Washington, Mar. 27 (ANI): Researchers have shown that it is possible to use gene therapy to treat patients whose hearts have been weakened by cardiac arrests and other heart conditions Continue reading
Tag Archives: concentration
Gene therapy may aid failing hearts
Mar. 25, 2013 In an animal study, researchers at the University of Washington show that it was possible to use gene therapy to boost heart muscle function. The finding suggests that it might be possible to use this approach to treat patients whose hearts have been weakened by heart attacks and other heart conditions. Continue reading
Eugenics Glenn Beck w/ Edwin Black author of "War Against the Weak" talk Al Gore
Eugenics Glenn Beck w/ Edwin Black author of “War Against the Weak” talk Al Gore Margaret Sanger Glenn Beck with Edwin Black author of “War Against the Weak” Discuss Eugenics. For the book go to: www.bit.ly For more go to: www.GlennBecksBookList.com Watch the video as they discuss Eugenics, Margaret Sanger, Hitler, Darwin, etc… In War Against the Weak, award-winning investigative journalist Edwin Black connects the crimes of the Nazis to a pseudoscientific American movement of the early 20th century called eugenics Continue reading
Mind control, Eugenics and mark-of-the-beast – Video
Mind control, Eugenics and mark-of-the-beast The technology developed in the concentration camps by Dr Josef Mengele was exported out of Germany prior to war's end and has continued to be perfected until today. Mind control through traumatic Satanic ritual abuse for the purpose of developing nephilim breeders, super soldiers and the planting of subversive elements in governments, military, education systems, banking systems and every core element of the social and governmental fabric of the United States and power centers around the world. Continue reading
Magnetic Polymer Nanofibers – Video
Magnetic Polymer Nanofibers North Penn High School nanotechnology research seniors, Alex H. and Matt M Continue reading
War Against The Weak – Edwin Black – Video
War Against The Weak – Edwin Black ll4.me War Against The Weak – Edwin Black Award-winning investigative journalist Edwin Black connects the crimes of the Nazis to a pseudoscientific American movement of the early twentieth century called eugenics. Based on selective breeding of human beings, eugenics began in laboratories on Long Island but ended in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany. Ultimately, over 60000 unfit Americans were coercively sterilized, a third of them after Nuremberg declared such practices crimes agains humanity. Continue reading
Cellerant Awarded SBIR Contract Funding to Develop CLT-009 for Treatment of Thrombocytopenia
SAN CARLOS, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Cellerant Therapeutics Inc., a biotechnology company developing novel hematopoietic stem cell-based cellular and antibody therapies for blood disorders and cancer, announced today that it has been awarded a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase 1 contract and a Phase 2 option from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) valued up to $1,683,503. The SBIR Contract funds the development of CLT-009, a first-in-class, human allogeneic Megakaryocyte Progenitor Cell therapy for the treatment of thrombocytopenia in cancer patients and allows the Company to conduct studies to enable an Investigational New Drug (IND) Application to be filed with the FDA in the next two years. Continue reading
Several beaches above algae guidelines
Winnipeg Free Press – ONLINE EDITION By: Staff Writer Posted: 4:44 PM | Comments: If you are headed to the lake this weekend, be careful around the water Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship reported algal blooms at a number of beaches this week, including some popular beaches on Lake Winnipeg. Algae advisory signs can be seen at Hillside, Victoria, and West Grand beaches as well as at the lagoon of West Grand Beach. Pelican Lake, which includes Ninette and Pleasant Valley beaches, has blue-green algal cells that are above the recreational water quality guideline, and the same can be said for the water Inverness Falls on Brereton Lake.The south pumphouse beach in that area, however, does not have algal cells that exceed the water quality guideline, and the concentration of the algal toxin microcystin is said to be safe Continue reading
Three Westman beaches fail water quality testing
TIM SMITH/BRANDON SUN Enlarge Image Sand castles line the beach of Killarney Lake in this file photo. Three beaches in Westman received failing grades from water tests conducted by Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship last week. Water in Killarney Lake and Pelican Lake showed the number of blue-green algae cells and the concentration of microcystin, an algal toxin, were above the recreational water quality guideline for the province Continue reading
Beach mgr.: Extended lifeguard shifts making beaches safer
Longer hours also boost revenues at Long Branch beaches BY KENNY WALTER Staff Writer Long Branch beaches have become safer and more profitable just one month after the City Councils decision to extend lifeguard hours from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on the weekends, according to Dan George, Long Branch beach manager Continue reading
Researchers Use Nanotech to Make Cancer 3 Million Times More Detectable
Scientists at Princeton University say they have used nanotechnology to make tests to detect diseases, like cancer and Alzheimer’s disease, 3 million times more sensitive. Continue reading
Swedish researchers discovery promises unique medicine for treatment of chronic and diabetic wounds
28.05.2012 – (idw) Schwedischer Forschungsrat – The Swedish Research Council A unique new medicine that can start and hasten healing of diabetic and other chronic sores is being developed at Ume University in Sweden. After several years of successful experimental research, it is now ready for clinical testing. Behind this new medicine is a group of researchers at the Department of Medical Chemistry and Biophysics who have made the unique finding that the protein plasminogen is a regulator that initiates and hastens wound healing by triggering the inflammatory reaction. Continue reading
Discovery promises unique medicine for treatment of chronic and diabetic wounds
ScienceDaily (May 28, 2012) A unique new medicine that can start and accelerate healing of diabetic and other chronic wounds is being developed at Ume University in Sweden. After several years of successful experimental research, it is now ready for clinical testing. Continue reading
Heads-On: MindWave Lets You Control Mobile Games With Brain Waves
The Mindwave Mobile headset lets you play games using your mind powers. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/Wired When you think of mobile gaming, you probably imagine Cut the Rope or Angry Birds tapping, flicking and touching your devices capacitive screen. Continue reading
NASA's new carbon-counting instrument leaves the nest
ScienceDaily (May 12, 2012) Its construction now complete, the science instrument that is the heart of NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) spacecraft — NASA’s first mission dedicated to studying atmospheric carbon dioxide — has left its nest at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and has arrived at its integration and test site in Gilbert, Ariz. A truck carrying the OCO-2 instrument left JPL before dawn on Tuesday, May 9, to begin the trek to Orbital Science Corporation’s Satellite Manufacturing Facility in Gilbert, southeast of Phoenix, where it arrived that afternoon. The instrument will be unpacked, inspected and tested. Continue reading
High moral cost paid for manned space flight
WASHINGTON As the 747 carrying the retired space shuttle Discovery circled the capital last week, my mind flashed back to the sole encounter I ever had as a reporter with the space program. An editor at the old Buffalo Courier- Express assigned me to interview a fellow named Walter Dornberger, whom he described as a German space visionary who had fled from the Iron Curtain. It was the late 1950s, and so-called refugees from Germany, like Wernher von Braun, who was guiding Americas struggling manned flight program, were in vogue Continue reading