Increasing Quality of Life for Neurology Inpatients is Goal of Newly Established Metrics – UCSF News Services

To improve the quality of life for neurology inpatients, a panel of experts, led by UC San Francisco neurologist S. Andrew Josephson, MD, has released quality measurements.

Increased scrutiny on quality and safety in hospitals nationwide has led to the development of multiple metrics for inpatients across a variety of specialties [but] few quality metrics exist specifically for disorders of the nervous system, said Josephson, chair of the UCSF Department of Neurology, in an article he authored in the journal Neurology, published on July 21, 2017.

Quality measurements are defined as a diagnostic or treatment activity that should be performed in the majority of patients and can be measured using objective criteria.

While there are thousands of guidelines published for treating patients in the hospital, most physicians are unaware of these and do not track their adherence, according to Josephson. To address this, Josephson, together with 30 or so national experts assembled by the American Academy of Neurology and two other national societies, have established these quality measurements.

Josephson and other members of the Inpatient and Emergency Neurology Quality Measurement Set Work Group identified 12 areas in which quality metrics will be used to drive improvements in patient care. These run the gamut from the percentage of neurology inpatients in which brain death was diagnosed using proper procedures, to the percentage of patients suspected of having meningitis who were given a steroid to reduce inflammation at the same time as they were given the first dose of antibiotics.

Rather than allow insurers or non-neurologists to define quality across neurologic conditions, this effort aims to garner neurologic expertise by defining measures that were supported by evidence and were relevant to the practicing neurologist.

The metrics have since been distributed to every neurologist in the nation.

These metrics have the potential to launch a new era in neurologic inpatient medicine, where attention is carefully paid to practicing consistency of evidence-based care, said Josephson, who is also professor of neurology, and director and founder of the UCSF Neurohospitalist Program. This effort will enable physicians and health care systems to work together, reporting rates of adherence to quality metrics that can be easily accessible to other providers, payors and the public at large, driving better care for our patients.

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Schulman IRB Launches Central Neurology Review (CNR) Service – PR Newswire (press release)

"As neurology research continues to evolve at a rapid rate, we saw the need to create a specialized IRB model that conducts neurology-focused scientific and regulatory review for multi-site studies," said Eli Alford, Schulman's Chief Operating Officer. "Together with NBREC, we're excited to launch CNR and look forward to supporting the development of the latest techniques, methodologies and discoveries in neurology research."

CNR features a scientific review committee to complement Schulman's best-in-class IRB review. CNR is therapeutically focused and comprised of distinguished scientists and industry leaders who have experience conducting neurology research. By combining the robust expertise of a local IRB, the collaborative capabilities of a central IRB, and the leading minds in neurology research, CNR delivers independent, objective and authoritative review services.

About Schulman IRB

Schulman IRB has been a leader in the protection of human research participants in the U.S., Puerto Rico and Canada since 1983. Schulman offers thorough, timely IRB review services including dedicated review capabilities for all phases of research across all therapeutic areas to clinical trial sponsors, CROs, investigators and institutions. Schulman also provides global consulting services in clinical quality assurance (CQA) and human research protections (HRP), and it also offers a commercial institutional biosafety committee (IBC) service. Fully accredited by the Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs (AAHRPP), Schulman has an unparalleled clean audit history with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

For more information, please visit http://www.sairb.com or follow @SchulmanIRB on Twitter or on LinkedIn.

About NBREC

Established in 2012as a Nevada-based 501(c)(3)not-for-profitorganization, the National Biomedical Research Ethics Council (NBREC) is committed tothe goals of assuringindividual researchvolunteer safety through the expanded use of single ethics committees, expanding international awareness for research ethics and improving population public health efforts allied with disease surveillance and control.

For more information, please visit http://nbrec.org.

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Protein at All 3 Meals May Help Preserve Seniors’ Strength – The Sentinel

THURSDAY, Aug. 3, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Eating protein at all three daily meals, instead of just at dinner, might help seniors preserve physical strength as they age, new research suggests.

The Canadian study found that protein-rich meals evenly spread throughout the day staved off muscle decline, but did not increase mobility, in older people.

Study co-author Stephanie Chevalier said, for seniors, "The important point is to create three meal occasions with sufficient protein to stimulate muscle building and greater strength, instead of just one."

Chevalier is an assistant professor of medicine at McGill University in Montreal.

The functional decline associated with aging often leads to falls, mental impairment and loss of independence. Chevalier's team wondered if more evenly distributed protein consumption might be tied to better physical performance and a reduced rate of decline.

To find out, they tracked more than 1,700 relatively healthy Quebec men and women, aged 67 to 84, who were all enrolled in a three-year study.

The participants provided dietary information and underwent yearly hand, arm, and leg strength testing. They were also tested for mobility.

Over the three years, the researchers found that both men and women saw their overall physical performance worsen, with muscle strength fading more significantly than mobility.

But those who consumed protein more evenly throughout the day appeared to retain greater muscle strength -- though not greater mobility -- than those who consumed most of their protein late in the day.

However, Chevalier stressed the researchers only observed an association between protein distribution and muscle strength, not a direct cause-and-effect relationship.

"In other words, we cannot conclude that older people had greater strength because they were ingesting protein evenly distributed at every meal," she said.

Establishing direct proof would require more research, she said.

Still, the study finding held up regardless of the total amount of protein consumed, she noted.

Prior research has indicated that adults of all ages should consume a minimum of 1.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. (To convert pounds to kilograms, divide your body weight by 2.2.)

For a 155-pound man, that would add up to about three ounces of protein a day, Chevalier said. Spread across breakfast, lunch and dinner, that would mean about one ounce of protein at each meal. A 130-pound woman would require a little less than one ounce per meal.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Dietary Guidelines call for those over age 50 to consume 5 to 7 ounces of protein foods daily.

In general, one ounce of meat, poultry or fish or one egg or one tablespoon of peanut butter, one-quarter cup of cooked beans or one-half ounce of nuts or seeds qualify as an ounce of protein, according to the USDA.

An outside nutrition expert offered one explanation why the new findings might work.

"Muscle protein is constantly being broken down and built back up. We need protein in our diet daily to make this happen," explained Lona Sandon, a dietetic educator.

That's true at any age, but in late life muscle protein tends to break down faster than it builds up, added Sandon, an assistant professor of clinical nutrition at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.

Also, research has shown older adults require a higher amount of protein, she said.

"Eating protein throughout the day seems to be a means to stay in a positive protein balance longer than just eating most of your protein for the day in the evening meal," said Sandon.

Sandon said distributing protein intake evenly throughout the day is likely beneficial to everyone, young and old.

Much of the research in this area stems from sports nutrition studies, she added. "This research has also shown a benefit to spreading protein throughout meals over the day for increased muscle mass and strength benefits in active individuals and adults," she added.

However, she cautioned that eating protein alone is not an anti-aging silver bullet.

"You can't just eat a steak and suddenly have bulging biceps," she said, noting the need for some level of physical activity or resistance training as well.

The study was published in the July issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

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Doug Brooks returns to Parkersburg as a physician – Parkersburg News

Photo ProvidedDr. Doug Brooks has joined Camden Clark Medical Center-WVU Medicine.

PARKERSBURG Dr. Doug Brooks has returned to his hometown of Parkersburg to practice family medicine.

Tuesday is Brooks first day as a physician with Camden Clark Medical Center-WVU Medicine at 2012 Garfield Ave., Suite 1 in the Garfield Medical Complex in Parkersburg.

Brooks, a 1989 graduate of Parkersburg High School, obtained a bachelors of arts in biology in 1993 from West Virginia University and a medical degree from West Virginia University School of Medicine in 1997.

For the past 17 years, Brooks has been a physician in Tampa and Charlotte.

Brooks, 46, said he is looking forward to making an impact in his hometown, something that was lacking at times while working in larger cities.

He found it not as meaningful, not as personalized working in big cities.

Brooks has friends in the Parkersburg area and his father, Dr. Paul Brooks, is a retired family doctor in Parkersburg who graduated from the WVU School of Medicine in 1966.

From 2000-2006, Brooks was a family physician with Morton Plant Mease Primary Care, the largest medical corporation in Tampa, Fla., he said. From 2007-2012, he practiced as a family physician for Carolinas Health Care system, the largest medical corporation in North Carolina.

From 2012 to early 2017, Brooks practiced with several companies in North Carolina, including a mens center, nursing homes, urgent care and occupational medical centers, and a primary care center that focused on anti-aging medicine.

