Scientists find possible new therapy for rare lung disease in children

Researchers at Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center have discovered a new gene and cell therapy that could treat a rare lung disease in children.

In the study, published in the journal Nature, researchers found that transplanting pulmonary macrophages immune cells into the lungs of mice corrected hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (hPAP).

The lung disease is caused by a build-up of surfactant, an oily substance in the air sacs of the lungs, which results in reduced lung function and eventually failure. The condition is the opposite of a common condition in premature babies, whose lungs are at a higher risk of collapsing because their air sacs will not stay open. Children with hPAP, on the other hand, have such high levels of surfactants that the childrens air sacs overinflate, and they drown internally as a result.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 children in the U.S. have hPAP, senior study author Bruce Trapnell, a physician in the division of neonatology and pulmonary biology at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, told FoxNews.com.

The only available therapy for the rare disease whole-lung lavage is a difficult procedure thats invasive, requires anesthesia and involves mechanical ventilation, Trapnell said. For the surgery, doctors must attach a breathing tube to one lung and fill the other with salt water. A few days later, the procedure is repeated on the opposite lung.

Its like trying to wash butter out of a sponge by squirting it with a garden hose, Trapnell said.

Searching for a different type of therapy, researchers studied transplantation of naturally healthy macrophages or gene-corrected macrophages into the lungs of mice with hPAP. The therapy corrected the disease in mice for at least one year and prevented disease-related death.

Researchers are planning clinical trials of macrophage transplantation, but they noted that questions remain. Previous research using bone marrow transplantation was successful in animal models, but failed in human trials.

We have to address how many cells to transfer, and how the human body processes these cells," study co-author Takuji Suzuki, a scientist in the division of neonatology and pulmonary biology at Cincinnati Childrens, told FoxNews.com.

Researchers hope to begin the clinical health study in two to three years.

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Scientists find possible new therapy for rare lung disease in children

Die Zukunft der Kulturpflege und die Wissenverdoppelungskurve (Futurist Redner Gerd Leonhard) – Video


Die Zukunft der Kulturpflege und die Wissenverdoppelungskurve (Futurist Redner Gerd Leonhard)
Note: this is a GERMAN-language video) Dies ist ein kurzer Ausschnitt von meiner Keynote beim Kulturnetzwerk-Treffen des Kantons Aargau (CH), zum Thema Zuku...

By: Gerd Leonhard

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Die Zukunft der Kulturpflege und die Wissenverdoppelungskurve (Futurist Redner Gerd Leonhard) - Video

Global Futurist Jack Uldrich to Keynote at the 2014 Economic Forum

Dallas, TX (PRWEB) October 07, 2014

It has been said, 'The best way to predict your future is to create it.' But creating a plan for the future is no easy task. This year's 2014 Economic Forum, entitled "Creating Tomorrow," is focused on helping credit unions do just that create a tomorrow that will ensure credit unions grow and thrive.

Catalyst engaged Uldrich, back in April, as a keynote speaker at their Accelerating Success Conference in Las Vegas and they have invited him back to their Economic Forum In Dallas to discuss how they can start creating their own futures and, in turn, create success credit unions, that are able to both embrace and cultivate change.

Uldrich says, "Each year information technology is only getting better, faster, and cheaper; and hundreds of millions of new individuals are being drawn into a hyper-connected and networked global economy. The previously unknown ideas and insights of those hundreds of millions of individuals are now being added to the global consciousness, further accelerating change.

"One of the key things I do with my clients and audience members is to challenge them to think about the unthinkable. It is an excellent way to remind ones self to always expect the unexpected. This, in turn, reminds individuals and organizations, like Catalyst, to focus on integrating the principles of flexibility and adaptability into their strategic planning processes. In the future change will be the only constant, and its imperative to always keep this idea top of mind."

Uldrich will draw on materials from his book Foresight 20/20, the second edition of the book will be coming out in November.

Jack Uldrich is a renowned global futurist, independent scholar, sought-after business speaker and best-selling author. His written works have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Forbes and hundreds of other publications around the country. He has also appeared on CNN, MSNBC and National Public Radio.

In addition to speaking on future trends, Uldrich also speaks on emerging technologies, innovation, change management and leadership. He has served as an adviser to Fortune 1000 companies. He is a master at honing in on emerging trends in economics, agriculture energy, education, Internet and communications, science, technology, healthcare, and transportation. In recent months he has addressed the FCCS, AgBank, CoBank, and Wells Fargo, along with Fiatech, Texpers, and the 2014 Verizon Wireless Connected Technology Tour, among others.

Parties interested in learning more about him, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to visit his website. Media wishing to know more about either the event or interviewing Jack as a futurist or trend expert can contact Amy Tomczyk at (651) 343.0660.

