Far Northwest Side Teacher Alexandria Lialios Remembered With Honorary Street Title – Block Club Chicago

IRVING WOODS For decades, the halls of Canty Elementary School twinkled with sparkly animal prints and glittery paper stars made by students in Alexandria Lialios classroom.

The Far Northwest Side school at 3740 N. Panama Ave. was Lialios second home for 38 years, where she taught first grade, Greek and specialized in early childhood development. The teacher died unexpectedly in February from lung cancer, her family said. She was 61.

In early June, on the last day of school before summer vacation, an honorary street designation for Lialios was posted across from the school at North Paris Avenue between West Waveland Avenue and West Grace Street. All of the students and staff joined in to celebrate the teacher and share memories.

Honorary Alexandria Lialios Way remembers the teacher and mother who impacted the school community and touched generations of students, said Canty Principal Jennifer Rath.

She was one of the longest-standing teachers here at the school, said Rath, who has been principal since 2019. One of the things that I learned initially was I have a teacher in the building who had [Lialios] as a first-grade teacher.

Lialios, a first-generation Greek American, grew up on the Northwest Side and lived in Arlington Heights. She devoted her life to teaching and always put others before herself, said her brother, Chris Lialios. She joined Cantys staff in 1984.

She loved teaching. She loved being around children, Chris Lialios said. She started teaching at a very young age, whether it was at our church, parish or Sunday school. She was fluent in both English and Greek, so she loved [teaching] that, as well.

Known for her polished look, Lialios always wore patterned animal outfits and was decked out with sequined jewelry, dresses and high heels. She was always dressed for work, and her makeup was perfect Rath only saw her in tennis shoes once, she said.

In Lialios decades at Canty, she created traditions at the school that will continue, Rath said. During the winter holidays, Lialios and her students would make large, white paper glittery star ornaments to wear while singing Do You Hear What I Hear? for the winter concert she organized.

Lialios also loved reading Corduroy, a classic 1968childrens bookwritten and illustrated byDon Freeman, to all of her students, and she tried her best to make sure no student fell behind, Rath said.

She understood the value of a neighborhood school that it should be the heart of a community, she said. That she dedicated her entire teaching to Canty really says a lot about her.

When Lialios wasnt in the classroom, she enjoyed spending time with her two children and caring for her elaborate flower garden, her family said. Neighbors would stop to admire the plants and shed often talk with them about her favorite flowers, relatives said.

Lialios was at Canty in late January when she didnt feel well and fainted, said her son, Demetri Verros. She was diagnosed with advanced lung cancer.

Verros said Lialios told the family her news, and her instinct was to comfort everyone else, he said.

When we got the diagnosis, we were all sitting there crying and she was looking at me trying to make me smile, Verros said. She had just received the worst news of her life probably and she was trying to comfort me.

Lialios died three weeks later, Verros said. It all happened so fast that Lialios never got a chance to say goodbye to her school community. With remote teaching because of the pandemic, there were students she never saw again and families with whom she lost touch.

With the honorary street designation, its almost as if she came back for a final adieu, her family said. Canty families came out in droves for her wake and the street dedication, and they reached out to the Lialios family to remind them of her impact on their lives, Chris Lialios said.

She never really got to say goodbye to all of the people she touched here so the street sign, I think, is her way and a blessing of saying, I love you guys. I was not able to say goodbye, but dont forget me,' he said.

That makes the street designation even more important, Chris Lialios said. The family is grateful to Ald. Nick Sposato (38th), who pushed the designation through City Council to make it in time before the school year ended.

Although Sposato never met the first-grade teacher, he said it was important to honor her.

She was loved by many. It was a very a nice thing for the family, said Sposato, who attended the unveiling ceremony.

After Lialios death, Canty created a committee to determine other ways to remember the teacher, Rath said. The committee, along with the family, has raised almost $10,000 in Lialios honor. The money will be used to build two benches near the schools playground that will be installed in September, the principal said.

The school also hosted a Ms. Lialios Spirit Day after she died, where all of the students and teachers dressed in sparkly animal prints and some received cheetah keychains as gifts.

Inside the school, a copy of the street sign hangs below Lialios picture, framed with sequins to match her style, the principal and the Lialios family said. The school also gifted the family with a sequined and framed photo.

The brown street signs, which border the back of the school on both sides of North Paris Avenue, can remind people of how deeply an educator can influence a community, Rath said.

Sometimes people dont think about the power of a first-grade teacher, she said. How wonderful that we have a street named after a teacher.

Subscribe to Block Club Chicago,an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make fundsreportingfrom Chicagos neighborhoods.

Clickhereto support Block Clubwith atax-deductible donation.

Thanks for subscribing to Block Club Chicago, an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make fundsreportingfrom Chicagos neighborhoods. Clickhereto support Block Clubwith atax-deductible donation.

Listen to Its All Good: A Block Club Chicago Podcast:

Follow this link:

Far Northwest Side Teacher Alexandria Lialios Remembered With Honorary Street Title - Block Club Chicago

Waveland Police host inaugural Fishing with the Fuzz event – WXXV News 25

Waveland police officers took a break from catching bad guys this weekend to go fishing with kids at Buccaneer State Park.

A pole and bait was all it took for the officers to come together to create lasting memories with children and their families on Saturday morning.

Fishing with the Fuzz hosted 62 kids who got a free fishing pole for a fishing experience along with lunch.

Officers and lieutenants helped and watched as kids reeled in fish off their poles. Everyone got a free t-shirt regardless if they caught anything or not. Lt. Chad Dorn said, When they all started showing up this morning it really. Its a real thing. and just seeing the kids smile. They are already catching fish. They are having a good time. Its a joy to see that happening. Meeting and greeting with them while they are out there fishing and stuff. Kinda the same thing while were doing our meal and stuff. We will get to know the kids and they will get to know us.

The Waveland Police Department plans to host more kids for this event next year.

See the rest here:

Waveland Police host inaugural Fishing with the Fuzz event - WXXV News 25

FACTSHEET: Imposing Additional Costs on Russia for Its Continued War Against Ukraine – US Embassy and Consulate in Poland

FACT SHEET

OFFICE OF THE SPOKESPERSON

AUGUST 2, 2022

The United States is committed to working alongside our allies and partners to further impose severe consequences on President Putin and his enablers for Russias unconscionable war against Ukraine.

VISA RESTRICTIONS

The Department of State is announcing a series of actions to promote accountability for actions by Russian Federation officials and others that implicate violations of Ukraines sovereignty to include:

DESIGNATION OF PUTIN ENABLERS

The Department of State is designating oligarchsDMITRIY PUMPYANSKIY,ANDREY MELNICHENKO, andALEXANDER PONOMARENKO.

The Department of State is designating four individuals and one entity that are or are enabling illegitimate, political leaders installed by Russia or its proxy forces to undermine political stability in Ukraine in support of Russias further invasion of Ukraine. The four individuals and the entity are being designated pursuant to Section 1(a)(ii)(F) of E.O. 14024, for being responsible for or complicit in, or having directly or indirectly engaged or attempted to engage in, activities that undermine the peace, security, political stability, or territorial integrity of the United States, its allies, or its partners, for or on behalf of, or for the benefit of, directly or indirectly, the Government of the Russian Federation.

Pursuant to Section 1(a)(vii) of E.O. 14024, the Department of State is designatingJOINT STOCK COMPANY STATE TRANSPORTATION LEASING COMPANY (JSC GTLK)for being owned, controlled by, or having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, the Government of the Russian Federation. JSC GTLK is a Russian state-owned enterprise that the Russian Ministry of Transportation oversees. It is the largest transportation leasing company in Russia. JSC GTLK is an important part of Russias transportation networks due to its leases of railroad cars, vessels, and aircraft on favorable terms to support Russias development strategy. JSC GTLK has been previously designated by the U.K. and E.U.

Pursuant to Section 1(a)(vii) of E.O. 14024, the Department of State is designating the following four JSC GTLK subsidiaries for being owned or controlled by, or having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, JSC GTLK. These companies leased JSC GTLKs transportation equipment outside of Russia and /or enabled JSC GTLK to access capital from western financial markets to fund its activities.

DESIGNATION OF DEFENSE AND HIGH-TECHNOLOGY ENTITIES

Under the leadership of U.S.-designated Russian President Vladimir Putin, the Russian Federation has systematically focused on exploiting high-technology research and innovations to advance Russias defense capabilities. Putin has also repeatedly underscored his concerns about Russias access to microelectronics. Advanced technologies such as microelectronics are used in numerous weapon systems used by Russias military. Today, the Department of State is imposing sanctions on numerous Russian high-technology entities as a part of the United States efforts to impose additional costs on Russias war machine.

The Department of State is designating theFEDERAL STATE INSTITUTION OF HIGHER VOCATIONAL EDUCATION MOSCOW INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS AND TECHNOLOGY (MOSCOW INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS AND TECHNOLOGY) (MIPT)pursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the defense and related materiel sector of the Russian Federation economy. MIPT has developed drones for Russias military that are intended to be used in direct contact with enemy forces, has won an award from Russias Ministry of Defense for developing technologies in the interests of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, and promotes that it focuses on conducting innovative research and development in the defense and security fields. MIPT has worked with a leading Russian fighter aircraft developer to design a visualization system related to fighter aircraft and has a laboratory that supports Russias military space sector. MIPT is also part of a consortium of Russian institutions involved in training specialists for Russias defense-industrial complex and has collaborated on research projects with a Russian defense research organization.

The Department of State is designating theSKOLKOVO FOUNDATIONpursuant to E.O. Section 1(a)(i) of 14024 for operating or having operated in the technology sector of the Russian Federation economy. The Skolkovo Foundation was established by a Russian Federation law in 2010 to manage the Skolkovo Innovation Center, which consists of the Technopark Skolkovo Limited Liability Company and the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech), which are also being designated as part of this action. Since its founding, the Skolkovo Foundation has focused on supporting the development of technologies to contribute to technology sectors prioritized by the Russian Federation government including strategic computer technologies, technologies for maintaining Russias defense capabilities including with regard to advanced and sophisticated weapons, and space technologies related to Russias national security. As additional information, the Skolkovo Innovation Center has hosted U.S.-designated Rosoboronexport, Russias state-controlled arms export agency, as a part of Rosoboronexports efforts to export weapons to foreign clients.

The Department of State is designating theSKOLKOVO INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (SKOLTECH)pursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the technology sector of the Russian Federation economy. Skoltech is a pioneer in cutting-edge technologies and seeks to foster new technologies to address critical issues facing the Russian Federation. As additional information, for nearly a decade, Skoltech has had a close relationship with Russias defense sector. Contributors to Skoltechs endowment include numerous sanctioned Russian weapon development entities including JSC Tactical Missiles Corporation, Uralvagonzavod (which makes Russian tanks), JSC MIC Mashinostroyenia (which manufactures Russian missiles), JSC United Aircraft Corporation (which manufactures Russias combat aircraft), JSC Concern Sozvezdie (which produces electronic warfare systems for the Russian military), JSC Almaz-Antey (which manufactures Russias surface-to-air missiles systems), and JSC Corporation Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology (which manufactures Russian missiles). Over the course of the last decade, Skoltech has had partnerships with numerous Russian defense enterprises including Uralvagonzavod, United Engine Corporation, and United Aircraft Corporation which have focused on developing composite materials for tanks, engines for ships, specialized materials for aircraft wings, and innovations for defense-related helicopters. Skoltech has also presented advanced robotics at the Russian Ministry of Defenses premier defense exhibition.

