header logo image


Page 11234..»

Archive for November, 2016

What Is Personalized Medicine?

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

1~p R rICuBePaT%G3Ry& CXvtyG+Hn?^5Hb,Vt-i-`kG;5YJ0m[^ec9Ax,st-ipD|JYJrS|OxDjFDyNF,1_p%F:AlkRV|g[qFghhyIkMRul}{ K;>kXz'c8>nM|+X0#n#W'#F KL,zM'yOPT/X54VuU'Qob-Co1FQZ~tA&lzT9 nKLK*Jl)MK3'L'FUqm g9B+oszdyF"Ypjiw>5~[Cnbnoo6YMlf3)t8ld`Pzgua~y D#ng/@WP^Oxi];f+P/gU%CUNcad]OX l[,b:1XL'& >70vbG$yFWf1'w|/ ?00d?> 6=jD^)4s+ekf6Hg1b+6NY"BSNCDhb+&1y0 Y0|*ep! Q^0X}XhJ$Y4=}TD{1iDvJ.Ej)',fl%Y|rNs74}RL'"0ea)' &4w ArA.ckFPFP >w8HkdbO@-%3n!Hm>?hdm.,4(AjhIEh:!5[q2 UcU52}vX'8eY$!3[/"WQ@B7::&K9 }YyaVS3J12B5u3:c;zb)~u#j u,yr8JDp[nGu^[7OpQg4g't$U~1'GV|k>$YmZ;z3[-= h6DD%j`64z}}r6DLbI?R]y?Zd$OZQ#]>}6[~A]+g'kkOkh%}~z{}IsQ~4C|vLm0Bcl&a}*R ,Mq! MM;!):uX:@g^.?_7B_[0K *SB*%W-%/ADVQMV`lIqNZzimhc)'R5RI@_i},82}4(:{ FRDdHBW#:(^h(KmE K b6Zv]>$ gvb ]qEAZI}/$Y.eU86@P;$G*BRljVlw`s IWHH^'(_tVY,H 6r!V(GB 8z,#Bg11G#`4S'2$aUA$n8 ]BTK+f VU-%&9rubeKw!POWP}_f>n"!9wr]9S,3y2Gx,(Pb,OuLD[A'yn-KwAZdKz_U =, x4eZo^Z S%s_zr4%au.UDZM!>eHyce!*q.5_Q1't6@;#9u&+9na Y2b6_72]s:*w^c xGK: y&>gkN gb^8Qid2~$Wk8b.dR"4}Vk*Vu}~vvP9C!/=zR:,2k`EJ]"e7a;kHOdEhUX"VDm5U?fZv=@vk. p,otjBc5We?hbs M&j0rQbq n(z=;9k(+W!e{FW&v(/~5 d`Q_XZ_Ue7%1Q{U8a,B _ED4=%Bf7kv^eaA*SNd-;r1>:2r?;tSThL{KYUp'`nfsP_bcj`GEg_mrs>|# |sZ/FTWY.W)} earO9:(cE"L{3a=y3gV73]0eIL>YL0q$WY!XmxVrYq Em3ImYbjZ-QQ A ^"v RN~j4t>fW(B!pw [] B l~=/l#q,Nzm;[;K|ndldg R#Jr$=_Fp'Salq2zZt dpqOs|WqKn^y]p+#7o~=on1k|jGd un0!:6S:q*o2$tJn9`>ZMA"{~0Z%9yPCu)YAca i}9w}A,|*/Hu5!C!FzJZZl|a3a)?l__%j$/>u/%dbSRkI=*q Aak?]ZlJI6f=o],rs~^hP0X;(@)4B}1F`gWu#X=AdtGwNBrt_l,it]6:R8|igsrd3WVu*Kz9.m :kJuX_Hp9|.M) D]m?6 "3a(A(*+U+$%tE)*xK0]7r(]>YE;V7z Q]("u$YIv%A 2wP@d.k>@l~FS,kE-O;4@7;K:Gl9%&kWUk;+Uo"7-rUk YM+d,+D0IZKZo/=M;Az$ TmbzO*$YDkG75PI?N1]PNufE7-C*bd?JD*rujoes GlUYrNCO.e.5z%9E3&!a4WLA X"}iI|R=%, 6m@k3og-8F3GC#r5hhZ=X scf&7Y9%SL!]cD__3m#h+;CX(G^v!u(w~IKc4*jzz(UG[b")IAH{ 01PFV c2@I.{\`q!9$%)Y"gC]e*L~L3m p~+$1T1Fpcc{h&{4^I9nDdS6&`s-pp7IZtl&%&q;/O|1"hs?uis`Is2dD^%Oc ~|j p0S >~+}(~lY^`H:ha("ZdIeN ]#/fms@3DCv)dU7::1yi4 6"5wPRI/Wp]+ft n7pT_SjMca5{*?4jR3Aott`}nwDx2x=YE*y6S!N={ HN/ Sh=Fc@AipikQ cPn4j0PsiQ|oG 1c>"ZNP[Nt'[O6%c5Hq]B#V ,Y1&'Mm2.t$(6X@H2txw GNbPX4N[3{% ~"}VvWH?a=oA@U%dUUy#-DCpR6X-`Z:*=z3ECqCD?_ve'"#bf:`f^30]/GkCd ;v!9Wn%I+jt" %Xch|='NVLil[&ju_nn.9R[q/^]`M;zU]aq]XxN*sPS7huG-TAE]6w5q,(p8 FHl)+)l6;#pQLA6l3yhpk@YcOnBpZ4m}7p%i &O`TSnDz +G4D6KmeprZthsn,Q]4rFrZ}ByQf=[`X>_F*~U"1YR SI'&~H{u

UV/x1=9oe=%TF*Z>w$C % ut5XU`|zyy%>$1I7#?hAVbkJ(BwW u2Y+iJ-+KqBOqImK"-lGJHcSL=L(B 0fX2jr$*?)^*~O&jY(L7(D+o E(0l`0sl^6Xlx,E#nc 2b;|tlO9 j c5 *0LwDxcw_R}hpk|G%Pl9*jJia&]X6Jt lqr[DX?&4H1IMqk{cf-x2Cu/x|4p;;7t5k~`n,&aC'^M;6i66hm[YM;6Xl!M?Z3kYYMk)6mnn+sMds>jn3787747onnnswS Jqw7+rWaZIV}:D'66 -k025`;5 5pQgIT6%bF1x;VByM:wP-HN%bMr~fT~IK>7h22J{m1|"fYI8Y1.4 {Q:.iG+"h[o,][$S?8>I}"@]2@U(=hcoI2T mR&% Y/,u=H'a(Qo_N^:M=R)5i A=yrPT enQDF EBHZw"`eo9{q$5wl_w/pR$B_G1~O3Mg4Si|&kLl%9K3YOdL,X2dKJ+X2s[63a/I$> Y%>Gx%H q/HHFLQ%Kb}% ffTC EtPshqn!c/vaT6O`%MJoAH}d?XMGv9B)Zy*Daz*WJA<*kMb(pI+E;|!'5s/LeqU G~IgAninq3j7=cf32$cB:NxH+k}tx,!jO'3]~9bTa r6R!j@&h3 *]G 63~i8; +y9/0G1a|p1y&1Qc%7`ox3HVa`>AC`U!h"d1F5u+7a;8FZuC:PbBG$.VRK0jHFh.ylaM_2-jZ#8|xAi7h"v-8/~~`9.7oxs-T?~?~qwsxwKOWr1m6D1=t[Mgu"w7/_`cbk^]<=[wxoh6#|DT?{|[b8X<,`IHy|U$mcS5U_]~iDvp?F1wb9rr74YwTnOOk|b4iaq/Gje6.y{p<#x"~{x|NYn |}"^P++&ztP({xyb=~p#z48zKW9W FR]j%S-,5:r:.Lma=WUx tY|' $B2^h`5%z!m;ns,EQXh:Je%z5 {V DLRTHN6]3)8 ZrDmW=rsIS`yt37 DSl%fs^|uP42s0F8I Xrh5 b3y jTTRbf5)&ZykXh Z@S4.i@NZ]Ko)izsu>ue&@w%L4Mf&AUlf9Z5.EICj5ISZKV,0(JLt9i^w_ bQ/#'=^ZmqVT'l({G.8BOVJ5=_s{J/hzL &M,fP|0 MfIR4decA3dE"{WQp%E |R F"&z6InIYl`o6Lt/c+qW7wEUL{(vo=O4~Sq*(lv+F-@J(@XqU^832i/qwqMiZ>81n03PpLlbTv{22vz^ldi[8sf4pt<> LgWqXd_c B L]se>F[F+[EvI34p?]HJ-`a(}I={4H/4#V8~n2f"^M0Owwt)<-dK,U/K*`?=>8&+0*iaQ#~8jOy#DX29G_^W!iDX2"-wew,+;3zB7|> ^K&JOF(=~*R|,*JQ9'42MU_'),o3R(>r^G^8#&wk~M'Q@6,g5`D qzc> :1"*VZ?b[GnpQI(`` cGe _x.TWWgAJVHU,H)Np/RnbB7y{x-Y?t&G&@LA%. >^:Kof9?6y@/{-kQ)v-2E}Z*j80C"p$f!{[XeL_WHrAx8 @Z+{Hkvgan4lE Na}-~^R=@{ K$13V3/JDI,lyb3i HJ

,-Z(k!Re],/Hk!P-B 8_U_UUwU}j3iyg{a4F#Vw3GEZd+G/*Y4.V^TvikxHQ[dP)])*U-goAo5H.]4dEYukx`ZrtvZgV;w1pNLu7VT&ERBX)^cc(?elXp~6^:l[X E[.S[G#R,[RTqBxD))](a75;vd'!?6 :dGBF>g5_3f.;tv3 7_]wJ ]94!W" Z:ob[ 3AJX5#8>F:SfjJh0}92p6c96H0D:QN;(MI~m2WZ#ddQ _JS1HJ.sUP+SK;H4r7J, *-*$h>|0Igi@X^:3I2)A_x82]48S.vIj68 $iNr_ezH [$rdf'2-;B:)TM)&l21du{dV $K (dPu=V)q*ZH=-'\FF6=3^a`2Ig*TU+^^^^>_+}BP Ji'e: b4Su&}`;7Gu@t`[`oxeF#f,+L9e44i2Ad3LxI+nprlF>J7 SB//,F/)R*>2&pdV5DhT P=?r}@v;s {A)Q OQV!8GG{-WVxH+[6v8J#K20=rb_,, %^8o|qp`n3{~8}~:tP -;:bjM3U;NzVYyrv-sE|+D 3cn$/ZqXGp aHB>e3M!giYE94br:G=

+ h*qmj> eXPHU|),"&)ck~)O;N#ehU7OjSYW)1Z;*QJHV%^dj"Exv$,M}:fLiYPPnPv-1tt>8cH>Dd"1;|OTgk~V&aPJ~9Y|E dNqs)/[G>. ?#40y3_tfD&'y { z,2?0Wv7qQ#IxLFn*@=FRa9_Uw7_[1U_@m/ v,$FN [p;/7P=|6ln*N"GIziN+n^|1kE"TO`%Z"!V bZnC))|+=9gj_38 _3${RIa 3jH T)B;^VwWN@ytwVkD3jNWm6,jv`YZv#=1/Pl58 mrdPq0 g?do' fH}_`:vRr.0zdM ,3A,ibd o5^ybo'

wl9(e+Op[jzhR0zt+'p73voY5>/b)R)UJN>-e =oi}Rvd5GSYc?Yvp-x+gEBye4#=|mYZ"er0d*@poX XgJ? %psY7U/knc'43'tq3&Q]z+&RR4'Aq2a^7[&c%'R`CMZxl>Du`c^!^*ofq^}3oF?t^wbjXWl8H+U9m`Yp%4{j9c5,c/f Gsi _sDpR:asgok,jhz+UFX~Bh^qlU+$O;8866!;kdG;Qje6h~NrY%,JGd??Xa'tJ!52S>$Ou^bc`{|4)4TGa&T&IS|dlqGp&GCjt?}aC?S'6&mhddT#CNX4CO!$(F:lb~ZZh?#^6/l bp@w.1e9Z^ VR#DvFSaS.5%p:~j/L[VL@]v"sdz9rOK;p *)9Nz1NTXFKo=+|9Cq:ZVML7ju's WIe|pIKrv6z!/rRN!BPR+aW [{O_("~2C^ aq6iu{p3'wu^ooz d?s#F3pl[*m[gk3L:LeYbKSbzNtanCtBt-#:U]W^2hf+lD1EO%9} _)yGJCd$JV8BfD*HI #.zf5q-OK5R $=pmL,~B-[},QDL,633uT^Z^'u;G%?ABM"/+9pzB6jt7(*PP~ wq$95cS >l~4-M?-!{x2_[n[n;Kk-_+^>3C6lR!J`[!_nLgL qZD#[Y(`>*t,$CW`AjMC0jHxxQ XI*h,R,w{pS2h4pM2]yGf4orV:-:0 ^QbBJO&E1{J9f[]J9yt)apFs%qHlNXYeen.6/[2J?OAcxB5|>~Sj~[q^Z}g`Z?Qj^3fo 8FF.ah(?jTID&D.f #8eCzu7^||UV[jtrhl/f8-:Ep A qQm(CT]BJcKK0jD;I&,U{Bg)EQ+|evTqFwUgf/l0({F*x|22YbVfQHH}B-4 Jv n wy7Ke,Y'Ic!ZOgLmG d%p A!bYVCA bnYJR*.O.z~o+aFB].wr:tkR:zJw+)tv8%413r+z]YhAw:@C`pC2[vm6$Ha] .G_fvR 3m}%T_n8+S$:U%ns?O-OEs;s.syy_39KsRz,Ciqr:@ZV:FW;9NK?mh*Ug~A3oIVk5U5'vY l(n}Q>;wJP5>u4+]mik,PgSY3[ ^->'h{SCPv4uCl8f"g#Jw2TkE`0>.ME}-QoW+..E2G&H^sy)ZZ33r&7q_TG1l/rErHbWg.$Zp7}J}wbKK)m. 5*u4}beVu?Rvhgm+X*|&dvU?%OAl67 hZYvI%G%zj> hC?'"#JnD/@|:z:;SzT;cQ4%%7jWxHK QZ*rHarfRHoFyyCZD'Q1QyYc!9PG(RfE}pisi%$nAMb"1L*r`~;z6TkZ-H))ouN1SlSlwS

=J+f65}!G hb}~?k]68R+oKy1|x'6H4sc6)ytWKn%Ly4,{z31$FTE/"P).]puF}eF.{]#bS{tJ]KJW%P~0+CS_ip^^kj"z`L9{G!%F0cqD0h+;ql6ie-=xUac}% gU;Ze+Cvrm%I626B@hxL-:kAm?@c.`X+[oM1P6.|[AY^kj ,~P9y}%DZV$EX#SC%(CP HJI>{NR7{D;e9^vc,u4Tv6k[usZ#md$w'B'.c==2 RbFWhw*]V >y&J{=T-=8 P+OM3U?F,EmJIZ;{X lOcoXHnGjTgR5sO=YNr]'zKCJkyjba$mvJ#,1iToqw-3l9e`+"Mw{>j*YuiPVho ?PZrq:_i$lx-}U_}7wsZ{jBgMyKR2(w;mI5Z2Xe8US(tRS !a^Ex@XV{mM1iatp42#lXs!^o% NSZJUMrj'm^FSn hcs[,q(FE%H{Top$@JCF F?wamrhiO)PIMW_L-lYW0ZKY=Dv4qmLb@rp] >N-L33A:Iv0md^GcHRtcDj*TDER,-jadl*0Tntld[) pmKNQ_aqF9h*x7+ -$2OJa7Ok[vBH[x~pM6zY5cE e$^|^eEJk#A >Vks^s+-b fY ~JwCaPB7, Oh$u"Dmk]'b`[^, U}Q`>A.>q@0ERgr>XW&}ybEF)x'*[$q}.?Gh%oOc2`s:yAWoy)XSG~-N$B*Td:7R~B]A2vA"saloy6/)RA hwu_AiAy$A)2>PKE-" ROb1ANB4fMAWT `.L?@{x^P_Q b%F4z %K)z?9~3e7tGtLuD[h5=6aWQh5Y6!va emB$)wz ,6guU)3b1=utJuE4l?B5rp-fx8A='vbn&!jU`TtqII4#?#!qO~@|]My5NUE5r5Bs]b}a0db7#DnNutKHP#1TilX](Adv2XUX'`ZB.FD hJhc@cumV:rSr }]2A$*W[Z$9Z;i;G'fSUsQ6zZ*d"_c}e3lI{X][?R ^d#SWsQ@hrC`<+b%iJ|mnSXaZ?T:+8cKb%&b*.anapw_91:wWw(qF>95/Dd]2/9 l+ Mit@+"&u{=F^gdy>K .yf1@aZ o;|gc/r|i/[y;D+q:Z'{E+(rosX-#;;nt86xj'hMdPr/j?*-t %{i_tc*/EX>i#+]K1U}$?{)h`EU);g>8~];64TpedH=5GZ=D"p,^Pv;rrRQ !Y[H7DpGo4 YdcQ!b^3D%NZJ6-<`}w>&:Znb,*S!464[q 6X3!/|7c`$`Qm8Bj)eN9A) @ 4 f+~{5e,mzWfD 4jiezQu>R1NwC2^=`R"Eq<79S1NT6[2Hpz3i#K!N{GIYlW;!o88@*e]{PQ_-b/qG<-JPj'c//k/{G/~@eS1f7NdPNp`t*S4:M6V|F/TF*ymd{$<6/ki__0a^VvrP>bo `eL-BSS^(Q.)=}K0NS~[3[t}kF|zn?:Yujjj 6f6~sz@| B'gAuL|4 w*?,2q_0bK XcuB TI3%U,@} #[ ol)m.8YF>-qprCa/lDR' Oc@<{X}xthR'a]azhrlfuI*iEGw%u{ZfuTU*3u9-V6l"XQZ9*CnS5wy]P.+cfL;Ho^1VSV$M h@/ifMGYGe*k(v/&M,ft[ge4&vG)fm6oNZ5&'3Y&_g~d0,--EKCavxUAl;a&.*k=Zr&=~]qM/rM=y%{WI2%I/rz:t415J8Tt9.l b >Uh(+"|dy&v)d`PvzjqLLO/3KiF+l.S]YZ"mI1r0&," /zG,F[+L:Jo,~rkXb>&br"QBB37Deb]RjrS&ImXJ`7,pAZ):Ng% 8k[SnJEK_]LI/My5tp$c> 9B> V^tqm-U41x0y)J#H^(3 BBICDdBhnwfaeDk _KqjD;I)bVF4j;P5wJ+";8re>:KLgZrc0=]:66LA)SGpy$[/D^7]3 au6 MoE Fh;%-af@>0rjOO6g%.#qA(t,k hDi~"th@^=>Dx^C7d#0O> u|r09s>#}1ejRmx ,ee|/qJ}PY6!K{G^fX,NUKg*`Z.9ygh'GR#@^F:^+#1lF+/Etx6(E>2v-QuQif5Iect9 jMbX(wJTjV ?vW"EJ@CISC, kJ"U<=K5x( JJGR[_[d[za(45TRs;bU<:pI.zZ(fx opuN) K%)ib0}p^]K~~*e>^OO.v{ ?>m! B*zO j6j,7`[UF_fb[KRuXu3A~?8LtNufT3~"># iq}sfjIm#/yGj2D g+l;vF;/XhN{l-?jb~6WAc'bP]n(d a99GVDT;}aXPO:dsO% + i`~"64t5BF8yI?saK?@)cfl%#/{lcxm3)~9|3EzsZ6bX7NwV 5uC fY9Gq?FdvA2yxmcq"~!*;6S[WLYk]&U#wd1$m1-e6f;Dz Ki1DcJrca!RyYlqlW-([W_c2kG27T~O?dK( p#%Mg6|"'*:&P/E^/8|4T*.:~RPFmT0#S7>5P /3hCXZ7y +APtc-f5M`XEHA>Ir=FBIpkI7"`g#]C9-blGh+`Bx[q8K&:[bZP->**=hP!^C.6 :^'%vS^S,>G~#x J`W1#XBCLieMT G3r:P9`A Z}Y#):m9( ,!mSp)`R{-,dC5`jLAFA)0/32w9q"4:J&eAe#B9Yqi"9fj.: {5c[z}7FCt>d:V/Co_}K'JH9EAPMhZGKmNEN:.{"LQ[.Go%zM!fTw&#AvR i`JiNzhO("{Yrr*b0Nf8rDDGYsdY1kTz.aX&+HIw ^hiM:i9\c8YN&0`8m=K!(hVa }=JNT%CkTGB5c7;Dv3bp:8^" 0 %yu JutZ@Z75xA!p00!&9b$#7zZ#/t&K~ qXC8Rw9p*s:& &}W0zrwuZS1y pYkk}KRS QYr /NP7RQMB[sldVo 6"tz+A-0VsqlfcGI-k"5ISW~)Qu)~{EDG.qPhjk{RL?")Eu*[>[s3~Fexao0oD}8DG.knn~?l%{fZsDqVt,mK-iiP~T$P^V5}K=1HIrZLmc^iCv[i22Z v754$e-n I,VT3iutFj$1&qFfAU>@{K0x lgT-@JOT+%?u=T g`1sVCuxzUH !Qj2j;^0RiWaTZ?ZeNlE=d8gw'$zjkCF (bKcf(@tm%;[I6EqNjj~rp&d!*} te* ^j=X^RNz+idL5Y7N&qp

poeJ%HbS-g[S^[,& ^Q3POAI!9nJBO.Cb1e7.W1MrU_lxu2`vD'*,;a4zYC;afMR ]C%OUhEq.=Mkl."B),$f2@4 U&$u#3N6hY2s#Gau5HiLLQjPFA5a!A|3J&]2$/|R/j GUf go5$vMyz_-b.{K}u)'MWILv]dby ^vtyO.m VR9V0H=dF^rQ(;RxTU&ZK_p2$n5;1r%5R{)k;,?q'If#5?Hm,RK3STuCo p)c ^0H,C$7cP+e39JH5o{Ws8H4 =u(q g"sjPQvHMsEa >!:t(]Hm8PBu4x`3.uI1[cE|F3'm.>,x Wwu@qq[9GZp~Hv%^TqAnq9>Z!!,kT4`l-=y)^TT1E4(PY>]v)sA1.jQD.&f;$Qn>x:Zwx#&1L(i~~KXNn)oa n?"8m9!(%+qx5msQ->SS ,'aq6;V+o%C&7?|zLBTFwWu7Pzv0p,b4^9zZtH^D>uVS*;.[6.8?]dLc^3|B*:F=uW/z%[Nr;Yy1d=NK6=evy:S7q9v32r]IsU;o-R7Kw[Os$q'Owj~G{ "YWS||}?}~__:x_5/(TBKk,4%Y4#)N#,:Cd(l^pfQ=dVQC%DK.8Hs:wH ] xqorjv!J !T@$ide>'8{ 7nRkMFJ`qBV~g^lqI9imClpUejW~_+8dP*`C+ Z [rYq6DDIsb>DQ3TLnTmf1%,"qQF2]|;/ZG0Hq`*"^ )Pa[IYtTVz1E.TvW+;P6&$u-KQWnt1>s%2P@u-1FkXu 61A{V*@ZR+q 9(hKx@Wj u`kSax,/?B5h=jpj5![_~dJT>,dz!^ywnlkmRwk(GU uHB~.X~E}Ei,s ia"]yjZ^X.f)]ko8}];O/BfRF}!;|#s56~n>>RlFafCNqkZrt]eF>W{votrgQv:7l^~GY| B>bx/J&ASdzZ&r(u)( 2 4/SJGn642# lI$j ,Oo{p(Z{!]*^~@CmK08pS[~z{V4[f77L.MbJma'w^~_G7g|=A].F1./3??/RWSe& k#Hja nbP'5 OW*HxdJML#ZM2#&1:=A-^X$nBIx9)Z9OU1*sh>2DFRi*0!:G+o&}sh?K.DQp]-IMW h2 %U:{qC|f8_uK92oBOf-b6N!wp"&}4A@ZCz1O~qxB-.s4l}89h_Y-0FD@`8[09wI&p,,3.A1FC&opG$b5)|h^Q> }?.i7B_UA=G+&ks- eCH8HnE__,E}ze9[2mIZ$;#m-he7U{mvKigGvuoEJw]`Pm7/]+aF(l.^ TF$^dn;/L"]8j@b>V|TnQ2OS|0^c),>~U$2,^6kn9}$JfmroAklu, ?"IYr|5 gy2pA&5Nt 83,E{".N*@tfrM3_hon9(hTI_ Ks _~xsmTUo^5D1?@id)3,3c9lPJ8YA2? 'w*ziohXvjUcoQxg[ag7Zew^dDi6ulmSk~T ?}b}FWJ[*uq;v33>ob`

5:w" %+;gZaEVgU| 6.=Jv]'Ymj5SY)q&F*Y^X@~2q`u7`j^&Z!5y lK-LA( ]z.I=OLIqr$uRAY""q#2TDv#6EN[[iV=qgUfB(pJ1UIQ!||&@ =uROcW#?N)BfS-N=P7K)xcD[yZs7u++G|{|~t*QExW"GaEU-hSVX>ppI.7Ko-(lESm,PxbFg1_RTA[WFt}.]|~V+ky98[j=(J7^mGXS{}w@K;qkyYBV7{5?#z3^|+5W}Cf+'Mc"h9lgF7Z2eNn^%m69|( Xv4r:s5oo.Ni7f@8 *%#rHmAc[0]B&sT`E%gOf|pcT,$H?' lIGehNsn?WNj)1$s p#[Jb9s|v}N4_V?hQ|3B*mq{v !S @#UpQ)ZW|cMiCS 6yQj=UG|PI9mT!@Mhv)C|1X;.kO#T B_Fb]Cb3zG{MK[h7a5nS|]>IMc/R_^Q-I k {b]SZxwFV`S/v|1rzTH/67m^qC)tW0-NNy]H t'G *siJltI'Gp{#`yf;"9X~b:&q&e/$Y2yz_]HMs?}][NV^K' %nhC~c^Ri/$b%*2L [Ck@/uk:]9u-BSd@w,JuIk8}67Sf&Mg+ B'} @hsA]hkgx p)y-, ]*"xV4g |tGQ% ;L#:} _>>]Ri&aGt6[NL$E4XYafLh:J9Zpf!0Y(?X3Z2V?LYudt5d**&ya;"k"|zET@D 1r9+7^-w$C*{m&CWiU)J|1Bq$&BLd1L Z;boR1:tyA7+.9*Z"+4Uo,q.8k6#$>g]+/4&I"uEsaiSGI~-4:.&41Y$o$* Re=zPq@J+8gHJ]5VZA j^ HX.[b@oCVX[7%)hQuyF+~Bt9BN1%1}2dA4jk}^&7%OJ7@6:4~(yr6p3E!2@x~u(_CtRHe1C)K[$/M)l'A]='wl:B~oiT|cESRkK|*1glo+=a qp=y?hH VB'e-}>{&;T`(dmzTe^:tqh0$xYcmE;:>wj#ccpRzL' n1zARoZXSL`V "1Kbsa 3K4;.40T{6'xn9" VMyO/^X[:Zh!28qqW.W%&3$%f6Kg-@-J4k~^;Wg`'b=hzL;Z ("h:e2 it]_%+ 4T+W2bTFEOtrSr6Xn IOF"s8GN%`PhCpUl

ed @SvUt,K,#=[b>)[Np:~HfoTua6[e{e3ZaCxZn(965/XTw^JdJjw+&i-`y F 2LhM1)o=o4~=[rqwvj! H^jaQTnO)zCy&#I~Q[8HpD+{-rgqz($?0dBeTZJCt8ZY{Rvn>N4t g+Tgf_&>~^z{mC%g hw`_=^L_TOUXoK(6_Qk_0Ci^H^ZAU'F$$MoQ^d3#5a*P,O.+)?Oz|OqiE+_ wU/XOonhYxU5d0Sz.RZ{tM/3BmsQ\u'&.UQ]#)Lo5HseSa5F.n R6REx ]OvtEq!%N3t 7rFsG`D@vNyE _]N^ AT^Q5}qQ3Xl@#(dB"}4U9y|Zdk%Vy,[ >GI07{BdE'K]7=WaKZyg(]O{R~.LYgLqso&yGpdv$im0]@i.GpE?f8`-9/nXa~E sHkbSs%=Co7sbnD[O(fz5#+=hoo/!&JQhFs%.M8.DJMguUt5rY@D7jEgh8 3> 0+6_He@PxO2IuU36]aoCI`-RQi(;7P!/.zA~'qt*R!p n4$OUptdp@p=u SjU2+EjE{A^NWrp&d3dxFkNx.*N8,SU$NP"nHl;ZU!E!Bz3yco8^u~Cx Uj70Fo!t]&^d&

