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Thursday, May 24, 2012

Scientists discover distinct molecular subtype of prostate cancer



Novel genetic mutation identified in up to 15 percent of prostate cancer patients, in largest study of its kind  

A collaborative expedition into the deep genetics of prostate cancer has uncovered a distinct subtype of the disease, one that appears to account for up to 15 percent of all cases, say researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

In the study, published online May 20 by the journal Nature Genetics, investigators describe how they discovered novel mutations in the SPOP (“S-pop”) gene in numerous patient tumors, saying this alteration is thus far unique to prostate cancer and so represents a distinct molecular class that might assist in cancer diagnosis and treatment. Researchers suspect the mutations alter the way cells tag proteins for degradation, leading to an accumulation of dangerous molecules that drive the growth of cancer, perhaps from the beginning.
Prostate cancer
Prostate cancer is cancer that starts in the prostate gland. The prostate is a small, walnut-sized structure that makes up part of a man's reproductive system.
This finding adds to a string of discovery of other genes linked to prostate cancer over the years by this team of investigators, the totality of which is painting a comprehensive picture of how genetic alterations contribute to prostate cancer — the most common cancer in men aside from skin cancer, accounting for the second leading cause of cancer deaths.
“These studies constitute a unique, meticulous and intensive look at prostate cancer to see the mechanisms driving this disease,” says Dr. Mark A. Rubin, The Homer T. Hirst Professor of Oncology in Pathology and vice chair for experimental pathology at Weill Cornell Medical College. “This study, and our prior findings, tells us that prostate cancer is not just one disease. So far, we have found two main pathways for prostate cancer to develop and this opens the door to development of specialized diagnostic tools and treatments.”
Mutations in SPOP constitute one major pathway, accounting for up to 15 percent of prostate cancer cases. The other is the 50 percent of prostate cancers containing the so-called “ETS” fusion genes, such as TMPRSS2-ERG.
“While there is still a need for increased discovery, it does appear that the overall genetic landscape of prostate cancer is taking shape, and better understanding of the biology and possible therapeutic avenues linked to these alterations has become a very high priority,” says Dr. Levi Garraway, a senior associate member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and assistant professor at the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Rubin and Dr. Garraway are co-senior investigators for this study and for others that have preceded it in this unique examination of prostate cancer genes.
In February 2011, the collaborative groups published a study in Nature in which they used whole genome sequencing to discern global changes and patterns of abnormality in seven prostate tumors and compared them to normal tissue samples. They found that areas of the genome had been unexpectedly rearranged — just as Dr. Rubin and his collaborators at the University of Michigan had in 2005 with the discovery of the common recurrent TMPRSS2-ERG gene rearrangement, created by the fusion of two different genes.
This current study looked at different drivers of cancer, which are mutations in specific genes. It focused on the 1-2 percent of DNA in the genome that codes for proteins, and, as such, is one of the largest “whole exome” sequencing studies published on prostate cancer to date, according to Dr. Garraway.
The impetus to search for genes in this way came about because of the observation that SPOP appeared to be mutated in some cases of prostate cancer, says Dr. Christopher Barbieri, a fifth year urology resident at Weill Cornell who spent a research year in Dr. Rubin’s laboratory in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.
Broad Institute researchers, led by Dr. Garraway and Dr. Sylvan Baca, completed an intensive exome sequencing of 112 prostate tumors and normal tissue pairs. The findings were verified in another 400 prostate cancer patient samples from other institutions around the country. Dr. Barbieri of Weill Cornell, Dr. Baca and Dr. Michael Lawrence of the Broad Institute are the study’s co-lead investigators.
The teams found three genes significantly altered in the prostate cancers, but not in non-cancerous tissue. In addition to SPOP mutations, which occurred in 6 to 15 percent of tumors across multiple independent cohorts, they found mutations in the FOXA1 and MED12 genes, each of which are found in about 4 percent of patient tumors.
Further examination revealed the interesting nature of SPOP mutations. SPOP belongs to a class of proteins known as ubiquitin ligases, whose role is to mark other proteins in the cell for degradation. The mutations the team discovered all occur where the SPOP protein binds to the other proteins it should tag. “That suggests that there might be an accumulation of proteins in the cell that aren’t cleaned out and this might lead to cancer growth, or the mutations could be removing proteins that help prevent unchecked cell growth,” says Dr. Rubin. “We are working hard to understand what is happening.”
Because they were also found in premalignant lesions, the researchers suspect SPOP mutations occur early in development of the cancer. “This could be one of the switches that turns prostate cancer on,” Dr. Rubin says.
They also do not yet know if SPOP mutations define a more aggressive type of prostate cancer.
Dr. Rubin further notes that SPOP mutations and TMPRSS2-ERG fusion genes never occur in the same tumor. They are mutually exclusive, implying two distinct molecular classes of prostate cancer.
“These studies really do provide a comprehensive catalog of the genetic changes occurring in prostate cancer,” Dr. Rubin says.
As a urologist who treats men with prostate cancer, Dr. Barbieri says the finding of a SPOP mutation may be one of the breakthroughs oncologists have been seeking. “We have very limited information available to us now on the particular biology of the tumor that prostate cancer patients have, and how best to treat that cancer,” he says. “But given the finding that SPOP mutations form a distinct kind of cancer, and if you low ball the incidence at about 10 percent of all tumors, that means, every year, 25,000 men in the U.S. will be diagnosed with tumors that have this mutation. That is a large number. Knowing what these mutations mean may give us huge clues about how the patient’s cancer will progress and how they might be best treated in the future,” Dr. Barbieri says.
“This prostate cancer subtype appears to contain abnormalities in cellular processes that are quite new to prostate cancer researchers, and should open up many future avenues for enhanced understanding of the disease,” says Dr. Garraway. He adds, “our collaboration with the Rubin lab has been crucial to the success of this effort. Our groups bring nicely complementary expertise in disease biology, genomics and pathology.”
“Going forward, we will attempt to define the specific biological roles of several new prostate cancer genes, and we will characterize new prostate cancer genomic alterations that are emerging through ongoing discovery efforts,” Dr. Garraway says.