The Department of State is designatingTECHNOPARK SKOLKOVO LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANYpursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the technology sector of the Russian Federation economy. Technopark Skolkovo Limited Liability Company is one of the largest technology development parks in Eurasia and hosts events related to technology.

The Department of State is designating numerous additional Russian high-technology entities as a part of our effort to isolate Russias technology sector in order to limit its contributions to Russias war machine.

Specifically, the Department of State is designating the following entities pursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the technology sector of the Russian Federation economy:

The Department of State is designating the following entities pursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the electronics sector of the Russian Federation economy:

The Department of State is designatingFEDERAL STATE BUDGETARY SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTION RESEARCH AND PRODUCTION COMPLEX TECHNOLOGY CENTERpursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the technology sector and the electronics sector of the Russian Federation economy. Federal State Budgetary Scientific Institution Research and Production Complex Technology Center develops and produces integrated circuits including application specific-integrated circuits, which are a type of high-technology electronic component, and also is involved in Russias semiconductor industry.

The Department of State is designatingJSC SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTE SUBMICRONpursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the aerospace sector of the Russian Federation economy. JSC Scientific Research Institute Submicron specializes in the design and development of components for computer systems for aviation and space control systems, as well as the development of other digital and data systems for aviation and space systems. As additional information, the main customers of JSC Scientific Research Institute Submicron are Russias Ministry of Defense and Air Force.

The Department of State is designatingACADEMICIAN A.L. MINTS RADIOTECHNICAL INSTITUTE JOINT STOCK COMPANYpursuant to Section 1(a)(i) of E.O. 14024 for operating or having operated in the defense and related materiel sector of the Russian Federation economy. Academician A.L. Mints Radiotechnical Institute Joint Stock Company is involved in developing technologies and systems for Russian military air defense systems.

SANCTIONS IMPLICATIONS

As a result of todays action, all property and interests in property of the individuals above that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons are blocked and must be reported to OFAC. In addition, any entities that are owned, directly or indirectly, 50 percent or more by one or more blocked persons are also blocked. All transactions by U.S. persons or within (or transiting) the United States that involve any property or interests in property of designated or blocked persons are prohibited unless authorized by a general or specific license issued by OFAC, or exempt. These prohibitions include the making of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services by, to, or for the benefit of any blocked person and the receipt of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services from any such person.

By U.S. Mission Poland | 3 August, 2022 | Topics: Events, News

View post:

FACTSHEET: Imposing Additional Costs on Russia for Its Continued War Against Ukraine - US Embassy and Consulate in Poland

Ultra Precision Machine Tools Market Executive Summary and Analysis by Top Players 2022-2028: Fives, Moore Nanotechnology Systems, Hardinge, Inc …

The 2022-2028, Global Ultra Precision Machine Tools Market by MarketsandResearch.biz research contains Ultra Precision Machine Tools market share analysis, winning techniques, recent developments, and financials for global, regional, and top players. The study recalculates the impact of macroeconomic and microeconomic factors that have the potential to affect the growth of the Ultra Precision Machine Tools market, as well as providing data on the major players in the Ultra Precision Machine Tools industry.

Furthermore, utilising the frameworks of SWOT and Porters Five Forces analysis, key insights into the Ultra Precision Machine Tools market market have been provided, as well as the markets attractiveness as evaluated by sales, revenue, distribution channel, product type, and region. The study also looks at the industrys major potential, future trends, main drivers, and roadblocks.

DOWNLOAD FREE SAMPLE REPORT: https://www.marketsandresearch.biz/sample-request/244760

Firm, region, type, and application are the four categories that make up the global Ultra Precision Machine Tools market. By utilising the study as a useful resource, companies, stakeholders, and other players in the global Ultra Precision Machine Tools market will get an edge.

The Ultra Precision Machine Tools market major Players include:

This research shows the production, revenue, price, market share, and growth rate of each product category, which is basically divided into:

This research focuses on the status and prognosis for key application, consumption (sales), market share, and growth rate for each application based on applications, including:

The primary regions addressed in the report are:

ACCESS FULL REPORT: https://www.marketsandresearch.biz/report/244760/global-ultra-precision-machine-tools-market-2021-by-manufacturers-regions-type-and-application-forecast-to-2026

It consists of market trends, constraints, and drivers that have a positive or negative impact on the market. This section also discusses the many categories and applications that may have an impact on the market in the future. The data is based on current trends as well as historical milestones.

Customization of the Report:

This report can be customized to meet the clients requirements. Please connect with our sales team (sales@marketsandresearch.biz), who will ensure that you get a report that suits your needs. You can also get in touch with our executives on 1-201-465-4211 to share your research requirements.

Contact UsMark StoneHead of Business DevelopmentPhone: 1-201-465-4211Email: sales@marketsandresearch.biz

Here is the original post:

Ultra Precision Machine Tools Market Executive Summary and Analysis by Top Players 2022-2028: Fives, Moore Nanotechnology Systems, Hardinge, Inc ...

Ditching the toothbrush for hydrogels to get whiter teeth, fewer cavities (w/video) – Nanowerk

Aug 03, 2022(Nanowerk News) The first thing people notice when they meet you is your smile. To be more confident when giving wide-mouthed, eye-crinkling smiles, people want healthy, pearly white teeth. But toothpastes only remove surface stains, and whitening treatments can harm enamel, leading to cavities and discoloration.Now, researchers in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces ("Fast cross-linked hydrogel as a green light-activated photocatalyst for localized biofilm disruption and brush-free tooth whitening") report a new hydrogel treatment that breaks apart cavity-forming biofilms and whitens teeth without damaging them.Daily toothbrushing and flossing are good ways to prevent cavities from forming, according to the American Dental Association. However, these methods dont effectively whiten teeth. For better whitening, consumers often turn to over-the-counter or professional treatments that combine hydrogen peroxide-containing gels and blue light, producing a chemical reaction that removes stains. This combination removes most of the discoloration, but generates reactive oxygen species that can break down enamel.Previously, Xiaolei Wang, Lan Liao and colleagues modified titanium dioxide nanoparticles for a less destructive tooth-whitening treatment. This method still required high-intensity blue light, which can damage nearby skin and eyes. So, the team wanted to find a material that would be activated by green light a safer alternative to both whiten teeth and prevent cavities.The researchers combined bismuth oxychloride nanoparticles, copper oxide nanoparticles and sodium alginate into a thick mixture. Then, they evenly coated the mixture onto the surface of teeth stuck to a slide and sprayed the concoction with a calcium chloride solution, forming a strongly adhering hydrogel.Next, the team tested the material on teeth that were stained with coffee, tea, blueberry juice and soy sauce and placed in a lab dish. Following treatment with the hydrogel and green light, the teeth got brighter over time, and there was no damage to the enamel.In another set of experiments, the team showed that the treatment killed 94% of bacteria in biofilms. To demonstrate that the treatment could work on teeth in vivo, the team used the new method on mice whose mouths were inoculated with cavity-forming bacteria.The green-light activated hydrogel effectively prevented moderate and deep cavities from forming on the surface of the animals teeth. The researchers say their safe, brush-free treatment both effectively prevents cavities and whitens teeth.

Continue reading here:

Ditching the toothbrush for hydrogels to get whiter teeth, fewer cavities (w/video) - Nanowerk

Sunscreen made in Zimbabwe for people with albinism – The Herald

The Herald

Sifelani Tsiko Innovations Editor

A University of Zimbabwe chartered industrial chemist and pharmaceutical nanotechnology expert has developed a low-cost sun cream that not only seeks to protect the skin of people with albinism from the suns radiation but also slows down damages and infections to their skin.

Dr Joey Chifamba, who won a prize for his innovations at the just ended the University of Zimbabwe Research Innovation and Industrialisation Week, told the Herald that his ground breaking product sought to help people living with albinism who suffer from actinic (solar induced) skin damage freckles and sunburn to various skin cancers which shorten their life spans considerably.

No product has ever been developed to protect albinistic persons from actinic damage. The sunscreens that are given to them are designed for white skinned people and do not take into consideration specific conditions and differences found on albinistic skins, he said.

This makes them not very effective and not very suitable especially for all day everyday wear since albinism is a lifelong condition.

Dr Chifamba developed a product range with about 10 different products including lotions, creams, wound healing washes, lip balms and hair protective products.

All the products were made using 5th generation emerging technologies including nanotechnology and biotechnology. The products incorporated zinc and titanium from natural sources and indigenous trees, which made them crucial and suitable for people with albinism in tropical areas.

We employ nanosized metallic oxides sunblocks conjugated together with nano optimised indigenous herbs with antibacterial, antifungal and wound healing effects to create aesthetically pleasing cosmeceutical products for everyday all day use by albinistic persons, the industrial chemist and pharmaceutical nanotechnology expert.

In our innovation we have developed ground-breaking cosmeceuticals which are not only sunscreens but complete actinic damage retarding treatments that consider albinistic skin differences and deal with various symptoms of actinic damage including wrinkles, premature aging, inflammation, bacterial and fungal infections.

The products, he said, were much more affordable and safer.

Dr Chifamba said the products which were developed in consultation with the Albino charity organisation of Zimbabwe and other albino welfare groups were already available to people living with albinism who are registered with the trust.

The UZ Innovation Hub was now supporting Dr Chifamba to further develop his research and innovations.

People with albinism have pale skin due to a pigment disorder that barely protects the skin from the suns radiation.

When exposed to sunlight, the skin of an albino does not acquire a tan. Instead, it remains light and there is a greater risk of skin cancer.

In Zimbabwe and most other African countries, this is an acute problem.

Most sunscreen products that are available in Zimbabwe are imported from South Africa and are expensive.

Retailers sell the lotion at high prices that range from US$22 and $35 for a 250 millilitre bottle of sunscreen lotion.

This is much too expensive for most albinos who use a tube that only lasts a few weeks with intensive usage.

Even with donations for albino welfare organisations, the lotions are still not widely accessible from many Zimbabweans living with albinism, who number an estimated 70 000.

Albinos in Zimbabwe and on the continent still face great difficulties because of the high intensity of the suns radiation there.

In addition, Albinos in most African countries suffer from prejudice and are often rejected by their families.

In other more extreme cases, many have been killed and their bodies dismembered for ritual purposes.

In some parts of Africa, some believe albinos possess magical powers.

Albino rights activists say there is a need to improve access to skin care products for this population and promote policies that could make sunscreen easier to get and more affordable.

For years, Albino rights organisations in Zimbabwe have been lobbying the government to reduce the price of sunscreen lotions and even make them free in health facilities.

