Hubble Captures Peanut-Shaped Stellar Explosion

Using the NASA / ESA Hubble Space Telescope (HST), an international team of astronomers have taken the first optical images of a dramatic stellar outburst and discovered a peanut-shaped bubble expanding rapidly into space. Team member Valerio Ribeiro, a graduate student from Liverpool John Moores University will present their results on Wednesday 22nd April at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference at the University of Hertfordshire.

The scientists looked at a star in the constellation of Ophiuchus (known as RS Oph) which has undergone a series of outbursts over the last century. On 12th February 2006, Japanese amateur astronomers reported it had brightened once again and had even become visible to the unaided eye. This was the first eruption of RS Oph since 1985 and gave scientists the unprecedented opportunity to study it using new more powerful telescopes on the ground and in space, including the HST.

RS Oph consists of a white dwarf, a dead star about the size of Earth in orbit around a much larger star, a so called red giant. Due to its proximity the white dwarf pulls hydrogen rich gas from the outer layers of the red giant and roughly every 20 years the build up of gas on the white dwarf’s surface causes a cataclysmic thermonuclear explosion. The rise to maximum brightness takes place in less than a day and at its height the energy output of RS Oph increases to over 100,000 times that of the Sun. The eruption ejects a quantity of material equivalent to the mass of the Earth at speeds of several thousand kilometers per second.

The red giant is also continuously losing enormous amounts of gas in a wind that envelops the whole system. As a result, the explosion on the white dwarf occurs effectively inside its companion’s atmosphere and the ejected gas then slams into it at very high speed.

Using the HST, observations of RS Oph were made 155 and 449 days after the outburst. Combined with spectroscopy from ground-based telescopes, the first images revealed a double-lobed “peanut” structure with material expanding outwards at between 1000 and 3000 km per second.

The team attribute the shaping of the nebula to the pre-existing red giant wind. In a binary system like this, material gathers towards the plane of the stars’ orbits while at the poles it is less dense. When the outburst takes place, the ejected material hits the high density gas in the orbital plane and slows down rapidly, while at the poles it moves more quickly. The result is the peanut shape seen in the HST images and confirmed earlier observations made using radio telescopes on the ground.

Valerio Ribeiro now hopes to watch RS Oph over the years to come. He comments, “There are some astronomers who believe systems like this will ultimately explode as supernovae. Our continuing work will help us find out if that will happen.”

Image Caption: An artist’s impression of the binary star system RS Ophiuchi: hydrogen-rich gas transferred from a red giant onto the surface of a white dwarf has just exploded. (Credit: David A. Hardy http://www.astroart.org & Science and Technology Facilities Council)

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Scientists Developing Web Site Credibility Tools

Researchers around the world are working to create new tools that can quickly ascertain a particular Web site’s credibility.

The need for such a tool has increased in recent years with the surge in the number of Web sites offering health advice, political viewpoints and other user-generated content, said researcher Andreas Juffinger at the Know-Center, an Austrian technology research center.

Juffinger and his team are developing a program that analyzes and ranks blogs as “highly credible”, “average credible” or “little credible,” he told the AFP.

The tool works by comparing statistical metrics, such as the distribution of particular words, of a blog post with those of news articles on the same issue from mainstream sources previously deemed credible.

“It has shown promising results, we think we are on the right path,” Juffinger said during a global World Wide Web conference in Spain.

“It has to be automatic because it is not possible for customers to label and read all these blogs.”

In Japan, researchers are working to develop a program that continually mines the Internet for different viewpoints on a particular topic, and then presents them to users along with a “statement map” clarifying how the different opinions are related.

“We really believe that ‘statement maps’ can help users come to conclusions about the reliability of a Web site,” Koji Murakami of the Nara Institute of Science and Technology, one of the researchers working on the project, told the AFP.

The number of Web sites worldwide has jumped from just 500 in 1994 to tens of millions today, according to data from Microsoft.

Wikipedia, one of the Web’s most-visited sites, is an online encyclopedia with open-source software such that anyone reading a subject entry can edit it.  This feature has created doubts about the site’s credibility ““ suspicions that surfaced again in January when an entry on Senator Edward Kennedy was changed to erroneously report his death following a seizure he suffered at President Obama’s inauguration luncheon.

However, despite these occasional incidents, Wikipedia has grown to have some 2.6 million articles in English alone since its founding in 2001.

Italian researchers are developing an algorithm to verify the integrity of Wikipedia entries by assigning quality scores to each article and contributor.

“Preliminary results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm seems to appropriately identify high and low quality articles,” wrote the researchers, led by Alberto Cusinato of Italy’s University of Udine, in a paper presented at the Web conference.

In 2005, the British journal Nature reviewed a wide range of scientific entries on the Wikipedia site and in the Encyclopedia Britannica.  The team concluded that although Wikipedia entries were often poorly structured, there were few differences in accuracy between the two sources.

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She Is An Astronomer Project

Gender equality is a priority concern for the whole scientific community, regardless of its field, cultural background or geographic location. This is also the case for astronomy, where only approximately one quarter of all professionals are women. In some countries there are no female astronomers, whilst in others more than half the professional astronomers are female. These numbers drop towards more senior levels, suggesting that scientific careers are heavily affected by social and cultural factors and are not determined solely by ability. The International Year of Astronomy 2009 Cornerstone project, She Is An Astronomer (SIAA), has been established to address these issues and tackle the main problems.

The SIAA program of activities was announced today during the European Week of Astronomy & Space Science at the University of Hertfordshire, UK. Boasting a mixture of international, national and local events ranging from conferences, meetings and workshops to address gender issues, events targeted at teenagers, and the central SIAA website, the variety is designed to appeal to a wide cross-section of the professional and public communities.

The official SIAA website, www.sheisanastronomer.org, provides a one-stop-shop for gender issues in astronomy and science. The site boasts five sections: profiles of living and historic astronomers; resources for female astronomers; events taking place during IYA2009; an SIAA Ambassadors’ Area; and a forum where issues, lessons and challenges can be discussed, including the opportunity to question experts. The website provides neutral, informative and accessible information and will be used to advertise new events, keeping interested parties at the forefront of developments. Examples of best practices and relevant statistics will be pooled, making them accessible to the wider community. Content will be regularly added during 2009, resulting in a vast depository that will remain online long into the future, acting as an ongoing legacy.

Several of the international and national meetings arranged for 2009 feature a SIAA presence. These include the IAU General Assembly in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, meetings in the US and Egypt, a book launch in Australia, an exhibition in Germany and many local events. Spain is conducting its first ever survey of women in astronomy and has also produced a calendar featuring historic female astronomers.

IYA2009 encourages us to discuss magnificent and complex topics, from black holes to the mysteries of our Sun, but without losing sight of the core human aspects. SIAA will play its part in ensuring that the Year’s impact is definitely felt here on Earth.

Image Caption: Indian girl looking through a telescope during an IYA2009 outreach activity in Bangalore, India. Credit: Naveen Nanjundappa/She is as Astronomer

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Repairing A ‘Bad’ Reputation?

New research at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies casts the role of a neuronal growth factor receptor “” long suspected to facilitate the toxic effects of beta amyloid in Alzheimer’s disease “” in a new light, suggesting the molecule actually protects the neuron in the periphery from beta amyloid-induced damage.

The receptor molecule in question, a protein better known as p75, regulates neuronal growth, survival, and degeneration, and guides nerve fibers in growing embryos to their final destinations. Some studies have suggested that it also exacerbates the neurotoxicity associated with beta amyloid deposits, which litter the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, giving the molecule its questionable reputation.

Yet a team of scientists in the laboratory of Kuo-Fen Lee, Ph.D., a professor in the Clayton Foundation Laboratories for Peptide Biology, found that p75 instead has a neuroprotective effect on the sympathetic nervous system in mice that were genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer’s disease.

Their findings, published in this week’s early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, challenge the prevailing view of p75’s harmful role in the condition and could lead to new insights and, ultimately, new protocols for managing the secondary deficits that accompany dementia and memory loss in Alzheimer’s.

Scientific interest in the peripheral nervous system has been growing as investigators studying neurodegenerative diseases seek new insights into disease progression. “How a disease damages the peripheral nervous system could add a great deal to our understanding of its process, possibly leading to applications down the line that impact patient management and quality of life issues,” says Lee, who led the study.

Proteins, like people, are often judged by the company they keep. For instance, p75 belongs to the same family as tumor necrosis factor and was widely thought to mediate cell death in some context. Various in vitro studies have examined p75 in combination with beta amyloid, seeking evidence that it helps induce nerve cell death in Alzheimer’s disease.

To gather evidence about p75 and the sympathetic nervous system, Lee’s team crossed a mouse model for Alzheimer’s disease with a line of mice genetically modified to lack the gene for p75. Without p75, they theorized, the neurotoxic effects of beta amyloid would be reduced, and the mice would show fewer Alzheimer’s symptoms.

“The role of p75 had been controversial for some time, but based on the evidence at the time, we expected to see indications that it mediates beta amyloid neurotoxicity,” says co-first author Tasha Bengoechea, Ph.D., a former graduate student in Lee’s lab. “We thought removing p75 while overexpressing amyloid would have a positive effect on neuron viability. The opposite was true.”

Along with profound motor problems, the p75-deficient mice exhibited severe defects in the wiring of nerves to multiple organs, and the majority died within just three weeks. (Mice normally live up to two years.) When the researchers scaled down the production of toxic beta amyloid by deleting one copy of BACE1, which encodes the molecular shears that make the first cut in the production of beta amyloid fragments, the nerves in the sympathetic nervous system of p75-deficient mice were substantially restored.

“This is the first time the interplay between p75 and beta amyloid in the peripheral sympathetic system, a system that has not been paid much attention before, has been demonstrated,” adds postdoctoral researcher and co-first author Zhijiang Chen, Ph.D. “Our findings will ultimately help to design novel strategies to treat the symptoms of the Alzheimer’s disease and improve the quality of life for Alzheimer’s disease patients.”

The study was funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Researchers who also contributed to the work included postdoctoral researcher Deborah O’Leary, Ph.D., of the Salk Institute’s Clayton Foundation Peptide Biology Laboratory, and Eliezer Masliah, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego.

Image Caption: The top image shows the neuronal wiring (red) of the heart in Alzheimer’s mice appears normal. The bottom image shows the sympathetic innervation in p75-deficient Alzheimer’s mice is severely impaired. Credit: Credit: Lee Laboratory, Salk Institute for Biological Studies.

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Students Find Jupiter-Sized Oddball Planet

A team of astronomers from University College London (UCL), including undergraduate students, have discovered that an exotic world passes directly in front of the Sun-like star it orbits, revealing for the first time that it is about the same size as Jupiter. And rather than traveling to one of the major observatories in Hawaii or Chile, the students made the discovery with a telescope at UCL’s University of London Observatory (ULO) in the capital’s northern suburb of Mill Hill.

The work was partly funded by a grant from the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) and will be presented on Tuesday 21st April at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference by ULO astronomer Dr. Steve Fossey; Ingo Waldmann, a final-year undergraduate and David Kipping, a PhD student working in the field of exoplanet science.

The team were alerted by the exoplanet science website http://www.oklo.org, run by Greg Laughlin of the University of California Santa Cruz. Using infrared space observations, Greg predicted that a planet (HD 80606b) would pass in front of its parent star (HD 80606) in a so-called transit event.

On the evening of 13th February, prompted by his alert, Dr Fossey and five UCL undergraduate observers started monitoring the brightness of HD 80606, and some 10 hours later at just after 4 am they discovered they had found the planet’s transit.

Transit events such as this one are very important because they allow astronomers to pin down a planet’s radius, density, and atmospheric composition, and to explore the possibility that their parent stars may harbor other as-yet-undetected planets.

The results have provided astronomers with some of the most precise data yet on the planet’s size and density, and the tilt and eccentricity of its orbit: and all with a relatively small telescope operated by UCL undergraduate students from a London suburb. The transit shows that the planet has a radius about the same as Jupiter, despite being about 4 times more massive.

The planet, called HD80606b, is unusual in that it travels in a highly elliptical orbit about its parent star. At its furthest point, it is almost as far from its star as the Earth is from the Sun. But every 111 days it is briefly a scorching 10 times closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun. A hypothetical observer above the cloud tops of the planet would see its parent star swell to 30 times the apparent size of the Sun in our own sky.

HD80606b now holds the record for both the longest orbital period and most eccentric orbit of all transiting planets and with such extreme variations in heating it presents a fascinating object for further study.

Astronomers world-wide are now planning to follow up future transits of this intriguing world using space- and ground-based telescopes to take a closer look at the planet’s characteristics, to try to understand its unusual orbit, and to explore the effect on its atmosphere of its looping, searing encounter with its parent star.

Greg Laughlin was quick to acknowledge the result on his website, “It’s certainly been a long time since an observational astronomical discovery of this magnitude has been made from within the London City Limits.”

Team leader Dr Steve Fossey is delighted. “Around the same time we submitted our paper, two other professional teams announced their own observations of the same transit. We are very encouraged that our results compare so favorably with those obtained from bigger European facilities, and that our results constrain tightly the nature of HD 80606b and its unusual orbit.”

“For example, spectroscopic observations reported by a French-Swiss team, when combined with our precise measurement of the orbital tilt, indicate that the planet’s unusual orbit might be explained by the parent star being a member of a binary system – where the companion star tugs on the planet’s orbit over millions of years to leave it in the strange configuration we see today.”

In the International Year of Astronomy (IYA2009), it seems appropriate that undergraduate students are making world class discoveries using a relatively small university observatory in an urban setting. Cherry Ng, one of the students who work at Mill Hill, comments, “The project gave me a taste of frontier astronomical research. It has definitely strengthened my resolve to pursue a career in astronomy.”

The results appear in a paper accepted publication in MNRAS Letters. S Fossey, I Waldmann & D Kipping, ‘Detection of a transit by the planetary companion of HD 80606’.

Image Caption: The geometry of the transit of HD 80606b on 2009 February 13/14, as viewed from Earth. The observations made by the UCL team were able to demonstrate that HD 80606b is about the same size of Jupiter, and that the transit was almost grazing – that is, it crossed the line of sight from Earth quite close to the limb of the star. Although it was only possible to capture about 8 hours of the full transit from ULO, it was concluded that the total transit was about 12 hours long. Credit: G. Laughlin (Univ. California at Santa Cruz)/S.

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Two Complex Organic Molecules Discovered In Space

Scientists in the US and Germany have discovered two of the most complex molecules ever to be found in space, and their scientific models imply that even larger molecules, such as amino acids, may also exist.

Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, Cornell University in the US, and the University of Cologne in Germany have reported the discovery of ethyl formate and n-propyl cyanide in space.

Using the IRAM 30 m telescope in Spain, the team discovered emissions from molecules in a hot dense cloud of gas known as the “Large Molecule Heimat” in the star-forming region Sagittarius B2.

The “Large Molecule Heimat” contains a newly formed star, and other large organic molecules – including alcohols, aldehydes and acids – have been previously found within the cloud.

Atoms and molecules emit radiation at very specific frequencies, which appear as characteristic “lines” in the electromagnetic spectrum of an astronomical source. Recognizing the signature of a molecule in that spectrum is rather like identifying a human fingerprint.

“The difficulty in searching for complex molecules is that the best astronomical sources contain so many different molecules that their ‘fingerprints’ overlap, and are difficult to disentangle,” said Arnaud Belloche, from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy.

“Larger molecules are even more difficult to identify because their fingerprints are barely visible: their radiation is distributed over many more lines that are much weaker,” said Holger Mueller, of the University of Cologne.

The IRAM telescope found 3,700 spectral lines, from which the team identified 36 lines belonging to the two new molecules.

Scientists used a computer model to reveal how these large molecules, as well as others, form in space.

While chemical reactions are happening in space as the result of collisions between gaseous particles, small grains of dust within the interstellar gas can be used as landing sites for atoms to produce molecules. These grains build up thick layers of ice, which contain some basic organic molecules.

“But the really large molecules don’t seem to build up this way, atom by atom,” said Robin Garrod, a researcher in astrochemistry at Cornell University.

Instead, the computational models suggest that the more complex molecules form section by section, using pre-formed building blocks that are provided by molecules, such as methanol, that are already present on the dust grains.