Oldest Art Even Older: New Dates from Geißenklösterle Cave Show Early Arrival of Modern Humans, Art and Music


Science Daily — New dates from Geißenklösterle Cave in Southwest Germany document the early arrival of modern humans and early appearance of art and music.

These are the earliest radiocarbon dates of Aurignacian deposits, and they predate Aurignacian dates from Italy, France, England and other regions. These results are consistent with the Danube Corridor hypothesis postulating that modern humans migrated to Europe and rapidly moved up the Danube drainage. Geißenklösterle Cave is one of several caves in the Swabian Jura that have produced important examples of personal ornaments, figurative art, mythical imagery and musical instruments. The new dates from Geißenklösterle together with existing dates using thermoluminescence confirm the great antiquity of the Swabian Aurignacian.Researchers from Oxford and Tübingen have published new radiocarbon dates from the from Geißenklösterle Cave in Swabian Jura of Southwestern Germany in theJournal of Human Evolution. The new dates use improved methods to remove contamination and produced ages between began between 42,000 – 43,000 years ago for start of the Aurignacian, the first culture to produce a wide range of figurative art, music and other key innovations as postulated in the Kulturpumpe Hypothesis. The full spectrum of these innovations were established in the region no later than 40 000 years ago.
The new dates indicate that modern humans entered the Upper Danube region prior to an extremely cold climatic phase referred to as the H4 event dating to ca. 40 000 years ago. Previously, researchers had argued that modern humans initially migrated up the Danube immediately following the H4 event. As it now looks modern humans entered southwestern Germany during a mild phase of the last Ice Age, under climactic conditions, which should have been inhabitable by indigenous populations of Neanderthals. Despite a major effort to identify archaeological signatures of interaction between Neanderthals and modern humans, researchers have yet to identify indications of cultural contact between these groups in Upper Danube region.
These results point to the Upper Danube Valley as a plausible homeland for the Aurignacian, with the Swabian caves producing the earliest record of technological and artistic innovations that are characteristic of the this period. Whether the many innovations best documented in Swabia were stimulated by climatic stress, competition between modern humans and Neanderthals or by other social-cultural dynamics remains a central focus of research by the archaeologists from Tübingen and Oxford. High-resolution dating of the kind reported here is essential for establishing a reliable the chronology for testing hypothesis to explain the expansion of modern humans into Europe, the processes that led to a wide range of cultural innovations including the advent of figurative art and music, and the extinction of Neanderthals.

Relief of urinary symptoms is an underappreciated benefit of early stage prostate cancer treatment




BIDMC findings presented at American Urological Association Annual Meeting

Treatment of early stage prostate cancer can also result in improved quality of life for a subgroup of men who suffer from lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), according to an abstract of a Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center-led study presented to the American Urological Association.