Brooks considers his 17-year journey through multiple disciplines of medicine to have made him a more knowledgeable and experienced physician with expertise in many different areas.

Brooks noted he has expertise in evidence-based medicine, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, premature coronary artery disease, obesity, anxiety and depression, dermatology, and sports medicine.

Brooks said he has taken a special interest in mens health and wellness, hormone therapy, erectile dysfunction, anti-aging, and skin care.

Men, in general, often dont want to see a physician about their medical issues, Brooks said.

Men are more reluctant, embarrassed to bring up problems, Brooks said.

I want to create an environment on a personal level, where patients will feel comfortable and want to seek his medical advice and expertise, Brooks said.

Wanting to see a physician is not a sign of weakness, he said. Instead, being proactive in ones health care is a sign of strength, Brooks said.

Brooks has served as a preceptor for 17 years, teaching medical students, residents, nurse practitioners and physician assistants from the University of South Florida, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Wake Forest School of Medicine, respectively.

Brooks wants to help in the community by possibly becoming a team physician at a high school.

Brooks was a state champion wrestler (at 125 pounds) his junior year at PHS in 1988 and finished second in the state at 130 pounds his senior year in 1989.

Brooks is a WVU football fan. He has season tickets to Mountaineer football games and used to attend games in Morgantown when he lived in the South.

Besides his father, other members of his family are, or have been, involved in the medical field. His mother, Ann Brooks, who lives in Hickory, N.C., was a nurse at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital. His stepmother, Nancy Brooks, is director of organizational development at Camden Clark Medical Center and his brother, Dr. Gregory Brooks, is a physician in Hickory, N.C.

WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center is delighted to welcome Parkersburg native and WVU School of Medicine graduate Dr. Doug Brooks back home! the hospital said in a release.

Brooks plans to attend the Camden Clark Community Health and Wellness Day from 9-3 p.m. Saturday at Grand Central Mall.

He is accepting new patients at 304-865-5140.

Brooks is board certified by the American Board of Family Medicine and has an unrestricted license with the West Virginia Board of Medicine. He is a member of the American Academy of Family Physicians and the West Virginia Academy of Family Physicians.

Brooks resume notes he is a 5-star physician on vitals.com and has received the Patients Choice Award, given to only 5 percent of physicians, and the Most Compassionate Doctor Award, given to only 3 percent of physicians.

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Genesis Biotechnology Group Acquires Assets of 4path, Ltd to Expand their Diagnostic Branch – Markets Insider

HAMILTON, N.J., Aug. 3, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --Genesis Biotechnology Group (GBG), a consortium of vertically-integrated entities that are concentrated in Drug Discovery and advanced, state-of-the-art molecular diagnostic services, such as next-generation sequencing and bioinformatics to aid in the detection of chronic complex diseases, announced today the asset acquisition of 4path, LTD (4path), an Anatomic and Clinical Pathology Laboratory facility located in Burr Ridge, IL. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Medical Diagnostic Laboratories, L.L.C. (MDL), a molecular diagnostic testing service company and a member of GBG, has a proven track record of service excellence and cost-efficiency through the effective use of advanced automation and robotic technology. With this collaboration, patients and providers in the Great Lakes region will have increased access to advanced molecular diagnostic assays and an expanded menu of cytopathology and histology services in multiple specialties such as Gynecology, Gastroenterology, Urology, Breast, Podiatry, and Dermatology. This collaboration also brings a dedicated sales force to expand 4path's relationship to clients in a larger geographic area, establish a rapid-response clinical laboratory to reduce turnaround time in the mid-west region, and fund future strategic growth initiatives.

According to Dr. Eli Mordechai, GBG's CEO, "This collaboration is an excellent fit with our mission to improve patient care and advance the quality of treatment options through the development and delivery of world class diagnostics. It brings together highly complementary services that enable clients to have access to a comprehensive portfolio of clinical diagnostic services in multiple therapeutic areas." This spirit of collaboration was supported by Stephen G. Ruby, MD, MBA of 4path, Ltd, who stated, "As Medical Director of 4path, I am pleased to have this relationship with the GBG family of healthcare businesses.We look forward to expanding the scope of services available to our physician base and providing them with the specialized laboratory support for their patients."

About GBGGBG is a consortium of vertically-integrated corporate diagnostic and research entities, which facilitates the overall market implementation and delivery of biomedical science products and services related to diagnostics and drug discovery. The Diagnostic segment of GBG utilizes high complexity, state-of-the-art, automated molecular analysis to offer clinicians from many different specialties valuable diagnostic information to assist in the detection, diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of complex disease. Through the integration of research activities and the collaboration of diverse groups of scientists with expertise in molecular biology, genetics, high throughput screening (HTS), pharmacology, molecular modeling, and medicinal chemistry, GBG will be better positioned to provide complex diagnostic platforms in infectious disease, genetic-based testing, cancer diagnostics, and drug resistance profiling.

About 4path, Ltd4path, Ltd is a College of American Pathologists (CAP) Accredited Laboratory in the Chicago metropolitan area, which has provided Anatomic Pathology services to clients in the Great Lakes Region for over 10 years. Their team of board-certified pathologists provides highly personalized diagnostic services with expertise in Podiatry, Gastroenterology, Urology, Dermatology, Breast, Gynecology, Orthopedics and other specialties.

To find out more, please visit http://www.genesisbiotechgroup.com or http://www.4path.com.

Contact:

Ben Bandaru, Director of Mergers & Acquisitionsrel="nofollow">170782@email4pr.comDirect: 609.245.7507www.genesisbiotechgroup.com

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20th World Congress on Biotechnology and Biotech Industries Meet – Technology Networks

20th World Congress on Biotechnology and Biotech Industries Meet during March 05-07, 2018 at London, UK with a theme Future prospects for Biotechnology and Economic Growth. Conference Series LLC through its Open Access Initiative is committed to make genuine and reliable contributions to the scientific community.

Scope and Importance

Biotech Congress 2018 Conference aims to bring together the Professors, Researchers, scientists, business giants, and technocrats to provide an international forum for the dissemination of original research results, new ideas and practical development and discover advances in the field of biotechnology, management and education in relation to biotechnology as well as a breadth of other topics. The applications of biotechnology include therapeutics, diagnostics, genetically modified crops for agriculture, processed food, bioremediation, waste treatment, and energy production. Biotech Congress 2018 is an excellent opportunity for the delegates from Universities and Institutes to interact with the world class Scientists.

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TC Biopharm gets 4m Horizon2020 grant – European Biotechnology – European Biotechnology

The Scottish biotech company TC Biopharm (TCB) has been awarded a 4m grant from the European Unions Horizon 2020 programme.

TC Biopharm Ltd. (TCB) gets a 4m funding from the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.TCB will progress its gamma-delta T-Cell therapy (GDT) for the treatment of multiple tumour types. The first-generation of its GDT platform is an autologous cell therapy, which uses the patients own cells to treat various tumour types. The company has ongoing phase II/III trials in skin, lung and kidney cancers. With the grant, TC Biopharm wants to manufacture allogeneic cell banks and develop a next-generation allogeneic off-the-shelf approach. First cancer patients should be treated in 2019. I am excited at the prospect of combining allogeneic GDT cell therapy with our existing CAR platform; this will allow us to develop the next generation of safe, cost-effective immunotherapy for cancer, states Artin Moussavi, Chief Business Officer at TCB. According to the company, off-the-shelf approaches have significant advantages over existing autologous treatments. Larger target populations of cancer sufferers could be treated with a more reproducible product, which has been campaign-manufactured. That would keep treatment costs much lower. However, the development process is more complex to ensure the cells are acceptable to a broader patient base.

The grant is the largest funding a UK company has ever received from a European scheme for the development of a healthcare therapeutic product. The funding will come from the SME instrument, which is considered to be the most competitive Horizon2020 funding programme. This summer, out of 1.514 applications, only 57 projects were selected.

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How the death of EDM brought pop music one step closer to eternal life – Washington Post

Today, well be discussing how a Selena Gomez song might foreshadow humanitys triumph over biological death but first, raise your hand if you remember EDM. It was short for electronic dance music, a style once poised to eat the planet for lunch and then eat itself for dessert. Five summers ago, as a new league of superstar DJs were being paid astronomical amounts of money to perform at packed festivals the world over, the musics sustainability didnt appear to be at the forefront of anyones mind. In 2015, Forbes reported that the EDM bubble was about to burst . In 2016, Pitchfork made the case that it had .

