মঙ্গলবার, ২ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Immune system can boost nerve regrowth, study suggests

ScienceDaily (Oct. 2, 2012) ? Modulating immune response to injury could accelerate the regeneration of severed peripheral nerves, a new study in an animal model has found. By altering activity of the macrophage cells that respond to injuries, researchers dramatically increased the rate at which nerve processes regrew.

Influencing the macrophages immediately after injury may affect the whole cascade of biochemical events that occurs after nerve damage, potentially eliminating the need to directly stimulate the growth of axons using nerve growth factors. If the results of this first-ever study can be applied to humans, they could one day lead to a new strategy for treating peripheral nerve injuries that typically result from trauma, surgical resection of tumors or radical prostectomy.

"Both scar formation and healing are the end results of two different cascades of biological processes that result from injuries," said Ravi Bellamkonda, Carol Ann and David D. Flanagan professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering and member of the Regenerative Engineering and Medicine Center at Georgia Tech and Emory University. "In this study, we show that by manipulating the immune system soon after injury, we can bias the system toward healing, and stimulate the natural repair mechanisms of the body."

Beyond nerves, researchers believe their technique could also be applied to help regenerate other tissue -- such as bone. The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and reported online Sept. 26, 2012, by the journal Biomaterials.

After injury, macrophages that congregate at the site of the injury operate like the conductor of an orchestra, controlling processes that remove damaged tissue, set the stage for repair and encourage the replacement of cells and matrix materials, said Nassir Mokarram, a Ph.D. student in the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering and Georgia Tech's School of Materials Science and Engineering. Converting the macrophages to a "pro-healing" phenotype that secretes healing compounds signals a broad range of other processes -- the "players" in the symphony analogy.

"If you really want to change the symphony's activity from generating scarring to regeneration of tissue, you need to target the conductor, not just a few of the players, and we think macrophages are capable of being conductors of the healing symphony," said Mokarram.

Macrophages are best known for their role in creating inflammation at the site of injuries. The macrophages and other immune system components battle infection, remove dead tissue -- and often create scarring that prevents nerve regeneration. However, these macrophages can exist in several different phenotypes depending on the signals they receive. Among the macrophage phenotypes are two classes -- M2a and M2c -- that encourage healing.

Bellamkonda's research team used an interleukin 4 (IL-4) cytokine to convert macrophages within the animal model to the "pro-healing" phenotypes. They placed a gel that released IL-4 into hollow polymeric nerve guides that connected the ends of severed animal sciatic nerves that had to grow across a 15 millimeter gap to regenerate. The IL-4 remained in the nerve guides for 24 hours or less, and had no direct influence on the growth of nerve tissue in this short period of time.

Three weeks after the injury, the nerve guides that released IL-4 were almost completely filled with re-grown axons. The treated nerve guides had approximately 20 times more nerve regeneration than the control channels, which had no IL-4-treated macrophages. Research is now underway to develop the technique for determining how soon after injury the macrophages should be treated, and what concentration of IL-4 would be most effective.

"We believe immune cells are the 'master knobs' that modulate the biochemical cascade downstream," Mokarram said. "They are among the 'first-responders' to injury, and are involved for almost the whole regeneration process, secreting several factors that affect other cells. With IL-4, we are doing something very early in the process that is triggering a cascade of events whose effects last longer."

Tissue engineering approaches have focused on encouraging the growth of nerve cells, using special scaffolds and continuous application of nerve growth factors over a period of weeks. Instead, the Bellamkonda group believes that influencing the immune system soon after injury could provide a simpler and more effective treatment able to restore nerve function.

"Beyond neural tissue engineering, the implications of this approach can be significant for other types of tissue engineering," said Mokarram. "Neural tissue may be just a model."

As part of their paper, the researchers defined a state they termed "regenerative bias" that predicts the probability of a regenerative outcome. The Bellamkonda group discovered that when it quantified the ratio of healing macrophages to scar-promoting macrophages at the site of injury early after the injury, the ratio -- or regenerative bias -- predicted whether or not the nerve regenerated after many weeks.