LUTS, which includes problems of frequent or urgent urination, particularly at night, is a common problem that affects approximately 40 percent of men, a percentage that rises with age. It is not a reason to suspect prostate cancer.
Prostate cancer photo
Prostate cancer is the most common male cancer in the U.S.
“Possible benefits of prostate cancer treatment in alleviating lower urinary tract symptoms have been largely overlooked,” says Martin G. Sanda, MD, Director of the Prostate Center at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Professor of Urology at Harvard Medical School. “We sought to identify pretreatment determinants of urinary function benefit versus worsening due to prostate cancer treatment.”
Researchers prospectively evaluated 1,812 men who underwent prostate removal surgery, radiation therapy and brachytherapy or the implant of radioactive “seeds” across the United States and in Spain. They found use of urinary medications was reduced two years after radical prostatectomy surgery compared to pretreatment, while it was unchanged after radiation and became worse after brachytherapy.
Overall bother from urinary treatment (reflecting combined effects of obstruction or incontinence) was unchanged from pretreatment in 86 percent of the men, improved in 7 percent of the cases and worsened in 7 percent.
“The burden of obstructive lower urinary tract symptoms, which is present in one-third of early stage prostate cancer patients, is underappreciated and deserving of greater emphasis in prostate cancer care decisions,” says Sanda. “Contrary to conventional assumptions, the number of men whose health-related quality of life is benefited by early stage prostate cancer treatment is similar to the number who quality of life is adversely impacted. Men with lower urinary tract symptoms may be particularly likely to have a better quality of life benefit from radical prostatectomy.”
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Coauthors of the study included investigators from the PROSTQA Consortium, funded by the National Cancer Institute, and a team of collaborators from Spain. 

Closeup Photogarphy












Researchers discover antibodies in breast milk help neutralize HIV


Antibodies that help to stop the HIV virus have been found in breast milk. Researchers at Duke University Medical Center isolated the antibodies from immune cells called B cells in the breast milk of infected mothers in Malawi. They showed that the B cells in breast milk can generate neutralizing antibodies that may inhibit the virus that causes AIDS.



HIV-1 can be transmitted from mother to child via breastfeeding, posing a challenge for safe infant feeding practices in areas of high HIV-1 prevalence. But only one in 10 HIV-infected nursing mothers is known to pass the virus to their infants.
“That is remarkable because nursing children are exposed multiple times each day during their first year of life,” said senior author Sallie Permar, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of paediatrics and infectious diseases at Duke. “We are asking if there is an immune response that protects 90 per cent of infants, and could we harness that response to develop immune system prophylaxis (protection) during breastfeeding for mothers infected with HIV-1.
“Our work helped establish that these B cells in breast milk can produce HIV-neutralizing antibodies, so enhancing the response or getting more mucosal B-cells to produce those helpful antibodies would be useful, and this is a possible route to explore for HIV-1 vaccine development,” Permar said.
The study was published on May 18 in PLoS One, an open-access journal published by the Public Library of Science.
“This is important work that seeks to understand what a vaccine must do to protect babies from mucosal transmission during breastfeeding,” said Barton Haynes, M.D., co-author and a national leader in AIDS/HIV research, director of the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI), as well as director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute (DHVI). “The antibodies isolated are the first HIV antibodies isolated from breast milk that react with the HIV-1 envelope, and it is important to understand how they work to attack HIV-1.”
The findings of two antibodies with HIV-neutralizing properties isolated from breast milk may also help researchers with new investigations into adult-to-adult and mother-to-child transmission.
Permar said most HIV-1 transmission occurs at a mucosal site in the body – surfaces lined with epithelial cells, such as the gastrointestinal tract or vaginal tissue. The mucosal compartments all have their own immune system cells.
“We’re excited about this finding because the immune cells in mucosal compartments can cross-talk and traffic between compartments,” Permar said. “So the antibodies we found in breast milk indicate that these same antibodies can be elicited in other tissues.”
Interestingly, the Centers for Disease Control recommends against breastfeeding if a mother has HIV-1 because baby formula is a safe alternative for U.S.-born infants. The World Health Organization, however, encourages HIV-infected nursing mothers in resource-poor regions to breastfeed while the mother and/or infant take antiretroviral drugs to prevent the infection in the infant because, without the nutrients and immune factors in mothers’ milk, many more infants would die from severe diarrhoea and respiratory and other diseases.
At the DHVI and CHAVI, there are many projects aimed at designing neutralizing responses in vaccinated individuals and for improved vaccines that display specific targets to the immune system before it gets infected, with the idea of eliciting protective responses that fight against HIV transmission. “Our work will be important in eliminating mother-to-child transmission and getting the responses needed for protecting all infants,” Permar said.
The study itself wasn’t easy to perform, she noted. The samples came from a group of Malawi women recruited by CHAVI for this study.
“Successfully characterizing antibodies from such a fragile medium required global coordination and expertise across multiple fields and is a hopeful testament to the incredible amounts of work and leadership currently underway to fight this devastating disease,” said first author James Friedman, a third-year medical student at Duke University School of Medicine. “To be a part of, and to contribute to such a large-scale and important effort is incredibly exciting.”
The samples were not analysed because of the limited availability of the laboratory instrument needed to isolate single, viable immune cells in the region. Instead, samples were frozen and transported for analysis. Keeping the breast milk under the right conditions for later thawing and testing of B cells and for isolating antibodies was a challenge, Permar said.
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Other co-authors from the Duke Human Vaccine Institute were co-senior author Anthony Moody, S. Munir Alam, Xiaoying Shen, Shi-Mao Xia, Shelley Stewart, Kara Anasti, Justin Pollara, Genevieve G. Fouda, Guang Yang, Garnett Kelsoe, Guido Ferrari, Georgia D. Tomaras, and Hua-Xin Liao.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH/NIAID/DAIDS) grants: the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI) AI067854, AI07392, and AI087992; and the Doris Duke Foundation Clinical Scientist Development Award. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery (CAVDVIMC grant 38619) provided additional funding for this work.
Courtesy Duke University Medical Center 
Photo source: EcoChildsPlay 