“There is no apparent limit to the size of molecules that can be formed by this process — so there’s good reason to expect even more complex organic molecules to be there, if we can detect them,” said Garrod.

Scientists will present their findings at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science at the University of Hertfordshire on Tuesday.

Image 1: The IRAM 30m Telescope at Pico Veleta in southern Spain. Observations with this telescope at millimeter wavelengths led to the detection of both molecules, ethyl formate (C2H5OCHO) and n-propyl cyanide (C3H7CN). Image: IRAM

Image 2: Ethyl formate (C2H5OCHO). Image: Oliver Baum, University of Cologne

Image 3: n-Propyl cyanide (C3H7CN). Image: Oliver Baum, University of Cologne

Color code of the atomic constituents of both molecules: hydrogen (H): white, carbon (C): grey, oxygen (O): red and nitrogen (N): blue.

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hCG Hormone Fights Against Breast Cancer Even In Short-Term Treatments

In an animal model of breast cancer, Fox Chase Cancer Center researcher shows how smaller doses of hCG could offer some of the same benefits of longer doses

One of the most effective ways to prevent breast cancer is through a full-term pregnancy at an early age. Studies out of Fox Chase Cancer Center have linked this protective effect to the presence of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), a hormone produced by the placenta to maintain the early stages of pregnancy. Their findings in an animal model of breast cancer showed that rats exposed to hCG over a 21 day period (the length of rat pregnancy), are far less likely to develop breast cancer when exposed to a known carcinogen.

Today, at the 100th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research. Johana Vanegas, M.D., a research associate at Fox Chase, presents findings suggesting that even a much shorter exposure to hCG can prevent breast cancer in rats.

Venegas is a member of the laboratory of Jose Russo, M.D. and Irma Russo, M.D., who were the first scientists to propose hCG as an anti-cancer agent. Their studies have shown that hCG offers lasting, protective changes within breast tissue. Clinical trials of hCG in women, based on their work, are currently under way at three locations, nationally, including Fox Chase Cancer Center, and in one European country. The hCG hormone is an FDA-approved agent frequently used for fertility treatments.

“The ability to replicate the naturally protective effects of pregnancy against breast cancer will hold a significant public health value,” says Vanegas. “In order to translate our finding into humans, a clinical trial with hCG as a preventive agent against breast cancer, is already ongoing in pre-menopausal women with no previous pregnancy.”

Vanegas and her colleagues studied virgin female rats, which had been divided into four groups: a control group, which did not receive hCG, and three groups that received hCG for five, ten or fifteen consecutive days. Following the treatment, each rat received a single dose of a breast cancer-inducing agent.

According to Vanegas, 90.9 percent of the rats in the control group developed breast tumors, compared to 71.4 percent, 57.1 percent, and 15.4 percent in the five, ten and fifteen day-treated animals, respectively. In addition, the average tumor size was also smaller in all the animals that received any of the three hCG treatments.

“The animals that received hCG, but still developed breast cancer did so much later than the control group, which further demonstrates the protective effects of hCG,” Vanegas says. “While we don’t foresee side effects among humans in using hCG, it is helpful to know that even smaller doses confer benefits on breast tissue.”

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Fox Chase Cancer Center

Astronomers Discover Lightest Exoplanet Yet

Astronomers claim to have discovered an exoplanet that is the most similar to Earth in terms of mass than any previously discovered.

Found in the constellation Libra, the planet known as Gliese 581 represents about twice the mass of Earth.

Astronomers have previously identified some 300 exoplanets, but most are much larger than Earth.

“This is by far the smallest planet that’s ever been detected,” said Michael Mayor, from the Geneva Observatory, Switzerland.

“This is just one more step in the search for the twin of the Earth.

“At the beginning, we discovered Jupiter-like planets several hundred times the mass of the Earth; and now we have the sensitivity with new instruments to detect very small planets very close to that of the Earth,” he told BBC News.

Mayor worked alongside an international team of scientists who made the observation using the low-mass-exoplanet hunting device known as the HARPS spectrograph, which is attached to the 3.6 meter ESO telescope at La Silla, Chile.

“The holy grail of current exoplanet research is the detection of a rocky, Earth-like planet in the “Ëœhabitable zone’ “” a region around the host star with the right conditions for water to be liquid on a planet’s surface,” Mayor said in a statement.

“With only 1.9 Earth-masses, it is the least massive exoplanet ever detected and is, very likely, a rocky planet”, said co-author Xavier Bonfils from Grenoble Observatory.

Although the planet passes too close to its star for life to be possible, scientists claim that another planet in the system may be.

Previous observations using the HARPS showed that the host star was known to harbor a system with a Neptune-sized planet and two “super-Earths”.

Gliese 581 d was discovered two years ago with a mass of about seven times that of Earth. It orbits its parent star in 66.8 days, according to astronomers.

“Gliese 581 d is probably too massive to be made only of rocky material, but we can speculate that it is an icy planet that has migrated closer to the star,” said team member Stephane Udry.

“”Ëœd’ could even be covered by a large and deep ocean “” it is the first serious ‘water world’ candidate,” she added.

Sophisticated modern technology allows astronomers to observe exoplanets by studying the tiny wobble in star motion. The discovery of low-mass red dwarf stars like Gliese 581 adds potential of finding other low-mass exoplanets in the habitable zones, scientists said.

“With similar observing conditions an Earth-like planet located in the middle of the habitable zone of a red dwarf star could be detectable,” said Bonfils. “The hunt continues.”

“It is amazing to see how far we have come since we discovered the first exoplanet around a normal star in 1995 “” the one around 51 Pegasi,” says Mayor. “The mass of Gliese 581 e is 80 times less than that of 51 Pegasi b. This is tremendous progress in just 14 years.”

The international team’s findings will be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Image Caption: After more than four years of observations using the most successful low-mass-exoplanet hunter in the world, the HARPS spectrograph attached to the 3.6-metre ESO telescope at La Silla, Chile, astronomers have discovered in this system the lightest exoplanet found so far: Gliese 581 e (foreground) is only about twice the mass of our Earth. The Gliese 581 planetary system now has four known planets, with masses of about 1.9 (planet e, left in the foreground), 16 (planet b, nearest to the star), 5 (planet c, centre), and 7 Earth-masses (planet d, with the bluish color). The planet furthest out, Gliese 581 d, orbits its host star in 66.8 days, while Gliese 581 e completes its orbit in 3.15 days.

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Primitive Dust Provides Pre-Solar Time Capsules

An international team of scientists has found some of the most primitive matter containing abundant interstellar material analyzed to date amongst dust particles collected from the upper atmosphere by NASA aircraft. The samples were gathered in April 2003 during the Earth’s passage through the dust stream left behind by comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup. Dr Henner Busemann of the University of Manchester will present the results at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science at the University of Hertfordshire on Tuesday 21st April.

“We found an extraordinary wealth of primitive chemical “fingerprints”, including abundant pre-solar grains, true stardust that has formed around other earlier stars, some during supernova explosions, associated with extremely pristine organic matter that must pre-date the formation of our planets,” said Dr Busemann.

The interplanetary dust particles, which are only a few thousands of a millimeter in diameter, were analyzed by an international collaboration from the UK, the US and Germany. Two grains appear to have percentage levels of material thought to match the nebula from which the Solar System formed.  One dust particle contained four pre-solar silicate grains with an unusual chemical composition that matches predictions for silicates formed from cooling gas following a supernova explosion. One of these grains, a fragment of olivine, was found next to a hollow, globule of carbon, most likely of interstellar origin.  Organic coatings are suspected to be the time-capsules that protected and secured the survival of some of these fragile stellar silicate grains in the radiating space environment.

“These tiny grains combine all the most primitive features, found to date only separately in various meteorites, samples from the Stardust mission and interplanetary dust particles. The particular collection scenario allows us speculate that we truly have samples of a known source, comet Grigg-Skjellerup, in our hands,” said Dr Busemann.

The group compared their findings with Deep Impact observations of comet 9P/Tempel 1 and analyses of samples from comet 81P/Wild 2 collected by Stardust.  The comparison revealed surprising differences between the comets, which are all short-period comets with orbits constrained by Jupiter’s gravitational field.  Comet 81P/Wild 2 was found to have incorporated much higher levels of material formed in the inner Solar System, however all the comets contained materials such as carbonates that commonly indicate the presence of water.

The primitive matter, containing unaltered samples of the building blocks of our Solar System, gives insights into the turbulent processes leading to the formation of our Solar System and also the fate of comets orbiting since their formation at the outer edges of our planetary system. While the planets in the inner solar system, such as Earth or Mars, once experienced harsh conditions and have changed substantially over the past 4.5 billion years, comets are believed to store the original material of the early Solar System, acting as “Ëœsupersized refrigerators’.

“We still have much to learn from samples of primitive matter containing large amounts of interstellar grains. Aircraft offer a less costly way to collect cometary dust, albeit of unknown origin. Predictions and timed collection campaigns in the future offer an increased likelihood to analyze material from known comets without actually going there,” added Dr Busemann.

Image Caption: Interplanetary dust particles showing pre-solar silicate grains and organic matter of interstellar origin. Credit: H Busemann.

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Mass-Loss Leaves Exoplanets Exposed To Core

An international team of scientists has found that giant exoplanets orbiting very close to their stars could lose a quarter of their mass during their lifetime.  The team found that planets that orbit closer than 2% of an Astronomical Unit (AU), the distance between the Earth and the Sun, may lose their atmospheres completely, leaving just their core.  The team, led by Dr Helmut Lammer of the Space Research Institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, believe that the recently discovered CoRoT-7b “Super Earth”, which has less than twice the mass of the Earth, could be the stripped core of a Neptune-sized planet.

The team used computer models to study the possible atmospheric mass loss over a stellar lifecycle for exoplanets at orbiting distances of less than 0.06 AU where the planetary and stellar parameters are very well known from observations. The 49 planets considered in the study included hot gas giants, planets with masses similar or greater than that of Saturn and Jupiter, and hot ice giants, planets comparable to Uranus or Neptune. All the exoplanets in the sample were discovered using the transit method, where the size and mass of the planet is deduced by observing how much its parent star dims as it the planet passes in front of it.

“If the transit data are accurate, these results have great relevance for planetary formation theories”, said Dr Lammer, who is presenting results at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science at the University of Hertfordshire.

“We found that the Jupiter-type gas giant WASP-12b may have lost around 20-25% of its mass over its lifetime, but that other exoplanets in our sample had negligible mass loss.  Our model shows also that one major important effect is the balance between the pressure from the electrically charged layer of the planet’s atmosphere and the pressure from the stellar wind and coronal mass ejections (CMEs).  At orbits closer than 0.02 AU, the CMEs ““ violent explosions from the star’s outer layers ““ overwhelm the exoplanet’s atmospheric pressure causing it to lose maybe several tens of percent of its initial mass during its lifetime.” 

The team found that gas giants could evaporate down to their core size if they orbit closer than 0.015 AU. Lower-density ice giants could completely lose their hydrogen envelope at 0.045 AU. Gas giants orbiting at more than 0.02 AU lost about 5-7% of their mass.  Other exoplanets lost less than 2%. Results suggest that CoRoT-7b could be an evaporated Neptune-like planet but not the core of a larger gas giant. Model simulations indicate that larger mass gas giants could not have been evaporated to the mass range determined for CoRoT-7b.

Image Caption: Artist’s impression of an evaporating exoplanet. Credit: ESA, Alfred Vidal-Madjar, NASA

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Self-Assembled Nanowires Could Make Chips Smaller And Faster

 Researchers at the University of Illinois have found a new way to make transistors smaller and faster. The technique uses self-assembled, self-aligned, and defect-free nanowire channels made of gallium arsenide.

In a paper to appear in the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) journal Electron Device Letters, U. of I. electrical and computer engineering professor Xiuling Li and graduate research assistant Seth Fortuna describe the first metal-semiconductor field-effect transistor fabricated with a self-assembled, planar gallium-arsenide nanowire channel.

Nanowires are attractive building blocks for both electronics and photonics applications. Compound semiconductor nanowires, such as gallium arsenide, are especially desirable because of their better transport properties and versatile heterojunctions. However, a number of challenges ““ including integration with existing microelectronics ““ must first be overcome.

“Our new planar growth process creates self-aligned, defect-free gallium-arsenide nanowires that could readily be scaled up for manufacturing purposes,” said Li, who also is affiliated with the university’s Micro and Nanoelectronics Laboratory and the Beckman Institute. “It’s a non-lithographic process that can precisely control the nanowire dimension and orientation, yet is compatible with existing circuit design and fabrication technology.”

The gallium-arsenide nanowire channel used in the researchers’ demonstration transistor was grown by metal organic chemical vapor deposition using gold as a catalyst. The rest of the transistor was made with conventional microfabrication techniques.

While the diameter of the transistor’s nanowire channel was approximately 200 nanometers, nanowires with diameters as small as 5 nanometers can be made with the gold-catalyzed growth technique, the researchers report. The self-aligned orientation of the nanowires is determined by the crystal structure of the substrate and certain growth parameters.

In earlier work, Li and Fortuna demonstrated they could grow the nanowires and then transfer-print them on other substrates, including silicon, for heterogeneous integration. “Transferring the self-aligned planar nanowires while maintaining both their position and alignment could enable flexible electronics and photonics at a true nanometer scale,” the researchers wrote in the December 2008 issue of the journal Nano Letters.

In work presented in the current paper, the researchers grew the gallium-arsenide nanowire channel in place, instead of transferring it. In contrast to the common types of non-planar gallium arsenide nanowires, the researchers’ planar nanowire was free from twin defects, which are rotational defects in the crystal structure that decrease the mobility of the charge carriers.

“By replacing the standard channel in a metal-semiconductor field-effect transistor with one of our planar nanowires, we demonstrated that the defect-free nanowire’s electron mobility was indeed as high as the corresponding bulk value,” Fortuna said. “The high electron mobility nanowire channel could lead to smaller, better and faster devices.”

Considering their planar, self-aligned and transferable nature, the nanowire channels could help create higher performance transistors for next-generation integrated circuit applications, Li said.

The high quality planar nanowires can also be used in nano-injection lasers for use in optical communications.

The researchers are also developing new device concepts driven by further engineering of the planar one-dimensional nanostructure.

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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Hospital Labels Do Not Guarantee Better Weight-Loss Surgery

According to U.S. researchers, hospital-appointed bariatric surgery “centers of excellence” suffer as many complications and fatalities from weight-loss procedures as other medical facilities engaging in these operations, Reuters accounted on Monday. 

The researchers suppose the extra expense and exertion called for by hospitals to receive such a sought-after title might not be worth it.

Dr. Edward Livingston of the University of Texas Southwestern School of Medicine, said in a statement, “Designation as a bariatric surgery center of excellence does not ensure better outcomes.”  His study is published in the Archives of Surgery. 

Treating obesity with bariatric surgery is rapidly becoming more popular.  The goal of the surgery is to rework the digestive tract for the purpose of reducing the volume of food that can be consumed and digested.

An additional study in the same journal examined the advantages of the surgery in patients suffering from severe obesity. 

Severely obese individuals may benefit from insurance assistance, even if partial, which ranges in cost from $15,000 to $35,000.  Many of these contributing insurance companies, including Medicare — the federal health plan for 44 million elderly and disabled Americans — authorize the procedures to be conducted strictly at hospitals designated as a bariatric center of excellence. 

Livingston investigated to find out if patients at these centers received better care in actuality.  His research included intense scrutiny of data on 19,363 patients who had bariatric surgery in 2005.  Of these, 5,420 patients received surgery at centers of excellence. 

Results indicated that 1.7 percent of bariatric surgery patients who underwent treatment at a center of excellence died and 6.3 percent suffered complications.  In comparison with a death rate of .09 percent and a complication rate of 6.4 percent at hospitals lacking the prominent title.

In order to substantiate the “center of excellence” title, a hospital must hire extra staff, making it more expensive to operate.  However, “extra expenses associated with center of excellence designation may not be warranted,” Livingston suggested.

Another study in the same journal reviewed the effects of gastric bypass surgery in two groups of severely obese patients: the morbidly obese, indicated by those with a body mass index of 40 to 49, and the super obese, indicated by those with a body mass index of 50 or higher. 

