piątek, 28 lutego 2014

Fwd: Phys.org Newsletter Friday, Feb 28



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Newsletter Phys.org <not-for-reply@physorg.com>
Date: Sat, Mar 1, 2014 at 2:20 AM
Subject: Phys.org Newsletter Friday, Feb 28
To: Pascal Alter <pascal.alter@gmail.com>


Dear Pascal Alter,

Here is your customized Phys.org Newsletter for February 28, 2014:

Spotlight Stories Headlines

- Ninjabot strikes with force of a mantis shrimp
- Pencil drawing of a sensor actually is a sensor
- GE and partners developing undersea pipeline x-ray technology
- Google adding voice recognition to Chrome browser search
- ACS chemistry mavens stir up hot sauce science
- Ransoms paid by two of every five victims of CryptoLocker
- Neurons coordinate to fine-tune motor control
- Novel technique for cell lineage-specific gene-expression analysis
- Food production in the northeastern US may need to change if climate does
- Physicists pave the way for more energy efficient technology
- Why we do dumb things on smartphones
- Sea sapphires shine with cellular layers of crystal plates
- Advantages emerge in using nanostructured material when forging mechanical components
- Emergency alert in the cell: Scientists identify new mechanisms in the cellular stress response
- Unearthing key function of plant hormone

Astronomy & Space news

Giant sunspot makes third trip across the sun
a magnetically strong and complex region on the sun's surface – has just appeared over the sun's horizon. This is the third trip for this region across the face of the sun, which takes approximately 27 days to make a complete rotation.

How Earth was watered
Early Earth's accidental deluge via water-carrying comets has long been a stumbling block for those interested in life on other planets.

Microgravity and radiation exposure add up to serious health risks for astronauts
Astronauts floating weightlessly in the International Space Station may appear carefree, but years of research have shown that microgravity causes changes to the human body. Spaceflight also means exposure to more radiation. Together, microgravity and radiation exposure add up to pose serious health risks. But research is not only making space safer for astronauts, it's helping to improve health care for the Earth-bound as well.

Evidence of water in meteorite revives debate over life on Mars
A team of scientists at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., has found evidence of past water movement throughout a Martian meteorite, reviving debate in the scientific community over life on Mars.

A new 'fast and furious' black hole
A black hole with extremely powerful jets has been found in the nearby galaxy Messier 83 (M83) by a team of Australian and American researchers, as we report in the journal Science today.

Medicine & Health news

Targeting metabolism to develop new prostate cancer treatments
A University of Houston (UH) scientist and his team are working to develop the next generation of prostate cancer therapies, which are targeted at metabolism.

Egypt army 'AIDS detector' instead finds ridicule
(AP)—Egypt's military leaders have come under ridicule after the chief army engineer unveiled what he described as a "miraculous" set of devices that detect and cure AIDS, hepatitis and other viruses.

Philippines claims record in organ donor pledges
(AP)—The Philippines has broken India's record of gathering the most organ donor pledges in an hour at a single site, health officials said Friday. The feat awaits the Guinness World Records' official confirmation.

Improving the health of people with learning disabilities
People with learning (intellectual) disabilities have a lower life expectancy than the general population and are more likely to suffer physical disabilities and chronic conditions.

Helping cancer survivors socialize and get exercise
Inspired by the popularity of online dating, Associate Professor Catherine Sabiston is hoping to help cancer patients find their perfect exercise "match" post-treatment.

Some patients may benefit from hip resurfacing over replacement
When a person loses mobility because of arthritis, surgeons can replace the faulty hip joint with a new one. A new study led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis suggests that a different procedure called hip resurfacing may be a better option for some patients, particularly those who are young and active.

Cause of heart disease spurred by kidney syndrome found, neutralized
Chronic kidney disease affects 26 million Americans, but its sufferers are more likely to die of heart disease than kidney problems. However, it hasn't been clear just how kidney disease causes heart disease or what could be done to stop it.

Developing an intelligent avatar to help UK's aging population
The University is taking a leading role in a ground-breaking project to support the UK's aging population through the use of responsive and interactive avatars.

New study combats depression in carers
Psychologists from the University of Exeter are trialling an innovative new type of support to help relatives and friends who care for stroke survivors – with studies showing that currently one in three become depressed or suffer other mental health problems.

Psychiatric nursing specialists played key role in response to Boston Marathon bombing
Psychiatric advanced practice nurses (APNs) played a critical role in supporting psychological recovery after the Boston Marathon bombing—not only for injured patients, but also for family members and hospital staff, according to an article in Clinical Nurse Specialist.

Can an app help make life easier for children with ADHD?
We have tended to associate welfare technology with support for the elderly. Now researchers are looking at whether technology such as digital calendars and smartwatches can also provide support for children with autism and ADHD.

High-calorie feeding may slow progression of ALS
Increasing the number of calories consumed by patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) may be a relatively simple way of extending their survival. A phase 2 clinical trial led by Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) physicians found that ALS patients receiving a high-calorie, high-carbohydrate tube-feeding formula lived longer with fewer adverse events than participants who received a standard formula designed maintain their weight. While the small size of the trial indicates results need to be interpreted with caution, the authors are optimistic that improved nutrition could make a significant difference for patients with ALS.

Unconventional view of type 2 diabetes causation proposed
At 85, Nobel laureate James D. Watson, the co-discoverer of the double-helix structure of DNA, continues to advance intriguing scientific ideas. His latest, a hypothesis on the causation of type 2 diabetes, is to appear 7 pm Thursday US time in the online pages of The Lancet, the prestigious British medical journal.