Mars in Astrology



Function of Mars on different Ascendants
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This is a difficult concept but again so easy if we do not consider certain values as rules and restrictions. The 10th house is the house of action or Karma. While the 9th house depicts which are the possibilities and where destiny fails and limitations restrict, the 10th house is the seat of our dream that we try to fulfill in order to achieve our status in life. It is the strength of a Kendra that pushes us forward through career, a mode of earning material gain. How much this effort fructify, is then taken on by the next house the 11th house. The perfect balance in the potential of the 9th, 10th and 11th house is the real essence that brings maximum gain if other astrological conditions are not absolutely dethroning. The karakas(cause) of this house are Mercury, Jupiter, Sun and Saturn. A loaded 10th house definitely indicates a full functional and active life in respect to career and status. Malefics do very well here and a troublesome energy like that of Rahu can mean progress in career for the person. When I say that malefics do well here, the functional duty of the malefics have to be taken into consideration. Let us take the functional status of the malefic Mars.
For Aries Lagna, Mars is the owner of the 1st House and the 8th house. The 8th house is an inauspicious House but as the Ascendant is a strong and powerful, the effects of it will be predominant in Mars thus rendering it benefic. However it must be free of other malefic aspects.
For Taurus Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 12th and 7th House. As a malefic and lord of Kendra, Mars will give good/moderate result provided it is not afflicted. Mars is a fiery planet and any kind of affliction can ignite the malefic qualities and cause aggression and turmoil in the person's life. If there are other planets in the vicinity, they will not remain absolutely calm either.
For Gemini Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 6th and 11th house. Mars is not a benefic planet here but as the lord of both Upachaya Houses, can give great shape to all hopes and dreams with time and patience. The 11th house is the house of hopes and dreams and gains of all kind, a well placed Mars strong and healthy holds a lot of promise.
For Cancer Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 5th and 10th house. Mars here is the owner of two powerful houses and is termed as a Yoga Karaka. If Mars is well placed, and well aspected there is great possibility for the person. However Moon should also be un- afflicted and strong for this signature to give the best result. Slightest affliction to this planet has the power to turn life absolutely topsy-turvy with destruction of mind control'.
For Leo Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 4th and 9th house. Mars here is the owner of two powerful houses and is termed as a Yoga Karaka. In Mars's Dasa or Main period there may be great gains in terms of wealth and fame. There is great possibilities hidden behind Mars and it is most important to have this planet clean and clear of all negativity and Lagna lord Sun also. A well harmonized Mars has the potential to help the person to leap out of all battle grounds, victorious and radiant.
For Virgo Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 3rd and 8th house. Mars here is malefic. If Mars is strong and un-afflicted, it can give long life. The overall result for this lagna modifies to a large degree if there is the benefic aspect of Jupiter on Mars.
For Libra Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 2nd and 7th house. Mars here is the owner of one malefic house and one benefic house. The 2nd is a malefic house, but an astrologer can never relinquish this house that governs, speech, conserved wealth and general family happiness among other things. The 7th is a Kendra hence a powerful position and Mars becomes a powerhouse for this Lagna. A strong and well placed Mars gives good result, in terms of money, efforts among others. Vitality is a great boon as well, a harmonic connection between the Ascendant lord Venus and Mars generally defines a happy, content and passionate man- woman relationship.
For Scorpio Lagna, Mars is the lord of the Ascendant and the 6th house. As the Ascendant house lord its energy is most benefic and as the 6th house lord it increases the fighting spirit and capacity. A well harmonized Mars and under benefic aspect makes the Scorpio Ascendant people get ahead of all others. For a Scorpio Ascendant a well placed Mars gives very strong physical passion subdued and hidden. A man  woman relationship can thrive and gain heights of ecstasy very private and full of surprises.
For Sagittarius Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 5th and 12th house. 5th is a kona house and hence Mars becomes a benefic energy and as the 12th house lord it is not so benefic unless under the aspect of a benefic or the 12th house is under a benefic aspect. But the scope of great achievements during the Mars Main period or Dasa can be quite beyond expectation. In such a horoscope, the power of Sun and Jupiter are also very important factors governing the growth factor.
For Capricorn Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 4th and 11th house. 4th is a kendra house and hence Mars becomes a benefic energy and as the 11th house lord it is not so benefic. But the 11th house is the house that governs our hopes and dreams; our potential in respect to earning- some would say that for this lagna, Mars will give mixed result, with the perfect connection between Ascendant lord Saturn and Mars, I find it gives excellent result. The Ascendant being its sign of exaltation, can make Mars a great power, slow and steady when harmonized and under benefic aspect.
For Aquarius Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 3rd and 10th house. 10th is a kendra house and hence Mars becomes a benefic energy and as the 3rd house lord it is not so benefic. For this lagna, Mars will give mixed result. But the Ascendant lord being Saturn, can make Mars a great steady power and when harmonized and under benefic aspect can mean great success.
For Pisces Lagna, Mars is the lord of the 2nd and 9th house. 9th is a kona house and hence Mars becomes a benefic energy and may bless the person with wealth and a religious mind also. For this Lagna if Mars is weak or under malefic aspect can cause great loss of wealth and family unhappiness.
Mars energy is very important and when under benefic aspect it can mean a fine impetus. Mars drives our action in a way it is responsible for the Karma that we do in a life time. The 10th house directly relates to this. The better we understand our Martian energy, the greater is our scope for putting speed and energy into our life's achievement our mission. Hence, a solid Mars all unaffiliated planet in the 10th will give the person a strong direction, mission, or life purpose to follow. This is the reason it is believed that this house does well, when loaded...
