’re wearing skinny jeans to make yourself skinny that’s not the point,” he said. “Skinny jeans are meant to accentuate the way you look, not to make yourself look another way. Clothing isn’t designed to give us a shape that we don’t have, and that’s where people get in trouble.”

Dentist Exposed Thousands To Possible HIV Infection

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

An ongoing malpractice investigation centering on a Denver, Colorado oral surgeon has uncovered evidence that he reused syringes and needles, potentially putting thousands of patients at risk of contracting hepatitis or the HIV virus, state health officials revealed on Friday.

Officials at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment have sent letters to 8,000 patients of dentist Stephen Stein, suggesting that they have themselves tested for the conditions after learning of “unsafe injection practices” at a pair of his clinics from September 1999 through June 2011, Keith Coffman of Reuters reported in a Saturday article.

According to Coffman, investigations looking into allegations involving Stein, who had his license suspended for an undisclosed reason last year, found that the dentist had reused needles and syringes at both his oral surgery and dental implant clinics — a “violation of standard medical protocol.”

Health department officials are advising any patient who had received any type of injection at Stein’s facilities to undergo tests for HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C, Reuters said. They also found that the oral surgeon’s records were incomplete, and there may be more patients who could have been exposed due to the syringe and needle reuse.

While the Colorado dental board would not elaborate on the original reason for the June 2011 decision by to suspend Stein’s license, they told Michael Booth of the Denver Post that it was not because of the infection risk, which was unearthed during their probe.

The agreement between Stein and state officials says only that the dentists had “deliberately and willfully” violated the law, and Booth noted that the state attorney general contacted Denver police and the district attorney’s office regarding the investigation back in April.

Dr. Christopher Urbina, executive director and chief medical officer of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, told the Denver Post that officials at the dental board relayed allegations regarding the re-use of needles and syringes at Stein’s offices on April 26. Since then, officials have been reviewing records and interviewing individuals at the doctor’s practices before sending letters to the potentially affected patients.

“Lynn Kimbrough, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Denver, said Stein was already the target of a criminal probe for possible prescription fraud before the allegations emerged about reusing syringes,” said Coffman. “She said no criminal charges had so far been filed.”

Fringe-lipped Bat, Trachops cirrhosus

The fringe-lipped bat (Trachops cirrhosus) is the only species within its genus, Trachops. This species, as well as its three subspecies, can be found in southern Brazil and from southern Mexico to Bolivia. It prefers a habitat within moist or tropical forests, with abundant water sources. It chooses roosts in hollow logs and caves, and can be seen roosting with other bat species.

The fringe-lipped bat can weigh am average of 1.1 ounces. It is typically brownish red in color, although the underbelly is grey.  The nose leaf is prominent and bears serrated edges, and it has a short tail. It derives its name from the warts and bumps on its lips, which give the mouth a “fringed” appearance.

As is typical to bat species, the fringe-lipped bat roosts in small groups of up to fifty individuals containing both male a female bats. Mating season usually occurs between the months of January to June, after which one pup is born. The pup will remain with its mother for a long period.

The diet of the fringe-lipped bat consists of insects, seeds, and even lizards or frogs. These bats will emerge from their roosts early, in order to have higher chances of gleaning a frog from the ground. It will use echolocation to find its prey, sometimes hunting in continuous flight.

The biggest threat to this species is its diet. Because it has a wide variety of preferred foods, human actions can harm its prey. It is not threatened by habitat destruction or hunting, but it does have a main predator, the four-eyed possum, although it is not preyed upon often. With its current high population and lack of threats, the fringe-lipped bat appears on the IUCN Red List with a conservation status of “Least Concern”.

Image Caption: Fringe-lipped bat. Photo taken in La Selva, Costa Rica. Credit: Felineora/Wikipedia(CC BY 3.0)

DirectTV-Viacom Dispute Takes To Web Over Blackouts

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online
Frustrated customers took to social media sites on Wednesday to vent their anger about missing out on some of their favorite television shows amid a dispute between satellite provider DirecTV and Viacom.
The battle has left 20 million customers without access to channels such as MTV, VH1, Nickelodeon, BET, Comedy Central and others, as the Viacom and DirecTV clash over how much a distributor should pay an entertainment company for content.
Viacom pulled its shows off DirecTV on Wednesday as a result of the conflict, leading DirecTV to direct frustrated subscribers to temporarily watch the shows on the Web. However, Viacom thwarted the approach by darkening its Web sites and pulling its popular shows from the Internet.
The move threatens to anger not only DirecTV’s subscribers, but other fans who have no stake in the dispute.
“When my son can’t watch ‘The Backyardigans’ tomorrow he might call DirecTV himself,” wrote Atlanta Falcons All-Pro cornerback Brent Grimes in a Twitter post, referring to the Nickelodeon series.
“Jersey Shores”, “The Daily Show,” and others are among the popular shows unavailable to DirecTV customers or online, while other shows, such as “South Park,” remain online.
It´s not just angry customers who have taken to the Internet to voice their frustrations — DirecTV and Viacom have fired up their own online battle.
Viacom retweeted several posts blaming DirecTV for the blackout, accusing the broadband provider of refusing to negotiate.
Meanwhile, DirecTV pled its case on its Website, saying Viacom wants to hike the price of its channels, which would result in more expensive service for subscribers. The company shared a link to its own version of events, and said it hopes “to reach an agreement soon & keep your bill low.”
Both companies also were sharing their side of the story with fans on Facebook, where customers posted hundreds of comments, some of them laced with frustration and anger.
“This is ridiculous, I’ve only had DirecTV for 6 months and this is the SECOND time that we’ve lost channels that we watch on a regular basis,” wrote one fan on DirecTV’s Facebook page.
“Get your stuff together and get it settled BEFORE it affects us as customers. It’s very unprofessional. I will be canceling once my contract is up,” the subscriber said.
Viacom used its own Facebook page to sling some arrows at DirecTV Wednesday afternoon, posting an image of Nickelodeon cartoon favorite SpongeBob SquarePants with the caption:
“Who lives in a pineapple under the sea? I don’t know. I have DirecTV.”
The move fell flat with at least some Facebook members.
“WOW, Viacom! You win the crown for King of corporate [expletive]s!” one Facebook member wrote.
“My kids are upset because they can’t watch Spongebob anymore after you rubbed it in their faces with that lousy commercial you came up with to HURT their feelings and make DirectTV look like a bunch of [expletive]s and now here you are making a joke about it. YOU SUCK!!!!!”
Hulk Hogan of the “TNA Wrestling Impact” show, which airs on Spike, made a YouTube video that didn´t mince words.
“I’ve had a world of piledriving punishment dished out to me, brother, but I’ve never been hurt like I am right now since I heard that DirecTV dropped Spike,” he says in the video, which had 13,000 views as of Thursday.
Viacom became a trending topic on Twitter by Wednesday night, with high profile show creators like Sons of Anarchy’s Kurt Sutter even weighing in with expletive-laden comments.
Other celebrity complaints were more forthright and pragmatic in tone.
“Dear Direct TV … I want my expensive service to include all the channels I once had. Thanks,” wrote reality-TV star and NBA wife Khloe Kardashian.
DirecTV subscribers and others without access to their favorite shows have a few alternatives at their disposal as they wait for a resolution to the ongoing dispute.   Web services like Hulu Plus offer the current seasons of many TV offerings, including Comedy Central’s “South Park,” “The Daily Show” and The CW’s “Supernatural”, with episodes appearing shortly after they are originally aired.  The top offerings are listed under Hulu’s “Currently On Air” feature.
Hulu is currently offering a free one-week trial, meaning some subscribers could potentially ride out the dispute at no charge.
Amazon, Netflix and other providers also offer current TV series.
Rumors swirled on Thursday that Viacom and DirecTV had resumed discussions in an attempt to settle the dispute, but for now subscribers are still scrambling.
Although a deal between the two companies will likely be done at some point, it is only a matter of time before the same scenario plays out with other broadband providers and media companies.

Platinum Compounds Fight Against Cancer

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) recently revealed a new platinum compound that could eliminate cancer cells more effectively than cisplatin, a popular chemotherapy anticancer drug. Drugs that have platinum are the most widely used most powerful cancer drugs. On the downside, these agents have toxic side effects and the cancer cells can eventually become resistant; as such, the new discovery is exciting for researchers to explore new treatment possibilities.

Researchers hope that the new compound will prove to be affective in fighting cancer.

“I´ve long believed that there´s something special about platinum and its ability to treat cancer,” noted MIT chemistry professor Stephen J. Lippard, who has studied platinum drugs, in a prepared statement. “We might have a chance of applying platinum to a broader range of cancer types, more successfully.”

The project is described in a paper featured in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Lippard, senior author of the paper, has examined the workings of cisplatin and similar drugs for many years in hopes that these drugs would be more powerful, not as many side effects, and overcome cancer-cell resistance. Lippard and the team of researchers looked at compounds that were similar to cisplatin. Cisplatin can treat testicular cancer, ovarian cancer, lymphoma, as well as some lung tumors. The compound becomes positive charged when it enterers a cancerous cell as it replaces its chloride ions. The positive ion can then take on the negative charged DNA, producing cross-links with DNA strands and creating difficulties for the cell to gather information about that part of the DNA. This change causes much damage to the cell and the cell can be eliminated if not repaired.

In the past, scientists also thought that platinum compounds required two DNA binding sites to be able to influence cancer cells. However, researchers discovered in the 1980s that some positively charged platinum compounds could only bind to DNA at one site to activate anti-cancer activity. As such, instead of using cisplatin, the researchers looked at compounds that only had one replace chlorine atom, which would allow the compound to bind to DNA at one site instead of two. In 2008, Lippard and other scientists looked at pyriplatin, a compound that had one of the chlorine atoms of cisplatin replaced by a six-membered pyridine ring that had one nitrogen atom and five carbon atoms. Even though the compound wasn´t as strong as cisplatin, it showed some anti-cancer activity.