Unique multi-resistant bacterium difficult to eradicate
A previously unknown multi-resistant bacterium has been sticking around at a Swedish University Hospital for ten years. The reason for this is deficient hygiene routines among the staff, a doctoral thesis at Linköping University shows.

Asthma drug aids simultaneous desensitization to several food allergies, study finds
An asthma drug accelerates the process of desensitizing patients with food allergies to several foods at the same time, a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford shows.

Striking the right balance with muscle control
The central nervous system (CNS) comprises the brain and spinal cord, and coordinates all our bodily activities. One of the functions of the CNS is to choose the most efficient muscle movements in order to conserve energy and allow the body to move smoothly, and it is believed that the CNS trains itself through experience to narrow down the number of options. Fady Alnajjar and colleagues from the Intelligent Behavior Control Unit of the RIKEN Brain Science Institute have now modeled the behavior of muscles during balance tests to illustrate how the human CNS trains itself to maintain balance1.

Bone development of the unborn young rats of obese mothers impaired
Does obesity during pregnancy impact the baby's chances of developing strong, healthy bones? No one knows for certain, but ongoing U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)-funded studies at the Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center in Little Rock are helping to provide clues.

Novel therapy teaches abuse survivors not to fear kindness
Survivors of abuse, abandonment and neglect who struggle to understand the kind facial expressions of others - such as a smile - could benefit from a novel therapy tool developed by a mental health researcher with expertise in mood disorders.

Common sense, moderation are key on food safety issues
There is often debate over whether or not certain household and food-related products are safe for consumer use or consumption. The controversy often causes media hype that can scare consumers into avoiding common and useful items.

Study finds robotic-assisted prostate surgery offers better cancer control
An observational study from UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has found that prostate cancer patients who undergo robotic-assisted prostate surgery have fewer instances of cancer cells at the edge of their surgical specimen and less need for additional cancer treatments like hormone or radiation therapy than patients who have traditional "open" surgery.

Gene mutation associated with development of fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma
In the race for better treatments and possible cures, rare diseases are often left behind. In a collaboration of researchers at The Rockefeller University, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and the New York Genome Center (NYGC), an unusual mutation has been found that is strongly linked to one such disease: a rare liver cancer that affects teens and young adults. The results, published this week in Science, suggest that the mutation plays a key role in the development of the disease, called fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, and may also underlie more common cancers as well.

Lower-grade fruit availability may not increase consumption
New research suggests that increasing the availability of lower grade fresh fruit and vegetables may not be the answer to increasing its consumption.

Why shingles affects mostly people who are middle age and older
Shingles is a painful viral infection that affects almost 1 million people worldwide and 30 percent of Americans every year. Known as herpes zoster, it's caused by the same virus that causes chicken pox, the varicella-zoster virus. The outbreak occurs mostly in people older than 50 because the virus can lie dormant in the nerve tissue for many years and then become activated, which leads to shingles.

Hospitalization increases risk of depression and dementia for seniors
People over age 65 who have been hospitalized are at significantly greater risk for dementia or depression, finds a new study in General Hospital Psychiatry.

Regulator of gene expression responsible for the progression of breast cancer
Yale Cancer Center researchers have identified a regulator of gene expression that is responsible for the progression of breast cancer and its metastasis to the lung. The study appears online in Cell Reports.

Study suggests sports coaches are crucial to anti-doping attitudes amongst athletes
A study examining Scottish coaches' perspectives on anti-doping has highlighted the influence a coach can have on an athlete's views. It also calls for sport governing bodies to embed anti-doping policies and procedures to ensure Scotland maintains its clean reputation.

Breakthrough drug on fast-track to help leukemia patients
Three very different people gathered recently at University of Colorado Hospital. They were linked by leukemia.

Newer diabetes drugs cost more, but may not work better
Two newer classes of drugs to treat adult-onset diabetes may be no more effective than the old standby, yet they cost significantly more over the course of a patient's disease.

Does cell therapy treatment prolong the lives of heart attack patients?
One of the world's largest clinical cell therapy trials has begun to enroll 3,000 heart attack patients, some of whom will have bone marrow cells extracted with a needle from their hip and fed into their heart using a catheter in their coronary arteries.

Muscle loss that comes with age can be fixed through better nutrition
A cup of tea and a cookie for an afternoon snack, while a pleasant routine, may not be supplying adequate nutrition for many baby boomers, a recent Tufts study suggests. Substituting a glass of milk or a hard-boiled egg would better fuel the person who has reached that time in life—that is to say, anyone older than 50—when muscle mass declines at a rate of 1 to 2 percent annually.

Racial bias in pain perception appears among children as young as 7
A new University of Virginia psychology study has found that a sample of mostly white American children – as young as 7, and particularly by age 10 – report that black children feel less pain than white children.

Drinking water linked to infections
Brisbane's water supply has been found to contain disease carrying bugs which can be directly linked to infections in some patients, according to a new study by QUT.

Dangerous mistaken identity: Chaperone binds protein responsible for Alzheimer's disease
Proteins like the so-called heat shock protein Hsp90 play an important role in almost all processes within human cells. They help other proteins fold into their three-dimensional structure or return damaged proteins back into their proper shape.

Diabetes and obesity more common in socioeconomically deprived regions
Living in a socioeconomically deprived region is a risk factor for being affected by diabetes mellitus and obesity. This holds true regardless of the individual social status of the inhabitants. This is the conclusion reached by scientists from the Institute of Health Economics and Health Care Management (IGM) at the Helmholtz Zentrum München (HMGU) and the Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring at the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) in Berlin. "Regional factors, such as the population's average income, unemployment or quality of the living environment can affect the health of all inhabitants, regardless of the educational level of the individual people", explains the lead author Werner Maier.