Read more here:

Sunscreen made in Zimbabwe for people with albinism - The Herald

Researchers 3D print high-performance nanostructured alloy that’s both ultrastrong and ductile – Nanowerk

Aug 03, 2022(Nanowerk News) Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the Georgia Institute of Technology have 3D printed a dual-phase, nanostructured high-entropy alloy that exceeds the strength and ductility of other state-of-the-art additively manufactured materials, which could lead to higher-performance components for applications in aerospace, medicine, energy and transportation.The work, led by Wen Chen, assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at UMass, and Ting Zhu, professor of mechanical engineering at Georgia Tech, is published by the journal Nature ("Strong yet ductile nanolamellar high-entropy alloys by additive manufacturing").Wen Chen, assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at UMass Amherst, stands in front of images of 3D printed high-entropy alloy components (heatsink fan and octect lattice, left) and a cross-sectional electron backscatter diffraction inverse-pole figure map demonstrating a randomly oriented nanolamella microstructure (right).(Image: UMass Amherst)Over the past 15 years, high entropy alloys (HEAs) have become increasingly popular as a new paradigm in materials science. Comprised of five or more elements in near-equal proportions, they offer the ability to create a near-infinite number of unique combinations for alloy design. Traditional alloys, such as brass, carbon steel, stainless steel and bronze, contain a primary element combined with one or more trace elements.Additive manufacturing, also called 3D printing, has recently emerged as a powerful approach to material development. The laser-based 3D printing can produce large temperature gradients and high cooling rates that are not readily accessible by conventional routes. However, the potential of harnessing the combined benefits of additive manufacturing and HEAs for achieving novel properties remains largely unexplored, says Zhu.Chen and his team in the Multiscale Materials and Manufacturing Laboratory combined an HEA with a state-of-the-art 3D printing technique called laser powder bed fusion to develop new materials with unprecedented properties. Because the process causes materials to melt and solidify very rapidly as compared to traditional metallurgy, you get a very different microstructure that is far-from-equilibrium on the components created, Chen says.This microstructure looks like a net and is made of alternating layers known as face-centered cubic (FCC) and body-centered cubic (BCC) nanolamellar structures embedded in microscale eutectic colonies with random orientations. The hierarchical nanostructured HEA enables co-operative deformation of the two phases.This unusual microstructures atomic rearrangement gives rise to ultrahigh strength as well as enhanced ductility, which is uncommon, because usually strong materials tend to be brittle, Chen says. Compared to conventional metal casting, we got almost triple the strength and not only didnt lose ductility, but actually increased it simultaneously, he says. For many applications, a combination of strength and ductility is key. Our findings are original and exciting for materials science and engineering alike.The ability to produce strong and ductile HEAs means that these 3D printed materials are more robust in resisting applied deformation, which is important for lightweight structural design for enhanced mechanical efficiency and energy saving, says Jie Ren, Chens Ph.D. student and first author of the paper.Zhus group at Georgia Tech led the computational modeling for the research. He developed dual-phase crystal plasticity computational models to understand the mechanistic roles played by both the FCC and BCC nanolamellae and how they work together to give the material added strength and ductility.Our simulation results show the surprisingly high strength yet high hardening responses in the BCC nanolamellae, which are pivotal for achieving the outstanding strength-ductility synergy of our alloy. This mechanistic understanding provides an important basis for guiding the future development of 3D printed HEAs with exceptional mechanical properties, Zhu says.In addition, 3D printing offers a powerful tool to make geometrically complex and customized parts. In the future, harnessing 3D printing technology and the vast alloy design space of HEAs opens ample opportunities for the direct production of end-use components for biomedical and aerospace applications.Additional research partners on the paper include Texas A&M University, the University of California Los Angeles, Rice University, and Oak Ridge and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories.

Continued here:

Researchers 3D print high-performance nanostructured alloy that's both ultrastrong and ductile - Nanowerk

This Curvy Quantum Physics Discovery Could Revolutionize Our Understanding of Reality – The Debrief

A recent discovery in the field of quantum physics by researchers at Purdue University has opened the doorway to a whole new way of looking at our physical reality.

According to the researchers involved, an all-new technique that can allow the creation of curved surfaces that behave like flat ones may completely revolutionize our understanding of curvature and distance, as well as our knowledge of quantum physics.

As a fundamental principle, if one wants to create a curved surface even at the microscopic level, one must start with a flat surface and bend it. Although this may seem self-evident, suchprinciples are critical guidelines for researchers who work in quantum mechanics, information processing, astrophysics, and a whole host of scientific disciplines.

However, according to the Purdue research team behind this latest discovery, they have discovered a way to break that law, resulting in a curved space that behaves at a quantum level like a flat one. Thediscovery is, in short, something that appears to break the sorts of fundamental rules many physicists take for granted.

Our work may revolutionize the general publics understanding of curvatures and distance, said Qi Zhou, a Professor of Physics and Astronomy who is also a co-author of the paper announcing the research teams potentially groundbreaking results. It has also answered long-standing questions in non-Hermitian quantum mechanics by bridging non-Hermitian physics and curved spaces.

Published in the journal Nature Communications, the paper and its authors explain that the discovery involves the construction of curved surfaces that behave like flat ones, particularly at the quantum level, resulting in a system they describe as non-Hermitian.

For example, quantum particles on a theoretical lattice can hop from one location to another instantaneously. If the chances of that particle hopping either left or right is equal, then that system is referred to as Hermitian. However, if the odds are unequal, then the system is non-Hermitian.

Typical textbooks of quantum mechanics mainly focus on systems governed by Hamiltonians that are Hermitian, said graduate student Chenwei Lv, who is also the lead author of the paper. As a result, the team notes that there is very little literature about their discovery.

A quantum particle moving in a lattice needs to have an equal probability to tunnel along the left and right directions, Lv explains before offering examples where certain systems lose this equal probability. In such non-Hermitian systems, familiar textbook results no longer apply, and some may even look completely opposite to that of Hermitian systems.

Lv and the Purdue team found that a non-Hermitian system actually curved the space where a quantum particle resides. In that case, they explain, a quantum particle in a lattice with nonreciprocal tunneling is actually moving on a curved surface. Lv notes that these types of non-Hermitian systems are in sharp contrast to what first-year undergraduate quantum physics students are taught from day one of their education.

These extraordinary behaviors of non-Hermitian systems have been intriguing physicists for decades, Lv adds, but many outstanding questions remain open.

Professor Ren Zhang from Xian Jiaotong University, who was a co-author of the study, says that their research and its unexpected results have implications in two distinct areas.

On the one hand, it establishes non-Hermiticity as a unique tool to simulate intriguing quantum systems in curved spaces, he explained. Most quantum systems available in laboratories are flat, and it often requires significant efforts to access quantum systems in curved spaces.That non-Hermiticity, adds Zhang, offers experimentalists an extra knob to access and manipulate curved spaces.

On the other hand, says Zhang, the duality allows experimentalists to use curved spaces to explore non-Hermitian physics. For instance, our results provide experimentalists a new approach to access exceptional points using curved spaces and improve the precision of quantum sensors without resorting to dissipations.

The research team notes that their discovery could assist researchers across a wide array of disciplines, with future research spinning off in multiple directions.

First, those who study curved spaces could implement the Purdue teams apparatuses, while physicists working on non-Hermitian systems could tailor dissipations to access non-trivial curved spaces that cannot be easily obtained by conventional means.

In the end, Lv points to the broader implications of their discovery and its place in the world of quantum physics.

The extraordinary behaviors of non-Hermitian systems, which have puzzled physicists for decades, become no longer mysterious if we recognize that the space has been curved, said Lv.

In other words, non-Hermiticity and curved spaces are dual to each other, being the two sides of the same coin.

Connect with Author Christopher Plain on Twitter @plain_fiction

Read more here:

This Curvy Quantum Physics Discovery Could Revolutionize Our Understanding of Reality - The Debrief

Quantum trailblazer – News Center – The University of Texas at Arlington – uta.edu

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2022 Linsey Retcofsky : Contact

Weeks into summer break, a classroom door opened onto a quiet hallway at Martin High School in Arlington, where a crowd of students waited.

What is something that has confused you this week? asked Victor Cervantes, an alumnus of the UTeach program at The University of Texas at Arlington and an AP physics teacher. Students wrote their answers on sticky notes and stuck them to butcher paper hanging from the wall. Many of the colorful papers read wave-particle duality.

A group of more than 50 high school students and teachers was meeting to attend workshops in quantum information science (QIS) led by Karen Jo Matsler, assistant professor in practice at UTA. Many of the weeks lessons were guiding them through uncharted territory.

In 2021, the National Science Foundation awarded Matsler and collaborators a nearly $1 million grant to launch Quantum for All, a three-year QIS program for high school teachers. Key to workforce preparation, quantum principles intersect with numerous industries, impacting global communication methods, technology, innovation, health care, issues of national security and more. As an emerging field, QIS is excluded from many high school courses.

Quantum skills are integral to the development of a globally competitive workforce, Matsler said. If students have never heard of these concepts before they enter college, they likely wont choose to study them at advanced levels.

Jonathan Lewis

Open to high school teachers from across the country, the program capitalizes on familiar content areas in instructors existing curricula and teaches them how to incorporate quantum principles into lesson plans. During summer breaks, participants gather for intensive workshops where they practice teaching the new subject.

At the beginning of the day, Matthew Quiroz, a physics and astronomy teacher at Ysleta High School in El Paso, Texas, gathered materials from a 3D printer. The day before, the students were given parameters for an experiment and told to design and 3D-print the tools they lacked.

Jonathan Lewis, a junior in Martin High Schools STEM academy, paired with a friend to lead his cohorts design.

We needed to design a rotating stand to hold a small polarizer, Lewis said. Our group brainstormed ideas and then designed the 3D model in Tinkercad, a software I had never used. Going through the stages of this project has been a lot of fun.

Using the student-made tools, Quiroz guided the class through an experiment testing how varying polarizer angles affect the brightness of light. As students examined the polarization of photons, he introduced them to the quantum concepts of superposition, states and probability.

Matsler, a clear-eyed veteran with infectious enthusiasm, is the science teacher everyone wishes they had in high school. Throughout the morning she bounced between classrooms, cheering her pupils through lessons in physics, cryptography and coding.

Students on computers used the modeling software Glowscript to code a physics simulation, where two balls, one constant and one accelerating, traveled through space. Although both were released at the same time, the accelerating ball traveled farther and faster.

Are we having fun, yall? she said.

Among students and teachers, the enthusiasm was palpable. Many instructors had traveled from across Texas and the southern United States to attend Matslers workshops. Jacqueline Edwards, a science teacher at McAdory High School in McCalla, Alabama, said studying quantum concepts reminded her that she and her colleagues are lifelong learners.

We are all learning about the process of trial and error, she said. Thats the essence of scientific inquiry. We dont fail, we just try again.

Cori Davis, a biomedical science teacher in Martin High Schools STEM academy, discovered how to incorporate quantum information into her forensics curriculum.

Quantum principles have broad applications, Davis said. In our unit on forensic science, I can apply these lessons to how we understand projectile motion when examining bullet wounds and blood splatter.

Matsler argues that small modifications to lesson plans in math, chemistry, technology and other science and engineering courses enable teachers to easily integrate quantum theory into their syllabi.

Make no mistake, she said, quantum principles arent only important for physics teachers.

Most K-12 educators are not prepared to teach QIS because they didnt study advanced physics in college, Matsler said. These workshops democratize quantum principles, making them accessible to teachers of a variety of science, technology, mathematics and engineering courses.

The rest is here:

Quantum trailblazer - News Center - The University of Texas at Arlington - uta.edu

Physics Ph.D. student wins Best Speaker Award at international conference in Spain – Ohio University

Physics doctoral student Eva Yazmin Santiago Santos received a prestigious Best Speaker Award at a large international conference in Spain for her talk describing hot-electron generation of nanoparticles.

"I had presented a poster and given a virtual talk at other international conferences before. However, this was my first in-person oral presentation at an international conference. This was also my first invited talk, so it made it even more special," Santiago Santos said.

More than 600 physicists attended META 2022, the 12th International Conference on Metamaterials, Photonic Crystals and Plasmonics held July 19 - 22 in Torremolinos, Spain. META is the worlds leading conference on nanophotonics and metamaterials, reporting on various current hot topics such as metasurfaces and metadevices, topological effects in photonics, two-dimensional quantum materials, light-matter interaction, plasmonic nanodevices, heat engineering, and quantum-information systems.

"The highlight of the conference was meeting people that work in a similar field as ours in different parts of the world," Santiago Santos said. "In particular, I really enjoyed interacting with some of the people we have collaborated with in previous projects but had never met in person before."