With these findings, Lippard focused on creating similar compounds that had larger rings. He believed that these rings would allow the compounds to be stronger in stopping DNA transcription from occuring. The compound ended up being phenanthriplatin, which was compared against 50 other types of cancer cells under the National Cancer Institute´s cancer-drug screening program. Phenanthriplatin was discovered to be four to 40 times stronger than cisplatin, deepening on the cancer cell. It also proved to have a different pattern of activity than cisplatin, which demonstrated that it could possibly be used to treat cancers that were resistant against cisplatin.

Furthermore, the researchers believe that phenanthriplatin has many advantages. For one, it can target cancer cells with fewer difficulties than cisplatin. It also can have the ability to inhibit transcription, making it difficult for the cells to change RNA to DNA in gene expression. Lastly, the compound can shield against cancer cells´ defenses. Phenanthriplatin has bulky three-ring attachments that can stop sulfur from stopping it from working effectively.

Researchers unaffiliated with the study believe that the new compound is a positive step forward.

“It expands the utility of platinum drugs and avoids some of the problems that existing drugs have,” remarked Luigi Marzilli, a professor of chemistry at Louisiana State University, in the statement.

In continuing the research, the investigators are conducting animal tests to understand how effective the drug is in killing tumors and how it moves through the body.

Marine Protected Areas Benefit Fisheries

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

The first clear evidence that no-take protected areas can help restock exploited fish populations on neighboring reefs was presented at the International Coral Reef Symposium today.

These answers will help resolve a long-running discussion worldwide about whether areas blocked off to all forms of fishing help replenish fish numbers outside the marine protected areas (MPAs).

“Using DNA fingerprinting technology, we now can clearly show that the benefits of MPAs spread beyond reserve boundaries, providing a baby bonus to fisheries,” Geoff Jones, from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS) and James Cook University, who led the study commented.

Jones presented his team´s evidence as part of a media meeting on fish larval spreading and the connectivity between reefs entitled “Reef Connections.” International Coral Reef Symposium which is held every 4 years is the premier global coral reef conference and a breeding ground of the latest advances in coral reef science. The research and findings presented at ICRS2012 are imperative in informing national and international policies and the sustainable use of coral reefs globally.

Others joining Jones was Leanne Fernandes, Director and Principal Consultant, Marine and Coastal Resource Management, Earth to Ocean, Australia; Stephen D. Simpson, Marine Biologist & NERC KE Fellow, School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, United Kingdom; and Bob Warner, Professor of Marine Biology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

A full video of the presentation, with each panelist´s discussion of the current science presented at ICRS and management applications of fish larval research is available online at www.icrs2012mediaportal.com.

The groundbreaking study was carried out in the Keppel Island group on Australia´s Great Barrier Reef by researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS), in conjunction with other leading research institutions.

“The implications for local fishing communities around the world are huge,” said Fernandes, who was the manager of the Representative Areas Program in Australia that established one-third of the Great Barrier Reef as no-take protected areas. “It´s never easy to protect areas from fishing because, so often, the fished areas are very important for local communities for food, livelihoods and lifestyles. So fishermen need to know for sure it will work.”

Fernandes said that Jones´ research also shows that MPAs can be effective on small scales, which has implications worldwide. For many communities, particularly in the developing world that depend on small areas of reef for food and income, there are limited options for closing areas to fishing.

“The MPAs weren´t tens of kilometers across. Some were about two kilometers cross or even 800 meters across, and they still worked,” she said. “This is great news for local fishing communities around the world because protecting areas about this size might be possible for them; protecting really big areas is just too hard.”

Using DNA samples, the team of scientists tracked the dispersal pathways of juvenile coral trout and stripey snappers larvae from MPAs in the Keppel island group. They found that a very large proportion of juveniles, 65 percent, settled in nearby areas that are open to fishing. Most of the baby fish settled within one to five kilometers of reserves but a significant proportion dispersed 10 kilometers or more to find a new home.

In addition, the study found that the six marine reserves, which cover only 28 percent of the total reef area of the Keppels, had generated 50 percent of the total juvenile fish, both inside and outside of the reserves. “So 28 percent of the area protected equals 50 percent of the baby fish produced. This means there would have been a lot less fish if the no-take areas weren´t there,” Fernandes said.

Warner said that research into fish larvae behavior is tremendously important to developing successful management approaches. Fish larvae, which are microscopic fish babies, normally are dispersed in the open ocean after they are born, living for days or weeks, before the lucky survivors make it back a reef.

“This poses immense problems for management. How do you manage fish populations if the young produced are scattered out to sea like dandelion puffs drifting in the wind?” he said. But Jones has addressed this critical issue by showing that these fish babies do return to their home reefs, which means that local actions to protect
fish can have direct local benefits, he said.

Simpson added that recent research has shown that fish larvae have highly developed senses, included smell and hearing, and can actively swim back to their home reefs. But that means the reef habitat and adult fish populations need to be intact for them to find their way home. That´s exactly what MPAs can provide, with spillover benefits for neighboring reefs.

“This research is the strongest support for management strategies that adopt marine protected areas as a fundamental tool for sustaining fish populations,” Simpson said.

Satellite Thermometers Helping Science

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

There are satellites for nearly everything out in orbit now-a-days, including some that are meant just to provide measurements of the surface temperature of oceans and seas.

These thermometers in the sky led to the meeting of scientists to review data from new satellite missions and scientific progress in the field.

The European Space Agency said that measuring the sea-surface temperature (SST) across regional and global scales is important for improving weather and ocean forecasting and climate change research.

ESA’s Medspiration project merges SST maps using data from infrared and passive microwave satellite instruments to map SST dynamics in the Mediterranean. The website uses Medspiration SST maps in its near-realtime service for scientists as well.

ESA began monitoring SST in 1991 by launching the first European Remote Sensing satellite (ERS-1), which carried the Along Track Scanning Radiometer (ATSR).

The space agency launched the Envisat satellite in 2002, helping to ensure continuity of SST measurements with its Advanced Along Track Scanning Radiometer (AATSR).

The radiometers on ERS and Envisat were unique because they use two views of the same sea surface when measuring its temperature.

ESA lost contact with the Envisat back on April 8 this year, ending the spacecraft’s 10-year-long mission.

Data from Envisat’s AATSR allowed the U.K. Met Office to upgrade the performance of its OSTIA SST analysis system significantly in 2007, ESA said.

“AATSR, with its dual-view capability, was used as a reference sensor and its loss has degraded the accuracy of the OSTIA SST analysis used by weather and ocean modelling systems,” Jonah Roberts-Jones of the Met Office said in a press release.

ESA said its next mission to continue the dual-view SST dataset is Sentinel-3, which is being developed under Europe’s Global Monitoring and Environmental Security (GMES) program.

The Sentinel-3 will launch in April 2014, and its Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer (SLSTR) extends the capability of AATSR, having a wider swath and more channels.

“Users need records of SST from space lasting decades, without gaps — and many want the records to be independent of in situ measurements,” Chris Merchant, Science Leader of ESA´s Climate Change Initiative project on SST, said in a press release. “That was achieved with the ERS and Envisat radiometers. It´s important to carry this forward to Sentinel-3.”

Future SST measurements came into focus last month at the 13th Science Team Meeting of the Group for High Resolution Sea Surface Temperature (GHRSST), according to ESA.

The meeting brought international scientists and space agency representatives that maintain the provision of SST data for science and operational services.

The meeting in Tokyo was particularly important as it was the first after the launches of the US satellite Suomi-NPP and the Japanese satellite GCOM-W1,” Prof. Peter Minnett, Chair of the GHRSST Science Team, said in a press release. “Both carry new sensors for the measurement of SST, and so herald a new era of satellite SST research and operational applications.”

“Now we look forward to the launch of ESA´s Sentinel-3 to complete the suite of new sensors and continue the multi-decadal time series of SST measurements into the future.”

Doctors And Nurses On Strike In Portugal

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

The halls were quiet and empty this past Wednesday in Portugal´s hospitals. Normally filled with crowds of bustling bodies, the hospitals were clear of physicians and other medical staff. This scene is just one example that highlights the European Union fiscal crisis and its affect on many parts of European society. Signs of the recession can be seen throughout the different industries, including the health care sector. In Portugal, thousands of doctors and nurses went on strike to bring awareness to cuts in the health budget.

According to BBC, the health ministry issued a warning that approximately 4,500 operations and 400,000 appointments could be cancelled due to the strike. The strike took place after the Portuguese government stated that it would work to reduce its budget deficit in accordance with the 78 billion Euros European Union-International Monetary Fund bailout last May. Many unions mentioned doctors´ complaints of excessive hours.

I’m here to protest the destruction of the health service and the end of medical careers,” noted 25-year-old internist Eloisa Sobreira in an AFP article.

Other physicians mentioned their dislike of the use of private companies to offer public services

“The national health service is under threat. They want to destroy it by creating disparities in who has access to care,” stated Miguel Cunha, a 49-year-old pediatrician, in the AFP article.

The unions also stated that the measures taken by the physicians and nurses will affect the poor, as many people cannot pay for the increasing cost of health care.

“Thousands of people are now deprived of care because they cannot afford the prices that were put in place in January,” Carolos Braga, representative for patients´ group in Lisbon, told the BBC.

Many patients in Lisbon were unsure if they would receive medical care on Wednesday.

“I am due to have an operation today but I don’t know if it is going to happen. I have been told to wait,” Lidia Goncalves remarked in an AFP article.

The strike is planned to go for 48 hours and many hospitals have rescheduled appointments ahead of the strike.

“I called yesterday but they couldn’t tell me if I would be seen. This morning they told me to go home and that they would contact me soon,” commented Manuel Silva in the BBC article.

Portugal has already taken many actions in response to the recession. Earlier this month, there was a proposal to limit extra holiday pay for government workers but it was ruled as unconstitutional. As well, the country eliminated its public sector wages and increased taxes to decrease its budget deficit. The government hopes that these actions will curb the economic crisis, as the EU and IMF have already praised Portugal for taking these steps.

However, unemployment is still high and citizens are still dealing with reduced incomes in the EU. The news of the Portuguese strikes by medical professionals follows the austerity measures unveiled by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in Spain. According to the New York Times, the austerity measures are unpopular with the country and the nation´s miners held a violent protest to show their dissent. Only time will tell if the actions prove beneficial or not.