A formula used to calculate obesity, body mass index (BMI), takes into account an individual’s height and weight.  A person is considered obese if their BMI is 30 or above. BMI of 25 to 30 is considered overweight. 

At the Hospital du Chablais in Lausanne, Switzerland, Dr. Michael Suter and his colleagues looked at 492 morbidly obese patients and 133 super obese patients treated with gastric bypass between years 1999 and 2006.

The team found that while the super obese patients lost more weight (37.3 percent of their body weight) than the morbidly obese patients (34.7 percent of their body weight), less than half of the super obese lost enough to be considered overweight six years after the surgery, compared with more than 90 percent of the morbidly obese patients.   

In spite of these differences, improvements in quality of life and other health measures were mostly the same in both groups.  Earlier research found that obese people who undergo weight-loss surgery are less inclined to die from heart disease, diabetes and cancer than obese people who do not. 

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Authority On Obesity Says: Retrain Your Brain

In his new book set to hit the shelves next week, the man who first made headlines when he helped President Clinton take on the cigarette industry is tackling a new kind of addiction.

Dr. David Kessler, former chief of the Food and Drug Administration, explains that he can’t walk through a part of downtown San Francisco without being overwhelmed by the irresistible craving to stop at a local shop for a chocolate-covered pretzel. Why? According to him, food hijacks his brain.

In his book, “The End of Overeating”, Dr. Kessler ties together the results of numerous brain studies conducted in recent years to help consumers understand a phenomenon that he calls “conditioned hyper-eating” ““ a condition that drives people to gorge on high-sugar and high-fat foods while draining them of the will-power to resist.

The simple fact, says Dr. Kessler, is that certain people really do have a much harder time resisting unhealthy foods. 

“The food industry has figured out what works,” Kessler told the Associated Press. “They know what drives people to keep on eating…It’s the next great public health campaign, of changing how we view food, and the food industry has to be a part of it.”

He describes some of the processed sweets sold by major manufacturers as being “layered and loaded” with a tantalizing combination of fat, salt and sugar.  They are often intentionally prepared so that the consumer barely even needs to chew them.  Minimal effort, maximum satisfaction ““ at least in the short-run.

This does not, however, absolve consumers of their responsibility in the fight against overeating, warns Kessler. 

“I have suits in every size,” writes Kessler.  “But once you know what’s driving your behavior, you can put steps into place” to retrain your brain and teach it to resist the enticements.

At the crux of research on overeating is the question of how the brain is affected by different stimuli.  There is increasing unanimity amongst neuroscientists in recent years regarding how the combination of fat and sugar excites dopamine receptors in the brain, releasing a pleasure-response similar to that initiated by alcohol or drugs.

The question then becomes: Which specific food stimuli trigger your brain to crave a specific food again?  Which fast food chain or packaged little goodies light up your brain’s pleasure sensors?

“You’re not even aware you’ve learned this,” explains Dr. Nora Volkow, the head of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and a seasoned expert in research dealing with the similarities between food and drug addiction.

Dr. Volkow herself confesses to a particular weakness for chocolate.  “You have to fight it and fight it,” she says.

Various other factors besides psychological conditioning also play a role in food addiction.  Amount of exercise, metabolism and hormones all work together in food addiction and obesity.

Representatives of the food industry point to the fact that more restaurants and grocery stores than ever have begun offering healthy alternatives to the traditional calorie-laden favorites.  For example, many restaurants will let you substitute a fruit salad for French fries, or a yogurt cup for ice cream.

Dr. Kessler, now working at the University of California in San Francisco, assembled a team of his fellow scientists to start researching why certain people seem to have a much harder time choosing to eat healthy.

In the first phase of their research, the team observed that rats ““ even after just being fed ““ will exert significant effort to obtain sips of a milkshake with the right combination of sugar and fat.  Additionally, they found that the more sugar was added to the drink, the more the rats were willing to eat of it.  The researchers point to the many low-fat foods in supermarkets that substitute sugar for the removed fat, essentially doing nothing to help consumers reduce their calorie intake.

Kessler’s team then examined research results from various studies on food habits and health.  They noted that most conditioned overeaters report losing control over the amount of food they eat, as well as loss of the feeling satiety and a persistent preoccupation with food.  More than 40 percent of these subjects qualified as obese compared to less than 20 percent for eaters without these symptoms.

For the last part of the project, Yale neuroscientist Dana Small allowed food addicts to smell chocolate and taste chocolate while scanning their brains in an MRI machine.  Rather than becoming desensitized to the aroma over time, Dr. Small found that the hyper-eaters actually became more stimulated the longer they smelled the food.  Drinking the milkshake didn’t satisfy their urge either.  The region of the brain that anticipates the reward appeared to stay lit up even after the subjects were allowed to indulge their cravings.

Kessler also found that people who aren’t obese can still be conditioned hyper-eaters, leading to the conclusion that the urge can indeed be controlled.  Dr. Volkow, for instance ““ the self-described chocolate addict ““ is also a compulsive exerciser.  Physical activity can also stimulate the dopamine pathway, offering a healthy way to curb the urge to binge.

As Kessler points out, society’s changed perception of smoking was one of the lead factors that led to a significant drop in cigarette sales in the U.S.  When people stopped seeing smoking as glamorous and “Ëœcool’ and started viewing it as a potentially deadly vice, more and more people started to kick the habit.

Though society’s view of food has yet to follow a similar to trend, Kessler says that people simply have to start retraining their brains.  Tell yourself, “I’ll hate myself if I eat that,” advises Kessler.  Start rewiring your own brain by replacing healthy foods and activities for the fleeting neurological reward of a chocolate bar.

Design a set of rules to help yourself deal with temptation before it’s staring you in the face: “I’m going to the mall, but bypassing the food court.”

Start consciously avoiding those cues that you know encourage bad eating habits.  If you can’t go to your favorite restaurant without ordering the large plate of chili-cheese fries, start going to a new restaurant.

“I’ve learned to eat things that I like but things that I can control,” says Kessler.

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Senior Citizens Becoming More Net-Savvy

Although tech-savvy young people were largely responsible for the explosive growth of the Internet during its early stages, senior citizens 70 and older now represent the fastest growing segment of Web users, experts said Monday.

“Older adults are the fastest growing demographic on the Internet,” said Professor Vicki Hanson of Scotland’s University of Dundee on Monday during a global World Wide Web conference in Madrid, Spain.

In 2005, just 26 percent of 70-75 year-olds in the U.S. surfed the Web.  As of last year that number had grown to 45 percent, Hanson said, citing data from the Pew Internet & American Life Project. 

The percentage of those 76 and older that use the Internet rose from 17 to 27 percent during that time.  

Britain has also seen a dramatic increase in the number of senior citizens surfing the Web, according to Andrew Arch of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the Web’s primary international standards organization.

“They are basically doing the same things as everyone else. Using the Web for communication, then quickly moving to other activities like information seeking, online banking, shopping,” Arch told Reuters.

According to the Pew study, e-mail is the most popular online activity for Internet users age 64 and older.  However, older users are less likely than their younger counterparts to conduct online shopping and banking, and are far less likely to visit social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook, the study found.

“They are not on Twitter,” said Hanson.

Given the expected sharp increase in the percentage of the U.S. population aged 60 and older, which is projected to reach 20 percent by 2050, experts predict the numbers of older Web surfers will continue to rise in the years ahead.

Additionally, many nations are now increasing the retirement age, which is expected to further fuel Internet use among older adults who will need to be Web proficient to work.

However, the physical challenges that accompany old age still act as a barrier for Internet use.  For instance, poor vision can make reading text more difficult, while arthritis can make using a mouse more challenging.

Some Web sites are making it easier for senior citizens to surf the net by utilizing larger fonts, higher contrast and extra spaces at the end of sentences, said Arch, works to facilitate Web accessibility for older and disabled Internet users.

“The typical web developer does not really understand that the world is ageing the way it is,” he said.

The changes he recommends would make it easier for people of all ages to surf the Web, he said.

“It is like footpaths. They were initially set up for the disabled but then everyone found them very useful.”

The number of people using the Internet has now surpassed one billion for the first time, according to comScore figures that count only unique users aged 15 and older.  The figures exclude those who access the Web from their mobile phones or from Internet cafes.

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Spitzer sees asteroids around dead suns

Astronomers using the U.S. space agency’s Spitzer Space Telescope say they have discovered at least one in 100 white dwarf stars has orbiting asteroids.

The international team of astronomers say their finding suggests the orbiting asteroids and rocky planets once hosted solar systems similar to our own.

White dwarf stars are the compact, hot remnants of stars such as the sun. The new observations suggest such Earth-sized stars are often polluted by a gradual rain of closely orbiting dust that emits infrared radiation.

The researchers said the data suggest at least 1 percent to 3 percent of white dwarf stars are contaminated in such a fashion and that the dust originates from rocky bodies such as asteroids, which are also known as minor planets. In our Solar System, minor planets are the leftover building blocks of the rocky terrestrial planets like the Earth, the scientists said.

The astronomers said the Spitzer results imply asteroids are found in orbit around a large number of white dwarfs, perhaps as many as 5 million in our own galaxy.

The findings were presented Monday at the University of Hertfordshire in Britain during the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference.

Researchers Find Possible Ways To Slow Down Cancer

Scientists have found ways to halt genetics which could slow down or stop diseases like MS and cancer.

Researchers of the University of Edinburgh said their findings might lead to new treatments for such illnesses.

Previously, scientists believed that a select group of “master” genes was responsible for controlling the growth of cells that cause the conditions.

However, the team found hundreds of genes interacting and they will now try to find weak spots to halt tumor growth.

Scientists said that they believe variations in this networked explained the reasons why people might develop diseases in different ways.

The researchers hope that by identifying the weaker spots in the gene structure, they will be able to stop the growth of tumors, enabling the growth of healthy cells.

Professor David Hume of the university’s Roslin Institute led the research and said, “This study has effectively shown us where the brakes are which could slow down or stop diseases like cancer and multiple sclerosis.”

He added, “We believe this could lead to treatments and cures for many diseases of the immune system.”

The researchers findings were published in the Nature Genetics Journal.

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UNESCO’s World Digital Library Goes Live

Officials at UNESCO headquarters in Paris announced the launch of the World Digital Library on Monday.

The library represents a massive collection of books, films, photographs and other materials from libraries across the globe.

UNESCO’s new library will become the world’s third major digital library, behind Google’s Book Search and the EU’s Europeana.

U.S. Librarian of Congress James H. Billington is credited with establishing the basis of the new digital library during a speech to the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO in June 2005.

Billington said the project could “have the salutary effect of bringing people together by celebrating the depth and uniqueness of different cultures in a single global undertaking.”

UNESCO and the Library of Congress first came together in December 2006 to discuss the project. In October 2007, the partner institutions unveiled the prototype of the digital collection.

“They noted that little cultural content was being digitized in many countries and that developing countries in particular lacked the capacity to digitize and display their cultural treasures,” UNESCO’s Web site reads.

“Existing Web sites often had poorly developed search and display functions. Multilingual access was not well developed. Many Web sites maintained by cultural institutions were difficult to use and, in many cases, failed to appeal to users, particularly young users.”

The WDL will function in seven primary languages – Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.

The library is the product of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and 32 partner institutions.

Billington will co-chair the launch event alongside UNESCO director general Koichiro Matsuura on Monday.

According to AFP, the collective hopes to develop partnerships with 60 countries by the end of 2009. Morocco, Uganda, Mexico and Slovakia have already signed up to work with the project.

Last year, Google succeeded in getting authors and publishers groups to drop copyright lawsuits after two years of negotiations.

In the past, Microsoft Inc and the European Union have devised rival libraries to Google’s Book Search engine. Microsoft gave up its efforts just 18 months after launching its library in 2006.

The EU’s digital library, Europeana, began in November, and was thrown offline hours after opening due to the influx of visitors. It currently operates via a prototype that draws about 40,000 visitors each day.

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Project Reveals Super Active Orion Nebula

Astronomers have completed the most comprehensive census of the star formation surrounding the Orion Nebula.

Using the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawaii, the IRAM Millimeter-wave Telescope in Spain, and the orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope, astronomers have uncovered a much busier scene than previously considered in and around Orion, some 1300 light years away from Earth.

They found that a stellar nursery exists behind the constellation, and can be vaguely seen through the fuzzy patch around Orion’s sword, known as the Orion Molecular Cloud. Astronomers characterize the region as chaotic and somewhat overcrowded, with young stars emitting gas in every direction.

Spanning from above Orion’s head to far below his feet, the Orion Molecular Cloud is more than 20 times angular the size of the full moon. It has become the subject of several studies in the past.

But the recent study is the first to present such a complete study of the young stars, the cloud of gas and dust from which they are being born, and the spectacular supersonic jets of hydrogen molecules being launched from the poles of each star, astronomers from the three facilities said.

Due to its thickness, the molecular field is mostly to blame for keeping the “action” hidden from plain sight. The Orion nebula provides just a glimpse of what is truly going on.

Astronomers required the ability to observe at wavelengths beyond the reach of the human eye. They combined the resources of UKIRT, the Spitzer Space Telescope, which works at even longer “mid-infrared” wavelengths, and the IRAM radio telescope, which operates beyond the infrared at short radio wavelengths.

“This spectacular dataset demonstrates the power of survey telescopes like UKIRT. With on-line access to data from other telescopes around the world, and the ease with which one can communicate with collaborators across the globe, massive projects like the Orion study are very much the future of astronomy,” said Dr. Andy Adamson, Associate Director at the UKIRT.

“Regions like this are usually referred to as stellar nurseries, but we have shown that this one is not being well run: it is chaotic and seriously overcrowded,” said Dr. Chris Davis of the Joint Astronomy Center in Hawaii.

“Using UKIRT’s wide field camera (WFCAM), we now know of more than 110 individual jets from this one region of the Milky Way. Each jet is traveling at tens or even hundreds of miles per second; the jets extend across many trillions of miles of interstellar space. Even so, we have been able to pinpoint the young stars that drive most of them.”

“Star formation research is fundamental to our understanding of how our own sun, and the planets that orbit it, were created,” Thomas Stanke of the European Southern Observatory in Garching, Germany, who worked on the study, said in a statement.

“Many of the stars currently being born in Orion will evolve to be just like the sun. Some may even have Earth-like planets associated with them.”

The new study’s findings will be presented at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science (NAM 2009) at the University of Hertfordshire on Monday.

Image 1: This spectacular image combines observations from the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope. It shows just a small portion of the region surveyed. In this figure, parts of the Orion Molecular cloud are illuminated by nearby stars and therefore glow an eerie green color. The jets punch through the cloud and can be seen as a multitude of tiny pink-purple arcs, knots and filaments. The young stars that drive the jets are usually found along each jet and are colored golden orange. Credit: UKIRT/JAC, Spitzer Telescope.

Image 2: A close-up view of a spectacular jet (seen in red) popping out of a busy region of star formation in Orion. All of the red wisps, knots and filaments are in fact associated with jets from young stars, which in this figure are colored orange. These data were acquired with the Wide Field Camera (WFCAM) at the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope. Credit: UKIRT/JAC.

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HARPS-NEF Will Sift Through Kepler Targets For New Earths

Astronomers have announced plans to build an ultra-stable, high-precision spectrograph for the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT – part of the Isaac Newton Group or ING on La Palma) in an effort to discover habitable Earth-like planets around other stars. Dr Ian Skillen of the ING will present the new High Accuracy Radial-velocity Planet Search ““ New Earths Facility (HARPS-NEF) spectrograph in a poster on Monday 20th April at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference at the University of Hertfordshire.

Spectrographs analyze the electromagnetic spectrum of light emitted from stars and other objects and allow astronomers to measure properties like velocity and temperature. The super sensitive HARPS-NEF spectrograph is currently under construction by a collaboration between Harvard University’s Origins of Life Initiative, New Earths Facility, and the HARPS team of the University of Geneva and is expected to start operation soon after 2010.

A planet and its parent star orbit around a common centre of mass. As a (usually unseen) planet moves its gravitational pull exerts a small reflex motion on the star. The magnitude of this stellar ‘wobble’ is measured from the resulting Doppler shift imposed on its spectrum. A planet as small as the Earth causes a reflex motion of the Sun of just about 9 cm/sec, which is less than 1 km/hour, or equivalent to the speed of a rather gentle stroll! Other objects such as white dwarfs and stellar companions on the other hand cause a larger reflex motion in excess of 1 km/sec, and so are much easier to identify.