8'tjXxDfv%Z0er!S9 JWy4L9-wOQQ'QBAyn()ZlG t'aimFv_jIC sAJGsuu$+DWn^5,"alqjqEG:{m6J^B_"IhdM~$qzI yJuD]%zK>b9+5B-CW!GIfs#b>idTDiq*2m}^lunRlyY@+''P$|j|.r@MiKTtp/124CA?Ad0FT!Z2w7/A_,&u}RuNM 9k-3}qXM_F$$,/88"mc=hC{lnY2>je [&G"Em3vbR% p73-4Fb65d7Rq)DJ/k&_DwXZ(ht5/I>UZm"NJYR(@&,/YlMqx'I#cx5r=miXZ9pmKVM"0 lPVfv8MMUts)|P0yNP`??1[s`_8Z"f2H-iV?O1>~g!'?awe}1.:8f~X^4hG>Hh0^MgDGldbZ.XL9 .Ce^XP3+yD"&A>VdOez^g$ &?e@/rcJX*iPV|jH};:y ybMY VCB_ AG_`{EF$FmDmV,my@U|zSyZFa=RkvFnw77eJ*HFu Oqkm(B G]maO|^|rd5x(2 #>>Nqy#V }f&qoyv6=N$sT F9DU7DM(px!b4XZ7Dpv~/OA*Y9ZDr0HAq%{p`6%YoAfSbU]<_>x 5H%a9_C Kb1^x3m[P>7/vq-~GR-yH,BX!p*q,C[Ba:/( U8wLJ=)5:PH-'JBM*d]-lV~bOMn_,bUwpIE|3p]D[ozV=ylI&|d$N~#nU,Wo o .!~l LsBASG /pV$Ib5o_/7/qjK.Nt`b sTm>Z`in%9O5@{*}fvbkyjPrj17%J404>x[~XYa[1A9 07A!Kpc,FPm 0UKpuB=BSvA ]`xM`N(8uR&dn(M1b]8Ysn( %@W71 e/PVcI7 nrxU*] $2Ph}V};4p0UKY5lNu:&Uh1S9I pgvfBpSB=`Ppg]3qRC(0J-wwsIU3D$oRyhd,yGp2VQ"DCI}2^s/p_Sj_~>c`3#T9^=G.OmAXln&#MEx+'|ci9_BzpN>{v!Aw8?'`8A}Lfc|ZC)%06NRmF #(E[H27 @Rv,G:-i^=owbUXtOI`X2 (>NgpyS%sgcH&nyXSX94'Q4&.Y Cvxe.Xwrm 4+Ma-[hw0""_8 "2|~Yr.oqi..rr)!o!QbE`-c 'cCXExX x={(3)+`d@:pfo-GL;;yD,A'6ry (RAX@b u_?/AP22y3;`tVjV 6sGKvL:!JED?^r#Bi_ ( snua0}X4h1 }w nA=}1@"W/9K#T*&S9yzqr?Kzic?jD#Q0k3so9OC[+U}ELKc5v?Xl[n0&5 )`z.8 cx+FPx=1pp:Y~'9U?a6z#Q 7wj%,?3x:o G4>6^&hcfk}Pix5Sjc ~O1 endstream endobj 40 0 obj >stream HWMzC))r`0=H2i^fI6m,?eW="?A8g~6ayCu}6l-B+=[)&z8m5c;pv)kE-(;|(ycA.oa:pvQ;KR[w!nuh8f.p1JL&1m-A9c.UTo))HEm;|aDu >PyeMjV@jO7n+q'*M-[fP=zO-CK+Ej:.ZyO1OZbm#--mrz3>}Rru=p6nS-q^y{lK1Cf3Jsv9nW}y[6$"CM&f F3a_}K+a~yEWi#zGds]I3'?yZF%3.@V5Qo]#o`2P#oeNzO3[QdXoW]??mC>1iSp +lVLyO4&L2MDV|*Tb;M>k-z+ka?iwwIQ6' !PD5lZe(SoX Q'itb+ 'Ha;{Al4j 2Pgb6:6heDmCw%}?*RV 7ZXllPJjzp@I4CZ --Y0$0fS.ih${U8wR@BpS^dBu#:)hBFF:8 i,h$ S2?a9 ww*B%8- ZS?,g&@p%iM`sEl_>Ji qO}wLkryLi{k adYl[zkNdeB6N(yVJC|9OL]Th7,#.:> Np&h,IVdRDdSm1=dsyfn@6fABOaulU.dv3[(n_$g5+lf5k!5 |0ou&JlhRCjZP1@OL8N]cyEU)r^P_3tzZ-V/U{/dYw6lSs t5oCb Kd j1sFf$!w+.Sz5uGCyEy v#YW'~O~PNi5kGd3W.^/Z2fNZB I[ fd7_x-.-qhy1-M}$Ig)q;[at}SzDH}|IG n{z*-`3{zYiu_ v;)(kNRX|EZO9MJ|]xN;RSjZFU,uX(4h%Y3~UR=dfj]bSgn~*jTDy#HuOQg}U:yT8ChcTj/PS{): T/cGrR?7FX}|W??zL i8-:F'L Ngovt %lQ j%kpAT!s.39K{ 5*Ir$_tYnB2mlJ} B=keTuGgj]S)MZ8_.F`+{6*nxq$LA6kI*?W~AhklQvxRRw6J+A>:ohJh/0:{q.h(OPJ!eQU`^`G}|;>6 aA{JlH/ $!tWA1MM}ViI./3NW&9vmr{yZU7T(G60h!Mb-C#-z6N}o:myx3l9`,|C0.}5vNJM,}>Y5[|:Njlr }mrmSV]bETUbCwe}3[A 9p6R>YMuwLF+h-HEd~1nhUId-F7~}wA)Whmf{|CSuBkp*LE *pHaZvNu@i P4e'v}!{jusdn Ue*xw1q:jp[;>R{w|.DwBC31hOzjdLo 2XQ9|Iq_];#884NiI/4$f_{JUW;s,,o4%m>;"|yl=*8n9|ySOxg V}4o]}z>2d1`k9o6}6]{+>ifu[Tw6-U3ovz&ur)]H}2{I]x;6sGWaZ{'inB50PQ>DS NQ GSv[M?vcUM3~ |L=6 SgCmwUlqohw'yFjD=t7> bYyeRmt1)eDSw HbQYQVGu+TG|"&~+AdiE8s?q}_4p3l"VmmV93|m}?UA+KO;BX! y$'=~kFv5 IU`"PIwd$,F[4=-92@jKW87Sfn@q>)5NJ}e%hJH+HrGQ#h,=BC>H4Qgi8r :+8jL+^X4E"6aQN:IpDNU^XQ[8s-Uzuz dM H2uWC!]!"X)m%jMH8]xW=6S7t}J4?T%GD`u}pMAK}B=Gp4{* G*@Is]veC)]=#"NudAx!d`eNSN[8-9UxHAgy4S?'ozEBXi.7i@!LhnW>X"deG`bMN^v*O]Z@5h:N 6U`{]m}]y5 yMQxguw]}# 4974UT!a{$+P$/(uZ1e7 VhRL}Ul2& Eilj./D>zn{FtO_/ l 8Q7?!6pPIU*!G`Y)CFvLZKq9 oIVuEPp?|V l9C/(ao~MYV|nMQSNXga su t~2E1nB, hZC3K'pSSoKIgcW4.}+yY_;yrK2nG(5'8-jS6b#+tG;G8|J`jo)/@&/;2AW77W-]X.@Mpk+TCP9b_U Tc{jvkls1MG 8x,T q961oA+|3$&k$b)Y5h~'q{X *kS#)ITtgCwtCGAo2bGx~bJfxtSjX1!w5U8( [B5$s5wA*%%.}Voi4$IAWZ:d[f#U_pocn=b^=zXh;fJ8a `(:1y$&@;}2/1/~{1.,uand3n48?%.0b|GUuCdetfUDu#|'k0k[kFjB6 ,!/_E[ `>WcI!OX+``O:j+ eg`D8y1uuC~)q5U`wSL ac6@%S:d!edpI|"9$1ZG|f,sdf^_oCL5#*V[KI31!xT1u lXw+`~&AEkaro8&H*x/CDsU?BOr+q6MR'%Tym. lqT4`u;!o0aqjIb{z^&n'['~~pG6=hOli^X#VVCahjV"GFL7_%7E TA/J2

G^QjjZ/u40*Qa"UOl$!Y8v;.6!?!),= w6,G.^.MB?X@o4)(Qu}$k"uA#@x])H(YMrBRLL nCh5SN"_pEc6x0"&Vw.LI{]>WUY.f;tqh*gBfAQxm| F&G1Dkk?M]]=q-}VF{)YM:19% wBy9LcFZb33!8fRh U #/J`UwdLF+d lyiEMV~4DGw^WMv@t~/M0z]ry B!k_7eAgJN=T%gMhuTY(;G_H0=MSrwkP`X7_B5.%m7m3#u&b-7h&]Db'9>2kdidK~"*" ,QOQ `z/cb"f_i6aT@PF!Z5%E'9 Yx`(HgP0'uLAwA }k, lkEAI4~tyP)XB"HMAD,9 Hk5h8u#C>xyd?BxeKdxFl2B(/yIRYpnl;mpwJ,wmO5~wR"c~ & QJ(GA>r{M~a+m5re]KA/2TQh/X_S PhzJ+NW3;$OL IUi}SAji$Q$zJK7: luxT|ke:Y"l]j o(KOX>/ F`jKQzW|r3S:>t/vqu#-v>v?XFE 3n dW#(B^A n NgZp@4:K%W ;`U57E@mYz PY+%Ve~SF-7?*O1dH}l^ alPa374;?DG*aUF#Uvkk8o ;uMy:kxDd_\Hm f;}-M}P{>QnZ-BQ.{2;'Zw&R6.3vzz:AFWYNP |si5uw@s`$Ym`nuQP!Rx^5)bu*Ouu^jA:}L}&*)5yJ~lPe5/C^X)SSd7`&lx/=S*KQ-+C"'8=%>3 F%ITPDUr6jDGf]-6A)0%lbKn/& 3zN%jB*'}JX/sl-GcG?Gf~tc[:$k*{$Je)oG7d0;jr{ jh&>8/N&@m&rq[/qvxsRQxSCSZui#M17wtPn0;*aPQ"|BU dKCZ |~$x%+}52rn~5GS:eA1 JyRigG#_1QtHi;WI]zKk hf(%f-cHS`&P$th=]wLxCyyA}V18Fj5{;_zJ(Sh%[V{T`NJ+P( Yf~m+])WB7p_4A%]u#:%g.c2X$8twx|bO8Z8[n2Ui[5DR=+_1vP|A^H?`1p9}>GQETznxU`@'slY Ak^5TU~:kSP;/XZ7Pdvekue>g,~],Hp^e"Uk R7a9.*4k]cr>Q.a335yXJCq&B. SYSg)OqQ2vsE=^+T;SX-ea8s=(H.Xf@}zB':y1W%m6W.uv8_r7OKKEGDJmoM5O('1fI'yOtyb'Vfc~6a6'nTj=#Tj'{pwA"jp:O[tDYE?lX5Gc+?yGa"Vj`7sv9R*lJ[p.=JFJmH+JOK8. 2kWOUeGYn=aJ{i%oikzL:+jO)+g&B&"pKnM'>]rReo.&C-~Vcii*C4m&"yXBRiYxmP0/) gPQVMn1vbzdjT 7~p`S.1&uOs &y '2fLvF}0G[TBI$jBHL.mD^gR5=,qb0h P6d'oPS^B0vLLWe,z"B.urnClKa,=6k'Sd|+D|z'y(nd3o(~m))I`'= }^G^Wr~sA= vgmh^'0[I",r"NP`, $!*"Q"nB~S%X~p3):hPg}:1k=ml|dtlp 9`8`k*THRt26jY{,=#XOa B>l5pM`Up?+nw^d9t }.:'i)lQaMU_hSgFiU_4|)M9ptLg[?g&PG}2%U=b*$+1jRDH',`r3]_Eas! ag*Lqpe( By2mRA}'x9)Au#$um2O#(O)=2Vlaqsf8)3>mn8lLnUgW$bdj~0vDy/

#U#7:kM'G*fZ'#/nN%K#PM%W))n {HgIAJ3`j="7m!0e3szAc9i a[,Nm#P'v~|%1o9]9z6daXm3M o!` ep,h'7cCdhO9wfo]FXvJMvG2bQy5*M6^h@ )jnKRZno8 xuX*C&/j_7eCx5k^{0F=6M~I1#{:!Ug~&WP@4 l-PJ|,VyzDZ.)yYr&E"(@"&m:e mjL_ 7DfB|bO#$fe*{gJ*svLp ]tV;_q*4M4eKB3p,B_ x7eBN2m.JSy&q]7z bM|^u@L=ZFJ8u2;x,BHcdPI]

P;,l$R?^'X{g1Axc~3qu`;0it]3z6j%[NT5)Is }*-4kVl9$(@F#H%I 4^wd:-PLFCW=roQ4N.ys[={#s-6ekgWk|W/k/]g=Z);d9^z0nj5@RLIWnk^%JB%xoI>$LH nB_vg =&_7kDFl4Ib?~b f(T^ct l=*G)@|_Ihq,UQ$JN 15uvlChP P6p4LcmYL%4_AP1X!Ba*X0$0zAV2:"w C%5/bLX|E|%H"L>t#`w"6D*#8vLXZ5 E&3= 2P+0PMkRo HWP`xarY|`v: 6k_mA#%~]-Ce#"^{C1ApOj;kd;14VC q{mg6Zr#O,.nSst7-D`q]7%KO"huV} z`p KPMgaR1ppHLOC7|Buy'|4y7m^o!H>k"+F !m^cX71gqI4x0N LqH; I!# _ PoB)a;d3z!=l Vd&D=R({i^%:cLy:'N^$k~NpcO0X~m:OqPdFiQ +t(N='MF/>S[7n[#OkX[K]&O`Hn,~0|$+akl t+t?'-i*SwI|m e6],HVhtfxFGt_9%kMT7p"2dNj>&XmL4sqsF SX6y-ZZ{kX,= zAQipP}3yyZ*k6]>/5IE^4isM>;O57YW?9LMl7I,DdH/xV Ps#o@ gW&6>g-_zt9Qy5uScJNweMI1c&8hucp NtjW+x/{grx `iNd5~$8=dsk!)V$8 5U

vD[]4[vjF8a!N]!Q(.{ _U0xrXt"Uqa0^d)%JhkUF- CR2 uH:ZxS`'CZ]R['%xE~M|b;X#7;mo]$d4a=eFCa:z DM2 p{#lE *#t&3: LYIYGV3?58xV2}nh5 ]EcgoM)[o'Fpq>!nycO] f N,mQ-kylt.}6^8{AG{AoO4!ROK6{@ga(aa%]WKb)}+BC$U[Yn>/0HJtaA=$/(*+:NGa5oPz{%|hVqAK([L> oB n8?[x$;vhYL|~s:tsX}>WFyNSfucJ'}>t8km0Mx7~MV-y~X?q{:c3~O~6:je]`D`q@/`}efO8-w_@2[xnu|$KzPF "5VPa_tfK #vl d?;W%0L`q z9n v58ap}tZI M-ZG#{#h_D)DERih Z P|~zb5j]"oUHKz'04`dxc7TD2zA1XVeCrn/E|k6 >fXO q&Xy#yXpiX,bn`H{QOnu~{t*>GD+at}Uv|]g'~pgh>'{/Vptis87FZc{lS=~^~o^6JdU|kxFG :hr&'5MlD;}II2ZGsXmI]d!Aym!"X6pF4$E2Cm t#OE*@k=CI?=UyY:.[&tr%YC-.RPHu_)Ck7>V{|G^`Iq TcP|BcpZnK%a2[Sv/?BI$fI}Y;{zAzE/~}C*0Oly,W4d+!?^pKoU;)9mSJ>_022^"rR%!ZC^4nl73cQOO3*T,9=+yunf3?Sb$oqJ/t$7 [!+d.{s:k [n=,tcwrE~!/@ T{6mOEVP(f]

na3$AgO}u7Q' 7jRz,A4+6j'ZiAm&7 1,mLY4&^^mqx-b%2&"1Zpy6F9Z|BItj (Lo!E ^rEO.#YZN8"6t71ItV+z?KP.c1?}j>:MO&sGM1l"h2UlU'u}h%UqV['t3D! 6~] lB%8#a>.WNWkM[x.2&]8lFal,)VNR~K@?%,S=Xupef0)BoCb@:"E;h 6]O4{l`EntDcVx_2/D?b>v~bC11f .N|aC46AdGkEQg3m nh^''#38!)5 :v!Vrh3 hBxh61'2oF~^PS9ys(&fx|t>1oV8CL(w=/Pi!|J]U[vo5%K|~~A:[8NU3gs%b_1NbX C$Bs)O[jGFC!Q 'S*zp]N(d/.B 'kL= f CI`e^*lV5;I&z>u-S!>9MB`Zi9 #"8(B.+C/K mDsm=8a$*2iJ=e@_K,N9F%oWgVG|.P,z,,'@N'J2NRuQ 6=),D]fwvl#2HV 56c. QaYxM64~;u;:9NKmy6E7>oJ~AkXt3Apn]r }OI_ViO~M?(Y arxTt-OqltB^mj.***(amI!?`e{[V9~dkQ-?4FSQ.*_,/{PauUNSw_7'Oz$:*i9Z*7Z5}Y?Y"f5P N ]v Z1vNN` =sC0oN0)czZ6K"R-HrD9xsG"IUwN [4Vy*Yjw(N(8 Un}9#d/E/IrzR]@ZS(zC6j=JrFRh7SRpBN-BI[9p|CvQU7K"^_Hy-rc_BG$HExER3dQ":^dzs8qTYVC~+ G1`T}t>p8v>Us`j(e4kc= =1{Uq6&_ mNh:k-i7whx={Xu;V5gju{^jT$X[p?cB+(>O;Nmf:F?@ u[& ;|C)[$kw'@(`!3;xw`n-zBEJbh,D"g_+uJ9Y=h4bP'RR afb`JV8'g,[BJ~QmubcFR25:>U6zzrQVsd(r7q'`L@ Jth$6`H;smOIl^;K##)#MvQg?8x7Z@h!L#q S" ~$F N :Lq1|&C%|f>'~4fAPPaf`vQ*-9R]Pl$*J`IJ9dH)(Cde FVY=mMVVrLwa>D7eY*q2#p8 Ms*|Tsm,,S xuexaBx)t7cY6a@VYg"k{Q g70ob$0aI$aae+zL2>X{XJ@$%X cKd|yc/r0y PNB* GmnEG*6O$S h}w@!E1`J561a%QZ;:C otm@1`]#>LbF)9 +(/x/R-Dh9;nEnK@+/fxxn0C)$:y1y2euNne[xI"];p.7*A6F@%EzL5i9,)b:*>p4-;R%TEEwS{hS.5(;3Jb7)%mfCsp dtnO>dWw2Q`L~`NjzLB1E(g$H2Z?tDx2p;o3@-9gTTrsPY- g5W?2:=B3_=j37^chv%sf{GB&kY$"Vqb.e*FO;UN^bQe;@HZJrJV* UhYW!a fa+ FNgAu@^`6Z;2KH^4B~';uz*5:=f4j8MR[VrM"+Ve?1"XYpQBXz|o.6J+'W~]dD1>;JW.>mwDeyVo{Y=%t$xBf7nyrP2z&kV*i=X7}@lN1nzsm&=;GJ'#dJ4wN0d2v+]}HjJH;/jYy6V dd0I+rzNj~m|zrtSZ(nC.jKk|xkn&C5eAZy5BNKC:lgf xnpSmnATk+iQ9E_[u~ iCHF`e81S't$(dK+"GS 6Oe,AN_y}>b3e%=lyS{N w}Vc{Y*kC;7 ,lQ5kYIk:l}_p5l!d R&z!X.uWC*>P_w nEMQ[dP;v DnxyNEPoio{ elJ/Ucy/H>CFo@8v' zEQ`'9A*s8Gg2cZD"]AIlJ -ftAR4=zo$=?tu]^kV)p!Gql |a Kx[Kc69v_q?P8"pmgI', ?o3!Njv  .{n6i $/t+EVNs/Iz4pyW[]6fQm@-z^RYCgq>*"S|&daCzy)r',fn0mQUMXSd?h~hqjK9}B-g~M?>.%>7cE .LWZClpAx.#cJ]OFvL0 At&REw1trG;$|^RZ{7(6sHF'*3'}B]~@8na`.0AFP;:RMn;fwJA {g8P2jb1Op [=5.

`Ca&[4y;'7g{9kiZ;:37WxP|:2iIoYf!HIsad[V8}sesC$7ll4!#.cl;TKfj59ztBuT rL/BN)5U){H$8.JJI,F){6[B~.-uN-A{7;L2SE [N$Bc2O7j+&2FO{I/).Sl%l8'_g `u=,ri[T;3n@mQ;rL$1u&EW;at< F!zI[e|"Y[^kGv"IzXPGQ ,14?DwUk[,,{55Xckh)KAeKSC Rw |J|E%lUw]Me1?9v/R#}x3k8QIM3vxBjDRUrU3Z%;-^Cej!&|7>2;T4oSG]I{ k'R;Oa j Y ]kjwyQpaO$gvY2jo?VZn^n]CB[R^?/?<6o?o?zo~agIRTZGz^^P: C:wS@4kYJifC<-4:2]a4(vMEpt|q9sS(6ycf7wU,"`L8d@vdm"::~yj$he9Q8N: p+ eUjO9Fm_{:k~:RvDisFbXO"$fl<[V(P+0:x4J&|*'}gui`U)hz5OB"+A>b.9XX/OpxuJ!aNR'vz?N`oafWPj,7Tf.CROM;IaTF,Bue/u<^gk*}Pz4Gs1Qo wcVcMYORk1Mw5 d2[bo&9Ef-u5BpJ|J&SMb0@tX%B~'HeH$Qh!Boe+9#p_u r;Y}H 1z]Ekp1*A>utRn=+F{NLM{Kf^CRf54.Tw(5jWB'#sEF8k*:]P.Yu[eRUj) U{Mksk!{ =MW l#.fTf6Q}euZ8G(}eUFFZXjgU"MTI>7$z- 'hzj="7G~ J6DKbjyj0%A5:0mH>`@* [Ebyw,=+DHfrd)/#drhO$5@opm:*Cd`@{VE14t|k"V<5!Bs8FC=ikJ~|o~em$ xw[e$2[m}h6lZ]dzSV(4A0K#`d/Ld+5Y*)8DCEFpn*^ f8 .)O( U$< FHm=ll ,) (^ZQ. My &LdF(h;;wDTt:Qpz!Z!jMkIthy@xB"N!/V0+&KU!mCS3,~? v9E@i cg);IxDqUhX;D^R8M(@fJpi$ '2RQ-YcMaB Xr4K]79vw$?=!{fZ#UW zz?"iuB?A`]jx}f><,T8coHVP$hO&3kmgo9)Vn8v_t8ES3}.UiPVd*ZZC91PEaJ%G@;JD}F!Vu*]^(zngA. /dchfo,pL` 8D-"_5yG3a)BMR:E2*7H>m 1"3%8- j+xlzXp2X[eF=3^J$z66d :C[;1+/ F_Fh7F64/C3*1U=by|^RxR|8 `$. x]>f l3]zMU3Pf',J_01_~p6l@Vd%4ik`O{#'d6}:5 |$`oS)`hgqhM05s+ajCK*cH#l;A*khSR(U)sEvR'r6K:rg_s*UZ?{HH BG)RcqN8eQ-I `M+.!^T*J3i/p`(?5/_RQCW%|`ST@uwhvncHkX%w}@Lc2v:S#}v'&pTXhqE .%0^s'-h8g9gjr8Gx_2[7EV`O !qTm>z,~ C$cwL|`|4PXJ1#UAHbK05'ga{@NS}psp&_?X%}!sx/*?,&>iW(iS6!2`B%}_wg9kI";1 n&Y'%aK!c+"&B0{&XAD19Xx$RgfO%bTd,?lB"`AewIM^tzSOP$PftV}K)^UCu26T0x` "x`CJ)xfo[.oZZ|S5iJbN}T?Vise'AOnzWBx*|n*';F{l k"0P`]Ea-

Read the original:
What Is Personalized Medicine?

Read More...

Life extension – Wikipedia

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

Life extension science, also known as anti-aging medicine, indefinite life extension, experimental gerontology, and biomedical gerontology, is the study of slowing down or reversing the processes of aging to extend both the maximum and average lifespan. Some researchers in this area, and "life extensionists", "immortalists" or "longevists" (those who wish to achieve longer lives themselves), believe that future breakthroughs in tissue rejuvenation, stem cells, regenerative medicine, molecular repair, gene therapy, pharmaceuticals, and organ replacement (such as with artificial organs or xenotransplantations) will eventually enable humans to have indefinite lifespans (agerasia[1]) through complete rejuvenation to a healthy youthful condition.

The sale of purported anti-aging products such as nutrition, physical fitness, skin care, hormone replacements, vitamins, supplements and herbs is a lucrative global industry, with the US market generating about $50billion of revenue each year.[2] Some medical experts state that the use of such products has not been proven to affect the aging process and many claims regarding the efficacy of these marketed products have been roundly criticized by medical experts, including the American Medical Association.[2][3][4][5][6]

The ethical ramifications of life extension are debated by bioethicists.

