Even my Kentucky Grandma loves Rand Paul; That’s why he’ll win

by Wes Messamore

The secret to Rand Paul’s success is not that he resonates with people like me, but that he resonates with people like my grandmother. I’m a young, enthusiastic libertarian Republican; she’s a traditional, conservative, Reagan Republican- and Rand Paul’s message speaks to her.

Originally from Oklahoma, my grandmother has lived in the Bluegrass State now for longer than I have been alive. Her father was a staunch Democrat and all four of his children, including my grandmother, became Republicans during the Reagan years, when the two parties experienced a major realignment.

She started listening to Rush Limbaugh during the Clinton years- and still does. She loves Glenn Beck, she voted for Bush both times, and she even has a crush on Dick Cheney (but you didn’t hear it from me). She thinks and feels like most Kentucky Republicans do about what’s best for her state and what’s best for the country.

Rand was right those many months ago when he implied that kids like me who supported his father are a poor barometer for his success in Kentucky’s upcoming U.S. Senate election. It is not the Internet that will sweep him to victory, but Kentucky’s registered Republicans like my grandmother- the perfect barometer for Kentucky opinion.

The Paul family message of fiscal conservatism, strict constitutionalism, and principle over party has reached beyond the Internet and college campuses, and swept into the hearts of the people who were inspired by the Reagan revolution of the 1980s, and that’s why he will win.

Rand Paul will be the next U.S. Senator representing Kentucky. Not because I support him, but because my grandma does. And when he gets there, he may just be the one of the very best Senators this country has ever had.

Editor's Note - Wes's blog is Humble Libertarian. Read the full-length article at Republican Liberty Caucus RLC.org

Millions pulled from DOD budget for Ted Kennedy Monument in Boston

Two GOP Rivals Team up to Support the Troops

by Stephen Maloney
GOP First District Congressional Candidates Tim Scott and Katherine Jenerette teamed up on Wednesday to decry the federal government’s decision to siphon millions of dollars away from the Department of Defense budget to erect a monument to Ted Kennedy in Boston, Massachusetts .

“I don’t know of any Taxpayer Paid shrine or mausoleum to any politician in Massachusetts or South Carolina that can stop an RPG or IED or an AK-47 round in Iraq or Afghanistan ,” said Jenerette a veteran of the Persian Gulf War and a former U.S. Congressional Aide. “But if that $20 million can help save one single American soldier’s life downrange in Iraq or Afghanistan , it’s worth it to keep it in the U.S. Defense Department budget and not siphon it off for the Sainthood of Ted Kennedy or anyone else.”

At least $19 million has been siphoned from the U.S. Defense Department budget to pay for the Kennedy shrine, which could ultimately end up costing taxpayers as much as $80 million.

“Our magnificent military is being stretched by 2 wars right now. The Pentagon, just today, requested another $33 billion towards the efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan . Wasting tax dollars is bad enough, but weakening our military in the process is absolutely inexcusable,” Scott said. “When the people of this country told Congress that it was time to start prioritizing spending – this is just the opposite of what they had in mind.”

“On matters like this Tim Scott and I see eye-to-eye,” said Jenerette, an Army Paratrooper and Officer in the U.S. Army Reserve. “We already know Washington D.C. is full of political con-artists who can pull money out of one taxpayer’s pocket and stick it into another pocket without blinking an eye; so anytime we can highlight examples of ‘Pork-Gone-Wild’ in Congress I’ll be glad to work with Tim or any other member of our legislative delegation.”

Even establishment Conservatives feeling nagged by ObamaCare’s nanny-ism

"Mary Poppins Syndrome" gone Mad!

From Eric Dondero:

Michael Gerson is the ultimate insider establishment Republican. Some might even call him a dreaded "NeoCon." Gerson served in various capacities in the Bush administration, including a stint as the President's chief speechwriter. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is currently a columnist for the Washington Post.

But Gerson is starting to feel the "socialist creep" of big government. From his latest WaPo column, "With health care reform, it's nag, nag, nag".

I can hardly be called a libertarian. Legalizing drugs is a foolish idea because addiction robs people of liberty. Restaurant smoking bans have improved my life and my appetite. But freedom implies some leeway for personal risk and minor, pleasurable foolishness. Democrats in particular seem to be afflicted with Mary Poppins Syndrome: They will not rest until Americans are practically perfect in every way.