By measuring the wobble of their parent stars, HARPS-NEF will use this technique to discover and characterize Earth-like planets from candidates identified by NASA’s Kepler mission, launched on 6th March this year. It will incorporate several improvements on the original HARPS  spectrograph at the European Southern Observatory in Chile, most notably the use of a laser frequency grid or ‘astro comb’, which will provide the ultra-stable wavelength reference against which tiny Doppler motions can be measured with an unparalleled precision of a few cm/s over a period of years.

Kepler will carry out a continuous 4-year survey of more than 100000 stars in the constellations of Cygnus and Lyra. It will search for the small, periodic dips in brightness that result from a planet passing directly in front of the star it orbits in a so-called transit. An Earth-like planet moving in front of its star causes a dip in brightness of about 1 part in 10000 and can last for several hours. However, other objects like the Earth-sized white dwarfs (compact objects that are the end state of stars like the Sun) can mimic this dip. So in conjunction with the Kepler observations, the HARPS-NEF measurements will allow astronomers to calculate both the mass and size of the orbiting objects and confirm them as planets.  The mean density (from mass and size) will show if a planet is rocky and dry or rich in water.

But determining the tiny changes in the motions of stars that result from orbiting Earth candidates is a huge challenge. It is the achievement of this precision and stability over many years that makes HARPS-NEF the most advanced facility of its kind in the world.

The scientists believe that the Kepler mission and HARPS-NEF on the WHT together have the real prospect of discovering a number of Earth-like planets capable of supporting life. Professor Dimitar Sasselov (Director, Harvard Origins of Life Initiative and HARPS-NEF project leader) comments, ” A new age of exploration is about to begin, as HARPS-NEF will spy on the new Earths identified by the Kepler mission to show us what they are made of and infer their surface conditions.”

Dr Ian Skillen (ING project scientist for HARPS-NEF) adds, “The discovery of habitable, Earth-like planets orbiting other stars is now within our grasp. HARPS-NEF will play a fundamental role in this giant step forward in our quest for life elsewhere in the Universe.”

Image Caption: The original HARPS spectrograph at the European Southern Observatory, during laboratory tests. The vacuum tank which isolates the spectrograph from the environment is open, allowing some of the high-precision optical components to be seen. The large optical grating, measuring 20 x 80 cm, is visible on top of the bench. It disperses the incoming stellar light into the spectrum from which the stellar Doppler ‘wobble’ is measured. Credit: ESO

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Could Dead Suns Harbor Solar Systems?

Using NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, an international team of astronomers have found that at least 1 in 100 white dwarf stars show evidence of orbiting asteroids and rocky planets, suggesting these objects once hosted Solar Systems similar to our own. Team member Dr Jay Farihi of the University of Leicester will present this discovery on Monday 20th April at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference at the University of Hertfordshire.

White dwarf stars are the compact, hot remnants left behind when stars like our Sun reach the end of their lives. Their atmospheres should consist entirely of hydrogen and helium but are sometimes found to be contaminated with heavier elements like calcium and magnesium. The new observations suggest that these Earth-sized stars are often polluted by a gradual rain of closely orbiting dust that emits infrared radiation picked up by Spitzer.

The data suggest that at least 1% to 3% of white dwarf stars are contaminated in this way and that the dust originates from rocky bodies like asteroids (also known as minor planets). In our Solar System, minor planets are the left over building blocks of the rocky terrestrial planets like the Earth. The Spitzer results imply that asteroids are found in orbit around a large number of white dwarfs, perhaps as many as 5 million in our own Milky Way Galaxy.

The new findings indicate the dust is completely contained within the Roche limit of the star — close enough that any object larger than a few kilometers would be ripped apart by gravitational tides (the same phenomenon which led to the creation of Saturn’s rings).  This backs up the team’s hypothesis that the dust disks around white dwarfs are produced by tidally disrupted minor planets.  In order to pass this close to the white dwarf, an asteroid must be perturbed from its regular orbit further out ““ and this can occur during a close encounter with as yet unseen planets.

Because white dwarfs descend from main sequence stars like the Sun, the team’s work implies that at least 1% to 3% of main sequence stars have terrestrial planets around them. Dr Farihi comments. “In the quest for Earth-like planets, we have now identified numerous systems which are excellent candidates to harbor them. Where they persist at white dwarfs, any terrestrial planets will
likely not be habitable, but may have been sites where life developed during a previous epoch. “

Perhaps the most exciting and important aspect of this research is that the composition of these crushed asteroids can be measured using the heavy elements seen in the white dwarf.

Dr Farihi sees this as a crucial step forward. “With high quality optical and ultraviolet observations (e.g. the Hubble Space Telescope), we should be able to measure up to two dozen different elements in debris-polluted white dwarfs.  We can then address the question, “Are the rocky extrasolar planets we find similar to the terrestrial planets of our Solar System?”

Image Caption: NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope set its infrared eyes upon the dusty remains of shredded asteroids around several dead stars. This artist’s concept illustrates one such dead star, or “white dwarf,” surrounded by the bits and pieces of a disintegrating asteroid. These observations help astronomers better understand what rocky planets are made of around other stars. Image: NASA / JPL – Caltech

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Local Star’s Cool Companion Discovered

An international team, led by astronomers at the University of Hertfordshire in the UK, have discovered one of the coolest sub-stellar bodies ever found outside our own solar system, orbiting the red dwarf star Wolf 940, some 40 light years from Earth. Dr Ben Burningham of the University of Hertfordshire will present this discovery on Monday 20th April at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference.

“Although it has a temperature of 300 degrees Celsius, which is almost hot enough to melt lead, temperature is relative when you study this sort of thing, and this object is cool by stellar standards. In fact this is the first time we’ve been able to study an object as cool as this in such detail”, says Dr Burningham, “the fact that it is orbiting a star makes it extra special”.

The object is thought to have formed like a star, but has ended up looking more like Jupiter. It is roughly the same size, despite being between 20 and 30 times as heavy, and when the infrared spectral “fingerprints” of the two objects are compared, their resemblance is striking.

The new object orbits its star at about 440 times the distance at which the Earth orbits the sun. At such a wide distance, it takes about 18,000 years to complete a single orbit.

Too small to be stars, so-called “brown dwarfs” have masses lower than stars but larger than gas giant planets like Jupiter. Due to their low temperature these objects are very faint in visible light, and are detected by their glow at infrared wavelengths.

Modeling the atmospheres of cool brown dwarfs is a complex task, but it is key to understanding what we see when we look at planets that orbit other stars. Models of emitted light from such objects, which are dominated by absorption due to water and methane gas, are sensitive to assumptions about their age and chemical make-up.

In most cases astronomers don’t initially know much about the age and composition of brown dwarfs and this can make it hard to tell where the models are right, and where they are going wrong.

“What’s so exciting in this case, is that we can use what we know about the primary star to find out about the properties of the brown dwarf, and that makes it an extremely useful find”, explains Dr Burningham, “you can think of it as a Rosetta Stone for decrypting what the light from such cool objects is telling us”.

The object has been named Wolf 940B, after the red dwarf star that it orbits, which was first catalogued by the pioneering German astronomer Max Wolf ninety years ago.

“Red dwarfs are the most populous stars in the Galaxy, and systems like this may be more common than we know” says Dr David Pinfield of the University of Hertfordshire, “As the generation of ongoing large scale surveys continues, we may discover a pack of Wolf-940B-like objects in our solar back yard.”

Wolf 940B was initially discovered as part of a major infrared sky survey – the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) which is being carried out using the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) on Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

The object was found as part of a wider effort to find the coolest and least luminous bodies in our local Galactic neighborhood, but it was then found to be a companion to the nearby red dwarf Wolf 940 through its common motion across the sky. The data used to confirm the discovery were obtained using telescopes in Chile, the Canary Islands and Hawaii.

Its temperature was then confirmed using data from the Gemini-North telescope on Mauna Kea. The team’s findings will soon be published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Following its discovery with ground based telescopes, Wolf 940B, has since been observed by the NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, and the findings from those observations will be published later this year.

“This object is going to continue to provide insights into the processes of cool brown dwarf, and warm planetary atmospheres for some time to come”, says Dr Sandy Leggett, of the Gemini Observatory, “finding it was just the first step”.

* Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS) “The discovery of an M4+T8.5 binary system”, astro-ph: arXiv:0902.181

Image Caption: UKIRT UKIDSS image of Wolf 940A and Wolf 940B. Credit: UKIRT / B. Burningham / University of Hertfordshire

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Astronomers Explain Solar Sigmoids

‘Sigmoids’ are S-shaped structures found in the outer atmosphere of the Sun (the corona), seen with X-ray telescopes and thought to be a crucial part of explosive events like solar flares. Now a group of astronomers have developed the first model to reproduce and explain the nature of the different stages of a sigmoid’s life. Professor Alan Hood and Dr. Vasilis Archontis, both from the Mathematical Institute at St. Andrews University, Scotland, will present the team’s results at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science conference at the University of Hertfordshire. Prof. Hood will present some of the work in a talk on Monday 20th April, supplemented by a poster by Dr. Vasilis Archontis on Thursday 23rd April, which will cover the model in more detail.

Recently, the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) on board the Hinode space mission was used to obtain the first images of the formation and eruption phase of a sigmoid at high resolution. These observations revealed that the structure of the sigmoid is complex: it consists of many, differently oriented, loops that all together form two opposite J-like bundles or an overall S-shape. They also showed that at the end of its life the sigmoid produces a ‘flare’ eruption.

Over the years a series of theoretical and numerical models have been proposed to explain the nature of sigmoids but until now there was no explanation on how such complex structures form, erupt and fade away. The new model describes how sigmoids consist of many thin and twisted layers (or ribbons) of strong electric current. When these layers interact it leads to the formation of the observed powerful flares and the eruption of strong magnetic fields which carry highly energetic particles into interplanetary space.

Dr. Archontis sees the connection between the two astronomers’ model and work on predicting solar flares. He remarks, “Sigmoids work as ‘mangers’ or ‘cocoons’ for solar eruptions. There is a high probability that they will result in powerful eruptions and other explosive events. Our model helps scientists understand how this happens.”

Prof. Hood adds that these events have real significance for life on Earth, “Sigmoids are among the most interesting features for scientists trying to forecast the solar eruptions ““ events that can disrupt telecommunications, damage satellites and affect the way navigation systems are operated’.

Image Caption: Sigmoid 1. The left panel shows one snapshot from the St Andrews model and the right panel the corresponding snapshot from the Hinode satellite observations. The two images both show the internal complex structure of the solar sigmoid, which has been observed at very high resolution and is reproduced in the model. The ‘sigmoids’ consist of a network of thin ‘ribbons’ where the electric current is strong and the material is heated to between 1 and 2 million degrees Celsius. Credit: NASA / STFC / ISAS / JAXA / A. Hood (St. Andrews), V. Archontis (St. Andrews)

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The Benefits Of Eating Eggs For Breakfast

New studies presented this week at Experimental Biology 2009 enhance the growing body of evidence supporting the nutritional benefits of eggs. Research presented at the meeting demonstrates that choosing eggs for breakfast can help adults manage hunger while reducing calorie consumption throughout the day. Additional research shows that teens who choose a protein-rich breakfast are less hungry and eat fewer calories at lunch.

Among the findings presented at Experimental Biology:

Eggs for Breakfast Helps Manage Hunger and Calorie Consumption

A study led by Maria Luz Fernandez, Ph.D., professor in the department of nutritional sciences at the University of Connecticut, investigated the differences in post-meal hunger and daily caloric intake when eating a breakfast of either protein-rich eggs or carbohydrate-rich bagels. Although the two breakfast options contained an identical amount of calories, the researchers found that adult men who consumed eggs for breakfast:

* consumed fewer calories following the egg breakfast compared to the bagel breakfast

* consumed fewer total calories in the 24-hour period after the egg breakfast compared to the bagel breakfast

* reported feeling less hungry and more satisfied three hours after the egg breakfast compared to the bagel breakfast(1)

This study supports previous research published in the International Journal of Obesity, which found that eating eggs for breakfast as part of a reduced-calorie diet helped overweight dieters lose 65 percent more weight and feel more energetic than dieters who ate a bagel breakfast of equal calories and volume. The study also found no significant difference in blood levels of LDL- and HDL-cholesterol and triglycerides between the individuals who ate the egg breakfast and those who ate the bagel breakfast.(2)

Protein for Breakfast Helps Teens Control Appetite

Researchers from the University of Kansas Medical Center assessed the impact of a protein-rich breakfast on appetite and overall calorie consumption among teens who traditionally skip breakfast. While each test breakfast contained 500 total calories, the researchers examined variables including the protein form (solid food or beverage) and the amount of protein versus carbohydrate in the breakfast.(3)

* Teens consumed fewer calories at lunch when they ate a protein-rich breakfast of solid foods compared with a protein-rich beverage breakfast

* Post-meal hunger was significantly reduced when the teens ate a protein-rich breakfast of solid foods

It is important to encourage children and teens to consume a healthy breakfast. According to data from the Nationwide Food Consumption Surveys and Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals, skipping breakfast has been associated with a higher BMI in this population.(4) Previous research published in the British Journal of Nutrition found that consuming high-quality protein foods for breakfast, such as eggs, can keep individuals satisfied longer, and may help them consume fewer calories throughout the day.(5)

Cracking Open Heart Health Myths

Florida State University researchers examined the relationship between cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors such as body mass index, serum lipids and levels of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), and the degree to which these factors are influenced by dietary intake of fiber, fat and eggs. The study found:

* no relationship between egg consumption and serum lipid profiles, especially serum total cholesterol, as well as no relationship between egg consumption and hs-CRP

* a positive correlation between dietary trans-fat intake and CVD risk factors, as well as a negative correlation between fiber and vitamin C intake and CVD risk factors(6)

In additional research presented at Experimental Biology, investigators with Exponent, Inc. evaluated egg consumption data from the NHANES III Follow-Up Survey to determine the association between egg consumption and heart health. The researchers developed a statistical model which showed:

* no increased risk of death from coronary heart disease with increased egg consumption

* a reduced risk of mortality among men who consumed one to six eggs/week compared to less than one egg/week

* a significant reduction in risk of stroke among women who consumed one to six eggs/week and one or more eggs/day(7)

These studies support more than 30 years of research showing that healthy adults can consume eggs as part of a healthy diet. Eggs are all-natural and packed with a number of nutrients. One egg has 13 essential vitamins and minerals in varying amounts, high-quality protein and antioxidants, all for 70 calories. Eggs are also an excellent source of choline, an essential nutrient required for life’s most basic functions and vital for fetal and infant brain development.

1. Ratliff J, et al. Macronutrient composition of breakfast influences plasma glucose, satiety hormones and caloric intake in the next 24 h in adult men. Presented at Experimental Biology 2009. Supported by the Egg Nutrition Center.

2. Vander Wal JS, et al. Egg breakfast enhances weight loss. IJO 2008; 32(10): 1545-1551.

3. Leidy HJ, et al. The incorporation of a protein-rich breakfast on appetite sensations and subsequent food intake in “breakfast-skipping” adolescents. Presented at Experimental Biology 2009. Supported by SAH Research Award, KUMC.

4. Siega-Riz AM, et al. Trends in breakfast consumption for children in the United States from 1965-1991. Am J Clin Nutr. 1998; 67(suppl): 748S-756S.

5. Leidy HJ, et al. Increased dietary protein consumed at breakfast leads to initial and sustained feeling of fullness during energy restriction compared to other meal times. BJN 2009; 101 (6):798-803.

6. Chai SC, et al. No relationship between egg consumption and cardiovascular risk factors in postmenopausal women. Presented at Experimental Biology 2009.

7. Scrafford C, et al. The impact of egg consumption on heart health using the NHANES III Follow-up Survey. Presented at Experimental Biology 2009. Supported by Egg Nutrition Center and NIH Training Grant.

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Drug-Makers Leaking Pharmaceuticals Into Water Supply

Government scientists say that they have detected significantly elevated levels of pharmaceutical residues in the water downstream from treatment facilities in charge of disposing waste from drug manufacturers.