During the process of aging, an organism accumulates damage to its macromolecules, cells, tissues, and organs. Specifically, aging is characterized as and thought to be caused by "genomic instability, telomere attrition, epigenetic alterations, loss of proteostasis, deregulated nutrient sensing, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence, stem cell exhaustion, and altered intercellular communication."[7]Oxidation damage to cellular contents caused by free radicals is believed to contribute to aging as well.[8][8][9]

The longest a human has ever been proven to live is 122 years, the case of Jeanne Calment who was born in 1875 and died in 1997, whereas the maximum lifespan of a wildtype mouse, commonly used as a model in research on aging, is about three years.[10] Genetic differences between humans and mice that may account for these different aging rates include differences in efficiency of DNA repair, antioxidant defenses, energy metabolism, proteostasis maintenance, and recycling mechanisms such as autophagy.[11]

Average lifespan in a population is lowered by infant and child mortality, which are frequently linked to infectious diseases or nutrition problems. Later in life, vulnerability to accidents and age-related chronic disease such as cancer or cardiovascular disease play an increasing role in mortality. Extension of expected lifespan can often be achieved by access to improved medical care, vaccinations, good diet, exercise and avoidance of hazards such as smoking.

Maximum lifespan is determined by the rate of aging for a species inherent in its genes and by environmental factors. Widely recognized methods of extending maximum lifespan in model organisms such as nematodes, fruit flies, and mice include caloric restriction, gene manipulation, and administration of pharmaceuticals.[12] Another technique uses evolutionary pressures such as breeding from only older members or altering levels of extrinsic mortality.[13][14] Some animals such as hydra, planarian flatworms, and certain sponges, corals, and jellyfish do not die of old age and exhibit potential immortality.[15][16][17][18]

Theoretically, extension of maximum lifespan in humans could be achieved by reducing the rate of aging damage by periodic replacement of damaged tissues, molecular repair or rejuvenation of deteriorated cells and tissues, reversal of harmful epigenetic changes, or the enhancement of telomerase enzyme activity.[19][20]

Research geared towards life extension strategies in various organisms is currently under way at a number of academic and private institutions. Since 2009, investigators have found ways to increase the lifespan of nematode worms and yeast by 10-fold; the record in nematodes was achieved through genetic engineering and the extension in yeast by a combination of genetic engineering and caloric restriction.[21] A 2009 review of longevity research noted: "Extrapolation from worms to mammals is risky at best, and it cannot be assumed that interventions will result in comparable life extension factors. Longevity gains from dietary restriction, or from mutations studied previously, yield smaller benefits to Drosophila than to nematodes, and smaller still to mammals. This is not unexpected, since mammals have evolved to live many times the worm's lifespan, and humans live nearly twice as long as the next longest-lived primate. From an evolutionary perspective, mammals and their ancestors have already undergone several hundred million years of natural selection favoring traits that could directly or indirectly favor increased longevity, and may thus have already settled on gene sequences that promote lifespan. Moreover, the very notion of a "life-extension factor" that could apply across taxa presumes a linear response rarely seen in biology."[21]

Much life extension research focuses on nutritiondiets or supplementsas a means to extend lifespan, although few of these have been systematically tested for significant longevity effects. The many diets promoted by anti-aging advocates are often contradictory.[original research?] A dietary pattern with some support from scientific research is caloric restriction.[22][23]

Preliminary studies of caloric restriction on humans using surrogate measurements have provided evidence that caloric restriction may have powerful protective effect against secondary aging in humans. Caloric restriction in humans may reduce the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis.[24]

The free-radical theory of aging suggests that antioxidant supplements, such as vitaminC, vitaminE, Q10, lipoic acid, carnosine, and N-acetylcysteine, might extend human life. However, combined evidence from several clinical trials suggest that -carotene supplements and high doses of vitaminE increase mortality rates.[25]Resveratrol is a sirtuin stimulant that has been shown to extend life in animal models, but the effect of resveratrol on lifespan in humans is unclear as of 2011.[26]

There are many traditional herbs purportedly used to extend the health-span, including a Chinese tea called Jiaogulan (Gynostemma pentaphyllum), dubbed "China's Immortality Herb."[27]Ayurveda, the traditional Indian system of medicine, describes a class of longevity herbs called rasayanas, including Bacopa monnieri, Ocimum sanctum, Curcuma longa, Centella asiatica, Phyllanthus emblica, Withania somnifera and many others.[27]

The anti-aging industry offers several hormone therapies. Some of these have been criticized for possible dangers to the patient and a lack of proven effect. For example, the American Medical Association has been critical of some anti-aging hormone therapies.[2]

Although some recent clinical studies have shown that low-dose growth hormone (GH) treatment for adults with GH deficiency changes the body composition by increasing muscle mass, decreasing fat mass, increasing bone density and muscle strength, improves cardiovascular parameters (i.e. decrease of LDL cholesterol), and affects the quality of life without significant side effects,[28][29][30] the evidence for use of growth hormone as an anti-aging therapy is mixed and based on animal studies. There are mixed reports that GH or IGF-1 signaling modulates the aging process in humans and about whether the direction of its effect is positive or negative.[31]

Some critics dispute the portrayal of aging as a disease. For example, Leonard Hayflick, who determined that fibroblasts are limited to around 50cell divisions, reasons that aging is an unavoidable consequence of entropy. Hayflick and fellow biogerontologists Jay Olshansky and Bruce Carnes have strongly criticized the anti-aging industry in response to what they see as unscrupulous profiteering from the sale of unproven anti-aging supplements.[4]

Politics relevant to the substances of life extension pertain mostly to communications and availability.[citation needed]

In the United States, product claims on food and drug labels are strictly regulated. The First Amendment (freedom of speech) protects third-party publishers' rights to distribute fact, opinion and speculation on life extension practices. Manufacturers and suppliers also provide informational publications, but because they market the substances, they are subject to monitoring and enforcement by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which polices claims by marketers. What constitutes the difference between truthful and false claims is hotly debated and is a central controversy in this arena.[citation needed]

Research by Sobh and Martin (2011) suggests that people buy anti-aging products to obtain a hoped-for self (e.g., keeping a youthful skin) or to avoid a feared-self (e.g., looking old). The research shows that when consumers pursue a hoped-for self, it is expectations of success that most strongly drive their motivation to use the product. The research also shows why doing badly when trying to avoid a feared self is more motivating than doing well. Interestingly, when product use is seen to fail it is more motivating than success when consumers seek to avoid a feared-self.[32]

The best-characterized anti-aging therapy was, and still is, CR. In some studies calorie restriction has been shown to extend the life of mice, yeast, and rhesus monkeys significantly.[33][34] However, a more recent study has shown that in contrast, calorie restriction has not improved the survival rate in rhesus monkeys.[35] Long-term human trials of CR are now being done. It is the hope of the anti-aging researchers that resveratrol, found in grapes, or pterostilbene, a more bio-available substance, found in blueberries, as well as rapamycin, a biotic substance discovered on Easter Island, may act as CR mimetics to increase the life span of humans.[36]

More recent work reveals that the effects long attributed to caloric restriction may be obtained by restriction of protein alone, and specifically of just the sulfur-containing amino acids cysteine and methionine.[37][38] Current research is into the metabolic pathways affected by variation in availability of products of these amino acids.

There are a number of chemicals intended to slow the aging process currently being studied in animal models.[39] One type of research is related to the observed effects a calorie restriction (CR) diet, which has been shown to extend lifespan in some animals[40] Based on that research, there have been attempts to develop drugs that will have the same effect on the aging process as a caloric restriction diet, which are known as Caloric restriction mimetic drugs. Some drugs that are already approved for other uses have been studied for possible longevity effects on laboratory animals because of a possible CR-mimic effect; they include rapamycin,[41]metformin and other geroprotectors.[42]MitoQ, Resveratrol and pterostilbene are dietary supplements that have also been studied in this context.[36][43][44]

Other attempts to create anti-aging drugs have taken different research paths. One notable direction of research has been research into the possibility of using the enzyme telomerase in order to counter the process of telomere shortening.[45] However, there are potential dangers in this, since some research has also linked telomerase to cancer and to tumor growth and formation.[46]

Future advances in nanomedicine could give rise to life extension through the repair of many processes thought to be responsible for aging. K. Eric Drexler, one of the founders of nanotechnology, postulated cell repair machines, including ones operating within cells and utilizing as yet hypothetical molecular computers, in his 1986 book Engines of Creation. Raymond Kurzweil, a futurist and transhumanist, stated in his book The Singularity Is Near that he believes that advanced medical nanorobotics could completely remedy the effects of aging by 2030.[47] According to Richard Feynman, it was his former graduate student and collaborator Albert Hibbs who originally suggested to him (circa 1959) the idea of a medical use for Feynman's theoretical micromachines (see nanotechnology). Hibbs suggested that certain repair machines might one day be reduced in size to the point that it would, in theory, be possible to (as Feynman put it) "swallow the doctor". The idea was incorporated into Feynman's 1959 essay There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom.[48]

Some life extensionists suggest that therapeutic cloning and stem cell research could one day provide a way to generate cells, body parts, or even entire bodies (generally referred to as reproductive cloning) that would be genetically identical to a prospective patient. Recently, the US Department of Defense initiated a program to research the possibility of growing human body parts on mice.[49] Complex biological structures, such as mammalian joints and limbs, have not yet been replicated. Dog and primate brain transplantation experiments were conducted in the mid-20th century but failed due to rejection and the inability to restore nerve connections. As of 2006, the implantation of bio-engineered bladders grown from patients' own cells has proven to be a viable treatment for bladder disease.[50] Proponents of body part replacement and cloning contend that the required biotechnologies are likely to appear earlier than other life-extension technologies.

The use of human stem cells, particularly embryonic stem cells, is controversial. Opponents' objections generally are based on interpretations of religious teachings or ethical considerations. Proponents of stem cell research point out that cells are routinely formed and destroyed in a variety of contexts. Use of stem cells taken from the umbilical cord or parts of the adult body may not provoke controversy.[51]

The controversies over cloning are similar, except general public opinion in most countries stands in opposition to reproductive cloning. Some proponents of therapeutic cloning predict the production of whole bodies, lacking consciousness, for eventual brain transplantation.

Replacement of biological (susceptible to diseases) organs with mechanical ones could extend life. This is the goal of 2045 Initiative.[52]

For cryonicists (advocates of cryopreservation), storing the body at low temperatures after death may provide an "ambulance" into a future in which advanced medical technologies may allow resuscitation and repair. They speculate cryogenic temperatures will minimize changes in biological tissue for many years, giving the medical community ample time to cure all disease, rejuvenate the aged and repair any damage that is caused by the cryopreservation process.

Many cryonicists do not believe that legal death is "real death" because stoppage of heartbeat and breathingthe usual medical criteria for legal deathoccur before biological death of cells and tissues of the body. Even at room temperature, cells may take hours to die and days to decompose. Although neurological damage occurs within 46 minutes of cardiac arrest, the irreversible neurodegenerative processes do not manifest for hours.[53] Cryonicists state that rapid cooling and cardio-pulmonary support applied immediately after certification of death can preserve cells and tissues for long-term preservation at cryogenic temperatures. People, particularly children, have survived up to an hour without heartbeat after submersion in ice water. In one case, full recovery was reported after 45 minutes underwater.[54] To facilitate rapid preservation of cells and tissue, cryonics "standby teams" are available to wait by the bedside of patients who are to be cryopreserved to apply cooling and cardio-pulmonary support as soon as possible after declaration of death.[55]

No mammal has been successfully cryopreserved and brought back to life, with the exception of frozen human embryos. Resuscitation of a postembryonic human from cryonics is not possible with current science. Some scientists still support the idea based on their expectations of the capabilities of future science.[56][57]

Another proposed life extension technology would combine existing and predicted future biochemical and genetic techniques. SENS proposes that rejuvenation may be obtained by removing aging damage via the use of stem cells and tissue engineering, telomere-lengthening machinery, allotopic expression of mitochondrial proteins, targeted ablation of cells, immunotherapeutic clearance, and novel lysosomal hydrolases.[58]

While many biogerontologists find these ideas "worthy of discussion"[59][60] and SENS conferences feature important research in the field,[61][62] some contend that the alleged benefits are too speculative given the current state of technology, referring to it as "fantasy rather than science".[3][5]

Gene therapy, in which nucleic acid polymers are delivered as a drug and are either expressed as proteins, interfere with the expression of proteins, or correct genetic mutations, has been proposed as a future strategy to prevent aging.[63][64]

A large array of genetic modifications have been found to increase lifespan in model organisms such as yeast, nematode worms, fruit flies, and mice. As of 2013, the longest extension of life caused by a single gene manipulation was roughly 150% in mice and 10-fold in nematode worms.[65]

In The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins describes an approach to life-extension that involves "fooling genes" into thinking the body is young.[66] Dawkins attributes inspiration for this idea to Peter Medawar. The basic idea is that our bodies are composed of genes that activate throughout our lifetimes, some when we are young and others when we are older. Presumably, these genes are activated by environmental factors, and the changes caused by these genes activating can be lethal. It is a statistical certainty that we possess more lethal genes that activate in later life than in early life. Therefore, to extend life, we should be able to prevent these genes from switching on, and we should be able to do so by "identifying changes in the internal chemical environment of a body that take place during aging... and by simulating the superficial chemical properties of a young body".[67]

According to some lines of thinking, the ageing process is routed into a basic reduction of biological complexity,[68] and thus loss of information. In order to reverse this loss, gerontologist Marios Kyriazis suggested that it is necessary to increase input of actionable and meaningful information both individually (into individual brains),[69] and collectively (into societal systems).[70] This technique enhances overall biological function through up-regulation of immune, hormonal, antioxidant and other parameters, resulting in improved age-repair mechanisms. Working in parallel with natural evolutionary mechanisms that can facilitate survival through increased fitness, Kryiazis claims that the technique may lead to a reduction of the rate of death as a function of age, i.e. indefinite lifespan.[71]

One hypothetical future strategy that, as some suggest, "eliminates" the complications related to a physical body, involves the copying or transferring (e.g. by progressively replacing neurons with transistors) of a conscious mind from a biological brain to a non-biological computer system or computational device. The basic idea is to scan the structure of a particular brain in detail, and then construct a software model of it that is so faithful to the original that, when run on appropriate hardware, it will behave in essentially the same way as the original brain.[72] Whether or not an exact copy of one's mind constitutes actual life extension is matter of debate.

The extension of life has been a desire of humanity and a mainstay motif in the history of scientific pursuits and ideas throughout history, from the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh and the Egyptian Smith medical papyrus, all the way through the Taoists, Ayurveda practitioners, alchemists, hygienists such as Luigi Cornaro, Johann Cohausen and Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland, and philosophers such as Francis Bacon, Ren Descartes, Benjamin Franklin and Nicolas Condorcet. However, the beginning of the modern period in this endeavor can be traced to the end of the 19th beginning of the 20th century, to the so-called fin-de-sicle (end of the century) period, denoted as an end of an epoch and characterized by the rise of scientific optimism and therapeutic activism, entailing the pursuit of life extension (or life-extensionism). Among the foremost researchers of life extension at this period were the Nobel Prize winning biologist Elie Metchnikoff (1845-1916) -- the author of the cell theory of immunity and vice director of Institut Pasteur in Paris, and Charles-douard Brown-Squard (1817-1894) -- the president of the French Biological Society and one of the founders of modern endocrinology.[73]

Sociologist James Hughes claims that science has been tied to a cultural narrative of conquering death since the Age of Enlightenment. He cites Francis Bacon (15611626) as an advocate of using science and reason to extend human life, noting Bacon's novel New Atlantis, wherein scientists worked toward delaying aging and prolonging life. Robert Boyle (16271691), founding member of the Royal Society, also hoped that science would make substantial progress with life extension, according to Hughes, and proposed such experiments as "to replace the blood of the old with the blood of the young". Biologist Alexis Carrel (18731944) was inspired by a belief in indefinite human lifespan that he developed after experimenting with cells, says Hughes.[74]

In 1970, the American Aging Association was formed under the impetus of Denham Harman, originator of the free radical theory of aging. Harman wanted an organization of biogerontologists that was devoted to research and to the sharing of information among scientists interested in extending human lifespan.

In 1976, futurists Joel Kurtzman and Philip Gordon wrote No More Dying. The Conquest Of Aging And The Extension Of Human Life, (ISBN 0-440-36247-4) the first popular book on research to extend human lifespan. Subsequently, Kurtzman was invited to testify before the House Select Committee on Aging, chaired by Claude Pepper of Florida, to discuss the impact of life extension on the Social Security system.

Saul Kent published The Life Extension Revolution (ISBN 0-688-03580-9) in 1980 and created a nutraceutical firm called the Life Extension Foundation, a non-profit organization that promotes dietary supplements. The Life Extension Foundation publishes a periodical called Life Extension Magazine. The 1982 bestselling book Life Extension: A Practical Scientific Approach (ISBN 0-446-51229-X) by Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw further popularized the phrase "life extension".

In 1983, Roy Walford, a life-extensionist and gerontologist, published a popular book called Maximum Lifespan. In 1988, Walford and his student Richard Weindruch summarized their research into the ability of calorie restriction to extend the lifespan of rodents in The Retardation of Aging and Disease by Dietary Restriction (ISBN 0-398-05496-7). It had been known since the work of Clive McCay in the 1930s that calorie restriction can extend the maximum lifespan of rodents. But it was the work of Walford and Weindruch that gave detailed scientific grounding to that knowledge.[citation needed] Walford's personal interest in life extension motivated his scientific work and he practiced calorie restriction himself. Walford died at the age of 80 from complications caused by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Money generated by the non-profit Life Extension Foundation allowed Saul Kent to finance the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, the world's largest cryonics organization. The cryonics movement had been launched in 1962 by Robert Ettinger's book, The Prospect of Immortality. In the 1960s, Saul Kent had been a co-founder of the Cryonics Society of New York. Alcor gained national prominence when baseball star Ted Williams was cryonically preserved by Alcor in 2002 and a family dispute arose as to whether Williams had really wanted to be cryopreserved.

Regulatory and legal struggles between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Life Extension Foundation included seizure of merchandise and court action. In 1991, Saul Kent and Bill Faloon, the principals of the Foundation, were jailed. The LEF accused the FDA of perpetrating a "Holocaust" and "seeking gestapo-like power" through its regulation of drugs and marketing claims.[75]

In 2003, Doubleday published "The Immortal Cell: One Scientist's Quest to Solve the Mystery of Human Aging," by Michael D. West. West emphasised the potential role of embryonic stem cells in life extension.[76]

Other modern life extensionists include writer Gennady Stolyarov, who insists that death is "the enemy of us all, to be fought with medicine, science, and technology";[77]transhumanist philosopher Zoltan Istvan, who proposes that the "transhumanist must safeguard one's own existence above all else";[78] futurist George Dvorsky, who considers aging to be a problem that desperately needs to be solved;[79] and recording artist Steve Aoki, who has been called "one of the most prolific campaigners for life extension".[80]

In 1991, the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (A4M) was formed as a non-profit organization to create what it considered an anti-aging medical specialty distinct from geriatrics, and to hold trade shows for physicians interested in anti-aging medicine. The A4M trains doctors in anti-aging medicine and publicly promotes the field of anti-aging research. It has about 26,000 members, of whom about 97% are doctors and scientists.[81] The American Board of Medical Specialties recognizes neither anti-aging medicine nor the A4M's professional standing.[82]

In 2003, Aubrey de Grey and David Gobel formed the Methuselah Foundation, which gives financial grants to anti-aging research projects. In 2009, de Grey and several others founded the SENS Research Foundation, a California-based scientific research organization which conducts research into aging and funds other anti-aging research projects at various universities.[83] In 2013, Google announced Calico, a new company based in San Francisco that will harness new technologies to increase scientific understanding of the biology of aging.[84] It is led by Arthur D. Levinson,[85] and its research team includes scientists such as Hal V. Barron, David Botstein, and Cynthia Kenyon. In 2014, biologist Craig Venter founded Human Longevity Inc., a company dedicated to scientific research to end aging through genomics and cell therapy. They received funding with the goal of compiling a comprehensive human genotype, microbiome, and phenotype database.[86]

Aside from private initiatives, aging research is being conducted in university laboratories, and includes universities such as Harvard and UCLA. University researchers have made a number of breakthroughs in extending the lives of mice and insects by reversing certain aspects of aging.[87][88][89][90]

Though many scientists state[91] that life extension and radical life extension are possible, there are still no international or national programs focused on radical life extension. There are political forces staying for and against life extension. By 2012, in Russia, the United States, Israel, and the Netherlands, the Longevity political parties started. They aimed to provide political support to radical life extension research and technologies, and ensure the fastest possible and at the same time soft transition of society to the next step life without aging and with radical life extension, and to provide access to such technologies to most currently living people.[92]

Leon Kass (chairman of the US President's Council on Bioethics from 2001 to 2005) has questioned whether potential exacerbation of overpopulation problems would make life extension unethical.[93] He states his opposition to life extension with the words:

"simply to covet a prolonged life span for ourselves is both a sign and a cause of our failure to open ourselves to procreation and to any higher purpose ... [The] desire to prolong youthfulness is not only a childish desire to eat one's life and keep it; it is also an expression of a childish and narcissistic wish incompatible with devotion to posterity."[94]

John Harris, former editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics, argues that as long as life is worth living, according to the person himself, we have a powerful moral imperative to save the life and thus to develop and offer life extension therapies to those who want them.[95]

Transhumanist philosopher Nick Bostrom has argued that any technological advances in life extension must be equitably distributed and not restricted to a privileged few.[96] In an extended metaphor entitled "The Fable of the Dragon-Tyrant", Bostrom envisions death as a monstrous dragon who demands human sacrifices. In the fable, after a lengthy debate between those who believe the dragon is a fact of life and those who believe the dragon can and should be destroyed, the dragon is finally killed. Bostrom argues that political inaction allowed many preventable human deaths to occur.[97]

Life extension is a controversial topic due to fear of overpopulation and possible effects on society.[98] Biogerontologist Aubrey De Grey counters the overpopulation critique by pointing out that the therapy could postpone or eliminate menopause, allowing women to space out their pregnancies over more years and thus decreasing the yearly population growth rate.[99] Moreover, the philosopher and futurist Max More argues that, given the fact the worldwide population growth rate is slowing down and is projected to eventually stabilize and begin falling, superlongevity would be unlikely to contribute to overpopulation.[98]

A Spring 2013 Pew Research poll in the United States found that 38% of Americans would want life extension treatments, and 56% would reject it. However, it also found that 68% believed most people would want it and that only 4% consider an "ideal lifespan" to be more than 120 years. The median "ideal lifespan" was 91 years of age and the majority of the public (63%) viewed medical advances aimed at prolonging life as generally good. 41% of Americans believed that radical life extension (RLE) would be good for society, while 51% said they believed it would be bad for society.[100] One possibility for why 56% of Americans claim they would reject life extension treatments may be due to the cultural perception that living longer would result in a longer period of decrepitude, and that the elderly in our current society are unhealthy.[101]

Religious people are no more likely to oppose life extension than the unaffiliated,[100] though some variation exists between religious denominations.

Most mainstream medical organizations and practitioners do not consider aging to be a disease. David Sinclair says: "Idon't see aging as a disease, but as a collection of quite predictable diseases caused by the deterioration of the body".[102] The two main arguments used are that aging is both inevitable and universal while diseases are not.[103] However, not everyone agrees. Harry R. Moody, Director of Academic Affairs for AARP, notes that what is normal and what is disease strongly depends on a historical context.[104] David Gems, Assistant Director of the Institute of Healthy Ageing, strongly argues that aging should be viewed as a disease.[105] In response to the universality of aging, David Gems notes that it is as misleading as arguing that Basenji are not dogs because they do not bark.[106] Because of the universality of aging he calls it a 'special sort of disease'. Robert M. Perlman, coined the terms aging syndrome and disease complex in 1954 to describe aging.[107]

The discussion whether aging should be viewed as a disease or not has important implications. It would stimulate pharmaceutical companies to develop life extension therapies and in the United States of America, it would also increase the regulation of the anti-aging market by the FDA. Anti-aging now falls under the regulations for cosmetic medicine which are less tight than those for drugs.[106][108]

Originally posted here:
Life extension - Wikipedia

Read More...

Diabetes | Florida Hospital

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

Diabetes specialists at Florida Hospital helps tens of thousands of people each year control and manage their diabetes. More astounding is that weve helped to eliminate the disease in many of our patients through nutritional counseling and life-style adjustments. Because of the growing prevalence of diabetes in our communities, we offer treatment hubs throughout the state, with The Diabetes Center in Volusia, Diabetes Institute in Orlando and Celebration, and the Diabetes and Endocrinology Institute in Tampa.

With diabetes services recognized by US News and World Report, Florida Hospital has become a vital resource for tens of thousands of diabetics and pre-diabetics every year. We strive give all diabetics the opportunity to live long, healthy and productive lives, and do so with advanced teams of board certified endocrinologists, certified diabetes educators, nurses, dietitians, and exercise specialists.

Our highly experienced diabetes specialists offer comprehensive care through medical treatment, education, lifestyle and nutritional modification, group and individual counseling, support groups, and weight management.

Florida Hospital endocrinologists also provide support for dysfunctional glands and hormonal imbalances that can affect:

Our medical team is uniquely positioned to work with each patient's primary care physician to provide personalized care for diabetes management, as well as other endocrine disorders, including the thyroid. We provide programs built on a solid foundation of research; some of our patients also have the opportunity to participate in clinical trials, which bring new medications and approaches to diabetes care.

Originally posted here:
Diabetes | Florida Hospital

Read More...

Heracleum mantegazzianum – Wikipedia

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

Heracleum mantegazzianum, commonly known as giant hogweed,[1][2][3]cartwheel-flower,[1][2][3]giant cow parsnip,[4][5]hogsbane or giant cow parsley,[6] is a plant in the family Apiaceae. In New Zealand, it is also sometimes called wild parsnip,[2] or wild rhubarb.[2] It typically grows to heights of 25.5m (6ft 7in18ft 1in).[7] Superficially, it resembles common hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium), Heracleum sosnowskyi, or garden angelica (Angelica archangelica). It is phototoxic and considered to be a noxious weed in many jurisdictions. Giant hogweed is native to the Caucasus region and Central Asia. It was introduced to Britain as an ornamental plant in the 19th century, and it has also spread to many other parts of Europe, the United States, and Canada.

The sap of giant hogweed causes phytophotodermatitis in humans, resulting in blisters and long-lasting scars. These serious reactions are due to the furocoumarin derivatives in the leaves, roots, stems, flowers, and seeds of the plant.

Giant hogweed has a stout, bright green stem that is frequently spotted with dark red and hollow red-spotted leaf stalks that produce sturdy bristles. The stems grow to more than 2 m high.[8] The hollow stems vary from 38cm (1.23.1in) in diameter, occasionally up to 10cm (3.9in). Each dark red spot on the stem surrounds a hair, and large, coarse white hairs occur at the base of the leaf stalk. The plant has deeply incised compound leaves which grow up to 11.7m (3ft 3in5ft 7in) in width.

Giant hogweed is a biennial or monocarpic perennial,[7]:827 the plants usually begin dying after they have set seed. It usually flowers in its second year from late spring to midsummer, with numerous white flowers clustered in an umbrella-shaped head that is up to 80cm (31in) in diameter across its flat top. The plant produces 1,500 to 100,000 flattened, 1-centimetre (0.39in)-long, oval, dry seeds that have a broadly rounded base and broad marginal ridges. Tall dead stems may mark its locations during winter.