Her faculty mentor is Alexander Govorov, Distinguished Professor of Physics & Astronomy in the College of Arts and Sciences. The additional colleagues she's collaborating with on her work include Lucas V. Besteiro from the Universidade de Vigo in Spain, Xiang-Tian Kong from Nankai University in China, Miguel A. Correa-Duarte from the Universidade de Vigo in Spain, and Prof. Zhiming Wang from the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China.

Santiago Santos'sresearch is in computational physics of nanostructures for optical, energy, and sensor applications, and the title of her talk was "Generation of hot electrons in plasmonic nanoparticles with complex shapes."

"The generation of hot electrons in plasmonic nanoparticles is an intrinsic response to light, which strongly depends on the nanoparticle shape, material, and excitation wavelength," she said. "In this study, we present a formalism that describes the hot-electron generation for gold nanospheres, nanorods and nanostars. Among them, the nanostars are the most efficient, with an internal energy efficiency of approximately 25 percent, owing to multiple factors, including the presence of hot spots," Santiago Santos said.

Read more:

Physics Ph.D. student wins Best Speaker Award at international conference in Spain - Ohio University

Schrdinger Believed That There Was Only One Mind in the Universe – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

Consciousness researcher Robert Prentner and cognitive psychologist will tell a prestigious music and philosophy festival in London next month that great physicist Donald Hoffman, quantum physicist Erwin Schrdinger (18871961) believed that The total number of minds in the universe is one. That is, a universal Mind accounts for everything.

In a world where many scientists strive mightily to explain how the human mind can arise from non-living matter, Prentner and Hoffman will tell the HowtheLightGetsIn festival in London (September 1718, 2022) that the author of the famous Cat paradox was hardly a materialist:

In 1925, just a few months before Schrdinger discovered the most basic equation of quantum mechanics, he wrote down the first sketches of the ideas that he would later develop more thoroughly in Mind and Matter. Already then, his thoughts on technical matters were inspired by what he took to be greater metaphysical (religious) questions. Early on, Schrdinger expressed the conviction that metaphysics does not come after physics, but inevitably precedes it. Metaphysics is not a deductive affair but a speculative one.

Inspired by Indian philosophy, Schrdinger had a mind-first, not matter-first, view of the universe. But he was a non-materialist of a rather special kind. He believed that there is only one mind in the universe; our individual minds are like the scattered light from prisms:

A metaphor that Schrdinger liked to invoke to illustrate this idea is the one of a crystal that creates a multitude of colors (individual selves) by refracting light (standing for the cosmic self that is equal to the essence of the universe). We are all but aspects of one single mind that forms the essence of reality. He also referred to this as the doctrine of identity. Accordingly, a non-dual form of consciousness, which must not be conflated with any of its single aspects, grounds the refutation of the (merely apparent) distinction into separate selves that inhabit a single world.

But in Mind and Matter (1958), Schrdinger, we are told, took this view one step further:

Schrdinger drew remarkable consequences from this. For example, he believed that any man is the same as any other man that lived before him. In his early essay Seek for the Road, he writes about looking into the mountains before him. Thousands of years ago, other men similarly enjoyed this view. But why should one assume that oneself is distinct from these previous men? Is there any scientific fact that could distinguish your experience from another mans? What makes you you and not someone else? Similarly as John Wheeler once assumed that there is really only one electron in the universe, Schrdinger assumed that there really is only one mind. Schrdinger thought this is supported by the empirical fact that consciousness is never experienced in the plural, only in the singular. Not only has none of us ever experienced more than one consciousness, but there is also no trace of circumstantial evidence of this ever happening anywhere in the world.

Most non-materialists will wish they had gotten off two stops ago. We started with Mind first, which when accounting for why there is something rather than nothing has been considered a reasonable assumption throughout history across the world (except among materialists). But the assumption that no finite mind could experience or act independently of the Mind behind the universe is a limitation on the power of that Mind. Why so?

Its not logically clear and logic is our only available instrument here why the original Mind could not grant to dogs, chimpanzees, and humans the power to apprehend and act as minds in their own right in their natural spheres not simply as seamless extensions of the universal Mind.

With humans, the underlying assumptions of Schrdingers view are especially problematic. Humans address issues of good and evil. If Schrdinger is right, for example, Dr. Martin Luther King, and Comrade Josef Stalin are really only one mind because each experienced only his own consciousness. But wait. As a coherent human being, each could only have experienced his own consciousness and not the other mans.

However, that doesnt mean that they were mere prisms displaying different parts of the spectrum of broken light. The prism analogy fails to take into account that humans can act for good or ill. Alternatively, it is saying that good and evil, as we perceive them, are merely different colors in a spectrum. As noted earlier, many of us should have got off two stops ago

In any event, Schrdingers views are certain to be an interesting discussion at HowLightGetsIn.

Schrdinger was hardly the only modern physicist or mathematician to dissent from materialism. Mathematician Kurt Gdel (19061978), to take one example, destroyed a popular form of atheism (logical positivism) via his Incompleteness Theorems.

The two thinkers held very different views, of course. But both saw the fatal limitations of materialism (naturalism) and they addressed these limitations quite differently. In an age when Stephen Hawkings disdain for philosophy is taken to be representative of great scientists, its a good thing if festivals like HowLightGetsIn offer a broader perspective and corrective.

You may also wish to read: Why panpsychism is starting to push out naturalism. A key goal of naturalism/materialism has been to explain human consciousness away as nothing but a pack of neurons. That cant work. Panpsychism is not a form of dualism. But, by including consciousness especially human consciousness as a bedrock fact of nature, it avoids naturalisms dead end.

Original post:

Schrdinger Believed That There Was Only One Mind in the Universe - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

This startup wants to copy you into an embryo for organ harvesting – MIT Technology Review

Now humans

Renewal Bios precise technical plan remains under wraps, and the companys website is just a calling card. Its very low on details for a reason. We dont want to overpromise, and we dont want to freak people out, says Omri Amirav-Drory, a partner at NFX who is acting as CEO of the new company. The imagery is sensitive here.

Some scientists say it will be difficult to grow human embryo models to an advanced stage and that it would be better to avoid the controversy raised by imitating real embryos too closely.

Its absolutely not necessary, so why would you do it? says Nicolas Rivron, a stem-cell scientist at the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology in Vienna. He argues that scientists should only create the minimal embryonic structure necessary to yield cells of interest.

For his part, Amirav-Drory says he hasnt seen a technology with so much potential since CRISPR gene-editing technology first emerged. The ability to create a synthetic embryo from cellsno egg, no sperm, no uterusits really amazing, he says. We think it can be a massive, transformative platform technology that can be applied to both fertility and longevity.

To create the succession of breakthroughs, Hannas lab has been combining advanced stem-cell science with new types of bioreactors.

A year ago, the stem-cell specialist first showed off a mechanical womb in which he managed to grow natural mouse embryos outside of a female mouse for several days. The system involves spinning jars that keep the embryos bathed in nutritious blood serum and oxygen.

A. AGUILERA-CASTREJON ET AL., NATURE 2021

In the new research published this week, Hanna used the same mechanical womb, but this time to grow look-alike embryos created from stem cells.

Remarkably, when stem cells are grown together in specially shaped containers, they will spontaneously join and try to assemble an embryo, producing structures that are called embryoids, blastoids, or synthetic embryo models. Many researchers insist that despite appearances, these structures have limited relation to real embryos and zero potential to develop completely.

Here is the original post:
This startup wants to copy you into an embryo for organ harvesting - MIT Technology Review

Miracle longevity drug? Scientists identify molecules that reverse the aging process – Study Finds

JERUSALEM, Israel A fountain-of-youth drug could soon make the problems of aging a thing of the past. Researchers in Israel say they have identified a group of molecules that repair the damaged parts of cells which break down over time. That discovery may also lead to a new pill that prevents age-related diseases such as Alzheimers.

Scientists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem note that modern medicine has helped to increase the average life expectancy worldwide. However, as people live longer, they face more and more problems associated with old age. With that in mind, the team set out to balance the benefits of longevity with a better quality of life in our later years.

During their study, the researchers developed a drug which protects human cells from damage, making it possible for a persons tissues to retain their proper function for a longer period of time.

Study authors say a major factor in the aging process is the drop in effectiveness in a cells quality-control mechanism. When this system starts to break down, it leads to a buildup of defective mitochondria the power plants of the cells.

Mitochondria, the cells power plants, are responsible for energy production. They can be compared to tiny electric batteries that help cells function properly. Although these batteries wear out constantly, our cells have a sophisticated mechanism that removes defective mitochondria and replaces them with new ones, Professor Einav Gross explains in a media release.

However, this mechanism breaks down as people grow older. The result is cell dysfunction and the deterioration in tissue activity which can cause diseases like Alzheimers, Parkinsons, and heart failure to develop.

The team is hopeful that their study has found an innovative compound that may help treat these diseases. Turned into an easy-to-take pill, the molecules may also act as a preventative measure, repairing cellular aging before it has a chance to trigger disease.

In the future, we hope we will be able to significantly delay the development of many age-related diseases and improve people quality of life, says co-author Shmuel Ben-Sasson.

The researchers, together with Yissum, Hebrew Universitys tech transfer company, have created the startup company Vitalunga to further develop this compound into an anti-aging drug.

Ben-Sassons and Grosss findings have significant value for the global aging population, notes Itzik Goldwaser, CEO of Yissum. As Vitalunga advances towards pre-clinical studies, theyre closer than ever to minimizing the unbearable burden that aging-related diseases, such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons, has on individuals, their families and our health care systems.

The findings are published in the journal Autophagy.

Original post:
Miracle longevity drug? Scientists identify molecules that reverse the aging process - Study Finds

MyMD Pharmaceuticals (MYMD) Announces Data Showing MYMD-1 May Extend Life and Improve Health Published in the Journal of Gerontology: Biological…

Get instant alerts when news breaks on your stocks. Claim your 1-week free trial to StreetInsider Premium here.

MyMD Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: MYMD) (MyMD or the Company), a clinical stage pharmaceutical company committed to developing novel therapies for age-related diseases, autoimmune and inflammatory conditions, announced today the publication of data in the Journal of Gerontology: Biological Sciences (JGBS) from a pre-clinical study of MYMD-1 demonstrating four-fold greater improvements than rapamycin in delaying aging and extending the life of mice who began treatment at the human equivalent of 60 years of age. The study was led by principal study investigator Patrizio P. Caturegli, MD, MPH, a professor of pathology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

We are very excited that this important early data with our lead product MYMD-1 has been published in a prestigious medical journal, said Chris Chapman, MD, President, Director, and CMO of MyMD Pharmaceuticals. These results further validate the potential of MYMD-1 in delaying aging. Our ongoing Phase 2 study of MYMD-1 in sarcopenia/frailty, a result of a pathological aging process, is going well. Since TNF-alpha is a key player in the aging process, we also believe MYMD-1 has real potential to address autoimmune and inflammatory conditions by modulating inflammation, even when begun at an advanced age.

MYMD-1, an oral selective inhibitor of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-), that drives chronic inflammation, is being studied to slow the aging process, prevent sarcopenia and frailty, and extend healthy lifespan. A Phase 2 multi-center double-blind, placebo controlled, randomized study (NCT05283486) to investigate the efficacy, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of MYMD-1 in the treatment of chronic inflammation associated with sarcopenia/frailty is currently ongoing. The companys scientific advisory board met recently and agreed to move to the next higher dose in the study.