Preliminary results from two important federal studies compared the wastewater flowing from sewage plants that handle waste from drug companies and compared them with others that do not.  The studies examined only a handful of the 1,886 U.S. drug manufacturing plants recorded by the 2006 Census report.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey’s report, some of the samples contained a range of pharmaceuticals, from over-the-counter medications to opiates, barbiturates and tranquilizers; some of them at significantly higher concentrations than what were found at other plants.

At one location, the muscle relaxer metaxalone was found in treated waste-water at a concentration several hundred times higher than the concentration used by drug regulators to examine a drug’s impact on the environment.

Because of privacy agreements, the specific treatment facilities were not listed by name.

Herb Buxton, a researcher with the USGS and co-chair of the federal task force on pharmaceuticals and the environment, spoke of the significance of double-checking the environmental safety claims of drug companies.

“It’s critical that those types of assumptions are confirmed through real testing,” said Buxton.

In a study conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of a municipal wastewater treatment facility in Kalamazoo, Mich., the city’s public service director provided evidence that showed elevated levels of the antibiotic lincomycin entering the plant.  The facility services a large production factory for the pharmaceutical company Pfizer Inc., which was producing the antibiotic around the time of the tests.

“There’s some product going down the drain,” explained Merchant plainly.

While the vast majority of the lincomycin was properly removed from the water during treatment, traces of it did remain.  A separate 2008 study showed that the antibiotic can combine with small concentrations of other drugs to stimulate the production of cancer cells in both humans and fish.

Other experiments have showed that lincomycin can cause genetic mutations in fish, bacteria, algae and other aquatic microbes common to streams and rivers.

Francesco Pomati, a biologist at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, has expressed extreme concern about the levels of these drugs found in drinking water.  He and his colleagues at the university have cautioned that repeated exposure to this cocktail of drugs ““ even in minute quantities ““ could be “a potential hazard for particular human conditions, such as pregnancy or infancy.”

Pfizer spokesman Rick Chambers has assured that “compliance with all environmental, health and safety laws is imperative to our business operations worldwide.”

The two U.S. studies added to a slew of similar research projects carried out in Asia and Europe recently that have connected pharmaceutical production facilities to dangerous levels of drugs in water supplies.  Other drugs detected include the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole, the pain reliever diclofenac, the anticonvulsant carbamazepine, as well as a range of milder medications like aspirin, antihistamines and female sex hormones.

Recent studies in India have shown that a waste water plant that services dozens of multinational drug companies had been releasing as much as 100 pounds of the antibiotic ciproflacin a day into local rivers through supposedly treated water.

A Swiss study paid for by the pharmaceutical giant Roche found that some 0.2 percent of its active ingredients managed to escape during the production process.  Such a small number may not sound like much until it is multiplied by the thousands of drug production plants around the world, many of which likely have a much higher loss rate than that reported by Roche.

This has many experts in the U.S. questioning their own production standards.

“Is it as bad in the U.S. as it is in India?  Probably not.  But it does make me think we should test,” says former EPA enforcement officer Kyla Bennett, who is now pursuing a career as an ecologist and environmental attorney.

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Chewing Gum Decreases Snack Cravings And Reduces Consumption Of Sweet Snacks

Men and women who chewed Extra® sugar-free gum three times hourly in the afternoon chose and consumed less snacks and specifically, less sweet snacks than they did when they did not chew gum. They still reached for a variety of snacks provided but the decrease in overall snack intake was significant at 40 calories and sweet snack intake specifically was significantly lowered by 60 calories.

Researchers from the Pennington Biomedical Research Center and Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La., presented study findings on April 19, 2009 at the Experimental Biology 2009 meeting in New Orleans.

The presentation by Dr. Paula J Geiselman, chief of women´s health and eating behavior and smoking cessation at Pennington, was part of the scientific program of the American Society for Nutrition. Earlier studies had found that gum chewing was associated with lower snack intake, but the study conducted by Dr. Geiselman is the first to examine the macronutrient composition of afternoon snack food choices made by men and women after chewing Extra® sugar-free gum.

The participants, 115 men and women, between the ages of 18 and 54, were all regular gum chewers. They came to the laboratory twice – once for the gum condition and the other for the no gum condition. During each visit, subjects were given sandwiches for lunch, nutrient rich enough to account for one fourth of their recommended daily caloric intake. They remained in the laboratory and for the next three hours, they either chewed Extra® sugar-free gum for 15 minutes hourly for three hours or did not chew gum.

Participants filled out questionnaires rating their self-perceived levels of hunger, cravings for snacks and energy levels. Three hours after lunch, they were offered a variety of snacks including high sugar foods and high complex carbohydrate foods that contained either high or low fat. Subjects could eat as much as they wanted of any or all snack food categories.

When they chewed gum, on average, they reported significantly decreased feelings of hunger and cravings for something sweet. In addition, the gum chewers felt they maintained energy levels throughout the afternoon and also felt significantly less drowsy at hours two and three before the afternoon snack.

According to Dr. Geiselman, “Overall, this research demonstrates the potential role chewing gum can play in appetite control, reduction of snack cravings and weight management. Even small changes in calories can have an impact in the long term. And, this research supports the role of chewing gum as an easy, practical tool for managing snack, especially sweet snack, intake and cravings.

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Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

“ËœSilent’ Heart Attacks Are Very Common

According to U.S. researchers, the medical phenomenon known as the “silent” heart attacks is likely far more prevalent ““ and dangerous ““ than experts had previously suspected.

According to current estimates, some 200,000 Americans per year experience these painless heart attacks ““ known in medical terminology as unrecognized myocardial infarctions ““ often without even realizing it.

Dr. Han Kim of Duke University recently conducted a study on the subject that is set to appear in next week’s Public Library of Science Medical journal.  According to him, there is reason to suspect that current figures on silent heart attacks may be far too low.

“No one has fully understood how often these heart attacks occur and what they mean, in terms of prognosis,” says Kim.

According to standard practice, when a physician wants to determine whether a patient has had a heart attack, his two standard tools are the electrocardiogram (EKG) and tests of blood-enzyme levels.

An EKG allows a cardiologist to examine the electrical signals that the heart sends out.  When a patient has suffered a heart attack, there are signature changes that occur in sections of the EKG called the Q-wave and ST-segment.

In a cardiac-enzyme blood test, the physician is able to check for elevated levels of a family of enzymes known as troponins which are released from damaged myocardial cells in the heart.  The levels of troponins found in a patient’s blood can remain high for as long as two weeks after a heart attack.

The problem however, according to Dr. Kim, is that with silent heart attacks you don’t always observe these telltale symptoms.
“Those are the ones we haven’t been able to count because we’ve never had a good way to document them,” said Kim.

To tackle this problem, Kim and his colleagues have begun using a new generation of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology known as delayed enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance.  This cutting-edge technology is particularly suited for locating damaged heart tissue that might have been missed by other imaging techniques.

Dr. Kim’s group examined 185 patients suffering from coronary artery disease who had no previous record of heart attacks.  Of the patients they studied, some 35 percent showed signs that they had previously suffered from a heart attack according to the new imaging techniques.  Among these patients, they found the silent heart attacks in which there was no change in the Q-wave, were three times more common than those that did show Q-wave changes.

Even more disturbing, the group’s follow-up study of these patients showed that after two years, patients who had suffered from a non-Q-wave heart attack were at a 17 times higher risk of dying from heart problems than patients without heart damage.

In current medical practice, patients who suffer from silent heart attacks are generally treated like patients with other heart diseases, said Kim.  He hopes that his findings will lead to more specialized forms of treatment for these patients.

In the U.S. heart disease is the No.1 cause of death each year, killing on average one person every 34 seconds.

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Duke University

Gel studied as cancer treatment

U.S. gastroenterologists are studying a new system for delivering chemotherapy for esophageal cancer patients.

The drug therapy delivers a highly concentrated dose of chemotherapy directly to hard-to-reach tumors of esophageal cancer patients. The aim is to reduce the size of the tumors.

Patients with esophageal cancer have very few treatment options, study principal investigator Dr. Sohrab Mobarhan of the Coleman Foundation Comprehensive Clinic for Gastrointestinal Cancers at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago said in a statement. This also could potentially be a viable treatment option for patients who have inoperable tumors located in their esophagus.

The investigational drug, OncoGel, is made of two major components — the ReGel drug delivery system, which is a gel made up of ingredients used in biodegradable stitches, and paxclitaxel, an established, U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved anti-cancer chemotherapy agent. Patients receive a one-time injection of OncoGel during an endoscopy.

In an earlier phase of the study of OncoGel in patients with late stage inoperable esophageal cancer, 70 percent of patients had a reduction in tumor volume when OncoGel was used in combination with radiotherapy. In addition, after treatment, biopsy samples did not contain tumor cells in almost 40 percent of patients.

Study: Dullness can kill a marriage

A team of U.S. researchers has concluded that problems don’t hurt a marriage, but dullness — being in a rut — does.

Irene Tsapelas and Arthur Aron of Stony Brook University and University of Michigan researcher Terri Orbuch interviewed a representative U.S. sample of 123 married couples seven years into their marriage, and then interviewed them again nine years later, 16 years into their marriage.

As part of the interview taking part in the seventh year of marriage couples were asked, During the past month, how often did you feel that your marriage was in a rut, or getting into a rut, that you do the same thing all the time and rarely get to do exciting things together as a couple?

The study, published in the journal Psychological Science, said the key finding was that those who were bored with their marriage at year seven experienced a greater decrease in satisfaction at year 16. Those who were not bored at year seven experienced a typically small decrease in satisfaction at year 16.

Most marital research has focused on eliminating problems, but some studies indicate that a larger problem faced by many long-term couples is simple boredom and lack of excitement, Aron said.

The study said being bored reduces closeness, which in turn causes reduced satisfaction.

Zimbabwe Rhino Threatened By Increased Poaching

A rise in poaching in Zimbabwe has raised concern among conservationists for the survival of endangered rhinos in the region.

Raoul du Toit, head of southern Zimbabwe’s Lowveld Rhino Trust, told the Associated Press that the rhinos are sought after by gangs who sell their horns to be used for traditional medicine in Asia and ceremonial dagger handles in the Middle East.

Established in 1991 under the provision of the World Wildlife Fund, the Lowveld Rhino Trust (LRT) has worked to increase the population of the endangered black rhino through management and anti-poaching activities.

“Numbers are up from 42 to 390 despite the political conditions in the country and the population now accounts for 80 percent of Zimbabwe’s total population, making it of huge continental, and indeed global importance,” according to the LRT’s Web site.

“However, since 2000 the Lowveld’s wildlife industry has been strongly challenged by land reform policy and by consequences of the “Ëœfast-track resettlement program’, which has had negative effects on wildlife operations through unplanned settlement, foreclosure of some key wildlife corridors, poaching and habitat loss,” said the LRT, which monitors 755,000 hectares of protected lands.

Save the Rhino executive director Cathy Dean told the AP that the overall rhino population has dropped from about 830 in 2007 to 740 at the end of 2008 despite a stable birth rate.

The organization said at least 90 rhino were poached in 2008 ““ about twice the amount as in 2007 ““ and conservationists have counted 18 dead rhinos so far this year.

The group also noted a rise in poaching of zebra for their hides, which were smuggled through Zimbabwe along with illegal diamonds, gold and other contraband.

Du Toit told the AP that the rhino poachers were people with “cars, cell phones and expensive lawyers,” adding that poaching “increased because of our lack of ability to investigate, higher market prices and the growing Asian footprint in southern Africa.”

“The repercussions for the country’s international image and the economic implications are a lot more serious than the politicians and the ministers realize,” he said.

Conservationists are planning to relocate about 60 rhino away from regions with high poaching activity, Du Toit said.

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Popcorn flavoring lawsuits on rise in Ohio

The number of lawsuits in Hamilton County, Ohio, filed against companies over an allegedly harmful popcorn flavoring has reached 43, one company says.

Givaudan Flavors, which is based out of Cincinnati, said it is fully investigating the effects of the chemical diacetyl, a key ingredient in its microwave popcorn butter flavoring, in response to the growing number of lawsuits filed by its workers, The Cincinnati Enquirer said Friday.

The company said in a court filing its diacetyl investigation has included a specialized task force, a trade group and University of Cincinnati experts. The company added it has created written procedures for dealing with the chemical.

These are hardly the acts of an employer that knowingly, intentionally and deliberately caused harm to its employees, the company said.

Most of the 43 lawsuits filed in recent months come from workers at the company’s plant in Carthage, Ohio. The workers allege inhaling the butter flavoring has left them with irreversible lung damage.

The company ConAgra Foods is also facing similar lawsuits from an unspecified number of its workers at a plant in Marion, Ohio. ConAgra makes the Orville Redenbacher brand of microwave popcorn, the Enquirer said.

Disruption Of Copper Regulation Key To Prion Diseases

An investigation of a rare, inherited form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease suggests that disrupted regulation of copper ions in the brain may be a key factor in this and other prion diseases.

Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, discovered a striking relationship between changes in the copper-binding properties of abnormal prion proteins and the clinical features of prion disease in patients with certain rare, genetic mutations. They described their findings in a paper published by PLoS Pathogens on April 17.

“The loss of copper regulation may play a very important role in prion disease progression,” said Glenn Millhauser, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UCSC and corresponding author of the paper.

Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative brain disorders caused by a misfolded form of the normal cellular prion protein. Human prion diseases include classic and variant types of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). The vast majority of CJD cases are sporadic, meaning they are thought to arise from spontaneous misfolding of the prion protein. Infectious transmission of the prion accounts for a very small percentage of cases, while about 10 percent of cases are caused by inherited defects in the structure of the prion protein.

Millhauser and his coauthors studied the effects of insertional mutations that cause extra sequences of eight amino acids (known as the octarepeat sequence) to be incorporated into the prion protein. Whereas the normal prion protein has four octarepeat segments, insertional mutations can result in as many as nine additional octarepeats. The extra octarepeats change the properties of the prion protein and eventually lead to the progressive brain damage characteristic of CJD.

These insertional mutations are known from a small number of cases reported in the literature, involving about 30 families and 108 individuals. Reviews of these cases have suggested that higher numbers of inserts are associated with earlier-age onset of the disease.

The octarepeat domain takes up copper ions, which are essential for the proper functioning of neurons. Millhauser’s lab looked at the effects of insertional mutations on the prion protein’s ability to bind copper. Graduate student Daniel Stevens, lead author of the paper, and postdoctoral researcher Eric Walter performed experiments using magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study how prion proteins with different numbers of octarepeats interact with copper.

The normal prion protein responds dynamically to varying concentrations of copper by changing the way it binds the metal, allowing it to soak up more copper ions at higher concentrations. When the researchers studied proteins with octarepeat inserts, however, they found that the protein loses this ability to switch binding modes as the number of inserts increases beyond four.

“We got excited when we saw that the threshold in the effects on copper binding corresponds to the threshold for age of onset that was seen in the clinical studies,” Millhauser said.

The average age of onset is 64 years for patients with one to four extra repeats, but for patients with five to nine inserts the average age of onset drops to 38 years. Similarly, Millhauser’s group found a transition in the copper-binding properties of the protein that occurred between four and five inserts, the same threshold observed for early-onset disease.

For the statistical analysis of clinical cases, Millhauser enlisted the help of statisticians David Draper and Abel Rodriguez, professors of applied mathematics and statistics in the Jack Baskin School of Engineering at UCSC. Draper and Rodriguez used several approaches to analyze the pooled data from case studies in the literature. Their results are consistent with the existence of two groups of patients: a group with one to four extra octarepeats and late-onset disease, and a group with five or more inserts and early-onset disease.

The normal function of the prion protein remains uncertain, but the new findings support the idea that it plays a role in the regulation of copper ions in the brain, Millhauser said. The prion protein is anchored to the outside of the cell membranes of neurons and is concentrated at the synapses, the junctions between neurons where signals are transmitted. The concentration of copper in the synapses is dynamic, and as the copper concentration goes up and down the prion protein switches from one copper-binding mode to another. Millhauser suspects that the prion protein soaks up excess copper ions to protect brain cells from harmful reactions.

“The prion protein goes into a neuroprotective mode at higher levels of copper, and that mode gets lost when extra octarepeats are added to the protein structure,” he said.