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Global Futurist Jack Uldrich to Keynote at the 2014 Economic Forum

PARIS MOTOR SHOW: DETAILED! MORE Shots Of The Show-Stopping Volkswagen XL Sport

While I am the first to admit that I adore ANYTHING with four wheels, I have to say that I rarely become infatuated with an automotive design.

The Volkswagen XL Sport just does it for me.OFFICIAL Paris Motor Show Gallery Sporting a matte blue paint job, the XL Sport to me is a mixture of futurism and aggressive lines. A part of me knows this car is an ode to geekiness, but I don't care if it looks like something Sheldon Cooper from The Big Bang Theory would drive.

Of course I think this vehicle merits a second look that really shows you the nitty gritty of its special features. Scope out the details, below!

OFFICIAL Paris Motor Show Gallery

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PARIS MOTOR SHOW: DETAILED! MORE Shots Of The Show-Stopping Volkswagen XL Sport

A Farewell to Epcot's Norway Ride: How Fake Experiences Shaped My Life

I've never been to Norway. I guess it's supposed to be like Minnesota, but with more fjords and trolls or something. But you know where I have been? Epcot. Which is kind of the same thing. Right?

Yesterday, the Epcot attraction officially known as Maelstrom (more commonly just called "the Norway ride") carried its last visitors. The ride is getting replaced with a new attraction based on the smash hit Disney movie Frozen. I guess because snow. Oh, and vertical integration.

The Norway ride took you through some bizarre version of Norwegian history and mythology. You'd float past audio-animatronic vikings, scary three-headed trolls, and enormous oil rigs. Eventually you'd be dumped into "modern Norway" and an auditorium where you could watch a movie made in the 1980s about how great Norway is.

Epcot nerds all have different opinions on the closing of the Norway ride. Many, like myself, are a bit upset to see a beloved ride from our childhoods close down. Others invoke Walt Disney's famous words about Disneyland (the one in California, since he didn't survive to see the one in Florida built): "Disneyland will never be finished." The implication being that we should never feel bad when a Disney attraction gets a reboot that's what Uncle Walt would've wanted.

Outsiders, if they care at all, are no doubt just happy the Disney-fication of some strange experience is dead. Because Disney's version of Norway was about as representative of the country and its culture as anything else Disney does. Which is to say, not very accurate at all. But does that matter?

The three-headed troll of Maelstrom (circa 1991)

The closing of this ride is causing me to confront a strange aspect of my childhood, and I guess the way that I view the world overall: most of my experiences in life have been hyper-real imitations of the authentic thing. Which isn't so much an existential crisis as the logical conclusion of 20th century consumer capitalism.

As I said, I've never been to Norway, but a quick exploration of 1970s and 80s futurism will show you that this wasn't supposed to matter by now. The past is littered with predictions that the future would be filled with simulated experiences that make geography and history itself irrelevant. You don't need to look much further than the pages of The Futurist magazine or the 1973 film Westworld.

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A Farewell to Epcot's Norway Ride: How Fake Experiences Shaped My Life

Premiere: Napolian & Dro Carey – 'Silicon City'

Cult American label Software has a habit of throwing up fascinating new voices.

Uniting bedroom talents across the globe, the imprint emphasises a communal relationship, with artists on their roster frequently collaborating.

Launching the Mixware series, Software are encouraging their artists to piece together special, intricate mixes featuring old, new and unreleased material. Each Mixware instalment will be available as a free download, alongside a limited cassette issue.

Napolian is next up. The producer has responded with a deft selection, one which intrudes upon left field hip hop while also retaining a love of experimentalism that locates 8-Bit melodies, fluorescent tones and other aural treats.

Clash is able to premiere a new collaboration, which pits Napolian against Dro Carey. Silicon City is gleeful retro-futurism, with those sharpened synths borrowed straight from the Mega Drive era. This isnt some nostalgic trip, though, with the two producers delivering a slumped hip hop beat which could only be summoned in 2014.

Check it out now.

Buy Clash Magazine Get Clash on your mobile, for free:iPhone/Android

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Premiere: Napolian & Dro Carey - 'Silicon City'

Deadline approaches for compensation for NC eugenics claims

By MARTHA WAGGONER, Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. A first deadline for compensation payments to those sterilized under North Carolina's past eugenics program is looming at the end of the month and less than a third of compensation claims have been approved.

Authorities who are reviewing claims say one main reason so few claims have been approved is that a state law setting aside $10 million for the qualifying victims doesn't cover many of those who had been sterilized.

As of Sept. 30, the N.C. Industrial Commission had approved 213 claims for compensation of the 731 claims reviewed, or about 30 percent. The Office of Justice for Sterilization Victims has received another 55 claims that the commission hasn't yet reviewed under the state law, approved in July 2013.