"The significance of this finding is that IL-4 and other factors may be used to make sure the regenerative bias is high so that nerves, and perhaps other tissues, can regenerate on their own after injury," Bellamkonda said.

The research team also included Alishah Merchant, Vivek Mukhatyar and Gaurangkumar Patel, all from the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University.

This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health under grants NS44409, NS65109 and 1R41NS06777.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Georgia Institute of Technology, Research Communications, via Newswise. The original article was written by John Toon.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Nassir Mokarram, Alishah Merchant, Vivek Mukhatyar, Gaurangkumar Patel, Ravi V. Bellamkonda. Effect of modulating macrophage phenotype on peripheral nerve repair. Biomaterials, 2012; 33 (34): 8793 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2012.08.050

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/0zFksIv9i2g/121002101131.htm

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সোমবার, ১ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

The World's Best Countries in Science (preview)

Image: Graphic by Arno Ghelfi; SOURCES: DIGITAL SCIENCE (research papers); U.S. PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE (patents); OECD SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRY SCOREBOARD, 2011 (R&D and doctorates)

What makes one country better than another in science? It's not an easy thing to measure. Publishing research papers is a good way to get a bead on basic research, but it doesn't say much about whether a nation is taking advantage of those good ideas. For this, other metrics come into play. Patents give a clue as to how well a country is exploiting its ideas for commercial gain. What a nation spends on R&D captures not only what universities and government research programs do but also the contribution from industry. How many students a nation educates in science and technology disciplines is a key metric, but little data are available.


This article was originally published with the title Scorecard: The World's Best Countries in Science.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=20162130adf656b13ed86a242f5165af

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Big questions over Chinese bid for Nexen

Published: September 26, 2012 6:23 AM

The Chinese state company CNOOC?s $15-billion bid for Nexen, a major Canadian oil and gas company, raises major issues about the future of Canada?s economy.

Whether or not the government approves the bid ? it is being reviewed under the Investment Canada Act ? there are many questions that should be asked about the deal, including:

Should the government allow our resources to be owned by whoever pays the highest price to shareholders of a Canadian company?

By extension, do we want stock markets to decide how best to protect Canadian interests?

The issues become especially important because the Harper government has put most of Canada?s economic eggs in the resource sector instead of manufactured exports.

Some commentators have maintained that the criteria for review ? whether it is deemed a ?net benefit? to Canada ? are too vague, but by using a broad test, the government does retains flexibility when seeking conditions for a takeover or blocking it outright.

Under this laissez-faire approach, favoured by the government, Canada should be wide open to foreign investment. We should not care about country-of-origin or about whether the buyer is state-owned or private. Let the bidding begin, all offers welcome. Maximize the benefits for shareholders.

But do we want to ensure that our resources are exploited according to Canadian priorities? And do we expect governments to play a role? If so, the government needs to ensure a minimum threshold of Canadian ownership in key sectors. With ownership comes control; with Canadian ownership comes a range of options to ensure Canadian interests are protected.

Chinese ownership, on the other hand, gives China an ability to frustrate policies in Canada. The issue could be jobs or value-added business. It could be environmental protection or aboriginal rights. It could be foreign affairs or national security. The point is, governments in Canada and by extension all of us will have less of a say.

Those who ask government to regulate foreign investment are often demeaned, including by the prime minister, as ?protectionist.? Yet governments of other major countries take a more active role in protecting nationally-owned firms. In contrast, the Harper government has thrown open the doors to foreign takeovers and foreign influence.

All sorts of foreign takeovers (including, we can assume, by Chinese companies) are no longer subject to the usual review process under the Investment Canada Act because the Harper government raised dramatically the threshold for review of proposed takeovers.

It ceded its powers to review bids for any Canadian company worth less than $1 billion.

As a result, many foreign takeovers of Canadian firms fly under the radar of the government and the public. The economic ramifications will emerge gradually and be very difficult to reverse.

Reviews under the Investment Canada Act are limited in other ways. For example, they apply only to takeovers of existing Canadian companies. Foreign investment in new businesses ? so-called greenfield investment, which Canadians support and prefer in opinion polls ? are not subject to review.

