Daily Archives: March 17, 2014

Dimitri & Rose; DNA – Video

Posted: March 17, 2014 at 1:44 pm


Dimitri Rose; DNA
Vampire Academy | AU Starring: Dimitri Belikov, Rose Hathaway. Music: Little Mix -- DNA. WATCH IN HD.

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DNA secrets helping athletes improve

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British runner Jenny Meadows is using a revolutionary DNA test designed to prevent injury and improve her performance ahead of the Commonwealth Games - and a trio of leading European football teams are about to follow her lead.

The test is a brainchild of London-based company DNAFit, which obtains genetic profiles - using a simple mouth swab - to identify genes that make athletes prone to certain injuries. It can also ensure they can tailor a program of training and nutrition to fit their DNA.

Meadows, a world indoor silver medallist in the 800 metres in 2010, became the first athlete to publicly reveal the secrets of her DNA on Monday.

"I only wish I'd had this information years ago," said Meadows, who has discovered she has the gene that makes her prone to the kind of tendon injuries that forced her to miss the London Olympics in 2012.

"To get to the top as an athlete, it takes a combination of hard work, luck and timing. But if I'd have known what my genetic strengths and weaknesses I could have trained more effectively."

Dr. Keith Grimaldi, DNAFit's chief scientific officer, told The Associated Press in a phone interview that two Premier League teams and another leading club in Europe have also commissioned genetic profiles of their players. He said they can't be named for confidentiality reasons.

"The idea of having knowledge of genetic variation is such that we can give personalised advice on training programs and nutrition and also give an idea of any increased risk of tendon injury, if there is any, so that preventative measures can be taken," Grimaldi said.

The DNA test revealed to Meadows that she has an even split of power and endurance, making her ideally suited for 800 metres instead of 400 metres, and that the potential of her sustaining a sports-related soft-tissue injury was high, causing her to make changes to her training schedules that included reducing her running sessions and doing more cardio work on a bike.

It also told her that her recovery times were quicker than average.

In winning the 800 at a meet in Prague last month in 2 minutes, 1.67 seconds, she is among the top six in the world this year and could be one of the favourites for gold in the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

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IBM Watson and New York Genome Center – Video

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IBM Watson and New York Genome Center
Dr. Robert Darnell, President, CEO Scientific Director of the New York Genome Center, explains the goals of the collaboration with IBM to harness IBM Watso...

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RNA-Seq : From A-T – Video

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RNA-Seq : From A-T
If you have utilized or are just considering RNA-Seq for your research, please join us for the first in a series of informational seminars on the application...

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RNA-Seq : From A-T - Video

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Apple Cider Vinegar – ECZEMA A SOLUTION – ALLERGY. www.healthscan.co.uk – Video

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Apple Cider Vinegar - ECZEMA A SOLUTION - ALLERGY. http://www.healthscan.co.uk
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A colonic for clear skin? Experts say that's a load of …

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Health

Meghan Holohan TODAY contributor

1 hour ago

Colonics, the celebrity-endorsed practice, is gaining in popularity among a new group of fans: people seeking clearer skin. But flushing your body with colon hydrotherapy can cause risks that are definitely not pretty, experts warn.

Better skin is one of the main reasons clients request a colonic, says Tracy Piper, owner of The Piper Center for Internal Wellness in New York City. Most of her clients do three sessions in a few weeks with two follow-up maintenance sessions.

Photographer: Comaniciu Dan / Comaniciu Dan

Skin and gut health can sometimes be connected, but theres no evidence that the body processes toxins by pushing them through the skin.

Your skin is your outer mirror so it is telling you what is going on from the inside, Piper says. She claims that hydrotherapy prevents a build up of toxins in the colon from seeping out the skin, adding that if people are constipated, its like pooping through your skin.

A colonic is an enema-like procedure that uses water to flush out the colon, causing bowel movements.

Several years ago, Tammy Texi McLeans skin erupted with plaque psoriasis and eczema. McClean visited a natural health professional in Pittsburgh to start twice-weekly sessions of colonics, along with a new diet. Soon, she noticed that her skin started to clear.

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Psoriasis Special on Arogya Mantra (Epi 13 part 2) – Dr. Chauhan’s TV Show on IBN7 – Video

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Psoriasis Special on Arogya Mantra (Epi 13 part 2) - Dr. Chauhan #39;s TV Show on IBN7
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Believa Natural Intensiv – Die Pflege bei Neurodermitis oder Psoriasis (Schuppenflechte) – Video

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Believa Natural Intensiv - Die Pflege bei Neurodermitis oder Psoriasis (Schuppenflechte)
Klinische Studie belegt Wirksamkeit bei Neurodermitis und Psoriasis (Schuppenflechte). Die therapiebegletende Pflegecreme damit Ihre Haut zur Ruhe kommt. Bel...