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The Effects of Mars in Different Houses
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The planet Mars if prominent and well placed in a chart gives a strong and energetic personality, endurance and self confidence, generosity and a resourceful nature. When badly placed, it can give a predisposition to accidents, inflammatory ailments, violent and excessively emotional nature, litigation among other things, and a tendency to be rash.
Mars rules Tuesday, the zodiac sign Aries and Scorpio, shades of red and orange and is a hot, fiery, and masculine planet. Its stone is red coral.
Following are the effects of Mars in different houses.
Mars in the first house: If well placed it gives the person a youthful appearance, courage, and a strong willed and ambitious nature. There may also be a scar on the body part ruled by Mars. The person will be athletic and muscular; many police officers are found with a strong Mars in ascendant or 10th house. It gives the person great stamina and energy, and the ability to be very successful.
If afflicted it can give head injuries, mental break downs and a tendency to get into brawls. Unless Mars is strong or in its own sign it can affect longevity. It also affects matrimonial happiness.
Mars in the second house: It gives wealth through legacies and marrying into an affluent family when well placed, wealth and a materialistic streak. This is a good placement for success and gains from metal or manufactured goods which use metal. It also gives foreign residence. People with this placement do better when self employed than when they are working for someone else.
When afflicted it gives eye and ear trouble, losses by theft, fraud and disharmony in family life.
Mars in the third house: When well placed, this position gives intelligence, money and endurance and younger brothers but relationship with them may be fiery. If not well placed it can give fractures and tensions with mother- it also gives broken education, accidents while traveling and suicidal tendencies. Such people can do well in work related to the public or media because of good debating skills, but they can also become argumentative if the planet is badly placed.
Mars in the fourth house: If well placed it gives a lot of property and a flair for math, science and technology` along with the possibility of foreign residence. Over all however it is not a good position to have as it affects home life adversely and causes illness to children. There is a likelihood of stomach and chest ailments and property losses through fire, theft, fraud and quarrels. There will also be a tendency for extra-marital affairs. If afflicted by Saturn, Rahu or Ketu, this placement can cause a sudden and unnatural death.
Mars in the fifth house: Unless well placed this position can cause loss of first child, and financial losses, private organ and stomach ailments like ulcers and an aggressive sexual nature. If Mars is badly placed it can give many extra marital affairs and illegitimate children, and losses by speculative ventures.
When well placed it gives success and athletic ability-such people are fond of children and good teachers and mentors. A strong combination gives success with sculpting, architectural work and anything that requires use of metal.
Mars in the sixth house: It is a strong placement for Mars and gives success against ill wishers, good digestive abilities, unexpected financial gains, and fame. There may be some inflammatory infections and stress to maternal relatives. It gives gains from engineering and technology driven careers.
If afflicted it can give death through surgery gone wrong, losses, unexpected trouble, hurts and losses through animals.
Mars in the seventh house: When ill placed this creates troubles in married life and personal relationships and gives losses through business partnerships, humiliation on account of the opposite sex and danger of contracting sexually transmitted diseases. This position affects relationship with father adversely and affects health and wealth, giving an aggressive and easy to anger partner.
In female charts this placement can give sudden death or severe accident for husband. Horoscopes have to usually be matched for people with this placement in their chart. When well placed it gives gains from cooperative ventures, but still more than one serious relationship.
Mars in the eight house: Mars in the 8th unless in its own house or exalted is not considered auspicious. It gives inflammatory diseases, sudden accidents and death, debts and mental distress and legal troubles.
Mars in the ninth house: If well placed it makes the person a pioneer, a philosopher, a traveler and a supporter of higher learning and initiatives for bettering the lives of humanity. Such people can make good social activists and lawyers as well as leaders who can inspire others to follow their path. When badly placed it can make the person narrow minded, fanatical and annoying to others. It can give litigations, trouble while traveling and disruption of personal life. It can give premature death of younger brother and inharmonious relations with him.
Mars in the tenth house: When well placed it’s a powerful position and gives tremendous gains through business, politics and technical/medicine/hardware/real estate/ oriented businesses and careers. It gives great leadership qualities but affects relationship with father. Gains from fire, copper, and metal are indicated; armed forces is a good career option for people with this placement.
If afflicted this placement can make the person radical and affects career and academics adversely. There may be a desire to use unfair means to achieve success, and a bad reputation and sudden fall from the top will be the outcome as a result.
Mars in the eleventh house: It gives wealth but affects children adversely. It makes the person move in high circles and gives influential friends-gains from metal, land and business related to these two especially, apart from other gains. The number of friends is limited and if afflicted, friends may cause major losses and injury by betraying the person.
Mars in the twelfth house: This gives a difficult childhood, injuries and troubles to the body part indicated by the sign Mars is in. It makes the person intense, and prone to feeling unappreciated and thus depressed as a consequence. A badly placed Mars here can cause injury and bad reputation along with long hospitalization and legal troubles. Such people will be secretive, will have secret liaisons and will be loners most of the time.