Indonesia's competitiveness at risk from neglected diseases of poverty
February 27, 2014 – The control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) is one of the most cost-effective ways Indonesia can sustain economic growth and reduce inequality, said scientists today in an analysis published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. While Indonesia is poised to defeat NTDs by 2020, it has an opportunity to scale up national programs, integrate NTDs with other development efforts, strengthen coordination and enhance collaboration among key partners.

Scientists discover the specific types of macrophages that affect Crohn's disease severity
For those coping with Crohn's disease, a new research report published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology offers hope for the development of new and more effective drugs. In the report, scientists show for the first time, precisely what type of immune cells are involved in driving the inflammation process in the disease. With this knowledge, new compounds can be identified which reduce the activity of these cells or lessen their inflammatory effects.

Shaky hand, stable spoon: Study shows device helps essential tremor patients
For people whose hands shake uncontrollably due to a medical condition, just eating can be a frustrating and embarrassing ordeal – enough to keep them from sharing a meal with others.

Smoke in the water: Understanding the effects of smoke compounds on seed germination
Although seemingly destructive, wildfires help to maintain biodiversity and are an important element of many ecosystems throughout the world. Not only do fires discourage non-native and invasive species from becoming established, but the quick release of nutrients, heat, and compounds found in ash and smoke play an important role in the life cycle of the native flora. For plants that are adapted to ecosystems where fire is a regular occurrence—such as savannas, grasslands, and coniferous forests—exposure to fire may initiate seed germination or enhance plant growth.

Study reveal unexpected findings
Research on a deadly form of brain cancer co-authored by a physician at Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The three-year research project led locally by David Brachman, M.D., revealed that a 'promising' drug therapy failed to improve survival among patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma.

Becoming disabled may up risk of developing diabetes
(HealthDay)—Functional decline and physical disability may increase the subsequent risk of diabetes in older adults, according to research published online Feb. 18 in Diabetes Care.

Funding tied to spinal study outcomes, levels of evidence
(HealthDay)—Source of funding for spinal research is significantly associated with study outcome and level of evidence (LOE), according to a review published in the Feb. 1 issue of The Spine Journal.

Hand hygiene lacking in many U.S. health care facilities: study
(HealthDay)—One in five U.S. health care facilities does not make alcohol-based hand sanitizer available everywhere it's needed, new research shows.

Common asthma meds may raise sleep apnea risk, study says
(HealthDay)—Medicines commonly used to control asthma may increase the risk of a potentially serious sleep problem in some people, a small, early study suggests.

Mental health problems mistaken for physical illness in children
Many children are admitted to general acute wards with mental health problems mistaken for physical disease.

Study links poor sleep quality to reduced brain gray matter in Gulf War vets
A new study of Gulf War veterans found an association between poor sleep quality and reduced gray matter volume in the brain's frontal lobe, which helps control important processes such as working memory and executive function.

Tackling tumors with space station research
In space, things don't always behave the way we expect them to. In the case of cancer, researchers have found that this is a good thing: some tumors seem to be much less aggressive in the microgravity environment of space compared to their behavior on Earth. This observation, reported in research published in February by the FASEB Journal, could help scientists understand the mechanism involved and develop drugs targeting tumors that don't respond to current treatments. This work is the latest in a large body of evidence on how space exploration benefits those of us on Earth.

Frequent childhood nightmares may indicate an increased risk of psychotic traits
Children who suffer from frequent nightmares or bouts of night terrors may be at an increased risk of psychotic experiences in adolescence, according to new research from the University of Warwick.

Innovative approaches to improve vision in children with tumors
Robert Avery, DO, MSCE, of Children's National Health System and colleagues are establishing innovative approaches with technology and medication to improve the vision of young children who have visual pathway glioma, a type of brain tumor.

3-D imaging sheds light on Apert syndrome development
Three dimensional imaging of two different mouse models of Apert Syndrome shows that cranial deformation begins before birth and continues, worsening with time, according to a team of researchers who studied mice to better understand and treat the disorder in humans.

Researchers identify brain differences linked to insomnia
Johns Hopkins researchers report that people with chronic insomnia show more plasticity and activity than good sleepers in the part of the brain that controls movement.

Purification, culture and multi-lineage differentiation of zebrafish neural crest cells
Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)/Harvard Medical School, Drs. Beste Kinikoglu and Yawei Kong, led by Dr. Eric C. Liao, cultured and characterized for the first time multipotent neural crest cells isolated from zebrafish embryos. This important study is reported in the February 2014 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine.

Coating could help prevent blood clots associated with implanted biomedical devices
A team of researchers from UCLA and the University of Michigan has developed a material that could help prevent blood clots associated with catheters, heart valves, vascular grafts and other implanted biomedical devices.

How photosensitization can stop viruses from infecting cells
A UCLA-led team of researchers has found evidence that photosensitizing a virus's membrane covering can inhibit its ability to enter cells and potentially lead to the development of stronger, cheaper medications to fight a host of tough viruses.

Scientists develop new nanoscale method to fight cancer
Researchers from UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have developed an innovative cancer-fighting technique in which custom-designed nanoparticles carry chemotherapy drugs directly to tumor cells and release their cargo when triggered by a two-photon laser in the infrared red wavelength.