But this unofficial collapse hasnt forced the star producers of EDM to unplug their laptops and register for the GRE. In fact, plenty are faring exceptionally well this summer, taking up residence on the Billboard Hot 100 after partnering with an array of willing pop vocalists Calvin Harris with Pharrell Williams, the Chainsmokers with Coldplay, David Guetta with Justin Bieber. These kinds of genre-splicing collaborations arent anything new, but with EDM now in decline, theyve quietly reversed their polarity. Instead of making dance tracks that behave like pop songs, these producers appear to be making pop songs that behave a little more like dance tracks.

In most instances, the result is just a mirror-image of the same old thing, but for a certain class of pop singers, it seems to be changing the way they apply their physicality to a geometric dance rhythm. You can hear it on the radio this summer whenever Gomez goes hopscotching across the grid of Kygos It Aint Me, or when Alessia Cara leans hard against the right-angles of Zedds Stay, or in the way Halsey seems to be gasping for air in the digital vacuum of her solo single Now or Never. All three songs are delivered with mechanical clarity, with all three vocalists making direct lyrical references to eternity. Are they singing about transhumanism?

Not long after our species learned how to dream, we were probably dreaming of ways to exceed the limitations of our bodies. Its the stuff of religions and comic books. Now, its the work of Silicon Valley, where a growing number of transhumanists believe that mankinds next evolutionary leap will occur once we figure out how to convert consciousness into code, allowing for a digital transmigration of souls. In his recent book, To Be a Machine, author Mark OConnell describes transhumanism as a liberation movement advocating nothing less than a total emancipation from biology itself. That emancipation means eternal life inside a supercomputer. Heaven is a hard drive.

The idea isnt so shocking if you watch Black Mirror or if you listen to pop music. For well over a decade now, Auto-Tune software has been narrowing the musical gap between humans and machines, generating signature hooks for everyone from T-Pain to Future. However, whether we as listeners embrace Auto-Tune as a tool or denounce it as a crutch often depends on whos singing through it. When Kanye West uses computer software to manipulate his voice, hes an artist. When Britney Spears does the same thing, shes a girl who cant sing.

That double standard helps to explain why Ellie Goulding hasnt been recognized as one of the more significant pop vocalists of our time. The British singer always had bright ideas about phrasing, but it wasnt until she loaned her voice to a few juggernaut EDM singles that her singing began to feel totally frictionless. And it had more to do with Gouldings inflection than whatever digital processing she was applying to it. By the time she released her 2015 album, Delirium, Goulding was weaving the curves of her voice through a world of clean-edged rhythms as if drawing a map to the future.

[Ellie Goulding is singing from inside the pop machine]

With Now or Never, Halsey has that map folded up in her back pocket. Its a slower, stronger, smarter, more spacious song than Closer, her massive EDM hit with the Chainsmokers, and it gives the 22-year-old the opportunity to do some captivating things with her breath. When shes breathing in, shes all human, taking sharp little hits of oxygen that dramatize the ballads sustained romantic ache. But when shes breathing out, shes at least half-machine, singing about pain with precision. Listen close to how she lingers on the words now, time and forever. The grain in her voice sounds like its pixelating.

Alessia Caras Stay a collaboration with the German EDM producer Zedd addresses the gap between data and soul in the form of a simple duet, with a refrain thats delivered in two parts. First comes Cara pushing her voice especially hard into the songs rigid architecture. Then comes a gush of synthesized melodies pantomiming what the 21-year-old just sang. Its a game of call and response, but the call sounds big-hearted, and the response sounds no-hearted, giving the dialogue a sinister glint. Cara is singing about forestalling a separation, but she might as well be teaching the HAL 9000 how to sing Daisy.

With It Aint Me, Norwegian producer Kygo isnt playing a game so much as conducting a test one in which Gomez must first coo alongside a gently plucked guitar and then over the relentless thuds of sub-woofing bass. As the song builds its graceless crescendo, the coffee shop turns into a rave, with the most promising 25-year-old in pop showing us how she can make her voice feel artificial in an intimate setting and expressive in an anonymous one.

That so-real-it-sounds-fake quality in Gomezs singing is put to far better use over the uncluttered beat of Bad Liar, a hit single about an affection that cant be suppressed. The song radiates such indomitable charm, even its bad lyrics ooze weird charisma. In the first verse, Gomez asserts, just like the Battle of Troy, theres nothing subtle here. Sure. In the second verse, she purrs, If youre the art, Ill be the brush. If she says so. And does she? Are these malformed bits of poetry the result of human error, or were they written by a buggy algorithm? Its hard to know for sure, and the pleasure is in the not-knowing.

Youll want to savor that confusion until Gomez reaches the bridge and blurts out the most metaphysical romantic advance to grace the radio in years: Oh, baby, lets make reality. Amazing, amazing, amazing, amazing. The nature of her proposition depends entirely on whether shes pretending to be a machine, but either way, whos going to sayno?

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National Organization for Rare Disorders Gives Batten Disease Community a Voice in Washington – Batten Disease News

Even by the standards of rare illnesses, Batten disease is extremely uncommon, affecting only two to four of every 100,000 births in the United States. That translates into 20 or so American babies born each year with the hereditary illness.

Yet no disease is too insignificant for the National Organization for Rare Disorders, or NORD, which represents those with 7,000 rare conditions that together affect an estimated 30 million Americans.

In April, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Brineura (cerliponase alfa) as a treatment for children 3 and older with a Batten disease.BioMarin Pharmaceuticalsenzyme replacement therapy is for a version of the disease known aslate infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2 (CLN2). Another name for the condition is tripeptidyl peptidase-1 (TPP1) deficiency.

We were excited to learn of the FDAs approval of the very first treatment for Batten disease, Paul Melmeyer, the National Organization for Rare Disorders director of federal policy, said in an interview in Washington. Yet as we understand it, it will be effective in only a small portion of those with Batten a specific genetic subset of 150 or so patients.

BioMarin said its therapy costs $27,000 per biweekly infusion, or just over $700,000 a year, to treat each of the few children born with the condition. This makes Brineura one of the worlds most expensive drugs.

While Brineura doesnt cure the condition, clinical trials have shown that it delays major symptoms. Those treated with it are able to continue walking and talking until around 6 years of age.

Now that theres an innovative treatment for a genetic subtype, we also want to be sure that the rest of the population with Batten disease will have access to therapies which may be coming down the pipeline over the next couple of years, Melmeyer said.

The suggested dose of Brineura is 300 mg, administered once every other week by intraventricular infusion into the cerebrospinal fluid, followed by an infusion of electrolytes. The whole process lasts about four and a half hours. The FDA recommends pre-treatment of patients with antihistamines with our without antipyretics [to prevent fever] or corticosteroids 30 to 60 minutes before starting the infusion.

Orphan therapies [those for rare diseases] do run the gamut of medical technologies and routes of administration, Melmeyer said. Many therapies are infused, many are blood products delivered through plasma, many are standard pills, and many are medical foods. Theres a whole lot of innovative ways to get effective treatment to individuals with rare diseases. Theyre unique and complex and the developers of these therapies have to get very creative.

The patient organizations and advocates who lobbied for passage of the Orphan Drug Act founded the National Organization for Rare Disorders in 1983. The law facilitates the development of treatments for rare diseases.

Ever since then, our role has been to support the rare disease patient organizations and act as a union of those associations, Melmeyer told Batten Disease News.

The organization operates from the fifth floor of a Dupont Circle office building that also houses the Pulitzer Center, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Embassy of Papua New Guinea.

Its 260 or so member organizations include the Batten Disease Support and Research Association.The voluntary nonprofit group, based in Columbus, Ohio, promotes the civil and human rights of people with Batten disease.

Established in 1987, the association offers referral services so that families with Batten disease can secure benefits available by law. It also maintains a database of people with Batten disease by state, nationally and internationally. And it functions as a national registry for researchers worldwide who are studying the disease.

We did a survey showing that 70 percent of our member organizations have fewer than five full-time employees, Melmeyer said. Many of them may have only one or two staffers or volunteers. Thats indicative of the level of resources, that only a handful of people are paying attention to them.