While changes in copper binding begin to appear with four or more extra octarepeats, other changes in the molecular properties of the prion protein occur with as few as one insert. These changes include an increased propensity to clump together and form protein deposits in brain tissue.

Research on prion diseases has tended to focus on these aggregates and deposits, which are thought to have toxic effects on brain cells. But the strong relationship between changes in copper binding and clinical progression of the disease suggests that more attention should be given to the normal function of the prion protein, Millhauser said.

“The fundamental issue may be the loss of copper regulation, and excess copper may be what causes the cytotoxicity,” he said.

In addition to Millhauser, Stevens, Walter, Rodriguez, and Draper, the coauthors of the PLoS Pathogens paper include Paul Davies and David Brown of the University of Bath.

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Shedding Some Light On Parkinson’s Treatment

Scientists use optical approach to study deep brain stimulation

A research team lead by Karl Deisseroth in the bioengineering department at Stanford University has developed a technique to systematically characterize disease circuits in the brain. By precisely controlling individual components of the circuit implicated in Parkinson’s disease, the team has identified a specific group of cells as direct targets of deep brain stimulation (DBS), a Parkinson’s treatment.

Termed optogenetics, the NSF-funded technology uses light-activated proteins, originally isolated from bacteria, in combination with genetic approaches to control specific parts of the brain. The technique is a vast improvement over previous methods because it allows researchers to precisely stimulate neurons and measure the effect of treatment simultaneously in animals with Parkinson’s-like symptoms.

Published in the April 17 issue of Science, Deisseroth’s team found they could reduce disease symptoms by preferentially activating neurons that link to the subthalamic nucleus region of the brain. First, these specific cells were treated in a way that made them sensitive to stimulation by blue light, then the team implanted an optical fiber in the brain.

When researchers rapidly flashed blue light inside the animals’ brains the disease symptoms improved. In contrast, treating with slower flashes of light actually made the symptoms worse, and targeting other kinds of cells had no effect at all, indicating both proper cell type and stimulation frequency are crucial components of effective treatment. Flashing blue light on portions of the same neurons found closer to the outer surface of the brain had an effect similar to treatment deep within the brain, raising the possibility that researchers may be able to develop treatments that are less invasive than current options.

Approved as a medical treatment in 1997, DBS remains controversial because it doesn’t work on all patients. Used to treat Parkinson’s disease, depression and movement disorders, DBS involves surgical implantation of a brain pacemaker, which sends electrical impulses into the brain. In the past, researchers have been unable to understand the effective mechanism of DBS because the electrical signal emitted by DBS devices interferes with the ability to observe brain activity.

Explains Deisseroth, “The brain is an electrical device, but it is a very complicated device. Think of it as an orchestra without sections: all of the types of instruments, or cells, are mixed together. Treatments like DBS are unrefined, in that they stimulate all of the cells or instruments. The optogenetic approach allows us to control stimulation of specific cells in the brain on the appropriate timescale, much like a conductor directing specific sections of an orchestra at the appropriate time.”

Production of new therapies is always a long-term goal, but for now Deisseroth and his group are focused on mapping disease circuits and understanding brain function. “We need to understand the players before we can develop effective treatment strategies,” he stated.

Image 1: Casting light on diseased circuitry: optogenetics helps identify cellular targets of deep brain stimulation. First, specific cells are treated in a way that makes them sensitive to stimulation by blue light. Then an optical fiber is implanted in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) region of the brain. Treating the brain with rapid flashes of blue light activates neurons (green and purple structures) in the STN and cortex, which improves disease symptoms. This optogenetic result provides important scientific insight into the affected brain circuits. Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation

Image 2: Casting light on diseased circuitry: In the first application of optogenetics to brain disease, the combined use of light-activated proteins and fiberoptics helps Parkinsonian animals move more easily and quickly. When flashes of blue light are delivered to the ends of neurons at the surface of the brain (blue fiber), researchers detect activation of cells deep within the brain (yellow electrode). The red line (within the circle) shows an untreated animal’s path, and the blue line shows the animal’s path, over the same amount of time, when treated with light delivered through the fiberoptic. The animals’ ability to move more quickly and easily, a result of optogenetic treatment, provides important scientific insight into the affected brain circuits. Credit: Viviana Gradinaru, Murtaza Mogri, and Karl Deisseroth, Stanford University

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U.S. Recession Causing Increase In Child Abuse Reports

U.S. hospitals are reporting a spike in child abuse during a recession that has driven some families to the brink and overwhelmed cash-strapped child-protection agencies, Reuters reported.

Allison Scobie, program director of the Child Protection Team at Boston’s Children’s Hospital, said in the last three months they had twice as many severe inflicted injury cases as they did in the three months the previous year.

She said her hospital typically handles about 1,500 such cases a year, but last year it rose to 1,800, adding that they have found the rise is directly attributable to what is happening economically.

“Many of the hospitals around here report an increase of 20 to 30 percent of requests for consultation regarding suspected child maltreatment,” she said.

One case involved a 9-year-old diabetic boy who was hospitalized after his single mother could no longer afford the insurance co-payments needed to treat his disease. The boy was left at home alone for long stretches on days when he required medical attention.

Similar anecdotal and official reports have surfaced in other regions as well. The Illinois department of child and family services reported a 5.8 percent rise in child abuse cases in the state in 2008 and child abuse cases rose more than 9 percent last year in the Chicago area.

The Public Children Services Association of Ohio, a nonprofit association of agencies charged with child protection, said child abuse cases in Ohio, a state hit hard by the recession, topped 100,000 for the first time in 2007 and are still rising.

The group’s director, Crystal Ward Allen, whose agency relies heavily on local revenue drawn from property taxes that have collapsed in the recession, said many agency directors acknowledged that child abuse reports have risen.

“Our basic safety net is really faltering,” she added.

Child abuse declined in 2007 to a rate of 10.6 percent of America’s total 71 million children, from 12.1 percent in 2006, according to recent federal data.

However, a March poll by Mason-Dixon Polling and Research showed that 88 percent of 607 sheriffs, district attorneys and chiefs of police nationwide expect a rise in child maltreatment.

The projections were based heavily on similar rises in past recessions.

More children suffering from subdural bleeding caused by blows to the head from abuse have been noted at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital and the Harborview Medical Center. They treat about one such child a month in a typical year, but they admitted nearly three times as many (32 children) were admitted last year.

The same has been reported in Syracuse, New York, where a flurry of similar cases startled doctors late last year.

Dr. Ann Botash, who heads the Child Abuse Referral and Evaluation Program at State University of New York in Syracuse, a city of about 147,300 people, said she was shocked by the increase.

Doctors call many of the cases “shaken-baby syndrome,” which the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke says bear distinct signs: brain hemorrhaging, retinal hemorrhaging and damage to the spine, neck or ribs.

The institute said shaking makes the fragile brain bounce back and forth due to a baby’s relatively large head and weak neck. It can cause bruising, swelling and bleeding, which can lead to permanent, severe brain damage or death.

Dr. Alice Newton, medical director at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Child Protection Team, which treated 25 children for serious abuse this year, said they saw a huge influx of shaken-baby cases compared to the 16 cited for all of 2008.

She said she might see 12 to 14 children for serious inflicted head trauma within a typical year. However, she’s already seen nine this year and many are from families without the usual warning flags such as a prior history of child abuse or drug problems.

Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley handles such cases in Boston. Conley’s spokesman, Jake Wark, said they have seen allegations of child abuse more than double in January to February from the same period last year.

While some offending parents are arrested and prosecuted, and their children put in the care of relatives or foster families, agencies are overwhelmed and under funded, making them not always able to keep pace with the rise.

Robert Sage, director at the Boston Medical Center’s Child Protection Team, which treated 500 children with injuries consistent with abuse last year, said they’re getting swamped with such cases. He said that rate rose 30 percent in the first two months of 2009.

“It’s pretty much everything. A lot of physical abuse. Some neglect,” he said.

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Safe Exercise Program For Migraine Sufferers

Many patients who suffer from migraines avoid taking aerobic exercise because they are afraid that the physical activity may bring on a serious migraine attack. Researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have now developed an exercise program that can improve fitness among migraine sufferers without aggravating this painful condition.

Patients who suffer from migraines are often advised to take exercise, but to date no studies have been conducted to show that exercise actually helps guard against migraine attacks. No exercise program has so far been scientifically proven to be safe for migraine patients.

“We know that everyone benefits from a little exercise, but if you’re convinced that a session at the gym will end up with you being confined to bed with a thumping headache and nausea then it’s hardly surprising that people give it a miss,” says Jane Carlsson, Professor in Physiotherapy at the Sahlgrenska Academy.

In the study, which is being published in the latest issue of the scientific journal Headache, some twenty migraine sufferers were asked to follow a special exercise program three times a week for three months. The program involved using an exercise bike under the guidance of a physiotherapist.

“We could see that those who participated in the study were much fitter after the training period, since their ability to absorb oxygen increased considerably,” says physiotherapist Emma Varkey, one of the researchers behind the study.

Only one of the patients suffered a migraine attack that was directly linked to the training session. “Now that we’ve been able to show that the risk of increased frequency of attacks in connection with this type of exercise is extremely small, we can study whether exercise can be used to prevent or alleviate migraine attacks. “We have already initiated a new study in which we plan to compare the results against a control group,” says Mattias Linde, neurologist at Cephalea Headache Centre and researcher at the Sahlgrenska Academy.

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Microsoft: Recession Could Increase Cyber Crime Threat

The global recession could prove to be a starting point for an influx of more cyber criminals seeking to use their computer skills to earn extra money.

“Today these (cyber) attacks are not about vandalism any more, today it’s about cash,” said Roger Halbheer, Microsoft’s chief security advisor for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

“Cyber crime has gone from cool to cash. And this will definitely grow in the future,” he told AFP during an international conference on terrorism and cyber security.

“At the moment we are still at the cool side. But I’m expecting it to move to the cash side.”

He added that it is “one of the things that scares me about the economic downturn because I’m expecting cyber crime will grow.”

The economic crisis is resulting in a large number of layoffs, many of them coming from tech firms. Implying that the computer experts that have been or will be laid off will “then have time and they don’t have money.”

Halbheer pointed to the recently publicized Conficker worm, which has reportedly found its way into millions of PCs over the past few months.

The nature and purpose of Conficker “is still unclear,” he said.

Cyber criminals can use worms to create a botnet, “so they have a network of computers they control and then they try to sell their services to scammers and phishers or whatever … So it might well be that this is what the guy who wrote this (Conficker) is trying to do now.”

Microsoft is currently offering $250,000 dollars in reward for information leading to the arrest of individuals behind the Conficker worm threat.

“It is a pretty bad beast.., one of the worst we’ve seen in a long time,” said Halbheer. “It looks for a lot of different channels which makes it so dangerous.”

Microsoft has modified its free Malicious Software Removal Tool to detect and remove Conficker. Security firms, including Trend Micro, Symantec and F-Secure, provide Conficker removal services at their websites, according to AFP.

“A lot of critical infrastructure is owned by the private sector – the banks, telecom companies, energy companies. The government however has enforcement power as well as the intelligence power,” said Halbheer.

“We need to reach a state where we trust each other and exchange information.”

In March, Microsoft, in conjunction with law enforcement agencies and academia, proposed that the European Commission support an initiative to establish a network of university Centers of Excellence to train law enforcement agencies on cybercrime investigation techniques.

Tim Cranton, associate general counsel of Worldwide Internet Safety Programs at Microsoft, presented findings of a new study supported by Europol and Interpol at the Council of Europe Octopus Interface 2009 conference. The study supported the creation of the Cybercrime Centers of Excellence Network for Training, Research and Education (2CENTRE).

“Technological innovation, customer guidance and partnerships are essential to addressing the increasing complexities of cybercrime,” Cranton said.

“The 2CENTRE universities will unite law enforcement, industry and academic expertise to provide an internationally coordinated cybercrime investigation training program for law enforcement agencies and the IT industry in the European Union and beyond.”

“Though we have a long way to go and much more work to do, today it is a lot harder for cybercriminals to exploit weaknesses in our software,” said Halbheer.

“Unfortunately the bad guys don’t give up and go away. Instead they increasingly focus on crimes of deception that prey on human vulnerabilities rather than software vulnerabilities.”

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Prenatal Exposure To Hong Kong Flu Linked With Reduced Intelligence in Adulthood

The Hong Kong flu pandemic was responsible for more than 700,000 deaths worldwide in the late 1960s, with major disease outbreaks in Europe in the winter of 1969-1970. A number of studies have been conducted to determine if prenatal exposure to the influenza virus may result in mental disorders that affect a small portion of the population, but no studies have explored the possible effects of prenatal exposure on the mean intelligence in the general population. A new study found that early prenatal exposure to the Hong Kong flu may have interfered with fetal cerebral development and caused reduced intelligence in adulthood. The study is published in Annals of Neurology.

The study involved records of more than 180,000 men born between 1967 and 1973 who served in the military. Military service is compulsory for young men in Norway, who are evaluated medically and psychologically before they enter the service.

The intelligence test data used in the study consisted of a composite score from arithmetic, word similarity and figures tests similar to those commonly used in intelligence tests.

The results showed that the mean intelligence score increased in every birth year from 1967 to 1973, except for a downturn in 1970. The intelligence scores of men born in July through October of that year, six to nine months after the main outbreak of the Hong Kong flu in Norway, were lower than the mean values for those born in the same months during the preceding and following years. The mean intelligence score of men born during these months was also lower than the mean score of men born in any other month in 1970, and this trend was not seen in the other years. As the flu outbreak occurred during the winter months, this suggests that exposure during the first three to four months of pregnancy seems to have had the strongest impact on intelligence scores.

“This is the first report of a possible association between prenatal exposure to an influenza virus epidemic and the mean level of intelligence in the general population,” says Dr. Willy Eriksen of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, co-author of the study.

The authors note that other types of maternal infections during pregnancy such as rubella, varicella, cytomegalovirus and toxoplasmosis may cause central nervous system abnormalities and cognitive delay in offspring. In these cases, more severe damage to the fetal brain also tends to occur during the first trimester.

There are several possible explanations for the results shown in the study. It may be that exposure to the influenza virus interfered with the cerebral development of the fetus, as has been shown in laboratory animals. Also, some influenza virus strains, including the Hong Kong flu virus, can cross the placental barrier, so it is possible that some fetuses suffered a cerebral infection. It may also be that a maternal infection during pregnancy has an effect on the fetal brain through maternal immune response or high body temperature, or through medication used to treat infections.

The authors suggest that that if 20 percent of the men born between July and October 1970 were exposed to the flu virus, and assuming they were all affected neurologically, prenatal exposure to such a virulent virus may reduce intelligence scores by three to seven points on a standard IQ scale.

“If cerebral complications occurred in only a small group of those who were exposed, however, the effects on the intelligence of the susceptible individuals may have been considerably larger,

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Hi-Fat Diet May Contribute To Low Sperm Count

A small study conducted in Spain suggests that men who consume large amounts of animal fats as part of their daily diet ““ particularly processed meats and full-fat dairy foods ““ may be at a higher risk for infertility than their counterparts who eat a diet rich in fruits, vegetables and low-fat dairy products.

The study examined 61 Spanish men who were seeking professional fertility counseling.  Among the participants, some 50 percent suffered from a below average sperm count and admitted to a relatively high intake of fatty meats and dairy products.  Of the other 31 men who were found to have high-quality sperm and a normal sperm count, most consumed a well-balanced diet including fruits, vegetables and skim milk.

Dr. Jaime Mendiola of the Spanish Instituto Bernabeu explains that though the findings do not offer conclusive evidence that diets high in animal fats lead to dysfunction in sperm production, they do suggest that reproductive potency may be just another of the many health benefits associated with a healthy, well-balanced diet.

In a previous study, Mendiola and his colleagues found that diets rich in antioxidants like lycopene (found abundantly in tomatoes) and vitamin C seemed to be connected with healthy sperm quality in adult males.  Mendiola explained that the antioxidants probably guard the genetic material carried in sperm from other potentially harmful elements found in the body.