Super Hit Bollywood Songs Of Raj Kapoor Vol - 1


Raj Kapoor, known as the 'Showman' of Indian cinema Raj Kapoor had received many awards throughout his career, including 9 "Filmfare Awards". The Government of India honoured him with the "Padma Bhushan" in 1971 and "Dadasaheb Phalke" Award in 1987 - the highest award for cinematic excellence in India. In 2001, he was honoured with "Best Director of the Millennium" by Stardust Awards. He was named "Showman of the Millennium" by Star Screen Awards in 2002.His films have some of the best songs of Bollywood which are famous even today. Raj Kapoor is still known as one of the best directors of India who had the knack of getting the best out of any one, since he had mastered all departments of film making. Beautiful songs like 'Awara hoon ya gardish mein' from the film Awaara and 'Mera joota hai Japani' from the film Shree 420 simply show the potential of music in his films

Sai Naam Japte Japte Jaga Shirdi Dham By Hemant Chauhan I Sai Ganga

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Sugar makes you stupid: Study shows high-fructose diet sabotages learning, memory



Attention, college students cramming between midterms and finals: Binging on soda and sweets for as little as six weeks may make you stupid.
A new UCLA rat study is the first to show how a diet steadily high in fructose slows the brain, hampering memory and learning — and how omega-3 fatty acids can counteract the disruption. The peer-reviewed Journal of Physiology publishes the findings in its May 15 edition.
"Our findings illustrate that what you eat affects how you think," said Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, a professor of neurosurgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a professor of integrative biology and physiology in the UCLA College of Letters and Science. "Eating a high-fructose diet over the long term alters your brain's ability to learn and remember information. But adding omega-3 fatty acids to your meals can help minimize the damage."
While earlier research has revealed how fructose harms the body through its role in diabetes, obesity and fatty liver, this study is the first to uncover how the sweetener influences the brain.
The UCLA team zeroed in on high-fructose corn syrup, an inexpensive liquid six times sweeter than cane sugar, that is commonly added to processed foods, including soft drinks, condiments, applesauce and baby food. The average American consumes more than 40 pounds of high-fructose corn syrup per year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
"We're not talking about naturally occurring fructose in fruits, which also contain important antioxidants," explained Gomez-Pinilla, who is also a member of UCLA's Brain Research Institute and Brain Injury Research Center. "We're concerned about high-fructose corn syrup that is added to manufactured food products as a sweetener and preservative."
Gomez-Pinilla and study co-author Rahul Agrawal, a UCLA visiting postdoctoral fellow from India, studied two groups of rats that each consumed a fructose solution as drinking water for six weeks. The second group also received omega-3 fatty acids in the form of flaxseed oil and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), which protects against damage to the synapses — the chemical connections between brain cells that enable memory and learning.
"DHA is essential for synaptic function — brain cells' ability to transmit signals to one another," Gomez-Pinilla said. "This is the mechanism that makes learning and memory possible. Our bodies can't produce enough DHA, so it must be supplemented through our diet."
The animals were fed standard rat chow and trained on a maze twice daily for five days before starting the experimental diet. The UCLA team tested how well the rats were able to navigate the maze, which contained numerous holes but only one exit. The scientists placed visual landmarks in the maze to help the rats learn and remember the way.
Six weeks later, the researchers tested the rats' ability to recall the route and escape the maze. What they saw surprised them.