Giant hogweed was among many foreign plants introduced to Britain in the 19th century as ornamental plants. It is now widespread throughout the British Isles, especially along riverbanks. By forming dense stands, they can displace native plants and reduce wildlife habitats.[9] It has spread in the northeastern and northwestern United States, and southern Canada and is an invasive species in Germany, France, and Belgium, overtaking the local native species, Heracleum sphondylium.[9]

In Canada, the plant has been sighted in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and in isolated areas of Newfoundland. It has been seen in Quebec since the early 1990s.[10] The plant's spread in Ontario began in the southwest and was seen in 2010 in the greater Toronto area and Renfrew County near Ottawa.[11]

Giant hogweed was introduced into New York about 1917, and was recorded in British Columbia in the 1930s. It now occurs in the west in British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon and in eastern North America from Newfoundland and Nova Scotia west to Ontario and Wisconsin and south to Indiana, Maryland, and New Jersey.[12][13] It is also recorded occasionally in Michigan[14] It is a federally listed noxious weed in many states.[12]

The sap of the giant hogweed plant is phototoxic; when the contacted skin is exposed to sunlight or to ultraviolet rays, it can cause phytophotodermatitis (severe skin inflammations). Initially, the skin colours red and starts itching. Blisters form as it burns within 48 hours. They form black or purplish scars that can last several years. Hospitalisation may be necessary.[9] Although many media reports on giant hogweed suggest the plant can lead to temporary or permanent blindness, existing research on the plant does not back up this claim.[15]

These reactions are caused by the presence of linear derivatives of furanocoumarin in its leaves, roots, stems, flowers, and seeds. These chemicals can get into the nucleus of the epithelial cells, forming a bond with the DNA, causing the cells to die. The brown colour is caused by the production of melanin by furocoumarins.

Authorities advise that children should be kept away from giant hogweed, that protective clothing, including eye protection, should be worn when handling or digging it, and that if skin is exposed, the affected area should be washed thoroughly with soap and water and the exposed skin protected from the sun for several days.[9]

Because of its phototoxicity and invasive nature, giant hogweed is often actively removed. In the UK, the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 makes it an offence to plant or cause giant hogweed to grow in the wild.[9][16] Hogweed is regulated as a federal noxious weed by the US government, and is illegal to import into the United States or move interstate without a permit from the Department of Agriculture.[17] The USDA Forest Service states pigs and cattle can eat it without apparent harm.[5] The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has had an active program to control giant hogweed since 2008, including reporting, database maintenance, and crews for removal or herbicide control.[18][19] In 2011, Maine state horticulturists, describing the plant as "Queen Anne's lace on steroids", reported that it has been found at 21 different locations in Maine, with the number of plants ranging from one to a hundred.[20]

The 1971 album Nursery Cryme by the progressive rock group Genesis contains a song called "The Return of the Giant Hogweed". The lyrics describe a murderous attack on the human race by Heracleum mantegazzianum, long after the plant was first "captured" and brought to England by a Victorian explorer.[21] It is typical of the dramatic, tongue-in-cheek humour prevalent in the band's early recordings. A live version can be found on their 1973 Genesis Live album.

The 1971 studio recording appears in Series 1 Episode 1 ("And No Birds Sing") of the British TV crime drama Rosemary and Thyme as the episode story centres around hogweed.

Read more:
Heracleum mantegazzianum - Wikipedia

Read More...

Environmental biotechnology – Wikipedia

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

Environmental biotechnology is biotechnology that is applied to and used to study the natural environment. Environmental biotechnology could also imply that one try to harness biological process for commercial uses and exploitation. The International Society for Environmental Biotechnology defines environmental biotechnology as "the development, use and regulation of biological systems for remediation of contaminated environments (land, air, water), and for environment-friendly processes (green manufacturing technologies and sustainable development)".[1]

Environmental biotechnology can simply be described as "the optimal use of nature, in the form of plants, animals, bacteria, fungi and algae, to produce renewable energy, food and nutrients in a synergistic integrated cycle of profit making processes where the waste of each process becomes the feedstock for another process".[2]

Science through the IAASTD has called for the advancement of small-scale agro-ecological farming systems and technology in order to achieve food security, climate change mitigation, climate change adaptation and the realisation of the Millennium Development Goals. Environmental biotechnology has been shown to play a significant roll in agroecology in the form of zero waste agriculture and most significantly through the operation of over 15 million biogas digesters worldwide.

Consider an environment in which pollution of a particular type is maximum. Let us consider the effluents of a starch industry which has mixed up with a local water body like a lake or pond. We find huge deposits of starch which are not so easily taken up for degradation by micro-organisms except for a few exemptions. we isolate a few micro-organisms from the polluted site and scan for any significant changes in their genome like mutations or evolutions. The modified genes are then identified. This is done because, the isolate would have adapted itself to degrade/utilize the starch better than other microbes of the same genus. Thus, the resultant genes are cloned onto industrially significant micro-organisms and are used for more economically significant processes like in pharmaceutical industry, fermentations...etc.

Similar situations can be elucitated like in the case of oil spills in the oceans which require cleanup, microbes isolated from oil rich environments like oil wells, oil transfer pipelines...etc. have been found having the potential to degrade oil or use it as an energy source. Thus they serve as a remedy to oil spills.

Still another elucidation would be in the case of microbes isolated from pesticide rich soils These would be capable of utilizing the pesticides as energy source and hence when mixed along with bio-fertilizers, would serve as excellent insurance against increased pesticide-toxicity levels in agricultural platform.

But the counter argument would be that whether these newly introduced microorganisms would create an imbalance in the environment concerned.The mutual harmony in which the organisms in that particular environment existed may have to face alteration and we should be extremely careful so as to not disturb the mutual relationships already existing in the environment of both the benefits and the disadvantages would pave way for an improvised version of environmental biotechnology. After all it is the environment that we strive to protect.

Humans have been manipulating genetic material for centuries. Although many benefits are provided by these manipulations, there can also be unexpected, negative health and environmental outcomes. Environmental biotechnology, then, is all about the balance between the applications that provide for these and the implications of manipulating genetic material.[3] Textbooks address both the applications and implications. Environmental engineering texts addressing sewage treatment and biological principles are often now considered to be environmental biotechnology texts. These generally address the applications of biotechnologies, whereas the implications of these technologies are less often addressed; usually in books concerned with potential impacts and even catastrophic events.

Go here to read the rest:
Environmental biotechnology - Wikipedia

Read More...

Personalized Medicine – Swedish Medical Center

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

At the Swedish Cancer Institute, we practice personalized medicine every day. We combine the newest, most advanced science with extraordinary medicine and patient-centered care in order to develop a care plan thats personalized for you. Our approach ensures the best treatment pathway for you right from the start. Using Gene Sequencing to Help Treat Your Cancer

Not all cancers are alike. Just as your genetic fingerprint determines the color of your hair and eyes, a tumors genomic fingerprint defines the cancer cells.

Identifying a tumors genomic fingerprint is called gene sequencing. This science is helping many of our patients get the best cancer treatment. Find more details about how we use gene sequencing to treat cancer.

Patients with the same type of cancer usually received the same type of treatment. For example, if you had stage IV colon cancer, you probably received similar initial chemotherapy as every other patient with stage IV colon cancer.

Today, gene sequencing allows cancer specialists at the Swedish Cancer Institute to identify gene abnormalities in cancer cells and then personalize cancer treatments for those specific abnormalities independent of where the cells or tumors are located. This information allows us to create a customized treatment plan that will work best for you.Learn more about how your personal treatment plan is developed.

Personalized medicine is the most comprehensive, effective and efficient approach to cancer care.

Cancer is personal, so we make sure everything at the Swedish Cancer Institute is personal, too. It begins with your cancer-care team. You will have a team of cancer specialists created specifically for your particular needs.

Learn more about the cancer care team

Personalized medicine at the Swedish Cancer Institute means we harness every tool to focus our clinical expertise on your disease. And we use utilize every type of therapy provide customized whole person care, focused specifically on you not just your disease.

We provide an environment, resources and support that attend to your physical, psychological, social and other needs. And because we acknowledge that you may have developed many important personal relationships long before your battle with cancer began, we also offer educational and supportive services that are designed specifically for your families and caregivers.

We call this aspect of personalized medicine supportive care services because they provide essential nurturing support critical to you throughout your cancer management from diagnosis, through treatment and survivorship.

Learn more about our supportive care services

See the rest here:
Personalized Medicine - Swedish Medical Center

Read More...

Integrative Doctor in NJ – Wellness.com

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

Integrative Doctor Summary: An Integrative Doctor combines the latest advancements of conventional medicine with complimentary alternative approaches to promote wellness of the body, mind, heart, and spirit. An Integrative Doctor focuses on a more holistic approach to relieve pain, reduce stress, find alternatives to prescription medicines, or simply improve an individual's quality of life. An Integrative Doctor will typically offer individualized treatment plans based on a patients' needs. Some of the therapies an Integrative Doctor may incorporate throughout treatment include nutritional supplements, acupuncture, naturopathic medicine, clinical nutrition, massage, and energy healing. Integrative Doctors treat a wide array of ailments and illnesses and offer integrative, holistic care that is designed to treat the person, not just the disease.

Integrative Doctor FAQs: What is an

What is Conventional Medicine? Conventional Medicine is the system that physicians use to treat diseases. It is one of the practices of an Integrative Doctor.

What is Alternative Medicine? Examples of Alternative Medicine are acupuncture, massage, herbal remedies and supplements. It is also one of the practices of an Integrative Doctor.

How do I find an Integrative Doctor in my city and state? The Wellness.com directory will help you locate an Integrative Doctor in your state. Select Integrative Doctor from the professionals menu and select the state that you are looking to locate an Integrative Doctor in. After you have located your state, find the city that you will need an Integrative Doctor in. Select the state and city and you will see a list of Integrative Doctors in your city and state.

Integrative Doctor Related Terms: holistic, wellness, integrative doctor, alternative medicine, conventional medicine, herbal remedies

View original post here:
Integrative Doctor in NJ - Wellness.com

Read More...

Master of Science in Genetic Counseling | Icahn School of …

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

The Master of Science in Genetic Counseling Program at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS) provides students with many opportunities for study, research, and practice in the challenging and exciting field of genetic counseling.

Our program, part of the ISMMS Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, is sponsored by the Department of Genetics and Genomics Sciences, one of the largest departments of its kind in the world. Our faculty is renowned in the diagnosis, treatment and counseling of genetic disorders and is at the forefront of basic science research. Our large multidisciplinary center provides clinical and laboratory services to a wide range of culturally diverse patients and their families, along with our proven commitment to the community we serve.

The Master of Science in Genetic Counseling program is a 21-month, full-time course of study accredited by the Accreditation Council for Genetic Counseling (ACGC), which blends didactic coursework with a variety of clinical rotations.The Program has a 100% job placement rate for those seeking positions within the genetic counseling field. The first time Board certification pass rate for the classes of 2013, 2014 and 2015 is 95.5%.

Our students grow in skills and knowledge while enjoying access to the incomparable opportunities present in a prestigious academic medical center in the heart of New York City.

The Genetic Counseling Program was established in 1991 as a Certificate Program to train individuals with related advanced degrees to become genetic counselors. It became a Master of Science degree program in 1995 and is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Genetic Counseling (ACGC). As part of The Mount Sinai Health System.Our students have access to the laboratories, libraries, and educational resources of ISMMS as part of The Mount Sinai Health System.

The integration of academic and clinical disciplines within one of the country's preeminent health systems provides an ideal environment for our master's program, affording our students unparalleled opportunities for study, research, and practice in the challenging and exciting field of genetic counseling.

Randi Zinberg, MS, CGC Director, Master of Science Program in Genetic Counseling Email: randi.zinberg@mssm.edu

Sabrina Suckiel, MS, CGC Assistant Director, Master of Science Program in Genetic Counseling Email: sabrina.suckiel@mssm.edu

Julie McGlynn, MS, CGC Director, Clinical Training, Master of Science Program in Genetic Counseling Email: julie.mcglynn@mssm.edu

Genetics and Genomics Faculty

Who are genetic counselors?

Integrating the digital universe to better diagnose, treat and prevent disease

A professional network for the interests of genetic counselors

Promoting high standards in genetic counseling

Student Life and Resources

1st Year Genetic Counseling Program Experience at ISMMS

Live in one of the worlds most vibrant cities

Finance your graduate education

Course registrations, academic calendars, transcripts and more

Embracing the principles of diversity and inclusion

Learn about graduate student housing

Discover and explore research at ISMMS

Read the original:
Master of Science in Genetic Counseling | Icahn School of ...

Read More...

20/20 Vision: Is It Perfect Eyesight? – AllAboutVision.com

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

By Amy Hellem and Gary Heiting, OD

On this page: What's the difference between visual acuity, eyesight and vision? What is 20/20 vision? Seeing better than 20/20 What is perfect vision? Where to get expert advice

If you have an eye exam and are told you have 20/20 vision, does this mean you have perfect eyesight? Is it possible to achieve even better than 20/20 vision? And what is "perfect vision" anyway?

To answer these questions, let's take a closer look at vision-related terminology to fully understand how eye doctors measure the quality of your vision.

Visual acuity. This, literally, is the sharpness of your vision. Visual acuity is measured by your ability to identify letters or numbers on a standardized eye chart from a specific viewing distance.

Visual acuity is a static measurement, meaning you are sitting still during the testing and the letters or numbers you are viewing also are stationary.

Visual acuity also is tested under high contrast conditions typically, the letters or numbers on the eye chart are black, and the background of the chart is white.

Although visual acuity testing is very useful to determine the relative clarity of your eyesight in standardized conditions, it isn't predictive of the quality of your vision in all situations. For example, it can't predict how well you would see:

Three major physical and neurological factors determine visual acuity:

Only light that is focused on a very small and highly sensitive portion of the central retina (called the macula) influences visual acuity measurements obtained during an eye exam.

FIND A DOCTOR: If you're worried about your vision, visit an eye doctor near you. >

Visual acuity typically is quantified with Snellen fractions (see "What is 20/20 Vision?" below).

Eyesight. The exact definition of "eyesight" is difficult to pin down. Depending on which dictionary or other resource you check, it can mean "ability to see," "the sense of seeing," "vision," "range of sight" or "view." Often, the terms "eyesight" and "visual acuity" are used interchangeably.

Vision. This is a broader term than visual acuity or eyesight. In addition to sharpness of sight or simply a description of the ability to see, the term "vision" usually includes a wider range of visual abilities and skills. These include contrast sensitivity, the ability to track moving objects with smooth and accurate eye movements, color vision, depth perception, focusing speed and accuracy, and more.

If this more inclusive (and accurate) definition of "vision" is used, what most people call "20/20 vision" should really be called "20/20 visual acuity." Realistically, that probably won't happen. For better or worse, the term "20/20 vision" is likely here to stay.

The term "20/20" and similar fractions (such as 20/40, 20/60, etc.) are visual acuity measurements. They also are called Snellen fractions, named after Herman Snellen, the Dutch ophthalmologist who developed this measurement system in 1862.

In the Snellen visual acuity system, the top number of the Snellen fraction is the viewing distance between the patient and the eye chart. In the United States, this distance typically is 20 feet; in other countries, it is 6 meters.

At this testing distance, the size of the letters on one of the smaller lines near the bottom of the eye chart has been standardized to correspond to "normal" visual acuity this is the "20/20" line. If you can identify the letters on this line but none smaller, you have normal (20/20) visual acuity.

The increasingly larger letter sizes on the lines on the Snellen chart above the 20/20 line correspond to worse visual acuity measurements (20/40, 20/60, etc.); the lines with smaller letters below the 20/20 line on the chart correspond to visual acuity measurements that are even better than 20/20 vision (e.g., 20/15, 20/12, 20/10).

The single big "E" at the top of most Snellen eye charts corresponds to 20/200 visual acuity. If this is the smallest letter size you can discern with your best corrective lenses in front of your eyes, you are legally blind.

On most Snellen charts, the smallest letters correspond to 20/10 visual acuity. If you have 20/10 visual acuity, your eyesight is twice as sharp as that of a person with normal (20/20) vision.

Yes, it's indeed possible to have sharper than 20/20 vision. In fact, most people with young, healthy eyes are capable of identifying at least some of the letters on the 20/15 line or even smaller letters on the Snellen chart.

This may be due in part to better printing methods available today vs. those in the 19th century when Snellen was determining the smallest letters a person with normal vision should be able to discern. So a case could be made that "normal" visual acuity today is an ability to identify letters that are a bit smaller than those on the 20/20 line of a traditional Snellen eye chart.

Even if you see 20/20, you may feel your vision isn't as sharp as you'd like. There are remedies for this.

On the other hand, people are living longer today than they did in Snellen's era. Normal aging changes in the eye, such as early cataracts, could justify considering somewhat larger letters than those on the 20/20 line as being indicative of "normal" vision among adults in their 60s or older.

Regardless of these considerations, let's say your eye doctor says you have 20/20 vision (or, more accurately, 20/20 visual acuity), and you want sharper eyesight. What can you do?

If your 20/20 vision doesn't seem sharp enough, it could be that your eyes have higher-order aberrations (HOAs) that cannot be corrected with regular eyeglasses or soft contact lenses. Your eye doctor can check for these aberrations with wavefront technology that is available in some eye care practices.

If HOAs are caused by small irregularities in the shape of the front surface of your eyes, being fitted with gas permeable contact lenses (GP lenses) often can improve your visual acuity better than eyeglasses or soft contact lenses. This is because GP lenses are rigid and essentially replace the eye's irregular front surface with a perfectly smooth, curved surface to focus light more accurately.

Another option might be custom wavefront LASIK. This personalized laser vision correction surgery can provide vision that is comparable to wearing rigid gas permeable contact lenses (which often is sharper than the visual acuity provided by glasses or soft contact lenses), without the hassle of the daily contact lens care.

If you prefer to wear eyeglasses to correct your refractive errors, glasses with special high-definition lenses might give you sharper vision than regular eyeglass lenses.

It's nearly impossible to quantify what "perfect" vision is. Besides, a more interesting question would be, "Perfect for what?"

For example, if you are driving on a sunny day, excellent Snellen visual acuity might be the main factor in your satisfaction with your vision. But your girlfriend, who has worse visual acuity than yours, might be happier with her vision in the same circumstances because she is wearing polarized sunglasses with anti-reflective coating that enhance contrast and block glare.

Or an athlete who has better than 20/20 vision might struggle with his performance because he doesn't have certain dynamic visual skills that allow him to react to moving objects as quickly as a teammate whose static visual acuity isn't as sharp as his.

The first step to maximizing the clarity and comfort of your eyesight in all situations is to see a qualified optometrist or ophthalmologist for a comprehensive eye exam and vision evaluation.

If you are interested in finding out if laser vision correction could sharpen your vision better than glasses or contacts, ask to be referred to an experienced LASIK surgeon for a consultation.

If you want to maximize your dynamic vision skills for sports and other activities, seek an eye doctor who is a sports vision specialist and ask about sports vision training.

Finally, if your child has 20/20 vision but is struggling with eye strain and other vision problems in school, seek the advice of an eye care provider who specializes in children's vision to have your child evaluated for possible learning-related vision problems.

Back to top

About the Author: Amy Hellem is a writer, editor and researcher who specializes in eye care and other medical fields. She is a past editor-in-chief of the professional ophthalmic journals Review of Optometry and Review of Cornea & Contact Lenses and currently is president of Hellem Consulting, LLC.

[Page updated September 2016]

The rest is here:
20/20 Vision: Is It Perfect Eyesight? - AllAboutVision.com

Read More...

Test your vision

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

Message content Please select a topic

Group information Financial information Product / Brand information Press Unsolicited application Other *

Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegowina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Cook Islands Costa Rica Cote d'Ivoire Croatia (Hrvatska) Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic East Timor Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France France Metropolitan French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard and Mc Donald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran (Islamic Republic of) Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao, People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macau Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco Mongolia Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Reunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia (Slovak Republic) Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Spain Sri Lanka St. Helena St. Pierre and Miquelon Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States United States Minor Outlying Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Vietnam Virgin Islands (British) Virgin Islands (U.S.) Wallis and Futuna Islands Western Sahara Yemen Yugoslavia Zambia Zimbabwe *

* PDF or Word document

Please attach your CV and letter of motivation which we will review carefully. If you don't get a response from us within a month, it means that your application does not meet our current needs. However, please continue to check our website as we regularly publish new job offers.

View post:
Test your vision

Read More...

Blindness (Movie Tie-In) by Jos Saramago | 2900156035582 …

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

Membership Gift Cards Stores & Events Help

Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.

For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.

Winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature. A city is hit by an epidemic of 'white blindness.' The blindness spreads, sparing no one. Authorities confine the blind to a vacant mental hospital secured by armed guards. Inside, the criminal element among the blind hold the rest captive: food rations are stolen, women are raped. There is one eyewitness to this nightmare who guides seven strangers through the barren streets. The developments within this oddly anonymous group -- the first blind man, the old man with the black eye patch, the girl with dark glasses, the boy with no mother, and the dog of tears -- are as uncanny as the surrounding chaos is harrowing.

A parable of loss and disorientation, of man's worst appetities and hopeless weaknesses, Blindness is one of the most challenging, thought-provoking, and ultimately exhilarating novels published in any language in recent years.

Show More

Post to your social network

See all customer reviews

Read more from the original source:
Blindness (Movie Tie-In) by Jos Saramago | 2900156035582 ...

Read More...

Blindness – Sensory Birth Defects – Medic8

Tuesday, November 29th, 2016

Birth defects affect the structure or function of parts or systems in the body and this can result in many different developmental and health problems. Birth defects which affect the sensory organs are known as sensory birth defects; the most common examples include cataracts, visual impairment, blindness and hearing loss.

Blindness rarely develops during the teenage and early adult years; most people are either born with blindness or develop it as a result of other visual problems which get worse as they age. In some rare cases, blindness may also result from an accident or injury or exposure to a harmful chemical. Blindness that exists from birth is known as congenital blindness; in this case, the baby will probably never be able to see. There are different degrees of visual impairment and some people who have a birth defect which affects the sensory organs only suffer from mild visual impairment.

There may be many different causes of congenital blindness and visual problems; possible causes are outlined below:

Blindness can also be caused by existing conditions, which become worse over time; examples of these conditions include glaucoma and cataracts, which may be common symptoms of birth defects.

Being blind does not have any impact on intellectual capacity but it may make learning more difficult because so much of our learning and development is aided by seeing the world around us. Blind children and adults tend to rely on their other senses, particularly their hearing and touch to guide them and enable them to learn. Using Braille and other tangible objects enables blind people to do everyday activities such as crossing the road, making a phone call or reading a book; Braille uses small tangible dots and bumps that can spell out words or replace letters or numbers. Audio books enable blind people to listen to books, rather than reading them and hearing can also be very beneficial for things like communicating with others and keeping safe when out and about.

Many children with visual impairment attend regular schools, although there are many specialist schools which cater for children with more severe visual problems and blindness. At school, pupils should be given additional support and the school should cater for them by providing Braille equipment and ensuring the surroundings are suitable and safe.

As mentioned above, many people rely on their other senses to get around and live a normal daily life; however, there are additional aids which can help to make life easier. Braille, as e have already established, is hugely beneficial for blind people; it allows them to do everything from making a telephone call and reading a book, to understanding forms and letters. Many blind people also benefit from having a specially trained guide dog; these dogs help to enable people to stay relatively independent and keep them safe when they are crossing roads or are out and about walking.

There is currently no cure for blindness and those born with blindness will have to face the reality of never being able to see; this is a strange, frightening concept for people who have good sight. There are treatments available for some visual conditions; however, not all problems are curable. If you are born with a visual impairment, your doctor or ophthalmologist will discuss all the possible options and treatment pathways with you.

Scientists and researchers are currently working on numerous projects to identify measures and treatments which can cure congenital blindness; one of the methods being trialled is gene therapy.

Go here to read the rest:
Blindness - Sensory Birth Defects - Medic8

Read More...

Costa Rica Tico Times Directory

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

Costa Rica Tico Times Directory is the largest online website directory in Costa Rica. It has been design for those niche websites for travel, real estate, recreation, business and general information on Costa Rica. We have the largest list of government websites.

For those who lack geographical knowledge, Costa Rica is a country in Central America, bordered by Nicaragua to the north, Panama to the southeast, the Pacific Ocean to the west, and the Caribbean Sea to the east.

Costa Rica, which means "Rich Coast," and best known for the country that constitutionally abolished its army permanently in 1949 and for its ecotourism.

Photos of Costa Rica's Beaches and enjoy some great Costa Rica Aerial Photos

So whether you are searching for the most secluded bed and breakfast, or looking for information on turtles this is the place you will probably find it.

RECENT BLOG POSTS

American Students Power Up Costa Rica Community

Could Costa Rica Become the Poster Child of Bitcoins Users?

World Records Of Saltwater Fish Caught In Costa Rica

Help Prevent Getting Dengue Fever in Costa Rica

See original here:
Costa Rica Tico Times Directory

Read More...

Fight Aging! Reports from the front line in the fight …

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

Linking Excess Fat Tissue, Immune Dysfunction, and Cellular Senescence in Aging

Loading...

Cellular senescence is one of the root causes of aging, and there are at present serious, well-funded efforts underway to produce rejuvenation therapies based on the selective destruction of senescent cells in old tissues. This progress is welcome, but it could have started a long time ago. It has taken many years of advocacy and the shoestring production of technology demonstrations to finally convince the broader community of scientists and funding institutions that the evidence has long merited serious investment in treatments to clear senescent cells. This is what it is, and now we must look to the future, for all that it has been a long, uphill battle. Cellular senescence is today having its time in the sun. Many research groups are linking the mechanisms of senescence to other aspects of aging; senescent cells are showing up in many more research papers than in past years, now that there is more of a scientific and financial incentive to search carefully for their influence. I think that declaring cellular senescence to be the causal nexus of aging, as one research group did, is going overboard a little, as there are, after all, other independent causes of aging, forms of metabolic waste and damage that would cause death and disease even if cellular senescence did not exist. Nonetheless, it is gratify to watch the spreading realization that cellular senescence plays a role in many areas of health and biology associated with aging. The advent of therapies that can remove senescent cells promises to produce sweeping beneficial effects on aging and disease.

There is a set of fairly well established threads of research that link aging with visceral fat tissue and immune dysfunction in the form of chronic inflammation. Visceral fat produces an accelerated pace of aging by generating greater chronic inflammation, producing an hostile tissue environment of inappropriate signals that attract immune cells and then cause those cells to become dysfunctional. The more fat there is the more inflammation it creates. This is thought to be the primary mechanism by which obesity increases the risk and severity of age-related disease. All of the common age-related diseases are accelerated in their progression by higher levels of chronic inflammation. The material difference between a lot of fat and a normal amount of fat is well demonstrated by a study in which researchers produced life extension in mice through surgical removal of visceral fat, but there is a mountain of data on human health to show that people who are overweight will suffer a shorter life expectancy and more age-related illness, and that this effect scales by the amount of excess fat tissue. How do senescent cells fit into this picture? One of the characteristic features of senescent cells is that they produce greater levels of chronic inflammation via the secretion of signal molecules such as cytokines. Of late, researchers have shown that senescent cells are found in the immune system, as in other cell populations. Given this, it should not be a surprise to find that cellular senescence can be implicated in the way in which visceral fat accelerates aging: their presence in visceral fat tissue and the immune cells interacting with that tissue fits right in with the broader picture of inflammation and bad cellular behavior.