Red Wine and Resveratrol May Prevent Alzheimer’s

Doctors have just opened a study looking at whether a compound found in wine and red grapes can prevent brain aging and possibly stop degenerative diseases like alzheimers from worsening. They say it’s their best bet when it comes to fighting the disease that strikes one in eight older Americans. Doreen Gentzler reports.

Florida Just Says No To GM Mosquitoes

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Florida residents are voicing their opposition to the release of genetically modified (GM) mosquitoes by a British pest control company; despite the fact that the pesky critters were engineered to impede the spread of dengue fever.

Dengue Fever, which comes from a virus spread by the bite of an infected mosquito, was first recognized in the 1950s, yet has become a leading cause of hospitalization and death among children in tropical Asian and Latin American countries. The incidence of dengue has increased by 30 times in the last 50 years and, according to the World Health Organization, 2.5 billion people are now at risk.

Mila de Mier, the author of a 96,000-signature online Florida petition, said she began her campaign because she was worried about the lack of scientific understanding surrounding the full impact of the mosquitoes on the Florida ecosystem.

We need more data. If something goes wrong the consequences could be catastrophic not only for humans but also the whole ecosystem, and I don’t want my family being used as laboratory rats for this,” de Mier told the Guardian.

Oxitec, the U.K. company responsible for the mosquitoes, has developed the insects in laboratories over the past 10 years and released them into the open for the first time in 2009 on the Cayman Islands. Oxitec´s GM mosquitoes have also been released on a trial basis in Brazil.

“After a long period of contained evaluation work, we started a series of releases in Brazil in February 2011 in the outdoor environment,” reported Margareth Capurro of the University of Sao Paulo, who is leading the project in Brazil.

“Then, from December 2011 we commenced a suppression trial and showed that, in the area where we were releasing the sterile male mosquitoes, we could control the mosquito that spreads dengue fever.”

While Brazil was reported to have 1 million cases of dengue fever in 2010 alone, the situation in Florida is much less dire with the last reported case occurring in that same year.

However, mosquito officials in the Keys fear that the disease could re-emerge and deal a swift blow to the state tourism industry, which economically hard-hit Florida depends heavily on. Supporters of the plan said that GM mosquitoes could possibly keep dengue away from the Keys and be less damaging to the local environment than the pesticides that are currently used.

Oxitec officials were quick to dismiss any fears of mutated genes running rampant in the ecosystem saying that only male mosquitoes would be released, which do not bite and would not carry dengue fever. The sterilized mosquitoes would be unable to have offspring, eliminating the danger of the mutation that has been introduced to the males from being passed down the generations.

Despite the fact that the online petition could reach its goal of 150,000 signatures, Florida officials signaled that release of the GM insects may happen regardless due to the power granted to the local health authority.

Hadyn Parry, Oxitec’s chief executive, noted that that the company was approached by Florida officials after a dengue fever outbreak was reported in the Keys in 2009 and 2010.

“The decision to go ahead is entirely a local Florida decision — it’s not up to us,” he said.

Online Games Pushing Into Russia And Eastern Europe

Peter Suciu for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Russia and Eastern Europe have been the backdrop and setting for many computer war games and simulations. This is expected as the region has seen conquerors and would-be conquerors march over the lands from both directions. And likewise there have been many video games that suggest an invasion from the east.

But Israel-based online games developer Plarium, which has already conquered the Russian and Eastern Europe market, is now looking for an invasion of the west with its online games such as the multi-player Total Domination, which has attracted 20 million users in just a single year.

Founded just three years ago, Plarium now has a staff of 250, and more than 70 million users, with 3 million active daily users — mostly in Russia and Eastern Europe.

The company hopes to annually double its revenue as it launches new games and enters markets such as the United States. The privately held company has six games in the pipeline, including two that will launch in the coming weeks.

We are growing very fast,” Plarium CEO Avi Shalel told Reuters this week. “Since the beginning we have doubled revenue every year and we expect this pace to continue.”

And instead of just sticking to one formula, Plarium is looking for a multi-pronged assault on new markets. In addition to its multi-player games, the company is developing titles for new platforms including Facebook and mobile devices.

“This is the way to go,” said M2 principal analyst Billy Pidgeon, who has covered the video game market for more than a decade. “You have to be in all those platforms if you want to be a global player in the game market.”

Pidgeon told redOrbit that Israel could also be the next hotspot for international game development.

“The game community is subsidized by the government as much of what they do is in a way developed for the military,” said Pidgeon. “I´ve seen many other companies working on incredible software coming out of there. No one innovates like the Israelis.”

Innovating and adapting has been a key to Plarium´s success.

While its online games still fall way short of the truly massive masses that have flocked to games such as Star Wars: The Old Republic or the leading champion of online games, World of Warcraft, the company has done quite well in a short of amount of time.

The company became the leading developer in terms of revenue of casual games in Russia and Eastern Europe, and expanded with its first online game Total Domination, which launched a year ago. It now has 20 million users, while the company´s next game, Pirates, is approaching 10 million after just six months.

Part of the reason for the success is that Plarium has focused on the free to play model, which offers the games for free but charges for special content and add-ons. Platium is also looking into ad-based revenue in Europe, but will only carefully consider how it is implemented.

“We don’t see it being a main business model in the near future. We want to make sure we don’t spoil the user experience with advertisements,” Shalel told Reuters.

Pidgeon noted that the market still has room to grow, especially in the free to play space.

“Look at World of Tanks,” he noted, “Anyone can be in the free to play game business and become very successful. I´m glad to see more people shooting for it.”

Tumor Cells In Mice Killed By Mediterranean Weed Drug

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

While grenades have been mentioned in situations related to the military, they have never been mentioned in scientific research dealing with cancer. That is, until now. A new innovative drug by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, in collaboration with Danish scientists, works like a “molecular grenade”; it can move through the bloodstream until activation by specific cancer proteins.

The drug is made from a weed-like plant that has demonstrated its ability to destroy cancer and direct blood sources, working and safeguarding healthy blood tissues and vessels.  The drug, G202, is made from Thapsia gargancia, a weed that grows in the Mediterranean area. The plant produces thapsigargin, a product that has been known to be toxic to animals.

The investigators stated that, through laboratory studies, they tested a three-day course of drug G202. Within 30 days, the drug can decrease the size of human prostate tumors found in mice to about 50%. When compared to chemotherapy drug docetaxel, G202 outperformed it and reduced seven of nine human prostate tumors in a 21-day period.

Apart from the study done with tumors, G202 was able to produce regression in illness like bladder cancer, breast cancer, and kidney cancer. The findings are presented in a recent issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.

“Our goal was to try to re-engineer this very toxic natural plant product into a drug we might use to treat human cancer,” commented lead study author Dr. Samuel Denmeade, professor of oncology, urology, pharmacology and molecular sciences, in a prepared statement. “We achieved this by creating a format that requires modification by cells to release the active drug.”

In the project, scientists disassembled thapsigargin and chemically modified it. The drug was injected into mice and researchers saw how it would travel through the bloodstream until it arrived at the site of cancer cells. The protein prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) would then be released by cells in tumors that were based in the prostate and other areas and activate cell-killing agents into the tumor and blood vessels. The G202 was able to prohibit the function of protein SERCA pump. This protein, in particular, was important for cell survival and kept the levels of calcium at a correct level. With the drug focused on the SERCA pump, it would be difficult for the cells to stay alive and the tumor cells would lower its resistance to the drug.

In moving forward with the study, the Johns Hopkins investigators have already performed a phase I clinical trial in testing the safety of the drug. They have successfully treated 29 patients who have advanced stages of cancer.

“The exciting thing is that the cancer itself is activating its own demise,” commented senior study author John Isaacs, professor of oncology, urology, chemical and biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins, in the statement.

The University of Wisconsin and the University of Texas, San Antonio also participated in the trial. The researchers are planning to conduct a phase II trial to test the drug with patients who have liver cancer or prostate cancer.

Women Working Long Hours Tend To Gain Weight

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

In this day and age, work and home life can be a stressful balance for women. On the one hand, women have more opportunities in the work place than ever. On the other hand, as women may take on more tasks and responsibilities at work, it may have a negative impact on their health. In particular, scientists recently found that middle-aged women who work long hours have a higher chance of leading less healthy lifestyles and have a greater likelihood of gaining weight than their counterparts who work less hours.

The study included over 9,000 women who were between the ages of 45 and 50. The results spanned a two-year period and showed that female employees who worked more than 49 hours a week gained an average of 1.9% of their weight, as compared to those who worked part-time and gained 1.5% of their weight.

“These findings suggest that not working may have some protective effect against weight gain and may help promote weight loss,” wrote the researchers in the report that´s published in the International Journal of Obesity. “This may be related to those women having more time to spend on maintaining a healthy body weight.”

In the project, women who were overworked tended to pick up unhealthy habits. In particular, women who worked long hours, classified as between 41 to 48 hours a week, or worked very long hours, classified as over 49 hours a week, had a tendency to smoke, to drink copiously, to sleep less, and to not exercise. In particular, 65% of the women who worked long hours drank at unhealthily levels as compared to 42% of women who did not participate in the workforce or 53 percent who were considered unemployed.

Working women are faced with so many different time pressures, which leaves them with less time to engage in physical activity and less time to prepare healthy meals,” lead author Nicole Au of Monash University in Melbourne told the Sydney Morning Herald.

Researchers believe that employed women should look at the study to better understand how their work is affecting their health.

”These statistics “¦ provide some clues as to how employment patterns may affect lifestyle choices, and subsequently, body weight,” remarked Au in the International Journal of Obesity.

Research findings showed that 55% of the women gained weight over the two-year period, while 31% lost weight.

“Employed women had the greatest mean weight change (1.6%), and the smallest mean weight loss among losers,” stated researchers in the study. “Among the employed sample, mean changes in weight increased with work hours (from 1.5% for part-time hours to 1.9%t for very long hours).”

For women who are interested in completing aerobic and muscle strengthening exercises at work, WebMD offers a number of tips and solutions. A few of the recommendations include running in place, simulating jumping rope, taking the stairs, walking during a lunch break, and practicing yoga postures. Also, whenever possible, complete tasks standing rather than sitting.