"The second group of rats navigated the maze much faster than the rats that did not receive omega-3 fatty acids," Gomez-Pinilla said. "The DHA-deprived animals were slower, and their brains showed a decline in synaptic activity. Their brain cells had trouble signaling each other, disrupting the rats' ability to think clearly and recall the route they'd learned six weeks earlier."
The DHA-deprived rats also developed signs of resistance to insulin, a hormone that controls blood sugar and regulates synaptic function in the brain. A closer look at the rats' brain tissue suggested that insulin had lost much of its power to influence the brain cells.
"Because insulin can penetrate the blood–brain barrier, the hormone may signal neurons to trigger reactions that disrupt learning and cause memory loss," Gomez-Pinilla said.
He suspects that fructose is the culprit behind the DHA-deficient rats' brain dysfunction. Eating too much fructose could block insulin's ability to regulate how cells use and store sugar for the energy required for processing thoughts and emotions.
"Insulin is important in the body for controlling blood sugar, but it may play a different role in the brain, where insulin appears to disturb memory and learning," he said. "Our study shows that a high-fructose diet harms the brain as well as the body. This is something new."
Gomez-Pinilla, a native of Chile and an exercise enthusiast who practices what he preaches, advises people to keep fructose intake to a minimum and swap sugary desserts for fresh berries and Greek yogurt, which he keeps within arm's reach in a small refrigerator in his office. An occasional bar of dark chocolate that hasn't been processed with a lot of extra sweetener is fine too, he said.
Still planning to throw caution to the wind and indulge in a hot-fudge sundae? Then also eat foods rich in omega-3 fatty acids, like salmon, walnuts and flaxseeds, or take a daily DHA capsule. Gomez-Pinilla recommends one gram of DHA per day.
"Our findings suggest that consuming DHA regularly protects the brain against fructose's harmful effects," said Gomez-Pinilla. "It's like saving money in the bank. You want to build a reserve for your brain to tap when it requires extra fuel to fight off future diseases."
Provided by University of California, Los Angeles
"Sugar makes you stupid: Study shows high-fructose diet sabotages learning, memory." May 15th, 2012.http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-05-sugar-stupid-high-fructose-diet-sabotages.html
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Robert Karl Stonjek

New heart monitor ‘accurate'



THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND   
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The new USCOM method involves placing a small ultrasound probe on the chest.
Image: cosmin4000/iStockphoto
A new Australian study has confirmed the accuracy of a modern non-invasive cardiac output monitor that can replace a 40-year-old standard in this field.

The collaborative paper by researchers at The University of Queensland School of Medicine, the Florey Neuroscience Institute and the University of Melbourne compared the current accepted method of measuring cardiac output with a non-invasive accurate ultrasound monitor called USCOM.

The current gold standard cardiac monitor is the Pulmonary Artery Catheter (PAC), which involves insertion of a catheter into a patient's neck or groin.

The catheter is then positioned in their arteries through the heart before heating or cooling the blood.

Alternatively, the newer USCOM method simply involves placing a small ultrasound probe on the chest.

Professor Malcolm West, a Professor of Medicine at The University of Queensland School of Medicine and a paper co-author said: “The USCOM device is a simple method for accurately and non-invasively measuring central circulation a goal of cardiology for many years.

“To be non-invasive is a great advantage over the PAC.

“To be non-invasive and more accurate, means the device has the potential to change the way we approach management of many cardiovascular diseases including sepsis, heart failure and hypertension.”

Lead author, UQ School of Medicine PhD student Rob Phillips said the new study added to the growing global body of independent evidence which demonstrated that the USCOM device offered critical care clinicians a new gold standard for cardiovascular monitoring which could replace costly and dangerous catheter-based technologies.