Obesity accelerates T cell senescence in murine visceral adipose tissue

Visceral obesity is associated with chronic low-grade inflammation in visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and a sustained whole-body proinflammatory state, which may underlie metabolic and cardiovascular diseases. VAT inflammation associated with obesity involves a complex network of responses of immune cell components, including acquired immune cells such as various subsets of T cells and B cells and innate immune cells such as macrophages. Among these cells, CD4+ T cells have been recognized as a central regulator of chronic VAT inflammation. The number of CD4+ T cells in VAT increases as the tissue expands in obesity. Factors that drive CD4+ T cell expansion and into proinflammatory effectors in VAT during the development of high-fat diet-induced (HFD-induced) obesity may include MHC class II-associated antigens, possibly self-peptides, because the T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire of CD4+ T cells in VAT is limited, and deficiency of MHC class II protects mice from high fat diet (HFD)-induced VAT inflammation and insulin resistance. However, the obesity-associated immune background underlying chronic inflammation in VAT remains elusive.

Significant changes occur in the overall T cell populations with age. In CD4+ T cells, proportions of naive (CD44loCD62Lhi) cells sharply decline in ontogeny, with an age-dependent increase in cells of the memory phenotype (CD44hiCD62Llo). Among CD44hiCD4+ T cells, a unique population expressing programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and CD153 actually increases with age in mice. The CD153+PD-1+CD44hiCD4+ T cell population shows compromised proliferation and regular T cell cytokine production on T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation but secretes large amounts of proinflammatory cytokines, such as osteopontin. These CD4+ T cells also show signatures of cell senescence, including a marked increase in senescence-related gene expression and nuclear heterochromatin foci, and are termed senescence-associated T cells (SA-T cells). Notably, the age-dependent development of SA-T cells, which may include autoreactive cells, is dependent on B cells. As such, the increase in SA-T cells is suggested to be involved in part in immune aging phenotypes such as impaired acquired immune capacity, increased proinflammatory traits, and high risk for autoimmunity.

In the present study, we demonstrate that CD153+PD-1+CD44hiCD4+ T cells are remarkably increased and preferentially accumulated in the VAT of HFD-fed mice in a B cell-dependent manner and that these CD4+ T cells show functional and genetic features strongly resembling SA-T cells that increase in secondary lymphoid tissues with age. We also indicate that the CD153+PD-1+CD44hiCD4+ T cells play a crucial role in inducing chronic VAT inflammation and metabolic disorder via secretion of large amounts of osteopontin. We demonstrated that adoptive transfer of CD153+PD-1+CD44hiCD4+ T cells, but not other CD4+ T cells, from HFD-fed spleens into VAT of ND-fed mice recapitulates the features of VAT inflammation, including a striking increase in CD11chiCD206lo macrophages and expression of proinflammatory cytokine genes. It is noteworthy that CD153+PD-1+CD4+ T cells in VAT of HFD-fed mice show features indistinguishable from those of CD153+ SA-T cells, which gradually increase systemically with age. The age-dependent increase in CD153+ SA-T cells may partly underlie the immune aging, including a reduction in acquired immunity and an increase in the inflammatory trait and autoimmunity risk. Obesity is also associated with diminished resistance against infection, chronic low-grade inflammation, and a greater susceptibility to autoimmunity. It has been suggested that the increase in CD153+ SA-T cells in chronological aging and systemic autoimmunity is attributable to a robust, homeostatic T cell proliferation, but the precise mechanism underlying the accumulation of these T cells in VAT of HFD-fed mice remains to be investigated. Nonetheless, it is an intriguing possibility that the predisposition often associated with obesity may partly be a systemic manifestation of the premature increase in CD153+ SA-T cells in VAT, since adipose tissues can constitute up to 50% to 60% of total BW in severe obesity.

Loading...

Both birds and bats have great longevity for their size in comparison to mammalian species that do not fly, which has led researchers to theorize that the metabolic demands of flight lead to the evolution of cell structures that are more resistant to the damage of aging. Energy metabolism revolves around the mitochondria, the power plants of the cells, and so this in turn points to an important role for mitochondrial function and damage to mitochondria in determining aging and longevity, both across species and in individuals. There are good correlations between mitochondrial composition, the degree to which mitochondrial structures can resist oxidative damage, and mammalian life span, for example. Researchers here take a more reductionist approach to the question of why bats are exceptionally long-lived, and begin by mapping the RNA of a bat species:

Of all mammals, bats possess some of the most unique and peculiar adaptations that render them as excellent models to investigate the mechanisms of extended longevity and potentially halted senescence. They are considered the 'Methusalehs' among mammals due to their exceptional and surprising longevity given their body size and metabolic rate. Typically mammals that are small have a high metabolic rate (e.g. shrews) and do not live for a long time. However, despite their small size and high metabolic rate bats can live for an exceptionally long time, with the oldest recorded Brandt's bat (wild caught as an adult) ever recaptured being more than 41 years old with a body weight of 7 grams. Indeed, to get a positive correlation between longevity and body size in mammals, bats must be removed from the analyses. By comparing the ratio of expected longevity to that predicted from the 'non-bat placental mammal' regression line (longevity quotient - LQ) only 19 species of mammals are longer lived than man, one of these species being the naked mole rat and the other 18 are bats. This suggests that bats have some underlying mechanisms that may explain their exceptional longevity.

MicroRNA (miRNA) are a subset of short endogenous non-coding RNA that play a significant role in post-transcriptional regulation, via repression of translation. Since the first miRNA was discovered in 1993, a multitude of miRNA have subsequently been identified, and implicated in the regulation of the vast majority of biological pathways including cell cycle regulation, metabolism, tumorigenesis, as well as immune response. However, the role of miRNA regulation in mammalian ageing and the onset of age-related diseases has only recently been established. In mammals, various miRNA have been shown to be differentially expressed during ageing, most of which appear to be generally tissue-specific. In addition to tissue-specific ageing, it is increasingly evident that many miRNA regulate gene expressions in well-known ageing pathways, most notably in the p53 tumor suppressor pathway and insulin-like growth factor signaling pathway.

Despite being the second largest order of mammals (~1200 species), there is a scarcity of genomic and transcriptomic bat resources. To date, only five well-annotated bat genomes are publically available. Phylogenomic studies of bat genomes and other mammalian species reveal that a number of genes are under positive selection in bats. These genic adaptations have been correlated with traits such as echolocation, powered flight, hibernation, immunity and longevity. For example, specific non-synonymous mutations in GHR and IGF1R, key ageing-related genes, were detected in several long-lived vespertilionid bats (M. brandtii, M. lucifugus and Eptesicus fuscus), while a large proportion of genes involved in DNA repair (RAD50, KU80, MDM2, etc.) and the NF-B pathway (c-REL and ATM2, etc.) were reported to be under positive or divergent selection in M. davidii and P. alecto. These results suggest bats may better detect and repair DNA damage. Intriguingly, positive selection was also detected in mitochondrial-encoded and nuclear-encoded oxidative phosphorylation genes in bats, which may explain their efficient energy metabolism necessary for flight. Apart from comparative genome analysis, only a small number of transcriptomic studies on bats using have been carried out, focused primarily on the characteristics of hibernation, immunity, echolocation and phylogeny. However, the molecular mechanisms of adaptations affecting longevity are still far from understood, especially with respect to gene regulation.

In the present study, we sequenced six small RNA libraries from whole blood sampled from wild-caught greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis) and for the first time made genome-wide comparisons of both miRNomes and mRNA transcriptomes between bat and non-bat mammalian species (human, pig and cow). The profiling of the M. myotis blood miRNome showed a large number of bat-specific miRNA involved in regulating important pathways related to immunity, tumorigenesis and ageing. Comparative analyses of both miRNomes and transcriptomes also revealed distinctive longevity mechanisms in bats. Several up-regulated miRNA possibly act as tumor suppressors. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of differentially expressed protein-coding genes showed that up-regulated genes in bats compared to other mammals were mainly involved in mitotic cell cycle and DNA damage repair pathways while a high number of down-regulated genes were enriched in mitochondrial metabolism. The results and data presented here show unique regulatory mechanisms for protection against tumorigenesis, reduced oxidative stress, and robust DNA repair systems, likely contribute to the extraordinary longevity of bats.

Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-3227-8

Loading...

Very few genetic variants robustly correlate with longevity across different study populations, and those that do, such as variants of APOE and FOXO3A, have small effects, only visible in the mortality statistics of large numbers of people. This indicates that the genetics of longevity, the way in which variations in metabolism and the response to high levels of age-related cell and tissue damage in later life can produce modestly different mortality rates, is a matter of many thousands of tiny, interacting contributions, very sensitive to environmental factors. It appears ever less likely that there will be any easy, small number of genetic changes that can be made to humans in order to produce significant lengthening of life. Thus the study of genetics and longevity isn't the place to be looking for cost-effective ways to produce radical life extension of decades and more. This paper is one of many recent illustrations of this point; none of the described problems would be anywhere near as much of a challenge if there was a large genetic effect on aging and longevity with simple, narrow origins there to be found. That would stand out from the data much more readily.

The results of many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of complex traits suffer from a lack of replication. Differences in population genetic structures among study populations are considered to be possible contributors to this problem. One aspect of population structure - the differences in genetic frequencies among subgroups of individuals comprising the population - was traditionally linked with the effects of population stratification. Another one - the presence of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in many parts of the human genome including those that contain causal single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) - was actively exploited in GWAS of complex traits. Methods of fine mapping following the "discovery" phase are used for evaluating causal SNPs. One could expect that the non-replication problem due to differences in LD patterns among study populations in GWAS would disappear if the detected marker SNP is a causal one, i.e., if it contributes to the variability of a trait. It turns out that the differences in LD levels around a functional SNP may still contribute to the non-replication problem.

The estimated associations in this case depend on whether the detected functional SNP is in LD with another functional SNP, the effects of these SNPs on the trait in the absence of LD (pure effects), and on the level of LD between corresponding SNP loci. This property has important consequences for interpretation of the results of genetic analyses of complex traits. In the presence of LD the estimated effects of a causal SNP may be spurious and may incorrectly characterize the biological relationships between the SNP and the trait. In contrast the pure effect of a given causal SNP estimated in the absence of LD with other such SNPs may correctly characterize the biological connections between the SNP and the trait. Therefore, for example, performing genetic analyses of African populations (that have lower levels of LD patterns for many SNP pairs than populations of European origin) has the potential to reduce bias in the estimated effects of functional SNPs on a trait caused by the presence of LD between functional loci. This condition is, however, not sufficient because of the possible presence of hidden gene/gene interaction effects, gene/environment correlations, and gene/environment interaction effects.

Human lifespan and many other aging, health and longevity related traits are multifactorial phenotypes, that is, they are affected by many genetic and non-genetic factors. The relationships between genes and these phenotypes have special features that distinguish them from other complex traits, influence methods of their genetic analyses, and affect the interpretation of the research results. The genetic variants that influence aging, health, and longevity related traits generate age dependent changes in the population genetic structure, i.e., changes in the frequencies of genetic variants and in the levels of linkage disequilibrium (LD) among them. This feature has important implications for studies focused on the replication of GWAS research findings: independent populations involved in such studies often have different genetic structures, due in part to the differences in the population age distribution at the time of biospecimen collection. As a result, the frequencies of the genetic variants associated with these traits and their LD patterns may differ even if the genetic structures in the corresponding population cohorts were the same at birth.

Detecting statistically significant associations of genetic variants with complex traits is not the end of the genetic analyses. One reason is that the relationship between a detected marker SNP and the complex trait of interest is not, necessarily, a causal one. More often these relationships serve as proxies for the real effect of some unobserved causal SNPs (due to linkage disequilibrium (LD) between the marker and causal SNPs), and, hence, do not have a direct biological effect on the phenotype. To generate insights about the biological mechanisms responsible for the trait's variability one has to identify the causal SNPs responsible for the association signal. To identify such SNPs a number of efficient fine-mapping procedures have been recommended. The main limitation of existing methods is that they seek to identify a single causal variant which is independent of (not in LD with) other causal variants. Since this is not sufficiently realistic, a new approach that allows for efficient detection of multiple causal variants has been proposed. The case where two or more causal SNPs are in LD creates additional problems for interpretation of the results of genetic association studies.

In this paper we show that the estimates of the effects of a causal SNP on lifespan depend on the genetic structure of the population under study (e.g., the level of LD of the SNP with other causal SNPs). Genetic association studies of this trait using data from populations with different LD levels are likely to produce different results. We show that differences in population genetic structures can explain why genetic variants favorable for longevity in one population appear as harmful risk factors in another population. Population structure may also be responsible for the age-specific effects of genetic variants on mortality risk. Differences in genetic structures in distinct populations may be responsible for the low level of replicability of GWAS of human aging, health, and longevity related traits.

Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2016.00188

Loading...

I stumbled upon an interesting open access paper a few days ago, linked below, in which the authors present their view of immunosenescence, the age-related failure of the immune system, as being in part a process wherein some cells of the adaptive immune system change their characteristics and function to become more like innate immune system cells. It makes for interesting reading, though it is worth bearing in mind that the immune system as a whole is fantastically complex, and in many ways still a dark and unmapped forest. It is easy to theorize unopposed when there is such a lot of empty space remaining on the map, making it hard to argue concretely about the relative importance of various mechanisms and observations. This poor understanding of the intricacies of the immune system is why autoimmune diseases and immune aging are largely lacking in effective treatments, and why the best of the prospective cures are those that sidestep the entire question of specific causes and mechanisms in face of the Gordian strategy of destroying the entire immune system in order to start over with new stem cells and immune cells.

As you might know, the immune system of most higher animals is two-layered. The layer that evolved first, and which remains the entirety of the immune system in lower animals such as insects, is known as the innate immune system. It reacts quickly, generates inflammation, and reacts in the same, predictable way to every threat. It has no memory and does not reconfigure its operations in response to circumstances and history. Later in evolutionary history, a second layer known as the adaptive immune system came into being, a more sophisticated set of functions resting on top of the existing innate mechanisms. The innate immune system reacts to intruders, and then the adaptive immune system records the nature of the threat and responds in its own manner, augmenting the attack. As the name suggests, the adaptive immune system maintains a memory and adjusts its operations in order to more aggressively destroy pathogens that it has encountered in the past. As anyone in the field will tell you, however, this high level picture of cleanly divided dualism is overly simplistic, however. There are numerous grey areas and incompletely understood complexities at the border between the two sides of the immune system.

Given that the adaptive immune system can adapt, its failure with aging is in large part a matter of acquired misconfiguration. There is only a small influx of new immune cells in adults, and this puts an effective limit on the number of immune cells that is supported at any one time. The inevitable problem in a space-limited system that keeps a continual record of history is that it runs out of space: evolutionary pressures produced the trade-off of a system that works very well out of the gate in young people, but fails sometime in later life. An old adaptive immune system is burdened with too many cells devoted to memory and too few cells devoted to attacking new threats. That is on top of the progressive failures that occur due to the the growing burden of the molecular damage that accompanies aging: persistent metabolic waste products such as cross-links and lipofuscin, mitochondrial damage, diminished stem cell activity, and so forth. The innate immune system has its own problems that arise from this damage, but is less prone of the issue of misconfiguration.

Understanding exactly how aging progressively harms the intricate choreography of the immune response is a massive project, and nowhere near completion. It is possible to judge how far along researchers are in this work by the side effect of the quality of therapies for autoimmune disease, which are malfunctions in immune configuration, and largely incurable at the present time. From a practical point of view, and as mentioned above, the best prospects for effective treatments in the near future involve destroying and recreating the immune system. That works around our comparative ignorance by removing all of the problems that researchers don't understand in addition to ones that they do. Destroying the immune system can only be done with chemotherapy at the moment, which no-one would undergo unless there was no choice in the matter given that it has significant negative effects on long-term health, but once new methods of selective immune cell destruction are developed, lacking side-effects, then we can start to talk about treating immune aging by rebooting the immune system.

Convergence of Innate and Adaptive Immunity during Human Aging

Aging is associated with a general decline in immune function, contributing to a higher risk of infection, cancer, and autoimmune diseases in the elderly. Such faulty immune responses are the result of a profound remodeling of the immune system that occurs with age, generally termed as immunosenescence. While the number of nave T cells emerging from the thymus progressively decreases with age as a result of thymic involution, the memory T cell pool expands and exhibits significant changes in the phenotype and function of antigen-experienced T cells, particularly evident in the CD8+ T cell compartment. Chronic immune activation due to persistent viral infections, such as cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), is one of the main drivers contributing to the accumulation of highly differentiated antigen-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes that have characteristics of replicative senescence. In combination with the depletion of the peripheral pool of nave T cells, the accumulation of these terminally differentiated T cells with age skews the immune repertoire and has been implicated in the impaired immune responses to new antigens and vaccination in the elderly

Natural killer cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes are the two major cell lineages with constitutive cytotoxic activity and have a crucial role in the recognition and killing of abnormal cells. However, the paradigm for the recognition of target cells is fundamentally different between these two cell types: conventional CD8+ T cells rely on the T cell receptor (TCR) to recognize specific peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex class-I (MHC-I) molecules, whereas NK cells use a repertoire of germ line-encoded receptors to detect "missing self" or "altered-self" antigens and directly kill abnormal cells, without prior sensitization. Besides antigen specificity, the development of immunological memory is conventionally another distinctive feature between NK and T cells, categorizing them into distinct arms of the immune system and the innate and adaptive immune system, respectively.

Nevertheless, accumulating evidence supports the existence of NK cell memory, as well as evidence for TCR-independent responses mediated by CD8+ T lymphocytes, suggesting that the conventional limits between the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system may be not as distinct as first thought. NK and T lymphocytes have a common origin from a lymphoid progenitor cell in the bone marrow, and recent comparative proteomic and transcriptomic studies have demonstrated a remarkably close proximity between effector CD8+ T lymphocytes and NK cells, reiterating an evolutionary ancestry and shared biology between the two cell lineages.

An increasing body of literature reveals the existence of subsets of T cells with features that bridge innate and adaptive immunity. These cells typically co-express a TCR and NK cell lineage markers, distinguishing them from NK cells and other innate lymphoid cells, which lack the expression of a TCR or somatically rearranged receptors. Functionally, innate-like T cells respond to TCR ligation but are also able to respond rapidly to danger signals and pro-inflammatory cytokines, independently of TCR stimulation, resembling innate cells. Recently, subsets of conventional CD8+ T cells expressing NK cell markers and intraepithelial T cells have been included in this vaguely defined group of innate-like T cells. Despite the similarities in phenotype and function, there are clear differences in ontogeny and tissue distribution between them.

In this review, we will discuss recent evidence that aging is associated with the expansion of a subset of conventional CD8+ T cells with phenotypic, functional, and transcriptomic features that resemble NK cells. Such innate-like CD8+ T cells have the characteristics of terminally differentiated T cells, and the acquisition of functional NK receptors is most likely part of a general reprograming of the CD8+ T cell compartment during human aging, to ensure broad and rapid effector functions. We propose that innate-like CD8+ T cells share important features with other innate-like T cells; however, fundamental differences in origin and development separate them from truly innate cells. Interestingly, these cells are also differentially affected by aging, suggesting distinct roles in immune responses at different times of life. Evidence indicates that chronological aging is associated with accumulation of cells combining features of both the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system, most likely to compensate for functional defects of conventional NK and CD8+ T cells with age. We propose that senescent CD8+ T cells should not be seen as a dysfunctional population but instead a functionally distinct subset, which uses recently acquired NK cell machinery to maintain rapid effector functions throughout life. Contrary to the classic paradigm that peripheral TCR ligation is essential for T cell activation, this subset of highly differentiated T cells has impaired TCR responsiveness and may be non-specifically activated by inflammatory cytokines or after ligation of innate receptors. The switch to an innate mode of function may shed light on the mechanisms that allow highly differentiated CD8+ T cells to maintain functionality, despite the loss of TCR signal functions.

Our understanding of the physiological significance of the expression of NKRs on T cells is still incomplete, and the identification of the molecular mechanisms and the transcriptional regulators underpinning the development of innate features in T cells is essential. Most importantly, it will be important to understand how the intersection between innate and adaptive immune features may be manipulated to enhance immune function and to use this information to develop new approaches to improve immunity in the elderly.

Loading...

There are many possible answers to the question of why women have a longer life expectancy than men, but no real consensus on which of the candidate mechanisms are the important ones. It is interesting to note that, in an age in which rejuvenation therapies are starting to arrive, the research community has a better idea of how to bring aging under medical control, and thus make natural variations in longevity irrelevant, than of how to definitively determine the mechanisms causing those natural variations between groups of humans. Fully understanding our biochemistry is a massive undertaking, far greater in scope than merely wrestling degenerative aging into submission by addressing its root causes. Biology is enormously complex, and working with statistical demographic data or evolutionary theory doesn't tend to produce firm answers, only helping to narrow down the directions for further inquiry.

People worldwide are living longer, healthier lives. A new study of mortality patterns in humans, monkeys and apes suggests that the last few generations of humans have enjoyed the biggest life expectancy boost in primate history. The gains are partly due to advances in medicine and public health that have increased the odds of survival for human infants and reduced the death toll from childhood illness. Yet males still lag behind females - not just in humans but across the primate family tree, the researchers find. "The male disadvantage has deep evolutionary roots."

An international team compiled records of births and deaths for more than a million people worldwide, from the 18th century to the present. The data included people in post-industrial societies such as Sweden and Japan, people born in pre-industrial times, and modern hunter-gatherers, who provide a baseline for how long people might have lived before supermarkets and modern medicine. The researchers combined these measurements with similar data for six species of wild primates that have been studied continuously for three to five decades, including sifaka lemurs, muriqui monkeys, capuchins, baboons, chimpanzees and gorillas. The data confirm a growing body of research suggesting that humans are making more rapid and dramatic gains than ever before seen in the primate family tree. For example, in the last 200 years life expectancy in Sweden has jumped from the mid-30s to over 80, meaning that a baby born today can hope to live more than twice as long as one born in the early 19th century. The data show that today's longest-lived human populations have a similar 40- to 50-year advantage over people who live traditional lifestyles, such as the Hadza hunter-gatherers of Tanzania and the Ach people of Paraguay.

In contrast, these modern hunter-gatherers - the best lens we have into the lives of early humans - live on average just 10 to 20 years longer than wild primates such as muriquis or chimpanzees, from which human ancestors diverged millions of years ago. "We've made a bigger journey in lengthening our lifespan over the last few hundred years than we did over millions of years of evolutionary history." One indicator of healthcare improvement is infant mortality, which strikes fewer than 3 in 1000 babies born in Sweden or Japan today. But it was more than 40 times higher for those born two centuries ago, and is still high among hunter-gatherers and wild primates.

The researchers also studied lifespan equality, a measure similar to income equality that indicates whether longevity is distributed evenly across society, or only enjoyed by a few. They found that, for both humans and wild primates, every gain in average lifespan is accompanied by a gain in lifespan equality. That is, for a population to be very long-lived, everyone must benefit more or less equally, with fewer individuals left behind. The researchers were surprised to find that the longevity of human males has yet to catch up with females, and the improvements in males aren't spread as evenly. A girl born in Sweden in the early 1800s could expect to outlive her male counterparts by an average of three to four years. Two hundred years later, despite Swedes adding 45 years to their average lifespan, the gulf that separates the sexes has barely budged. The life expectancy gender gap isn't just true for humans. Females outlived males in almost every wild primate population they looked at.

Link: https://today.duke.edu/2016/11/life-expectancy-grows-men-still-lagging

Loading...

In the field of tissue engineering, this is the era of organoids. Researchers are limited in the size of tissue they can produce because of the lack of a robust method of generating the blood vessel networks needed to support large tissue sections, but are otherwise making significant progress in the generation of functional organ tissue. Initially this is producing the greatest benefit for further research and development, allowing tests to be conducted in living tissue at a much faster pace and lower cost. For many tissue types, however, organoids also offer the possibility of benefits realized through transplantation, as in many cases they are capable of integrating with existing organ tissue to improve its function.

Scientists report using human pluripotent stem cells to grow human intestinal tissues that have functioning nerves in a laboratory. The paper puts medical science a step closer to using human pluripotent stem cells (which can become any cell type in the body) for regenerative medicine and growing patient-specific human intestine for transplant. "One day this technology will allow us to grow a section of healthy intestine for transplant into a patient, but the ability to use it now to test and ask countless new questions will help human health to the greatest extent." This ability starts with being able to model and study intestinal disorders in functioning, three-dimensional human organ tissue with genetically-specific patient cells. The technology will also allow researchers to test new therapeutics in functioning lab-engineered human intestine before clinical trials in patients.

Researchers started out by subjecting human pluripotent stem cells to a biochemical bath that triggers their formation into human intestinal tissue in a petri dish. The process was essentially the same as that used in a 2010 study, which reported the first-ever generation of three-dimensional human intestinal organoids in a laboratory. Intestinal tissues from the initial study lacked an enteric nervous system, which is critical to the movement of waste through the digestive tract and the absorption of nutrients. The gastrointestinal tract contains the second largest number of nerves in the human body. When these nerves fail to work properly it hinders the contraction of intestinal muscles. To engineer a nervous system for the intestinal organoids already growing in one petri dish, researchers generated embryonic-stage nerve cells called neural crest cells in a separate dish. The neural crest cells were manipulated to form precursor cells for enteric nerves. The challenge at this stage was identifying how and when to incorporate the neural crest cells into the developing intestine. "We tried a few different approaches largely based on the hypothesis that, if you put the right cells together at the right time in the petri dish, they'll know what do to. It was a long shot, but it worked." The appropriate mix caused enteric nerve precursor cells and intestines to grow together in a manner resembling developing fetal intestine.

A key test for the engineered intestines and nerves was transplanting them into a living organism - in this case laboratory mice with suppressed immune systems. This allowed researchers to see how well the tissues grow and function. Study data show the tissues work and are structured in a manner remarkably similar to natural human intestine. They grow robustly, process nutrients and demonstrate peristalsis - series of wave-like muscle contractions that in the body move food through the digestive tract.

Link: https://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/news/release/2016/hirschsprungs-intestinal-nerve-disorder

Loading...

The first rejuvenation therapies to work well enough to merit the name will be based on the SENS vision: that aging is at root caused by a few classes of accumulated cell and tissue damage, and biotechnologies that either repair that damage or render it irrelevant will as a result produce rejuvenation. Until very recently, no medical technology could achieve this goal, and few research groups were even aiming for that outcome. We are in the midst of a grand transition, however, in which the research and development community is finally turning its attention to the causes of aging, understanding that this is the only way to effectively treat and cure age-related disease. Age-related diseases are age-related precisely because they are caused by the same processes of damage that cause aging: the only distinctions between aging and disease are the names given to various collections of symptoms. All of frailty, disease, weakness, pain, and suffering in aging is the result of accumulated damage at the level of cells and protein machinery inside those cells. Once the medical community becomes firmly set on the goal of repairing that damage, we'll be well on the way to controlling and managing aging as a chronic condition - preventing it from causing harm to the patient by periodically repairing and removing its causes before they rise to the level of producing symptoms and dysfunction. The therapies of the future will be very different from the therapies of the past.