Novel technique for cell lineage-specific gene-expression analysis
Before doctors like Matthias Kretzler can begin using the results of molecular research to treat patients, they need science to find an effective way to match genes with the specific cells involved in disease. As Kretzler explains, finding that link would eventually let physicians create far more effective diagnostic tools and treatments.

Neurons coordinate to fine-tune motor control
Whether it is playing a piano sonata or acing a tennis serve, the brain needs to orchestrate precise, coordinated control over the body's many muscles. Moreover, there needs to be some kind of feedback from the senses should any of those movements go wrong. Neurons that coordinate those movements, known as Purkinje cells, and ones that provide feedback when there is an error or unexpected sensation, known as climbing fibers, work in close concert to fine-tune motor control.


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Fwd: Alert Google - Katastrofa TU 154 M w Smoleńsku



---------- Wiadomość przekazana dalej ----------
Od: Google Alerts <googlealerts-noreply@google.com>
Data: 1 marca 2014 00:00
Temat: Alert Google - Katastrofa TU 154 M w Smoleńsku
Do: ac84703@gmail.com


Google
Katastrofa TU 154 M w Smoleńsku
Aktualizacja codzienna 28 lutego 2014
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Gazeta.pl
Katastrofa smoleńska: Zakończono kopiowanie nagrań z tupolewa
Prokuratura wojskowa dysponuje już opinią dotyczącą zapisu czarnej skrzynki Tu-154M rozbitego pod Smoleńskiem, która została wydana w grudniu ...
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środa, 26 lutego 2014

Fwd: Człowiek wyklęty






---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: PascalAlter . <ac84703@gmail.com>
Date: 2014-02-26 12:19 GMT+01:00
Subject: Człowiek wyklęty
To: Pascal Alter <pascal.alter@gmail.com>


Człowiek to brzmi durnie przyjacielu - czemu w Pl dziwić się nie można;; od dzieciństwa mamiony, potem ogłupiany i oszukiwany na każdym kroku -( lecz gdzieś indziej wcale nie jest lepiej jak widać).

(25 lutego 2014: w Filharmonii w Kielcach ; Nigdy was nie zapomnimy - koncert dla uczczenia pamięci "Żołnierzy Wyklętych".)

ad



Fwd: Recently Posted Documentaries - Top Documentary Films



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Top Documentary Films <contact@topdocumentaryfilms.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 8:12 PM
Subject: Recently Posted Documentaries - Top Documentary Films
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com



Top Documentary Films
Don't Panic: The Truth About PopulationWe live in a world of relentless change. Huge migrations of people to new mega-cities filling soaring skyscrapers and vast slums, ravenous appetites for fuel and food, unpredictable climate change... and all this in a world where the population is still growing. Should we be worried, should...

Watch now... 8.00

Cheetah: Against All OddsIn the Serengeti cheetahs live edgy lives. Females with cubs must hunt for food and if left alone their offspring are prone to the cruelty of more dominant predators. Even scavengers can abuse this slim feline built for speed. Cheetahs are the most agile but also the...

Watch now... 8.00

Apocalypse, ManThe planet is being destroyed all around us. Using money to try to address that problem is like shooting yourself in the foot. Evolve or parish, grow up or die... an entirely new level of human consciousness is needed right now or we're all dead. Mankind openly...

Watch now... 8.00

What Difference Does It Make?This is a film about making music. It gets to the bottom of what is needed to be a musician and contemplates on some of the fundamental questions of life itself. It investigates the difficulties that a life in music can create. Shot by award-winning director Ralf...

Watch now... 8.00

The Collective Evolution III: The ShiftThis is the third installment from the series The Collective Evolution in which the authors claim that there's a rebellious fluctuation stirring every aspect of our planet. The people are waking up, they're in the streets, they're educating themselves, and they're demanding change. It seems the days...

Watch now... 8.00

Rule from the Shadows: The Psychology of PowerThe pursuit for dominance is the primary propellant of history, always has been, always will be. Those who don't identify this assumption are not excused in the grand chess game, but instead are displaced and exploited by forces they do not comprehend. From the aspect of those...

Watch now... 8.00

4310 W. 190th St. 65235 - Torrance, CA 90504 - USA



poniedziałek, 24 lutego 2014

Fahrenheit 9 11 wojna

Fwd: Phys.org Newsletter Friday, Feb 21



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Newsletter Phys.org <not-for-reply@physorg.com>
Date: Sat, Feb 22, 2014 at 2:23 AM
Subject: Phys.org Newsletter Friday, Feb 21
To: Pascal Alter <pascal.alter@gmail.com>


Dear Pascal Alter,

Here is your customized Phys.org Newsletter for February 21, 2014:

Spotlight Stories Headlines

- New, inexpensive production materials boost promise of hydrogen fuel
- Self-cleaning, antireflective coating mimicks the structure of moth eyes
- Researchers find neurons responsible for tying together fearful events with environment
- Tracking catalytic reactions in microreactors
- New method to create monomodal, mesoporous metal oxides
- Exchange of genetic material between harmless bacteria could be reservoir of antibiotic resistance
- Nissan-Renault boss upbeat about green car future
- Fruit-loving lemurs score higher on spatial memory tests
- Adobe Flash Player updates confront zero-day exploit
- Pew maps Twitter conversations, finds six types
- Is a 'buttery' molecule behind cystic fibrosis flare-ups?
- US officials at odds over cellphone use on planes (Update)
- NASA suspends space capsule recovery test in ocean (Update)
- Seed-filled buoys may help restore diverse sea meadows in San Francisco Bay
- Scientist proposes revolutionary naming system for all life on Earth

Astronomy & Space news

Voyager, the space triumph that nearly wasn't
The Voyager 1 spacecraft is the first human-made object to venture into interstellar space. Even if defined only by distance, the NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory twin Voyagers are America's greatest space adventure. They've been flying successfully for more than 36 years and are billions of miles from home. What isn't widely known is that they almost never made it out there.