Another potential factor in reducing sperm quality may the increased exposure to xenobiotics that is associated with the consumption of high-fat foods; particularly meats.  Xenobiotics are chemicals that are not found naturally in the body or as part of a normal diet.  They include substances like non-human steroids, pesticides and PCBs ““ all of which are known to mimic the effects of estrogen in the human body.

Estrogen, though typically known as the “Ëœfemale hormone’, is essential to sperm production in males.  Dr. Rex A. Hess, a professor of veterinary biosciences at the University of Illinois, hypothesizes that estrogen-mimicking contaminants may interfere with and block the receptors responsible for incorporating the real hormone into the sperm-production process.

Xenobiotics are usually associated with environmental pollutants that often find their way into livestock through food and water supplies, explains Mendiola.  Since these compounds are often fat-soluble they tend to accumulate in the animal’s fat deposits, which are later passed on to the consumer of the products made from these animals.

Mendiola also suggested that the antibiotics and hormones used to increase growth in livestock may play a role.  Though the use of growth hormones in livestock farming has been illegal in Europe since 1988,  he noted that most of the men involved with the study were born in or before the 1970’s and thus would have had significant exposure to the hormones before they were outlawed.

The use of antibiotics and growth hormones in the United States is still legal and widely practiced.

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In Search Of Cleopatra’s Tomb

Next week, archaeologists will start unearthing sites in Egypt in an effort to unravel the mystery of the final resting place of the historic unfortunate lovers, Cleopatra and Mark Antony, the Associated Press reported.

Three sites located at a temple believed to contain tombs will be excavated in this hunt for the renowned queen of Egypt and Roman general, Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities said in a statement Wednesday.

The council indicated Cleopatra and Mark Antony, whose relationship was later commemorated by William Shakespeare and then in a Hollywood film masterpiece with stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, may be buried in a deep trench below the surface of the earth in a temple close to the Mediterranean Sea.

Among the discoveries already unearthed at the temple last year, an alabaster head of a Cleopatra statue, 22 coins with images of Cleopatra and a mask thought to belong to Mark Antony. 

The council’s statement told of three sites discovered last month during a radar survey of the temple of Taposiris Magna.  The temple, which was constructed under the reign of King Ptolemy II (282-246 B.C.), is located not far from the northern coast near Alexandria. 

The temple has been under excavation by teams from Egypt and the Dominican Republic for the last three years.  Numerous deep trenches inside the temple, some of which are believed to be utilized for burial, have been discovered inside the temple.  Archaeologists presume the lovers could be buried in a similar trench. 

After being defeated in the battle of Actium, the lovers committed suicide in 30 B.C.  Historically, Mark Antony is thought to have stabbed himself with his sword, while Cleopatra is believed to have clutched a poisonous asp to her chest. 

However, this belief is surrounded by much controversy.  Egyptologist, John Baines, of Oxford University in England questioned why Antony’s defeater, Augustus, would have permitted such an honorable resting place. 

“I don’t really see why there should be a particular connection between that site and Antony and Cleopatra,” Baines said.

Egypt’s top archaeologist, Zahi Hawass, pointed out that the recent theory that the queen was “quite ugly,” is proven incorrect with the discovery of the Cleopatra statue and coins.  Both reflect a face of beauty. 

“The finds from Taposiris reflect a charm … and indicate that Cleopatra was in no way unattractive,” said Hawass.

The conception that Cleopatra was not particularly attractive was concluded in 2007 by a group of scholars at the University of Newcastle, who based their conclusion on the characterization of her on a Roman coin that illustrated her as a sharp-nosed, thin-lipped woman with a prominent chin.

A previously unidentified cemetery was discovered by excavators at the site just outside the temple enclosure.  Other findings include 27 tombs, some of which housed 10 mummies. 

The architectural style indicates the tomb was constructed during the Greco-Roman period, according to the statement.  It was common practice of the day to establish cemeteries for the dead near temples where persons of prominence, often royalty, were buried. 

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Researchers Assessed The Use Of CBT And BT On Chronic Pain

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Behaviour Therapy (BT) show some effect in helping the disability associated with chronic pain, according to a Cochrane Systematic Review. The researchers assessed the use of CBT and BT on chronic pain, mood, and disability.

“For people with chronic pain, psychological therapies can reduce depression and anxiety, disability, and in some cases pain, but guidance is still required on the best type and duration of treatment,” says lead researcher Christopher Eccleston, at the Centre for Pain Research at the University of Bath.

Both CBT and BT try to manage pain by addressing the associated psychological and practical processes. CBT involves the avoidance of negative thoughts. BT helps patients to understand how they can change their behaviour in order to reduce pain. Both approaches have been in development for around 40 years and are sometimes recommended for patients with long lasting, distressing pain that cannot be relieved by conventional medicines.

In a systematic review, researchers considered the results of 40 trials of CBT and BT, which included 4,781 patients in total. Patients suffering from pain due to any cause, except headache, migraine, or cancer, were included. Most studies were of CBT, which showed small positive effects on pain, disability, and mood. There was less evidence for BT, which the researchers say had no effect on disability or mood.

“Although there is overall promise for CBT in chronic pain, the term covers a diverse range of treatment and assessment procedures. Right now, we are not able to say which specific features of therapy may be critical for improvement of a patient’s condition,” says Eccleston.

According to the researchers, simpler studies of CBT and BT that focus on a purer form of treatment, rather than a variety of mixed methods, would benefit the field.

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Elder tutors improve youth reading

Students with older tutors made 60 percent more progress in reading than those without, U.S. researchers say.

The study finds students with Experience Corps tutors — volunteers age 55 and over — made progress in learning two critical reading skills: sounding out new words and reading comprehension.

The two-year, $2 million study, funded by The Atlantic Philanthropies, involved more than 800 first-, second- and third-graders at 23 elementary schools in three cities. Half of the students had Experience Corps tutors and half had none.

The difference in reading ability between kids who worked with Experience Corps tutors and those who did not is substantial and statistically significant, study lead researcher Nancy Morrow-Howell of the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis says in a statement.

The researchers say as an intervention, Experience Corps compares to smaller class size — the equivalent of a student assigned to a classroom with 40 percent fewer children, the study says.

The study is at http://csd.wustl.edu/Publications/Documents/RP09-01.pdf.

Jumpstarting The Healing Process Of Bones

In-body stem cell therapy has enormous potential for bone injuries

Rarely will physicians use the word “miraculous” when discussing patient recoveries. But that’s the very phrase orthopedic physicians and scientists are using in upstate New York to describe their emerging stem cell research that could have a profound impact on the treatment of bone injuries. Results from preliminary work being released today show patients confined to wheelchairs were able to walk or live independently again because their broken bones finally healed.

At the heart of the research is the drug teriparatide, or Forteo, which was approved by the FDA in 2002 for the treatment of osteoporosis. Astute observations led a team of clinicians and researchers to uncover how this drug can also boost our bodies’ bone stem cell production to the point that adults’ bones appear to have the ability to heal at a rate typically seen when they were young kids.

Baseline research presented in February at the Orthopedic Research Society meeting revealed that of 145 patients who had an unhealed bone fracture ““ half of them for six months or longer ““ 93 percent showed significant healing and pain control after being on teriparatide for only eight to 12 weeks. These findings were enough to convince the National Institutes of Health to fund a clinical trial underway in Rochester, and if the preliminary data are any indication, researchers may have discovered a new, in-the-body stem cell therapy that can jumpstart the body’s natural healing process in bones.

The clinical implication is significant, as orthopedists can soon have a new tool at their disposable to deal with many common, painful bone ailments including the tens of thousands of painful fractures for which there is no treatment (pelvic fractures, vertebral compression fractures, clavicle fractures), fractures that won’t heal, fractures in patients that are either too sick to have surgery or chose not to have surgery, and even reduce the size of a incision in some surgeries.

Aging Bones Heal Slower

Of the estimated six million fractures in the United States each year, approximately five percent will have slow or incomplete healing. According to J. Edward Puzas, Ph.D., who heads up orthopedic bone research at the University of Rochester Medical Center and is the principal investigator of the clinical trial, a large portion of non-healing fractures tend to occur in older adults.

“In many people, as they get older, their skeleton loses the ability to heal fractures and repair itself,” Puzas said. “With careful application of teriparatide, we believe we’ve found a way to turn back the clock on fracture healing through a simple, in-body stem cell therapy.”

Those especially hard hit are the nearly 60,000 Americans suffering from pelvic fractures, where bracing and immobilization are not an option for an injury that leaves people immobile and in pain before the bone fuses.

“It takes three to four months for a typical pelvic fracture to heal. But during those three months, patients can be in excruciating pain, because there are no medical devices or other treatments that can provide relief to the patient,” said Susan V. Bukata, M.D., medical director of the Center for Bone Health at the University of Rochester Medical Center Bukata. “Imagine if we can give patients a way to cut the time of their pain and immobility in half? That’s what teriparatide did in our initial research.”

Bukata said much more was at stake then just comfort and pain relief. Patients who would ordinarily be confined to nursing homes or require additional medical attention because of non-healing fractures might be able to live an independent life. Bukata and Puzas estimate that if this drug saved just one week in a nursing home, it would pay for itself ““ and beyond.

“Many people don’t realize that pelvic fracture carries with them the same mortality as hip fractures ““ in one year, approximately one-quarter of all older women with pelvic fractures will die from complications,” Bukata said. “And during that year of recovery, a patient typically puts a greater strain on our health care system, not to mention their pain and suffering.”

Translational Research at Work

The impetus for the research began in Bukata’s clinic, where she saw painful bone fractures in osteoporotic patients quickly heal within a few months of taking teriparatide. At the time, Bukata also served on a research team at the University’s Center for Musculoskeletal Research, and she began to advocate that the team direct its efforts in an entirely new direction based on the results she was seeing with patients who were taking teriparatide.

“I had patients with severe osteoporosis, in tremendous pain from multiple fractures throughout their spine and pelvis, who I would put on teriparatide,” said Bukata. “When they would come back for their follow-up visits three months later, it was amazing to see not just the significant healing in their fractures, but to realize they were pain-free ““ a new and welcome experience for many of these patients.”

Puzas and Bukata developed a plan to focus attention in both the lab and clinic to understand if her observations were a fluke or if there was an underlying scientific process producing such life-changing results for patients.

“While we had come to understand how teriparatide builds bone more robustly than the body can on its own, up to that point, we had no clue how the drug would or could help with fracture healing,” Puzas said.

Bukata began prescribing teriparatide to patients with non-healing fractures, and was amazed at her findings: 93 percent showed significant healing and pain control after being on teriparatide for only eight to 12 weeks. And in the lab, Puzas began to understand how teriparatide stimulates bone stem cells into action.

Closing the Gap

When a fracture occurs, a bone becomes unstable and can move back and forth creating a painful phenomenon known as micromotion. As the bone begins healing it must progress through specific, well-defined stages. First, osteoclasts ““ cells that can break down bone ““ clean up any fragments or debris produced during the break. Next, a layer of cartilage ““ called a callus ““ forms around the fracture that ultimately calcifies, preventing the bony ends from moving, providing relief from the significant pain brought on by micromotion.

Only after the callus is calcified do the bone forming cells ““ osteoblasts ““ begin their work. They replace the cartilage with true bone, and eventually reform the fracture to match the shape and structure of the bone into what it was before the break.

According to Puzas, teriparatide significantly speeds up fracture healing by changing the behavior and number of the cartilage and the bone stem cells involved in the process.

“Teriparatide dramatically stimulates the bone’s stem cells into action,” Puzas said. “As a result, the callus forms quicker and stronger. Osteoblasts form more bone and the micromotion associated with the fracture is more rapidly eliminated. All of this activity explains why people with non-healing fractures can now return to normal function sooner.”

“The decreased healing time is significant, especially when fractures are in hard-to-heal areas like the pelvis and the spine, where you can’t easily immobilize the bone ““ and stop the pain,” Bukata added. “Typically, a pelvic fracture will take months to heal, and people are in extreme pain for the first eight to 12 weeks. This time was more than cut in half; we saw complete pain relief, callus formation, and stability of the fracture in people who had fractures that up to that point had not healed.”

The new clinical research will study post-menopausal women and men over 50 who come to the Emergency Department at Strong Memorial Hospital with a low-energy pelvic fracture. Patients will be divided into two groups — one offered teriparatide, the other a placebo — and followed for 16 weeks to measure the fracture healing process in a variety of ways: pain levels, microscopic bone growth determined through CT scans and functional testing of bone strength, among others.

Eli Lily, manufacturers of Forteo, are providing the medication for the clinical trial. Both Drs. Puzas and Bukata are members of Eli Lily’s speaker bureau.

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Dietary Competition Among Elephants

Researchers say the diet and behavior of elephants, evidenced by the chemical makeup of their tail hairs, shows how they compete with other species, BBC News reported.

The data, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, comes from a six-year study following a single family of elephants in northern Kenya.

It shows how the elephants lost out to cattle grazing on grasses and that the rate of conception is rising as food and water resources become more abundant each year.

Researchers are tracking the elephant family using GPS receivers on each individual and determining a dietary history from the hair on their tails.

The hair shows their chronological history in an “isotope record”. Isotopes are naturally occurring variations of atoms that are chemically identical but have a slightly different mass.

The elephants carry different food or water sources that might contain different ratios of isotopes of carbon, hydrogen or nitrogen.

The power of the maxim “you are what you eat” is evident in a clear record of the elephants’ diets that are found in the proteins that made up their tail hairs.

Thure Cerling, the University of Utah professor who lead the research, said they now have a long-term record that allows them to see what one normal family is doing over a long period of time.

Researchers have also analyzed the content of deuterium – an isotope of hydrogen – in the elephants’ tails to determine the pack’s water sources.

Professor Cerling told BBC News that during the dry season, the river they’re accessing comes from far away, so the water has had a lot of time to evaporate and change its isotope composition.

“Then during the rainy season, the rivers come up and the whole isotope composition changes and we’re able to actually see that,” he added.

However, the team was surprised to find that one season, the elephants apparently did not eat grasses that should have been readily available.

Cerling said when the rainy season comes you get this big sprouting of grasses, but they can’t access it until it is 30 to 50 centimeters high.

“It’s got to grow tall enough before they can actually yank it off with their trunks,” he said.

“We have this one incident where they apparently missed an entire good season of grass resource; the GPS data shows that they were outside [Samburu National Reserve] in a community area where it appears that they had to compete with cattle. They got out-competed in that situation,” he added.

Conceptions were also found to have risen sharply just a few weeks after the rainy season brought abundance of food and water.

Cerling explained that the elephants bulk up during the rainy season and get into good condition right as things are starting to get good.

The research shows that the elephants’ 22-month gestation period means that the maximum birthing period is shortly before things get good again””when they have adequate water and the right time to access the high-protein grass sources.

Elephant experts believe the new approach gives an intimate look into the elephants’ behavior and diet in a way that traditionally could not be done.

Cerling said the recent findings point to an imminent problem of broader interest, adding that it brings to light the worry about the conflict of how humans want to use resources and how wildlife wants to use resources.

He said global climate change is going to change the available resources and as populations increase dramatically, like in Africa, it will lead to more competition for the resources.

“If you’re concerned about preservation of wildlife then you have to worry about that competition,” he warned.

However, he said the method could be extended “to other regions throughout Africa”.

“The rest of Africa also is changing land use, and in all parts of Africa where elephants and humans coexist, there is resource competition.”

The team hopes to keep monitoring the elephants, including other families, for another 10 to 15 years, which will allow them to “look at how climate and land use change affect the elephants.”

Image 1: A female African elephant walks in Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve. Note the hairs on her tail. Scientists from the University of Utah and Save the Elephants analyzed chemical isotopes in elephant tail hairs to study what one family of elephants ate and where during a six-year period. Their findings reveal that when elephants sometimes wander off their reserves during the rainy season, cattle out-compete them for grass, showing how human encroachment further threatens the endangered pachyderms. Credit: Thure Cerling, University of Utah

Image 2: An extended family of elephants walks from Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve and across the Ewaso N’giro River into the Buffalo Springs National Reserve. Researchers from the University of Utah and Save the Elephants placed tracking collars on members of an elephant family named “the Royals” and studied chemical isotopes in their tail hair to develop a six-year record of the elephants’ movements and diet. The method is expected to help scientists understand how climate change and human encroachment will further threaten the endangered animals. Credit: Mahala Kephart, University of Utah

Image 3: A female African elephant is followed by some young adults (left) in Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve as other family members walk nearby (right). A six-year study by researchers from the University of Utah and Save the Elephants showed how tracking collars and analysis of chemical isotopes in elephants’ tail hairs can allow detailed monitoring of their movements and diet — useful information for conservationists working to protect the endangered animals from global warming and human encroachment. Credit: Thure Cerling, University of Utah

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Marijuana, Tobacco Smoking Linked To Increased Risk Of COPD

Smoking both tobacco and marijuana increases the risk of respiratory symptoms and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), found a study in CMAJ. Smoking only marijuana, however, was not associated with increased risks.