This tendency has added relevance because of the passage of health-care reform. When the provision of health insurance to every American becomes a direct responsibility of government, nearly every health matter becomes a public matter. Why not regulate tanning at beaches? Wouldn't mandatory, subsidized sunscreen save billions in health costs? Why not a jelly doughnuts tax? Why not make saturated fat a controlled substance? Shouldn't children on tricycles be required to wear safety helmets?

For some of us, the problem is not the tyranny but the nagging.

Of course, we libertarians would argue that the problem is both the nagging and the tyranny. Regardless, it's nice to have Mr. Gerson on board.

New Poll: Capitalism gets a Big Boost among Americans

From 53% last year to 60% today

Rasmussen has a new survey out which suggest support for capitalism over socialism getting stronger among Americans nationwide. One demographic group still lagging for free enterprise are the under 30 crowd.

From Rasmussen:

Sixty percent (60%) of U.S. adults nationwide say that capitalism is better than socialism. A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds that 18% disagree, while 21% are not sure.

Adults under 30 are closely divided on the question. While Republicans and unaffiliated voters overwhelmingly say that capitalism is better, just 43% of Democrats agree. Twenty-four percent (24%) of Democrats say socialism is better.

Last year at this time, among all adults, only 53% said capitalism was better.

PeepGov.com: A Simple Way to Track Your Congress

New Resource for Libertarian Republicans and Tea Partiers

There's a new place to find out all information about your congressional official: PeepGov.com.

PeepGov is a simple, real time way for everyone to track and follow their congressional leaders. The only thing you need to know is your zip code and you can learn about what your elected official is doing, what they believe in and what people are saying about them as they happen.

On your congressman’s profile, PeepGov allows you to see information sorted by news, blog, video, twitter, and the legislation they vote on. It gives you the links to the Congressman’s website as well as their facebook® and twitter® pages. Also, PeepGov is able to show you who the most talked about members in congress are and how they are trending.

With the ever-changing political landscape, PeepGov.com can help to easily understand if your congressman shares the same ideals and principals that you have.

R-rated can cause early drinking – Hindustan Times


India Talkies
R-rated can cause early drinking
Hindustan Times
... of parenting and one that is often overlooked," said James D. Sargent, professor of paediatrics at Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, New Hampshire. ...
Study: Drinking, R-rated films linked in middle-schoolersUSA Today
Watching R-rated movies, early alcohol use linkedCNN (blog)
Watching R-rated movies linked to early alcohol useDaily News & Analysis

all 24 news articles »

The complexity of cancer: A science-based view

Last week I participated in a panel discussion at NECSS with John Snyder, Kimball Atwood, and Steve Novella, who reported on the conference last Monday. What I mentioned to some of the attendees is that I had managed to combine NECSS with a yearly ritual that I seldom miss, namely the yearly meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) meeting. There are two huge cancer meetings every year, AACR and the annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO). AACR is the meeting dedicated to basic and translational research; ASCO, as the word “clinical” in its name implies, is devoted mainly to clinical research. Personally, being a translational researcher myself and a surgeon, I tend to prefer the AACR meeting over ASCO, not because ASCO isn’t valuable, but mainly because ASCO tends to be devoted mostly to medical oncology and chemotherapy, which are not what I do as a surgeon. Each meeting draws between 10,000 to 15,000 or even more clinicians and researchers dedicated to the eradication of cancer.

Having taken the Acela train from the NECSS meeting in New York straight to Washington, DC for the AACR meeting, I couldn’t help but think a bit about the juxtaposition of our discussion of the infiltration of quackademic medicine into medical academia with the hard core science being discussed at AACR. One session in particular at AACR highlighted what is one of the most significant differences between science-based medicine and the various forms of “alternative” medicine that we discuss here on SBM on such a regular basis. That difference, quite simply put, is the difference between the simple and the complex. “Alternative” medicine supporters often scoff at practitioners of science-based oncology, asking why we don’t have a “cure for cancer” yet, as if cancer were a single disease, or why we haven’t made much more progress since President Richard Nixon declared “war on cancer” back in 1971. One part of the answer is that cancer is incredibly complicated. Not only is it not a single disease, but each variety of cancer is in and of itself incredibly complicated as well. To steal from Douglas Adams, cancer is complicated. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly complicated it is. I mean, you may think algebra is complicated, but that’s just peanuts to cancer.