The full rejuvenation toolkit of the next few decades will consist of a range of different treatments, each targeting a different type of molecular damage in cells and tissues. In this post, I'll take a look at the likely order of arrival of some of these therapies, based on what is presently going on in research, funding, and for-profit development. This is an update to a similar post written four years ago, now become somewhat dated given recent advances in the field. Circumstances change, and considerable progress has been made in some lines of research and development.

1) Clearance of Senescent Cells

It didn't take much of a crystal ball four years ago to put senescent cell clearance in first place, the most likely therapy to arrive first. All of the pieces of the puzzle were largely in place at that time: the demonstration of benefits in mice; potential means of clearance; interested research groups. Only comparatively minor details needed filling in. Four years later no crystal ball is required at all, given that Everon Biosciences, Oisin Biotechnologies, SIWA Therapeutics, and UNITY Biotechnology are all forging ahead with various different approaches to the selective destruction of senescent cells. No doubt many groups within established Big Pharma entities are also taking a stab at this, more quietly, and with less press attention. UNITY Biotechnology has raised more than $100 million to date, demonstrating that there is broad enthusiasm for this approach to the treatment of aging and age-related disease.

With the additional attention and funding for this field, more methods of selective cell destruction have been established, and there is now a greater and more detailed understanding of the ways in which senescent cells cause harm, contributing to the aging process. Senolytic drugs that induce apoptosis have been discovered; senescent cells are primed to enter the programmed cell death process of apoptosis, and so a small nudge to all cells via a drug treatment kills many senescent cells but very few normal cells. Researchers have established that senescent cells exist in the immune system, and may be important in immune aging. Similarly, the immune cells involved in the progression of atherosclerosis are also senescent, and removing them slows the progression of that condition. Other research has shown that removing senescent cells from the lungs restores lost tissue elasticity and improves lung function. Beyond these specific details, senescent cells clearly contribute to chronic inflammation in aging, and that drives the progression of near all common age-related conditions. The less inflammation the better. These effects are caused by the signals secreted by senescent cells: that their harm is based on signaling explains how a small number of these cells, perhaps 1% by number in an aged organ, can cause such widespread havoc.

2) Immune System Destruction and Restoration

At the present time it is a challenge to pick second place. A number of fields are all equally close to realization, and happenstance in funding decisions, regulatory matters, or technical details yet to be uncovered will make the difference. The destruction and recreation of the immune system wins out because it is already possible, already demonstrated to be successful, and just missing one component part that would enable it to be used by ordinary, healthy, older people. At present researchers and clinicians use chemotherapy to destroy immune cells and the stem cells that create them. Repopulation of the immune system is carried out via cell transplants that are by now a safe and proven application of stem cell medicine, little different from the many varieties of first generation stem cell therapy. This approach has been used to cure people with multiple sclerosis, and has been attempted with varying degrees of success for a number of other autoimmune conditions for going on fifteen years now: there are researchers with a lot of experience in this type of therapy.

The catch here is that chemotherapy is a damaging experience. The cost of undergoing it is high, both immediately, and in terms of negative impact on later health and life expectancy, similar to that resulting from a life spent smoking. It only makes sense for people who are otherwise on their way to an early death or disability, as is the case for multiple sclerosis patients. However, there are a number of approaches very close to practical realization that will make chemotherapy obsolete for the selective destruction of immune cells and stem cells - approaches with minimal or no side-effects. A combined approach targeting c-kit and CD47 was demonstrated earlier this year, for example. Sophisticated cell targeting systems such as the gene therapy approach developed for senescent cell clearance by Oisin Biotechnologies could also be turned to stem cell or immune cell destruction, given suitable markers of cell chemistry. There are quite a few of these, any one of which would be good enough.

Replacing the chemotherapy with a safe, side-effect-free treatment would mean that the established programs for immune system restoration could immediately expand to become a useful, effective treatment for immunosenescence, the age-related failure of the immune system. This is in part a problem of configuration: a lifetime of exposure to persistent pathogens such as herpesviruses leaves too much of the immune system uselessly devoted to specific targets that it cannot effectively clear from the body, and too little left ready to fight new threats and destroy malfunctioning cells. Then there are various forms of autoimmunity that become prevalent in older people, not all of which are in any way fully understood - consider just how recently type 4 diabetes was discovered, for example. Clearing out the entire immune system, all of its memory and quirks, and restarting it fresh with a new supply of stem cells is a good approach to many of the issues in the aged immune system. Not all of them, but many of them, and considering the broad influence immune function has over many other aspects of health and tissue function, it seems a worthwhile goal.

3) Clearance of the First Few Types of Amyloid

There are about twenty different types of amyloid, misfolded proteins that form solid deposits. Not all are robustly associated with age-related dysfunction, but of those that are, some progress has been made towards effective therapies based on clearance. Last year, a clinical trial of transthyretin amyloid clearance produced good results. This type of amyloid is associated with heart disease, and is thought to be the primary cause of death in supercentenarians. This year researchers finally demonstrated clearance of amyloid- in humans, after a long series of failures. Amyloid- is one of the forms of metabolic waste that accumulates in Alzheimer's disease.

So these types of rejuvenation therapy already exist in the sense of prototypes and trial treatments. To the degree that they are effective and safe, everyone much over the age of 40 should be undergoing a course of treatment every few years. In practice, since both of the above mentioned therapies are tied up in the slow-moving edifice of Big Pharma regulatory capture, it will be a long time before they make it to the clinic in any way that is accessible to an ordinary individual. The most likely path to that goal is for other groups outside that system to reverse engineer the basic technology from the scientific publications, implement their own methodologies, and market it in other regulatory regions, making it available via medical tourism. This is how stem cell medicine progressed, and seems likely to be the way that any other very significant field will also move forward.

4) Clearance of Glucosepane Cross-Links

Clearance of cross-links in the extracellular matrix of tissues is, like senescent cell destruction, one of the most exciting of early rejuvenation therapies. It is a single target that influences a great many aspects of aging: if we look at just the cross-link-induced loss of elasticity in blood vessels alone, that has a major influence on mortality through hypertension and consequent impact on cardiovascular health. It is also a single target in the sense that near all persistent cross-links important to aging in humans so far appear to be based on one compound, glucosepane. Thus all that is needed is one drug candidate.

Four years ago, the situation for glucosepane clearance looked pretty bleak. The funding was minimal, and the tools for working with glucosepane in living tissues didn't exist. Researchers avoided the whole topic, as making any progress would require a lot of funding and effort to even get to the point of starting in earnest. The SENS Research Foundation and their allies have since made major inroads into this challenge, however. Last year, a method of cheaply and reliably synthesizing glucosepane was established, and now the road is open to anyone who wants to try their hand at drug discovery. That is now underway in the Spiegel Lab, among others, and I'd hope to see the first potential drug candidates emerge at some point in the next couple of years.

5) Thymic Rejuvenation to Increase the Supply of Immune Cells

Another possible approach to partially restore lost function in the aging immune system is to increase the pace at which new immune cells are created. This is a very slow pace indeed in older people, due in large part to the age-related decline of the thymus. The thymus acts as a nursery for the maturation of T cells, and its atrophy thus restricts the rate at which new cells enter circulation. There has been some progress towards engineering of replacement active thymus tissue, as well as methods of providing signal proteins that instruct the old thymus to regenerate and begin to act in a more youthful manner. Transplants of young thymus organs into old mice has demonstrated that this class of approach can produce a meaningful improvement in immune function, and thereby extend healthy life. This is one of a number of regenerative approaches that is on the verge, just waiting for someone to start a company or join the final two dots together and get moving.

6) Mitochondrial Repair

Mitochondria, the power plants of the cell, are herds of bacteria-like organelles that bear their own DNA. This DNA becomes damaged in the course of normal cellular processes, and certain forms of mitochondrial DNA damage - to the thirteen genes needed for oxidative phosphorylation - produce malfunctioning mitochondria that can overtake their cells, either by replicating more readily or being more resistant to quality control mechanisms. Such cells become dysfunctional exporters of harmful signals and oxidized proteins, something that contributes to the progression of atherosclerosis via increased amounts of oxidized lipids in the bloodstream, to pick one example. If we're lucky, a substantial proportion of these cells will become senescent as a result of their mutant mitochondria, and will thus be destroyed by senescent cell clearance therapies. Regardless of whether or not that is true, a method of either repairing or working around this type of damage is needed.

Most of the possible approaches may or may not work well, because of the replication advantage that damaged mitochondria have over normal mitochondria, and are still to be tested in practice rather than theory or demonstration: upregulation of existing repair mechanisms; delivery of extra functional mitochondrial DNA or whole mitochondria; and so forth. The SENS approach is somewhat more radical, involving gene therapy to introduce copies of the thirteen genes into the cell nucleus, altered to ensure that the proteins produced can migrate back to the mitochondria where they are needed. Mitochondria will thus have the necessary protein machinery for correct function regardless of the state of their DNA. This has been demonstrated for three of the thirteen genes of interest, numbers two and three just this year, and getting that far has taken the better part of ten years at a low level of funding. It is likely that things will go faster in the future, now that there is a for-profit company, Gensight Biologics working on the problem in addition to non-profit groups, but it is still the case that the bulk of the work remains to be done.

Will it be useful to have therapies that fix half the problem, moving six or seven genes to the cell nucleus? Will that reduce the impact on aging by half? Hard to say until it is done and demonstrated in mice. Halfway there is probably a target reached by 2020 or so at the present pace. Mitochondrial function appears from all the evidence to be an important aspect of aging, so it is to my eyes worth trying at the halfway point to see what the outcome is.

7) A Robust Cure for Cancer

Some might find it counterintuitive that a universal cure for cancer is not last in this list. We've all been educated to think of cancer as the greatest challenge for medical science, the problem to be solved last of all. Nonetheless, a more rapid arrival of a generally applicable cure for cancer looks to be the likely course of events, as the basis for a treatment that can in principle put a halt to all cancer at all stages of development is currently in the earliest stages of development. All cancers depend absolutely on the ability to continually lengthen telomeres, and so avoid the Hayflick limit on cell replication. Telomere lengthening occurs through the activity of telomerase or the less well understood alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) mechanisms: these two are a small set of targets for modern medicine, and researchers are working on the challenge. If telomerase and ALT can both be blocked, temporarily and either globally throughout the body or selectively in cancerous tissue, then cancer will wither and become controllable. This is too fundamental a part of cellular biochemistry for the rapid mutational evolution of cancer cells to work around, as they can for many of the standard approaches to cancer treatment at the present time. Stem cell populations will suffer while telomerase activity is blocked, as they require telomere lengthening for self-renewal, but that is a lesser problem when compared to cancer and one that the stem cell research community will become increasingly able to address in the years ahead.

8) Reversing Stem Cell Aging

The stem cell industry is massively funded, and is on a collision course with stem cell aging. Most of the conditions that one would want to use stem cell therapies to treat are age-related conditions. Researchers must thus ensure that the altered cellular environment, the damage of aging, doesn't prevent the treatments from working - that pristine cells can integrate and work well, not immediately die or decline in response to an age-damaged stem cell niche. On the whole, the research community isn't engaging aggressively with this goal, however. Possible reasons for this include the fact that most stem cell treatments, even without addressing issues of the aged tissue environment, represent a considerable improvement in the scope of what is possible to achieve through modern medicine. So the incentive to go further is perhaps not as strong as it might otherwise be.

Stem cell populations become damaged by age, falling into quiescence or declining in overall numbers. They should be replaced with new populations, but while simple in concept, and even achieved for some cell types, such as the blood stem cells that produce immune cells, this is easier said than done for the body as a whole. Every tissue type is its own special case. There are hundreds of types of cell in the body. Each supporting stem cell population has so far required specific methodologies to be developed, and specific behaviors and biochemistry to be laboriously mapped. It isn't even entirely clear that researchers have found all of the stem cell or stem-like cell populations of interest. There is an enormous amount of work to be done here, and at the moment the field is still largely in the phase of getting the basics, the maps, and the reliable therapeutic methods sorted out for a few of the better understood tissue types, bone marrow and muscles in particular. So this seems at the present time like a long-term prospect, despite the high levels of funding for this line of medical research and development.

9) Clearance of Other Amyloids, Aggregates, and Sundry Lysosomal Garbage

A good portion of aging is driven by the accumulation of waste products, either because they are hard for our biochemistry to break down, is the case for glucosepane cross-links and many of the components of lipofuscin that degrade lysosomal function in long-lived cells, or because clearance systems fail over time, as appears likely to be the case for the amyloid- involved in Alzheimer's disease. There are a lot of these compounds: a score of amyloids, any number of lipofuscin constituents, the altered tau that shows up in tauopathies, and so on and so forth. In many cases there isn't even a good defensible link between a specific waste compound and specific age-related diseases: the waste is one contribution buried in many contributions, and the research community won't start putting numbers to relative importance until it is possible to clear out these contributions one by one and observe the results.

A range of research groups are picking away at individual forms of waste, some with large amounts of funding, some with very little funding, but this is a similar situation to that I outlined above for stem cell aging. There is a huge amount of work to accomplish because there are many targets to address, and with few exceptions, such as amyloid-, it is unclear which of the targets are the most important. They will all have to be addressed, in some order, but there are only so many researchers and only so much funding. We can hope that as the first effective therapies make it into the clinic, most likely for the clearance of forms of amyloid, there will be a growing enthusiasm for work on ways to remove other types of metabolic waste.

Loading...

The big question in the study of the comparative biology of regeneration is the degree to which mammals retain the mechanisms needed for the exceptional regeneration found in species such as zebrafish and salamanders. The individuals of these highly regenerative species are capable of regrowing fins, limbs, and major portions of internal organs. Has evolution removed this machinery from mammals, or only buried it, leaving it dormant and awaiting activation? This experiment, in which the molecular signals provided via transplanted extracellular matrix material from zebrafish are shown to enhance heart regeneration in mice, argues for the latter theory. The heart in mammals is among the least regenerative of tissues, and does not recover well from damage, but there is considerable room for improvement in the healing processes for all mammalian tissues. Zebrafish and other highly regenerative species heal without scars and without loss of function, something that cannot be said for mammals.

Many lower forms of life on earth exhibit an extraordinary ability to regenerate tissue, limbs, and even organs - a skill that is lost among humans and other mammals. Now, researchers have used the components of the cellular "scaffolding" of a zebrafish to regenerate heart tissues in mammals, specifically mice, as well as exhibiting promising results in human heart cells in vitro. The researchers found that a single administration of extracellular matrix (ECM) material from zebrafish hearts restored the function of the heart and regenerated adult mouse heart tissues after acute myocardial infarction. The study also found that the zebrafish ECM protected human cardiac myocytes - specialized cells that form heart muscle - from stresses.

ECM are the architectural foundations of tissues and organs; not only do they provide a "scaffolding" on which cells can grow and migrate, they assist in the signaling necessary for the organ to develop, grow, or regenerate. In mammals, the heart quickly loses the ability to regenerate after the organism is born, except for a brief period after birth. In lower animals, such as zebrafish, the heart retains that ability throughout their lives: up to 20 percent of a zebrafish's heart can be damaged or removed, and within days the heart's capacity has been fully restored. The researchers first separated the ECM from the cells so that the recipient heart would not reject the treatment. They did this by freezing the zebrafish cardiac tissue, causing the cell membranes to burst and allowing the researchers to retrieve the ECM, a process called decellularization. They then injected the ECM into the hearts of mice with damaged heart muscles and watched the hearts repair themselves. It is difficult to inject foreign cells into a body because the body will recognize them as foreign and reject them. That's not the case with ECM because it is composed of collagen, elastin, carbohydrates and signaling molecules and has no cell surface markers, DNA or RNA from the donor, and so the recipient is less likely to reject the treatment.

Restored function starts almost immediately, and healing is noticeable as early as five days after treatment; within a week, his team could see the heart beating more strongly than the hearts of the untreated animals. The researchers tested the effectiveness of ECM from normal zebrafish and from zebrafish with damaged hearts, in which the ECM had already begun the healing process. They found that while both types of ECM were effective in repairing damage to the mice hearts, the ECM obtained from the zebrafish hearts that were healing were even more potent in restoring heart function in the mice. The researchers are now working on a process to regenerate nerves in mammals using the same process and hope to expand the heart treatments to larger animals in a future study.

Link: http://www.news.pitt.edu/news/how-do-you-mend-broken-heart

Loading...

Heterochronic parabiosis involves joining the circulatory systems of an old and a young mouse. This produces harmful effects on the young mouse and beneficial effects on the old mouse. There is considerable interest in the research community in identifying the molecular signals involved. So far theory has focused on delivery of beneficial signals from young blood to the old individual, but here researchers present evidence to suggest it may be more a matter of diluting detrimental signals present in the old blood. This has implications for efforts to build therapies based on transfusions of young blood: if dilution is the primary mechanism, those efforts will have little to no effect.

A new study found that tissue health and repair dramatically decline in young mice when half of their blood is replaced with blood from old mice. The study argues against the rejuvenating properties of young blood and points to old blood, or molecules within, as driving the aging process. "Our study suggests that young blood by itself will not work as effective medicine. It's more accurate to say that there are inhibitors in old blood that we need to target to reverse aging." In 2005, researchers found evidence for tissue rejuvenation in older mice when they are surgically joined to younger mice so that blood is exchanged between the two. Despite remaining questions about the mechanism underlying this rejuvenation, media coverage of the study fixated on the potential of young blood to reverse the aging process, and on comparisons to vampires, which was not the takeaway from the study. In the years since the 2005 study, scientists have spent millions to investigate the potential medical properties of youthful blood with enterprises emerging to infuse old people with young blood. "What we showed in 2005 was evidence that aging is reversible and is not set in stone. Under no circumstances were we saying that infusions of young blood into elderly is medicine."

While the experimental model used in the 2005 study found evidence that some aspects of aging may be reversed, the techniques used in the study do not allow scientists to precisely control the exchange of blood, which is necessary to dig deeper into blood's effect on aging. When two mice are sutured together, a technique called parabiosis, blood is not the only thing that is exchanged in this setup; organs are also shared, so old mice get access to younger lungs, thymus-immune system, heart, liver and kidneys. In surgical suturing it takes weeks to a month for the effects of blood to take place and the precise timing is not actually known. Nor is the precise amount of the exchanged blood. In the new study, researchers developed an experimental technique to exchange blood between mice without joining them so that scientists can control blood circulation and conduct precise measurements on how old mice respond to young blood, and vice versa. In the new system, mice are connected and disconnected at will, removing the influence of shared organs or of any adaptation to being joined. One of the more surprising discoveries of this study was the very quick onset of the effects of blood on the health and repair of multiple tissues, including muscle, liver and brain. The effects were seen around 24 hours after exchange.

With the new experimental setup, the research team repeated the experiments from 2005. In each test, blood was exchanged between an old mouse and a young mouse until each mouse had half its blood from the other. The researchers then tested various indicators of aging in each mouse, such as liver cell growth as well as liver fibrosis and adiposity (fat), brain cell development in the region that is needed for learning and memory, muscle strength and muscle tissue repair. In many of these experiments, older mice that received younger blood saw either slight or no significant improvements compared to old mice with old blood. Young mice that received older blood, however, saw large declines in most of these tissues or organs. The most telling data was found when researchers tested blood's impact on new neuron production in the area of the brain where memory and learning are formed. In these experiments, older mice showed no significant improvement in brain neuron stem cells after receiving younger blood, but younger mice that received older blood saw a more than twofold drop in brain cell development compared to normal young mice. The researchers think that many benefits seen in old mice after receiving young blood might be due to the young blood diluting the concentration of inhibitors in the old blood.

Link: http://news.berkeley.edu/2016/11/22/young-blood-does-not-reverse-aging-in-old-mice-uc-berkeley-study-finds/

Loading...

Cryonics is the low-temperature preservation of at least the brain following death, leaving open the possibility of restoration to life in a future in which molecular nanotechnology and total control of cellular biochemistry are mature industries. As individuals, each of us is the data of the mind, no more, no less, and that data is stored in the form of fine physical structures, most likely those of the synapses connecting neurons. If that structure is preserved sufficiently well, then the individual is not yet gone - only ceased for the moment. Early cryopreservations involved straight freezing to liquid nitrogen temperatures, and this likely caused great damage to the structures of the brain due to ice crystal formation. Modern cryopreservations use cryoprotectants and staged cooling to achieve vitrification of tissues with minimal ice crystal formation. There the degree of damage is much reduced, contingent on sufficient perfusion of cryoprotectant and the quality of the other aspects of the process. These technologies are also under development by groups in the organ transplantation and tissue engineering communities: reversible vitrification of organs would solve a great many logistical problems. From the present state of the science, that goal isn't very far distant. Proof of concept vitrification, thawing, and transplantation of mammalian organs has taken place in the laboratory. Even without present reversibility, however, the merits of cryonics stand: people who are preserved are not dead and gone, just dead, with a chance to return. A chance of unknown size, yes, but that is a big improvement over the grave and certain oblivion.

Cryonics suffers from being a small industry. People encountering the concept for the first time tend look at it askance because it is a small community and thus not the usual end of life choice. Then they make up reasons in their own minds as to why it won't work, or is stupid, or illogical, or otherwise wrong, simply because it is not the norm. It takes multiple exposures to a topic for most people to come around and actually engage with what is known rather than with their own knee-jerk reaction to the topic. In the normal run of things, however, few people actually encounter the ideas of cryonics; it doesn't get all that much press, and since it is such a small industry and surrounding community, few people encounter those involved as they make their way through life. Thus public awareness and understanding of the long-standing cryonics industry seems to advance by a series of infrequent great leaps rather than ongoing incremental gains, each such leap driven by the high-profile cryopreservation of a sympathetic or noted individual that attracts a short-lived mob of press attention. First there is a flood of commentary from those who know next to nothing of cryonics and are quick to condemn it for being different, then a following wave of more thoughtful commentary, for and against, and finally some few of the many people who read the coverage choose to dig further, peruse some of the mountain of literature written on cryonics over the past 40 years, and conclude that cryonics does make sense and is a good idea. So the community of supporters and those signed up as members of a cryonics organization grows a little.

The latest leap forward was spurred by the cryopreservation of a terminally ill young lady in the UK, unusual for its surrounding legal case regarding consent and self-determination. The UK has a cryonics support organization, as is the case for many countries, but like most parts of the world lacks a cryonics provider. This may be why so much of the initial commentary has been from those fairly new to the idea, and has been unusually hostile in tone when compared to the media attention of the past five years or so. Being the UK, there is also a considerable focus on regulation, since the bias over there, in the media at least, is very much towards the idea that nothing must ever happen without government involvement - all that is not explicitly allowed is forbidden, any new endeavor must be quickly regulated by a new government office, and so forth. Sadly the US has been heading in that direction quite energetically since the turn of the century; it has been a sad thing to watch taking place. Cultural differences aside, many cryopreservations are carried out under difficult circumstances, and this was one of them. The ideal preservation takes place at the cryonics provider location, or very close by, within a known window of time, and cooldown is rapid following death so as to minimize damage. Departures from that ideal have a cost, both monetary and in the quality of the preservation, but the people involved here by all accounts did the best possible under the circumstances, hampered by the existing regulatory environment that prevents near every possible approach that could make things easier, cheaper, and more reliable.

Below find a very small selection of the recent attention given to this case. There is a lot more out there, if you are interested enough to go looking, ranging from ignorant and hostile to thoughtful and considered. The incorrect term "cryogenics" is bandied around, as is the mistaken idea that cryopreservation involves freezing: the press is ever haphazard when it comes to accuracy, and it doesn't become much better if you glance at what the wisdom of the crowds produced at social news sites in this case. Ultimately this matter, just as any cryopreservation, boils down to issues of self-determination and responsibility for the self. Sadly this is a topic that many members of our society, and especially those in the media and positions of power, seem to find offensive and undesirable: the idea that people can make decisions for themselves, and that those decisions should be respected. But we live in a world in which there is no choice so personal that it will not be interfered with by regulators and lawmakers, and that seems true whether or not the individual is young enough to be considered by those with power effectively the property of his or her parents. (Which is an entirely different iniquity in and of itself). As adults with a lifetime of experience people have just as much trouble in matters of self-determination at the end of life. Witness the political and legal battles over euthanasia, for example, in which childhood is extended indefinitely and the uncaring minions of the state take on the role of distant and forbidding parents. How free are we, really, when it is declared illegal to decide on matters of our own bodies and our own lives, and those who help will be jailed for the crime of compassionate if they are found out?

14-year-old girl who died of cancer wins right to be cryogenically frozen

A 14-year-old girl who said before dying of cancer that she wanted a chance to live longer has been allowed by the high court to have her body cryogenically frozen in the hope that she can be brought back to life at a later time. The court ruled that the teenager's mother, who supported the girl's wish to be cryogenically preserved, should be the only person allowed to make decisions about the disposal of her body. Her estranged father had initially opposed her wishes. During the last months of her life, the teenager, who had a rare form of cancer, used the internet to investigate cryonics. She sent a letter to the court: "I have been asked to explain why I want this unusual thing done. I'm only 14 years old and I don't want to die, but I know I am going to. I think being cryo-preserved gives me a chance to be cured and woken up, even in hundreds of years' time. I don't want to be buried underground. I want to live and live longer and I think that in the future they might find a cure for my cancer and wake me up. I want to have this chance. This is my wish."

The judge wrote: "I was moved by the valiant way in which she was facing her predicament. The scientific theory underlying cryonics is speculative and controversial, and there is considerable debate about its ethical implications. On the other hand, cryopreservation, the preservation of cells and tissues by freezing, is now a well-known process in certain branches of medicine, for example the preservation of sperm and embryos as part of fertility treatment. Cryonics is cryopreservation taken to its extreme." The judge said the girl's family was not well off but that her mother's parents had raised the money. A voluntary UK group of cryonics enthusiasts, who were not medically trained, had offered to help make arrangements. Co-operation of a hospital was required. The hospital trust in the case was willing to help although it stressed it was not endorsing cryonics. "On the contrary, all the professionals feel deep unease about it," the judge said.

The Human Tissue Authority (HTA), which regulates organisations which remove, store and use human tissue, had been consulted but said it had no remit to intervene in such a case. "The HTA would be likely to make representations that activities of the present kind should be brought within the regulatory framework if they showed signs of increasing," the judge said. The HTA said: "We are gathering information about cryopreservation to determine how widespread it is currently, or could become in the future, and any risks it may pose to the individual, or public confidence more broadly. We are in discussion with key stakeholders on the possible need for regulatory oversight." The government may need to intervene in future, the judge said: "It may be that events in this case suggest the need for proper regulation of cryonic preservation in this country if it is to happen in future."

Cryonics debate: 'Many scientists are afraid to hurt their careers'

Read the rest here:
Fight Aging! Reports from the front line in the fight ...

Read More...

Stem cell factor – Wikipedia

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

KITLG Identifiers Aliases KITLG, FPH2, FPHH, KL-1, Kitl, MGF, SCF, SF, SHEP7, DCUA, KIT ligand, DFNA69 External IDs OMIM: 184745 MGI: 96974 HomoloGene: 692 GeneCards: KITLG Genetically Related Diseases testicular germ cell cancer, Testicular cancer[1] RNA expression pattern

Stem cell factor (also known as SCF, KIT-ligand, KL, or steel factor) is a cytokine that binds to the c-KIT receptor (CD117). SCF can exist both as a transmembrane protein and a soluble protein. This cytokine plays an important role in hematopoiesis (formation of blood cells), spermatogenesis, and melanogenesis.