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What you need to know about PSORIASIS

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Q: One of the two people from Pangasinan who were reported by a radio-TV network to be afflicted with a flesh-eating disease was actually suffering from psoriasis according to the Department of Health. What is psoriasis? Is it contagious? elena623@gmail.com

A: Psoriasis is an autoimmune disease that primarily affects the skin. It afflicts two to four percent of the population, mainly adults. Although rather common, the disease is little understood by the public.

The typical skin lesions of psoriasis consist of red and well-demarcated patches that are often covered by silvery scales. The lesions can occur anywhere, but usually the skin areas that are affected are those on the elbows, knees, lower back, and buttocks. It is, however, not unusual for lesions to develop on the scalp, genitalia, and even the face. Occasionally, the nails also get involvedthey thicken and deform. As a rule, psoriasis affects only the skin although occasionally, it complicates and produces swelling and pain in some joints (psoriatic arthritis).

In psoriasis, the area of skin involved can vary from a few small spots to nearly complete body coverage. When only small areas are involved, there is usually no accompanying sign or symptom, except for occasional itchiness and soreness. Extensive body coverage, however, is invariably accompanied by itchiness, tenderness, and/or bleeding. The physical discomforts associated with psoriasis are generally tolerable, but the skin rashes are unsightly and often cause embarrassment and psychological distress.

Psoriasis is not an infection, thus it is not contagious. It is caused by a malfunction of the bodys immune system that results in the proliferation and abnormal maturation of the cells of the skin, that is accompanied by inflammation and abnormalities of the blood vessels. Psoriasis runs in families and researchers have already identified genes that are linked to the disease.

Once it has appeared, psoriasis persists for life, although in most people, appearance of the skin lesions(called a flare-up) is followed by a prolonged period of remission that last for months to years. Flare ups can be precipitated by intake of drugs like lithium and beta-blockers (used in hypertension), stress, alcohol, injury or physical irritation of the skin and upper respiratory tract infection, but some occur spontaneously. Sunburn exacerbates psoriasis, although moderate exposure to sun is beneficial.

There is no cure for psoriasis yet, but it is controllable. A variety of treatment regimens that relieve the active skin lesions are available, but none is consistently effective in inducing long-term remissions. Furthermore, a regimen that works in one person may have little effect in another. Often, a regimen that works is found only after a series of trial and error attempts.

In general, initial treatment of psoriasis involves application of a topical medicine, which could be a steroid preparation, retinoid (synthetic vitamin A), dithranol, calcipotriol (a vitamin D analog), anthralin, or coal tar.

For extensive psoriasis and those unresponsive to topical treatment, exposure of the affected areas to ultraviolet (UV) light with or without topical or oral Psoralen is employed.

Flare ups that are refractory to topical and UV therapy necessitate use of systemic drugsnonbiologics and biologicsthat are given by injection or IV infusion. Nonbiologics drugs such as cyclosporine and methotrexate suppress the immune system in general while biologics such as infliximab, adalimumab, and golimumab are protein-based drugs derived from living cells cultured in a laboratory that target specific agents of the immune system that contribute to psoriasis.

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New gene-scanning approach finds link to heart attack risk 'hiding in plain sight'

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As scanning genomes for disease-related gene variations becomes more commonplace, scientists are pinpointing gene variations that change the way proteins function. Using this approach, a new study found a previously unknown gene variation that appears to make blood lipid levels healthier in humans and reduce risk of heart attacks.

The study researchers, from the University of Michigan and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, report their findings in Nature Genetics. They hope the discovery will lead to new ways of testing or treating patients with high cholesterol and other lipid disorders.

They explain that by looking at the genetic code differently - such as looking for how it influences the way proteins behave - they found the gene hiding in plain sight in previous searches for cardiovascular risk genes.

Senior author Cristen Willer, assistant professor of Internal Medicine, Human Genetics and Computational Medicine & Bioinformatics at the University of Michigan Medical School, says:

"While genetic studies that focused on common variations may explain as much as 30% of the genetic component of lipid disorders, we still don't know where the rest of the genetic risk comes from. This approach of focusing on protein-changing variation may help us zero in on new genes faster."

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