On Tuesday morning, I attended a session that hammered home that cancer is complex. The session was called, appropriately enough, The Complexity of Cancer. It was chaired by Dr. Joan S. Brugge, professor of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School and featured as speakers cancer stem cell expert Dr. Sean J. Morrison of the University of Michigan, as well as two faculty from UCSF, Dr. Lisa M. Coussens and Dr. Allan Balmain. Dr. Brugge spoke about mechanisms that control tumor cell anchorage, as well as the interface between genetics and metabolism in cancer; Dr. Morrison discussed cancer stem cells and how some tumors appear to follow the stem cell model while others didn’t; Dr. Coussens discussed how chronic inflammation can lead to cancer; and Dr. Balmain discussed genetic network analysis as a means of determining the susceptibility to cancer of various cells.

Right from the beginning, Dr. Brugge invoked Nixon’s war on cancer with a particularly appropriate observation, namely that the war has been far more difficult than anyone could possibly have ever envisioned in 1971. Back in 1971, in the wake of the discovery of the first oncogene, src, most scientists studied almost exclusively cancer cells, not appreciating the role of the surrounding matrix of normal cells and connective tissue in both preventing and modulating tumors. It’s true that, even back in 1971, scientists understood that the immune system in controlling cancer, but we lacked the tools to study this system in great detail. Since 1971, the list of discoveries about cancer has been long. Some examples include the discovery of many more oncogenes; tumor suppressor genes; the role of tumor angiogenesis in cancer; cancer stem cells; the rediscovery of the Warburg effect and metabolic derangements in cancer cells; and an enormous number of discoveries in tumor immunology. Each discovery helped us understand better how normal cells become tumors and how tumors grow, invade, and metastasize. But each discovery also led to additional complexities and more questions.

One characteristic that virtually defines a malignant cell in solid organs (as opposed to blood-derived tumors) is its ability to survive when not attached to other cells in its normal surrounding matrix of collagen and other connective tissues. This characteristic of tumor cells has long been recognized, having been first described back in the 1960s. Normal cells, when not attached to the proteins to which they normally cling, rapidly undergo programmed cell death (apoptosis). Apoptosis due to becoming detached is known as anoikis. Dr. Brugge started out discussing her interest in anoikis and understanding how breast epithelial cells survive detachment. Her talk ended up encompassing intracellular signaling pathways, metabolic derangements, and genetics. One observation that is likely underappreciated is that cells that undergo detachment develop metabolic deficiencies that lead to decreased ATP deproduction, decreased cellular energy (real energy, not the fake “energy” — or qi — that alt-med proponents often invoke), and ultimately programmed cell death. One of the more provocative observations is that antioxidants can actually help save these cells by neutralizing reactive oxygen species (ROS) and thereby rescuing fatty acid oxidation. For purposes of this discussion, the details aren’t important (although they are very important for cancer biology). What is important is that antioxidants are not a universal good when it comes to cancer; in the case of the models of breast cancer discussed by Dr. Brugge, antioxidants actually promote the survival of transformed cells because part of the mechanism by which these cells undergo programmed death is through the production of ROS. Does this result mean that antioxidants don’t prevent cancer? Of course not. It does however, when taken in context with other studies, suggest a great deal of complexity, where in some cases antioxidants prevent cancer and others may promote cancer.

Contrast this to the frequent alt-med claim that antioxidants prevent cancer and are virtually always good.

Dr. Morrison’s talk touched upon one of the most contentious issues in cancer today, namely the cancer stem cell hypothesis. This hypothesis goes something like this. There exist within cancer a population of cells that behave like stem cells. They are self-regenerating and each is capable of dividing indefinitely and recapitulating a tumor, while the vast majority of tumor cells have only limited replicative potential. The population of cells that can actually produce new tumors may be very small, much less than 1% of the cells in any given tumor. This concept has been most validated in leukemias, although there is good evidence that breast and a variety of other cancers may follow a stem cell-like model.

Cancer stem cell

Cancer stem cell

Under the stem cell model of cancer, these stem cells are highly resistant to chemotherapy, which wipes out all the non-stem tumor cells but leaves a few tumor stem cells, which can rapidly grow and then recreate the tumor, even from a single cell. In essence, the stem cell model postulates a hierarchy among tumor cells, as contrasted to the previous model, which was a more stochastic model in which any tumor cell could produce a tumor. To boil the concept down, in the stochastic model, any given cell in a tumor could be viewed as having, for example, a 1% chance of being able to form a new tumor if transplanted, while in the stem cell model only 1% of the cells of a given tumor can form new tumors, but they do so with very high efficiency. Moreover, these cancer stem cells have various protein and genetic markers that distinguish them from other cells in the same cancer.

