Site Last Updated 1:12 am, Sunday

GLAUCOMA patients may, in the future, be able to replace their daily eye drop regimen for an eye injection once every six months, to treat their condition.

The injection to the eyeball is delivered under local anaesthetic by a doctor, and takes only a minute. It contains millions of tiny capsules of glaucoma medicine which release their contents slowly over time.

This breakthrough procedure was jointly developed by the Singapore Eye Research Institute (SERI) and a team from Nanyang Technological University (NTU). Six patients were involved in the first human trials in February 2013.

We conducted the trial to ensure that the procedure was safe, feasible and workable, said Associate Professor Tina Wong, Senior Consultant Ophthalmologist at the Singapore National Eye Centres (SNEC) Glaucoma Service and head of the Ocular Therapeutics and Drug Delivery Research Group at SERI. Prof Wong developed the injection with the NTU team led by Professor Subbu Venkatraman, Chair of NTU s School of Materials Science and Engineering. The team is ready to conduct larger clinical trials, most likely in the US, and the injection is expected to be commercially available in about two and a half years time.

Prof Subbu said it took four and a half years to move from concept to trial. Nanomedicine is currently being used to treat cancer. The challenge in applying it was to take an existing drug, put it into a nano carrier and control its release over a long period. For glaucoma, the drug had to act for at least three months. We believe this has not been done before.

Prof Wong said: We consider this a major breakthrough, not just technologically but also in the way we can administer medicine, apart from through eye drops, to our patients in the future.

In glaucoma patients, fluid build-up in the eye creates pressure which damages the optic nerve the major cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. In Singapore, about three per cent of people over the age of 50 have it. SNEC sees up to 10,000 glaucoma patients each year.

Prof Wong said eye drops for glaucoma have some drawbacks. Some patients complain of red, itchy eyes and a bitter taste in their throats, and only five to ten per cent of the drug in each drop actually gets into the eye. Theres a lot of wastage, she said.

One of the biggest challenges is patients failure to apply eye drops as prescribed. A study showed that after a year, less than 25 per cent of patients came back to SNEC for more eye drops; after three years, only 10 per cent were using eye drops at all. A US study showed that 10 per cent of glaucoma-resultant blindness was due to incorrect use of eye drops.

Patients main reasons for this were forgetfulness and stopping because they did not understand what the eye drops did. Prof Wong said: This is why we have such bad glaucoma in Singapore. We doctors are prescribing medicine in good faith, but theres still a problem with our patients ability to comply with whats given. Ideally, we want something that will take away the responsibility from them. With sustained drug delivery through nanomedicine such as ours, we can ensure that the medicine is working round the clock. We get a more targeted release of the drug without the side effects of eye drops, and we will be able to manage the disease more effectively.

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Site Last Updated 1:12 am, Sunday

Two-Year Chromebook Users: Your Free Google Drive Space Is Ending Soon

When you buy a Chromebook, youre eligible for a free 100GB upgrade on Google Drive for two years. It has now been almost two years since the first devices with this offer went on sale in Australia, so some people are going to start losing that space shortly. Heres what you need to know.

Its easy to lose track of just when you activated your free storage, so head to the Drive Storage section of your Google account settings to check. Hover the cursor over the pie chart that shows how much space is available and how much has been used. The pop up that appears shows how your space is used and where it all came from its possible you gained more storage from other offers as well. You will be able to see when a storage offer expires, and this is the date you need to keep in mind.

When the expiration date rolls around, your storage limit falls back to where it was before. Your files will not be deleted so dont panic too much but you wont be able to upload any more files until you drop back below the 15GB level.

Ultimately, if you need more space, youre left with two main options.

Buy More Space: It is, of course, possible to pay Google so you retain the storage space youve become used to. At the Drive Storage page, click one of the buttons to sign up for a 100GB or 1TB package, priced at $US1.99 and $US9.99 per month respectively.

Go down this route and theres not need to worry about expiration dates. As long as you keep paying the monthly fee, the storage space is yours.

Take Your Data Elsewhere: You may prefer to save your money, and there are lots of Google Drive alternatives to choose from. In terms of space, it is hard to beat the unlimited storage option from Mega. But if Kim Dotcoms cloud storage doesnt appeal, the likes of Dropbox, Box and OneDrive all have varying amounts of free space that you can distribute your files between. You could even create your own cloud storage with a NAS drive.

Remember, though: if youre moving files away from Google Drive, make sure you have a local copy before you delete them from the cloud. Check your Google Drive account now to see how long you have left.

What Happens To Files When the Google Drive Chromebook Offer Ends? [OMG! Chrome!]