On the wall of his office are posters marking The Orphan Drug Hall of Fame drugs that has become successful therapies against rare diseases. One is for Norditropin, an injectable growth hormone that the FDA approved in August 2006. Another is for Revlimid, a multiple myeloma therapy approved in December 2005. And still another for Cystadane, an oral powder to treat homocystinuria that was approved in May 1994.

BioMarin, which is based in San Rafael, California, said most patients with CLN2 are on federal medical assistance programs such as Medicaid. The mandatory discounts the government demands drop the price by about a third, from $700,000 a year to $486,000, it said.

Weve been hearing from a lot of patients who are frustrated by the cost of these therapies, and also a lot from advocates who want us to focus more on ensuring innovation and less on what the end-stage cost is, Melmeyer told us. We see both sides of those arguments.

He added: We have been very public in our advocacy [for rare diseases insurance coverage] over the last couple of months, ever since efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act started last year. We understood it was going to take a very large effort on our part to protect our patients.

Tiny organizations such as the Batten association pay $50 a year to belong to the National Organization for Rare Disorders, while larger ones pay a few hundred dollars. The rare disease organization sometimes offers research grants, partnering with a specific disease community.

We are seeing patient organizations starting to get more and more into investing in companies, Melmeyer said. Organizations also take stakes in compounds that are being developed in return for a portion of the compounds sales when theyre approved.

For example, the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation invested from start to finish in Vertexs development of Kalydeco and Orkambi.

Melmeyer said 80 percent of rare diseases are genetic, like Batten disease, and that half the patients who have them are children.

Those who donate to the National Association for Rare Disorders are mostly individuals and foundations, with some money coming from pharmaceutical companies. The organization has a grant from the FDA to work on family history registries.

Last year, over 40 percent of the therapies the FDA approved were orphan drugs. Were very happy that is the case, Melmeyer said. Back in the 80s, wed see one, two, maybe three approved each year. In the 90s, that increased very slightly, but it didnt get to over 10 a year. Really, its only within the last 10 years or so that weve seen a substantial increase in the development and approval of rare drugs for diseases.

Melmeyer said his organization doesnt take positions on drug pricing, including what an appropriate price should be for Brineura or any other therapy.

When we look at the drug pricing debate, we are constantly weighing the two sides, he said. On one side, we need to encourage innovations for individuals with rare diseases, while, on the other, ensuring these same therapies are accessible. Its such a delicate balancing act.

He added: We have drawn a line in the sand for ourselves to not get involved. Once we do, in the interest of consistency, wed have to do that for any drug.

Melmeyer, a native of Pittsburgh, did an internship with the office of Pennsylvania Democratic Sen. Bob Casey before working on health policy issues at the Center for American Progress. He took the National Association for Rare Disorders in February 2013 as associate director of public policy. Hes been in the directors job for five months.

We believe pharmaceutical companies want to ensure that patients with the disease can access their therapy, he said. There are publicity benefits for doing so, especially for kids with a very serious disease. It looks good. But we want it because our patients dont have any other options. Many of these orphan drugs will substantially improve the quality of their lives, which is why we hope the insurance companies will see the value of these therapies.

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Dad’s heart attack scared her into a healthy lifestyle – Fox News

Name: Sammi Goldsmith

Age: 23

Occupation: Graduate Student

Hometown: Greensboro, NC

How long have you been running?

I have been running for almost three years.

What prompted you to start?

My dad suffered his first of two heart attacks almost three years ago during the fall of my junior year. His near death experience was a wake up call for me. I started to research heart-health and decided to turn my life around. Changing my eating habits and implementing running into my workout routine were my main priorities. One of my college basketball teammates offered to run with me a few times a week, and soon enough I was addicted.

MOM WARNS OTHERS AFTER 1-YEAR-OLD TESTS POSITIVE FOR HERPES VIRUS

How often do you run?

I run three to four times per week.

What is your routine?

I run one easy run of three to five miles, one day of speed workouts on the treadmill, one longer tempo run of six to eight miles, and one long slow run of eight or more miles.

Do you race? If so, how often, and what kind of races?

I have completed two half marathons, a plethora of 5Ks, and hope to run a full marathon in 2018. I will be running my third half marathon and a 10-miler in September. I love racing and the amazing running community.

Do you engage in other sports or activities? If so, what and how often?

I played college basketball and am now the graduate assistant for the womens basketball team at Virginia Tech. I am working toward earning my Masters in Education and plan to pursue a career as a womens college basketball coach. I also lift weights, go to spin class, and cook often.

Whats the most rewarding part of running for you?

There are two things that I love the most about running. The first is the feeling of accomplishment and pride when I run a distance Ive never reached before, or PR in a race. It is a beautiful thing to discover that your body is capable of doing things that you once thought were impossible. The second thing I love about running is the amazing community it has brought into my life. I now have multiple running partners, and my long runs with them turn into amazing, in-depth conversations that bring us even closer together.

Please describe your weight loss journey, including your before and after weights.

My weight loss journey begins with me stepping on the scale at the doctors office only to feel shame and disappointment. The scale read 183.5 pounds. I started taking steps toward living a healthier lifestyle after my dads heart attack. I began to cook a lot more and stopped drinking soda. McDonalds drive-thru breakfast was no longer a part of my morning routine. I was doing my basketball pre-season workouts as well as the additional runs with my teammate. After four months of little changes, I stepped on the scale to see a big surprise. I weighed 165 pounds. Now, three years after my journey began and now as a runner-lover, I weigh 153 pounds.

What is the secret to your weight loss success?

I would say the secret to my weight loss was making little changes and being consistent. For example, I gave up soda and havent had it since. I think not drinking my calories helped me lose weight by cutting down my caloric intake. I also only eat out once or twice per week and eat a lot less meat. Cutting down on my sugar and saturated fat intake was also key.

How do you stay motivated?

I started a fitness and wellness blog and Instagram in order to showcase the nutritious meals I cook. Friends and strangers alike ask for tips because they find my story inspiring. This, along with my relationship with my dad, keeps me motivated to continue to live a healthy lifestyle.

JAPANESE WOMAN DIED FROM TICK-BORNE ILLNESS DESPITE NO TICK BITE, OFFICIALS SAY

Do you have any favorite motivational quotes?

You miss 100 percent of the shots you dont take. Wayne Gretzky.

Even when you have gone as far as you can, and everything hurts, and you are staring at the specter of self-doubt, you can find a bit more strength deep inside you, if you look closely enough. Hal Higdon

What are your current short and long-term goals?

My current short-term goals are to PR on my next half marathon and start training for a full marathon. My long-term goal is to run in the Boston Marathon eventually, as well as become a head womens coach at the collegiate level within the next ten years.

Is there anything else youd like to tell us?

I have truly fallen in love with running. It brought me friendships, happiness, and a new passion. I am forever grateful for that.

This article first appeared on Runner's World.

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Dad's heart attack scared her into a healthy lifestyle - Fox News

The best place to launch a healthy lifestyle? Your kitchen – Harvard Health (blog)

Because we all have to eat.

When I saw the brochure for the Harvard Medical School Lifestyle Medicine conference, I was intrigued, and determined to attend. Why? Because how we live can either spur on or help prevent some of the biggest threats to health like diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and heart disease.

The conference started with Culinary Health Education Fundamentals coaching. Its purpose is to teach providers like me how to teach patients about nutrition, and to help us identify and address barriers to eating healthy. Dr. Rani Polak, the Director of the Culinary Health Education Fundamentals (CHEF) Coaching Program at the Institute of Lifestyle Medicine, led these sessions.

Dr. Polak is a physician and trained chef. He reviewed extensive research showing that home cooking is key to a healthy lifestyle. For example, studies show that the more meals people prepare at home, the more fruits and veggies they eat. But since the 1960s, people have been preparing food at home less often, and relying on fast food a lot more.

Many people know they need to eat more healthfully, but dont know where to start. They lack confidence and skills, and dont think they have the time to prepare meals at home. If these are barriers to eating well, then doctors should be able to inform, motivate, and help patients make reasonable and practical goals for better eating. We need to help patients plan, shop for, and prepare healthy meals and understand that they can do this. It takes more than handing them a list of healthy foods and recipes.

Doctors as well as their patients can benefit from Dr. Polaks tips and tricks, for example:

For anyone (including doctors) who is intimidated by the kitchen, or beginning home cooks, Dr. Polak offers some advice as well as two beautiful recipes.

There are endless possibilities for healthy homemade soup. To keep it easy and convenient:

Try Dr. Polaks recipe for this simple and delicious Zucchini and Mint Soup.