The gene encoding stem cell factor (SCF) is found on the Sl locus in mice and on chromosome 12q22-12q24 in humans.[4] The soluble and transmembrane forms of the protein are formed by alternative splicing of the same RNA transcript,[5][6]

The soluble form of SCF contains a proteolytic cleavage site in exon 6. Cleavage at this site allows the extracellular portion of the protein to be released. The transmembrane form of SCF is formed by alternative splicing that excludes exon 6 (Figure 1). Both forms of SCF bind to c-KIT and are biologically active.

Soluble and transmembrane SCF is produced by fibroblasts and endothelial cells. Soluble SCF has a molecular weight of 18,5 KDa and forms a dimer. It is detected in normal human blood serum at 3.3ng/mL.[7]

SCF plays an important role in the hematopoiesis during embryonic development. Sites where hematopoiesis takes place, such as the fetal liver and bone marrow, all express SCF. Mice that do not express SCF die in utero from severe anemia. Mice that do not express the receptor for SCF (c-KIT) also die from anemia.[8] SCF may serve as guidance cues that direct hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to their stem cell niche (the microenvironment in which a stem cell resides), and it plays an important role in HSC maintenance. Non-lethal point mutants on the c-KIT receptor can cause anemia, decreased fertility, and decreased pigmentation.[9]

During development, the presence of the SCF also plays an important role in the localization of melanocytes, cells that produce melanin and control pigmentation. In melanogenesis, melanoblasts migrate from the neural crest to their appropriate locations in the epidermis. Melanoblasts express the KIT receptor, and it is believed that SCF guides these cells to their terminal locations. SCF also regulates survival and proliferation of fully differentiated melanocytes in adults.[10]

In spermatogenesis, c-KIT is expressed in primordial germ cells, spermatogonia, and in primordial oocytes.[11] It is also expressed in the primordial germ cells of females. SCF is expressed along the pathways that the germ cells use to reach their terminal destination in the body. It is also expressed in the final destinations for these cells. Like for melanoblasts, this helps guide the cells to their appropriate locations in the body.[8]

SCF plays a role in the regulation of HSCs in the stem cell niche in the bone marrow. SCF has been shown to increase the survival of HSCs in vitro and contributes to the self-renewal and maintenance of HSCs in-vivo. HSCs at all stages of development express the same levels of the receptor for SCF (c-KIT).[12] The stromal cells that surround HSCs are a component of the stem cell niche, and they release a number of ligands, including SCF.

In the bone marrow, HSCs and hematopoietic progenitor cells are adjacent to stromal cells, such as fibroblasts and osteoblasts (Figure 2). These HSCs remain in the niche by adhering to ECM proteins and to the stromal cells themselves. SCF has been shown to increase adhesion and thus may play a large role in ensuring that HSCs remain in the niche.[8]

A small percentage of HSCs regularly leave the bone marrow to enter circulation and then return to their niche in the bone marrow.[13] It is believed that concentration gradients of SCF, along with the chemokine SDF-1, allow HSCs to find their way back to the niche.[14]

In adult mice, the injection of the ACK2 anti-KIT antibody, which binds to the c-Kit receptor and inactivates it, leads to severe problems in hematopoiesis. It causes a significant decrease in the number HSC and other hematopoietic progenitor cells in the bone marrow.[15] This suggests that SCF and c-Kit plays an important role in hematopoietic function in adulthood. SCF also increases the survival of various hematopoietic progenitor cells, such as megakaryocyte progenitors, in vitro.[16] In addition, it works with other cytokines to support the colony growth of BFU-E, CFU-GM, and CFU-GEMM4. Hematopoietic progenitor cells have also been shown to migrate towards a higher concentration gradient of SCF in vitro, which suggests that SCF is involved in chemotaxis for these cells.

Fetal HSCs are more sensitive to SCF than HSCs from adults. In fact, fetal HSCs in cell culture are 6 times more sensitive to SCF than adult HSCs based on the concentration that allows maximum survival.[17]

Mast cells are the only terminally differentiated hematopoietic cells that express the c-Kit receptor. Mice with SCF or c-Kit mutations have severe defects in the production of mast cells, having less than 1% of the normal levels of mast cells. Conversely, the injection of SCF increases mast cell numbers near the site of injection by over 100 times. In addition, SCF promotes mast cell adhesion, migration, proliferation, and survival.[18] It also promotes the release of histamine and tryptase, which are involved in the allergic response.

The presence of both soluble and transmembrane SCF is required for normal hematopoietic function.[5][19] Mice that produce the soluble SCF but not transmembrane SCF suffer from anemia, are sterile, and lack pigmentation. This suggests that transmembrane SCF plays a special role in vivo that is separate from that of soluble SCF.

SCF binds to the c-KIT receptor (CD 117), a receptor tyrosine kinase.[20] c-Kit is expressed in HSCs, mast cells, melanocytes, and germ cells. It is also expressed in hematopoietic progenitor cells including erythroblasts, myeloblasts, and megakaryocytes. However, with the exception of mast cells, expression decreases as these hematopoietic cells mature and c-KIT is not present when these cells are fully differentiated (Figure 3). SCF binding to c-KIT causes the receptor to homodimerize and auto-phosphorylate at tyrosine residues. The activation of c-Kit leads to the activation of multiple signaling cascades, including the RAS/ERK, PI3-Kinase, Src kinase, and JAK/STAT pathways.[20]

SCF may be used along with other cytokines to culture HSCs and hematopoietic progenitors. The expansion of these cells ex-vivo (outside the body) would allow advances in bone marrow transplantation, in which HSCs are transferred to a patient to re-establish blood formation.[12] One of the problems of injecting SCF for therapeutic purposes is that SCF activates mast cells. The injection of SCF has been shown to cause allergic-like symptoms and the proliferation of mast cells and melanocytes.[8]

Cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of transmembrane SCF promotes stem cell migration and improves cardiac function and animal survival after myocardial infarction.[21]

Stem cell factor has been shown to interact with CD117.[22][23]

PDB gallery

1exz: STRUCTURE OF STEM CELL FACTOR

1scf: HUMAN RECOMBINANT STEM CELL FACTOR

Unsorted

Go here to see the original:
Stem cell factor - Wikipedia

Read More...

Stem Cell Heart Regeneration – Turmeric Curcumin Benefits …

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

THE STEM CELL & TURMERIC RESEARCH REPORT

Few people are aware of the more than 4400 government trials that have been in progress using adult stem cellsfor more than 87 major diseases.The documented current stem cell progressis nothing short of incredible. Thefull colorChristian Wilde Stem Cell and Turmeric Research Report has been informing families of the ongoingpromise of stem cell researchandwhat exciting breakthroughs lie aheadto help your family or friends live longer healthier lives.

The growing body of scientific evidence on the benefits of turmeric is now a regular ongoing part of the report. It is now the Christian Wilde Stem Cell and Turmeric Research Report. The information is astounding.

DISEASESCOVEREDIN ISSUE ONE (issues 1-4)

Diabetes I, breast cancer, macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa, stroke damage, (MS) multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's, osteo and rheumatoid arthritis. The recruiting heart failure trials. Stem cells now available for animals*

DISEASES IN ISSUE TWO

Alzheimer's disease, diabetes II, spinal injury, kidney disease, HIV, cerebral palsy, autism and more ...

DISEASES IN ISSUE THREE

Lymphomas and lukemias, brain cancer, prostate cancer, bone and ligament disease, liver disease. Preventive and protective properties of turmeric/curcumin.

DISEASES IN ISSUE FOUR

Ovarian cancer, crohn's corneal regeneration, systemic Lupus. (Building organs with stem cells forhearts, tracheas, livers, kidneys.) Enrolling centers for heart failure patients and storage of umbilical cords.

DISEASES IN ISSUE FIVE (ordering issues 5-8)

Aortic Valve, Non Surgical Replacement, Stem cell trials for MS, Turmeric for pancreatic cancer, Updates on turmeric and diseases, EMBRYONIC VS ADULT STEM CELLS, Stem cells for Parkinson's AND MORE.

DISEASES IN ISSUE SIX

Fibromyalgia, Stem Cells for MD, Stem cells for arthritic damage. First success for Pulmonary hypertension. Reversing Type I and II diabetes, + Surprise interviews with trial leaders and an interview with one of17 patients actuallyhealed for(3 full years) of Relapsing, Remitting Multiple Sclerosis. Five leading cancers in US compared to India where turmeric is consumed in the diet. Arthritic damage and stem cells. Dr. Paul Ridker from Harvard (father of inflammation) makes Time Magazine's top 10.

DISEASES INISSUE 7

A comprehensive study and report on howall types of cancer are benefiting from turmeric/curcumin both as a preventive and for existing cancer. In order to bring you the most accurate scientific information on this spice and how it does what it does, the world leader in the research who has conducted many of the trials for breast, pancreatic and other cancer trials has been a contributing source. There will also be some major breakthrough news on stem cells but the emphasis in this issue will be turmeric's curcumin for fighting all inflammatory diseases.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 8

Interview with Dr. Carlos Lima who has performed 150 successful spinal cord stem cell surgeries. Turmeric for heart disease, Stem cells for the heart, Women and Turmeric, a 4 heart attack patient (renewed with stem cells) interviewed. How Stem cells will favorably impact health costs.

DISEASESIN ISSUE 9 (issues 9-12)

Stem cells for face lifts. Single cell grows prostate gland. Stem cells for baldness also stem cells for ALS. Amit Patel, M.D., Director Cardiovascular and Stem Cell Researchat University of Utah performs first time procedure and saves Coast to Coast listener who had 7 heart attacks. Alzheimer's and dementia discussion of the 7 stages and what is available for the fight. Also what is normal aging behavior and what is a warning sign. Much more!

DISEASES IN ISSUE 10

FIRSTstem cell trial for degenerative back disease. First trial for stroke victim recovery. Turmeric for breast cancer. Stem cells for cartilage. Turmeric for liver and prostate. Stem cells for newborns of drug addicted mothers. Stem cells for Parkinson's disease.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 11

HIV patient cured of AIDS,Stem Cells for Vision, Stem Cells Building Lungs,Turmeric for better Chemo results, Breakthroughs for Parkinson's, Building body parts, Stem Cells for deadly infections AND MORE.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 12

Three stem cell trials for eyes, insulin from cord blood, Teeth Stem Cells may heal brain, New MS study, Melanoma breakthrough, Stem Cells double muscle size for elderly, Progress report on Stem Cell research.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 13

Major cancer breakthrough, Stem Cells for brain cancer, Turmeric reduces stroke damage, Salute to a stem cell Pioneer, Dr. Amit Patel, Stem Cell Spray for Burn Victims using stem cells. Progressive MS Study, Stem Cells for family pets. Fewer aputations for diabetics, Fat Cells for breast reconstruction, Big Pharma making drugs from turmeric.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 14

Storing new borns umbilical cords for stem cells, Creating actual body parts in regenerative medicine, A 1st time reversal of Cystic Fibrosis, Stem Cells save Pro Pitcher's Arm, more on MS, Arthritis and joint damage repair, Kidneys and livers, Bone cartilage and joints, Correcting blindness in infants. Vatica financing adult stem cell research.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 15

Stem Cell war against 23 autoimmune diseases, awarded 1 of the top ten breakthroughs of the decade. Top athletes like Peyton Manning, Jason Kidd healing sports injuries with adult stem cells. Turmeric for brain cancers and gliomas. Stem cells building human body parts now. Dental Pulp to heal brains? Turmeric for kidneys.

DISEASES IN ISSUE 16

Stem Cell progress, Where are we? Sir Ian Wilmut cloned Dolly The Sheep now favors (iPSCs)Induced Pluripotent stem cells as the best answer for cures. First embryonic stem cell terminated because of tumors. Stem Cell hope to end Tissue Rejection. Most promising back stem cell trial, can it help you?

THE QUARTERLY STEM CELL REPORTMAY BE ORDERED ONLINE BY CLICKINGON THE ABOVE COLORED IMAGE

OR BY SENDING A CHECK OR MONEY ORDER FOR ONE YEAR FOR$19.95 ALONG WITH $2.50 S/H. TOTAL ONEYEAR PRICE IS $22.45 CA RESIDENTS KINDLY ADD $1.89 CA TX .

TO WILDE RESEARCH REPORT, P.O. BOX 1363, STUDIO CITY, CA 91614.You will receive all issues you order at one time.

SPECIFY WHICHCOMBINATION OF 4 ISSUESYOU WOULD LIKE --All16 issues are $79.80.

ORDERING OPTION, YOU MAY ALSO ORDER BY CALLING TOLL FREE, 1 866 STEM 123 AND LEAVE A MESSAGE FOR AN OFFICE CALL BACK TO TAKE YOUR ORDER.

* STEM CELLS FOR PETS*

YOUR dogs, cats and horsescancurrentlyreceive treatment with stem cells! Thesetreatments are not subject to FDA trial approval and are available now! The report will share information on how to contact the company that will direct you to veterinarians in your area who are certified and trained to perform stem cell treatment for your pet. Hip dysplasia, osteoarthritis, bone/ ligament disease,kidney and liverdisease (as examples) may be helped.

Disclaimer: The information presented in the newsletter is not to be misconstrued as endorsement or recommendation by the author or the reportfor any trial or therapy. It is acknowledged, many of these treatments are experimental and exploratory, therefore the information is presented to inform you as to what is being studied within the research communitythat might favorably impact yourcondition.Yourphysicianis your best arbiter andit is advisable to alwaysconsult with him or heron all decisions particularly with exploratory treatments.

Sincerely yours, Christian Wilde

Christian Wilde, "Hidden Causes of Heart Attack" and "Mir.

Go here to read the rest:
Stem Cell Heart Regeneration - Turmeric Curcumin Benefits ...

Read More...

Center for Regenerative Medicine | Florida Orthopaedic …

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

By Name Armaghani, Sheyan J, M.D. Baker, Christopher E., M.D. Barna, Steven A., M.D. Beatty, Ellen , M.D. Bernasek, Thomas L., M.D. Billys, James B., M.D. Clare, Michael P., M.D. Davison, Thomas M., M.D. Echols, Jr., Eddy L., M.D. Epting, Timothy C., D.O. Frankle, Mark A., M.D. Garcia, Michael J, M.D. Garlick, Grant G, M.D. Gasser, Seth I, M.D. Grayson, Christopher W, M.D. Gustke, Kenneth A, M.D. Herscovici, Jr., Dolfi , D.O. Hess, Alfred V., M.D. Infante, Jr., Anthony F, D.O. Jackson, Howard B, M.D. Lyons, Steven T, M.D. Maxson, Benjamin J, D.O. Mighell, Mark A, M.D. Mir, Hassan R, M.D. Miranda, Michael A, D.O. Morse, Adam C, D.O. Nydick, Jason A, D.O. Palumbo, Brian T, M.D. Pappou, Ioannis P, M.D. Ramirez, Jr., John D., D.C. Reina, David A, D.C. Saatman, Donna A, M.D. Sanders, Roy W., M.D. Sellman, Jeff E, M.D. Shah, Anjan R, M.D. Small, John M., M.D. Stone, Jeffrey D, M.D. Tresser, Steven J., M.D. Walling, Arthur K., M.D. Watson, David T., M.D. Weinstein, Marc A., M.D. Yi, Seung Jin, M.D. Zaffer, Syed M., M.D.

By Specialty All Specialties Elbow Foot, Ankle & Lower Leg General Orthopaedics Hand & Wrist Hip & Thigh Interventional Spine Knee & Leg Musculoskeletal Oncology Primary Care Sports Medicine Shoulder Spine Sports Medicine Trauma

By Services All Services Chiropractic Services Concussion Treatment Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Platelet Rich Plasma Therapy (PRP) Stem Cell Therapy Urgent Care at FOI

By Locations All Locations Bloomingdale Brandon Brooksville Citrus Park North Tampa - Temple Terrace Northdale Palm Harbor South Tampa Sun City Center Wesley Chapel

See original here:
Center for Regenerative Medicine | Florida Orthopaedic ...

Read More...

Stem cell controversy – Wikipedia

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

The stem cell controversy is the consideration of the ethics of research involving the development, use, and destruction of human embryos. Most commonly, this controversy focuses on embryonic stem cells. Not all stem cell research involves the human embryos. For example, adult stem cells, amniotic stem cells, and induced pluripotent stem cells do not involve creating, using, or destroying human embryos, thus are minimally, if at all, controversial. Many less controversial sources of acquiring stem cells include using cells from the umbilical cord, breast milk, and bone marrow, which are not pluripotent.

For many decades, stem cells have played an important role in medical research, beginning in 1868 when Ernst Haeckel first used the phrase to describe the fertilized egg which eventually gestates into an organism. The term was later used in 1886 by William Sedgwick to describe the parts of a plant that grow and regenerate. Further work by Alexander Maximow and Leroy Stevens introduced the concept that stem cells are pluripotent, i.e. able to become many types of different cell. This significant discovery led to the first human bone marrow transplant by E. Donnal Thomas in 1968, which although successful in saving lives, has generated much controversy since. This has included the many complications inherent in stem cell transplantation (almost 200 allogeneic marrow transplants were performed in humans, with no long-term successes before the first successful treatment was made), through to more modern problems, such as how many cells are sufficient for engraftment of various types of hematopoietic stem cell transplants, whether older patients should undergo transplant therapy, and the role of irradiation-based therapies in preparation for transplantation.

The discovery of adult stem cells led scientists to develop an interest in the role of embroynic stem cells, and in separate studies in 1981 Gail Martin and Martin Evans derived pluripotent stem cells from the embryos of mice for the first time. This paved the way for Mario Capecchi, Martin Evans, and Oliver Smithies to create the first knockout mouse, ushering in a whole new era of research on human disease.

In 1998, James Thomson and Jeffrey Jones derived the first human embryonic stem cells, with even greater potential for drug discovery and therapeutic transplantation. However, the use of the technique on human embryos led to more widespread controversy as criticism of the technique now began from the wider non-scientific public who debated the moral ethics of questions concerning research involving human embryonic cells.

Since pluripotent stem cells have the ability to differentiate into any type of cell, they are used in the development of medical treatments for a wide range of conditions. Treatments that have been proposed include treatment for physical trauma, degenerative conditions, and genetic diseases (in combination with gene therapy). Yet further treatments using stem cells could potentially be developed due to their ability to repair extensive tissue damage.[1]

Great levels of success and potential have been realized from research using adult stem cells. In early 2009, the FDA approved the first human clinical trials using embryonic stem cells. These can become any cell type of the body, excluding placental cells. This ability is called pluripotency. Only cells from an embryo at the morula stage or earlier are truly totipotent, meaning that they are able to form all cell types including placental cells. Adult stem cells are generally limited to differentiating into different cell types of their tissue of origin. However, some evidence suggests that adult stem cell plasticity may exist, increasing the number of cell types a given adult stem cell can become.

Many of the debates surrounding human embryonic stem cells concern issues such as what restrictions should be made on studies using these types of cells. At what point does one consider life to begin? Is it just to destroy an embryo cell if it has the potential to cure countless numbers of patients? Political leaders are debating how to regulate and fund research studies that involve the techniques used to remove the embryo cells. No clear consensus has emerged. Other recent discoveries may extinguish the need for embryonic stem cells.[2]

Much of the criticism has been a result of religious beliefs, and in the most high-profile case, Christian US President George W Bush signed an executive order banning the use of federal funding for any cell lines other than those already in existence, stating at the time, "My position on these issues is shaped by deeply held beliefs," and "I also believe human life is a sacred gift from our creator."[3] This ban was in part revoked by his successor Barack Obama, who stated "As a person of faith, I believe we are called to care for each other and work to ease human suffering. I believe we have been given the capacity and will to pursue this research and the humanity and conscience to do so responsibly." [4]

Some stem cell researchers are working to develop techniques of isolating stem cells that are as potent as embryonic stem cells, but do not require a human embryo.

Foremost among these was the discovery in August 2006 that adult cells can be reprogrammed into a pluripotent state by the introduction of four specific transcription factors, resulting in induced pluripotent stem cells.[5] This major breakthrough won a Nobel Prize for the discoverers, Shinya Yamanaka and John Gurdon.[6]

In an alternative technique, researchers at Harvard University, led by Kevin Eggan and Savitri Marajh, have transferred the nucleus of a somatic cell into an existing embryonic stem cell, thus creating a new stem cell line.[7]

Researchers at Advanced Cell Technology, led by Robert Lanza and Travis Wahl, reported the successful derivation of a stem cell line using a process similar to preimplantation genetic diagnosis, in which a single blastomere is extracted from a blastocyst.[8] At the 2007 meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR),[9] Lanza announced that his team had succeeded in producing three new stem cell lines without destroying the parent embryos. "These are the first human embryonic cell lines in existence that didn't result from the destruction of an embryo." Lanza is currently in discussions with the National Institutes of Health to determine whether the new technique sidesteps U.S. restrictions on federal funding for ES cell research.[10]

Anthony Atala of Wake Forest University says that the fluid surrounding the fetus has been found to contain stem cells that, when used correctly, "can be differentiated towards cell types such as fat, bone, muscle, blood vessel, nerve and liver cells". The extraction of this fluid is not thought to harm the fetus in any way. He hopes "that these cells will provide a valuable resource for tissue repair and for engineered organs, as well".[11]

The status of the human embryo and human embryonic stem cell research is a controversial issue, as with the present state of technology, the creation of a human embryonic stem cell line requires the destruction of a human embryo. Most of these embryos are discarded. Stem cell debates have motivated and reinvigorated the pro-life movement, whose members are concerned with the rights and status of the embryo as an early-aged human life. They believe that embryonic stem cell research instrumentalizes and violates the sanctity of life and is tantamount to murder.[12] The fundamental assertion of those who oppose embryonic stem cell research is the belief that human life is inviolable, combined with the belief that human life begins when a sperm cell fertilizes an egg cell to form a single cell. The view of those in favor is that these embryos would otherwise be discarded, and if used as stem cells, they can survive as a part of a living human being.

A portion of stem cell researchers use embryos that were created but not used in in vitro fertility treatments to derive new stem cell lines. Most of these embryos are to be destroyed, or stored for long periods of time, long past their viable storage life. In the United States alone, an estimated at least 400,000 such embryos exist.[13] This has led some opponents of abortion, such as Senator Orrin Hatch, to support human embryonic stem cell research.[14] See also embryo donation.

Medical researchers widely report that stem cell research has the potential to dramatically alter approaches to understanding and treating diseases, and to alleviate suffering. In the future, most medical researchers anticipate being able to use technologies derived from stem cell research to treat a variety of diseases and impairments. Spinal cord injuries and Parkinson's disease are two examples that have been championed by high-profile media personalities (for instance, Christopher Reeve and Michael J. Fox, who have lived with these conditions, respectively). The anticipated medical benefits of stem cell research add urgency to the debates, which has been appealed to by proponents of embryonic stem cell research.

In August 2000, The U.S. National Institutes of Health's Guidelines stated:

...research involving human pluripotent stem cells...promises new treatments and possible cures for many debilitating diseases and injuries, including Parkinson's disease, diabetes, heart disease, multiple sclerosis, burns and spinal cord injuries. The NIH believes the potential medical benefits of human pluripotent stem cell technology are compelling and worthy of pursuit in accordance with appropriate ethical standards.[15]

In 2006, researchers at Advanced Cell Technology of Worcester, Massachusetts, succeeded in obtaining stem cells from mouse embryos without destroying the embryos.[16] If this technique and its reliability are improved, it would alleviate some of the ethical concerns related to embryonic stem cell research.

Another technique announced in 2007 may also defuse the longstanding debate and controversy. Research teams in the United States and Japan have developed a simple and cost-effective method of reprogramming human skin cells to function much like embryonic stem cells by introducing artificial viruses. While extracting and cloning stem cells is complex and extremely expensive, the newly discovered method of reprogramming cells is much cheaper. However, the technique may disrupt the DNA in the new stem cells, resulting in damaged and cancerous tissue. More research will be required before noncancerous stem cells can be created.[17][18][19][20]

Update article to include 2009/2010 current stem cell usages in clinical trials.[21][22] The planned treatment trials will focus on the effects of oral lithium on neurological function in people with chronic spinal cord injury and those who have received umbilical cord blood mononuclear cell transplants to the spinal cord. The interest in these two treatments derives from recent reports indicating that umbilical cord blood stem cells may be beneficial for spinal cord injury and that lithium may promote regeneration and recovery of function after spinal cord injury. Both lithium and umbilical cord blood are widely available therapies that have long been used to treat diseases in humans.

This argument often goes hand-in-hand with the utilitarian argument, and can be presented in several forms:

This is usually presented as a counter-argument to using adult stem cells as an alternative that does not involve embryonic destruction.

This argument is used by opponents of embryonic destruction, as well as researchers specializing in adult stem cell research.

Pro-life supporters often claim that the use of adult stem cells from sources such as umbilical cord blood has consistently produced more promising results than the use of embryonic stem cells.[30] Furthermore, adult stem cell research may be able to make greater advances if less money and resources were channeled into embryonic stem cell research.[31]

In the past, it has been a necessity to research embryonic stem cells and in doing so destroy them for research to progress.[32] As a result of the research done with both embryonic and adult stem cells, new techniques may make the necessity for embryonic cell research obsolete. Because many of the restrictions placed on stem cell research have been based on moral dilemmas surrounding the use of embryonic cells, there will likely be rapid advancement in the field as the techniques that created those issues are becoming less of a necessity.[33] Many funding and research restrictions on embryonic cell research will not impact research on IPSCs (induced pluripotent stem cells) allowing for a promising portion of the field of research to continue relatively unhindered by the ethical issues of embryonic research.[34]

Adult stem cells have provided many different therapies for illnesses such as Parkinson's disease, leukemia, multiple sclerosis, lupus, sickle-cell anemia, and heart damage[35] (to date, embryonic stem cells have also been used in treatment),[36] Moreover, there have been many advances in adult stem cell research, including a recent study where pluripotent adult stem cells were manufactured from differentiated fibroblast by the addition of specific transcription factors.[37] Newly created stem cells were developed into an embryo and were integrated into newborn mouse tissues, analogous to the properties of embryonic stem cells.

Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, and Ireland do not allow the production of embryonic stem cell lines,[38] but the creation of embryonic stem cell lines is permitted in Finland, Greece, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.[38]

In 1973, Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in the United States. Five years later, the first successful human in vitro fertilization resulted in the birth of Louise Brown in England. These developments prompted the federal government to create regulations barring the use of federal funds for research that experimented on human embryos. In 1995, the NIH Human Embryo Research Panel advised the administration of President Bill Clinton to permit federal funding for research on embryos left over from in vitro fertility treatments and also recommended federal funding of research on embryos specifically created for experimentation. In response to the panel's recommendations, the Clinton administration, citing moral and ethical concerns, declined to fund research on embryos created solely for research purposes,[39] but did agree to fund research on leftover embryos created by in vitro fertility treatments. At this point, the Congress intervened and passed the Dickey Amendment in 1995 (the final bill, which included the Dickey Amendment, was signed into law by Bill Clinton) which prohibited any federal funding for the Department of Health and Human Services be used for research that resulted in the destruction of an embryo regardless of the source of that embryo.