Major reasons for denials which victims can appeal include missing paperwork and a determination someone wasn't sterilized on orders of the Eugenics Board of North Carolina but on orders issued at the county level, said Graham Wilson, spokesman for the state Commerce Department. That department oversees the industrial commission tasked with approving claims.

North Carolina sterilized about 7,600 people whom the state deemed feeble-minded or otherwise undesirable between 1929 and 1974. Wilson noted that compensation is allowed only those sterilized under orders of the state eugenics board.

"It's the way the statute is written," Wilson said. "If counties took it upon themselves to do it under their authority, they do not qualify." Victims can appeal, he said, "but if the documents show the procedure wasn't done under the state authority, they really don't have any case in this process."

Some of the victims were as young as 10 and chosen because they were promiscuous or did not get along with their schoolmates, authorities have said. While most were either forced or coerced into having the procedure, a small number of them chose to be sterilized.

But that's just at the state level.

It's not known how many were sterilized at the county level, said Elizabeth Haddix, senior staff attorney with the UNC Center for Civil Rights, which is representing 40 victims. Of those, just 10 had files from the state board, she noted.

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Deadline approaches for compensation for NC eugenics claims

Why Some Who Have Sterilization Proof Wont Receive Share of $10 Million NC Fund | WUNC

In 2013, North Carolina lawmakers set up a $10 million compensation fund for victims of state-sponsored eugenics. More than 780 people applied, claiming they had been forcibly or coercively sterilized by the state. Now, after an initial review, the state has decided only about 200 of those claims are valid, while more than 500 have come up short. The applicants are either denied outright or are asked for more information.

Eric Mennel reports on individuals whose sterilization claims are being denied by the state.

But we're also now learning that the state's eugenics program - once thought to be managed entirely by the North Carolina Eugenics Board - was actually much bigger. This fact presents problems for many seeking compensation.

Debra Blackmon's Story

In January, 1972, two social workers went to the home of Debra Blackmon. Blackmon was about to turn 14, and was intellectually disabled. It's hard to know exactly what was said, but court and medical documents have some details. They point out that Blackmon was "severely retarded" and had "psychic problems" that made her difficult to manage during menstruation.

The documents say Blackmon and her parents were counseled on the matter, and that it was in Blackmon's best interest that she be sterilized.

Debra Blackmon is 56 years old now. She's sprite and funny. She has a hard time remembering too many of the details, but she remembers that day in Charlotte Memorial Hospital. "My daddy said, 'Please don't hurt [my] baby,' and he was crying," she recalls.

"We didn't find out until recently the extent of the surgery and what they did to her," says Latoya Adams. Adams is Blackmon's niece. She was born the year after Blackmon was sterilized and grew up hearing about it from older family members.

Last year, the General Assembly created a $10 million fund to compensate victims of state-sponsored eugenics, the movement that sterilized thousands of people deemed unfit to have children. Adams knew her aunt had been sterilized, she knew there were social workers involved, she knew a court had ordered the procedure. All the pieces seemed to fit. So, she went looking for documentation.

She came back with the mother lode, documents that told the whole story. There was a court order, and the consent form social workers presented to Blackmon's parents. Adams discovered documents that detailed the entire procedure from pre-op to discharge. The doctor labeled it a "eugenics sterilization." And while it was a relief to have the information, it was also remarkably sad.

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Why Some Who Have Sterilization Proof Wont Receive Share of $10 Million NC Fund | WUNC

Pitts: Fayetteville woman still fights for compensation from state in eugenics case

In July of last year, state lawmakers set aside $10 million to compensate people like Mary English, who were sterilized either without their knowledge or against their will.

The decision was bipartisan and hailed by many as a significant, if belated, way for the state to make up for one of its great moral crimes.

But for English and other victims, getting that money has proven to be difficult. The N.C. Industrial Commission, which evaluates claims, has approved 213 of 751, about one-third, even as the first checks are set to go out by month's end.

Many claimants have been rejected because of a hole in the law, which calls for compensating only those victims who were sterilized by order of the Eugenics Board of North Carolina. That leaves out people sterilized on the order of county officials.

English was 22 and a divorced mother of three in 1972 when she says a Cumberland County doctor sterilized her. She did not find out until another doctor's visit in 1976.

She had been victimized by eugenics, a now-discredited movement that called for stopping "undesirable" people from having children. The poor and disabled were victimized in disproportionate numbers. North Carolina's program lasted from 1929 to 1974, continuing long after most other states had stopped.

English has been outspoken about what happened to her, and she started speaking before any serious talk of compensation. She has appeared before a panel of the General Assembly. She says she knows there are other Fayetteville victims who have applied for compensation, but they have not reached out to her.

"I think they're just embarrassed about it," she says.

In early September, English made her case before the Industrial Commission. A week later, she received a rejection letter, her second.

She points out two lines:

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Pitts: Fayetteville woman still fights for compensation from state in eugenics case