The concept of the cancer stem cell is rather controversial. Personally, although the evidence has persuaded me that there is such a thing as what is commonly called a “cancer stem cell,” from my perspective I view the term as a poor descriptor of this cell mainly for semantic reasons. The term “stem cell” implies unlimited ability to produce different tissue types, which is not what this model is about at all. It’s long been known that tumors are made up of different populations of cells with different characteristics, and it’s not such a stretch to accept that many tumors might have a subpopulation of cells that are most responsible for tumor growth, with most of the other cells remaining quiescent or only slowly dividing. What Dr. Morrison argued is that some cancers follow a more “stem cell” model, while others follow a more stochastic model. He used the example of melanoma to illustrate this point: over 30% of the cells in a given melanoma studied can produce new tumors. While this observation might be consistent with the existence of a melanoma stem cell that makes up 30% of a typical melanoma, Dr. Morrison was unable to find any markers to distinguish the cells that could form tumors from those that could not, and he checked over 50 markers. While this does not entirely rule out a stem cell model (it’s possible that he hasn’t yet found the right marker), it is more consistent with a stochastic model, in which each cell in the melanoma has a 30% chance of being able to form a tumor when transplanted.

Why is this important? It’s important because it has great relevance to treatment. If a tumor is driven by stem cells, then to eradicate the tumor it is necessary to eliminate the stem cells. If it is driven by a more stochastic mechanism, a non-stem cell mechanism, then a “kill ‘em all” approach is more likely to succeed. Of course, it wouldn’t surprise me if it turns out that most tumors actually fall somewhere on a continuum between being stem cell-driven and being stochastic. Cancer is just that complex. The term “either-or” rarely, if ever, applies to it.

Dr. Coussens’ talk is fascinating for what it revealed about the immune system and cancer. How many times have you heard “alternative medicine” believers and promoters brag that this nostrum or that potion “boosts the immune system”? As we’ve said before here, it’s a meaningless claim, because sometimes boosting the immune system is bad, as in autoimmune diseases. In cancer, it’s long been known that inflammation, particularly chronic inflammation, can lead to cancer. One of the most classic examples of this phenomenon is how gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) can lead to inflammation in the lower esophagus, which can lead to a change in the cells there known as Barrett’s esophagus, which can ultimately lead to esophageal cancer. Inflammation is a function of the immune system; consequently, when you take anti-inflammatories, you are suppressing part of the immune system on purpose in order to decrease inflammation. In any case, Dr. Coussens discussed how activation of certain parts of the immune system can suppress cancer development, while activation of other parts can promote tumor progression. This slide, taken on my iPhone, demonstrates the concept:

immune

Dr. Balmain echoed this message but came at it from a different angle, namely from the complexity of changes in gene expression in cancer, and how a highly complex interaction between inflammation, stromal cells, the immune response, metabolism, and changes in gene expression in a tissue, specifically skin, can influence susceptibility to cancer. One of the big disappointments in cancer research is that relatively few cancers have easily identifiable genes driving them, even though many tumors have a strong heritable component. The reason may well be due to the inheritance of multiple susceptibility genes of low penetrance, meaning that they don’t individually have a strong effect on the characteristics of a cell. Cancer actually involves changes in the expression levels of hundreds, if not thousands, of different genes. In fact, the way we now look at cancer is through network analysis of the levels of thousands of genes in the cell. We’ve gone from looking at single genes to looking at thousands upon thousands of genes. As Dr. Balmain concluded, cancer susceptibility and progression depend upon the emergent properties of many genes, each of which individually has a small effect, and these genetic variants affect the tumor cell, the microenvironment surrounding the tumor cell, or both. Moreover, depending upon the tumor type and situation, inflammatory networks can play opposite roles, either promoting or inhibiting tumor susceptibility and progression.

Is that complicated enough for you yet?