Aging is closely linked to multi-morbidities, frailty, and death due to conditions such as neoplastic, cardiovascular, neurodegenerative, metabolic, or autoimmune diseases.i Similarly, frailty, or a decline in physical function leading to greater risk of hospitalization, disability, and death, increases with age independent of underlying conditions or demographical characteristics.ii

Results from the JGBS Study

The study compared MYMD-1, an oral inhibitor of TNF-, to rapamycin, the best characterized drug endowed with anti-aging properties. In vivo, a longitudinal cohort of C57BL/6 mice, was randomized to receive either MYMD-1, high-dose rapamycin, or low-dose rapamycin plus metformin. Each of these three treatment arms of 18 mice (10 females and 8 males) was followed for 13 months or until death. Lifespan was significantly longer in the MYMD-1 group compared to rapamycin (P=0.019 versus high-dose and P=0.01 versus low-dose) in a Cox survival model that accounted for sex and serum levels of IL-6, TNF-, and IL-17A (see figure above). MyMD-1 also improved several health span characteristics in the study, resulting in milder body weight loss, maintenance of greater muscle strength, and amelioration of progression to frailty.

Additionally, using a panel of 12 human primary cell systems (BioMAP Diversity PLUSTM) where a total of 148 biomarkers were measured, MYMD-1 possessed anti-proliferative, anti-inflammatory, and anti-fibrotic properties. Many were shared with rapamycin, but MYMD-1 was more active in the inhibition of pro-inflammatory cytokines and pro-fibrotic biomarkers.

About MYMD-1

MYMD-1, an oral selective inhibitor of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-), a driver of chronic inflammation, is being studied to slow the aging process, prevent sarcopenia and frailty, and extend healthy lifespan. MYMD-1 has shown effectiveness in pre-clinical and clinical studies in regulating the immune system. Unlike other therapies, MYMD-1 has been shown in these studies to selectively block TNF- when it becomes overactivated in autoimmune diseases and cytokine storms, but not block it from doing its normal job of being a first responder to any routine type of moderate infection.

MYMD-1s ease of oral dosing is another differentiator compared to currently available TNF- blockers, all of which require delivery by injection or infusion. No approved TNF inhibitor has ever been dosed orally. In addition, the drug is not immunosuppressive and has not been shown to cause the serious side effects common with traditional therapies that treat inflammation. Because it can cross the blood-brain barrier and gain access to the central nervous system (CNS), MYMD-1 is also positioned to be a possible treatment for brain-related disorders. Its mechanism of action and efficacy in diseases including multiple sclerosis (MS) and thyroiditis have been studied through collaborations with several academic institutions.

About MyMD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

MyMD Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: MYMD), a clinical stage pharmaceutical company committed to developing novel therapies for autoimmune and inflammatory conditions, is focused on developing two novel therapeutic platforms that treat the causes of disease rather than only addressing the symptoms. MYMD-1 is a drug platform based on a clinical stage small molecule that regulates the immune system to control TNF-, which drives chronic inflammation, and other pro-inflammatory cell signaling cytokines. MYMD-1 is being developed to delay aging, increase longevity, and treat autoimmune diseases. The Companys second drug platform, Supera-CBD, is being developed to treat chronic pain, addiction and epilepsy. Supera-CBD is a novel synthetic derivative of cannabidiol (CBD) and is being developed to address and improve upon the rapidly growing CBD market, which includes both FDA approved drugs and CBD products not currently regulated as drugs. For more information, visit http://www.mymd.com.

Link:
MyMD Pharmaceuticals (MYMD) Announces Data Showing MYMD-1 May Extend Life and Improve Health Published in the Journal of Gerontology: Biological...

Opinion: Changing When and How Much We Eat May Extend Health Span – The Scientist

Healthy aging is a shared goal of most humans, but the body has a nasty habit of breaking down over time. Tantalizing research suggests it is possible to develop nutrition and lifestyle interventions that can delay aging and extend healthspan. In model organisms, including rodents and nonhuman primates, caloric restriction (CR) has proven to be an effective method for mitigating aging-related deterioration of biological functions and for extending healthspan and life-span. But more than 80 years since its discovery, the underlying mechanisms by which caloric restriction extends either are still largely undefined.

Researchers have linked a number of biochemical pathways to longevity, including those involved with nutrient signaling, metabolism, growth, genome stability, and oxidative stress. Translating this knowledge, derived mostly from mouse studies, to humans is an additional barrier that must be overcome. For example, it is almost impossible for the majority of people to maintain severe dietary restriction over their lifetime. Thus, more viable solutions for promoting health- and lifespan in humans must be found.

We have been studying the behavioral effects of CR in mice and have found that it leads to dramatic changes in feeding behavior. In contrast to mice given continual access to unlimited food, which spread their daily food consumption over the course of the day and night, mice on caloric restriction adopt a stark feeding and fasting pattern in which they consume all of the food provided within a few hours each day. Thus, under CR, mice not only consume fewer calories, they voluntarily adopt a time-restricted feeding pattern with a long fasting interval. All these factors have been shown to have numerous health benefits, again primarily in animal models.

More than 80 years since its discovery, the underlying mechanisms by which caloric restriction extends lifespan are still largely undefined.

To disentangle the contributions to longevity of calorie restriction, periods of fasting, and alignment of eating with an animals circadian clock, we recently completed a comprehensive study that contrasts these three factors. We found that CR is sufficient to extend lifespan but that the pattern and circadian alignment of eating act synergistically to extend life-span further. While CR alone increases lifespan by approximately 10 percent, eating that CR diet only at night, when mice are normally awake, extends life-span by more than 35 percent compared to mice eating regular diets. We also found that circadian alignment of feeding enhances CR-mediated benefits for survival independently of fasting duration (2 vs. 22 hours) and body weight. Aging promotes increases in inflammation and decreases in metabolism in the livers of mice with constant access to food, whereas a CR diet fed at night ameliorates most of these aging-related changes. Thus, eating only at certain times of day appears to promote longevity in animals and could provide a new mechanism for the treatment and management of aging in humans.

A significant aspect of our study was that there were no significant effects of the pattern or time of eating on body weight in mice. In addition, body weight was not associated with lifespan. This finding is consistent with a recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) comparing weight loss in two groups of human subjects that were assigned to CR alone or CR with an 8-hour time-restricted eating window. The authors of this paper report no differences between these groups and conclude that there was no benefit of time-restricted eating for body weight. As we showed in our study, however, body weight does not serve as a good biomarker for longevity under CR conditions. So it would have been more useful in the NEJM study to have measured other endpoints besides body weight, such as inflammatory biomarkers associated with aging. In addition, previous studies that demonstrated health benefits of time-restricted eating were performed under conditions of overeating, not CR. Obviously, CR and overeating engage fundamentally different metabolic processes, and thus time-restricted eating of a CR diet should not be expected to yield the same results as time-restricted eating of a calorie-rich diet.

Our discovery that CR functions in concert with time-restricted eating and circadian alignment to optimally extend healthspan and lifespan is potentially transformative because it may yield a novel method for promoting healthy aging and lifespan increases in humans. Because lifespan in humans is primarily determined by lifestyle (less than 25 percent is genetically determined), these findings may be translated in future work to humans and are amenable to widespread adoption because they can be achieved by behavioral intervention: a CR diet eaten at the correct circadian time of dayi.e., when one is normally awake. This might involve, for example, a 12-hour eating window that begins at breakfast time.

A significant aspect of our study was that there were no significant effects of the pattern or time of eating on body weight in mice.

In addition, ongoing research in our labs seeks to test whether enhancing circadian clock function by behavioral (lifestyle), genetic, or pharmacological means can delay the aging process. Pharmaceutical agents were identifying in our labs that enhance circadian clock function may one day be used in humans as comprehensive therapies for aging. For now, were planning experiments for testing their anti-aging and pro-longevity effects in mice. Our lab and others have already provided evidence that the circadian clock system is an upstream regulator of all of the known anti-aging and pro-longevity pathways. So enhancing circadian clock function may rescue multiple aging pathways at the same time. We are testing this hypothesis by boosting Clock gene expression in genetically engineered mice. These animal studies can then lay the groundwork for the isolation of small molecules that target the Clock protein and the development of drugs that might safely modulate clock function and enhance health and longevity in people.

Joseph S. Takahashiis an investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and professor and chair of the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centers Peter O Donnell Jr. Brain Institute. He is also a member ofThe ScientistEditorial Advisory Board. Carla B. Green is a professor and Distinguished Scholar in the Department of Neuroscience at the same institution.

Read more here:
Opinion: Changing When and How Much We Eat May Extend Health Span - The Scientist

Gene therapy approach shows promise in treating ALS – EurekAlert

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by the progressive loss of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord responsible for voluntary movements and muscle control.

In a new study, published July 11, 2022 in the journal Theranostics, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine report that a gene therapy approach, developed at UC San Diego, measurably delayed disease onset in humanized mouse and rat models of familial ALS, an inherited form of the disease that runs in families. (Most ALS cases are sporadic, of unknown cause, though environmental and genetic factors may play a part.)

In previous research, senior author Brian P. Head, PhD, adjunct professor in the Department of Anesthesiology at UC San Diego School of Medicine and research health scientist at the VA San Diego Healthcare System and colleagues had crossed a mouse model genetically engineered to express a neuroprotective protein called caveolin-1 with a transgenic mouse model of ALS. The double transgenic model exhibited better motor function and longer survival.

The latest work involved injecting a harmless adeno-associated viral vector carrying synapsin-Caveolin-1 cDNA (AAV9-SynCav1) into the spinal cords of familial ALS mice to see if it would delay disease progression and preserve physical strength and mobility.

Researchers found that SynCav1 protected and preserved spinal cord motor neurons and extended longevity in the mice. Subsequent experiments with a rat model of ALS produced similar results.

These data suggest that SynCav1 might serve as a novel gene therapy for neurodegenerative conditions in ALS and other forms of central nervous system disease of unknown etiology, the authors wrote, advocating for further studies.

The Theranostics paper follows a study published in 2021 in which Head and colleagues used a SynCav1 gene therapy approach to prevent learning and memory loss in a mouse model of Alzheimers disease (AD), a key step toward eventually testing the approach in humans with the neurodegenerative disease.

Because the neuroprotective efficacy afforded by SynCav1 occurred independent of targeting the known toxic monogenic protein (i.e., mutant hSOD1), these findings suggest that SynCav1 may serve as a novel gene therapy for other neurodegenerative conditions in addition to ALS and AD, said Head. However, it is essential for further studies to determine the effect of SynCav1 on disease progression at later stages of the disease.

Incidence of ALS is approximately 3 to 5 per 100,000 persons globally. The disease affects approximately 18,000 persons in the United States. Current approved pharmaceutical treatments, such as Rilutek and Radicava, may slow disease progression and improve quality of life, but there is no cure. Mean survival time after diagnosis is two to five years.

The SynCav1 gene therapy is patented through UC San Diego and the Department of Veterans Affairs, and licensed to Eikonoklastes Therapeutics, based in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Co-authors include: Shanshan Wang, Taiga Ichinomaya, Paul Savchenko, Donsheng Wang, Xiaojing Li, Tiffany Duong, Wenxi Li, Jacqueline A. Bonds, Atushi Miyanohara, David M. Roth, Hemal H. Patel, Piyush M. Patel and Martin Marsala, all at UC San Diego; Atsushi Sawada, University of the Ryukyus, Japan; Eun Jung Kim, UC San Diego and Yonsei University College of Medicine, South Korea.

# # #

11-Jul-2022

Study co-authors Dave M. Roth, Hemal H. Patel, Piyush M. Patel and Brian Head hold equity and are non-paid consultants to Eikonoklastes Therapeutics.