Second, the prime minister recently raised the stakes of Chinese ownership in Canada. By inking an investment deal with China last month, his government laid a footing for Chinese companies to sue Canada for any law or regulation that we introduce. The lawsuits would be decided, not by Canadian courts, but by international arbitrators who often operate in private and lack the independence of a judicial process. U.S. companies have sued Canada more than 30 times under a similar NAFTA process. The U.S. and Canadian governments at least took steps to make the arbitrations public.

The terms of the Canada-China investment deal are not public. But the government?s announcement that a deal was struck should heighten concerns about Chinese ownership in Canada?s resource sector.

The CNOOC bid poses a conundrum for the government. Its laissez-faire approach, and its allegiances to shareholders in the oilpatch, are pitted squarely against the risks of putting Canada?s economic future in foreign hands.

Undoubtedly, the takeover would enrich Nexen?s shareholders. But is it good for Canada?

Most importantly, are all of these foreign takeovers eroding our ability to ensure that Canada?s resources are exploited based on Canadian priorities? It is not protectionist to ask this question.

Gus Van Harten is a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto. He specializes in international investment law. This column was supplied by Troy Media (www.troymedia.com).

Source: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/opinion/Big_questions_over_Chinese_bid_for_Nexen_171329861.html

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2 killed, 1 wounded at VFW lodge shooting

By NBC News

Updated at 4:15 p.m. ET: Two people were fatally shot and one was wounded Sunday morning at a Veterans of Foreign Wars lodge where motorcyclists had?gathered?for a charity ride to raise money for injured bikers, WESH.com reported.

The shooting occurred around 10:40 a.m. at the VFW Post 5405 in Winter Springs, Fla., about 15 miles northeast of Orlando. Police say the investigation remains in the early stages and that they believe they have the shooter in custody.

Riders were finishing breakfast, about to embark on the charity ride, when armed men came in and started shooting, the Orlando Sentinel reported.


According to the Sentinel, police evacuated those in the building to a nearby senior center. They also detained several people and confiscated many weapons.

Lt. Doug Seely, a Winter Springs police spokesman, told the newspaper?all three victims appeared to be motorcycle-club members.?

"We have a lot of crime scene?" Seely said, according to the Sentinel. "We have a lot of people detained and a lot of weapons detained, and we're ascertaining what matches what."

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/30/14160479-three-shot-at-vfw-lodge-in-florida-during-motorcycle-charity-ride?lite

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Skydiver aims to break sound barrier in free fall

FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 file photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner salutes as he prepares to board a capsule carried by a balloon during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, N.M. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Joerg Mitter)

FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 file photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner salutes as he prepares to board a capsule carried by a balloon during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, N.M. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Joerg Mitter)

FILE - In this Friday Jan. 22, 2010 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Pilot Felix Baumgartner appears at a news conference in New York. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos)

FILE - In this 2010 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner makes a 25,000-foot high test jump for Red Bull Stratos. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Luke Aikins)

FILE - In this Friday Jan. 22, 2010 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Pilot Felix Baumgartner, left, shakes hands with United States Air Force Col. (Ret.) Joe Kittinger, right, following the Red Bull Stratos press conference in New York announcing Baumgartner's plan to attempt to become the first person ever to break the speed of sound with the human body. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. Kittinger launched a stratospheric jump in 1960 from 102,800 feet that opened the door for space exploration and whose records Baumgartner aims to break. (AP Images for Red Bull Stratos, David Goldman)

FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner prepares to jump during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos over Roswell, N.M. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Jay Nemeth)

(AP) ? His blood could boil. His lungs could overinflate. The vessels in his brain could burst. His eyes could hemorrhage.

And, yes, he could break his neck while jumping from a mind-boggling altitude of 23 miles.

But the risk of a gruesome death has never stopped "Fearless Felix" Baumgartner in all his years of skydiving and skyscraper leaping, and it's not about to now.

Next Monday over New Mexico, he will attempt the highest, fastest free fall in history and try to become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier.