Then let’s move on beyond this talk. On Friday, a bunch of us on our floor on the cancer institute got together to discuss interesting stuff we saw and learned at AACR this year. One topic that came up is the Cancer Genome Atlas, or TCGA (you gene geeks out there may find the initials amusing, but they explain why the word “the” was included). The idea behind the project is to sequence the genomes of many, many cancers. You might wonder why it’s necessary to sequence so many cancer genomes, and it’s not an unreasonable question. The reason is that so many cancers are driven by different mutations that it’s unlikely that any two tumors have the same set of mutations driving them. Consequently, TCGA seeks to sequence at least 500 cancers for each cancer type studied. It started with a pilot project and has since been expanded to 20 different tumors. By sequencing lots and lots of tumors, or so the idea goes, we can identify commonly occurring mutations and sets of mutated genes, perhaps even across cancers, that can be targeted for therapy. At the very least, it is thought that we will be able to develop a greater understanding of the complexity of cancer.

I must admit that when I first heard of TCGA, I was skeptical. To me, it struck me as perhaps the largest fishing expedition in the history of cancer research. Moreover, even this massive undertaking is only part of the picture. As I alluded to earlier, the metabolism of cancer cells is often hugely abnormal, and a “chicken or the egg” argument continues to some extent even now about whether it is the metabolic abnormalities that drive mutations or the mutations that produce metabolic abnormalities. More likely, it’s a little of both, the exact proportion of which depending upon the tumor cell. None of this even considers influences outside of the genome (epigenetic influences) or differences in how proteins are made. Part of our discussion also pointed out that so many mutations have been associated with cancer and that they are often so different in different tumors, even from the same tissue, that trying to figure out which mutations found in TCGA are even relevant to cancer and which ones are actually driving the development, progression, and spread of cancer will be a daunting task, every bit as challenging as the Manhattan Project or sending a man to the moon in less than a decade. In fact, when you consider how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly complicated cancer is, it’s amazing that we do as well as we do now and that we’ve made as much progress as we have, arguments over whether we are too conservative or whether pursuing riskier research strategies will bear fruit faster notwithstanding.

Compare this to the view of many practitioners of unscientific medicine. My favorite example of a vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly simple pseudo-explanation for cancer is that of the late Hulda Clark, who claimed to be able to cure all cancers (not just all cancers, but all disease) but who died of multiple myeloma herself. Her idea was that all cancer is caused by a liver fluke, which she would claim to be able to kill (and thus cure the cancer) with device she called her “Zapper,” a cheap little electrical gadget that looked as though it were assembled from spare parts at Radio Shack.

Another quack, Nicholas Gonzalez, claims that all cancer is due to a deficiency in pancreatic enzymes, for which he prescribes pancreatic enzyme replacement, up to 150 supplement pills a day, a “nutritional” regimen consisting of various vegetable and fruit juices , and a “detoxification” regimen including coffee enemas. He made a name for himself with a cherry-picked case series of his own patients that appeared to have survived pancreatic cancer far longer than is generally anticipated based on historical controls. This lead to a highly unethical clinical trial that ultimately showed that Gonzalez’s patients did considerably worse than conventional therapy, as poor as conventional science-based therapy does against pancreatic cancer.

These are not the only ones, of course. Still another quack, Robert O. Young, ascribes all cancer to “acidity” in the blood, and his treatment is always diet and bicarbonate to try to “alkalinize” the blood:

Robert O. Young

Young even goes so far as to describe cancer as a “poisonous acidic liquid,” states that “there is no such thing as a cancer cell” and that cancer cells are cells that have been “spoiled by acid.” To him, the tumor is the “body’s protective mechanism to encapsulate spoiled or poisoned cells from excess acid that has not been properly eliminated through urination, perspiration, defecation or respiration.” Young’s ideas have sucked in unwitting cancer patients, including one named Kim Tinkham, who even appeared on Oprah’s show a couple of years ago. (In addition, Young also doesn’t believe that sepsis is caused by bacterial infection.) On a related note, another quack named Tullio Simoncini espouses a variant of Robert Young’s ideas in that he believes that all cancer is a fungus. The similarity is that he prescribes “alkalinization” for the fungus, some of which can involve injecting sodium bicarbonate directly into tumors.

If there’s one difference between science-based medicine and quackery when it comes to cancer, it’s that science-based medicine appreciates the sheer complexity of tumors, while quacks often go for risibly simplistic pseudo-explanations of cancer. The complexity of cancer as a set of related diseases is incredible. Indeed, one has to respect it and even stand in awe at its ability to grow, evolve, and ultimately develop resistance to almost any treatment we can come up with. That’s not to say that the situation is hopeless, but it is an explanation as to why, nearly 40 years after Nixon’s war on cancer commenced, our progress against this foe has been incremental. Despite this record, I remain nonetheless optimistic and expect this situation to change within my lifetime. The reason is that we are finally developing the tools, both scientific and technological, along with the computational power to analyze the data, that hold out hope of an understanding of different cancers deep enough to make real progress in reducing the incidence, morbidity, and mortality from cancer. This isn’t any comfort to patients suffering from cancer now or to those who have (as I have) lost loved ones to cancer, but it does give me hope that, should I be one of the unlucky ones who develop cancer, my chances of survival will be better than at any time in history.

No quack can even come close to giving me that sort of hope.


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Ace those finals: Nap with dreams – UPI.com


CBC.ca
Ace those finals: Nap with dreams
UPI.com
Robert Stickgold of the Harvard Medical School in Boston advises studying hard right before going to bed or taking a nap after intense afternoon study ...
Sleeping and dreaming can produce a fast learnerIBTimes AU (blog)
'Napping Improves Memory,' Study FindsE Canada Now
Dreaming, Napping Can Improve Memory, Study SaysCBS News
Thaindian.com -Montreal Gazette -TopNews United States
all 122 news articles »

SkeptiCal 2010 | Cosmic Variance

I attended SkeptiCal 2010 on Saturday, a conference on science and skepticism organized by Bay Area Skeptics. The conference sold out all 200 slots, and the audience is a pretty lively bunch. I was invited here to speak at a breakout session in the afternoon on “Myths and Facts about the LHC” which I trust was entertaining, given all the media attention to the possibility that the LHC will destroy the world by producing a black hole, that the Higgs boson is coming back from the future to prevent its discovery, and the various notions about CERN in Angels and Demons such as that the lab is using the LHC to create an antimatter superweapon. All relatively standard topics for the skeptics…

The opening talk, but Eugenie Scott, addressed the rather deep question of how skepticism relates to science: is one included in the other? Do they overlap? Her conclusion, arrived at with humor, grace, and thoughtful examples, was that science is contained within skepticism, that the general approach to knowing we call skepticism is applied in the case of science to understanding the natural world. As a physicist, I need to continually put myself in the mindset of the (mostly) non-physicists in the audience. Skepticism is to a physicist as natural as breathing…this is not true of everyone in the world!

David Morrison, senior scientist at NASA Ames’ Astrobiology institute, gave a truly mind-boggling talk about the rapidly increasing end-of-the-world-in-2012 phenomenon. It all started with Nibiru, the planet that the Zetas told a Wisconsin woman, Nancy Lieder, would crash into the earth round about then. Of course the thing snowballed and led to the movie 2012 (actually the movie appropriated the 2012 meme a few years into prouction). Morrison has received over 3500 emails about the phenomenon, ranging from death threats against him (because, natch, NASA is covering it all up) to suicide threats (who wants to live to see the end of the world?) and everything in between. He made a youtube video trying to allay fears of the world’s imminent demise. (Of course I told my session that the LHC was scheduled to resume at full energy on Dec. 21, 2012, the particular date in question.)

I had a difficult choice of parallel sessions to attend, but chose the one on psychics by Karen Stollznow. And, of all things, I learned something very interesting about quantum physics that I had been blissfully unaware of. Watch for a future post once I read up on that.

In the afternoon, Brian Dunning, creator and host of Skeptoid.com, delivered a devastating blow to the myth of the origins of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the most pervasive symbol of Catholicism in Mexico. What becomes clear is that this was another example of the Catholic church appropriating the symbols of the indigenous population it was attempting (ultimately successfully) to convert. In the beginning, though, he lamented the failure of the skeptical movement as a movement. He pointed out that all that skepticism can offer is negative: we kill sacred cows and remove the scales from peoples’ eyes. But how will we save critical thinking?

All in all I found the conference quite eye-opening, and I have realized that we have a long way to go to counter the rising tide of ignorance of science and what it means to adopt a skeptical world view. Even once-respectable types like Bill Nye and Michio Kaku are starting to fall to the dark side. Too many think of skepticism as simply disbelief, when all it means is to place rationality at the base of our intellectual foundation. Help!