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

See more here:
Gene therapy approach shows promise in treating ALS - EurekAlert

Walking As Your Only Exercise Is Enough To Boost Longevity – Longevity LIVE – Longevity LIVE

Fitness is important and making sure you get enough exercise is one of the most effective ways for you to stay healthy and protect your longevity. However, sometimes life can get in the way, and it can be hard to get an hour out of your day to do HIIT, and sometimes, you might want to do something simpler. One of the easiest ways to stay fit is walking.

Granted, its not as intense as other exercises, but that doesnt mean that its not effective. In fact, you dont have to feel guilty about getting your steps in this way because according to experts, walking is enough of a workout to keep you living a long and healthy life.

The take-home point here is that even 15 minutes a day of walking, without stopping, provides benefits with regards to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, Michael Weinrauch, MD, Cardiologist, WellandGood

According to a study published last year in JAMA Network Open, individuals who walked at least 7 000 steps a day faced a 50-70 reduced risk of premature death, compared to those who walked less than 7 000 steps. As weve mentioned, walking is an underrated form of exercise, and it can improve your health in a number of ways.

Just over 420 million people worldwide are living with diabetes, and the condition is directly responsible for about 1.5 million deaths every year. For those living with diabetes, and for those hoping to reduce their risk of developing the disease, managing blood sugar levels is of paramount importance.

In addition to following a healthy diet, exercise can help one manage their blood sugar levels. If youre curious as to which form of exercise one should do, walking would be a great option. In fact, one systematic review acknowledged that walking was a useful management tool for people with type 2 diabetes. The findings revealed that walking improved glucose control in participants with type 2 diabetes.

Cardiovascular health is incredibly important, especially because the healthier your heart is, the better equipped your body will be when it comes to dealing with other external stressors.

Staying fit is a great way to keep your heart strong and healthy, and walking has enough power to do this. Per a study published in the Journal of American Geriatrics Society, postmenopausal women who briskly walked experienced a 34% reduced risk of heart failure, when compared to those who walked at a casual pace.

If you and your partner are looking to increase your chances of conceiving, might we recommend a romantic couples stroll?

A study from the University of Massachusetts Amherst set out to examine the modifiable factors, such as exercise, that can affect ones ability to conceive. The study focused on healthy women ages 18 to 40 years old with a history of one or two pregnancy losses. According to the findings, walking served to increase the likelihood of pregnancy,

One of our main findings is that there was no overall relationship between most types of physical activity and the likelihood of becoming pregnant for women who had already had one or two pregnancy losses, except for walking, which was associated with a higher likelihood of becoming pregnant among women who were overweight or obese. Lindsey Russo, health science specialist and study lead.

Have you ever heard of the phrase Go take a walk to clear your head? Well, looks like theres research behind that phrase, showing that walking is a great way to improve your mental wellness.

Be it moderate or intense levels of walking, taking a stroll can strengthen mental health. Additionally, it can also be utilized as a way to reduce the risk of mental health issues among older adults, according to a study published in Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine.

According to the World Health Organization, adults are advised to aim for 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise a week.

Speaking to Eating Well, Austin Johnson, a Texas-based NCSF certified personal trainer, said that this would translate to a brisk pace that would likely fall between 3 and 4 miles per hour, This would equate to a 15- to 20-minute-per-mile walking pace,he says.

If walking has been your primary form of exercise, there are a few ways you can upgrade your workout to make it a bit more challenging. Here are a few things you can do to enhance your walking workout, courtesy of Eating Well,

Yes, walking is an effective form of exercise, but that doesnt mean that its enough to substitute for poor eating habits. A healthy diet is crucial for your longevity, so if you really want to stay healthy, then you need to walk well and eat well.

You may not be breaking a hard sweat, but that doesnt mean that walking isnt a legitimate form of exercise that can protect your health and longevity. While other forms of intense exercise can benefit your health, never underestimate the power of a good stroll.

Han, A., Kim, J., & Kim, J. (2021). A Study of Leisure Walking Intensity Levels on Mental Health and Health Perception of Older Adults. Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721421999316

Miremad, M-M,Lin, X,Rasla, S, et al.(2022).The association of walking pace and incident heart failure and subtypes among postmenopausal women.J Am Geriatr Soc.70(5):1405-1417. doi:10.1111/jgs.17657

Paluch, A. E., Gabriel, K. P., Fulton, J. E., Lewis, C. E., Schreiner, P. J., Sternfeld, B., Sidney, S., Siddique, J., Whitaker, K. M., & Carnethon, M. R. (2021). Steps per Day and All-Cause Mortality in Middle-aged Adults in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study.JAMA network open,4(9), e2124516. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.24516

Read the original here:
Walking As Your Only Exercise Is Enough To Boost Longevity - Longevity LIVE - Longevity LIVE

Pig to human heart transplants are the future. Are we ready for it? – The Guardian

Shards of electricity burned through Mr Ps flesh. Layers upon layers of subcutaneous fat unraveled, filling the operating room with a pungent, metallic odor, like singed hair at the neighborhood barbecue. Within a few minutes, the pearly white bone of the sternum stuck out before a vein split open, filling the operative field with blood.

Zap! Maroon juice turned into a crackly black mass.

Transplant surgery is all about timing, says Dr Brandon Guenthart, a cardiothoracic surgeon at Stanford University School of Medicine. Anesthesiologists put the patient to sleep after the retrieval team confirms the donor heart looks good. Two surgeons start operating an hour before the donor heart arrives in the hospital. They dont begin cutting the patients heart out until the donor heart has landed safely at the local airport.

And if the plane crashes? Knock on wood, says Guenthart. Theres unfortunately no wood in the operating room.

I was at Stanford hospital watching this heart transplant because of my interest in David Bennett, a 57-year-old man who had died back in March. On 7 January 2022, at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Bennett had received a landmark heart transplant from an unusual donor: a genetically modified pig.

In 2021, a record 41,354 human-to-human organ transplants were performed, but over 100,000 Americans are still stuck on the transplant list. Every day, 17 people die waiting because there simply arent enough organs to go around.

Xenotransplantation or transferring cells, tissues and organs between species promises to solve this shortage and to reshape how we think about human longevity.

Lost in this boundless potential, however, is the significance of the human-animal divide. People walking around with pig organs melded into their bodies human-animal cyborgs of sorts can seem dystopian. And with the zoonotic Sars-CoV-2 virus having killed more than 6 million people, violating the interface between humans and animals may just promise more catastrophe.

This tortuous relationship is nothing new, but its often sanitized and hidden from sight think grinning cows on milk cartons and secret bunkers for animal research. Left open is a whole host of questions, starting with the most complex of all: what does it mean to be human?

Humans are animals. But animals are not humans. And yet, our history is rife with a cultural imagination of hybridity. The ancient Egyptian god of the sky, Horus, was depicted with a falcon head and the goddess of war, Sekhmet, that of a lioness. Similarly, the Hindu god Ganesha was beheaded and then resurrected with an elephant head grafted on to his body. In ancient Greece, fantastical creatures roamed the myths, from the bull-headed Minotaur to the snake-haired Medusa.

Within this wealth of options, the International Xenotransplantation Association chose a more obscure mascot: the Lamassu, an Assyrian deity with the body of a bull, the wings of a bird, and the head of a man a grounding wisdom.

Xenotransplantation, as a research field, started only with cells and tissues. In 17th-century France and England, blood was transfused from animals to humans to cure a whole host of medical conditions. Spiritual meaning was imbued into the act: Since Christ is the lamb of God, one recipient wrote in a letter to the Royal Society, sheeps blood possess[es] a symbolic relationship with [his] blood. One patients violent fever was purportedly cured, as was another patients paralysis, but at least two others died soon after these xenotransfusions.

Other early xenotransplants would follow, including ones with the bone, cornea and skin. Perhaps most infamously, the French surgeon Serge Voronoff transplanted slices of chimpanzee and baboon testicles into men, and ape ovaries into women, to rejuvenate his patients zest for life. Thousands of these operations were performed around the world, but any reported benefit, such as reduced fatigue or increased sex drive, was probably only the placebo effect and quickly faded.

While cell and tissue xenotransplants have been performed for centuries, whole organ transplants were more difficult to figure out. Sewing all the blood vessels together is a tricky business. You have to put two floppy tubes together mouth-to-mouth, tying them tight enough that the patient doesnt bleed out, but delicately enough that the patient doesnt have major clotting either.

This was a Nobel prize-level problem that the French surgeon Alexis Carrel solved with a small embroidery needle and fine silk suture, and was recognized for in 1912. Hes sometimes known as the father of transplant surgery.

A half-century later in 1964, the University of Mississippi surgeon James Hardy attempted the worlds first cardiac transplant, transferring Bino the chimpanzees heart into the chest of the rapidly deteriorating 68-year-old Boyd Rush. Rush survived for only 90 minutes, with the chimp heart offering insufficient support and rejection quickly shutting down his body.

It was Baby Fae who truly set the stakes for xenotransplantation. She was a 12-day-old infant with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, a congenital abnormality where the left side of the heart is a sliver of its full form. The condition was a death sentence.

So, in 1984, surgeons at Loma Linda University, California, transplanted a walnut-sized baboon heart into Baby Faes chest. The conditions were almost perfect. The heart was well-sized, Baby Faes immune system was immature (and sympathetic), and the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine could suppress attacks on the baboon heart.

After the operation, Baby Fae seemed to be doing well. Resting in her crib with a gauze-covered scar traversing her chest, she was just gulping down her formula and wailing with a lusty cry, according to the hospital spokeswoman. The hospital also released photos of Baby Fae talking with her mother, the phone receiver bigger than her entire torso.

She died 21 days after her operation, her immune system refusing to accept the new infant-baboon hybrid. Outrage from physicians and the public soon followed, with animal-rights activists protesting and bioethicists publishing articles like Baby Fae: The Anything Goes School of Human Experimentation.

Xenotransplantation died with Baby Fae, if only for a little while.

During surgery when the drapes are on, its not really a person, Guenthart said. Its a task.

Technically speaking, a heart transplant is pretty easy. It takes only five incisions to cut out the failing heart, and only five connections to put in the new one. Electrocautery in one hand, scissors in the other, you usually first cut out the superior vena cava the vessel bringing back blood to the heart from the head, neck, arms and chest because its the most accessible structure.

Next is the inferior vena cava, which brings back blood from down south but is a bit hard to reach. So, you cut off a portion of the hearts right chamber where this vessel drains into.

Then comes the aorta and pulmonary arteries in fairly simple, straightforward incisions. More difficult are the pulmonary veins, because these are four delicate vessels that are almost impossible to reconnect. The way around that is to lift the heart up and cut out a rim of left heart tissue from underneath. You create a swimming pool, or a little crater, Guenthart said. He paused. Thats just me giving a description. They dont actually call it a swimming pool.

Regardless of whether youre transplanting a human heart or pig heart into someone, the steps are essentially the same.

If you asked 99 doctors out of 100, they wouldnt be able to tell you if they were looking at a human chest or pig chest, Guenthart said.

Pigs are filthy animals, as conventional wisdom goes. Judaism and Islam prohibit consumption of pork and other unclean meat. The insult cops are pigs bears undeniable teeth. And in the Odyssey, the sorceress Circe transforms Odysseuss gluttonous men into swine.

Pigs are also highly intelligent animals, capable of showing emotions. Some 11,000 years ago, wild pigs may have domesticated themselves, recognizing a benefit to allyship with humans. They like playing fetch, are whizzes at navigating mazes, and can outsmart dogs and chimpanzees, according to their IQ tests.