"So many unknowns," Baumgartner says, "but we have solutions to survive."

The 43-year-old former military parachutist from Austria is hoping to reach 690 mph, or Mach 1, after leaping from his balloon-hoisted capsule over the desert near Roswell.

He will have only a pressurized suit and helmet for protection as he tries to go supersonic 65 years after Chuck Yeager, flying an experimental rocket plane, became the first human to go faster than the speed of sound.

Doctors, engineers and others on Baumgartner's Red Bull-sponsored team have spent as much as five years studying the risks and believe they have done everything possible to bring him back alive. He has tested out his suit and capsule in two dress rehearsals, jumping from 15 miles in March and 18 miles in July.

Baumgartner will be more than three times higher than the cruising altitude of jetliners when he hops, bunny-style, out of the capsule and into a near-vacuum where there is barely any oxygen and less than 1 percent of the air pressure on Earth.

If all goes well, he will reach the speed of sound in about half a minute at an altitude of around 100,000 feet. Then he will start to slow as the atmosphere gets denser, and after five minutes of free fall, he will pull his main parachute. The entire descent should last 15 to 20 minutes.

He will be rigged with cameras that will provide a live broadcast of the jump via the Internet, meaning countless viewers could end up witnessing a horrific accident.

Baumgartner is insistent on going live with his flight.

"We want to share that with the world," he says. "It's like landing on the moon. Why was that live?"

His team of experts ? including the current record-holder from a half-century ago, Joe Kittinger, now 84 ? will convene inside a NASA-style Mission Control in the wee hours Monday for the liftoff of the helium balloon at sunrise.

"All the things that can happen are varying degrees of bad," offers Baumgartner's top medical man, Dr. Jonathan Clark, a former NASA flight surgeon.

Clark was married to space shuttle astronaut Laurel Clark, who was killed aboard Columbia while it was returning to Earth in 2003, and he has dedicated himself to improving astronauts' chances of survival in a high-altitude disaster.

NASA is paying close attention, eager to improve its spacecraft and spacesuits for emergency escape, but is merely an observer; the energy drink maker is footing the bill and will not say how much it is costing.

The No. 1 fear is a breach of Baumgartner's suit.

If it breaks open ? if, say, he bangs into the capsule while jumping or supersonic shock waves batter him ? potentially lethal bubbles could form in his bodily fluids. That's what's known as boiling blood. A Soviet military officer died in 1962 after jumping from a balloon at 86,000 feet; the visor of his helmet hit the gondola and cracked.

During the descent, the temperature could be as low as minus 70. Baumgartner's suit will be all he has between his body and the extreme cold.

Then there's the risk of a flat spin, in which Baumgartner loses control of his body during the free fall and starts spinning. A long, fast spin, if left unchecked, could turn his eyeballs into blood-soaked, reddish-purple orbs, and he could be left temporarily blind. Also, a massive blood clot could form in his brain.

A small stabilizing chute will automatically deploy if he goes into a flat spin and blacks out or otherwise becomes incapacitated. He also has an emergency chute that will automatically deploy if he is unable to pull the cord on his main chute.

Baumgartner's team has a plan for every contingency but one: If the balloon ruptures shortly after liftoff because of a gust of wind or something else, the capsule will come crashing down with him inside. He won't have time to blow the hatch and bail out.

"I have every expectation that he'll come through this successfully based on our analysis," Clark says, "but you know, it still is an unknown."

Kittinger leapt from an open gondola on Aug. 16, 1960, from an altitude of 19.5 miles and reached 614 mph, or Mach 0.9 ? records that stand to this day. He was a captain in the Air Force, and the military's Excelsior project was a test bed for the nation's young space program.

Kittinger has been Baumgartner's mentor, signing on with this new project after decades of refusing others' requests.

Fearless Felix insists he would not attempt the jump if the odds were against him.

"I think they underestimate the skills of a skydiver," says Baumgartner, who has made more than 2,500 jumps from planes, helicopters, landmarks and skyscrapers, with no serious injuries.