Breastfeeding Mothers Have Lower BMI In Their 50s

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Considered taboo in the past, breastfeeding is the new hip activity for mothers who recently gave birth. Breastfeeding has gained in popularity for a variety of reasons related to better health. Most recently, scientists discovered that, while having more babies can lead to a higher body mass index, the longer a woman breastfeeds causes a lower body mass index (BMI) later on.

The study included women who had breastfed for at least six months and showed that women in their 50s had a lower BMI than those women who had not participated in breastfeeding. The researchers believe that every six months of breastfeeding was related to a one percent drop in BMI. The BMI factors in a person´s weight and height.

Our research suggests that just six months of breastfeeding by UK women could reduce their risk of obesity in later life,” commented study co-author Professor Dame Valerie Beral, Director of the Cancer Epidemiology Unit at the University of Oxford and study co-author, in an article by the Telegraph. “A one per cent reduction in BMI may seem small, but spread across the population of the UK that could mean about 10,000 fewer premature deaths per decade from obesity-related conditions, such as diabetes, heart disease and some cancers.”

The team of investigators from Oxford University calculated that there would be approximately 10,000 fewer obesity-related deaths if every woman in Britain breastfeed their child for six months.

“This study adds to a growing body of evidence that the benefits extend to the mother as well — even 30 years after she´s given birth. Pregnant women should be made aware of these benefits to help them make an informed choice about infant feeding,” lead author Dr. Kirsty Bobrow, a member of the University of Oxford and lead author of the paper, told the Telegraph.

Breastfeeding is also able to lower deaths that are related to conditions like cancer, diabetes, and heart disease.

“We already know that breastfeeding can reduce a woman´s risk of developing breast cancer,” noted Sara Hiom, Director of Information at Cancer Research UK, in the Telegraph article. “And this study highlights that breastfeeding may also be linked to weight. Weight in turn influences the likelihood of developing some cancers as well as other diseases. Too few people know about the significant cancer risks associated with being very overweight.”

There are benefits for babies who breastfeed as well, such as fewer allergies and ear infections as well as a lower likelihood of developing obesity.

“The obesity epidemic is one of the biggest challenges facing both high income and, increasingly, low and middle income countries,” Professor Dame Sally Macintyre, Director of the MRC/Chief Scientist Office Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, in the Telegraph article. “Rates of obesity are continuing to rise. Studies such as this one, which look at broad trends within a large population, can help us to develop effective strategies to prevent obesity and its related diseases.”

The Million Women Study, a national study of women´s health by Cancer Research UK and the National Health Service, was published in the International Journal of Obesity and included data from 740,000 women who had passed menopause.

African-American Youth Living In Housing Communities More Prone To Tobacco Use

Researcher says early interventions needed to curb youths´ tobacco use

Today, nearly 4,000 adolescents in the United States will smoke their first cigarette, and about a fourth of those youth will become daily smokers, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports. A recent study by a University of Missouri researcher found that African-American youths who live in public housing communities are 2.3 times more likely to use tobacco than other African-American youths.

“Compared to their same-aged peers, youth living in public housing were more likely to use tobacco and have positive attitudes about using tobacco,” said Mansoo Yu, an assistant professor of social work and public health. “As previous research suggests, early use of tobacco increases individuals´ chances of using more serious drugs later. In addition, early drug use is related to other serious problems, such as delinquent behaviors and family and social problems.”

Yu and his colleagues surveyed 518 urban African-American youths ranging from ages 11 to 20 who resided in public housing communities in three large U.S. cities. The survey measured adolescents´ attitudes toward tobacco use, depressive symptoms and delinquent behaviors.

Youths living in public housing might be more likely to be fearful, live around crime problems, have poorer social relationships and have higher levels of psychological strain. These factors could contribute to the increased rates of tobacco use, Yu said.

“Smoking cessation programs for young African Americans living in public housing communities should focus on reversing their positive attitudes toward tobacco use,” Yu said. “In addition, programs should help address the youths´ depressive symptoms and keep them from getting involved in delinquent behaviors.”

Additionally, Yu said tobacco prevention programs should target young children in public housing communities.

“Early interventions are critical for these individuals since the likelihood of being exposed to risky behaviors dramatically increases as the children age,” Yu said. “In public housing communities, adolescents may have easier access to drugs and social activities where drugs are used.”

Yu is an assistant professor in the School of Social Work, which is part of the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences, and also teaches in the Master of Public Health Program. The study, “Understanding tobacco use among urban African-American adolescents living in public housing communities: A test of problem behavior theory,” was published in Addictive Behaviors. Yu´s coauthors included researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago, Boston College and the University of South Carolina.

On the Net:

Marijuana May Deflect Obesity

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Cannabis seems to have many different allures. It can produce a “high.” It can give the feeling of munchies. Now, it can possibly help combat obesity. Scientists recently revealed that they found two compounds from cannabis leaves that could up the total energy that the body burns.

Previous studies of two specific compounds demonstrated that they could be used to treat type-two diabetes. The compounds were also discovered to have the ability to reduce cholesterol levels in the blood stream and decrease fat in important organs such as the liver. With the aim of treating patients who have “metabolic syndrome,” the researchers are currently conducting clinical trials in 200 patients with the drug. With “metabolic syndrome,” diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity combine to heighten the risk of heart disease and stroke in patients.

We are conducting four Phase 2a clinical trials and we expect some results later this year,” commented Dr. Steph Wright, director of research and development at GW Pharmaceuticals, in a Telegraph article. “The results in animal models have been very encouraging. We are interested in how these drugs effect the fat distribution and utilization in the body as a treatment for metabolic diseases“¦ Humans have been using these plants for thousands of years so we have quite a lot of experience of the chemicals in the plants.”

GW Pharmaceuticals was given a license to grow cannabis in greenhouses that were specially constructed for project. The company produces cannabis plants that have a number of cannabinoids, which are varied compounds of cannabis. They are already working on creating drugs that can assist in treating epilepsy and multiple sclerosis. Interesting enough, when the scientists studied two specific compounds, THCV and cannabioidoil, they found that they had the ability to suppress appetite but the effect lasted for a short amount of time. Upon further examination, the investigators discovered that the compounds could influence the fat level in the body as well as its effects to the hormone insulin.

Likewise, the studies of the compounds in mice showed that they increased the metabolism of the animals, causing decreased levels of fat in livers and minimized levels of cholesterol in the blood stream. In particular, THCV showed the ability of boosting the animals´ sensitivity to insulin but also shielding the insulin-producing cells. With these actions, the cells were able to work at a longer and more durable pace.

The researchers hope that the findings will help in the development of treatments for obesity-related illnesses and type-two diabetes.

“Overall, it seems these molecules increase energy expenditure in the cells of the body by increasing the metabolism,” noted Professor Mike Cawthorne, director of metabolic research at the University of Buckingham and animal studies researcher, in the Telegraph article.

Recently, there have been other studies related to marijuana. For example, a team of scientists at the University of Haifa used animal studies to investigate how cannabinoids may possibly help patients who are diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. As well, researchers at the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry at Plymouth University discovered that tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a type of marijuana, has varied effects on subjects diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Those who participated in the study stated a 50% decrease in pain.

ESA’s Clean Space Targets Orbital Debris, Greener Environment

Next year´s Hollywood film Gravity features George Clooney stranded in orbit by cascading space junk. The threat is genuine, with debris levels rising steadily. ESA´s new Clean Space initiative is developing methods of preserving near-Earth space — and the terrestrial environment, too.
Responding to public environmental concerns, Clean Space aims to reduce the environmental effect of Europe´s space activities, cutting waste and pollution on Earth and in orbit.
Industry is contributing to ESA´s draft plans for developing Clean Space technologies: new tools to assess environmental effects, more eco-friendly replacements for materials and techniques, and ways to halt the production of more space debris and bring down existing debris levels.
ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain emphasizes that implementing Clean Space is a major objective of Agenda 2015, the Agency´s upcoming action plan: “If we are convinced that space infrastructure will become more and more essential, then we must transmit the space environment to future generations as we found it, that is, pristine.”
“We can therefore say that Clean Space is not a new program, but instead a new way of designing all of ESA´s programs. I would like ESA to become a model agency in this respect.
“We will not succeed alone; we will need everyone´s help. The entire space sector has to be with us.”
ESTEC, ESA´s technical center in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, hosted a Clean Space workshop in June, jointly organized by ESA and industry body Eurospace.
Earth: cleaning up space projects
On Earth, Clean Space involves evaluating the environmental impact of future space projects, as well as monitoring the likely effects of forthcoming legislation on the space industry — environmental law being an extremely fast-moving field.
Life-cycle assessment will be important for evaluating the environmental effects of space technologies, from their initial design and manufacture to their end-of-life.
In the workshop, Environmental consultancy BIO Intelligence Services described the current wide employment of life-cycle assessment in other industrial sectors.
Environmental friendliness often goes hand-in-hand with increased efficiency — offering industry competitive advantage.
Novel manufacturing processes such as ℠additive manufacturing´, where structures are built up in layers, or ℠friction stir welding´, where lower weld temperatures use less materials and energy to do a better job.
Reducing the need for often costly waste disposal is another win—win: rocket maker Safran is working on a biological method of breaking down toxic solid-propellant waste.
Space: cleaner means safer
In Gravity, runaway orbital collisions fill low-Earth orbit with a lethal debris cloud.
In real life, of the 6000 satellites launched during the Space Age, less than 1000 remain operational. The rest are derelict and prone to fragment as leftover fuel or batteries explode.
Orbiting at 7.5 km/s or more, even a 2 cm screw has sufficient ℠lethal diameter´ to take out a satellite.
The workshop discussed various means of minimizing future debris production, such as tethers or sails to help drag abandoned satellites out of low orbit within 25 years.
Satellite reentry also needs to be a safer process — sometimes entire chunks of satellites have hit the ground intact. New ℠design for demise´ concepts aim to prevent that.
But even if all space launches stop tomorrow, simulations show that debris levels will keep growing. Active removal is also needed, including robotic missions to repair or deorbit satellites.

Obesity Vaccine Keeps People Trim

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

The global obesity epidemic has continued to burgeon without any solid intervention to halt and reverse an issue that now affects more than 1 in 3 people. Yet, that could change with the development of a new vaccine that scientists are hoping will keep the pounds off at the dinner table.