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Two-Year Chromebook Users: Your Free Google Drive Space Is Ending Soon

Tigers Keep Rolling in Swift Current

March 1, 2015 - Western Hockey League (WHL) Medicine Hat Tigers Medicine Hat, AB -- The Medicine Hat Tigers made their way to Swift Current for the final time this season looking to continue their momentum from Friday's victory against Regina. The Tigers were dominate on this night from the opening faceoff to the final buzzer, being rewarded with a 5-1 victory.

The opening frame was all Tigers but it looked like they may have ran into another hot visiting goaltender as Landon Bow was standing tall in net despite fighting the puck a bit, letting out some large rebounds. Medicine Hat would outshoot the Broncos 16-10 in the frame and Nick Schneider who got the start Saturday, was solid through the first 20 minutes. The Tigers would take the early lead as Steven Owre potted his 16th of the season on the power play after Broncos defenseman Jordan Thomson took a bad penalty for roughing. Owre found some quiet ice and Kyle Becker found the centerman in the high slot for the one timer. Medicine Hat took the 1-0 lead into the break.

The middle period did not start the way the Tigers wanted to, as just one minute into the period Jake DeBrusk wristed a shot from the blueline which made it's way past a screened Schneider to tie the game at 1. The push back by the Tigers after the Broncos goal was fierce and the line of Matt Staples, Mark Rassell and Alex Mowbray generated lots of energy for the Tigers on the forecheck and created lots of chances. Medicine Hat's pressure offense led to a goal just past the midway point as Cole Sanford found the scoresheet for the first time in 4 games, his 47th of the season to give the Tabbies a 2-1 lead.

Kyle Burroughs was in a fighting mood this weekend, fresh off a tilt with former teammate Colby Williams, Saturday Burroughs got into fight with Colby Cave after the Broncos forward hit Owre in the middle of the ice. It was a spirited fight between the two veterans which seemed to spark the Tigers more.

Before the buzzer sounded the Tigers headed to the power play and Dryden Hunt made the Broncos pay with his 29th of the season as he banked a puck off a Broncos defender and in. Medicine Hat lead 3-1 after 40 minutes.

The final period saw the Tigers extend the lead to 4-1 just a minute and a half in as Hunt found the back of the net for his 30th of the season. Trevor Cox would record his 3rd assist on the Tigers fifth goal of the night, scored by Kyle Becker. Cox was playing his third game since returning from suspension and extended his point total to 97 on the season. The third period brough lots of grit and physical play after the 5th goal, Medicine Hat answered nicely when David Quenneville got into a fight with Glenn Gawdin after the Broncos forward hit Ty Schultz from behind. The 16 year old held his own in the fight and scored the take down. Medicine Hat would not budge on their four goal lead and would win their second game in a row.

TIGERS FAST FACTS

Trevor Cox recorded his first multi-point game since February 6th with 3 assists Cole Sanford finally found the scoresheet after 4 games of not recording a goal, scored his 47th of the year to pull into the league lead once again Steven Owre has 7 points in his last 10 games since returning from injury Tigers goaltending has only allowed 2 goals on 59 shots over their past 2 games after allowing 9 goals on 58 shots in the previous 2 games

Three Stars of the Game:

1. Dryden Hunt - MH - (2G, 1A)

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Tigers Keep Rolling in Swift Current

Sandoval has a chance to make a major investment

Sunday, March 1, 2015 | 2 a.m.

UNLV is asking the Legislature for $27 million over the next two years to launch a medical school in Southern Nevada, and although supportive, lawmakers implied it is Gov. Brian Sandovals decision. Why? Because Sandovals proposed budget for the medical school calls for only $8.3 million.

The governor should support the request for the multitude of ways the medical school will improve our health care and stimulate the regions economy.

The problem

Las Vegas is the largest metropolitan area in the country without an M.D.-granting, allopathic medical school. Getting the $27 million over two years instead of three would allow the school to shoot for a 2017 opening.

If the governor doesnt sign off on the additional funding, the schools opening would be delayed by a year or more. Thats because if the agency that would accredit our medical school sees Nevada wavering in its support, the agency may lose confidence in our efforts and not want to revisit us for years.

What a delay would mean to health care

Nevada ranks 46th in the nation for number of doctors per capita. We feel that pinch every time we try to make an appointment to see a doctor. Sometimes, we have to leave Las Vegas altogether for specialists who are hard to find.

The UNLV medical school will develop young doctors more prone to complete residencies in Southern Nevada and, in turn, stay here where three-quarters of Nevadans live once they are fully minted. We will grow physician ranks from within.

But more than that, it would lift all areas of heath services, from federal grant money to diagnostics to biomes research and development. A state-led, publicly supported medical school lifts the entire health sector.

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Sandoval has a chance to make a major investment