Archive | November, 2005

Synaptic connections need nurturing to retain their structure and keep outsiders at bay

The ability of the brain to transmit and process information requires a lifelong commitment to maintaining the integrity of synapses — the special connections that permit the passage of nerve impulses from one nerve cell to another, according to investigators at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and colleagues in Hokkaido University School of Medicine.

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Abbr. Collection

The collection of abbreviation, especialy about Computer Science.
For example:
ISO International Organization for Standardization
Abbr. Abbreviation
SC Subcommittee

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Major study links chronic noise exposure to risk of heart attacks

Research published in European’s leading cardiology journal, European Heart Journal, links exposure to chronic noise with an increased risk of heart attack. Furthermore, the risk seems to be associated more with the physiological effect of environmental and work noise than with the annoyance it causes individuals, although there are differences in effects between men and women.

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Family habits set drinking path

Teenagers are more likely to develop drinking problems if their mothers are depressed and drink regularly. The findings come from University of Queensland researchers who tracked alcohol related disorders of children through adulthood as part of one of the world’s longest health studies.

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Electrons ‘tunnel’ through water molecules between nestled proteins

Theoretical chemists who spend much of their time calculating how the exotic rules of quantum mechanics govern electrons motion between and through biological molecules have garnered surprising results when they add water to their models. They have discovered that a scant handful of water molecules positioned in the nearly infinitesimal gap between two “docking” proteins creates unexpectedly favorable conditions for electrons to “tunnel” from one protein to another.

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HIV inserts into human genome using a DNA-associated protein

A human DNA-associated protein called LEDGF is the first such molecule found to control the location of HIV integration in human cells, according to a new study from researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. This study, published in this week’s early online edition of Nature Medicine, describes the first clear target for modulating where viruses insert into the human genome, which has implications for better design of gene-therapy delivery. Retroviral vectors are often used to introduce therapeutic genetic sequences into human chromosomes, such as in the delivery of Factor VIII for hemophilia patients.

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Earworms brain accelleration (the auditory cortex)

‘Earworms’ is a term for those (annoying) catchy tunes that you just can’t get out of your head. We have put this phenomenon to a positive educational use with a unique combination of music and scientific innovation.

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N95 and P100 are not enough you need a nanomask

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DRUG STOPS MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS – BUT SUFFERERS CAN’T GET IT

Through my website I became aware of a drug that has stopped the progression of Multiple Sclerosis and enhanced the quality of life of many Multiple Sclerosis (MS) sufferers.

The drug is Naltrexone (also known as ReVia) and my ‘Health Success Stories’ database contains a growing body of compelling anecdotal evidence that Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) works, and; it works well – BUT, sufferers can’t get it.

Naltrexone has not achieved mainstream acceptance as a treatment option for MS due to absence of clinical trial data. Research, drug development, and clinical trials are commercially-driven by sponsors. That’s okay, but there’s no recognized body that can officially step up to the plate to speak and act on behalf of patients. I know this because I’ve tried, without success, to find an authority that is sanctioned to do so.

The present system is unjust. It’s inequitable. It doesn’t place sufficient value on patient health success stories. It doesn’t place sufficient value on advocating for the patient. It doesn’t place sufficient value on patient-driven research or clinical trials. If it did, there would be a body sanctioned to speak and act on a promising body of testimonials.

How many stories similar to the LDN story are out there? We don’t know, because they haven’t all been collected, stored, and shared. That makes me feel uneasy and should make you feel uneasy.

We need an organisation chartered to act on this type of evidence; an organisation that values patient testimony and can make recommendations (without prejudice) on behalf of patients from all corners of the globe.

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The Evolutionary Origin of Our Universe and Its Physical Laws

1. Thesis:
The characteristics of our universe, its matter and energy, and its physical laws are the result Darwinian evolution.

2. Summary:
To the extent that a universe possesses characteristics that are favorable to the emergence of an intelligent life that is eventually capable of governing its universe in reproduction, that universe is more likely to proliferate, passing on its characteristics to a greater number of offspring. In this manner, successive generations of universes possess characteristics that are progressively favorable to the emergence of intelligent life, specifically, life that is eventually capable of governing the activities of its own universe to the reproductive advantage that universe.

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The Evolutionary Origin of Our Universe and Its Physical Laws

1. Thesis:
The characteristics of our universe, its matter and energy, and its physical laws are the result Darwinian evolution.

2. Summary:
To the extent that a universe possesses characteristics that are favorable to the emergence of an intelligent life that is eventually capable of governing its universe in reproduction, that universe is more likely to proliferate, passing on its characteristics to a greater number of offspring. In this manner, successive generations of universes possess characteristics that are progressively favorable to the emergence of intelligent life, specifically, life that is eventually capable of governing the activities of its own universe to the reproductive advantage that universe.

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Beyond Dover: What’s Next for Anti-Evolutionists

Even without waiting for the judge’s verdict in the Dover School Board case, it’s fairly easy to see that this apparent victory has come too easily.

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No hit counter on Science Blog

Does it bother anyone else that Science Blog now has no hit counter? I was told that it would be back up when new software came on board. That was weeks and weeks ago.

Seems to me that a hit counter is somewhat crucial for a blogsite. And I don’t understand why Science Blog can’t arrange to have one, especially after this much time. Unless, of course, the powers that be do not WANT people to see the hit counter. I just don’t know.

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” A L ” means After Lucky

“…about applying The Fundamental Theorem to 5D…”

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Living photos use bacteria as pixels

Living photos use bacteria as pixels

dn8365-1_250Scientists at UC San Francisco have engineered bacteria to create living photographs that weigh in at 100 megapixels per square inch. The photos were created by projecting light on “biological film” — billions of genetically engineered E. coli growing in dishes of agar, a standard jello-like growth medium for bacteria.

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Drug may combat weight loss during radiation treatments

A new study by researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center and colleagues shows that a drug originally used to treat breast cancer may help combat the severe weight loss that can plague patients undergoing radiation treatment for lung and head and neck cancer.

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Sonar, nets killing more dolphins

A United Nations-sponsored report released today urges extra protection for the world’s small cetaceans — dolphins, porpoises and related species — more than two-thirds of which are at risk from entanglement in fishing nets and which are vulnerable to pollution, habitat degradation and military sonar.

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