Japan's Pocari Sweat bound for the moon: maker
Japan's curiously-named Pocari Sweat is to be sent to the moon, its Japanese maker has said, in what the firm claims will make it the first sports drink on the celestial body.

NASA deploys record-breaking 29 small satellites into orbit
(Phys.org) —A spectacular launch from Virginia's eastern shore recently resulted in the successful deployment of a record-breaking 29 small satellites into orbit, but that wasn't the only first for the mission or the bustling spaceport at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va.

Could Jupiter become a star?
NASA's Galileo spacecraft arrived at Jupiter on December 7, 1995, and proceeded to study the giant planet for almost 8 years. It sent back a tremendous amount of scientific information that revolutionized our understanding of the Jovian system. By the end of its mission, Galileo was worn down. Instruments were failing and scientists were worried they wouldn't be able to communicate with the spacecraft in the future. If they lost contact, Galileo would continue to orbit the Jupiter and potentially crash into one of its icy moons.

Smart SPHERES getting a software upgrade
(Phys.org) —Smart devices – such as tablets and phones – increasingly are an essential part of everyday life on Earth. The same can be said for life off-planet aboard the International Space Station. From astronaut tweets to Google+ Hangouts, our reliance on these mobile and social technologies means equipment and software upgrades are an everyday occurrence – like buying a new pair of shoes to replace a pair of well-worn ones.

The bow shock of Kappa Cassiopeiae, a massive, hot supergiant
(Phys.org) —Roguish runaway stars can have a big impact on their surroundings as they plunge through the Milky Way galaxy. Their high-speed encounters shock the galaxy, creating arcs, as seen in this newly released image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.

NASA suspends space capsule recovery test in ocean (Update)
A training exercise designed to showcase the government's ability to recover a space capsule at sea was scrubbed after NASA ran into trouble off the Southern California coast, the space agency said Friday.

NASA's IRIS spots its largest solar flare
(Phys.org) —On Jan. 28, 2014, NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS, witnessed its strongest solar flare since it launched in the summer of 2013. Solar flares are bursts of x-rays and light that stream out into space, but scientists don't yet know the fine details of what sets them off.

Medicine & Health news

Study questions programs to prevent psychological problems for troops
Many federal programs aimed at preventing psychological problems for military service members and their families have not been evaluated correctly to determine whether they are working or supported by science, says a new report commissioned by theDefense Department.

Majority of hardest hit populations excluded from trauma research
New study reveals just over 12 percent of traumatic stress studies published in 2012 were conducted in low-to-middle income countries (LMICs), where 83 percent of the world's population lives, and where risk of experiencing a potentially traumatic event is often greatest.

Subjective poverty massively affects older people's health
Being objectively low income leads to poor health and a shorter life. This much we already knew. But poverty can also be a matter of subjectively feeling poor. WZB economist Maja Adena and her colleague Michal Myck (DIW Berlin and the Center for Economic Analysis, CenEA, Szczecin) have substantiated how the subjective assessment of being poor affects the health of the 50+ age group. A study of Germany and 11 other European countries shows that older people who assess themselves as poor get sick more often (38 per cent) and suffer more from health setbacks (48 per cent) than those who do not. The probability of dying earlier is also much higher – around 40 per cent for men in this age group.

Report analyzes drug overdose morbidity and mortality among Kentucky residents
A new report from the Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center (KIPRC) reveals the prevalence and charges associated with drug overdose in the Bluegrass state. The report, "Drug Overdose Deaths, Hospitalizations, and Emergency Department Visits in Kentucky, 2000‐2012", analyzes overdose morbidity and mortality among Kentucky residents and documents the enormous societal and financial toll on the Commonwealth's population. KIPRC, located in the UK College of Public Health, is a bona fide agent for the Kentucky Department for Public Health.

Enzalutamide: IQWiG assessed data subsequently submitted by the manufacturer
Enzalutamide (trade name: Xtandi) has been approved since June 2013 for men with metastatic prostate cancer in whom the commonly used hormone blockade is no longer effective and who have already been treated with the cytostatic drug docetaxel. In an early benefit assessment pursuant to the Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products (AMNOG) in November 2013, the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) determined an added benefit of this new drug over the appropriate comparator therapy specified by the Federal Joint Committee (G-BA).

Physicians in India access UPMC medical expertise through telemedicine
With the latest expansion of its global telemedicine efforts, UPMC is now offering physicians in India access to its world-renowned medical expertise to improve care for patients. Through advanced, web-based technology, UPMC physicians specializing in oncology, pulmonology, colorectal surgery and other specialties are providing second opinions to physicians in the world's second-most populous nation.

US 'not targeting' India, says FDA chief (Update)
US regulators are not targeting India, despite a series of import restrictions on drugs from the major US trading partner, the head of the US Food and Drug Administration said Friday.

Colorado, Utah move to hike smoking age to 21 (Update 2)
Two Western states with some of America's lowest smoking rates are considering cracking down even more by raising the tobacco age to 21.

Greece's deepening health crisis: Study details signs of the nation's deterioration in health
Greece's health crisis is worsening as a result of continued healthcare budget cuts, says a new study published in the medical journal, The Lancet. Researchers say the harmful effects of austerity are linked to the increasing inability of patients to access the health system, large rises in the incidence of infectious disease, and a deterioration in the overall mental health of Greek people.