Pamper your kitchen with a grill pan, which is a basically a frying pan with elevated ridges that duplicate the effect you get on your outdoor grill. This is an amazing tool that can help you prepare quick and impressive food. Grilled veggies are super-healthy and tasty! To keep it easy and convenient:

Try Dr. PolaksGrilled Vegetable recipe as an appetizer or side dish. I used yellow and red beets, zucchini, and summer squash, but the list of possibilities is nearly endless (eggplant, peppers, Brussels sprouts, you name it).

Rani Polak, MD, is Founding Director of the Culinary Health Education Fundamentals (CHEF) Coaching Program at the Institute of Lifestyle Medicine at the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston, am. He is also a ResearchAssociate,Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School. Follow Dr. Polak on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn:

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The best place to launch a healthy lifestyle? Your kitchen - Harvard Health (blog)

Leading a Healthy Lifestyle Requires an Attitude Adjustment – HuffPost

Leading a healthy lifestyle requires adjusting our attitudes about stress. Stress is unavoidable. But we have a choice about how to deal with it. Work, money and family all create daily stress. More global issues like politics and terrorism can also add to our stress levels.

But, research studies show that our perception of stress is really what matters in the long run. The key to dealing with stress and also leading a healthy lifestyle is to adjust your attitude. You can even make stress a positive part of a healthy lifestyle.

How to Embrace Stress While Leading a Healthy Lifestyle

Here are some ways to deal with stress, reduce its harm and even use it to make yourself stronger and healthier.

Even though stress is associated with many serious health problems, some people with high-stress thrive. How is that possible?

In 2012, researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison published a study looking at how 28,000 people perceived stress in their lives. People in the study answered these two questions:

1. During the past 12 months, would you say that you experienced:

o A moderate amount of stress

o Relatively little stress

o Almost no stress at all

2. How much effect has stress had on your health?

The researchers looked at death rates in the study group over nine years. The results were quite surprising. The study found that the amount of stress in the participants life was not linked with premature death. However, those people who said they had a lot of stress in their lives and believed it was taking a toll on their health, had a 43% increased risk of premature death.

Leading a Healthy Lifestyle Involves Changing Your Stress Perceptions

Another study shows how interconnected our minds are with our bodies. Whether we view stress as something that is harming our bodies or making us stronger so we can overcome adversity makes all the difference.

Heres a quick way to try out these two very different views of stress. Read the statement, and then think about your reaction to the biological changes that occur during times of stress.

1. When Im stressed, my body releases adrenaline and cortisol. My heart is beating faster. This means that:

o Common View: Stress is increasing my risk for cardiovascular disease and heart attack.

o Alternative View: My heart is working harder and my body is mobilizing its energy to get ready for this challenge.

2. When Im stressed, my stress response is causing my breathing rate to increase. This means that:

o Common View: My fast breathing is a sign of anxiety. I worry about how stress is affecting my mental and physical health.

o Alternative View: I should take a deep breath. My faster breathing means more oxygen is getting to my brain so I can think more clearly.

3. When Im stressed, blood vessels dilate, causing my blood to flow faster, increasing my blood pressure. This means that:

o Common View: I can feel my blood pressure rising. This cant be good for my health.

o Alternative View: This extra blood flow is fueling my muscles. Im feeling stronger and ready for the challenge ahead.

If you can adopt the alternative view over the common view, you will be able to continue leading a healthy lifestyle despite dealing with a stressful lifestyle.

Consider the results of this study done by Harvard researchers. They paid 50 study subjects $25 each to take part in a lab experiment designed to induce stress. The test involved giving a talk in front of an unfriendly audience, followed by a tricky word test. This is something that causes of lot of stress for almost everyone.

Before the stress test, one group was allowed to play video games. The second group was told to just ignore stressful feelings if they experienced them during the test. The third group was given a primer about the physical stress response and told that a higher heart rate, faster breathing and butterflies were all tools for making them stronger during a stressful event. They were told about how the bodys stress response evolved to help them succeed, and that the increased arousal symptoms of stress help performance during times of high stress.

The group that learned to rethink the role of stress in their lives did far better on the test. They gave better speeches and were rated as more confident. They smiled more and had more-positive body language. And physiological indicators showed that their bodies were also managing the stress response better than those of test subjects who were taught to ignore stress or given no advice at all.

The Stanford psychologist Kelly McGonigal has been a champion of rethinking stress as a way to cope with it better. Her TED talk on the subject, How To Make Stress Your Friend, has been viewed 14 million times.

What I learned from these studies, surveys and conversations truly changed the way I think about stress, Dr. McGonigal wrote in her book The Upside of Stress: Why Stress Is Good for You, and How to Get Good at It. The best way to manage stress isnt to reduce or avoid it, but rather to rethink and even embrace it.

Click here to read the full article about stress perceptions and leading a healthy lifestyle.

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Leading a Healthy Lifestyle Requires an Attitude Adjustment - HuffPost

Shout Out: Dasha Ignatova, co-founder of healthy lifestyle club at Buffalo Grove High School – Chicago Tribune

Buffalo Grove High School student Dasha Ignatova and other founding members have been surprised by the rapid success of the school's healthy lifestyle club that they helped start one year ago.

Beginning in fall 2016, the Elevate club, a school chapter of the national Life of an Athlete program, started with eight founding members but by the spring, the group totaled 200 members, the students said. Earlier this summer, the Life of an Athlete organization awarded the Buffalo Grove High School group with its "Program of the Year" honor.

"It was a huge surprise," Ignatova said of the award. "We're just trying to encourage other kids that there are better options than partying. The realization for others is the most important part for us."

It would be easy to pigeonhole the Elevate group as an anti-drugs club, but some of the founding members have said the message goes beyond that. Life of an Athlete and its chapters also try to teach students about the importance of healthy diets and sleep.

As Ignatova, who is an incoming senior and student athlete from Arlington Heights, and other founding members described it, Elevate teaches its members to take care of their bodies as a means toward taking care of their teammates.

Ignatova recently talked with Pioneer Press about the Elevate chapter as she and other seniors prepare students to lead the group once some of the senior members graduate. She said she plans to study chemical engineering in college after her senior year at Buffalo Grove High School.

Q: How do you keep in touch with so many kids?

A: It was more of an honor system. We have a pledge and if you sign it, you're saying you will be honest to it and to the other people who signed it. We talked with three or four kids about problems they had.

Q: Chemical engineering sounds important and lucrative. What is it?

A: You can work with different pharmaceuticals. You can work for companies that create hair sprays or medicine, or different bottled products. I've always felt that medicine is something that can be improved on. Something that has less side effects, or is better for your body.

Q: A high school kid somewhere hears about Life of an Athlete and wants to start a chapter. How does that kid replicate Elevate's success?

A: It only takes one person to make a change. Once his teammates realize, "Wow, this kid is excelling. He's the strongest one out of us all," and he might not be the greatest athlete, "Maybe, I should do what he's doing." And I'd tell the kid, "You don't need to force other people to do this."

Shout Out is a weekly feature in which we introduce our readers to their fellow community members and local visitors throughout suburban Chicago.

RWachter@PioneerLocal.com

Twitter @RonnieAtPioneer

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Shout Out: Dasha Ignatova, co-founder of healthy lifestyle club at Buffalo Grove High School - Chicago Tribune

Simple changes to begin a ‘heart-healthy’ lifestyle – WZZM

Brittany Foster, WZZM 10:06 AM. EDT August 01, 2017

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - With summer slowing down and plans for another school year just around the corner, now is a great time for your family to get back to some healthier habits.

Dr. Vinayak Manohar, cardiologist at Mercy Health Physician Partners, stopped by The Exchange to share some simple tips on how to start eating your way to a heart-healthy lifestyle.

Dr. Manohar suggests adding more vegetables to your plate, switching to whole grains, and when it comes to meat in your diet, trying to stick to mostly poultry or fish.

For more tips and for more on Mercy Health, click here.

Make it easy to keep up to date with more stories like this. Download the WZZM 13 app now.

Have a news tip? Email news@wzzm13.com, visit our Facebook page or Twitter.

2017 WZZM-TV

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Simple changes to begin a 'heart-healthy' lifestyle - WZZM

Scientists, Theologians Ponder If Latest Biological Findings Are More Compatible With Religion – Sojourners

When Charles Darwin published his landmark theory of evolution by natural selection in the 19th century, religious leaders were confronted with a powerful challenge to some of their oldest beliefs about the origins of life.