The vaccine — dubbed the “flab jab” — is the invention of scientists at the South Dakota, US company Braasch Biotech with Dr. Keith Haffer at the lead. In lab tests, mice injected with a single dose of the vaccine lost 10 percent of body weight in four days, despite being fed a high-fat diet. This suggests people might be able to continue to overeat and still keep a trim.

If the vaccine passes further safety trials, scientists believe it could lead to a new revolutionary tool in the fight against obesity. Currently the only non-dieting options most people are left with for controlling weight are risky surgeries and strong drugs, which often come with serious side effects.

Haffer noted the team tested two different versions of the vaccine, both offering similar results within three weeks of administration. The body weight loss was not seen in a matched control group of 10 untreated mice.

The vaccine works by fooling the immune system into making antibodies that fight off the hormone somatostatin, which promotes slow metabolism. Somatostatin is made by the brain and the digestive system and interferes with other hormones, leading to the metabolism slowing down and weight being put on. The vaccine antibodies stop the hormone from working, allowing metabolism to speed up and the pounds to drop off.

“This study demonstrates the possibility of treating obesity with vaccination,” said Haffer. “Although further studies are necessary to discover the long term implications of these vaccines, treatment of human obesity with vaccination could provide physicians with a drug and surgical-free option against the weight epidemic.”

This is a significant find given that close to half of all British men could be overweight and obese within 20 years, according to research published by The Lancet in 2011. The proportion of men being labeled obese was predicted to rise from 20 percent to about 48 percent in that timeframe. That study also predicted that 2 in five women in the UK will be obese by 2030.

According to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 33 percent of American adults over age 19 are obese; and an average of 16 percent of all children 19 and younger are also overweight. Those numbers are also likely to rise over the next 20 years.

Obesity kills about 30,000 people every year in the UK and costs the National Health Service more than $800 million annually, and the UK economy more than $3 billion.

Reporting the findings in the Journal of Animal Science and Biotechnology, the team wrote: “The vaccination effects did not significantly reduce cumulative food consumption and was confirmed by residual anti-somatostatin antibodies in mouse plasma at the study’s end.”

More research will be needed, said Haffer, and his team plans to look at the vaccine´s effects in obese pigs before moving on to human trials. He said it is likely ten years out before the advances could be seen used in humans as a way to control weight gain.

Teen Dating Violence Not A Priority For Schools

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online
A new study published in the journal Pediatrics said that a majority of high schools in the United States don’t have procedures or trained staff to deal with teen dating violence and often don’t make teen dating violence a “high-priority issue to be addressed.”
Despite research that shows notable levels of teen dating violence across the country, around 70 percent of high school counselors who were surveyed said they have not received any formal training in handling these issues.
“For example, if a female is abused in a relationship in a high school and they go to a school counselor, the counselor would not have a set protocol or procedure to handle the problem,” lead author and Ball State University professor Jagdish Khubchandani told Reuters Health.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), teen dating violence is a serious problem in the United States that often goes unreported. Statistics released by the centers last month show that about 10 percent of students nationwide report being physically abused by a boyfriend or girlfriend within the past year.
The data also showed that violence during teenage years could be a precursor to domestic abuse later in life. Among adult victims of rape, violence or stalking by an intimate partner, 22 percent of women and 15 percent of men first experienced some form of partner abuse between the ages of 11 and 17, according to the CDC.
The centers also noted that teen victims of dating violence are more often depressed, have lower grades, engage in drug and alcohol use, and have eating disorders or are more likely to commit suicide.
The latest survey indicated that many high schools are woefully unprepared for dealing with such dire situations. Around 81 percent of respondents said their schools did not have a protocol in place to deal with a dating violence incident. About 16 percent said their schools had discussed creating procedures for handling an incident or were in the process of implementing them.
Nearly all of the counselors surveyed, about 90 percent, said their schools had not provided training for handling adolescent dating violence to staff within the past two years.
Because Khubchandani and his colleagues note that teens who are victims of dating violence are more likely to reach out to peers or adults at school, they made a series of suggestions to enhance the ability of school personnel to detect and deal with such incidents.
Researchers said health organizations like the National Association of School Nurses should offer guidance counselors information and training. In addition, school officials should periodically assess the extent of dating violence in their schools and come up with strategies for identifying and mitigating it. The study also suggested that administrators should also familiarize themselves and their staffs with relevant state laws on dating violence and minor consent.
“School counselors and pediatricians need to reach out to one another to form partnerships” to create a set of skills and strategies for dealing with adolescent dating violence, the researchers wrote.
Khubchandani added that because there are only limited materials out there now for schools and counselors, national organizations need to start reaching out to members and start developing policies and protocols.

Researchers Describe Cellular Processes That Result In Sunburns

With scorching heat affecting much of the United States in recent weeks, sunburn undoubtedly has become a concern to many, and now researchers say that they have discovered the biological mechanism that causes the painful, reddish response to excessive UV radiation exposure.

As it turns out, sunburn is the result of RNA damage to skin cells, researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine, Rutgers University, and the Miami Veterans Affairs Medical Center report in a new study appearing Sunday in the Advance Online Publication of Nature Medicine. The discovery could open the door for the development of a way to block or treat the condition, the researchers said.

For example, diseases like psoriasis are treated by UV light, but a big side effect is that this treatment increases the risk of skin cancer,” Dr. Richard L. Gallo, principal investigator and a professor of medicine at the UCSD School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, said in a statement.

“Our discovery suggests a way to get the beneficial effects of UV therapy without actually exposing our patients to the harmful UV light. Also, some people have excess sensitivity to UV light, patients with lupus, for example. We are exploring if we can help them by blocking the pathway we discovered,” he added.

Gallo and his colleagues used both actual human skin cells and a mouse model, and discovered that UVB radiation fractures and entangles elements of a special type of non-protein-producing RNA in the cells known as non-coding micro-RNA.

When cells become irradiated, they release this special type of RNA, which causes healthy, neighboring cells to launch a process resulting in an inflammatory response designed to remove those sun-damaged cells, the researchers reported in a UCSD press release.

“The inflammatory response is important to start the process of healing after cell death,” Gallo said. “We also believe the inflammatory process may clean up cells with genetic damage before they can become cancer. Of course, this process is imperfect and with more UV exposure, there is more chance of cells becoming cancerous.”

“Genetics is closely linked to the ability to defend against UV damage and develop skin cancers,” he added, noting that he and his colleagues are still not sure how a person’s gender, skin pigmentation and individual genetics impact the entire process. “We know in our mouse genetic models that specific genes will change how the mice get sunburn.

Humans have similar genes, but it is not known if people have mutations in these genes that affect their sun response.”

Bra Size Linked To Breast Cancer Risk

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

The same gene that can determine a woman’s breast size could also be linked to her odds of developing breast cancer, with larger cup-sizes more likely to develop tumors, according to the results of a new study California-based personal genomics and biotechnology company 23andMe.

The firm reported that they were able to identify “seven single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) significantly associated with breast size, including three SNPs also correlated with breast cancer,” according to CBS News reports. The study, which has been published in the journal BMC Medical Genetics, marks the first time that a genetic correlation between breast size and the risk of developing breast cancer has been made.

In the study, the researchers contacted more than 16,000 women of European ancestry. Each study participant identified their bra size on a 10-point scale, ranging from smaller than AAA to larger than DDD, and also answered questions regarding their age, genetic ancestry, pregnancy history, breast surgery history, and breast feeding status, CBS News and Tamara Cohen of the Daily Mail reported.

The women were then grouped into 10 categories based on their cup sizes, and the researchers identified genome regions associated with differences in breast development, the UK National Health Service (NHS) explained.

The 23andMe scientists then compared those genome regions with those known to be associated with increased breast cancer risk, before conducting a secondary analysis of 29 DNA variations also linked to breast cancer and finding out whether or not those variations were also associated with breast size among the study group, the NHS added.

They found that two out of seven unique genome variations “significantly associated” with breast size were also associated with breast cancer, and a third variation, discovered in the secondary analysis, had a “possible association” but one that was not statistically significant.

“There are surprising connections between some of the genes involved in determining breast size and the genes involved in breast cancer,” lead author Nick Eriksson told The Huffington Post. However, he also emphasized that the link is somewhat “uncertain” and that “based on current knowledge, it’s not a strong risk factor” in terms of breast cancer development.

“While the precise relationships between breast size, density, obesity and breast cancer remain difficult to untangle, understanding the biology“¦ may aid in the development of novel screening tools,” Eriksson added in a separate interview with the Daily Mail’s Cohen.

New Vaccine Candidate Discovered For Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) have discovered a new vaccine candidate for the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa taking advantage of a new mechanism of immunity.

The study was published online in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine on June 21, 2012.

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a leading cause of hospital-acquired infections, particularly in patients on respirators, where it can cause so-called ventilator-associated pneumonia, which carries a very high mortality rate. Pseudomonas also causes lung infections in people with cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder that renders the lungs susceptible to bacterial infection.

Despite more than 40 years of vaccine research and development, there is no clinically available vaccine for this bacterium. Most prior vaccine efforts have focused on generating antibodies to Pseudomonas toxins or surface molecules, especially the sugar coating on the bug called the lipopolysaccharide O antigen. These approaches have not yielded a licensed vaccine for humans.

Gregory Priebe, MD, BWH Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, and Boston Children’s Hospital Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, along with researchers from Harvard Medical School, constructed a vaccine based on a new mechanism of immunity to Pseudomonas mediated by T helper 17 (Th17) cells. Th17 cells are a recently described type of helper T cells that secrete the cytokine IL-17 and enhance antibacterial mucosal defenses.

In the current studies, the investigators designed a screen for Th17-stimulating protein antigens expressed by a molecular library of DNA encoding Pseudomonas proteins. The screen discovered that the Pseudomonas protein PopB is a very effective stimulator of Th17 immunity, and immunization with purified PopB protected mice from lethal pneumonia in an antibody-independent fashion.

The researchers are currently taking their work a step further by constructing conjugate vaccines using PopB as a protein carrier with the hopes of improving the effectiveness of the vaccine. They hope that the PopB-based vaccine might one day be used to prevent Pseudomonas infections in hospitalized patients and in people with cystic fibrosis.

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Strawberries Have Great Health Benefits

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

The sun´s out, there´s a blue sky, the birds are chirping. All these things can only mean one thing — summer is here. One of the fruits that should be consumed this summer is strawberries. While strawberries symbolize certain aspects of summer sports events like Wimbledon, investigators have identified certain health benefits of the fruit. In particular, researchers at the University of Warwick recently found that strawberries provide a number of benefits to the body´s cardiovascular health, especially in preventing problems related to heart disease and diabetes.

The study was led by Paul Thornalley, a professor at the Warwick Medical School, and supported by funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC). His team found extracts from strawberries that can possibly activate Nrf2, a protein in the body that increases antioxidants and jumpstarts other defense mechanisms. The protein has also been beneficial in decreasing blood lipids and cholesterol, which may lower the risk of cardiovascular problems.

Furthermore, past studies have shown that consuming strawberries can counter post-meal blood glucose and low density-lipoprotein, which is otherwise known as bad cholesterol. As such, strawberries can decrease the chances of diabetes and heart disease. In particular, the Warwick Medical Study was the first project to prove that strawberry extracts have been shown to jumpstart proteins that can protect the body against certain illnesses.

“We´ve discovered the science behind how strawberries work to increase our in-built defenses to keep cells, organs and blood vessels healthy and which can reduce the risk of developing cardiovascular problems such as heart disease and diabetes,” explained Thornalley in a prepared statement. “So don´t feel guilty about serving up strawberries and cream “¦ although I´d suggest more strawberries and less or even no cream.”

The researchers hope that further research, featuring screening and mathematical modeling techniques from the University of Warwick, will help them determine what the best types of strawberries are. They are also interested in looking at the various ways in which strawberries are served or processed, hoping to have a better understanding of how strawberries should be eaten to allow for the best health possible.

Thornalley plans to publicize the research at the upcoming 16th biennial meeting for the Society for Free Radical Research International (SFRRI), which will take place at Imperial College London.

Lastly, there are a few ways in which strawberries can be incorporated into the daily diet.

The Los Angeles Times offered some tips in terms of finding and storing the right strawberries. One tip suggested that strawberries be chosen based on smell rather than size, as the odor can give off the flavor and the freshness of the fruit. After buying strawberries at the market, the fruit should be held at room temperature for as long as possible because chilling will make it lose its taste. Before taking a bite of the strawberry, it´s also best to wash it multiple times before cutting off the green stalks as this will help stop the fruit from soaking up the moisture and retain its flavor.

North Atlantic Phytoplankton Bloom Triggered By Eddies

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Scientists studying the annual growth of tiny plants in the North Atlantic Ocean have discovered that this year´s growth spurt began before the sun was able to offer the light needed to fuel the yearly phenomenon.

The annual growth spurt of plankton, which is known as the North Atlantic Bloom, takes place each Spring, and results in an immense number of phytoplankton bursting into existence — first “greening,” then “whitening” the sea as one or more species take the place of others.

In winter, cooling and strong winds generate mixing that pushes phytoplankton into deeper waters, robbing them of sunlight, but drawing up nutrients from depths. As winter turns to spring, days become longer. Phytoplankton are then exposed to more sunlight, fueling their growth.

But this year´s discovery initially puzzled researchers, since for decades the phytoplankton have required the longer days and calmer seas of Spring to fuel their growth.

However, the current study suggests evidence of another trigger.

The researchers found that whirlpools, or eddies, that swirl across the North Atlantic sustain phytoplankton in the ocean’s shallower waters, where the plankton can get plenty of sunlight to fuel their growth even before the longer days of spring begin.

The eddies form when heavier, colder water from the north slips under the lighter, warmer water from the south.

The study revealed that the eddies cause the bloom to begin about three weeks earlier than would otherwise be the case if the growth was spurred only by the longer days of Spring.

“That timing makes a significant difference if you think about the animals that eat the phytoplankton,” said Eric D’Asaro of the University of Washington (UW), one of the study´s co-authors.

Many small sea animals spend the winter dozing in the deep ocean, emerging in the spring and summer to feed on the phytoplankton.

“If they get the timing wrong, they’ll starve,” Craig Lee of UW’s Applied Physics Laboratory and School of Oceanography said.

Since fish eat these tiny sea animals, any reduction in their number could harm the fish population.

The North Atlantic Bloom is also important to the global carbon cycle, since Springtime blooms of microscopic plants in the ocean absorb enormous quantities of carbon dioxide, emitting oxygen via photosynthesis.

Their growth contributes to the oceanic uptake of carbon dioxide, amounting globally to about one-third of the carbon dioxide we put into the air each year through the burning of fossil fuels. Indeed, the North Atlantic is critical to this process, and is responsible for more than 20 percent of the ocean’s uptake of CO2.

“Our results show that, due to eddies, the bloom starts even before the sun begins to warm the ocean,” said Amala Mahadevan, an oceanographer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and lead author of a paper about the study published in the journal Science.

“Every undergraduate who takes an introductory oceanography course learns about the ecological and climate significance of the North Atlantic Bloom – as well as what causes it,” said Don Rice, program director in National Science Foundation´s Division of Ocean Sciences, which funded the research.

“This study reminds us that, when it comes to the ocean, the things we think we know hold some big surprises.”

The newly discovered mechanism helps explain the timing of the spring and summer bloom, known to mariners and fishermen for centuries and clearly visible in satellite images. It also offers a new look at why the bloom has a patchy appearance: it is shaped by the eddies that modulate its formation.

But making the discovery was not without its challenges.

“Working in the North Atlantic Ocean is challenging, but we were able to track a patch of seawater off Iceland and follow the progression of the bloom in a way that hadn’t been done before,” said study co-author Mary Jane Perry of the University of Maine.

“Our field work was set up with floats, gliders and research ships that all worked tightly together,” said D’Asaro.

“They were in the same area, so we could put together a cohesive picture of the bloom.”

The scientists focused on phytoplankton known as diatoms, which live in glass houses – walls made of silica.

“When conditions are right, diatoms blooms spread across hundreds of miles of ocean, bringing life-sustaining food to sometimes barren waters,” said Lee.

In April, 2008, Lee, Perry and colleagues arrived in a storm-lashed North Atlantic aboard the Icelandic research vessel Bjarni Saemundsson. They launched custom-designed robots in the rough seas, along with a float that hovered below the water’s surface to follow the motion of the sea.

Lurking alongside the float were six-foot-long, teardrop-shaped gliders that dove to depths of up to 3,000 ft. After each dive, the gliders, working in areas up to 30 miles around the float, rose to the surface, pointed their antennas skyward and transmitted their stored data back to shore.

The float and gliders measured the temperature, salinity and velocity of the water, and gathered information about the chemistry and biology of the bloom itself–oxygen, nitrate and the optical signatures of the phytoplankton.

In total, scientists aboard two ships, the WHOI-operated research vessel Knorr and the Bjarni Saemundsson, visited the area four times.

Soon after the measurements from the floats and gliders started coming in, the scientists perceived that the bloom had started even though surface conditions still looked winter-like.

“It was apparent that some new mechanism, other than surface warming, was behind the bloom initiation,” said D’Asaro.

Mahadevan used sophisticated three-dimensional computer modeling to analyze the information collected at sea by Perry, D’Asaro and Lee.  She generated eddies in the model from a south-to-north variation of temperature in the ocean. Without these, the bloom happened several weeks later, and didn’t have the space and time structures observed in the North Atlantic.

In the future, the scientists hope to put the North Atlantic bloom into a wider context. They believe much can be learned by following the phytoplankton’s evolution across an entire year, especially with gliders and floats outfitted with new sensors. The sensors would also look at the tiny animals that graze on the phytoplankton.

Ocean physics, particularly what we are learning about eddies, is intrinsic to life in the ocean, the researchers said.  They shape the oceanic ecosystem in numerous ways. For instance, no phytoplankton means no zooplankton, and no zooplankton means no fish.

Furthermore, eddies and phytoplankton play an important role in the oceanic cycling of carbon, without which we would have a different climate on Earth, the researchers noted.

“We envision using the gliders and float to make measurements–and models–of ocean physics, chemistry and biology that span wide regions of the world ocean,” said D’Asaro.

That would spark a new understanding of the sea, all from a tiny plankton that each spring and summer blooms by the millions and millions, Lee added.

“What we’re learning about eddies is that they’re a critical part of life in the ocean,” said Perry.

“They shape ocean ecosystems in countless ways.”

Continental Tropical Air Mass

Another type of air mass that we are going to talk about is called Continental Tropical also known as CT. This type of air mass can be best described as having dry and hot conditions. The reason for this is because it forms over the land and also is found in the hot tropical regions. The best place in the United States to find this type of air mass is the Southwest portion of the United States. This type of air is associated with very dry conditions that can prevail for long periods of time. Also because it is tropical in nature, temps can rise well into the 100’s. This type of air mass is most pronounced during the summer months as it’s a warm air mass. In the winter time this air mass is slowly removed and replaced by colder air. This air mass is strong enough that it can extend northward into parts of Colorado in the summer and also expand eastward into portions of Texas and Oklahoma.

Researchers Say People Cooperate Depending On Their Emotional State And Prior Experiences

A study by researchers at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid and Universidad de Zaragoza has determined that when deciding whether to cooperate with others, people do not act thinking in their own reward, as had been previously believed, but rather individuals are more influenced by their own mood at the time and by the number of individuals with whom they have cooperated before.

In addition to previous studies, this research is also based on an experiment carried out by the Institute for Biocomputation and Physics of Complex Systems (BIFI) at the Universidad de Zaragoza, together with the Fundación Ibercivis and Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M), the largest study of its kind to date in real time regarding cooperation in society. It was carried out during this past December, with 1,200 Aragon secondary students participating, who interacted electronically in real time via a social conflict prototype known as the “Prisoner´s Dilemma”. This game shows that the greatest benefit for individuals who interact is produced when both of them collaborate, but if one collaborates and the other does not, the latter will receive more benefits than the one who cooperates. On occasion, this allows an individual to take advantage of the cooperation of others, but if this tendency is extended, in the end, no one cooperates and as such, nobody obtains rewards.

After analyzing the information, the main conclusion drawn by the researchers is that in a situation where cooperating with others is beneficial, the way the individuals involved are organized into one social structure or another is irrelevant. A first analysis contradicts what many researchers have held based on theoretical studies.

In the experiment, the degree of cooperation in a network in which each subject interacts with four other individuals is compared to a network in which the number of connections vary between 2 and 16, that is, one that is more similar to a social network. What has been observed is that the results in the two networks are identical. “This happens because, contrary to what has been proposed in the majority of studies, people do not make their decisions based on the rewards obtained (by them or by their neighbors), but rather based on how many people have recently cooperated with them, as well as on their own mood at the time,” the researchers explained.

These results help understand how people make decisions, above all in the context in which one has to decide between collaborating with or taking advantage of others. “Understanding why we do one thing or another can help in designing incentives that induce people to cooperate,” the authors of the research pointed out. On the other hand, the fact that the networks are not important has implications, for organizational design, for example. The experiment revealed that people are not going to cooperate more because of being organized in a certain way. In this respect, it can be inferred that we do not have to be concerned with the design of organizational structure, but rather with motivating people individually to cooperate.

Ruling out that network organization influences in the cooperation of people, and having discovered that what is important is reciprocity, that is, cooperating according to cooperation received, will radically change the focus of a significant number of researchers who are developing theories on the emergence of cooperation among individuals.

The authors of this study, published in the most recent number of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, are professors from the Grupo Interdisciplinar de Sistemas Complejos (GISC) (Interdisciplinary Group of Complex Systems) of the UC3M Mathematics Department, José Cuesta and Ãngel Sánchez, together with Carlos Gracia, Alfredo Ferrer, Gonzalo Ruiz, Alfonso Tarancón and Yamir Moreno, from the BIFI at the Universidad de Zaragoza.

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New Drug Study Shows Clinical Benefits For Severe, Unresponsive Aplastic Anemia

Eltrombopag, a drug that was designed to stimulate production of platelets from the bone marrow and thereby improve blood clotting, can raise blood cell levels in some people with severe aplastic anemia who have failed all standard therapies.

About one-third of aplastic anemia cases do not respond to standard therapy, a combination of immune-suppressing drugs. Although bone marrow stem cell transplantation is an option for some, patients without a matched donor have few treatment options. The findings of this new clinical study, carried out by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health, suggest eltrombopag could be a second-line therapeutic option for them.

“Eltrombopag and Improved Hematopoiesis in Refractory Aplastic Anemia,” will be published online July 5 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Aplastic anemia is a rare blood disorder, with about 600 new cases in the U.S. each year. Aplastic anemia results from the destruction of bone marrow stem cells, which mature into red blood cells that carry oxygen, white blood cells that fight infection, and platelets that prevent excess bleeding. Symptoms of the disorder include fatigue, frequent infections, and hemorrhaging. In severe cases unresponsive to treatment, death can occur.

Eleven of 25 participants enrolled in this phase 2 study showed improved production of at least one type of blood cell (red blood cell, white blood cell, or platelet) after 12 weeks of oral eltrombopag therapy. Among the seven volunteers who continued taking the pills long-term (8-32 months), six eventually showed an improvement in all three types of blood cells, and were able to maintain safe blood counts without needing red blood cell or platelet transfusions. Overall the drug was well tolerated, with few side effects.

The research team in the NHLBI Hematology Branch tested eltrombopag because this drug had previously been shown to boost platelet levels in both healthy people and people with reduced platelets due to hepatitis C infection or immune thrombocytopenia, blood disorders that like aplastic anemia result in low platelet counts and increased risk of bleeding.

The encouraging finding in this study was improvement in red blood cell and white blood cell counts in some aplastic anemia patients, suggesting that the drug can stimulate bone marrow stem cells and perhaps have wider utility than initially predicted.

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Ovary Transplants Delay Menopause, Give Women More Time To Conceive

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Successful ovary transplants could lead to women remaining fertile indefinitely and also postponing menopause until they are well in their 50s, according to doctors speaking at a conference in Istanbul.

The breakthrough uses a technique to remove pieces of ovary, store it away for decades, then transplant it back later in life, perhaps effectively holding off menopause as well. The doctors said that only physical inability to carry a baby would prevent women from becoming mothers late in life.

The controversial method would give career-minded women peace of mind with so-called fertility insurance, allowing them to put off having children until they are financially secure.

Doctors told the conference that 28 babies had been born to infertile women who had the ovary tissue transplants, and that most of the children were conceived naturally without need for IVF or drugs.

They added that by delaying the menopause, women could also avoid the risk of osteoporosis and heart disease that usually coincide with menopause. However, risk of breast and womb cancer would be increased, they cautioned.

“A woman born today has a 50 per cent chance of living to 100. That means they are going to be spending half of their lives post-menopause,” American surgeon Dr. Sherman Silber, told the conference. “But you could have grafts removed as a young woman and then have the first replaced as you approach menopausal age. You could then put a slice back every decade.”

“Some women might want to go through the menopause, but others might not,” said Silber, who has been involved in transplants for 11 women at St Luke´s Hospital in St Louis, Missouri, US.

He noted that transplants he and his staff carried out more than eight years ago are still working, showing that the technique is ℠robust´ and it should no longer be considered experimental. One transplant from a 38-year-old to her identical twin, has lasted seven years so far without failing. In that time the recipient has had three healthy babies, all without IVF, conceiving the last at age 45.

Doctors had initially believed that ovary transplants would only last months, or at most a few years, offering only a brief shot at conceiving. But Silber and his colleagues said those hopes have been surpassed.

“It’s really fantastic, we didn’t expect a little piece of ovarian tissue to last this long,” he elated. Being frozen for decades, then thawed out for replantation when needed, and to be just as effective as fresh grafts, its amazing. And in the meantime, the tissue would not have aged — effectively putting the woman´s biological clock on ice, he added.

His findings were presented this week at the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) in Istanbul.

The Telegraph reported in 2008 that one patient of Dr. Silber, Susanne Butscher, who had received a whole ovary transplant  from her twin sister, had given birth to a healthy baby girl. Butscher, then 39, had already gone through menopause, but the doctors carried out the operation anyway and 13 months later it was confirmed that she had conceived naturally.

Silber said the majority of the women who underwent the procedure had cancer, but said its now time to extend it to others.

In time, this procedure should be made available to women with other conditions, said Dr. Gianluca Gennarelli, a Turin-based gynecologist, adding it should be included for women who likely suffer early menopause due to family history.

“In the 21st century many women don’t want to have children until they are in their 30s, rather than at 18. But if your mother went through menopause before 40 that could be very difficult,” he noted.

“This is an exciting development as a fertility treatment, however we would need much more data before claims could be made about the menopause,” Tim Hillard, a gynecologist and trustee of the British Menopause Society, told Stephen Adams at the Daily Telegraph. “You would have to balance it very carefully, the higher risks of breast and womb cancer that go with having estrogen circulating for longer against the increased risk of heart disease, osteoporosis and maybe dementia that go with the menopause.”

He noted that the method could also have significant implications as an alternative to hormone replacement therapy, but said that could be more than a decade away.

Genetics Could Explain Parrots Ability To Parrot

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Scientists say they have put together a more complete string of genetic letters that may control how well parrots learn to imitate their owners and other noises.

Researchers unraveled the certain regions of the parrots’ genome using a new technology, single molecule sequencing, and fixing its flaws with data from older DNA-decoding devices. Researchers also decoded hard-to-sequence genetic material from corn and bacteria as proof of their new sequencing approach. The results of the study appeared online recently in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Single molecule sequencing “got a lot of hype last year” because it generates long sequencing reads, “supposedly making it easier to assemble complex parts of the genome,” said Duke University neurobiologist Erich Jarvis, a co-author of the study.

Jarvis is interested in the sequences that regulate parrots’ imitation abilities because they could give neuroscientists information about the gene regions that control speaking development in humans.

Jarvis began his project with others by trying to piece together the genome regions with what are known as next-generation sequencers, which read chunks of 100 to 400 DNA base pairs at a time and then take a few days to put them together into a draft genome. After doing the sequencing, the scientists noticed that the read lengths were not long enough to assemble the regulatory regions of some of the genes that control brain circuits for vocal learning.

University of Maryland computational biologists Adam Phillippy and Sergey Koren — experts at assembling genomes — heard about Jarvis’s sequencing struggles at a conference and approached him with a possible solution of adjusting the algorithms that order the DNA base pairs. But the fix was still not sufficient.

Last year, 1000 base-pair reads by Roch 454 became available, as did the single molecule sequencer by Pacific Biosciences. The Pacbio technology generates strands of 2,250 to 23,000 base pairs at a time and can draft an entire genome in about a day.

Jarvis and others assumed the new technologies would solve the genome-sequencing challenges. Through a competition, called the Assemblathon, the scientists discovered that the Pacbio machine had trouble accurately decoding complex regions of the parrot, Melopsittacus undulates, genome. The machine had a high error rate, generating the wrong genetic letter at every fifth or sixth spot in a string of DNA. The errors made it nearly impossible to create a genome assembly with the very long reads, Jarvis said.

But with a team, including scientists from the DOE Genome Science Institute and the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York, Phillippy, Koren and Jarvis corrected the Pacbio sequencer’s errors using shorter, more accurate codes from the next-generation devices. The fix reduces the single-molecule, or third-generation, sequencing machine’s error rate from 15 percent to less than one-tenth of one percent.

“Finally we have been able to assemble the regulatory regions of genes, such as FoxP2 and egr1, that are of interest to us and others in vocal learning behavior,” Jarvis said.

He explained that FoxP2 is a gene required for speech development in humans and vocal learning in birds that learn to imitate sounds, like songbirds and parrots. Erg1 is a gene that controls the brain’s ability to reorganize itself based on new experiences.

By being able to decode and organize the DNA that regulates these regions, neuroscientists may be able to better understand what genetic mechanism causes birds to imitate and sing well. They may also be able to collect more information about genetic factors that affect a person’s ability to learn how to communicate well and to speak, Jarvis said. He and his team plan to describe the biology of the parrot´s genetic code they sequenced in more detail in an upcoming paper.