The study, which surveyed 878 people aged 40 years or more in Vancouver, Canada, was part of the Burden of Obstructive Lung Disease (BOLD) Initiative that sought to determine the prevalence of COPD in adults over 40 years in the general population. It differed from other studies in that the study population was older and the prevalence of tobacco smoking was lower in participants.

COPD is characterized by diseased lungs and narrowed airways and is associated with high mortality.

The researchers defined smokers as people who reported smoking at least 365 cigarettes in their lifetime, and a history of marijuana smoking as self-reporting of any previous smoking.

While tobacco smoking was associated with increased risk, smokers who reported using both tobacco and marijuana were 2.5 times more likely than nonsmokers to have respiratory symptoms and almost 3 times more likely to have COPD as defined by spirometric testing.

“We were able to detect a significant synergistic effect between marijuana smoking and tobacco smoking,” write Dr. Wan Tan of the University of British Columbia and St. Paul’s Hospital and coauthors. “This effect suggests that smoking marijuana (at least in relatively low doses) may act as a primer, or sensitizer, in the airways to amplify the adverse effects of tobacco on respiratory health.”

The researchers were limited by lack of data on the potential variations in marijuana potency, on differences in inhalation and the number of smokers who combine both substances in the same cigarette.

In a related commentary, Dr. Donald Tashkin of the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) writes that “the findings of Tan and colleagues add to the limited evidence of an association between marijuana use and COPD because their study focuses on an older population (aged 40 or older) that is at greater risk of COPD.” Previous studies have failed to find an additive effect of marijuana and tobacco on either chronic respiratory symptoms or abnormal lung function in younger smokers. Dr. Tashkin states that “we can be close to concluding that marijuana smoking by itself does not lead to COPD.”

However, Dr Wan Tan and coauthors conclude that “Although our study had insufficient power to show an association between marijuana alone and increased risk for COPD, it remains uncertain whether marijuana by itself is harmful for the lungs. Larger studies are needed to address this critically important issue in the future.”

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New Study Links Heat Transfer, Bond Strength Of Materials

The speed at which heat moves between two materials touching each other is a potent indicator of how strongly they are bonded to each other, according to a new study by researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Additionally, the study shows that this flow of heat from one material to another, in this case one solid and one liquid, can be dramatically altered by “painting” a thin atomic layer between materials. Changing the interface fundamentally changes the way the materials interact.

“If you have a nanoparticle that is inside a liquid solution, you can’t just ‘peel away’ the liquid to measure how strongly it is bonded to the surrounding molecules,” said Pawel Keblinski, professor in Rensselaer’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering, who co-led the study. “Instead, we show that you can measure the strength of these bonds simply by measuring the rate of heat flow from the nanoparticle to the surrounding liquid.”              

“Interfaces are an exciting new frontier for doing fundamental studies of this type. If you peek into complex biological systems ““ a cell, for example ““ they contain a high density of interfaces, between different proteins or between protein and water,” said Shekhar Garde, the Elaine and Jack S. Parker Professor and head of Rensselaer’s Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, who co-led the study with Keblinski. “Our approach possibly provides another handle to quantify how proteins talk to each other or with the surrounding water.”

Results of the study, titled “How wetting and adhesion affect thermal conductance of a range of hydrophobic to hydrophilic aqueous solutions,” were published today in Physical Review Letters.

Keblinski and Garde used extensive molecular dynamics simulations to measure the heat flow between a variety of solid surfaces and water. They simulated a broad range of surface chemistries and showed that thermal conductance, or how fast heat is transferred between a liquid and a solid, is directly proportional to how strongly the liquid adhered to the solid.

“In the case of a mercury thermometer, thermal expansion correlates directly with temperature,” Keblinski said. “What we have done, in a sense, is create a new thermometer to measure the interfacial bonding properties between liquids and solids.”

“We can use this new technique to characterize systems that are very difficult or impossible to characterize by other means,” Garde said.

This fundamental discovery, which helps to better understand how water sticks to or flows past a surface, has implications for many different heat transfer applications and processes including boiling and condensation. Of particular interest is how this discovery can benefit new systems for cooling and displacing heat from computer chips, a critical issue currently facing the semiconductor industry, Garde said.

More generally, the authors said the study sheds new light on the behavior of water at various solid interfaces, which has direct implications ranging from the binding of proteins and other molecules to surfaces, to biological self-assembly in interfacial environments.

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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

What Is Coffee’s Link To Colorectal Cancer?

Previous studies suggesting that coffee decreases risks of colorectal, colon or rectal cancer have been debunked by recent studies that confirm coffee contributes insignificantly to these cancers, according to the findings of a collaboration of studies published in the International Journal of Cancer, Reuters reported. 

“An inverse association between coffee consumption and the risk of colorectal cancer has been found in several case-control studies,” but the association was not consistent in prospective cohort studies, which are devised differently, Dr. Youjin Je, of Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, and colleagues indicate.

When patients with a disease or condition are evaluated with “controls,” healthy individuals teamed up with the study group for factors like age and sex to avoid unfairness, it is termed a case-control study.  On the other hand, prospective cohort studies are studies in which participants share a common characteristic, such as a smoking habit or birth order, are distinguished and then observed into the future; the concluding result is not known to the researchers before the trial ends. 

An orderly review of prospective cohort studies was directed by the researchers to scrutinize the connection between coffee consumption and colorectal cancer.  The researchers identified 12 studies in 3 different countries that included a total of 646,848 participants, and of these, 5,403 were colorectal patients.  

In a collective review of each of these studies, judging against high and low coffee consumption categories, no considerable connection between coffee consumption and colorectal cancer risk was found. 

Mostly, differences by sex and cancer site were irrelevant.  There was, however, a minor inverse relationship between coffee consumption and colon cancer in women, particularly Japanese women who indicated a 38 percent reduced risk, but most had a 21 percent reduced risk.   

More significant inverse associations between coffee consumption and colorectal cancer was evident in studies that examine the data accounting for the damages of smoking and alcohol use as well as those with shorter follow-up.

Je’s team of researchers commented, “Since any effect of coffee intake on colorectal cancer risk could vary by regular or decaffeinated coffee and boiled or filtered coffee, further investigation regarding type- and preparation method-specific analyses is warranted.”

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Accidental Shots Of Epinephrine Becoming More Common

A new study found that self-administered shots of epinephrine can combat a life-threatening allergic reaction, but accidental injections are becoming an all too common problem.

Researchers examined case reports from the past 20 years. Of the 69 reported cases found, more than two thirds occurred in the past six years.

The report is published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.

Experts say autoinjectors filled with epinephrine, like the EpiPen, are used to treat anaphylaxis.

Anaphylaxis is a life-threatening allergic reaction that is identified with symptoms like hives, swelling, difficulty breathing, and a drop in blood pressure.

Epinephrine, also known as adrenaline, works by relaxing the muscles of the airways and constricting the blood vessels.

Dr. F. Estelle Simons and a team of researchers, from the University of Manitoba in Canada, reviewed 26 reports on accidental autoinjector shots published in medical journals during the past 20 years.

Researchers found the majority of accidents happened when patients, or someone trying to help them, accidentally jabbed themselves in a finger.

To be safe, doctors warn that the autoinjections must be given in the thigh.

The study found that 94 percent of the mistaken injections were located in the thumb or finger.

Healthcare workers were also affected about 10 percent of the time, when they were accidentally jabbed while showing a patient how to use the autoinjector.

Most of the time the symptoms were temporary nerve problems, like numbness and “pins and needles” sensations, elevated heart rate, and heart palpitations.

Researchers say the findings highlight the need to teach patients how to properly use epinephrine autoinjectors.

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Survey Looks At Attitudes, Obstacles To Walking, Biking To Work

According to researchers with Kansas State University’s Physical Activity and Public Health Laboratory, active commuting — walking or biking to school or work — can be an easy, effective and efficient way to integrate physical activity into the daily routine.

Pam Wittman, a K-State senior in kinesiology, Olathe, worked with K-State’s Melissa Bopp and Andy Kaczynski, both assistant professors of kinesiology, on the active commuting research. The project included two surveys, administered in 2008, which looked at demographics, psychosocial factors and environmental characteristics related to active commuting. A survey of more than 800 individuals at K-State was conducted, followed by another survey of 400 Manhattan area residents.

The researchers say the results lay the groundwork for future policy discussions and for tailoring public health messages. Just 30 minutes of moderate physical activity a day is enough for health benefits, and small bouts of exercise throughout the day of as little as 10 minutes provide the health payoff, according to recently revised guidelines from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Among the campus findings: students were most likely to actively commute, then faculty members, and then staff. Women and men were equally interested in walking or biking. Older individuals were less likely to actively commute than younger individuals.

Depending on distance to campus, those living within a 20-minute walk actively commuted four times per week, and those within a 20-minute bike ride, biked to campus five times per week.

According to Bopp, many survey participants said they were willing to actively commute if they perceived they could travel to their destination in about 20 minutes — or a distance of approximately one mile.

The K-State researchers found a number of things that facilitated people’s choices to actively commute.

“We learned from the community survey results that people who hold ecologically-friendly attitudes are more likely to actively commute and less likely to drive to work,” Bopp said. The finding was interesting and she said future programs promoting active commuting could emphasize the eco-friendliness of it as a selling point.

Some of the hindrances to active commuting, according to the surveys, included a perceived lack of bike racks, showers or a place to freshen up before work or teaching, and an “office culture” where driving to work is the norm and there is limited support for walking or biking.

Respondents also listed time constraints, weather, a need to go elsewhere before or after work or school; parking availability; parking costs; concerns about the environment, such as pollution; cost of gasoline; safety from traffic and crime; and the terrain they have to traverse.

Kaczynski said that if bike lanes and sidewalks are a consideration of city and county engineers whenever roads have to be renovated it could benefit public health.

“In my opinion, changes to the physical environment that promote physical activity are investments, not costs,” he said. “Policymakers ought to weigh the cost of installing sidewalks or widening roads for bike lanes and the positive health benefits of physical activity.

“There are long-term economic costs to society of obesity, cancers and heart disease,” Kaczynski said. “There are emotional costs of people suffering because physical activity is actually being engineered out of our lives by having poor streets and other factors related to urban design.”

Mixed land use, where residential areas, commercial opportunities, parks, and workplaces are close and connected, provides more chances for people to engage in physical activity for leisure or for purposeful transportation, Kaczynski said.

“We see some areas of Manhattan where people can live, work and play all within a relatively short distance, but for large portions of Manhattan, such opportunities are limited by the way the neighborhoods are developed,” he said.

“Physical activity is a major public health concern. We need to take a new approach to integrating it back into our daily routines by designing communities that help meet these needs,” Kaczynski said. “We hope our study findings can help with that.”

Wittman has presented findings from the research at the Kansas Public Health Association conference, the K-State Sustainability Conference and the K-State Research Forum. She also has been selected to present at the American College of Sports Medicine conference in Seattle in May.

Bopp, Kaczynski and Wittman also have co-authored two other abstracts for presentation at national meetings: “Factors differentiating active versus non-active commuters to campus” and “The relationship of eco-friendly attitudes with walking and biking to work.”

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Microchip Monitors Patient Drug Regimen

Two major drug firms are pushing for new technology that would allow the development of digestible microchips that can inform doctors whether or not their patients have been taking their pills as instructed.

Supporters of the new ingestible event markers (IEMs) technology say it would offer help for patients who are elderly or those who take drugs for mental conditions on a regular basis.

“ËœThis is all about empowering patients and their families because it measures wellness, and people can actually be tracked getting better,” said Professor Nick Peters, a cardiologist at Imperial College London.

So far, two major drug companies are backing the technology being developed by Proteus Biomedical in the US.

Trials involving the edible microchip, called Raisin, are to begin in the UK within 12 months.

Patients using the Raisin System will also be able to see how well their body is responding to the medications prescribed.

The IEMs are activated by stomach fluids after swallowing, according to Proteus.

“Once activated, the IEM sends an ultra low-power, private, digital signal through the body to a microelectronic receiver that is either a small bandage style skin patch or a tiny device insert under the skin,” according to a statement on the company’s Web site.

“The receiver date- and time-stamps, decodes, and records information such as the type of drug, the dose, and the place of manufacture, as well as measures and reports physiologic measures such as heart rate, activity, and respiratory rate.”

IEMs are manufactured on silicon wafers that are cheap to produce at just a few cents per censor in large quantities.

“Psychologically speaking, that’s hugely helpful for patients and enormously reassuring for carers,” said Peters.

“Normally patients would have to be in hospital to get this level of feedback, so the hope is that it frees up beds and saves the NHS money.”

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‘Pleasure Nerves’ Play Role In Human Bonding

In a new study published recently in Nature Neuroscience, a group of researchers say they have discovered a new class of nerve fibers responsible for sending pleasure signals to the brain.  They believe that the study could shed light on the role that physical contact plays in sustaining long-term emotional bonds between humans.

Researchers say that the patients’ skin had to be stimulated at a certain speed and in certain locations in order for these nerves to discharge their pleasure-inducing messages. 

“There are some (biological) mechanisms in place that are associated with behavior and reward which are there to ensure relationships continue,” says professor Francis McGlone, one of the researchers involved in the project.

The majority of similar research in the field has traditionally focused on elucidating how nerve fibers transmit the sensation of pain to the brain.  Dysfunction in the peripheral nervous system for example, a condition known as Neuropathy, can cause nerve cells to spontaneously discharge pain signals, creating the sensation of physical pain even in the absence of external stimuli.

Researchers involved with this study are seeking to understand neurological phenomenon from another angle.

The project was a cooperative effort between scientists from the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, the University of North Carolina and the Unilever company.

The study examined the neurological responses of twenty patients as their arms were lightly stroked at various speeds.  They found that when the subjects identified a stimulus as pleasant, a class of neurological tissue known as “C-tactile” nerve fibers had been stimulated.

They also discovered that these fibers were only activated within a certain range of speeds ““ between 4-5 cm per second ““ and that slower and faster stimuli were not able to produce the same pleasurable sensation.

In addition, they observed that “C-tactile” nerve fibers were only located on hairy areas of the arm, and that similar stimulation of the hands did not have the same effect.

Professor McGlone of Unilever, who transitioned to the private sector after years of university research in the field of neurology, referred to this phenomenon as a sort of socio-biological “design”.

“We believe this could be Mother Nature’s way of ensuring that mixed messages are not sent to the brain when it is in use as a functional tool,” he said, adding that the speed at which arm-stroking is considered pleasurable corresponds to the same speed with which mothers caress their infants and couples express affection.

McGlone added that it is just another device that evolution has invented for supporting emotional bonds between individuals.

“Our primary impulse as humans is procreation,” adds Professor McGlone.  “But there are some mechanisms in place that are associated with behavior and reward which are there to ensure relationships continue.”

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Podiatrist warns against UGG-style boots

A New York podiatrist says people may face long-term pain from foot to back from wearing trendy UGG-style boots.

Dr. Rock Positano of the Hospital for Special Surgery says new research indicates wearing footwear that does not offer proper arch support can cause possible long-term problems, ABC News reported Friday.

It may feel cushiony; it may feel comfortable, but it doesn’t mean they’re getting the necessary arch support that a foot needs to function effectively, Positano said of UGG boots.

“What that leads to is overuse, meaning the muscles, the tendons, the ligaments, and the bones in the foot and the ankle overwork.

A recent study just came out that showed the correlation between a flat arch, and problems with the knee, the hip, and the back.

However, an unidentified spokeswoman for the UGG Australian boot company said it has not received a single complaint regarding insufficient arch support in the last 30 years, the Chicago Sun-Times reported Saturday.