Then evolutionary theory was expanded with the insights of genetics, which gave further support for a scientific and secular view of how humans evolved.

Faith and tradition were forced further onto the defensive.

Now, exciting progress in biology in recent decades may be building up a third new phase in the scientific explanation of life, according to thinkers gathered at a University of Oxford conferencefrom July 19-22.

Although this 21st-century wave has no single discovery to mark its arrival, new insights into developing technologies such as genetic engineering and human enhancement may end up giving another important boost to the belief that science has (or eventually will have) the answers to lifes mysteries.

Some scientists, theologians, and philosophers see in this ever deeper knowledge of how genes work a possible alternative to the more reductive approach to evolution one that brings in a broader view that also considers the influence of the environment.

Unlike the earlier views, which seemed to lead toward either agnosticism or atheism, the theologians see this new biology or holistic biology as more compatible with religious belief.

Weve added definition to the picture of evolution that has deepened and enriched our understanding of biological processes, Donovan Schaefer, an Oxford lecturer in science and religion who co-organized the conference, told the opening session of the July 19-22 meeting.

But he added: It would be naive to imagine that the grander questions about biology, religion, the humanities, and evolutionary theory generally have been put to death.

The achievements on their list include new fields like epigenetics, the science of how genes are turned on or off to influence our bodies, and advances in cognitive and social sciences that yield ever more detailed empirical research into how we behave.

Waiting in the wings are new technologies such as genome editing, which can modify human genes to repair, enhance, or customize human beings. Scientists in China are believed to have already genetically modified human embryos, and the first known attemptto do so in the United States was reported on July 26.

Schaefer compared todays deeper understanding of biology to the higher resolution that photographers enjoy, now that photography has advanced from film to digital images.

Genes once thought to be fairly mechanical in influencing human development leading to the my genes made me do it kind of thinking have been found to be part of complex systems that can act in response to a persons environment.

Since scientists succeeded in sequencing the genome in the late 1990s, they have found that epigenetic markers that regulate patterns of gene expression can reflect outside influences on a body.

Even simpler living objects such as plants contain a complex internal genetic system that governs their growth according to information they receive from outside.

To theologians who see a new biology emerging, this knowledge points to a more holistic system than scientists have traditionally seen, one more open to some divine inspiration for life.

In this view, the fact that epigenetic markers can bring outside pressures to bear on the genome deep inside a human means genetics is not a closed system, but part of the wider sweep of nature in which they, as religious thinkers, also see Gods hand.

Nature is so complex and rich, and that prompts questions about why on earth is this the case? If youre an atheist, how do you explain a universe that seems to have the capacity to produce these things in the first place? asked Alister McGrath, an Oxford theologian who is director of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion that hosted the conference.

This in turn opened a space for theologians to augment the discussion about the new biology, he said.

Massimo Pigliucci, a philosopher at New Yorks City College with doctorates in genetics and evolutionary biology, also said scientism the idea that science can answer all lifes important questions was too limited.

Science informs and grounds certain philosophical positions; it doesnt determine them, he said. But the data cant settle ethical questions.

Pigliucci agrees with the trend to use the evolutionary paradigm to analyze fields outside of biology, including topics such as ethics and morality.

The life sciences tell us that the building blocks of what we call morality are actually found presumably they were selected for in nonhuman social primates, he said. Science gives you an account of what otherwise looks like magic: Why do we have a moral sense to begin with? How did we develop it?

Not all present agreed that science could explain religion.

Some suspect that biology has triggered some kind of devotion and there are too many people who practice this cult, said Lluis Oviedo, a theologian at the Pontifical University Antonianum in Rome.

His own research has found at least 75 books and academic articles trying to explain religion through evolution, and he knew of about 20 more on the way, he said.

Although he thinks, the time of explaining through radical reduction is over, he admitted few biologists seemed ready to accept the more holistic new biology.

Even some scientists at the conference, while ready to engage with the philosophers and theologians, showed less interest in discussions about whether a new biology was emerging.

Im pragmatic, explained Ottoline Leyser of the University of Cambridge, whose lecture on plant genetics was one of the conferences highlights.

Theologians in the decades long science and religion debate, which argues the two disciplines complement each other, have also become more pragmatic as their dialogue proceeds.

Oxfords McGrath said the theologians had become more modest in the claims they made about what religion could contribute to this debate. Unlike some more doctrinaire scientists, he said, they did not think they had all the answers.

They dont say These observations in nature prove or disprove God, he said. Our religious way of thinking gives you a framework which allows you to look at the scientific approach to the world and understand why it makes sense, but at the same time also to understand its limits.

Those things need to be in the picture if were going to lead meaningful lives.

Via Religion News Service.

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Scientists, Theologians Ponder If Latest Biological Findings Are More Compatible With Religion - Sojourners

Do these 4 natural anti-aging alternatives work? – Fox News

In anti-aging skin care, there are many alternative treatments you'll come across, from skin-needling to Ayurvedic medicine to a diet detox, but all of them aren't created equal.

We asked skin care professionals which ones are worth your time and moneyand which ones you can skip. (We've also got loads of good natural skin care tips and tricks, from coconut oil to rosehip oil based moisturizers, to masks containing that anti-bacterial beauty balm, honey.) Below, we break down everything you need to know about four popular treatments.

RELATED: 6 MOST IMPORTANT BEAUTY PRODUCTS TO BUY ORGANIC

AYURVEDIC MEDICINE

This system of traditional Indian healing relies on techniques such as diet changes, breathing exercises and botanical medicine to treat patients based on their dosha, or "mind-body type."

Does it work?

"The doshas seem to line up with skin types we're familiar with," says Jasmina Aganovic, an MIT-trained chemical and biological engineer and founder of the Stages of Beauty skin-care line. "The Vata dosha typically coincides with dry skin," she says, "Pitta coincides with sensitive; and Kapha, with oily or combination skin."

Even so, there's no scientific evidence that treating your skin based on your dosha is beneficial, says Susan Stuart, MD, a dermatologist in San Diego. However, there is proof that many of the powerhouse plant-based ingredients used in Ayurvedic medicine can help you look younger.

For example, "research shows that turmeric and ginger, both used frequently in Ayurvedic medicine, can reduce wrinkles," says Shyam Gupta, PhD, a chemist and founder of Bioderm Research, a cosmetic research company in Scottsdale, AZ. And several studies show that grapeseed extract, another Ayurvedic ingredient, protects against photodamage.

RELATED: I TRIED DRINKING FRESH TURMERIC JUICE EVERY DAY FOR A MONTHHERES WHAT HAPPENED

Bottom Line

Try healing Ayurvedic recipes, and products with Ayurvedic ingredients like turmeric and ginger, but don't overhaul your beauty regimen based on your dosha just yet.

ALKALINE DIET

A few studies have shown acidity can be damaging to the body, so it's thought by some that eating mostly alkaline-forming (or, acid-lowering) foods like fruits and vegetables may slow skin aging.

Does it work?

There's no research proving this theory. Our bodies do a good job of regulating acidity regardless of diet. But there is anecdotal support: "My clients who eat 80% alkaline-forming foods notice fewer lines and more hydrated skin in weeks," says author and nutritionist Kimberly Snyder.

Bottom Line

The diet won't erase wrinkles, but eating more fruits and veggies improves overall health (including preventing weight gain)and that can only be good for skin.

SKIN NEEDLING

In this procedure, you roll a small needle-covered device over your face to create tiny, temporary pricks in your skin, which may trigger a healing response (similar to what occurs after a cut), leading to a smoother complexion.

Does it work?

San Francisco dermatologist Kathy Fields, MD, who helped develop a home skin needling package with a peptide-and retinol-based serum for Rodan + Fields, says her company's analysis shows using it can induce skin's collagen-building process and improve penetration of anti-aging ingredients applied afterward. But there aren't peer-reviewed studies of at-home devices, and Dr. Stuart believes needling is safer and more effective done in a dermatologist's office with a pro version of the tool.

Bottom Line

Used before a retinol-based product, an at-home skin-needling tool can smooth skin, but it's likely the retinol doing most of the work. Check with your dermatologist first.

RELATED: 11 OLD FASHIONED BEAUTY TREATMENTS GRANDMA USED THAT YOU SHOULD TOO

DIET CLEANSE

Some experts think that temporarily restricting your diet (whether with a cleanse, a juice fast or a similar detox plan) can clarify your complexion and make your skin glow.