FDA: High-dose simvastatin increases risk of muscle injury – caution with lower doses plus Amiodarone, Verapamil, Diltiazem

Based on review of data from a large clinical trial and data from other sources, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is informing the public about an increased risk of muscle injury in patients taking the highest approved dose of the cholesterol-lowering medication, Zocor (simvastatin) 80 mg, compared to patients taking lower doses of simvastatin and possibly other drugs in the "statin" class.

The muscle injury, also called myopathy, is a known side effect with all statin medications. The most serious form of myopathy is called rhabdomyolysis. Patients with myopathy generally have muscle pain, tenderness or weakness, and an elevation of a muscle enzyme in the blood (creatine kinase). The higher the dose of statin used, the greater the risk of developing myopathy. The risk of myopathy is also increased when simvastatin, especially at the higher doses, is used with certain drugs (see Simvastatin Dose Limitations below).

The data come from the SEARCH study, in which myopathy was seen in nearly 1% of patients taking the 80 milligram dose of Zocor but in only 0.02% of patients taking the 20 milligram dose of Zocor.

Rhabdomyolysis was rare in the SEARCH study. It happened in only 11 of 6,031 patients (0.02%) in group taking the 80 milligram dose of Zocor, but was not seen in patients taking the 20 milligram dose.

New data also suggest that people of Chinese descent should not take Zocor at the 80 milligram dose -- and should be careful even when taking lower doses -- if they also take niacin-containing products.

Simvastatin Dose Limitations

These limitations apply to ALL patients taking simvastatin.

Do not use simvastatin with these medications:

Itraconazole
Ketoconazole
Erythromycin
Clarithromycin
Telithromycin
HIV protease inhibitors
Nefazodone

Do not use more than 10mg of simvastatin with these medications:

Gemfibrozil
Cyclosporine
Danazol

Do not use more than 20mg of simvastatin with these medications:

Amiodarone
Verapamil

Do not use more than 40mg of simvastatin with this medication:

Diltiazem

References:

Image source: Simvastatin. Wikipedia, public domain.

Posted at Clinical Cases and Images. Stay updated and subscribe, follow on Twitter, Buzz, and connect on Facebook.


University investigates erotic dancer at event – UW Badger Herald


Fox11online.com
University investigates erotic dancer at event
UW Badger Herald
A Medical School party got a little too festive last weekend when a small group of attendees created a “back room” featuring their very ...
UW Medical School Investigating Stripper At EventWISC Madison
UW School of Medicine officials investigating stripper at school-sanctioned ...FOX6Now.com Milwaukee
UW investigates strip show at Memorial UnionWKOW-TV.com
Pierce County Herald
all 29 news articles »

New Digital Pathology Blog – Digital Pathology Insights from Definiens

Peter Duncan and colleagues over at Definiens have started a new insightful blog appropriately called Digital Pathology Insights.  (Link in sidebar provided).

There are a number of interesting posts already since this weekend including linked content about Definiens products such as in the video below. 

As I have written about before, the use of image analysis algorithms is one of the major added value drivers for digital pathology and digital pathology adoption.  

Definiens as part of their marketing strategy has also been active with other Web 2.0 modalities including You Tube and Twitter to showcase and educate users about their software programs. 

Welcome Digital Pathology Insights to the blogosphere!

Thousands remember victims of refinery blast – Seattle Post Intelligencer


KLEW
Thousands remember victims of refinery blast
Seattle Post Intelligencer
The sole surviving victim, Matt Gumbel, died early Saturday morning at Harborview Medical Center hours after undergoing skin graft surgery. ...
Community memorial held for refinery victims: 'They are us and we are them'Seattle Times
7th person dies from Wash. state refinery fireThe Associated Press
Seventh victim dies from refinery fireThe Spokesman Review
HeraldNet -Bellingham Herald
all 143 news articles »

Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia

Outrigger on Huahine

Outrigger on Huahine

My search for untouched islands has always led me to ones which I really cannot write about because, untouched means one thing; simply enjoying the secluded beaches and the jungles/forests. That is really about it, and quite honestly I’m sure you would all get pretty bored reading about beautiful places with only so much to do over and over again. So I look for both the untouched and the colorful, which brings me to Huahine in French Polynesia. This 9.9 by 8.1 mile island is actually made up of two islands circled by a coral reef and split in the middle by a couple hundred yards of water. The reason why it is still considered one island is because of a small strip of sand that lies between them only visible during low tide.