Genetic screening can identify men with advanced prostate cancer
Screening men with a family history of prostate cancer for a range of gene mutations can identify those who are at high risk of aggressive forms of the disease and in need of lifelong monitoring, a new study has shown.

Average obese woman gets just one hour of exercise a year, study says
(HealthDay)—A new study suggests that obese women get just one hour of vigorous exercise a year, while obese men don't do much better at fewer than four hours.

A little weight loss may ease sleep apnea
(HealthDay)—A small amount of weight loss might help combat sleep apnea, a new study suggests.

Low fluence, multiple pass laser efficacious in hair removal
(HealthDay)—Using diode lasers at low fluences and high average power with a multiple pass in-motion technique is an effective method for hair removal, according to a study published online Feb. 7 in Lasers in Surgery and Medicine.

Direct fitness measures better predict cardiometabolic risk
(HealthDay)—Directly measured fitness is more strongly associated with cardiovascular risk than self-reported physical activity level, according to research published in the Feb. 15 issue of The American Journal of Cardiology.

Unfilled hospital openings for doctors growing, survey finds
(HealthDay)—The need for hospital physicians is growing, according to an article published Jan. 3 in Medical Economics.

Total vaginal hysterectomy generates net hospital income
(HealthDay)—Compared with total vaginal hysterectomy (TVH), hospital costs are greater with laparoscopic assisted vaginal hysterectomy (LAVH), total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH), and robotic hysterectomy (RH), according to a study published in the February issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Surgeons can up outcomes for work-related lumbar surgery
(HealthDay)—In patients with chronic disabling occupational lumbar disorder (CDOLD) and workers' compensation claims, lumbar fusion outcomes can be improved if opioid dependence and excessive length of disability after surgery are controlled through care, according to a study published in the Feb. 1 issue of The Spine Journal.

New magnetic treatment offers hope for depression
Though depression is often dubbed the common cold of mental health, the disorder can be crippling - and nearly a third of those who suffer find little or no relief in the flood of anti-depressants now on the market.

'Too much mammography'
Doctors tell many American women that they need a yearly mammogram to screen for breast cancer. Early detection saves lives, women are told. But evidence has been mounting for years that mammograms do not reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer.

New test suggests antidepressant Paxil may promote breast cancer
A team of researchers from the City of Hope in Duarte, Calif., has developed a speedy way to identify drugs and chemicals that can disrupt the balance of sex hormones in human beings and influence the development and progress of diseases such as breast cancer.

Dyspnea during daily activities predicts all-cause mortality
Dyspnea, a sensation of breathlessness, during light daily activities can be used as an indicator of exercise intolerance and low fitness. According to a study on Finnish twins, persistent or developing dyspnea reveals an increased risk of death.

Mapping global road risk
(Medical Xpress)—The next time you go to Africa or the Middle East, you may want to stay off the roads.

Self-reported memory complaints may predict clinical memory impairment
(Medical Xpress)—A recent study suggests that self-reported memory complaints might predict clinical memory impairment later in life.

How older adults conceptualize the cause of their high blood pressure
(Medical Xpress)—Older adults with hypertension may have dramatically different perceptions about the cause of their condition depending upon where they live, their ethnicity and other demographic characteristics, suggests new research that involved older adults in Arizona and Illinois.

"Evidence is weak" for cold treatment with echinacea
(Medical Xpress)—For people seeking a natural treatment for the common cold, some preparations containing the plant Echinacea work better than nothing, yet "evidence is weak," finds a new report from The Cochrane Library. The evidence review revealed no significant reductions in preventing illness, but didn't rule out "small preventive effects."

Doctors express a strong desire to learn more about e-cigarettes
The use of electronic cigarettes, battery operated devices that often look like cigarettes and deliver vaporized nicotine, is on the rise, including among minors. In a survey between 2011 and 2012, 10 percent of high school students reported ever using an e-cigarette. However, many clinicians are unfamiliar with or uncomfortable with addressing the use of e-cigarettes with their young patients, finds a new study in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

Brain's motor cortex uses multiple frequency bands to coordinate movement
Synchrony is critical for the proper functioning of the brain. Synchronous firing of neurons within regions of the brain and synchrony between brain waves in different regions facilitate information processing, yet researchers know very little about these neural codes. Now, new research led by Tomoki Fukai of the RIKEN Brain Science Institute reveals how one region of the brain uses multiple brain-wave frequency bands to control movement.

Antibody may be detectable in blood years before multiple sclerosis symptoms appear
An antibody found in the blood of people with multiple sclerosis (MS) may be present long before the onset of the disease and its symptoms, according to a study released today that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 66th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia, April 26 to May 3, 2014.

Selenium and vitamin E supplementation over recommended dietary intake may raise prostate cancer risk
A multi-center study led by Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has found that high-dose supplementation with both the trace element selenium and vitamin E increase the risk of high-grade prostate cancer. But importantly, this risk depends upon a man's selenium status before taking the supplements.

Early warning system for epidemics
The environment has an impact on our health. Preventing epidemics relies on activating the right counter-measures, and scientists are now trying to find out how better use of forecasting can help. The EU's EO2HEAVEN project developed a risk map for correlating environmental and health data in order to identify where a disease may break out next. The concept will be on show at Booth E40 in Hall 9 of the CeBIT trade fair in Hannover.

Schizophrenics are at greater risk of getting diseases
Researchers have long known that people with autoimmune diseases, such as hepatitis, type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and psoriasis, are at greater risk of developing schizophrenia.