In 1998, privately funded research led to the breakthrough discovery of human embryonic stem cells (hESC). This prompted the Clinton administration to re-examine guidelines for federal funding of embryonic research. In 1999, the president's National Bioethics Advisory Commission recommended that hESC harvested from embryos discarded after in vitro fertility treatments, but not from embryos created expressly for experimentation, be eligible for federal funding. Though embryo destruction had been inevitable in the process of harvesting hESC in the past (this is no longer the case[40][41][42][43]), the Clinton administration had decided that it would be permissible under the Dickey Amendment to fund hESC research as long as such research did not itself directly cause the destruction of an embryo. Therefore, HHS issued its proposed regulation concerning hESC funding in 2001. Enactment of the new guidelines was delayed by the incoming George W. Bush administration which decided to reconsider the issue.

President Bush announced, on August 9, 2001, that federal funds, for the first time, would be made available for hESC research on currently existing embryonic stem cell lines. President Bush authorized research on existing human embryonic stem cell lines, not on human embryos under a specific, unrealistic timeline in which the stem cell lines must have been developed. However, the Bush Administration chose not to permit taxpayer funding for research on hESC cell lines not currently in existence, thus limiting federal funding to research in which "the life-and-death decision has already been made".[44] The Bush Administration's guidelines differ from the Clinton Administration guidelines which did not distinguish between currently existing and not-yet-existing hESC. Both the Bush and Clinton guidelines agree that the federal government should not fund hESC research that directly destroys embryos.

Neither Congress nor any administration has ever prohibited private funding of embryonic research. Public and private funding of research on adult and cord blood stem cells is unrestricted.

In April 2004, 206 members of Congress signed a letter urging President Bush to expand federal funding of embryonic stem cell research beyond what Bush had already supported.

In May 2005, the House of Representatives voted 238194 to loosen the limitations on federally funded embryonic stem-cell researchby allowing government-funded research on surplus frozen embryos from in vitro fertilization clinics to be used for stem cell research with the permission of donorsdespite Bush's promise to veto the bill if passed.[45] On July 29, 2005, Senate Majority Leader William H. Frist (R-TN), announced that he too favored loosening restrictions on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.[46] On July 18, 2006, the Senate passed three different bills concerning stem cell research. The Senate passed the first bill (the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act) 6337, which would have made it legal for the federal government to spend federal money on embryonic stem cell research that uses embryos left over from in vitro fertilization procedures.[47] On July 19, 2006 President Bush vetoed this bill. The second bill makes it illegal to create, grow, and abort fetuses for research purposes. The third bill would encourage research that would isolate pluripotent, i.e., embryonic-like, stem cells without the destruction of human embryos.

In 2005 and 2007, Congressman Ron Paul introduced the Cures Can Be Found Act,[48] with 10 cosponsors. With an income tax credit, the bill favors research upon nonembryonic stem cells obtained from placentas, umbilical cord blood, amniotic fluid, humans after birth, or unborn human offspring who died of natural causes; the bill was referred to committee. Paul argued that hESC research is outside of federal jurisdiction either to ban or to subsidize.[49]

Bush vetoed another bill, the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2007,[50] which would have amended the Public Health Service Act to provide for human embryonic stem cell research. The bill passed the Senate on April 11 by a vote of 63-34, then passed the House on June 7 by a vote of 247176. President Bush vetoed the bill on July 19, 2007.[51]

On March 9, 2009, President Obama removed the restriction on federal funding for newer stem cell lines. [52] Two days after Obama removed the restriction, the president then signed the Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009, which still contained the long-standing Dickey-Wicker provision which bans federal funding of "research in which a human embryo or embryos are destroyed, discarded, or knowingly subjected to risk of injury or death;"[53] the Congressional provision effectively prevents federal funding being used to create new stem cell lines by many of the known methods. So, while scientists might not be free to create new lines with federal funding, President Obama's policy allows the potential of applying for such funding into research involving the hundreds of existing stem cell lines as well as any further lines created using private funds or state-level funding. The ability to apply for federal funding for stem cell lines created in the private sector is a significant expansion of options over the limits imposed by President Bush, who restricted funding to the 21 viable stem cell lines that were created before he announced his decision in 2001.[54] The ethical concerns raised during Clinton's time in office continue to restrict hESC research and dozens of stem cell lines have been excluded from funding, now by judgment of an administrative office rather than presidential or legislative discretion.[55]

In 2005, the NIH funded $607 million worth of stem cell research, of which $39 million was specifically used for hESC.[56]Sigrid Fry-Revere has argued that private organizations, not the federal government, should provide funding for stem-cell research, so that shifts in public opinion and government policy would not bring valuable scientific research to a grinding halt.[57]

In 2005, the State of California took out $3 billion in bond loans to fund embryonic stem cell research in that state.[58]

China has one of the most permissive human embryonic stem cell policies in the world. In the absence of a public controversy, human embryo stem cell research is supported by policies that allow the use of human embryos and therapeutic cloning.[59]

According to Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Halperin of the Institute for Science and Jewish Law in Jerusalem, embryonic stem cell research is permitted so long as it has not been implanted in the womb. Not only is it permitted, but research is encouraged, rather than wasting it.

However in order to remove all doubt [as to the permissibility of destroying it], it is preferable not to destroy the pre-embryo unless it will otherwise not be implanted in the woman who gave the eggs (either because there are many fertilized eggs, or because one of the parties refuses to go on with the procedurethe husband or wifeor for any other reason). Certainly it should not be implanted into another woman.... The best and worthiest solution is to use it for life-saving purposes, such as for the treatment of people that suffered trauma to their nervous system, etc.

Similarly, the sole Jewish majority state, Israel, permits research on embryonic stem cells.

The Catholic Church opposes human embryonic stem cell research calling it "an absolutely unacceptable act." The Church supports research that involves stem cells from adult tissues and the umbilical cord, as it "involves no harm to human beings at any state of development."[60]

The Southern Baptist Convention opposes human embryonic stem cell research on the grounds that "Bible teaches that human beings are made in the image and likeness of God (Gen. 1:27; 9:6) and protectable human life begins at fertilization."[61] However, it supports adult stem cell research as it does "not require the destruction of embryos."[61]

The United Methodist Church opposes human embryonic stem cell research, saying, "a human embryo, even at its earliest stages, commands our reverence."[62] However, it supports adult stem cell research, stating that there are "few moral questions" raised by this issue.[62]

The Assemblies of God opposes human embryonic stem cell research, saying, it "perpetuates the evil of abortion and should be prohibited."[63]

The religion of Islam favors the stance that scientific research and development in terms of stem cell research is allowed as long as it benefits society while using the least amount of harm to the subjects. "Stem cell research is one of the most controversial topics of our time period and has raised many religious and ethical questions regarding the research being done. With there being no true guidelines set forth in the Qur'an against the study of biomedical testing, Muslims have adopted any new studies as long as the studies do not contradict another teaching in the Qur'an. One of the teachings of the Qur'an states that Whosoever saves the life of one, it shall be if he saves the life of humankind (5:32), it is this teaching that makes stem cell research acceptable in the Muslim faith because of its promise of potential medical breakthrough."[64]

The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints "has not taken a position regarding the use of embryonic stem cells for research purposes. The absence of a position should not be interpreted as support for or opposition to any other statement made by Church members, whether they are for or against embryonic stem cell research.[65]

View original post here:
Stem cell controversy - Wikipedia

Read More...

Stem Cells & Spinal Cord Injuries – sci-info-pages.com

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

Stem cell therapy can be defined as a part of a group of new techniques, or technologies that rely on replacing diseased or dysfunctional cells with healthy, functioning ones. These new techniques are being applied experimentally to a wide range of human disorders, including many types of cancer, neurological diseases such as Parkinson's disease and ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease), spinal cord injuries, and diabetes.

Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research The Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research (CAMR) is comprised of nationally-recognized patient organizations, universities, scientific societies, foundations, and individuals with life-threatening illnesses and disorders, advocating for the advancement of breakthrough research and technologies in regenerative medicine - including stem cell research and somatic cell nuclear transfer - in order to cure disease and alleviate suffering.

Portraits of Hope Volunteer group of patients and their families and friends who believe that stem cell research has the potential to save the lives of those afflicted by many medical conditions, including spinal cord injury. Purpose is to show the faces and recount the stories of people who have such illnesses and present these "portraits" to federal and state legislators in request for government support.

Read more from the original source:
Stem Cells & Spinal Cord Injuries - sci-info-pages.com

Read More...

Vision and Eye News – AllAboutVision.com

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

By Liz Segre

October 2016 Don't forget to see the new documentary Sight: The Story of Vision, starting on October 13, World Sight Day! (Details and trailer below.)

In the meantime, a companion eBook has become available for download from the iBooks store and the documentary website.

The author, Mark Mattison-Shupnick, ABOM, said he created the book as a "deeper dive" into the many topics covered by the documentary. (Mr. Mattison-Shupnick is a master optician who is also an All About Vision editorial advisory board member.)

The book is viewable on iPads, Kindles, other eBook readers, other IOS and Android devices, and computers.

Plus, you can download the Sight: Story of Vision Second Screen App, also available on the documentary website and directly from Apple's App Store. The app provides terminology definitions related to the documentary as well as expanded video content.

The eBook was underwritten by a grant from contact lens manufacturer CooperVision. Development of the app was supported by eyeglass lens manufacturer Essilor.

September 2016 Sight: The Story of Vision, a documentary on scientific, medical and technological aspects of human vision, is set to premiere on October 13 (World Sight Day).

The one-hour film will broadcast on public television and features Sir Elton John as narrator.

It tells the story of how people discovered how our eyes work, as well as how to improve our eyesight and even restore it when it is lost.

Online content will also be available for viewers of Sight: The Story of Vision, in the form of apps, a downloadable eBook and a companion website StoryofSight.com.

One interesting detail about the documentary is that its writer and director Kris Koenig decided to apply color correction to the film so people with red-green color confusion could distinguish those colors better while watching. He did this after trying a pair of EnChroma eyeglasses, which are custom-tinted to help people with various types of colorblindness.

Please check your local TV listings for broadcast times and dates. Watch the trailer.

August 2016 There's new hope for baby boomers who are fast approaching the age at which they will be most vulnerable to developing Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia. A new study of 2,802 seniors has led researchers to conclude that an inexpensive intervention involving visual training exercises can cut the likelihood of cognitive decline by nearly half over a 10-year period.

The ACTIVE study short for Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly was funded by the National Institute on Aging. All participants were cognitively healthy seniors with an average age of 73.4 at the study's start. They were divided into four study groups:

The participants who received training got 10 hour-long training sessions over a five-week period.

The results over the study's 10-year follow-up showed that 14 percent of participants who received no training suffered significant cognitive decline or dementia. Two of the three treatment groups fared slightly better: significant cognitive decline or dementia occurred in 11.4 percent of the memory-strategies training group, and in 11.7 percent in the reasoning-strategies training group.

In the group who received computerized training to improve speed of processing, 10.5 percent experienced these conditions; however, when significant cognitive decline or dementia appeared, it came later.

Statistically speaking, the cumulative risk of developing cognitive decline or dementia over 10 years was 33 percent lower for those who had received the visual processing training compared with those who got no training at all. And when researchers gave a small group of seniors a refresher class 11 and 35 months after the initial training, the risk of cognitive decline or dementia went down even further making them 48 percent less likely over 10 years to experience dementia or cognitive decline.

The computerized brain-training program is called "Double Decision." It uses a gaming format that exercises an individual's ability to detect, remember and respond to cues that appear and disappear quickly in varying locations on a computer screen. It uses colorful graphics and challenges players with escalating difficulty as their proficiency increases. This video explains the game in more detail. A.H.

July 2016 A twice-daily eye drop called Xiidra (lifitegrast ophthalmic solution) 5% has received FDA approval for treatment of both signs and symptoms of dry eye disease in adults. The biotechnology company Shire manufactures Xiidra and plans to launch it in the United States this quarter.

"The clinical program supporting the approval of Xiidra is the largest for an investigational-stage dry eye disease candidate to date, including more than 2,500 patients," said Edward Holland, MD, in a company release. Dr. Holland is professor of clinical ophthalmology, University of Cincinnati, and a clinical trial investigator for Xiidra.

"The clinical trial program design took into consideration many of the challenges of past dry eye research," he continued. "It's exciting to see Xiidra as the first prescription eye drop FDA-approved for both the signs and symptoms of the condition."

In the safety/efficacy study, 1,067 patients received the drops in four placebo-controlled 12-week trials. In two of the trials, an improvement in the patient-reported eye dryness score was seen at two weeks. In three of the trials, an improvement in the inferior corneal staining score was seen at 12 weeks.

The most common adverse reactions reported in 5 to 25 percent of patients were instillation site irritation, altered taste sensation (dysgeusia) and reduced visual acuity.

July 2016 Eyeglass lens manufacturer Essilor wants YOU that is, wants your ideas on how to help vision care providers in underserved areas of the world to accurately measure eye refractive errors.

More than 2.5 billion people live with uncorrected poor vision, and 95 percent of them live in countries where eye care is difficult to obtain or practically non-existent. They can't go to an eye doctor's office and get eye exams with up-to-date instruments. They can't get eyewear. With uncorrected vision, they can't learn in school or work to support their families.

So Essilor has launched the See Change Challenge, an initiative to find low-cost, easy-to-use, scalable software, hardware, or other solutions to enable more people to be easily trained to become eye care workers in less developed areas.

The Challenge is open to anyone, including app developers, universities, vision scientists, engineers, startup organizations and optometrists. Up to five winners of the first phase of the Challenge will each earn 25,000 in cash and will have the opportunity to be in the second phase. Up to two final winners will receive 100,000 in cash.

Essilor will potentially support the final winners with development contracts to help them build and scale up their solution.

Want to change the world? Visit the See Change Challenge website for details, and submit your entry by October 21. The first phase winners will be announced in January.

June 2016 Monday the 27th is The Vision Council's National Sunglasses Day, but protecting your eyes from the sun's UV rays is important every day.

The more exposure your eyes have to sunlight without sunglasses throughout your life, the greater your risk of cataracts, macular degeneration and more even on cloudy days. After a day in the sun without sunglasses, UV rays can also cause immediate, temporary issues like red eyes and sensitivity to light.

Don't let excuses prevent you from protecting your eyes. Get multiple pairs of sunglasses and keep spare shades in your car, so you're not caught without them.

According to The Vision Council, these are the top four excuses for not wearing sunglasses while outdoors:

Celebrate National Sunglasses Day by making sure your family always wears shades while outside. On June 27, post a sunglass selfie to your favorite social media outlet with the hashtag #NationalSunglassesDay to promote the importance of UV protection for eyes. N.B.

May 2016 The National Eye Institute (NEI) and partners like AllAboutVision.com are encouraging everyone to take make eye health a priority. Throughout Healthy Vision Month, try focusing on these five aspects of eye health:

Taking these steps can help prevent vision loss or blindness from many eye diseases and conditions.

More than 23 million American adults have never had an eye exam, according to a national survey by the NEI. A popular reason for not having an eye exam is that people think if they see fine, they don't need one. However, comprehensive dilated eye exams can detect problems early, often before they noticeably affect your vision.

For more eye health facts and information about Healthy Vision Month, download this fact sheet.

March 2016 If you have access to eyewear and eye care, you're lucky. Many people don't, and the result is that they have trouble learning in school, getting a job and even feeding their families. Not to mention the fact that they can't enjoy the gift of good vision.

A new study has found that 101 million people have moderate to severe refractive error (such as nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism) that is uncorrected. In other words, they don't have eyeglasses or contact lenses to help them see.

And at least seven million people are actually blind from correctable refractive errors, often because they need cataract surgery.

The researchers analyzed data from nearly 250 studies performed between 1990 and 2010, but since they lack data for some regions, these estimates are likely lower than the actual numbers.

"Our data again emphasizes that globally one of the most simple, effective, and cost-effective ways to improve the burden of vision loss would be to provide access to affordable adequate spectacles to correct refractive errors with the appropriate human resources," said Kovin Naidoo, OD, PhD, of Brien Holden Vision Institute, Durban, South Africa. Dr. Naidoo wrote the study report, which appeared in the March issue of Optometry and Vision Science.

February 2016 The Zika virus has quickly reached epidemic proportions in Brazil and is now rapidly spreading to other parts of the Americas including Hawaii, where the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have confirmed the birth of a microcephalic baby whose Brazilian mother was infected with Zika.

It is estimated that, in 2015 alone, more than one million Brazilians have had Zika virus infections. The infection, which is usually transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, is rarely life-threatening. Typically, individuals experience a short-lived fever, nonspecific rash and joint pain. Conjunctivitis, muscle pain and headache have also been reported. Some experience no symptoms at all.

But when infection occurs during pregnancy, complications are far more severe, most often causing microcephaly. In fact, six months after the onset of the Zika outbreak in Brazil, there was a 20-fold increase in newborns with microcephaly. By January 4 of this year, the Brazilian Ministry of Health had reported 3,174 microcephalic newborns.

Now, according to a study report published in JAMA Ophthalmology, it appears that microcephaly isn't the only risk that Zika poses to newborns. In the study, nearly 35 percent of 29 babies with presumed Zika virus-associated microcephaly also have vision-threatening lesions most often on both of their retinas.

Millions of people are believed to have been infected with the Zika virus. And in Brazil, where it's spreading fastest, testing for Zika is not readily available. In the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention can perform serologic testing. However, the mild nature of the symptoms means the illness often goes unnoticed and isn't reported.

Considering that the infection causing microcephaly and retinal lesions typically occurs during the first or second trimester of pregnancy, it has been suggested that women in the areas of the epidemic consider not getting pregnant. And it is recommended that pregnant women, especially during their first two trimesters, not travel to areas where the disease is epidemic. A.H.

Ed. note: For helpful fact sheets on the Zika virus, protecting your family from mosquito bites, controlling mosquitoes and traveling while pregnant, please visit the CDC website.

December 2015 Did carelessness, excitement, nerves, spotlights or presbyopia cause Steve Harvey to announce mistakenly that Miss Colombia had won the Miss Universe title instead of Miss Philippines?

Nobody knows for sure. But we suspect that partly to blame was the design of the card that Harvey was referring to when he announced the winner.

The layout is inconsistent, for one thing. And the type size is minuscule!

We don't know what kind of vision correction Harvey uses, or whether he has had presbyopia-correcting surgery. Hopefully, the next time he's called upon to read something onstage, it will be designed for a middle-aged person to read. L.S.

December 2015 Most of the body's organs are internal, which helps shield them from direct environmental assault. But the eye, which is one of the most essential and complex sensory organs we have, is largely unprotected most of the day. This leaves it particularly vulnerable to environmental factors like climate change.

The dangers posed by environmental factors have been researched extensively in recent years and were the subject of a recent National Institutes of Health symposium that focused on the impact of climate change on human health.

At the meeting, Sheila West, PhD, vice chair for research at the Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins University, detailed the three most likely ways that environmental change can affect our eyes.

The first has to do with the expansion of arid regions in the United States and around the globe. As areas of the planet get hotter and less humid, people who suffer from dry eye may see an escalation in symptoms. And since dry eye doesn't always produce symptoms early on, more and more people may recognize that they have the condition and start seeking treatment that they may not have otherwise needed.

Climate change also can affect our eyes due to increases in airborne particulates. Dr. West pointed to longer fire seasons and crop clearing as key offenders, emitting pollutants that can cause serious harm to the eyes. In fact, in Dr. West's own research, eye irritants from smoke emitted by cooking fires led to increased scarring of the eyelids and cornea in people with trachoma, which is the leading infectious cause of blindness worldwide.

A third way that environmental changes can be harmful to our eyes relates to depletion of the protective ozone layer in the Earth's atmosphere, which absorbs most of the damaging (UV) rays emitted by the sun. Though recent international treaties may help reverse damage to the ozone layer, the repair will take decades. In the meantime, UV exposure remains a risk factor for cataracts and other eye diseases.

Dr. West estimates that UV exposure will lead to an additional 150,000 to 200,000 cases of cataract by 2050, with a price tag exceeding one billion dollars for care and surgical treatment. And that's in addition to the huge number of cases that would otherwise be diagnosed. A.H.

November 2015 When you look at a picture of a lemon on a digital screen, be it on a phone, tablet, or your desktop, what color is it?

If you think it's yellow, you're wrong.

An interesting video by Vsauce called "This Is Not Yellow" explains how digital screens can fool our brains into seeing certain colors, even when those colors aren't actually being displayed.

The video also discusses optical illusions created by modern artists, electricity given off by fruits and how quickly historical events can slide out of our collective memory. Enjoy!

September 2015 More participants are wanted for testing the safety of a new retinitis pigmentosa (RP) treatment. The University of California, Irvine-led study is the first to test retinal progenitor cells to treat RP; the cells are similar to stem cells except they are specific to the retina of the eye.

Four participants who are visually disabled due to RP have received injections so far, in either Irvine or Los Angeles. Total enrollment will be 16 patients.

All will receive topical anesthesia followed by one injection of cells into the worse-seeing eye. Then they will be monitored for a year to determine safety and efficacy of the treatment.

The treatment was created by Dr. Henry Klassen and Dr. Jing Yang. It is designed to prevent vision loss by protecting the degenerating photoreceptors in the retina. It is also thought that the treatment could potentially reactivate the photoreceptors. Contact the UCI Alpha Stem Cell Clinic at 949-824-3990 or stemcell@uci.edu for more information or to enroll.

August 2015 Two cases of horrible effects of eyeball tattooing were reported recently, and they make clear just how dangerous this practice is to vision and eye health.

In one case, a 43-year-old man had red swellings on both eyes; the red color was from dye used in eyeball tattooing (also called episcleral tattooing) he'd undergone seven weeks before. After six months the redness had faded a little, but the lumps persisted.

You may not want to see photos, but in case you do, you may read the case report in the journal BMC Ophthalmology.

The authors of the case study said that episcleral tattooing is done by people with no medical training and that results have included severe light sensitivity and a persistent feeling that something is in the eye. Even scarier risks include infection, bleeding, traumatic cataracts, retinal detachment, blinding uveitis and even malignancy.

In the second case, a 49-year-old man had reduced visual acuity, severe inflammation and bluish-green deposits in his eyes. He underwent a lensectomy, vitrectomy and retinal re-attachment, plus an attempt to remove the blue particles and treatment for the inflammation. Some of the blue particles remained on the retinal surface and in other eye tissues even after treatment. By the way, the man denied the tattooing had occurred.

The case was described this month in a letter to the editor of Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology, and the authors urged more awareness of "the potentially blinding procedure of eyeball tattooing."

July 2015 Bono is partnering with the sunglass brand Revo to raise $10 million to improve access to eye exams and prescription eyewear for people in under-resourced places around the world. The "Buy Vision, Give Sight" program will provide $10 from the sale of every pair of Revo sunglasses to help the non-profit Brien Holden Vision Institute pay for basic eye care and train people to provide eye care and detect eye diseases in their communities.

Bono, who was diagnosed with glaucoma 20 years ago, says that "sight is a human right." He will appear in Revo advertisements supporting the initiative and will exclusively wear Revo sunglasses during U2's Innocence + Experience World Tour.

"Thanks to good medical care my eyes are okay, but tens of millions of people around the world with sight problems don't have access to glasses, or even a basic eye test," he says.

"Poor eyesight may not be life-threatening, but it dramatically affects your life and your livelihood if you aren't able to fix it. When we met with experts, they said the number one problem is untreated poor vision, which prevents a child from learning in school, or an adult from performing their job."

Bono calls the Brien Holden Vision Institute's efforts "remarkable" and "mind-expanding." He has also designed a capsule collection of five sunglass styles for Revo, debuting in late fall. The sales of those styles will also generate $10 per pair for the "Buy Vision, Give Sight" campaign.

July 2015 Different Colored Eyes Day is Sunday, July 12, and it's a great opportunity to learn more about this unusual phenomenon. As it grows, the human body generally follows the rule of left-right symmetry, where one half of the body mirrors the other in structure and appearance. But sometimes one eye's iris has an excess or lack of the pigment melanin, so one eye may be a different color than the other.

An inherited gene may cause this heterochromia iridum (also called heterochromia iridis). Or it may result from disease or injury. Another type of heterochromia in the eyes is sectoral heterochromia, where one part of the iris is a different color than the rest.

Many animals are prone to having different colored eyes, including certain breeds of dogs (such as Australian shepherds and Siberian huskies) and cats (such as Turkish Vans). Quite a few famous people reportedly have them, too, such as Kate Bosworth, Mila Kunis, Benedict Cumberbatch, Joe Pesci and Alyson Hannigan. And though we don't have a photo of Alexander the Great, he reportedly had one blue eye and one brown eye.

We don't know who came up with the idea of having a Different Colored Eyes Day, but it's a good way to celebrate the differences among us that make each living thing unique and special! Read more about eye color, as well as what causes hazel eyes and why many think green eyes are the most attractive.

May 2015 It's hard to imagine that a concoction made of onion, garlic, wine and cow stomach bile (oxgall) could be anything but sickening. But it was once recommended for eye infections.

The mixture, found in a ninth-century Old English medical text called Bald's Leechbook, was recently applied to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria (MRSA) in test tubes and in wounds. And it worked: the medicine killed 90 percent of the bacteria, which is very resistant to many antibiotics.

But how did it work? That's a mystery for now, though scientists have theorized that perhaps the combination of ingredients forms a new molecule.

Or perhaps each ingredient is effective in its own way and the combination is too much for the bacteria to resist.

Whatever the case, it's possible that some form of "Bald's salve" will be developed for future use against MRSA and other scary bacteria.

May 2015 We all know that our body clocks respond to how much light is in our environment, but now scientists have found that we are also affected by the color of the light. For example, light is bluer at twilight, and that can give us clues as to what time of day it is.

Researchers at the University of Manchester recorded electrical activity in mice who were shown visual stimuli and found that many of their cells were more sensitive to changes in color between blue and yellow than to changes in the brightness of the light.

They then constructed an artificial sky over the mice to display changes in color and brightness that occur each day. The body temperatures of the mice peaked just after nightfall, when the light became a darker blue. In contrast, when just the brightness of the sky was changed and not the color, the mice were more active before twilight.

The researchers theorized that color could be used to manipulate the body clock of humans such as shift workers or travellers, to help them adjust to unusual schedules or time zones. Results of the study appeared in PLOS Biology in late April.

(By the way: The image above is of a sunset.)

May 2015 Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil, HCQ) is a medication for rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and malaria and is generally well-tolerated. Still, like many drugs, it has potential side effects. One is its toxicity to the eye's retina, which can lead to irreversible retinal damage and vision loss.

Recently, Dr. Jing Grace Wang and Dr. Jonathan Levine found that most patients receiving the drug from late 2008 to mid-2014 at Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center had doses exceeding the safety limit recommended by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. In 86 percent of the patients, the daily dosage was 400 mg, much higher than the recommended 6.5 mg per kilogram of ideal body weight for 70 percent of those patients.

The doctors recommended better communication between prescribing physicians and eye doctors at such hospitals.

You can help, too: If you are taking any prescription medication, make sure your eye doctor is aware of it, in case of potential harm to the eyes.

Original post:
Vision and Eye News - AllAboutVision.com

Read More...

Page 11234..»


2025 © StemCell Therapy is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) Comments (RSS) | Violinesth by Patrick