One of the main attractions on Huahine is a small bridge that crosses over a particular river inhabited by sacred Tahitian eels (Check out this video of eels being fed by YouTube user jamfan2). Huahine is steeped in culture and history. These eels have probably been here longer than the locals have been on the island. Legend has it that the first of these eels made its way across the mountains from Tahiti. The eel was quite lonely in its new home and married a beautiful woman from Mataiera and it is said that the current eels are decedents of this eel and Mataiera. Why would a beautiful maiden marry an eel? No idea, but hey before you judge remember that whole princess and the frog story?

The fact of the matter is, Huahine is what Bora Bora was like before it became the uber-luxurious getaway that it is now and more impressive, Huahine has preserved much of its colorful culture and charm seemingly lost in other Polynesian islands. From amazing beaches, temples, towns and villages, this island can totally be the island that never changed – forever lost in time. If only Capt. James Cook were here to verify that.

By Sebastien Tobler

Colliding Continents

Chicago’s Montrose Beach

A sandy stretch at Montrose Beach

 

Beaches might not come to mind when you think of Chicago but the Windy City boasts quite a few.  My favorite is a pretty stretch called Montrose Beach.  Now I admit it, I’m quite spoiled when it comes to beaches.  Generally, my idea of a beach involves pristine, pearly sands and sun-dappled turquoise water.  Chicago beaches contain none of that.  But when I’m in the city and in the mood to be on the Lake Michigan shore, nothing beats Montrose Beach’s lively scene.

Lake Michigan water is typically murky and I usually don’t venture out into the Chicago side of Lake Michigan because the toxic levels rival only Chernoblyl.  But for sunbathing and sunny snacking,  Montrose Beach is the place.  The range of food offered at this beach is alone worth a trip.  There are carts filled with paletas or creamy popsicles in tropical flavors like my favorite, coconut.  There are sno cones, fruit bowls,  corn on the cob, billowy puffs of cotton candy and churros.  And if you long for something hardier,  there’s an ingenious portable taco stand serving up sizzling steak tacos.  To work off all that nibbling, endless games of soccer and volleyball take place in the sand and there’s even a wildflower preserve across the street from the beach. For people-watching and lounging in the sun, Montrose Beach is my reliable sandy spot.

Photo courtesy of Rosalind Cummings-Yeates

LPIN Podcast: Mike Wherry LPIN Candidate for Secretary of State

Delegates to the annual Libertarian Party of Indiana State Convention have nominated Mike Wherry as their 2010 candidate for Secretary of State.
The SOS race is crucial to the LP in that Wherry will need to achieve a minimum of 2% in order to retain automatic ballot access for Libertarians through 2014.
Wherry was interviewed briefly immediately [...]

Florida Gulf Beach Web Cams: Clearwater and St. Pete Beach

One of my helpful website visitors alerted me to two excellent beach web cams.
If you visit the Pinellas County beaches these web cams will be very helpful to you because:

They are live video cams
They are high resolution
They show a very good view of the beach and the Gulf of Mexico.

One beach web cam is on [...]

Smokeless tobacco products like snuff also cause cancer

A recent study published in the journal Chemical Research in Toxicology is urging tobacco manufacturers to reformulate a smokeless tobacco product called moist snuff. Researchers from Minnesota have found that the product contains high levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) which are highly toxic, cancer-causing substances.

Used in between the lip and gum, moist snuff has grown in popularity over the years due to increased awareness about the dangers of smoking cigarettes. Commonly thought to be a safer alternative to cigarettes, moist snuff is turning out to have its own slew of dangers. The PAHs found in moist snuff can lead to various cancers including oral (http://www.dreddyclinic.com/findinformation/cc/oralcancer.htm), pancreatic (http://www.dreddyclinic.com/findinformation/cc/pancreaticcancer.htm), and esophageal (http://www.dreddyclinic.com/findinformation/cc/esophagealcancer.htm). Precancerous oral lesions are typically the first symptoms to appear.

Twenty-three moist snuff products, including samples from the most popular brands, were examined by Irina Stepanov and her team from the University of Minnesota. As many as 28 different PAHs were discovered in the samples, nine of which are known carcinogens. These included naphthalene and chrysene. Read more...

Ayurstate for Prostate Care