Team sport compensates for estrogen loss
When women enter menopause, their oestrogen levels taper. This increases their risk of cardiovascular disease. New research from University of Copenhagen shows that interval-based team sport can make up for this oestrogen loss as it improves their conditions, reduces blood pressure and thereby protects the cardiovascular system.

US looks to reboot nonprescription drug system
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is seeking to revamp its system for regulating hundreds of over-the-counter drugs, saying the decades-old process is not flexible enough to keep pace with modern medical developments.

Modern war wounds can devastate vets' sexual, emotional health
(HealthDay)—The tools of war have changed. With the increased use of powerful explosive devices, men and women patrolling on foot in bomb-laced areas of combat are increasingly suffering traumatic injuries to the groin and genitals, experts say.

Can a change in diet reduce onset of dementia? Studies indicate yes
Data suggesting that nutrition plays a major role in the risk of dementia and cognitive decline continue to accumulate. This is good news, as it suggests that there is a lot that each of us can do individually to lower our risk of dementia and cognitive decline as we age.

New cocktail of medicine helps surgical patients get back on their feet
Mary Kay Drummond kept waiting for the pain to come after her Jan. 21 knee replacement surgery. She'd had her right knee replaced a year ago, and when it was time for her left, she braced herself for the discomfort and immobility she experienced the first time.

Promising cervical cancer study
Research on cervical cancer performed by a physician at the University of Arizona Cancer Center at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The multi-site research project by Bradley J. Monk, MD, is expected to change the standard of care for women with advanced cervical cancer.

Reducing HIV transmission among drug injectors lowers AIDS mortality in heterosexuals
Although community network studies show that sexual relationships occur between members of "risk groups"—men who have sex with other men (MSM), people who inject drugs (PWID), non-injection drug users (NIDU)—and heterosexuals, researchers at New York University's Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR) note that little research has been done to help explain how HIV epidemics and programs in one population affect others and how to reduce the risks of transmission.

MS researchers find task meaningfulness influences learning and memory
Kessler Foundation researchers have found that among persons with multiple sclerosis, self-generation may be influenced by variables such as task meaningfulness during learning and memory. They also found that type of task (functional versus laboratory) had a significant effect on memory.

Air Force aircraft returned from Vietnam identified as postwar source of Agent Orange contamination
From 1971-1982 Air Force reservists, who flew in about 34 dioxin-contaminated aircraft used to spray Agent Orange and returned to the US following discontinuation of the herbicide spraying operations in the Vietnam War, were exposed greater levels of dioxin than previously acknowledged, according to a study published today in Environmental Research.

US bans bidis made by Indian tobacco company (Update)
US regulators on Friday banned four types of small cigarettes known as bidis made by an Indian company, marking the Food and Drug Administration's first-ever oversight action against a tobacco product.

Does a diet high in carbohydrates increase your risk of dementia?
Even small increases in blood sugar caused by a diet high in carbohydrates can be detrimental to brain health. Recent reports in medical literature link carbohydrate calorie-rich diets to a greater risk for brain shrinkage, dementia and Alzheimer's disease, impaired cognition, and other disorders. David Perlmutter, MD, best-selling author of Grain Brain, explores this important topic in a provocative interview in Alternative and Complementary Therapies.

The parasite that escaped out of Africa
An international team of scientists has traced the origin of Plasmodium vivax, the second-worst malaria parasite of humans, to Africa, according to a study published this week in Nature Communications. Until recently, the closest genetic relatives of human P. vivax were found only in Asian macaques, leading researchers to believe that P. vivax originated in Asia.

Degradation of viral DNA in the cell nucleus opens new Hepatitis B treatment possibilities
Scientists from the Helmholtz Zentrum München and the Technische Universität München have discovered how the viral DNA of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) can be degraded in the cell nucleus of liver cells, consequently allowing the virus to be eliminated. Viruses such as HBV can persist by depositing their genetic information (DNA) in the cell nucleus, where the DNA is normally not degraded. This prevents antiviral drugs from eliminating these viruses. But the newly discovered mechanism could make this possible without damaging the infected cell in the liver. In the current issue of the prestigious journal Science, the scientists report that now new therapeutic possibilities are consequently opening up.

Geneticists study how individual nerve cells assemble into specific nerves
(Medical Xpress)—Geneticists from Trinity College Dublin interested in 'reverse engineering' the nervous system have made an important discovery with wider implications for repairing missing or broken links. They found that the same molecular switches that induce originally non-descript cells to specialise into the billions of unique nerve cell types are also responsible for making these nerve cells respond differently to the environment.

Exchange of genetic material between harmless bacteria could be reservoir of antibiotic resistance
Researchers have found that a harmless bacterium could be a source for antibiotic resistance in treatments against such diseases as pneumonia, bacteraemia and meningitis. Their results could help in the design of better strategies to deal with the emergence of antibiotic resistance.

Is a 'buttery' molecule behind cystic fibrosis flare-ups?
A molecule previously linked to lung injuries in factory workers producing microwave popcorn might play an important role in microbial infections of the lung suffered by people with cystic fibrosis (CF), according to a recent study led by San Diego State postdoctoral researcher Katrine Whiteson. The molecule, known as 2,3-butanedione or diacetyl, can be detected in higher concentrations in CF patients than in healthy ones.

Researchers find neurons responsible for tying together fearful events with environment
(Medical Xpress)—Researchers working at Columbia University have identified a neuron that serves to tie fearful events with the environment in which they occurred. In their paper published in the journal Science, the team explains how they isolated the special neuron and how its identification furthers the understanding of how memories are formed in the brain.


