Tuesday, July 29, 2008

health

Veterans grappling for decades with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have a greater risk of developing and dying from heart disease than do their peers who don't suffer from the stress ailment, according to a long-term study.http://louis2j1sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com

Male military veterans who approach their senior years with pronounced PTSD symptoms experience a particularly large number of nonfatal heart attacks and fatal heart conditions, say psychologist Laura D। Kubzansky of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and her colleagues. http://louis2j1sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com

Kubzansky's team analyzed data from 1,002 veterans who completed a PTSD survey in 1990 and another 944 vets who responded to a survey in 1986. Participants ranged in age from 52 to 70. None had previously been diagnosed with heart disease. Each survey probed for PTSD symptoms triggered by combat experiences. These symptoms include recurring thoughts of a past trauma, intense distress when reminded of the event, feelings of detachment, and an exaggerated startle response.

The researchers then tracked heart-related illnesses and fatalities among the vets through May 2001.

Even after the researchers accounted for depression in some men, those reporting numerous PTSD symptoms experienced substantially more heart ailments than the others did, the scientists report in the January Archives of General Psychiatry. Biological pathways by which PTSD promotes heart disease remain unclear, they say.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

frrog

A small frog appears to jump-start its skeletal development, turning on genes for building feet and toes before bothering to build its legs.

While researchers are still trying to figure out how a clump of cells becomes a wing or flipper or arm, the order of events has been established: The upper arm bone forms first, then the forearm, then the wrist bones, and finally fingers or toes.

But the new research, reported in the July–August Evolution & Development, hints that limb formation may not be so clear-cut। http://louisjjjsheehan.blogspot.com

“This is a very interesting idea,” says developmental geneticist Francesca Mariani, who was not involved with the research. “Maybe limb development has different ways of occurring.”

The evolutionary pathway from ancient fish fins to the structures that today’s creatures use for flying, burrowing, running and jumping has long intrigued scientists। They are still trying to figure out the massive coordination of genes, cells and proteins that it takes to build a fully formed animal। Insights from the frog’s fancy footwork could lead to a greater understanding of the cellular http://louisjjjsheehan.blogspot.com blueprint for all creatures, which one day could lead to therapies for repairing injured tissues। http://louisjjjsheehan.blogspot.com

While revealing an exception to the rule, the new work fits with a model proposed by Mariani in the May 15 Nature. Instead of a single management center that directs limb development from shoulder to fingertip, there might be a control center for areas close to the torso and a separate control center for the more distant structures, like wrists bones and fingers, she suggests.

The frog study “does fit in with the idea that different components of development programs are modular—they can be somewhat separate, potentially,” she says.

Coquí frogs, Eleutherodactylus coqui, are already known for bypassing normal amphibian growth stages. The Coquí is what scientists call a direct developer—it skips the tadpole phase, emerging from the egg as a tiny, fully formed froglet.

“These guys have managed to delete some aspects of the larval stage,” says embryologist Ryan Kerney of Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, who conducted the research with Harvard colleague James Hanken.

For years, scientists investigated the development of body parts by tracking the growth of cartilage, the precursor to bone, with a blue stain. But recently, researchers have gone further upstream, looking at the genes and proteins that act as taskmasters coordinating the construction site that is a developing embryo.

The new study follows the activity of three genes known to be involved in skeletal formation. In the coquí frogs, two genes were active in the budding cells that become toes before they were active in the budding cells that become a leg.

While looking at genes and proteins has provided a lot of insight, it isn’t necessarily cut and dried, says Mariani, of the University of Southern California. A gene might be turned on at a certain developmental stage, and then turned on again later for a different task. Mariani isn’t fully convinced that the reported gene activity means the frog’s budding cells are gearing up for making toes.

But she says “this kind of work is really important. It tells you when and where the template becomes established.”

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

cairo

May 23, Monday. A late dispatch on Saturday night from Cairo informs me that a dam at Alexandria has been constructed and our fleet is passing the falls. Lieutenant-Commander Phelps had left my house only about an hour before the dispatch was received. http://louis5j5sheehan.blogspot.comWe had passed most of the evening in discussing Red River affairs। The news of the passage of the whole fleet is since confirmed. It is most gratifying intelligence. http://louis5j5sheehan.blogspot.com

The author of the forged proclamation has been detected. His name is Howard, and he has been long connected with the New York press, but especially with the Times. If I am not mistaken, he has been one of my assailants and a defamer of the Department. He is of a pestiferous class of reckless sensation-writers for an unscrupulous set of journalists who misinform the public mind. Scarcely one of them has regard for truth, and nearly all make use of their positions to subserve selfish, mercenary ends. This forger and falsifier Howard is a specimen of the miserable tribe.

The seizure of the office of the World and Journal of Commerce for publishing this forgery was hasty, rash, inconsiderate, and wrong, and cannot be defended. They are mischievous and pernicious, working assiduously against the Union and the Government and giving countenance and encouragement to the Rebellion, but were in this instance the dupes, perhaps the willing dupes, of a knave and wretch. The act of suspending these journals, and the whole arbitrary and oppressive proceedings, had its origin with the Secretary of State. Stanton, I have no doubt, was willing to act on Seward’s promptings, and the President, in deference to Seward, yielded to it.

These things are to be regretted. They weaken the Administration and strengthen its enemies. Yet the Administration ought not to be condemned for the misdeeds of one, or at most two, of its members. They would not be if the President was less influenced by them.