If he makes it back in one piece, Baumgartner plans on settling down with his girlfriend and flying helicopters in the U.S. and Austria, performing mountain rescues and firefighting.

"After this," he promises, "I'm going to retire because I've been successfully doing things for the last 25 years and I'm still alive."

___

Online:

Red Bull Stratos: http://www.redbullstratos.com

National Museum of the U.S. Air Force: http://tinyurl.com/2dsnn6

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-10-01-Supersonic%20Skydiver/id-b4f00c3f134348159e49535d21cdf761

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Health Bracelets | wellness center

Health bracelets are used and worn as an article of jewelry, and as an object that provide several benefits to the wearer, when they use to wear health bracelets. Health ornaments are made up different metals, but they are manufactured with unique therapeutic qualities, that make them different from other energy, or therapeutic bracelets made up of different metals. fitness bracelets are made up specifically from some metal alloy that bear an electric charge, that effect body in many different ways. Health jewels are somehow bioelectric product, which is beneficial for the health of human being. fitness bracelets asserts some invisible forces of the body that work in very unique way, different from any other therapeutic object belonging to the similar category.
Health jewels flagrantly affect the energy flow in the body, energy flow is also called ?chi? or ?Qi? these are the Chinese terms, utilized to represent the energy flow, which is necessary to be normalized for a healthy life, when you are in a tension or anxiety than your energy flow slowed down or even stop, because stress create a feeling of insecurity or fear in the body, and to protect itself is a natural phenomenon of the body, so it protect itself by tensing muscles that are involved in protection, these muscles especially include the muscles of shoulders and the back. Some tensions are created due to hard work, so it is equally effective to reduce the tensions in the body and enhance the energy flow through its bioelectric charge that stimulates energy flow of human body.
Today there are many companies manufacturing fitness bracelets and there is a huge list of different brands claiming greater effectiveness of the health bracelets, available in market, in different styles, and design, made to wear them as a fashionable jewelry along with being a soothing source. So purchase them, utilize them without any threat of side effect, it is neutral. Mostly these kind of excessive energy equipments are utilized by athletes and other sports persons who have tensions both from the mental as well as from the physical hard work, but fitness bracelets are also useful for a normal person belonging to any profession, as a helping tool to increase his energy, stability, flexibility, and strength.

Health bracelets are mostly used by the athletes to enhance their stamina, flexibility and balance in order to enhance the overall performance. Health bracelets are used to optimize the natural energy flow of the body, it also respond and to renovate the energy field of the body.

About the Author

I am Johnson working with an advertisement company.

Health Bracelets

Source: http://www.ganwolam.net/archives/718

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Ryan Can't Explain Romney's Tax Plan - Business Insider

Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan struggled to defend his ticket's tax plan in an interview with Fox News Sunday, saying that it would take "too long to go through all of the math."

Ryan and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney have proposed to lower all individual income taxes by 20 percent, while keeping the plan revenue neutral by ending deductions for high-income individuals. As many have pointed out, the plan is mathematically impossible ? in order to keep the tax breaks revenue neutral, popular deductions that primarily affect the middle-class would also have to go.

Ryan, who is known as a numbers-crunching budget wonk, would presumably be able to explain how the plan would work. But pressed by host Chris Wallace to explain how the tax plan would add up, Ryan ducked.

Here's the transcript, courtesy of the Washington Post:

RYAN: We?re saying, limited deductions so you can lower tax rates for everybody. Start with people at the higher end?lowering tax rates by broadening the tax base works.?

WALLACE: You haven?t given me the math.

RYAN: (laughing) Well, I don?t have the time. It would take me too long to go through all the math. But let me say it this way, you can lower tax rates by 20 percent across the board by closing loopholes and still have preferences for the middle class for things like charitable deductions, for home purchases, for health care?

WALLACE: If ? just suppose ? that the doubters are right, President Romney takes office and the math doesn?t add up??

RYAN:?First of all, run the numbers. They?ve run them in Congress. We?ve got five other?studies that show you can do this.

Watch the video below:

?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/ryan-romney-tax-plan-fox-news-2012-9

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