Daily Archives: April 25, 2014

Eczema Remedies to Live a Normal Life Naturally – Video

Posted: April 25, 2014 at 1:43 pm


Eczema Remedies to Live a Normal Life Naturally
http://www.VanishEczema.net Eczema is an inflammatory disease of the skin that affects a lot of person worldwide. Everyone can be affect by eczema. Eczema ca...

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Different Practical and Useful Eczema Treatments – Video

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Different Practical and Useful Eczema Treatments
http://www.VanishEczema.net Eczema is an inflammatory disease of the skin that affects a lot of person worldwide. Everyone can be affect by eczema. Eczema ca...

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Cochlear Implant Also Uses Gene Therapy to Improve Hearing

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The electrodes in a cochlear implant can be used to direct gene therapy and regrow neurons.

Growth factor: The cochlear nerve regenerates after gene therapy (top) versus the untreated cochlea from the same animal (bottom).

Researchers have demonstrated a new way to restore lost hearing: with a cochlear implant that helps the auditory nerve regenerate by delivering gene therapy.

The researchers behind the work are investigating whether electrode-triggered gene therapy could improve other machine-body connectionsfor example, the deep-brain stimulation probes that are used to treat Parkinsons disease, or retinal prosthetics.

More than 300,000 people worldwide have cochlear implants. The devices are implanted in patients who are profoundly deaf, having lost most or all of the ears hair cells, which detect sound waves through mechanical vibrations, and convert those vibrations into electrical signals that are picked up by neurons in the auditory nerve and passed along to the brain. Cochlear implants use up to 22 platinum electrodes to stimulate the auditory nerve; the devices make a tremendous difference for people but they restore only a fraction of normal hearing.

Cochlear implants are very effective for picking up speech, but they struggle to reproduce pitch, spectral range, and dynamics, says Gary Housley, a neuroscientist at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, who led development of the new implant.

Cyborg cavy: An Xray image shows the cochlear implant in the left ear of a guinea pig.

When the ears hair cells degrade and die, the associated neurons also degrade and shrink back into the cochlea. So theres a physical gap between these atrophied neurons and the electrodes in the cochlear implant. Improving the interface between nerves and electrodes should make it possible to use weaker electrical stimulation, opening up the possibility of stimulating multiple parts of the auditory nerve at once, using more electrodes, and improving the overall quality of sound.

Peptides called neurotrophins can encourage regeneration of the neurons in the auditory nerve. Housley used a common process, called electroporation, to cause pores to open up in cells, allowing DNA to get inside. It usually requires high voltages, and it hasnt found much clinical use, but Housley wanted to see whether the small, distributed electrodes of the cochlear implant could be used to achieve the effect.

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Cochlear Implant Also Uses Gene Therapy to Improve Hearing

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Gene Therapy May Enhance Cochlear Implants, Animal Study Finds

Posted: at 1:42 pm

By Steven Reinberg HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 23, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Australian researchers say that gene therapy may one day improve the hearing of people with cochlear implants, allowing them to appreciate music and hear in noisy environments.

In experiments with deaf guinea pigs, senior study author Gary Housley and colleagues found that inserting genes in the area of the cochlear implant and passing an electric charge through the implant stimulated the growth of cochlear cells.

"Our study found a [new] way to provide safe localized delivery of a gene to the cochlea, using the cochlear implant device itself. The gene acts as a nerve growth factor, which stimulates repair of the cochlear nerve," said Housley, a professor and director of the Translational Neuroscience Facility at the University of New South Wales, in Sydney.

The cochlear implant is surgically placed in the cochlea, in the inner ear. The implant works by using a line of small electrodes within the cochlea to selectively stimulate cochlear nerve fibers at different positions and enhancing different sounds, or frequencies, Housley explained.

"In the cochlea of a person with good hearing, sound vibrations are encoded by sensory cells, called 'hair cells,' which stimulate the cochlear nerve fibers," he said. "With hearing loss, the hair cells are lost, and without them the cochlear nerve fibers die and retract into the bone within the core of the cochlea."

This makes the job of the cochlear implant difficult as the amount of electrical current needed to stimulate the nerves is quite high, Housley added.

The gene therapy, which makes the cells close to the electrode produce the nerve growth factor, causes the nerve fibers to grow out to those cells -- and therefore to the electrodes, he explained. This means that much less current is needed, so more selective groups of nerve fibers can be stimulated.