Does it work?

"Most people's skin improves when they do a cleanse because they're removing foods that have a pro-inflammatory effectand inflammation is the root of many skin issues, including rosacea, acne and premature aging," says Frank Lipman, MD, an integrative physician and founder of Eleven Eleven Wellness in New York City. Although it's best to have an integrative medicine expert guide you in the cleansing process, it's possible to see benefits on your own.

RELATED: 7 DIY FACE MASKS AND SCRUBS THAT ACTUALLY WORK

Dr. Lipman says avoiding caffeine, sugar, dairy, gluten and meat for a few weeks can offer a short-term boost to your complexion. Research supports this theory to some extent (gluten intolerances have been linked to skin issues for some people, and several studies have shown a correlation between dairy consumption and acne). However, Mary Lupo, MD, a dermatologist, says there are no studies showing that a temporary cleanseno matter what types of food are restrictedcan reduce cellular inflammation or provide long-term skin benefits.

Bottom Line

A cleanse won't turn back the clock, but eating less sugar and fewer starchy carbohydrates could be beneficial in the long run, and help you determine what's potentially throwing off your body chemistry. "These foods can spike blood glucose levels, and that accelerates aging of all organs, including the skin," says Dr. Lupo.

This article originally appeared on Rodale Organic Life

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Do these 4 natural anti-aging alternatives work? - Fox News

In My Memory: Is Trance Tiesto Gone for Good? (Opinion) – Dance Music Northwest

Since last year, trance has seen a resurgence that has been years in the making. Sales and artist bookings are up, dedicated trance festivals are growing bigger, and new sub-genre sounds, like Psy Trance, are emerging. Helping lead the charge are trance legends who have returned to the genre after branching off to make more mainstream, progressive sounds- names like Sander van Doorn, W&W, Ferry Corstens Gouryella and Arty. Noticeably absent from this movement back to trance: probably one, if not, the best trance artists of all-time: Tiesto.

Before he became the house music playing, big room pumping, Grammy award-winning superstar he is today, Tijs Michiel Verwest, of the Netherlands, operated in the shadows as DJ Tiesto. Starting his career in the early 90s, Tiesto helped define the trance genre with his uplifting and progressive sounds, in addition to the creation of record labels like Black Hole Recordings and In Trance We Trust. Joining him in his early projects include fellow Dutchmen Ferry Corsten, who, along with Tiesto, created Gouryella, and Armin van Buuren, who Tiesto helped take Armins sound into the mainstream (look how well that has turned out!).

Tiestos debut solo studio album, In My Memory, released in 2001, saw this legend score some of his biggest career hits. Does Flight 643 and Lethal Industry ring a bell?

As trance in its entirety continued to grow, both of these tracks stood the test of time, having been remixed by plenty and featured in sets galore- even to this day. Who could forget when the legendary Markus Schulz dropped 643 at Bliss; Transcendence, here in Seattle, a few months ago?!

In My Memory took Tiestos career to new heights. He began to do global tours, including his USA debut in 2003, and lengthy solo sets- a concept that was new at the time. The idea of one DJ playing alone in front of a crowd of thousands? His groundbreaking Tiesto in Concert solo shows, in 2003, helped pave the way for DJs who aspire to do concerts in massive venues; He showed it could be done.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily represent the views of Dance Music Northwest or its leadership.

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In My Memory: Is Trance Tiesto Gone for Good? (Opinion) - Dance Music Northwest

Cyberpunk 2077 release date rumours, news and trailers: Everything we know so far – Alphr

CD Projekt Red has a lot of expectation riding on Cyberpunk 2077. Not only is the studios latest title, The Witcher 3, widely regarded as one of the best videogames ever made, its new project is also based on a tabletop roleplaying game thats been capturing imaginations with tales of leather jackets and neon lights since 1988.

The Polish studio has shown its more than capable of handling complex, multi-layered storytelling across a vast open world so the signs are good that the shift from fantasy to science fiction will be a fruitful one. Beyond an initial trailer, however, theres relatively little known for certain about Cyberpunk 2077.

To keep you abreast with all the latest news and rumours, here is our rundown of everything you need to know about Cyberpunk 2077. Well be updating this page as new information surfaces.

Cyberpunk 2077 was revealed way back in 2012, three years before The Witcher 3 was released. This was followed in 2013 by a trailer that said the game would be released when its ready, which isnt a great deal to go on.

Some further hints came in early 2016, in the shape of a company investor call. This noted a timeframe to release Cyberpunk 2077 before June 2019, as well as plans to release two blockbuster RPGs before 2021. It was later clarified that the first of these would be Cyberpunk 2077.

Image 4 of 8

In 2016, a grant of 30 million zloty (around 6 million) from the Polish government was given to CD Projekt RED, to research seamless multiplayer and virtual city creation. That comes with a stipulation that the team delivers something over the next few years. Throw in a 2017 financial results conference, which made mention of progress on Cyberpunk 2077 being quite advanced, and wed say late 2018 or early 2019 is a good bet.

As for which platforms Cyberpunk 2077 will arrive on, the time frame makes it likely that the game will follow a similar release pattern to The Witcher 3 with a release on PC, PS4 and Xbox One. The main difference will be the inclusion of 4K editions for Xbox One X and PS4 Pro.

Back in 2013 CD Projekt RED's managing director Adam Badowski mentioned in a chat to Eurogamer that Cyberpunk 2077 would have multiplayer features, but tapered this by stressing the game would be a predominantly single-player experience.

News at the end of 2016, about the studios grant from the Polish government, also emphasised that the game would push the envelope for seamless multiplayer.

Will Cyberpunk 2077 have a multiplayer shooter mode? Will it be an MMO? Most likely not. Given CD Projekt REDs track record, we doubt the developers will want to stray too far from the scripted narratives that have made the studios name. Instead, expect a form of pervasive multiplayer that will aim to make Night City feel more alive, perhaps in the strand of Dark Souls and Bloodborne, where the paths of other players are seen as ghosts, and where other players can help or hinder progress through the games path.

Another upcoming AAA sci-fi game, Beyond Good and Evil 2, is aiming to straddle the balance between written storytelling and pervasive co-operation and competition although we expect CD Projekt RED to go less in the multiplayer direction than Ubisoft.

CD Projekt RED visual effects artist Jose Teixeira said in 2015 that Cyberpunk 2077 would be far bigger than anything else the studio has done. Part of the stipulation of the Polish government grant was that the developers create "cities of great scale based on the principles of artificial intelligence and automation", so it makes sense for the studio to approach this on a big scale.

The studio has also doubled in size, with more developers allegedly working on Cyberpunk 2077 than those that worked on The Witcher 3 at its most intensive. Not a lithe indie adventure, then.

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Cyberpunk 2077 takes place in the Cyberpunk tabletop universe, created by Mike Pondsmith, whos also a consultant on the project. Pondsmiths RPG, mainly known by its second edition name of Cyberpunk 2020, is based in a sprawling fictional metropolis on the US West Coast, called Night City.

Even if youre unfamiliar with the details of Pondsmiths world, youll no doubt be familiar with the Cyberpunk tropes it went some way to solidify. From the novels of William Gibson to films such as Blade Runner, the Cyberpunk style tends to feature (in no particular order) rampant megacorporations, hackers, cybernetic implants, social unrest, artificial intelligence, leather jackets, sex robots, mohawks, hardboiled detectives, neon lights. Expect Night City to have all of these things at some point or another.

Marcin Przybyowicz did stellar work on the atmospheric, if occasionally overpowering, Witcher 3 soundtrack. Hes continuing to work for the studio on Cyberpunk 2077, so itll be interesting to see how the composer works within a genre that already has a very established soundscape.

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Set over 50 years after Pondsmiths Cyberpunk 2020, CD Projekt RED has scope to explore technologies and cultures that were nascent in the original tabletop game. One of these will be Braindances virtual reality-like devices that let viewers experience events from the perspectives of other people. "People live someone elses life while sleeping in the gutter," lead gameplay designer Marcin Janiszewski told The Verge. "Its like a new drug."

Given its reverberations with current debates around the limits of immersive technology, wed expect these braindances to be a major part of Cyberpunk 2077s makeup.

One intriguing aspect of Cyberpunk 2077 may be how its creators handle language. While it was only floated as a consideration in 2013, CD Projekt REDs narrative and setting director, Sebastian Stepien, mentioned the possibility of having NPCs speaking in different languages with the player needing a translator implant to interpret what people are saying.