Jarvis added that as more scientists use the hybrid sequencing approach, they could possibly decode complex, elusive genes linked to how cancer cells develop and to the sequences that control other brain functions.

Afghanistan And Pakistan Children Not Getting Enough Polio Vaccines

New, more effective vaccines are struggling to have an impact in the drive to eradicate polio in Afghanistan and Pakistan because not enough children are being vaccinated, according to a study published in the Lancet medical journal today. Sharp declines in vaccine uptake led to a rise in the number of new infections between 2006 and 2011, even though new vaccines introduced during this time have proven to be more effective against the main circulating strain of the virus.

Poliovirus exists in three strains, with type 1 the most prevalent and type 2 unseen anywhere in the world since 1999. It mainly affects children under five and causes paralysis in about one in 200 cases. In most parts of the world it has been eliminated by sustained vaccination programs in the late 20th century. Afghanistan and Pakistan are among only three countries — along with Nigeria — that have never managed to eliminate polio.

Since it was launched in 1988, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) — spearheaded by national governments, the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and UNICEF – has relied on mass campaigns using the trivalent oral poliovirus vaccine, which contains all three types of the virus,. However, the presence of the type 2 strain in the trivalent vaccine makes it less effective against the other types. In 2005, monovalent vaccines of types 1 and 3 were introduced by the GPEI and in 2009 a bivalent vaccine containing both types was first used.

Scientists from Imperial College London and the WHO assessed the effect of immunization campaigns in the Afghanistan and Pakistan by analyzing data collected by national surveillance programs. They also assessed the effectiveness of the three varieties of polio vaccine against the predominant type 1 strain of the virus.

The study found that the monovalent vaccine was more effective than the trivalent vaccine against type 1 poliovirus. The bivalent vaccine was comparable in effectiveness to the monovalent vaccine. The difference between the bivalent and trivalent vaccines was not large enough to be statistically significant.

In 2006 over 80% of children in Afghanistan and Pakistan aged 0-2 years old received four doses or more of vaccine. However, vaccine coverage in southern Afghanistan and parts of Pakistan, including Balochistan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) declined from 2006 to 2011. Although the impact was partially offset by the use of the more effective vaccines, this resulted in significantly lower population immunity levels, leading to an increase in cases over that time frame. In 2011 there were 198 cases in Pakistan and 80 cases in Afghanistan compared with 40 cases in Pakistan and 31 in Afghanistan in 2006.

This analysis prompted a major shift in approaches in 2012 in both countries, to address the underlying challenges which prevent children from having access to polio vaccines. Both countries are this year implementing national polio emergency action plans, involving measures such as increasing technical support to the worst-performing areas; creating accountability mechanisms for district-level leadership; and engaging with communities to increase demand for immunization.

“Our findings show it’s not just small pockets where vaccine coverage decreased from 2006 to 2011,” said Dr Kath O’Reilly, from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling at Imperial College London, who led the study. “The new vaccines appear to be more effective than the trivalent vaccine, which offers encouragement that polio eradication is achievable. But the best vaccine in the world will not work unless it reaches the children its intended to protect. So it’s vitally important that vaccine coverage is considerably improved in 2012 through better campaigns and routine programs if we’re to finally eradicate polio globally.”

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California Child Dips Into Granny’s Pot Cookies

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A public service announcement to those of you living in Marijuana friendly states: If you are prescribed pot to help with whatever ailment you may experience, be sure to keep it out of reach of children. That´s the lesson a California grandmother learned last weekend as her 3-year old grandson was rushed to the hospital after the child´s family couldn´t wake him on Saturday morning.

According to The Press Enterprise, the grandmother has been diagnosed with cancer. Under her doctor´s recommendation, she uses medical marijuana to treat her pain and help her sleep at night. Rather than smoke her treatment, she had baked some of her prescription into a batch of cookies and stored them in a refrigerator in the family´s garage.

On Friday, the boy´s father asked his sister to watch the three-year old and his younger sibling while he was out. According to Sgt. Phil Gomez of the Murrieta Police Department, the father said he had noticed some crumbs on the ground in front of the garage refrigerator when he got home, but had assumed his mother had been eating the cookies earlier.

The boy was acting fine during the evening, but fell asleep around 5 pm Friday. The next morning, the family became concerned when the boy hadn´t woken up by 9:30. They tried to wake him, but were unable to. They noticed he was still breathing, and called the police around 10:30.

When the police arrived, the boy´s father mentioned that he had seen the cookie crumbs earlier that night and wondered if his son had somehow gotten into his grandmothers stash. The boy was admitted to the hospital for observation and was later released. The grandmother told police one silver-dollar sized cookie is enough to put her to sleep.

“No one knows how much he ate,” Sgt. Gomez said.

The family later assumed the boy had wandered into the garage through a side door on his way in the house after playing in the backyard. The family also said they weren´t aware the boy knew the refrigerator was in the garage, much less worry he would become hungry and go looking for a snack.

“It´s just kind of like the perfect storm,” Gomez said.

Though no one has been arrested, the incident is still under investigation. The Murrieta police have not released the names of the family members involved, though they could potentially face child endangerment charges should toxicology tests show any marijuana byproducts in the boy´s system.

The Riverside County child protective services were notified of the incident, Sgt. Gomez said. According to Murrieta Police, the boy´s family was very forthcoming and open about the incident and, with the notable exception of the cookie incident, the boy seemed to be very well cared for.

“It´s unfortunate that they didn´t take better steps to keep those cookies out of reach of the child,” Gomez said.

According to the Press Enterprise, the boy´s grandmother is particularly distraught over the situation and has promised police this mistake will never happen again.

“She claims she´s not going to make them ever again,” Sgt. Gomez told the Press Enterprise.

Researchers Develop Marijuana Without The High

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

In films, marijuana has been depicted as having slacker appeal. The characters that use marijuana for medicinal purposes end up having a high from the substance as well. Recent research showed that this association may eventually be eliminated with a new form of cannabis that has been developed. Scientists from Israel recently revealed that they have been able to develop marijuana that can lessen the symptoms of certain illnesses without getting the patients high.

Cannabis has over 60 various components that are known as cannabinoids. THC is possibly the most famous of the cannabinoids, known for its psychoactive affects and “high” feeling rather than medical uses. Cannabis also includes Cannabidioil (CBD), a substance that is believed to have anti-inflammatory properties.

“CBD plants are available in different forms all over the world,” explained Zack Klein, head of development at cannabis developer Tikun Olam, in a Stuff article.

CBD differs from THC in that it barely binds to the brain´s receptors and can focus on the body´s ailments without giving patients the “high feeling.”

“Sometimes the high is not always what they need. Sometimes it is an unwanted side effect. For some of the people it’s not even pleasant,” remarked Klein in a Telegraph article.

Cannabis is an illegal drug in Israel but it was first allowed for medicinal use in 1993. According to Reuters Health, cannabis is presently used in Israel to treat 9,000 people who suffer from a variety of diseases like cancer, Crohn´s disease, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson´s, and post-traumatic stress disorder. In 2009, Tikun Olam began researching CBD enhanced cannabis. Six months ago, the company developed Avidekel, a cannabis strain that has 15.8 percent CBD and slight traces of THC that amounts to less than one percent. Other drug companies have also showed interest in developing cannabis as medicine. Britain´s GW Pharmaceuticals collaborated with Bayer and Almirall in producing an under-the-tongue spray, known as Sativez, which lowered highs by managing the ratio of ingredients that were active.

However, Avidekel is the first drug in Israel that has been designed with a CBD-enriched cannabis plant and does not include THC.

“It is possible that (Avidekel’s) CBD to THC ratio is the highest among medical marijuana companies in the world, but the industry is not very organized, so one cannot keep exact track of what each company is doing,” noted Raphael Mechoulam, a professor of medicinal chemistry at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, in the Reuters Health article.

Avidekel is also interesting in its anti-inflammatory attributes. The drug has been tested on mice and clinical trials will start in the next few months. Since Avidekel is new strain of a plant that has already been approved for medical use, approximately 10 patients have already used it in the past six months.

“The cannabis plant, enriched with CBD, can be used for treating diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, colitis, liver inflammation, heart disease and diabetes,” remarked Ruth Gallily, a member of the Hebrew University and Tikun Olam who has studied CBD for over 12 years, in the Reuters Health article.

Despite the many different traits of Avidekel, members of Tikun Olam believe that regular marijuana will still have a role in treatment as THC has particular traits that can relieve symptoms from a number of illnesses.

“Don’t worry, I think that cannabis with THC will still be (around),” commented Klein in the Reuters Health article.

Ancient Map Of “America” Found In Germany

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

In time for Fourth of July festivities, Librarians at a German university announced on Tuesday that they have found a 500-year-old version of a world map that was the first to have mentioned “America.”

The librarians were unaware of the map’s presence until they found it stashed away inside an unrelated 16th century Geometry book.

The map doesn’t quite pre-date the 1507 map that Germany officially handed over to the U.S. back in 2007, which now lies in the Library of Congress in Washington.

The newly discovered map is believed to have been drawn up by German cartographer Martin Waldseemueller, who died back in 1522, according to the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich said.

The new map shows the world divided into twelve segments, which taper to a point at each end and are printed on a single sheet. When the map is folded out, it can form a small globe, with three rightmost segments depicting a boomerang-shaped territory named America.

The university said in a written statement that only four copies of the segmental maps were previously known about.  One of the four was sold at an auction for one million dollars back in 2005.

According to the university, the fifth map was found by a bibliographer, who was revising the catalogue “in an otherwise unremarkable volume that had been rebound in the 19th century.”

“Even in our digital age the originals have lost none of their significance and unique fascination,” Klaus-Rainer Brintzinger, the head of the library, said in the statement. “We intend to make the map accessible to the public in digital form in time for the Fourth of July, Independence Day in the USA.”

Waldseemueller helped create the name “America” in honor of explorer Amerigo Vespucci, who he mistakenly believed discovered the New World.

Sven Kuttner, head of the library´s old books department, said the map was a “sleeping beauty” in the university’s collection until its recent unearthing.