Following the Baby Fae experiment, primates fell out of favor for xenotransplantation, and pigs became the new model organism for researchers to develop.

If you ask xenotransplantation experts today, theyll give a laundry list of reasons why pigs are better than baboons: they are more easily genetically manipulated, they can be raised in a sterile environment to reduce infections, and they can be grown to give organs of any size needed.

Its a nice packaged narrative, but Dr Brad Bolman, historian of science at the University of Chicago, argues that sheep, goats or some other animal could have been deemed suitable instead. At the outset, Bolman said, it wasnt obvious that pigs were the right replacement for non-human primates. But when pigs were chosen, the scientific ideals were constructed retroactively to make them seem like the clear choice all along.

Bolman says that pigs were chosen because it was socially and economically convenient. They produce large litters quickly, with piglets reaching adult human size in six months. Theres also an almost unlimited supply of them 700 million worldwide and as agricultural animals, they arent covered by the Animal Welfare Act.

We treat pigs in ways that we would never treat people, but we also recognize theyre so similar to us that theyre our models, said Dr Lisa Moses, a bioethicist and veterinarian at Harvard Medical School. You cant make sense of that because it doesnt make sense. Its one giant paradox. Pigs are close enough to give their lives for ours but not close enough that their plight gives us pause.

Maybe it should. If you subscribe to Kantian ethics, its wrong to use others as a means to an end, so it feels downright exploitative to genetically modify a pig and kill it for its heart. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) has thus decried pig-to-human transplants as unethical, dangerous, and a tremendous waste of resources, asserting that animals arent toolsheds to be raided but complex, intelligent beings. Kathy Guillermo, a senior vice-president at Peta, went even further to proclaim, pigs are people.

These ethical concerns arent new. In 1999, the Campaign for Responsible Transplantation protested in New York Citys famous Halloween Parade, with members dressed up as genetically engineered monsters. As millions of Americans watched the parade on TV, these snout-wearing attendants hoisted a 13ft-tall mad scientist puppet, sporting a dollar sign tie and clenching a pig-human hybrid.

But the xenotransplantation experts I spoke to often dismissed these ethical concerns by citing the structural fact of the global pork industry. The thinking goes that, if pigs are going to be eaten anyway, they might as well be used for science, a more valuable and noble pursuit.

If you think about eating in a slightly more capacious sense, Bolman said, eating is really about consumption and rendering animals destroyable. More than anything else, the edibility of pigs justifies their usage for xenotransplantation and research at large.

What science does is consume animals, even if they arent literally eaten, said Bolman. Science remains carnivorous.

Mr Ps new heart had arrived in the operating room a half-hour ago, and Guenthart was zigging and zagging a fine thread across the arc of two vessels to cinch them together.

Six oclock, seven oclock, eight oclock Guenthart stitched together one half of the artery before he grabbed another needle to run around counterclockwise. Once the two sutures had circled around and met at noon, he threw a right-handed knot, and then another. Then left-right-left-right-left-right, each opposing throw locking the last one into a square knot, Guentharts hands dancing with the fine thread.

During the entire operation, everyone in the operating room was chatting away, but now it was so silent you could hear the faint music that had been playing all along. This was the crucial moment where, with the donor heart actively dying, Guenthart was sewing as fast as he could to restore blood flow to the heart. Every second counted.

Clamp off, Guenthart finally announced. With the pressure released off the aorta, blood rushed into the coronary arteries and fed the heart.

Having graduated from medical school a decade ago, Guenhart joked that xenotransplant is the promise thats 10 years out and always will be. But he also sees Bennetts 60-day survival as an amazing milestone and xenotransplantation as the most promising solution for the organ shortage killing his patients.

After about 30 seconds, Mr Ps new heart started beating on its own, like a zombie rising from the dead. Guenthart hadnt connected any of the nerves and definitely nothing to his brain. The hearts internal pacemaker is the circus master of its own show.

Xenotransplantation requires selective humanization of a pig. If you transplant a pig heart into a human, just like that, it will get rejected. Specifically, itll turn an ugly black and be flooded with blood clots, according to Dr Richard Pierson, director of the Center for Transplantation Sciences at Massachusetts general hospital. (I spoke with Pierson as he was speeding down to the hospital for a human-to-human lung transplant, ambulance sirens hollering in the background.)

Because our immune police force is so good at its job, the Virginia-based biotech company Revivicor used the gene-editing technology Crispr to create a special line of pigs with 10 modifications. Four genes are knocked out, and six genes are added in.

So, what is the recipe for making a pig heart fit for humans?

1. Knock out three sugar genes that are only found in pigs. Most of us think if you have a pig with those three genes knocked out, thats probably better than just one. We dont know that for sure, Pierson said.

2. Knock out a growth hormone gene to prevent the pig heart from overgrowing its new home. Pierson said, Is growth at the graft going to be a problem? We dont know.

3. Add two complement inhibitor genes that prevent antibodies from destroying the pig heart and two anti-clotting genes that stop the patients blood from curdling inside the foreign organ.

4. Add two anti-inflammatory genes to prevent the pig heart from swelling up. One of these genes signals to the immune system that the pig heart is a friend (self), not food (nonself). That may or may not be necessary, said Pierson. It probably is helpful, but we havent proven that.

After all this cutting and pasting, the next challenge is to keep the pig clean. The last thing you want is to transplant a pig heart with viruses, bacteria and parasites that cause infections in humans.

Therefore, these pigs are raised in pathogen-free facilities. There are no windows. They dont go outside. The air is filtered and sterilized, said Dr Leo Buhler, editor-in-chief of the journal Xenotransplantation and professor of surgery at the University of Fribourg.

After the genetically engineered embryos are implanted, the surrogate sows have to undergo caesarian sections (a vaginal birth is more likely to cause an infection.) The piglets are then immediately taken to isolation boxes under infrared lights, allowed to suckle their mother only every two hours under scientist supervision.

After 24 hours, the sows are all removed from the facility, and the piglets are artificially fed with a motherless rearing system and formula. Any interaction with humans must happen with the highest level of personal protective equipment.

With this pig-in-a-bubble approach, you should get a line of pigs that has never had any contact with the outside world and whose exogenous, or external, viruses have all been eliminated. These pig hearts are safe to implant into humans then, right?

Not exactly. Bennetts heart still tested positive for pig endogenous retroviruses (PERV) viruses built into the porcine genome that can jump into human cells, at least in a Petri dish. Its an alarming example of zoonosis that could lead to a pandemic like Covid-19.

Whether or not those viruses can infect humans remains to be seen, but Pierson doesnt think it will be a major barrier to xenotransplantation. HIV drugs seem to be relatively effective against them, and Boston-based biotech company eGenesis has already made a 60-gene PERV-free pig.

So what does worry Pierson about xenotransplantation?

The unknown unknown, he said. You can run a battery of tests in search of viruses, but you might only find what youre looking for. And with a cocktail of immunosuppressants required to sedate our trigger-happy immune system, any infection that crosses the pig-human barrier could wreak devastating consequences.

Doesnt this all feel a bit premature, then? I ask Pierson.

Worry is not a reason not to do things. You need to take cautious steps forward. If the problem presents itself, you figure out a way to solve it. You dont just go home.

For months, Bennetts transplant had been shrouded in secrecy, but the details of the operation were finally unveiled in a mid-June report of the New England Journal of Medicine. One of the studys blockbuster findings was that Bennett was infected with a pig virus. The paper itself is neutral on the cause of death, but the cardiothoracic surgeon and study first-author Dr Bartley Griffith is slightly betting that a pig virus killed Bennett.

The pig virus hes referring to is not a PERV, however; its an external virus called porcine cytomegalovirus (pCMV).

pCMV is a member of the herpes family, and its human form is known for causing mononucleosis, the kissing disease. Dont let that fool you though. Cytomegalovirus causes inflammation and damage to the organ, Pierson told me. A lot of damage.

pCMV is also one of the viruses that Revivicor had supposedly eliminated from pigs through all their precautions; it has been a well-recognized threat to xenotransplantation for decades.

When it first showed up, we thought maybe it was just an error or something, Griffith said, discussing how a routine blood draw on the 20th day after surgery returned a tiny blip.

Possible pCMV infection was so unimaginable to Griffiths team that they werent even looking for this pig virus and discovered the infection only on accident. Griffith told me, The first thing we did is we went to the company and said, How can we possibly be seeing this?

One xenotransplantation expert who wished to remain anonymous for legal reasons thinks that Revivicor may have gotten a bit slack about their protocol. He says the evidence is clear that, with early weaning and all other precautions, pigs dont get pCMV.

Revivicor, of course, tested the donor pig several times with a nasal swab and PCR, getting negative results every single time. It looks like PCR is not sufficient to exclude silent pCMV that can reactivate in an immunosuppressed environment, Buhler wrote to me. He suggests that Revivicor made an honest mistake by not using a more specific test. (Revivicor did not respond to repeated queries sent by the Guardian.)

Regardless of why pCMV was missed, the results were gruesome on autopsy. After hitchhiking into Bennett, the virus seems to have exploded some capillaries and killed the heart.

But Griffith is continuing to march along, hoping to do another xenotransplant in the next few months, even if he isnt entirely sure yet why Bennett died. Whatever it was, hes confident that it can be overcome. A pCMV infection? Exclude it. Too much immunosuppression? Reduce it. The anti-pig antibodies they gave Bennett? Dont do that again.

Thats how you make progress, Griffith said. You admit where you made errors, and you try to limit them. But you move on.

In a world where we are humanizing pigs with Crispr and piggifying humans with xenotransplantation, what does it even mean for there to be a human-animal divide?

In some ways, the word divide is problematic. After all, theres no bright red line separating humans from other animals. Pigs and humans share 98% of genes, and that 2% is critically important. But its also just 2%.

Moses, the Harvard bioethicist, believes that the notion of a human-animal divide is an artificial construct. Theres been a concerted effort from the biomedical research community to enhance the perception of that divide, going back as far as Descartes and Francis Bacon, she said.

Built on a shaky foundation, the separation between animals and humans has been reified over millennia. Look no further than the impossibly low sticker prices of a pack of bacon that hides environmental externalities and inhumane conditions under a crisp cellophane wrap. Its easier to not think too hard about it.

But we cant not think hard about xenotransplantation. If its promise is to be realized, well have to, at the very least, create a whole new economy of factory farming, where pigs will be manufactured and slaughtered en masse to give us life.

Sure, 1.5 billion pigs are already killed each year. And sure, if the people you loved most had heart failure, lungs slowly drowning in fluid, their dilated heart twisting agonizingly, youd probably take the pig heart instead of gambling with the transplant list. I would, at least. But that shouldnt obviate the need to tread carefully here.

Dr Chris Walzer, executive director of the Wildlife Conservation Society, thinks xenotransplantation could benefit from the OneHealth framework the idea that human, animal and environmental health are all connected.

Take the Nipah virus as an example. Nipah is a zoonotic disease that has caused deadly outbreaks in Malaysia, Singapore, Bangladesh and India. For years, these outbreaks were a mystery to epidemiologists, who couldnt understand how the transmission chain worked between fruit bats the natural hosts of the virus and humans. And ultimately, it took a broadened perspective to solve this puzzle tracing how date palm trees bloomed in the winter, how fruit bats infused tree sap with saliva and urine, and how humans consumed that infected sap and got Nipah.

Its too simple to say pigs are people. And its too simple to say pigs are an unlimited supply of organs. Seventeen people die every day waiting on the transplant list, but xenotransplantation is about a whole lot more than just saving these lives.