“It confirms that the growing worldwide USCOM user base has the very best tool available to guide lifesaving cardiovascular treatments and improve the management of critical and widespread diseases,” Mr Phillips said.

The peer-reviewed paper was published recently in the Critical Care Research and Practicejournal.

The researchers surgically implanted accurate measurement devices onto the great cardiac arteries, and then monitored their cardiac output using USCOM and PAC at rest and as medications were introduced.

They found that USCOM had a 1% error compared with the surgical device, while the PAC error was 17 per cent, and that USCOM was six to eight times more accurate than the PAC for detecting changes associated with the common drugs used in cardiovascular management.

USCOM's non-invasive system uses external ultrasound similar to that used in pregnancy.

The ultrasound signal bounces off the red blood cells as they flow across the cardiac valves, the site of true cardiac output, and producing a unique echo from which the device then counts the cell echoes with extremely high accuracy allowing high fidelity cardiac output measurement.

Because of its accuracy the USCOM monitor is most useful for diagnosing circulatory abnormalities and guiding the standard interventions of fluid inotropes and vaso-active therapies.

The USCOM monitor has many clinical applications ranging from paediatrics, critical care, anaesthesia and emergency medicine.

New USCOM research is now being focused on improved understanding the great global healthcare challenges of sepsis, heart failure and hypertension, and their treatment.
Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.

Study finds chronic child abuse strong indicator of negative adult experiences





This chart illustrates the individual childhood and adult outcomes according to the number of reports that occurred before the event of interest. Because it was possible for some children to enter the study period with a pre-existing condition, these are indicated as gray or black bars with the legend indicating the outcome occurred “before the study.” Chronicity is associated with increasing risk for all but child maltreatment perpetration, violent delinquency, and head or brain injury. In these cases, there is a slight decline in prevalence for the highest category compared with middle categories, but in all cases having reports was associated with higher rates of outcomes.
(Medical Xpress) -- Child abuse or neglect are strong predictors of major health and emotional problems, but little is known about how the chronicity of the maltreatment may increase future harm apart from other risk factors in a child’s life.
In a new study published in the current issue of the journal Pediatrics, Melissa Jonson-Reid, PhD, child welfare expert and a professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis, looked at how chronic maltreatment impacted the future health and behavior of children and adults.
The study tracked children by number of child maltreatment reports (zero to four or more) and followed the children into early adulthood, by which time some of the children had become parents.
The study sought to determine how well the number of child maltreatment reports predicted poor outcomes in adolescence, such as delinquency, substance abuse in the teen years or getting a sexually transmitted disease. 
“For every measure studied, a more chronic history of child maltreatment reports was powerfully predictive of worse outcomes,” Jonson-Reid says.
“For most outcomes, having a single maltreatment report put children at a 20 percent to 50 percent higher risk than non-maltreated comparison children.
In addition, a series of adult outcomes were tracked to see if the chronicity of maltreatment still mattered after controlling for the poor outcomes in adolescence. Adult outcomes included adult substance abuse or growing up and having children whom they then maltreated.
“In models of adult outcomes, children with four or more reports were about least twice as likely to later abuse their own children and have contact with the mental health system, even when controlling for the negative outcomes during adolescence.”
Jonson-Reid says that there appears to be good reason to put resources into preventing ongoing maltreatment.
“Successfully interrupting chronic child maltreatment may well reduce risk of a wide range of other costly child and adolescent health and behavioral problems,” she says.
Jonson-Reid cites a recently published Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study estimating lifetime costs for a single year’s worth of children reported for maltreatment at $242 billion. (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0145213411003140)
“What our study illustrates is that these costs are even more likely to accrue for children who continue to be re-reported,” she says.
The study also found that maltreatment predicts a range of negative adolescent outcomes, and those adolescent outcomes then predict poor adult outcomes.
“If the poor outcomes in adolescence can be dealt with effectively, then later adult outcomes may also be forestalled,” Jonson-Reid says.
“Our findings could therefore be interpreted as supporting many current evidence-based interventions that seek to improve behavioral and social functioning among children and adolescents who have experienced trauma like abuse or neglect.”
Jonson-Reid co-authored the study, “Child and Adult Outcomes of Chronic Child Maltreatment,” with fellow Brown School faculty members Patricia L. Kohl, PhD, associate professor, and F. Brett Drake, PhD, professor.
More information: To view the full study visit: http://pediatrics. … 529.abstract
Provided by Washington University in St. Louis
"Study finds chronic child abuse strong indicator of negative adult experiences." May 15th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-05-chronic-child-abuse-strong-indicator.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek