Oxford Immunotec value drops after public offering – European Biotechnology

UK-headquartered immunodiagnostics specialist Oxford Immunotec Global plc's share value slipped by $1.31 to $16.02 after the company raised US-$40.125m on Monday in an public offering of 2.5 million ordinary shares at Nasdaq underwritten by BTIG LLC.

Oxford Immunotec said it will use the proceeds from the offering for working capital and general corporate purposes. The companys immunodiagnostic T-SPOT platform is measures immune cell responses at a single cell level and thus detects immune responses of T cells and cells of the innate immune system more sensitive than ELISA assays. According to the British company, its assays can detect an individual reacting cell in a population of 250,000 white blood cells.

Oxford Immunotecs first product, the T-SPOT.TB test, has been approved for sale in over 50 countries, including the US, the EU, Japan and China. The companys second product line is a range of assays for tick-borne diseases, such as Lyme disease, obtained through the acquisitions of Imugen and Immunetics. The company currently is seeking FDA approval for its third product line, a screening test for Babesia in donated blood. Additionally Oxford Immunotec has several assays, such T-SPOT.CMV test and the T-SPOT.PRT under development.

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Oxford Immunotec value drops after public offering - European Biotechnology

Biotechnology, Panacea To Army Worm Maize Infestation – Leadership Newspapers

By Nkechi Isaac

Maize (also known as corn in some countries) is one of the most common and important food crops across Africa. It is widely eaten in various forms and more than 900 million Africans depend on maize every year because it is often cheaper than rice and wheat, two of the other most consumed cereals.

A report released by the IITA estimates that about 800 million tons of maize is produced worldwide every year.

According to the report, though the United States remains the worlds largest producer with 42 percent of all maize produced globally, Africa contributes significantly in this production with 6.5 percent of this volume which is still insufficient for local consumption.

Nigeria remains Africas largest producer with nearly 8 million tons per annum. It is closely followed by South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda.

It was therefore a nightmare when Nigeria like the rest of Africa woke up to the Fall Armyworm (FAW) infestation which was rapidly spreading across the region.

Army worm is very deleterious and like the name suggests it derives its name from its feeding habits, of marching in large numbers from grasslands into crops. They strongly prefer grasses, cereals like maize, and can mercilessly eat the stem of the crop as well as the leaves.

Army worm infestation can be disastrous on the crops. It affects the yield of the crop from the stalk to the stage of maturity and is capable of destroying entire crops in a matter of weeks if it is unchecked.

Like other African countries, Nigeria woke up to a nightmare of recent army worm infestation in the region, leaving farmers worried as the pest, which has grown resistance to chemicals, wreaked havoc on newly cultivated maize farms across the country. This resulted in the severe reduction on the yield recouped by farmers on their maize field.

The Federal Government quickly waded and convened a meeting with commissioners for agriculture from the 36 states in Abuja to find ways of ameliorating the effect of the havoc and contain the infestation.

In his speech, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said the achievement of self-sufficiency in maize production would continue to be a mirage with the pest infestation.

He said the spread of the maize disease had negatively affected the poultry industry, which largely depends on maize for the production of feeds.

The minister explained that the aim of the meeting was to brainstorm on ways of finding sustainable solutions to the army worm infestation which had ravaged maize farms in the states.

It is the state government that owns lands; so we need to tackle this problem to boost agricultural production, he said.

Ogbeh told the meeting the federal government required N2.98 billion to curb the army worm infestation of farmlands across the country, adding the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) had pledged to support the country in its fight against the army worm infestation.

However, scientists are calling on farmers to embrace biotechnology by using genetically modified crops which have been proven safe for man and the environment to permanently tackle such occurrences.

Speaking during an interview with journalists in Abuja, the country coordinator of Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology (OFAB), Nigeria Chapter, Dr Rose Gidado, said genetic modification, also known as genetic engineering, is a technologically advanced way to select desirable traits in crops, pointing out that while selective breeding has existed for thousands of years, modern biotechnology is more efficient and effective because seed developers are able to directly modify the genome of the crop.

The OFAB coordinator said adopting genetic modification technology to develop maize variety resistant to pest provided a lasting solution for army worm infestation, adding genetically engineered (GE) plants are selectively bred and enhanced with genes to withstand common problems that confront farmers which include maize that could survive pesticides/infestation.

Gidado, a deputy director, at the National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA) revealed that a breakthrough recorded by scientists with the development of a maize variety called Water Efficient Maize for Africa (WEMA) which has proven to resist the attacks from army worm infestations provided a lasting solution to the infestation.

She said: The lasting solution to army worm infestation on maize is the use of genetic modification technology to develop a maize variety that would be resistant to the pest, that gives a permanent solution.

She added, There is already a variety of maize called Water Efficient Maize Variety for Africa that has proven to be resistant to army worm, it has not yet been deployed to Nigeria but we are making plans.

The WEMA project is a public-private partnership to develop royalty-free African drought-tolerant white maize varieties, it also increases yield stability, protects and promotes farmers investment in best management practices.

The project which is water conserving and insect protected conventional and transgenic maize, is expected under moderate drought, to increase yields by 20-35 percent over current varieties; it is also expected to translate into additional 2 million MT of maize during drought to feed 14 to 21 million people.

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‘Quarterback whisperer’ Martellus Bennett talks chemistry with Aaron Rodgers – ESPN (blog)

GREEN BAY, Wis. -- Sure, Martellus Bennett would love more preseason snaps with Aaron Rodgers -- or any preseason snaps with his quarterback at this point -- but the Green Bay Packers' new tight end has another formula that he thinks will help them connect on the field when it counts.

"I need all the reps I can with Aaron -- practice reps, game reps, meeting room reps," Bennett said. "Any rep I can get with him I'll try to get, whether it's just whispering to him, try to be the quarterback whisperer. It's just a lot of communication and a lot of reps. Over-communicate and over-rep every single thing we could possibly do."

Rodgers probably doesn't need to play in the preseason for his own good, but he might for Bennett's.

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It was no surprise that Rodgers didn't play in last Thursday's preseason opener against the Eagles, although he did surprisingly take part in pregame warm-ups. And given that Rodgers took only the first rep of every period on Tuesday with the No. 1 offense and then jumped over to the scout team like he did last week, it looks like this preseason might mirror last year's -- when Rodgers played just two series (26 total snaps) in the second-to-last preseason game.

If that's the case, then Rodgers' only preseason snaps likely will come on Aug. 26 at Denver.

And that's fine with him even though last year he didn't exactly start the regular season fast. Rodgers said last week that there's no correlation between playing time in preseason games and how an offense starts the season.

"I felt great, I felt great," Rodgers said of how he felt going into last season. "It was nice. Body felt really good. You know, we do things on the side conditioning wise to make sure we're ready to go. So I initially felt great. I would assume this year with Denver being the third preseason game I'll play for sure in that one. And that altitude will help with the conditioning because it's tough to play out there.

"We played out there in 2008 in the preseason, I had a good half of football, but yeah, it's preseason. Mike [McCarthy] wants to look at the other guys for sure [in] extended time. He feels good about what we've got, we're trying to work our timing in practice with the young guys and the new tight ends. We'll figure it out as we go."

Bennett said he believes he and Rodgers will be on the proverbial same page come Sept. 10 for the regular-season opener against the Seahawks.

Rodgers has raved about Bennett almost ever since he arrived for the offseason program back in April and there's been nothing on the practice field to indicate the two won't have an immediate chemistry, but the reality is they may not know until the games count.

"I'm like everybody's type, so I have chemistry with everybody," Bennett said. "I never really had problems having chemistry with anyone. Chemistry was one of my best classes, and in real life chemistry is one of my best traits. So I have a lot of good chemistry with a lot of good people, so I don't lack in the chemistry field."

Bennett played 11 snaps -- all with Brett Hundley as the quarterback -- in the preseason opener and caught the only pass that came his way, a 13-yard pickup on a third-and-2 slant.

"It doesn't matter who throws the ball or who's back there, I've just got to do my job," Bennett said. "That's what I try to do, make it easy for the quarterbacks."

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'Quarterback whisperer' Martellus Bennett talks chemistry with Aaron Rodgers - ESPN (blog)

Johnson and Luebbert embrace chemistry heading into 2017 season – Columbia Missourian

COLUMBIA As assistant soccer coach Don Trentham split Missouris players into groups during a team practice, he called the names of two of his top forwards: sophomore Sarah Luebbert and senior Jessica Johnson.

"Sarica!" Luebbert remembers the coach yelling before catching himself. "Oh, I mean Sarah and Jessica. Youre on this team!"

Luebbert loved Trentham's slip-up. She calls herself and Johnson a dynamic duo the two scored a combined 15 goals in 2016 and she wants the nickname "Sarica" to catch on.

Though Missouris players have not yet started calling the two forwards by their combined name, Luebbert and Johnsons chemistry is essential on both the offensive and defensive side of the ball.

Head coach Bryan Blitz trains his players to aggressively defend the whole field, comparing his style to a full-court press in basketball. The defense begins with the forwards, and Blitz said Johnson and Luebbert embrace this mindset.

"You might score 20 goals, but if you dont defend, you won't start," Blitz said. ... "If you do both (offense and defense), thats when you can start. And thats what those two exhibit for us."

Luebbert is coming off a monster 2016 season in which she scored 10 goals, including four game-winners. She led the Tigers in points and was named SEC Freshman of the Year.

Johnson also put up solid numbers, tallying five goals and five assists. Luebbert said the senior excels when fighting for the ball.

"Sarah's direct success was because of all the dirty work Jessica does," Blitz said.

Heading into her final season with Missouri, Johnson has emerged as a leader. Luebbert said she has a calming presence; the senior doesnt have an in-your-face style, which makes her more relatable to teammates.

"We all are leaders on this team as seniors," Johnson said. "Definitely getting into that and growing into that role has been pretty awesome so far."

Blitz said he asked Johnson to lead the offense in 2017. He does not want to put too much pressure on Luebbert after her standout freshman year, and he stressed Johnson's improved finishing abilities, which will complement her speed.

"Shes really fast, so its fun to use our speed against other teams," Luebbert said. "We both really like to work together to try and confuse defenders and switch positions and play off of each other."

The sophomore vividly remembers working well with Johnson during a specific play during the 2016 season. Missouri was playing a road game against Mississippi in its SEC opener, and the two forwards were running toward the Rebels' goal with the game tied at zero.

Luebbert took the ball at the side of the field and quickly crossed it to Johnson, who took a shot in front of the goal.

Ball met net, and the Tigers were on the board.

Luebbert still smiles when thinking of the play. It was "Sarica" at their finest, and its a sight Missouri fans could get used to in 2017.

Supervising editors are Brooks Holton and Pete Bland.

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Johnson and Luebbert embrace chemistry heading into 2017 season - Columbia Missourian

Ravens news, notes and opinions on offensive chemistry, Ryan … – Baltimore Sun

Ravens players and coaches insist theres plenty of time left to build some chemistry and continuity on offense. But really, what else are they going to say?

It has to be extremely hard to evaluate the offense when theres so many missing or moving pieces. How can the team get a true read on the wide receivers when Ryan Mallett has struggled mightily and the teams de facto No. 2 quarterback, Dustin Vaughan, played so poorly in the preseason opener that he was quickly yanked and has since been released? Can we truly gauge whether the running game has improved when the first-team offensive line changes on a seemingly daily basis?

James Hurst started at right tackle in Thursdays preseason opener against the Washington Redskins. By Saturdays practice, he was at left guard, with recently signed Austin Howard inserted at right tackle. With Ronnie Stanley missing practice the past two days, Hurst is now at left tackle. Credit Hurst for his versatility, but it has to be difficult to develop chemistry with so much change up front.

The Ravens have 3 1/2 weeks before they open the regular season against the Cincinnati Bengals. If quarterback Joe Flacco, wide receiver Breshad Perriman and Stanley are back practicing at this time next week, there is still enough time. But thats a big if, as very little this summer has gone according to plan for the Ravens.

More on Mallett: It seems that every Ravens preseason game will be a referendum on Malletts ability as a quarterback. The increased scrutiny is understandable, given Flaccos back concerns and Colin Kaepernicks availability.

But have we really learned anything about Mallett this summer? His accuracy and decision-making have been issues his whole career, and his training camp has been a continuation of that. Throw in a revolving door of offensive linemen and a lot of uncertainty at wide receiver and tight end, and you have a struggling offense.

Make no mistake, the Ravens know Malletts flaws. But since drafting Tyrod Taylor in 2011, they have shown a reluctance to invest assets (money or high draft picks) in their backup-quarterback position.

Mallett makes $2 million, which is mid-level backup-quarterback money. Per contract data website Spotrac, 43 quarterbacks in the league will make more than Mallett this season. His salary this year is the same as that of Matt Barkley, Case Keenum, Mark Sanchez and Brandon Weeden, and less than that of guys like Landry Jones ($2.2 million), Matt Cassel ($2.6 million), Colt McCoy ($3 million) and former Raven Matt Schaub ($4.5 million).

With Flaccos durability, the Ravens clearly dont believe in spending much money on an upper-level backup quarterback. The only time Flacco has missed games was in 2015, when he tore up his knee in late November. The Ravens were 3-7 and going nowhere fast when the injury occurred.

So while they havent been punished yet for not investing a lot in a backup quarterback, a case could be made that the position should become a bigger priority with Flacco now 32 years old and having taken a ton of hits over the years.

Theories on White are wrong: The idea that the Ravens concocted the severity of the thumb injury to undrafted wide receiver Tim White so that they can stash him on injured reserve a narrative that has been strengthened by misinformed media members and fan speculation is nonsensical for myriad reasons.

First, White could have helped them this year as a wide receiver and returner. You never know how the final three weeks of the preseason would have played out, but White was in position to not only make the team but also have a role on Sundays. With jobs potentially on the line this year, no coach or executive is going to prioritize next season over the current one.

Second, you cant officially put players on IR without them having clear waivers after the final roster cutdown to 53 players, which follows the final preseason game. So there are absolutely no benefits right now in shutting White down. It doesnt give you roster flexibility.

Third, the Ravens are dealing with a staggering number of injuries right now, and the wide receiver position has been hit reasonably hard. Perriman and Kenny Bell have been sidelined since early in camp because of hamstring injuries. Since White was ruled out, Quincy Adeboyejo has gone down with a knee injury. The Ravens simply arent going to compound their injury situation by shutting down a good young player who could help them during the season.

Four, while stashing is frowned upon by the NFL, it happens pretty much everywhere. But nobody is stashing players after Week 1 of the preseason. Too much can happen over the rest of the preseason for teams to handcuff themselves with a rash decision after one game.

And one more quick point about White: The Ravens said the former Arizona State player is expected to miss the season. That doesnt mean hes not an option to be one of two players the Ravens place on IR with a designation to return later. But that doesnt need to be decided now.

Quick hits: Undrafted rookie running back Taquan Mizzell has been really impressive, and there should be a spot for him in the NFL, but I think it will be tough for him to crack the Ravens 53-man roster. The Ravens already have Danny Woodhead, and Mizzell has a pretty similar skill set. Im a little surprised the Ravens havent opened up a few roster spots by doing something with Bell and inside linebacker Lamar Louis, who are both dealing with injuries and not practicing. They could use a few more healthy bodies at certain positions. Tight end Maxx Williams deserves a ton of credit for persevering through a serious knee surgery and getting back onto the field this summer. But in watching him run, its still pretty clear that he has a ways to go. He has bulked up and gotten considerably stronger, so it will be interesting to see whether he becomes more of a blocking tight end, assuming hes on the season-opening roster. In about a month, second-year offensive lineman Matt Skura went from a guy I thought might not make the team to the teams top reserve at three positions. Im not sure the Ravens have seen enough in fullbacks Lorenzo Taliaferro or Ricky Ortiz to feel comfortable with either as the lead blocker in a key fourth-and-short situation. At least, not yet. Every time an NFL team loses a member of its front seven to a season-ending or significant injury, as the Detroit Lions recently did, I picture Ravens officials poring over that teams roster to see whether they have any excess offensive linemen who might intrigue them in a potential trade.

jeff.zrebiec@baltsun.com

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On the cutting edge of chemistry – UCI News

UCI graduate student Cory Windorff could have studied abroad for a year in Bangkok, Barcelona or Buenos Aires. Instead, he chose an austere outpost at the Los Alamos National Laboratory near Santa Fe, New Mexico. What the location lacked in culture and amenities, it more than made up for in historical significance, and it allowed the young researcher to play a central role in a groundbreaking scientific discovery.

In 2015, Windorff went to Los Alamos with the support of UCI and a Science Graduate Student Research Fellowship from the U.S. Department of Energy. While there, he served as a key member of a team of chemists that uncovered a previously unknown oxidation state of plutonium, the highly radioactive, synthetic element used in nuclear power plants and weaponry.

Chemists are generally aware of the applications of plutonium and have known the available oxidation states since it was first made decades ago, says Windorff, who was awarded a Ph.D. in chemistry this summer. But we still dont fundamentally understand everything we would like to know about plutonium and some of its closely related elements, including all of their oxidation states, apparently. This is important information because oxidation states dictate how elements will react in chemical compounds.

Derived by either adding electrons to the outer shells of atoms or taking them away, oxidation states are fundamental aspects of elements on the periodic table. In nomenclature perplexing to nonchemists, removing electrons results in a plus oxidation state, and adding them produces a minus state. (This has to do with the fact that electrons have a negative charge.) A well-known example is rust, which is iron 3 plus (with three missing electrons) in chemistry terminology. Windorff and his colleagues had a breakthrough when they added an electron to plutonium 3 plus to make plutonium 2 plus.

The charge on a metallic element is a basic quantity in chemistry, says William Evans, UCI professor of chemistry and Windorffs Ph.D. adviser. Oxidation states have been studied extensively by scientists for over 100 years, and many thought that all were well-established.

But Evans and his students have made a habit of toppling these assumptions.

Their focus has largely been on the metals called lanthanides and actinides in the two rows usually shown at the bottom of the periodic table, separate from the main body of elements. In a lab in UCIs Frederick Reines Hall, Evans team developed innovative techniques to tease out new oxidation states for six lanthanide elements and three actinide metals.

Their approach involves combining reagents at low temperatures and working quickly before the materials decompose. Evans students log a lot of hours with their hands inside glove boxes (transparent sealed containers that allow manipulation of substances inside), mixing compounds, and moving samples in and out of cold baths and freezers to keep things chilly and stable.

When a perfect crystal is formed, its loaded onto a diffractometer and X-rayed to tell the researchers exactly where the atoms are in the molecules. You can see your target metal ion surrounded by a group of atoms we call ligands that protect the ion were studying, Evans says.

With the help of Los Alamos actinide chemist Stosh Kozimor, a veteran of the Evans lab, Windorff was able to bring these techniques to the national lab to be used on plutonium; he worked closely with Los Alamos senior scientist Andrew Gaunt.

Cory was a fourth-year graduate student, so he was at his peak in terms of his ability to make these molecules, Evans says. We cant handle plutonium here its too dangerous but they can at Los Alamos, and they wanted to work with us on this project, so what better way than to drop your student into the lab that has the capacity to do this.

He notes that the young chemist not only got to participate in cutting-edge research, but benefited from exposure to the national lab environment.

Windorff agrees: It was an unbelievable experience, being able to rub elbows and shake hands with so many well-known scientists from a field that Im interested in. It was really exciting. When I came back to UCI after a year in Los Alamos, I began to think differently about my research because of what I learned there.

The sojourn also opened his eyes to possible new career paths. I had always thought about a position in academia after I got my Ph.D., Windorff says. Los Alamos made me think about doing research at a national lab, so Ive included a few in my application process.

For Evans, the driving factor is the ongoing quest for fundamental knowledge about the world around us.

Whats special to me is the idea that were finding out things about the elements that we never knew were possible and this after looking closely at them for years and years, he says. As a scientist, you might think, Okay, weve gone about as far as we can go, then somebody finds something completely different that opens up a whole new world. That, to me, is what makes this plutonium oxidation state research a very big deal.

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Revamped offensive lines seeking to build chemistry for Rams, Chargers – OCRegister

When Orlando Franklin was released in May, the Chargers offensive line didnt just lose its most veteran member. It lost something arguably just as crucial to the undefinable, yet indisputably important chemistry of an offensive line.

The Chargers linemen lost their grillmaster.

Nothing about offensive line chemistry is scientific. For how often coaches talk about it or commentators reference it, chemistry up front remains mysterious and ever-changing. Its really hard to quantify, says Chargers left tackle Russell Okung. Its not like there are metrics. But when searching for common ground among comically large and constantly hungry men, a barbecue is a pretty good place to start.

Franklin was the choice host for linemen barbecues in San Diego. His backyard in Poway, north of downtown, was a grilling oasis, with its own barbecue island, not to mention a pool, a firepit, and a giant table perfect for large men to bond over smoky, char-grilled meat.

But now, Franklin and his barbecue island are gone, along with two other starters, King Dunlap and D.J. Fluker, and the Chargers find themselves starting from scratch to conjure chemistry up front. Theyre not alone in that endeavor. The Rams opened camp this season breaking in two new starters, while switching the positions of two others. Only one starting lineman, Rodger Saffold, is in the same spot he occupied last season.

For both lines, an overhaul was certainly in order. Last year, the Rams and Chargers each ranked among the worst teams in the NFL up front, thanks to an unfortunate mix of injuries and incompetence. But while moves were made to bolster the line, rebuilding up front isnt as simple as plugging in high-priced free agents. It takes nuance, trust, and a whole lot of repetition. Even then, things dont always click.

In the majority of sports, everyone is doing their own assignment, says Matt Slauson, one of the Chargers two returning starters up front. But on the O-line, you have five guys who have to move together as one. It takes time to build that.

For years under former coach Jeff Fisher, the Rams strategy was to build chemistry through continuity up front, allowing young linemen to blossom into their positions. With Fishers firing, that formula was rightfully abandoned this offseason.

Instead, the Rams signed a new center and a new left tackle. With new offensive line coach Aaron Kromer in the fold as well, Kromer says his most important job is just figuring out how to make all the pieces fit.

Given the experience of the Rams two new offensive linemen, that shouldnt be as difficult as in years past. When Andrew Whitworth and John Sullivan reported for camp last month, they boasted 19 years of NFL experience between them.

That first day, though, the two seasoned vets joked about still having opening-day jitters. It felt like the first day of school, Sullivan says.

Since, its been seamless. The rest of the Rams offensive line cant stop raving about the impact Whitworth and Sullivan have had on chemistry.

Theyve seen it like Ive seen it, Kromer says. They just fit in right away. Theyre already able to communicate at a higher level.

As the only other veteran member of the Rams offensive line, no one is happier than Saffold, who understands better than most the constant state of flux the Rams line has been in recently. Last year, as injuries tore through the unit and other struggles wore them down, Saffold played nearly every position. Each week, he was the one answering for the Rams issues up front.

Now, things have never felt so settled, so soon. Saffold is rooming with Whitworth at camp. Their kids have already taken a trip together to Legoland. And Whitworth, whose other love is golf, has already offered to teach Saffold how to play. Saffold describes his relationship with the Rams new veteran linemen as almost telepathic.

That certainly bodes well for an offensive line that nearly got its young quarterback killed last season. Jared Goff was sacked 26 times in seven starts during his rookie season, a rate higher than any other quarterback in the NFL.

So Goff wasted no time this season trying to build the groups bond. The first week the team was together, he treated the quarterbacks and linemen to a steak dinner at Mastros in Thousand Oaks. He understands whats at stake, Whitworth says.

Still, there are kinks to be worked out, which only time together and not a smorgasbord of meat can fix. As they prepare to take on the Cowboys on Saturday, the Rams still havent solved the right side of their line. In the offseason, Rob Havenstein moved inside to right guard and Jamon Brown kicked out to right tackle a move that seemed permanent, at the time. But the two young linemen have already switched back, begging questions of the Rams plans on that side.

Havenstein contends hes more comfortable at right tackle. But hes determined to fit in either spot. Even if it isnt the simple.

Not everything is going to be perfect all the time, Rams right tackle Rob Havenstein says, but it really comes down to knowing that the guy next to you is going to have your back, no matter what.

Nowhere else in football are five lumbering giants expected to move in perfect concert. One lineman out of position can disrupt an entire lines rhythm, and each individual mistake reflects poorly on the whole. At no other position is trust as paramount.

When Slauson was a rookie in 2010, thrust into a starting role on a dominant Jets offensive line, he worked tirelessly to earn that trust. Most days, he stayed quiet, hoping to glean as much as he could from the veterans next to him. When those veterans poked and prodded him which they did often he had to earn their trust another way. As their punching bag. You cannot have soft skin as an offensive lineman, Slauson says.

Dan Feeney has tried to follow Slausons example. A third-round rookie, Feeney is one of several Chargers linemen fighting to fit into an open position up front. After fellow rookie Forrest Lamp tore his ACL in camp, leaving right guard up for grabs, Feeney has cycled back and forth from that spot to second-team center. So far, hes kept his head down. In his first training camp, he knows he cant force his way into the picture up front.

You have to let them see you work and make them want to trust you, Feeney says. That comes with a body of work. Theres still a ton I need to correct to earn that chemistry.

For now, as the Chargers continue to experiment along the line, veteran journeyman Kenny Wiggins remains the de facto starter at right guard. Wiggins may not seem like the obvious fit for a team desperate to improve up front. He was an undrafted free agent, with just nine starts currently to his name. On two of his three teams, he never saw the field.

What he does have going for him is three seasons of trust earned on the Chargers line. That, and one other thing.

Hes a heck of a griller and smoker, Slauson says.

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Revamped offensive lines seeking to build chemistry for Rams, Chargers - OCRegister

Why we should all embrace gene editing in human embryos – The Hill (blog)

The first reportof gene editing in viable human embryos performed in the United Stateshas beenpublished. The landmark study demonstrates that gene editing technology can successfully repair faulty genes in the human germline a scientific term that refers to sperm or egg cells, zygotes, and embryos.

Correcting gene mutations in the germline is powerful because any such modifications are inherited by subsequent generations in a fixed, self-perpetuating configuration. To many, this represents the Holy Grail of modern medicine.

Germline editing contrasts gene therapy and other methods that target somatic cells all of the body's non-reproductive, differentiated cells. An individual whose somatic cells have been corrected at a specific gene cannot produce offspring that carry the correction.

The ability to edit genes at the germline level brings immense prospects for human health and welfare. Clinical applications that have only ever existed in science fiction are now within the realm of reality. Scientists have developed basic tools that may soon be used to prevent a myriad of debilitating and fatal genetic diseases including Cystic Fibrosis, Tay-Sachs, certain types of cancer, and hereditary forms of Parkinson's Disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), and Alzheimer's Disease.

Despite the vast potential for good, gene editing for clinical purposes is controversial. Jennifer Doudna, a gene editing pioneer, stated she is "uncomfortable" with the clinical applications of the technology. She and others have previously argued for a moratorium on germline editing citing unknown risks, safety, and efficacy concerns.

However, the latest germline editing report suggests that many of the concerns against future use of gene editing technologies for gene repair in human embryos may be premature and overstated. The study sought to correct a mutated version of the MYBPC3 gene, which causes hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a heritable disease that leads to sudden cardiac failure, often in young athletes.

The study revealed that co-injecting the CRISPRCas9 system and sperm carrying the faulty MYBPC3 into healthy donor eggs corrected the pathogenic mutation. Importantly, the researchers overcame many of the problems associated with editing of human embryos that Chinese teams have experienced since 2015.

By injecting the gene editing system before the first cell division, the researchers discovered that mosaicism a characteristic of embryos that have a mix of edited and unedited cells could be avoided. This strategy led to highly precise and accurate editing, as evidenced by the lack of unintended off-target mutations in the embryos' genomes.

Progress aside, germline editing is not yet ready for primetime. Further research and considerable technology optimization are essential prerequisites for clinical use. Laws that prohibit clinical trials may be reconsidered, in due course, as the technology develops. That all takes time.

Researchers know this. Unfortunately, scientific progress is frequently susceptible to sensationalism.

Unjustified debates concerning germline editing often conjure up eugenics. Alluring and frivolous claims that reproductive technologies will inevitably be used to create tall, beautiful, superhuman geniuses with superb athletic abilities circulate ad nauseam. The myth of "designer babies" has become an emblem of misinformation.

Never mind that the quest to uncover specific intelligence gene(s) has proven to be an exercise in futility. Research shows that, while heritable, highly polygenic traits those determined by multiple genesare often determined by the collective contribution of hundreds of genes. For instance, hundreds of genetic variants in at least 180 genetic loci have been reported to influence height in humans.

Knowledge concerning the genetics of complex polygenic traits is vastly incomplete. The notion that scientists can tinker with a few genes let alone hundreds of them simultaneously, and know precisely how such manipulation will affect an individual is simply preposterous at this time. And it will likely remain so during our lifetimes.

That scientific fact favors gradual and thoughtful measures including legislation and policymakingto address actual concerns raised by germline editing. Entertaining dubious hypotheticals is a dangerous endeavor. And seeking to ban a technology over far-fetched contingencies is bad policy.

So be skeptical when encountering views that aver humans are entering a Brave New World. Be skeptical when scientific progress is reduced to a Frankenstein-like fable engineered to pollute thoughtful debate. The designer baby canard must be confronted.

We are indeed entering a new exciting world. One in which human ingenuity can and will be used to eradicate disease and suffering by pushing the boundaries of knowledge.

We should all embrace this momentous time in human history.

Paul Enrquez is a lawyer and scientist. His work focuses on the intersection of science and law and has been featured in legal and scientific journals. He explores gene editing as it relates to eugenics and the genetics of human intelligence in his recently published article "Genome Editing and the Jurisprudence of Scientific Empiricism."

The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the views of The Hill.

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Why we should all embrace gene editing in human embryos - The Hill (blog)

The Doctor Is In: Living with Chronic Pain – Fox 2 Detroit

Content provided and sponsored by Beaumont Health

The National Institutes of Health estimates more than 25 million people in the United States live with chronic pain. If you've experienced pain every day for the past three months, you have chronic pain. It's the most common cause of long-term disability, according to the NIH.It can rob you from doing the most basic things, like dining out, shopping or even leaving your house. So what can you do? And where can you find relief?

Beaumont Health is offering a free clinic Wednesday, August 23rd to help those with chronic pain. The interactive program will explore pain science and self-management techniques including strategies from integrative medicine, behavioral health and physical and occupational therapy. During the event, participants will set personal goals to better manage their pain. Registration is required.

Living with Chronic Pain: A free, interactive workshop to help you live a meaningful life.

Beaumont/ Troy

Moceri Learning CenterWednesday, Aug. 236:30 - 8:30 p.mRegistration is required online or by phone(800) 633-7377

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The Doctor Is In: Living with Chronic Pain - Fox 2 Detroit

Home [www.esptnet.eu]

(April 14, 2017)

Dear ESPT member,First of all, I would like to thank you for your continued support of the European Society for Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Therapy (ESPT). With this email, I would like to update you on the activities of ESPT, and inform you about interactions with you as members regarding the direction and strategies of our society. The ESPT Board has been strengthened in October 2016 by Dr .Sanja Stankovic (Belgrade, Serbia) and Csilla Sipeky (Turku, Finland). Sanja took over the general secretariat from Janja Marc, whereas Ingolf Cascorbi (Kiel, Germany) took over the treasurer position from Sofia Siest. Janja Marc has taken over the Educational Division activities from Vangelis Manolopoulos. The Division Scientific Research and Clinical Implementation will be split in two individual Divisions, with Ron van Schaik (NL) leading the Clinical Implementation Division, collaborating with the European Pharmacogenetic Implementation Consortium (www.eu-pic.net) whereas Marc Ansari (CH) will chair the Research Division. ESPT has now a new Executive office, located in Milan, giving us the opportunity to professionalize our society as well as having a physical headquarter for meetings. Address: ESPT Executive Office, Via Carlo Farini 81, 20159 Milano, ItalyThe ESPT society itself will maintain its main registration in France. As ESPT, have been active in 2017 in setting up and/or extending collaborations with the Finnish National Society for Pharmacogenetics , the Turkish Society for Pharmacogenetics and the Serbian Society for Pharmacogenetics. ESPT has been present at the CPIC meeting in Washington DC (March 15), the ASCPT Annual meeting (Washington DC, March 16-18) and the UK Pharmacogenomics & Stratified Medicine Network Meeting (March 23) in London, UK.The preparations for the ESPT Annual Meeting 2017 (Oct 4-7) in Catania, Sicily, are in full progress. At this moment, 90% of the invited speakers have confirmed. It is expected that registration will start in 6 weeks. Already, we received a lot of positive reactions to this meeting. Also, the ESPT General Assembly will take place in Catania. More information will follow shortly. In the next months, ESPT will be present at the QLAC meeting in Belgrade (April 19-21), the Global Genomic Medicine Alliance meeting (Athens, April 27-29) , the WPA Interzonal congress in Vilnius, Lithuania (May 4-6), the Pharmaceutical World Congress in Stockholm (May 21-24) and the Human Genome Variation Society meeting (Copenhagen, May 26). Hope this update will give you more insight in the developments ongoing!Kindest regards,

The Society

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Genomic Medicine Has Entered the Building – Hospitals & Health Networks

After years of fanfare and a few false starts, the era of genomic medicine has finally arrived.

Across the country, thousands of patients are being treated, or having their treatment changed, based on information gleaned from their genome. Its a revolution that has been promised since the human genome was first published in 2001. But making it real required advances in information technologyinfrastructure and a precipitous drop in price.

Today, the cost of whole exome sequencing, which reveals the entire protein-coding portion of DNA, is now roughly equivalent to an MRI exam in many parts of the country, says Louanne Hudgins, M.D., president of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and director of perinatal genetics at Lucile Packard Children'sHospital Stanford, Palo Alto, Calif.

Genomic sequencing is a tool like any other tool in medicine, and its a noninvasive tool that continues to provide useful information for years after it is performed, she says.

Nowhere is this genomic transformation more apparent than in the realm of cancer treatment.

Companies like Menlo Park, Calif.-based Grail Inc. are forging ahead with large-scale genomic sequencing projects in collaboration with both academic medical centers and community health systems. Grails Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas study aims to identify genomic fingerprints shed from tumors that can be identified in a blood sample. The goal is to help identifycancers early when they are more treatable and to match a patients tumors to individualized treatment.

We are finding great enthusiasmas people want to participate in this effort, both patients and physicians, says Mark Lee, M.D., a practicing oncologist at Stanford and head of clinical development and medical affairs at Grail. Right now, he says, health systems and patients have an opportunity to participate in shaping the future of this genome-based medicine.

Supporting article:Maine Genomics Project Rethinks Cancer Care

Backed by investing giants like Amazon and Bill Gates, Grail has partnered with the Mayo Clinic, the Cleveland Clinic, the U.S. Oncology Networkand others to collect de-identified data from consenting patients for large-scale genomic studies.

And they have lots of company. The biotech company Regeneron has partnered with Pennsylvania-based Geisinger Health System to enroll interested patients in a project dubbed MyCode Community Health Initiative. A discovery-focused initiative, MyCode is also using genomic data to guide treatment decisions today. Currently, the project has enrolled more than 150,000 consenting patients and has returned what are considered actionable results to 340 patients and providersand counting.

For example, MyCode participant Barbara Barnes chose to have her reproductive organs removed after an analysis of her DNA determined that she was at increased risk for developing breast and ovarian cancer. The surgeryrevealed that she already had a fallopian tube tumor that required treatment, and the early intervention may have saved her life. She shared her story in a Facebook video produced by Geisinger.

While anecdotal success stories provide a taste of whats possible, the Geisinger-Regeneron collaboration is aimed more toward matching genotypes with treatment on a population level, and that effort is starting to yield results.

In July, the group published a report in the New England Journal of Medicine describing a variant of the gene ANGPTL3 associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease detected in some MyCode participants. The gene variant codes for a protein that seems to lower cholesterol, and the company has developed a targeted treatment, evinacumab, that mimics the action of this protein. Evinacumab earned breakthrough therapy designation by the Food and Drug Administrationin April and is now in Phase 3 clinical trials for patients with an inherited tendency that manifests early in life to have high cholesterol levels, leading to deadly cardiovascular disease.

Another goal of Geisingers population-based study, says Andy Faucett, a principal investigator of MyCode and genomics researcher at Geisinger, is to determine how to scale the program and make it possible for more health systems to implement genomic screening for their patients.

We probably have a health system a week call us and ask us for help [setting up a genomics program], he says. We think its something that should be offered to every patient.

Genomic medicine has advanced to the point that genes and their variants now can be targets for drug treatments. Case in point: In May, the FDA approved pembrolizumab (Keytruda) to treat any unresectable or metastatic solid tumor with a specific genetic biomarker, irrespective of its location in the body.

This is an important first for the cancer community, Richard Pazdur, M.D., director of the FDA's Oncology Center of Excellence and acting director of the Office of Hematology and Oncology Products in the FDAs Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in a statement made at the time of the approval. We have now approved a drug based on a tumors biomarker without regard to the tumors original location.

Clinical trials matching genomic markers with targeted treatment are well underway and are only expected to increase, making identification of genomic targets an essential part of care.

Targeted therapies got another advance in July when an advisory panel convened by the FDA gave its unanimous recommendation for approval of the first gene-based medical treatment in the U.S. Chimeric antigen receptor T, or CAR-T,cell therapy, expected to be approved in November for a particularly aggressive form of leukemia, is the first in a wave of living drugs engineered to seek out and destroy cancerous tumors.

CAR-T cell therapy represents the culmination of decades of research to identify genetic features that are unique to each specific form of cancer that can be targeted by the immune system. The approach, coaxing a patients own immune system to recognize and attack cancerous cells, also delivers on the promise of personalized medicine, as T cells are harvested from each patient, re-engineered to recognize and attack cancer, and returned to the patient.

In the case of Novartis CTL019, the treatment on the cusp of FDA approval, complete response rates in clinical trials for acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients whohad relapsed despite multiple conventional treatments, reached 80-90%.

Physician-scientists like Brian Till of Seattles Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, who has been working on CAR-T for years but was not involved in the development of CTL019, say these early results are encouraging.

We have enough data right now to be optimistic that this could become standard of care for some cancers, says Till.

He quickly added that there will likely always be a role for chemotherapy or other standard treatments and that CAR-T will probably be limited in its early days to centers that have experience managing potential toxicities. But, he added, CAR-T has the potential to be given as an outpatient treatment with careful management of side effects.

Many questions remain about whether it makes sense for healthy people to learn the secrets hidden in their DNA, but those concerns are likely to be overshadowed by a cavalcade of genomic sequencing projects and targeted therapies now hitting clinics nationwide. Simply put, genomic sequencing will be part of standard care within the next decade.

In the realm of rare-disease diagnoses and treatment, genomics already has been transformative. As recently as five years ago, patients with myriad vague symptoms, mostly infants and children, could bounce from doctor to doctor and invasive procedure to invasive procedure without ever receiving a definitive diagnosis. While some disorders still do evade diagnosis, whole genome sequencing has dramatically reduced that number.

Our ability to diagnose genetic conditions has improved dramatically, says Hudgins. And we are gaining a much better understanding of the biology behind these genetic changes. Because of these advances, therapy and management of these diseases are much improved. So the idea that there is no treatment for genetic disorders is just not true anymore.

The speed of DNA sequencing and analysis now permits near real-time diagnosis, moving it into the clinical workflow.

At Rady Childrens HospitalSan Diego, an array of Illumina sequencing machines churns through clinical samples in as few as 37 hours, according to Stephen Kingsmore, M.D., director of its Institute forGenomic Medicine.

The rapid sequence analysis has resulted in almost half of patients receiving a genomic diagnosis, while 80 percent had their care altered as a result of sequencing.

Kingsmore is consulting with a dozen other childrens hospitals that want to offer real-time genomic testing to their patients within the next year. Every hospital should have access to rapid sequencing and analysis within a few years, he says.

For prospective parents, prenatal and perinatal diagnosis has entered a new realm as well.

Cell-free DNA prenatal screening has dramatically decreased the number of invasive procedures such as amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling that pregnant women undergo, Hudgins says. In the last few years, it has decreased fivefold in many areas of the U.S.

Even the granddaddy of all genomic medicine, gene therapy, is enjoying a renaissance. Early efforts to treat disease by replacing defective genes suffered many setbacks over the years, mainly due to the difficulty of efficiently delivering genes to affected tissues and organs. But next-generation modified viral delivery systems have shown they can get the job done safely and efficiently.

Philadelphia-based Spark Therapeutics' biologics license application for voretigene neparvovec (Luxturna)for inherited retinal disease has been accepted for review by the FDA with a decision expected early next year. The experimental treatment of 31 patients was the first successful randomized, controlled Phase 3gene therapy clinical trial, leading to FDA orphan drug designation in July.

Spark is one of several companies developing gene-based treatment for vision loss in the U.S. and Europe.

Similarly, Bluebird Bio Inc.'s gene-therapy treatment for thalassemia and sickle cell disease has shown promise. Results presented at the European Hematology Association meeting in Vienna in June suggested that a child treated for severe sickle cell disease in France might have been cured.

The company is running clinical trials to treat severe sickle cell disease at six hospitals in the U.S., including the Medical University of South Carolina. Julie Kanter, M.D., director of sickle cell research at MUSC and a primary investigator on the U.S. trial, says the new generation of gene-delivery systems is more efficient with fewer side effects.

I think weve made incredible headway and we are going to see some great things coming, she says.

Amid tumbling genomic sequencing costs, more people are having their DNA sequenced to match an underlying genetic defect withan increasing variety of targeted treatment options. From an estimated 1,000 genetic tests available only five years ago, the field has exploded to more than 52,000 available in the U.S., and that number grows daily. To find out more about what's out there, visit the National Center for Biotechnology Information's Genetic Testing Registry website at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gtr.

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Genomic Medicine Has Entered the Building - Hospitals & Health Networks

CRISPR and the Ethics of Human Embryo Research – Foreign Affairs

News that U.S. scientists led by Oregon Health and Sciences University biologist Shoukrat Mitalipov have used the gene-editing technique known as CRISPR to modify the DNA of human embryos has led to renewed debate over human genetic engineering. Although scientists in China and the United Kingdom have already used gene editing on human embryos, the announcement that the research is now being done in the United States makes a U.S. policy response all the more urgent.

The scientists created 131 embryos that carried a genetic mutation that causes hypertrophic cardiomyopathya condition that can lead to sudden and unexpected heart attacks but has few other symptomsand attempted to correct the mutation in 112 of them (leaving 19 as unmodified controls).By injecting the CRISPR complex together with the sperm cells that carried the mutation, rather than injecting CRISPR into already fertilized embryos, the scientists were able to successfully correct the mutated genes in 72 percent of the embryos.Whether the embryos were successfully or unsuccessfully treated, all were destroyed after the researchers were finished with the study.

Much of the debate over CRISPR has been framed around concerns over the creation of so-called designer babieschildren genetically engineered to possess desirable traits that will then be passed on to subsequent generations. Some science writers and journalists have tried to downplay these concerns by noting that the gene editing was done only for basic research, rather than as an attempt to create a genetically engineered human. Writing in The New York Times, Pam Belluck argued that even if scientists do modify the genes of human embryos, fears that embryo modification could allow parents to custom order a baby with Lin-Manuel Mirandas imagination or Usain Bolts speed are closer to science fiction than science.

Those downplaying concerns also argue that preexisting practices such as the abortion of fetuses diagnosed with Down syndrome or the selective discarding of embryos diagnosed with genetic disease through preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) are exactly the reason gene-editing

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CRISPR and the Ethics of Human Embryo Research - Foreign Affairs

Please don’t edit me out – The Washington Post – Washington Post

By Rebecca Cokley By Rebecca Cokley August 10

Rebecca Cokley is former executive director of the National Council on Disability. She served in the Obama administration from 2009 to 2017.

Its ironic that news of a breakthrough in human gene editing was released on July 26. That was the 27th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the landmark civil rights legislation intended to remedy centuries of discrimination against 57 million disabled Americans. And yet the announcement served as another reminder that there is still much desire to put those rendered undesirable in our place.

Nearly 1 out of every 5 people in this country has a disability. What would it mean for society to render such a large group of people unfit for the human germline? Stories about genetic editing typically focus on progress and remediation, but they often ignore the voice of one key group: the people whose genes would be edited.

Thats my voice. I have achondroplasia, the most common form of dwarfism, which has affected my family for three generations. Im also a woman and a mother the people most likely to be affected by human genetic editing.

I remember clearly when John Wasmuth discovered fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 in 1994. He was searching for the Down syndrome gene and found us. I remember my mothers horrified reaction when she heard the news. And I remember watching other adult little people react in fear while average-height parents cheered it as progress.

How, if you are an average-height parent, do you explain to children whom youve spent years telling are beautiful the way they are, that if you could change them fix them in a minute you would?

People with disabilities have always played pivotal roles in society. People with dwarfism were hired as engineers to work in the engines of 747 jets. Deaf scientists Henrietta Swan Leavitt and Annie Jump Cannon created the field of astrophysics. And Dan Harmon, who has a form of Aspergers, makes us laugh with TV shows such as Community.

I am who I am because I have dwarfism. Dwarfs share a rich culture, as do most disability groups. We have traditions, common language and histories rich in charismatic ancestors. I can honestly say that I may not have been able to work in the White House doing diversity recruitment for President Barack Obama had I not been born a little person. It allowed me to understand discrimination, isolation and societys lowered expectations.

While non-disabled people fear a prenatal diagnosis of disability, disabled people think of the possibilities. How rich would our society be if we all did this? What if that child with osteogenesis imperfecta becomes a world-changing architect because they think differently about how the world is set up due to their disability?

Now think about the message that societys fear of the deviant that boogeyman of imperfection says to disabled people: We dont want you here. Were actively working to make sure that people like you dont exist because we think we know whats best for you. This is ableism. Its denying us our personhood and our right to exist because we dont fit societys ideals.

Proponents of genetic engineering deliberately use vague language, such as prevention of serious diseases, leading many people with disabilities to ask what, in fact, is a serious disease. Where is the line between what society perceives to be a horrible genetic mutation and someones culture?

We cannot look at this breakthrough without looking at the context. In times of economic and political uncertainty as we saw with the austerity measures that swept Europe in the past several years disability is often stigmatized in an attempt to cut costs. We can trace this historically to the growth of the eugenics movement in the 1920s.

Too often the media and society frame people with disabilities as takers, beggars and unworthy cost drivers for the rest of the public. Most recently, The Post published an article on the costs associated with people receiving Social Security Disability payments. These portrayals contribute to the myth of the Medicaid mama, reminiscent of the damaging welfare queen rhetoric of the Reagan era.

Such ableism adds to the notion that people with disabilities do not add to the fabric of society; that as lesser than sciences definition of what is normal, we have nothing to contribute; that our fight for equality is not as valid as other movements because with the right innovation, medicine could fix us.

Let us not forget that disabled Americans led the charge to save the Affordable Care Act for all Americans last month. It remains critical that we drive decisions about the future of disabled people and our health care. Many of us see our disabilities as a rich and diverse culture, many of us want to pass that culture down to our children through our genes, and many of us see no reason not to. We should have that right.

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Please don't edit me out - The Washington Post - Washington Post

Northwestern Memorial Hospital | Chicago, IL …

Northwestern Memorial Hospital 251 E. Huron St. Chicago IL 60611 312.926.2000 312.926.6363 Northwestern Memorial Hospital is an academic medical center in the heart of downtown Chicago with physicians, surgeons and caregivers representing nearly every medical specialty. Northwestern Memorial enjoys a teaching and service partnership withNorthwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, an integration that provides patients access to leading-edge clinical trials and fosters an environment of world-class patient care, academic inquiry and innovative research.

A number of world- and nationally-renowned physicians, surgeons and specialists practice at Northwestern Memorial andU.S. News & World Report ranked the hospital among the top 25 in the nation in:

The downtown medical campus includes Prentice Womens Hospital, the Feinberg Pavilion, the Galter Pavilion, the Olson Pavilion, the Arkes Family Pavilion,Lavin Family Pavilion and a number of other facilities and physician offices. The campus is designed to be a health and wellness destination and a launch pad for community involvement. In addition to providing medical services, buildings on the campus are also home to restaurants, retail stores and pharmacies that have been handpicked based on community feedback to provide both healthy and local choices. The campus also provides spaces for educational seminars, wellness classes and other events dedicated to the health of the community.

Directions and transportation

Get directions to and from Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Transportation

Find taxis1

The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) provides the City of Chicago and 40 neighboring communities regional transportation by bus and rail ('L' train). For specific connection information, visit the CTA website1or call 888.YOUR.CTA.1

View Metra train maps and schedules.1

Visits from family and friends can bring patients the warmth, comfort, encouragement and support they need to heal. Northwestern Medicine encourages you to spend time with your loved ones and friends during their hospital stay.

Northwestern Memorial Hospital offers several amenities, including flower and gift shops, online services, and food and beverage options, for your convenience.

Visits from family and friends can bring patients the warmth, comfort, encouragement and support they need to heal. Northwestern Medicine encourages you to spend time with your loved ones and friends during their hospital stay.

Local services are available to accommodate your needs during your visit at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Parking is available at discounted rates for patients and visitors of Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Parking garage tickets must be validated each time a car is parked. Without validation, regular garage rates will apply. You can validate your ticket at the following locations.

Feinberg and Galter Pavilion: Customer service desks, first and second floors

Prentice Women's Hospital: Customer service desks, first and second floors

Lavin Family Pavilion: Customer service desks, first and second floors

Physician offices

Arkes Family Pavilion: Customer service desks, first and second floors

Download a parking map for Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

The main parking structure is located at 222 E. Huron St. (Parking A). Located between Superior and Huron streets, the public garage is across from Feinberg and Galter Pavilions. Second-floor bridges connect the garage to both pavilions.

Patients can also park at 259 E. Erie St. (Parking B) and 321 E. Ontario St. (Parking C and D) for the same discounted rate. There is a bridge connecting Parking B and C to the Feinberg Pavilion.

Parking B is located within the Lavin Family Pavilion at 259 E. Erie St.

Parking C and D are located between Erie and Ontario streets. The public garage is located on the southeast corner across from the Feinberg Pavilion.

Valet parking services2 are conveniently offered to patients and their visitors at the front entrance of the Lavin Family Pavilion and Prentice Women's Hospital. Valet rates are:

$23 for up to 7 hours

$33 for 7 to 24 hours

Visitors play an important role in helping patients recover. To maintain a healing environment and enable patients to rest, however, we ask that family and friends honor the following hours and guidelines for visits.

Daily: 9:00 am8:30 pm

To find a patient, please call our Hospital operators at 312.926.2000.

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Northwestern Memorial Hospital | Chicago, IL ...

Anti-Aging Approaches – Harvard Magazine

Decades of research have shown that calorie restriction extends lifespan and delays morbidity in many small, short-lived species: yeast, spiders, and various fish and rodents. In humans, though, the benefits of calorie restriction are still unproven, and probably less straightforward. And how calorie restriction slows the aging process is still not well understood. The interesting thing about calorie restriction is that we used to think the body was in some way slowing down, maybe in the number of heartbeats or production of free radicals, says professor of genetics David Sinclair. But it turns out thats wrong.When were calorie restricting, what were really doing is telling the body that now is not the time to go forth and multiply. Its time to conserve your resources, repair things better, fight free radicals, and repair broken DNA.

Sinclair believes that a compound found in all living cells, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), could be used to mimic these effects in humans without the starvation or decreased reproductive capacity associated with calorie restriction; his human trials of a therapy that could increase NAD levels are due to begin this month. Meanwhile, a similar compound is already being marketed as a supplement by a health start-up with several distinguished scientists (including three Harvard faculty members) on its advisory boardeven though theres still no evidence that the substance works.

Sinclairs approach is based on a broad view that links diseases of age such as cancer, diabetes, Alzheimers, and heart failure to common cellular processes. His lab aims to understand these processes and then use that understanding to develop medical therapies.

Underlying the wide-ranging benefits of calorie restriction, Sinclair explains, are sirtuinsa group of seven genes that appear to be very important in regulating the aging process. These longevity-gene pathways are turned on by changes in lifestyle such as exercise and calorie restriction, he says. They control a variety of protective processestheres hundreds of things that they do, and we still dont know everything. But they protect the chromosomes, they protect stem cells from being lost, they protect cells from senescing. Sirtuins can be activated by a lack of amino acids or of sugar, or through an increase in NAD. (The compounds level in the body declines with age.)

Earlier this year, research from Sinclairs lab showed that feeding mice nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN)a related, precursor compound that the body converts into NADmay slow aging in the animals, mimicking the effects of calorie restriction. We get the same effects as exercise or dieting, he says. The mice are leaner, have more energy. They can run further on a treadmill. That research continues, and is poised to be tested in humans: the first stage of the trials of NMN that he was preparing to begin in August at a Harvard-affiliated hospital will test for NAD increases in the blood; after that, he plans to study NMNs efficacy in treating diseases. Sinclair has been taking the compound himself for about a year. Hes reticent about that, to avoid sounding like a kook, but claims his lipid profile has improved dramatically and he feels generally less fatiguedthough he admits this is not scientific.

There is a cautionary note to sound, says Jeffrey Flier, Walker professor of medicine and former dean of Harvard Medical School (HMS). The NAD precursor already on the market as a dietary supplement, nicotinamide riboside (NR), is sold by New York-based Elysium Health, founded by MIT biologist Leonard Guarente, Ph.D. 79, who played a central role in establishing the link between sirtuins and aging, and was Sinclairs doctoral adviser. The company doesnt make any specific claims about aging prevention (legally, it cant); instead, it promotes its product as the one daily supplement your cells need. Flier has criticized the company for using the names of the highly credentialed scientists on its advisory board (featured prominently on its website) to market an unproven product: Elysium is selling pills [without] evidence that they actually work in humans at all, he says, echoing the strongly worded Boston Globeop-ed he wrote earlier this year condemning the companys marketing scheme.

Sinclair, who co-directs the Glenn Center for the Biology of Aging at HMS, is not linked to Elysiumhis clinical trials go squarely down the traditional medical route, rather than through the loosely regulated supplement industry. Thats the contrast, he says. Im taking a pharmaceutical approach, FDA approval. Still, whatever animal research portends about the potential of NAD (and however alluring the promise of a cure for aging), the history of pharmaceutical development suggests its much too soon to expect any benefits for humans. Often molecules may be helpful to animals in a limited set of studies, but then are not shown to be helpful in humans, Flier warns. There are many, many, many examples of that.

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Anti-Aging Approaches - Harvard Magazine

Introducing CoolSculpting, the World's Most Popular Non-Invasive Fat Reduction Treatment, in Glen Allen, VA at … – PR Web (press release)

Glan Allen,VA (PRWEB) August 15, 2017

Rejuvenate MD is excited to announce the addition of CoolSculpting to their leading selection of services. FDA-cleared CoolSculpting is the worlds most popular non-invasive fat reduction treatment, with more than 4 million people treated and counting. Without surgery or downtime, CoolSculpting can reduce fat cells in almost any area of the body, including double chin, arms, back, waist, abdomen, belly, love handles, thighs, and more.

CoolSculpting uses gentle cooling technology to disable targeted fat cells by freezing them. Once the fat cells are destroyed, they are naturally flushed out by the body in the months following treatment, resulting in a natural-looking, gradual reduction of fat. Once fat cells are destroyed, they can never return, which means CoolSculpting offers long-term results. By maintaining a healthy lifestyle, patients can enjoy slimmer and trimmer contours for years to come.

For more information on CoolSculpting, or to schedule your CoolSculpting consultation, call us today at 804.270.5920.

About Rejuvenate MDRejuvenate MD provides the highest level of expertise and care. With your health and well-being at the center of every service, Rejuvenate MD supports total body health and beauty, providing an extensive selection of leading aesthetic and wellness services.

About Dr. Lonny Green Medical Director Dr. Lonny Green attended Stanford University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in biology. He received his medical degree from UCLA and completed his residency in the Harvard Program in urology. He went on to serve as a registrar at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Australia before moving to Richmond, Virginia.

Dr. Green is a member of numerous organizations, including the Richmond Academy of Medicine, American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, American Academy of Aesthetic Medicine, Obesity Medicine Association, and the American Academy of Facial Esthetics.

He has practiced in Richmond for over 20 years and has been recognized by his peers in Richmond Magazines Top Docs 11 times. Dr. Green sums up his medical outlook as follows: My mission is not just to add years to a patients life, but to also add life to their years.

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Introducing CoolSculpting, the World's Most Popular Non-Invasive Fat Reduction Treatment, in Glen Allen, VA at ... - PR Web (press release)

Stimulating Stem Cells to Encourage Hair Growth – Anti Aging News

Scientists have discovered a new way to stimulate the stem cells in the hair follicle to make hair grow, opening the door to the development of new drugs for those with baldness or alopecia.

UCLA researchers have revealed a new way to activate stem cells within hair follicles that stimulate hair growth. The hope is this discovery will lead the way to the development of drugs that allow bald individuals and those with alopecia to once again grow hair. The research was led by scientists William Lowry and Heather Christofk of UCLA's Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research. The details of theirfindings were recently published in Nature Cell Biology.

About Hair Follicle Stem Cells

Hair follicle stem cells are best described simply as older cells within hair follicles that are present in human skin. They generate hair across an individual's lifetime. These cells are quiescent, meaning they are typically dormant yet they can activate quite rapidly in a new hair cycle when the growth of new hair occurs. The hair follicle stem cells' quiescence is regulated by an array of factors. In some instances, they do not activate and hair loss occurs.

Study Details

The researchers determined the metabolism of hair follicle stem cells is unique from other skin cells. Cellular metabolism occurs when nutrients necessary for cell division break down, create energy and react to their environment. The metabolism process makes use of enzymes that changenutrients to generate metabolites. Hair follicle stem cells gradually consume a form of sugar, known as glucose, from the body's bloodstream. The glucose is processed to gradually create a metabolite known as pyruvate. The cells subsequently send pyruvate to the mitochondria (the portion of the cell that generates energy) or convert pyruvate to another metabolite referred to as lactate.

The researchers blocked the generation of lactate in mice. This prevented the activation of hair follicle stem cells. The UCLA team worked with University of Utah Rutter lab academicians to boost lactate production in mice. This hastened the activation of hair follicle stem cells, causing an increase in the hair cycle. Prior to this, no one knew boosting or decreasing lactate would make an impact on hair follicle stem cells. Now that the researchers have determined how changing lactate production in mice changes hair growth, they can attempt to identify drugs that can be applied to the skin to produce the same effect.

Drugs of Note

The research groups identified a couple drugs that alter hair follicle stem cells in specific ways to boost lactate production when applied to mice skin. One of the drugs, RCGD423, triggers a cell signaling pathway referred to as JAK-Stat that transmits information from outside cells to the cell nucleus. Research shows JAK-Statactivation causes an increase in the generation of lactate. This spurs the activation of hair follicle stem cells and results in faster hair growth.

The second drug of note, UK5099, stops pyruvate from entering mitochondria. This forces the generation of lactate within the hair follicle stem cells, boosting the rate at which hair grows in mice. These experimental drugs were strictly used during pre-clinical testing. They have not been tested in human beings. Nor have these drugs been approved by the Food and Drug Administration as safe or effective for humans.

Why the Study Matters

This study is important as it provides plenty of insight into the many ways in which stem cells are activated. The idea of using drugs to catalyze hair growth by way of hair follicle stem cells is quite promising considering the millions of individuals who are bald or going bald. The researchers' findings will help improve the understanding of how metabolism affects hair growth as well as stem cells.

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Stimulating Stem Cells to Encourage Hair Growth - Anti Aging News

20 Bad Habits That Are Lowering Your Sperm Count – The Daily Meal

Sperm count is kind of a big deal right now in the United States. According to a recent and terrifying study published in the journalHuman Reproduction Update, sperm counts in the United States, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand are all plummeting.

And by plummeting, we mean plummeting. Sperm counts have decreased on average by over 50 percent.

For 20 Bad Habits That Are Lowering Your Sperm Count, click here.

The average cost of in vitro fertilization in the U.S. is currently about $11,000 to $12,000, and the prevalence of these procedures is equally concerning. More women are using in vitro methods of fertilization to get pregnant than ever before; this could in part be due to the high mortality rate of sperm making fertilization less likely through more natural methods.

There are many hypotheses out there about what men could do better to preserve their sperm. They range from reasonable to ridiculous drinking Mountain Dew, for example, has no proven effect on your sperm at all. However, some sperm-massacring habits that at first sound ridiculous are not to be messed with.

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20 Bad Habits That Are Lowering Your Sperm Count - The Daily Meal

Award Supports Novel Methods to Produce Ammonia and Hydrogen – University of Arkansas Newswire

University Relations

Jingyi Chen and Lauren Greenlee

Ammonia is the world's primary raw material for nitrogen-based fertilizer production, but producing it consumes a large amount of energy1- to 2-percent of energy consumption worldwide. The National Science Foundation has awarded $450,000 to Jingyi Chen and Lauren Greenlee to develop alternative processes for producing ammonia. The research will also lead to a more refined and environmentally softer method of producing hydrogen for energy storage and fuel and chemical production.

Chen is an associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, and Greenlee is an assistant professor of chemical engineering in the College of Engineering. Their work supports the NSF's goal of discovering and developing sustainable energy sources.

Conventional processes for ammonia production, primarily the Haber-Bosch thermal catalytic method, rely on hydrocarbon resources for the hydrogen needed to produce ammonia. Chen and Greenlee are developing catalytic electrochemical processes, or "electrolyzers," for an alternative method of producing ammonia and hydrogen. Specifically, they focus on a method called nitrogen reduction reaction, in which nitrogen is combined with water molecules to form ammonia. They are also studying oxygen evolution reaction, during which water splits to oxygen and hydrogen. For both methods, the researchers are seeking efficient, nonprecious-metal nanocatalysts that can operate at ambient temperature rather than the high-temperature conditions required for hydrocarbon-based technologies.

The researchers will characterize iron and nickel nanostructures as bimetal catalysts and evaluate the reactivity and selectivity of these catalysts for both electrochemical processes. They will then use x-ray absorption spectroscopy to develop methods to correlate the structure and composition of the metals with electrocatalytic activity.

The goal of the project is to design a low-cost and better performing catalytic electrolyzer that can be developed for commercial production.

By integrating research and education, the project is designed to increase student participation in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). Chen and Greenlee will recruit students from under-represented groups to participate in the research program. The researchers' findings will be integrated into teaching and curriculum development for the departments of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry and Biochemistry.

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Award Supports Novel Methods to Produce Ammonia and Hydrogen - University of Arkansas Newswire

SIU med school administrator to expand diversity promotion efforts – The State Journal-Register

Dean Olsen Staff Writer @deanolsenSJR

Expanding a program that cultivates high school students interest in the medical profession and helping future doctors avoid unconscious bias are among the goals of a new associate dean at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine.

This job will give me the opportunity to be a collaborator, a change agent, Dr. Wendi Wills El-Amin said.

Wills El-Amin, 46, a family medicine physician, began her new role Aug. 1 as associate dean for equity, diversity and inclusion. She previously was an academic strategist in SIUs department of medical education and treated patients through the department of family medicine.

The Springfield resident succeeded Dr. Wesley Robinson McNeese, who helped launch SIUs office of diversity, multicultural and minority affairs in 2001.

McNeese, 69, who is African-American, is a Christian minister who pastors a Springfield church. He has been hired to work part-time on diversity initiatives throughout the SIU system, including the campuses in Carbondale and Edwardsville.

Wills El-Amin, who also is African American, was born in Pennsylvania and raised in Houston, Texas. She said she will take on McNeeses role of mentoring minority medical students. Among other duties, she also will oversee the Physician Pipeline Preparatory Program, or P4, which McNeese founded in 2009.

The P4 program enrolls Springfield-area high school students interested in potential careers as doctors. The after-school program provides mentors and exposure to the medical field.

Wills El-Amin said she would like to expand the program so parts of it reach students in the elementary and middle-school grades. Many of these young people would benefit from learning that a career as a doctor is a possibility, she said.

Wills El-Amin said her most influential teacher was in third grade a woman she knows today as Mrs. Creole.

She was the teacher who really made me believe I had a lot of potential, El-Amin said.

McNeese and Wills El-Amin come from different backgrounds.

McNeese said he grew up very poor in East St. Louis. He was salutatorian of his high school class and served in the Air Force in Vietnam before working as a journalist in East St. Louis and a paramedic.

He enrolled at Illinois State University at age 30 and later took part in SIUs Medical/Dental Education Preparatory Program (MEDPREP) before earning his medical degree at SIU and working a decade as an emergency room doctor. He now is a father of four. His new title with SIU will be system executive director for diversity initiatives.

Since McNeese began his work on diversity at SIU, the school has definitely made strides in the percentage of minority students enrolling and graduating as doctors, he said.

SIU currently ranks in the top 3 percent to 4 percent of medical schools nationwide when it comes to the percentage of black students graduating, he said, though the share of doctors who are black nationwide 4 percent remains low.

The P4 program, which has served many students who are minorities since its inception, could produce medical students for SIU eventually, McNeese said.

Its a grow-your-own type of idea, he said.

Wills El-Amin, the mother of three girls, grew up the daughter of an internal-medicine physician, but like McNeese, she said she experienced racism as she grew up and as a professional.

She earned a bachelors degree from Hampton University in Virginia and a medical degree from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., before completing a family medicine residency at the University of Texas at Houston.

She joined SIU in 2013 and before that was director of the University of Virginias cancer center disparity initiative and the outreach center on health disparities. She is chairwoman of the womens health section for the National Medical Association, an organization of African American doctors.

Wills El-Amin said she will work to help all SIU medical students, minority and non-minority, understand how the health of their patients can be influenced by factors outside the exam room. Those factors, known as the social determinants of health, can include poverty, education and crime.

She said she also wants to equip medical students with tools to avoid burnout a common problem among the ranks of physicians. Im very invested in cultivating resiliency, she said.

Unconscious biases can shape the way doctors interact with patients, Wills El-Amin said. She said she plans to use data on those biases to shape the curriculum for medical students and create a different approach when theyre dealing with their patients.

The medical schools staff already has received some training on eliminating institutional racism. That training will continue and will promote equitable treatment regardless of race, gender or sexual orientation, Wills El-Amin said.

My approach is more of how to teach people cultural humility, she said.

Dr. Jerry Kruse, dean and provost of the medical school, said McNeese has done an excellent job for the school. Kruse said Wills El-Amin is an accomplished medical educator. She has a focus in her heart on the students.

Wills El-Amins annual salary as associate dean will be $210,000. The salary for McNeeses salary for his new job was unavailable. His salary as a medical school associate dean was $210,000, according to SIU officials.

Contact Dean Olsen: dean.olsen@sj-r.com, 788-1543, twitter.com/DeanOlsenSJR.

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SIU med school administrator to expand diversity promotion efforts - The State Journal-Register