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Fwd: Newsletter: Timoschenko ist frei, Janukowitsch abgesetzt



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: KURIER.at <newsletter@kurier.at>
Date: 2014-02-23 8:31 GMT+01:00
Subject: Newsletter: Timoschenko ist frei, Janukowitsch abgesetzt
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com


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Newsletter vom 23.02.2014
Ukraine
Timoschenko ist frei, Janukowitsch abgesetzt
Triumph für die Protestbewegung: Die Oppositionspolitikerin wurde freigelassen, das ukrainische Parlament erklärt Präsident Janukowitsch für abgesetzt.
Olympia
Österreichischer Langläufer Johannes Dürr gedopt
Doping-Schock am Ende der Spiele: Der Langläufer gab laut ÖOC-Präsident Stoss das Vergehen sofort zu.
"Wetten, dass...?"
Unglaublich viel Käse
Das Protokoll der "Wetten, dass….?"-Sendung aus Düsseldorf
Syrien
UNO-Sicherheitsrat verabschiedet Resolution
Die Vereinten Nationen fordern die Regierung Syriens dazu auf, im gesamten Land humanitäre Hilfe zuzulassen.
Hypo-Debakel
Vranitzky: "Spindelegger ist nicht Herr der Lage"
Der Ex-Kanzler bezeichnet die Hypo-Folgen als "das größte bankwirtschaftliche Fiasko".
Mexiko
Meistgesuchter Drogenboss der Welt gefasst
Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman war seit 2001 auf der Flucht, nun wurde er in Mexiko festgenommen.
Schule
Aufregung um Abschaffung der Matura
Unterrichtsministerin findet Vorschlag von Lehrergewerkschafter "sehr befremdend".
Italien
Neuer Premier Renzi in Eile
Frisch angelobter Regierungschef präsentiert sein jüngeres und weiblicheres Kabinett.
"Chart of Doom"
Steht ein Börsencrash bevor?
Eine Grafik mit manipulierten Daten, die im Internet kursiert, beunruhigt Anleger.
Thomas Wieser
Wenn schon Banken retten, dann gleich ordentlich
Euro-Mastermind: 2009 wären mehr Staatshilfen und rigoroses Aufräumen à la USA besser gewesen.
Umsatzminus
Bittere Pille Arzneimittel-Versand
Trotz Bedenken startet der Verband ab April ein eigenes Online-Portal. Das sorgt für Kritik.
Kika/Leiner
Management versichert: Kein Job-Kahlschlag
"Veränderungen im Personalstand" von Kika/Leiner werden eingeräumt, aber in geringem Ausmaß.
Interview
Robin Hood im Werber-Wald
Dieter Weidhofer und Mario Debout wollen mit ihrer neuen Agentur Verantwortung übernehmen.
Penthouse
Luxusdomizil mit Blick auf den Graben
Mitten im Goldenen Quartier entstehen zwölf exklusive Dachgeschoß-Wohnungen.
Wiener Linien
Stellwerkdefekt: U6 und Teile der U3 standen still
Wegen eines technischen Gebrechens war der U-Bahn-Betrieb am Samstag kurzzeitig unterbrochen.
Wiener Linien
Elektrobus: Chaffeur erlitt Stromschlag
Der 26-jähriger Busfahrer musste eine Nacht im Krankenhaus verbringen.
Prostitution
Der Freier mit der Polizeimarke
Die Wiener Polizei hebt mit verdeckten Ermittlern illegale Bordelle aus. Ein heikles Unterfangen.
Schwechat
"Ein mulmiges Gefühl" wird wegtrainiert
Ob Turbulenzen, Sturzflug oder Notwassern: Im Ernstfall ist es wichtig, ruhig zu bleiben.
Arzt-Serie
Wilfried Feichtinger: Mein Gesundheitstipp
Jede Woche verrät ein Mediziner seine persönlichen Geheimnisse für eine hohe Lebensqualität.
Da schau her
Frühlingserwachen am Red Carpet
Katy Perry & noch einige mehr sorgten diese Woche für den Wow-Effekt.
Leitfaden
10 Speisen, die jedes Date killen
Was man bei einem Dinner oder Lunch zu zweit besser nicht bestellt.
Orte wie im Bilderbuch
Beinahe zu schön, um wahr zu sein
Woche für Woche zeigen wir Ihnen schöne Plätze und traumhafte Orte.
Leser
Was frühstücken Sie diesen Sonntag?
KURIER-Leserreporter zeigen, was sie vergangenen Sonntag frühstückten.
Volkstheater
"Arturo Ui": Die große One-Woman-Gangstershow
Brechts grelle Parabel feierte mit Maria Bill in der Hitler-Paraderolle im Wiener Volkstheater Premiere.
Standortfrage geklärt
Küniglberg wird zum echten ORF-Zentrum
Die jahrelangen Diskussionen um den künftigen Standort des ORF sind beendet.
86. Oscars
DiCaprio vs. McConaughey: Wer holt sich den Oscar?
Zugpferd gegen den Neuen im Stall: Das Kopf-an-Kopf-Rennen bei den Oscars.
Afrika-Roman
Der Bub kostete 23 Euro
Ryad Assani-Razakis Schrei aus Afrika verrät, warum Menschen trotz Warnung nach Europa flüchten.
elisabeth de waal
Schade um die Rückkehr nach der Vertreibung
Im Nachlass der ältesten Ephrussi-Tochter wurde ein Roman über Wien in der Besatzungszeit entdeckt.

KURIER - Wien, 2013
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