Were all part of a shared ecology. And theres a danger to ignoring our interconnectedness.

Earlier that day, Guenthart had told Mr P that he was getting a new heart. Mr P started crying. Hes in his early 20s, and three months ago, his heart started failing without any apparent reason. His doctors still arent sure why.

It was hard for me to not also start crying, Guenthart said.

A heart transplant is a highly technical operation, but for the patient, its a chance at life. When David Bennett had his xenotransplant, he didnt just get a pig heart; he got two more months of life. He watched the Los Angeles Rams win the Super Bowl. He sang America the Beautiful with his therapist. He spent time with his five grandchildren, every day begging his surgeons to let him go home to his dog Lucky.

Now that the transplant was over, Guenthart was calling Mr Ps mom.

The surgery went really well. The new heart looks beautiful, and hes doing amazing. Hes asleep right now, and were sending him over to sleep in the ICU.

Yes, hes going to be two floors above where he was before.

Normal visiting hours are from 8am to 7pm, but you can call them at any time and get updates directly from his nurse.

Of course, youre so welcome, and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Original post:
Pig to human heart transplants are the future. Are we ready for it? - The Guardian

Exploring strategies and innovations that deliver balance and wellbeing, expand access to health care, and dramatically improve health outcomes -…

Making the U.S. healthcare system sustainable in the future is only possible if there is a recognition that many chronic diseases can be prevented, but it is a complex challenge. The strong correlation between chronic disease outcomes and mental health disorders underscores the disconnect of working to improve chronic disease outcomes without addressing mental health. Innovation also requires correcting healthcare disparities in areas of inequity in quality of, access to, and affordability of preventive remedies. The connecting tissue to all of this is a holistic view of body, mind, and spirit as the pathway to good health, wellbeing, and longevity.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that the costs associated with caring for people with chronic disease and mental health conditions comprises 90% of the nations $3.8 trillion spend on healthcare. Because of this, investors are increasingly seeking out wellness companies that foster harmony or life balance to drive health and wellness. The application of this approach connects the masses with medical professionals and services in a low friction and economical manner through enhanced user experiences driven by things such as home health, telehealth, and digital health solutions that reduce costs and ease time constraints for users by solving systematic healthcare inefficiencies.

In particular, investors will increasingly seek out companies that disrupt old models and promote a baseline of wellbeing via innovations that mitigate and/or prevent increased medical and social costs of poor health through affordable solutions that deliver flexible, easy access and customized services that contribute to improved outcomes.

Advances in science, medicine, and technology have created a tremendous capability to treat and cure chronic disease, but the wisdom of prevention is better than cure, is often lost in the process. With its focus on treatments and cures, the perplexing, profit-driven, one-size-fits-all model for health care in the United States in particular, fails to deliver the benefits of fundamental wellness that result from early attention to disease prevention. Whats more, in the last two years the sudden shift to working from home, social distancing, and isolation has led to declines in health and wellbeing through a troubling mix of perceived positives in the form of flexibility and increased free time, and alarming negatives in the form of burnout, depression, and reduced physical activity. This new normal makes good health even harder to maintain, and the companies who address this situation are potentially evermore valuable.

Creative health innovations are key to delivering health for all

The World Health Organization Council on the Economics of Health for All published their manifesto last September in the run-up to the October 2021 G20 summit in Rome. The creation of the Council, and the goals laid out for the G20 Summit, signal a sea change in policy design and a related realignment of sectors and financing to prioritize public health. This paradigm shift in health security places human wellness and the common good as a priority for economic policy design. Creative health innovations will be an important part of the ecosystem.

We actively seek investment offerings that include choices positioned at the intersection of healthy living, healthy lifestyle, and efficient delivery of healthcare services. These are companies that enhance financial, community, and corporate wellness. Companies that illustrate the potential of these wellness investment philosophies include HelloBetter, Iris Telehealth, and Talkiatry, who are a group of companies pioneering the tech-enabled, customized mental health space. Another group of companies in this area are Cara Care, FoodMarble, and Ombre, who are leading the in-home gut biome testing space. Finally, you have JOON, Limeade, and Headspace for Work, who are charging forward in areas of corporate personalized wellness (Talkiatry and Ombre are portfolio companies of Relevance Ventures).

Talkiatry clears two major pain points for patientswait times and affordabilitywith online providers that accept major insurance plans. Ombre self-testing delivers affordable, easy-to-use kits that remove the main barriers to getting useful health insights: access to gut biome testing, testing costs, and lack of information and actionable suggestions. And JOON is helping companies create healthy and productive work settingsfrom health to lifestylefor their employees.

Balance an ancient concept to balance modern life

At home disease prevention and health management has the potential to dramatically reduce costs for insurers, Medicare and the consumer. Scientific evidence suggests healthy diets, physical activity, and eliminating tobacco use can possibly prevent and control chronic diseases. Recognizing the symbiotic relationship between chronic diseases and mental wellbeing highlights a need for common sense solutions that embrace a holistic, more balanced-oriented approach that has proven successful in nature for hundreds of thousands of years; solutions that may achieve better whole patient outcomes and a reduced total cost of care for the users, companies, and the total healthcare system.

Photo: 123456, Getty Images

Read more:
Exploring strategies and innovations that deliver balance and wellbeing, expand access to health care, and dramatically improve health outcomes -...

Zone 2 training: Definition and benefits – Livescience.com

Zone 2 training has become a trendy term among fitness professionals in recent years, but what does it mean and what are the benefits?

Zone 2 is one of five cardio heart rate zones (opens in new tab) experienced during different intensities of training zone 1 being the lowest effort and zone 5 being the highest. These zones reflect how hard your cardiovascular system (your heart and lungs) is being made to work by the activity you are doing, whether thats a weightlifting (opens in new tab) session or a long run on one of the best treadmills (opens in new tab).

The benefits of incorporating a large amount of lower intensity work into your training schedule (also known as polarized training) are well-documented. Not only can this concept help create a more sustainable exercise routine by preventing you from burning out or becoming injured through overtraining, but studies such as this one, published in the international Healthcare journal (opens in new tab) have also shown it can improve athletic factors including strength and cardiorespiratory function.

Research (opens in new tab) has even found it can be more efficient than alternative training methods such as HIIT and high volume training for upping several benchmarks of athletic performance such as VO2 peak, time to exhaustion and power output.

To find out more about zone 2 training, its many benefits, and how to incorporate it into a wider training regime, Live Science spoke to orthopedic surgeon Howard J Luks MD, author of Longevity Simplified (opens in new tab).

After graduating with honors from New York Medical College, Luks completed his Orthopedic Surgery residency in NY in 1996 and a fellowship in Sports Medicine at the Hospital For Joint Diseases in NYC in 1997.As the Chief of Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy at New York Medical College for over 20 years, he was entrusted to teach the next generation of Orthopedic Surgeons about the needs of athletes of all ages.He currently works as an orthopedic sports medicine surgeon.

Zone 2 is one of five heart rate zones you can enter when training. It usually refers to intensities where your heart rate is 60-70% of your maximum, with most athletes choosing cardiovascular exercises like walking, running, cycling and swimming to achieve this.

This training method has many benefits, from enhancing athletic performance and overall health to improving body composition when twinned with an appropriate diet.

You can estimate your maximum heart rate by subtracting your age from 220. This figure can then be used to calculate where your 60% and 70% thresholds lie, although a normal heart rate (opens in new tab) can be hard to pin down as it varies from person to person.

Luks says there are more precise methods to tell which training zone you are in while exercising, with blood lactate testing being the most effective among them. However, if you dont want to invest in a pricey device or time-consuming testing process, there are also physical cues that can reveal when your heart rate is in zone 2.

Most athletes are in zone 2 between 60-70% of their maximum heart rate, Luks says. They should be able to hold a conversation without pausing.

Paying attention to our breathing is also important. There's a moment when you start to take a deeper breath or can no longer breathe for distance through your nose. For many that represents the moment they are starting to transition out of zone 2.

The payback for including zone 2 training into your weekly routine can be immense, with potential impacts including improved athletic performance and a lower risk of injury.

Whether it's improved endurance, resilience, a lower heart rate or simply improved health, zone 2 training is worthy of your consideration, Luks says.

Zone 2 or low heart rate training is also one of the best tools we have to achieve metabolic health and longevity. (Metabolic health is defined in a study published in the journal Metabolic Syndrome and Related Disorders as having optimal levels of waist circumference, glucose, blood pressure, triglycerides, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and not taking any related medication.)

During low heart rate training, we are generating adenosine triphosphate (ATP, an energy-carrying molecule found within cells) or energy from fat oxidation. This process occurs in the mitochondria, but most folks (even most athletes) have significant aerobic deficiency syndrome. This means they tend to start burning glucose a process known as glycolysis far too soon during their efforts.

...Most runners run too fast on their slow days and too slow on their fast days. They are stressing their energy systems and not deriving the benefit of a strong aerobic base. Zone 1 and 2 activities will improve all zones above it, even VO2max.

In the simplest terms, whether youre chasing a PB over 5km or a marathon, taking a train slow to run fast approach can improve your performance at all intensities. And the benefits extend beyond athletic performance, positively impacting everyday health factors too.

In terms of the overall health of our nation, most people have poor mitochondrial flexibility, which is the ability to burn fat versus glucose for low demand activities. Our mitochondria need to be trained to function properly. That mostly occurs with low heart rate (zones one and two) activities.

Luks says training to increase mitochondrial efficiency will not only benefit athletic performance, but also everyday health and longevity.

Humans die of very predictable causes, he says. The majority of those diseases are rooted in poor metabolic health, which in and of itself is due to mitochondrial dysfunction.

Long zone 1 and 2 sessions are critical for athletes to build their aerobic base, Luks says. When considering the epic proportions of disease that people are contending with now, low heart rate activities are crucial to building mitochondrial flexibility and improving metabolic health.

Many people choose to incorporate zone 2 work into their exercise regime through polarized training a plan that involves activities of different intensities to improve multiple areas of cardiovascular health and fitness.

Several studies have explored the health and athletic benefits of polarized training. A 2014 study published in Frontiers in Physiology (opens in new tab) found that polarized training (POL) has greater impact on key endurance variables than threshold (THR), high intensity (HIIT), or high volume training (HVT).

During the study, 48 elite endurance athletes were assigned a 9-week training program based on one of the four conditioning concepts listed above. At the end of the testing period, it was found that polarized training triggered the greatest improvements in several benchmarks of athletic performance among endurance athletes, including their VO2 peak, time to exhaustion and power output.

A second 2021 study published in the MDPI Healthcare (opens in new tab) journal found that 12 weeks of polarized training had a positive impact on the body composition of male and female cross-country skiers.

It was confirmed that it contributed to the improvement in the athletic performance of cross-country skiers by improvement of cardiorespiratory function and upper-body strength, the study states.

On average, both male and female athletes taking part in the study saw a decrease in body fat (from 18.1% down to 12.7%, and from 29.1% down to 21.4%, respectively).

As part of a typical polarized training schedule, at least 80% of training should be in zones one or two, Luks says. However, he adds, the proportion of zone 2 training to higher intensity work will depend on several factors, including your age and fitness goals.

For example, I am an aging endurance runner. My goals are to be healthy and active and suffer as few injuries as possible I am not searching for a podium.

My current mix is nearly 95% zones one and two, and 5% threshold or VO2 max. It does not take much to maintain upper training zone function, health and conditioning. A few hill repeats or sprints at the end of a long zone 2 effort suffices.

The rest is here:
Zone 2 training: Definition and benefits - Livescience.com