Speaking to dubscore.pl, Stepien said: The idea is to record everything in its original language. If there are, for example, Mexicans in the game, they will speak with slang. All performed by Mexican actors.

"Then a player could try a translating implant, and according to its level, he will get better or worse translation."

Its a very intriguing idea one that could lead to a lot of interesting narrative opportunities from a writing perspective but hasnt yet been confirmed as a definite feature in the game.

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Cyberpunk 2077 release date rumours, news and trailers: Everything we know so far - Alphr

Howie Lee is the cyberpunk-obsessed club producer concerned we’re trapped in the Matrix – FACT

FACT Rated is our series digging into the sounds and stories of the most vital breaking artists around right now. This week, Claire Lobenfeld talks to Beijing-born club innovator Howie Lee about 3D design, GarageBands Chinese instruments library and the possibility that were all just living in a simulation.

IN SHORT NAME: Howie Lee FROM: Beijing, China MUST-HEAR: Homeless EP (2017, Do Hits) FOR FANS OF: Aphex Twin, M.I.A., James Ferraro

Howie Lee thinks we might be living in the Matrix. Speaking from his home in Taipei, Taiwan, the Beijing-born club producer is waxing on the possibility that weve all just been imagined by someone else, either human or artificial. I dont know what to believe and I dont know what is to value in this world anymore, he says. Im always very anxious about whats going to happen in the short future. I believe in the Matrix and I believe we might already be in it.

Listening to his thrilling recent EP Homeless, one can hear the digital dread he describes, but its substance isnt all future-fearing flourishes. When he speaks to FACT in June, he says hes been digging a lot of old folk music from the Western border of China sounds from Xinjiang, Tibet and Yunnan that meld Buddhist histories with Muslim traditions from Chinas neighbors. This global influence from both the physical and digital worlds is imprinted all over the EP, which was named after the placelessness of the music.

Created with software like the granular synthesizer iPad app iDensity and popular entry-level DAW GarageBand most people delete it, but GarageBand has Chinese drum kit and erhu thats really awesome as well as live instruments, the six-song collection is slaughtering club music made for our nearly-dystopian present. And if you cant grasp the technicolor collage that its sounds invoke, Lees music videos deftly illustrate the world he is trying to sort out.

Im scared about real life, but the virtual life is more scary to me when I play music, I feel safe.

His visual identity is inspired by his wife, renowned designer Veeeky. Im inspired by a lot of cyberpunk things and I always think were already living in a dream and living in a sort of AI-controlled dream, Lee says. You have your own space, but you never really have space. Everything is in front of you like: BUY ME, CLICK ME. He uses Cinema 4D and other 3D drafting tools to make his videos and other pieces of art. For a half decade, Lee has been incorporating these elements into his live show with Veeeky crafting the visual accompaniments to his music and another friend supplying a self-made game engine to the video art.

Lee is part of Do Hits, a label that originated in 2011 as a party at Beijing punk hangout School Bar before becoming fully-realized after moving to underground dance club Dada. But like Do Hits, Lees origins are also in punk. I was in cheesy pop-punk like Green Day, Lee says, looking back at his time as an audio engineering student a Communication University of China. There were just a lot of show opportunities, but I had no idea why I was doing until I said, OK, fuck this, this is boring, its not creative, these are cheesy pop songs.' His roommate at the time taught him how to use Traktor and the two started DJing at bars together. But it was after university that dance music truly became his passion.

When Justice came out and I was like, OK, this is new music. Its not punk, but its not the trance music that I used to listen to. It just grabbed my mind and I said, I wanna do something like this. And like Justice, Lees brand of dance music is all about pushing the conversation forward. Throughout Homeless, there are multiple threads to latch onto in each track that transport its listener across varying musical landscapes. Hes created a kaleidoscopic world in order to grapple with what he sees as an easily manipulated reality. Im scared about real life, but the virtual life is more scary to me, he says. There is no way to get rid of the internet and its not necessary to, either. Its more about self-control and not losing your awareness of yourself. When I play music, I feel safe.

Claire Lobenfeld is on Twitter.

Read next: Icelands Bjarki makes 10 tracks a day and has Nina Kraviz on speed dial

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Howie Lee is the cyberpunk-obsessed club producer concerned we're trapped in the Matrix - FACT

National Science Foundation $9M grant will fund neurotech research hub at Cornell – The Ithaca Voice

YOUR LOCAL NEWS IS MADE POSSIBLE BY SUPPORT FROM This story was written by Syl Kacapyr and originally published in the Cornell Chronicle. It was NOT written by The Ithaca Voice.

ITHACA, N.Y. As neuroscientists examine challenging questions about the complexities of the central nervous system, new tools to be developed at Cornell will provide them with an unprecedented glimpse into the inner workings of the brain thanks to a five-year, $9 million grant from the National Science Foundation.

The grant will establish the Cornell Neurotechnology NeuroNex Hub, which will focus on researching, developing and disseminating new optical imaging tools for noninvasive recording of neural activity in animals. It will also establish the Laboratory for Innovative Neurotechnology at Cornell, where engineers and biologists will collaborate on developing and testing the tools.

The hub aims to overcome three barriers faced by neuroscientists:

Deep imaging of intact brains Multiphoton microscopy, invented at Cornell, has allowed neuroscientists to record the activities of individual neurons up to approximately 1 millimeter deep into a mouse brain. However, the mouse brain is about 8 millimeters thick, and even thicker in larger animals. The hub will optimize a recently developed three-photon microscope and focus on making the tool widely available.

Imaging of large and multiple neural regions The best whole nervous system images have come from laval zebrafish, but existing imaging tools cannot holistically view larger brains, even at the scale of an adult zebrafish. Using a combination of two- and three-photon microscopy, the hub will develop a new tool to simultaneously observe neurons in different regions of the mouse brain and the spinal cord.

Faster imaging for volumetric recording To record large numbers of neurons, high-speed imaging will be achieved through the development of an adaptive illumination microscope in which the sample becomes an integral part of the imaging system. By leveraging prior knowledge of the sample, optimum laser exposure will be used to record the activities from a large number of neurons.

Within five years, the hub aims to integrate the three tools to demonstrate the deepest, high-resolution, large-scale neural activity recording ever achieved.

It is well recognized that neurotechnology development is essential to push the envelope of neuroscience. At the Cornell NeuroNex Hub, we will create, optimize and then disseminate the new tools that will enable biologists to attack some of the impossible problems in neuroscience, said Chris Xu, professor of applied and engineering physics, and principal investigator for the hub.

Using the technology, biologists hope to explore unanswered questions, such as how animals consciously switch from autonomous locomotion to deliberate limb placement.

Behaviors emerge from interactions of neurons widely distributed in brains, but we do not yet have the tools we need to simultaneously monitor single-cell activity widely in the brains of diverse species, said Joseph Fetcho, professor of neurobiology and behavior, and a senior investigator for the hub.

The hub is part of the largerCornell Neurotech program launchedwith a multimillion-dollar gift from the Mong Family Foundation in 2015 with the same goal of encouraging cross-disciplinary research to develop new tools for neuroscience. The hub will also educate the next generation of scientists by involving graduate and undergraduate students who will learn to collaborate across such disciplines as biology, computer science, engineering, medicine and physics.

In many ways, Cornell Neurotech has been growing at a rate faster than we could have anticipated, said Gretchen Ritter 83, the Harold Tanner Dean of Arts and Sciences. This trajectory is prompted both by the leading-edge imaging work of its researchers, as well as the attention that Cornells investment in neurotechnology has been generating more broadly.

Added Lance Collins, the Joseph Silbert Dean of Engineering: Its been exciting to see this Neurotech initiative blossom here at Cornell, which really is an ideal place to make great discoveries in neurotechnology and neuroscience. We not only have the collaborative environment, but we have a proud history of pioneering new technologies.

A large number of academic and industry partners across the nation have already signed on to participate in the hub, which will be led by Xu, Fetcho, Chris Schaffer, associate professor of biomedical engineering, Nilay Yapici, assistant professor of neurobiology and behavior, and Mert Sabuncu, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and of biomedical engineering.

Featured image:Principal investigators for the Cornell Neurotechnology NeuroNex Hub.Courtesy of Dave Burbank/Cornell University.

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National Science Foundation $9M grant will fund neurotech research hub at Cornell - The Ithaca Voice