"In the future, people with cochlear implants may get this gene therapy at the time of their implant, and the computer system -- which is part of the cochlea implant that converts sound to electrical pulses along the array of electrodes -- should be able to provide a better sound perception," Housley said.

Scientists note, however, that research with animals often fails to provide similar results in humans.

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FMD Acoustic Performance – Video

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FMD Acoustic Performance
FMD acoustic performance at the WTVP channel 47 studio! Ben Eisenmann directed this production for the band. We play our original songs "Politically Incorrect", "She #39;s a Punk" and cover the...

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Unnecessary Censorship – Smite God Reveals – Video

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Unnecessary Censorship - Smite God Reveals
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Ron Paul "Incredible Video", "KEEPS BEING REMOVED, WATCH WHILE YOU CAN" – Video

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Ron Paul "Incredible Video", "KEEPS BEING REMOVED, WATCH WHILE YOU CAN"
Please watch and share this video. The world needs Ron Paul Others like him.

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UNC researchers link aging to cellular interactions that occur across generations

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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

25-Apr-2014

Contact: Mark Derewicz mark.derewicz@unch.unc.edu 919-923-0959 University of North Carolina Health Care

April 24, 2014

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. The evidence for what causes aging has typically been limited to the study of a single organism's lifespan; our cells divide many times throughout our lives and eventually cause organs and our bodies to age and break down. But new research from the UNC School of Medicine suggests that how we age might depend on cellular interactions that we inherit from ancestors throughout many generations.

By studying the reproductive cells of nematodes tiny worms found in soil and compost bins Shawn Ahmed, PhD, an associate professor of genetics, identified the Piwi/piRNA genome silencing pathway, the loss of which results in infertility after many generations. He also found a signaling pathway a series of molecular interactions inside cells that he could tweak to overcome infertility while also causing the worms to live longer adult lives.

The research, in collaboration with researchers at the University of Cambridge and described in a paper published in the journal Cell Reports, suggests that it's possible to manipulate the aging process of progeny before they're even born.

The finding gives scientists a deeper understanding of what may govern aging and age-related diseases, such as some cancers and neurodegenerative conditions.

Typically, nematodes produce about 30 generations in a matter of months and remain fertile indefinitely. Ahmed and colleagues found that a mutation in the Piwi/piRNA cellular pathway of germ cells gradually decreased the worms' ability to reproduce as the mutation was passed down through the generations and eventually caused complete sterility. But when Ahmed's team manipulated a different protein DAF-16/FOXO the nematodes overcame the loss of the Piwi pathway. The worms did not become sterile; generations of worms reproduced indefinitely, achieving a sort of generational immortality. Moreover, it has been well established that DAF-16/FOXO plays a role in nematodes living longer.

Achieving longer life suggests that there's an effect on the aging of somatic cells the cells that make up the body and organs of an organism.

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Researchers Link Aging to Cellular Interactions That Occur Across Generations

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Newswise CHAPEL HILL, N.C. The evidence for what causes aging has typically been limited to the study of a single organisms lifespan; our cells divide many times throughout our lives and eventually cause organs and our bodies to age and break down. But new research from the UNC School of Medicine suggests that how we age might depend on cellular interactions that we inherit from ancestors throughout many generations.

By studying the reproductive cells of nematodes tiny worms found in soil and compost bins Shawn Ahmed, PhD, an associate professor of genetics, identified the Piwi/piRNA genome silencing pathway, the loss of which results in infertility after many generations. He also found a signaling pathway a series of molecular interactions inside cells that he could tweak to overcome infertility while also causing the worms to live longer adult lives.

The research, in collaboration with researchers at the University of Cambridge and described in a paper published in the journal Cell Reports, suggests that its possible to manipulate the aging process of progeny before theyre even born.

The finding gives scientists a deeper understanding of what may govern aging and age-related diseases, such as some cancers and neurodegenerative conditions.

Typically, nematodes produce about 30 generations in a matter of months and remain fertile indefinitely. Ahmed and colleagues found that a mutation in the Piwi/piRNA cellular pathway of germ cells gradually decreased the worms ability to reproduce as the mutation was passed down through the generations and eventually caused complete sterility. But when Ahmeds team manipulated a different protein DAF-16/FOXO the nematodes overcame the loss of the Piwi pathway. The worms did not become sterile; generations of worms reproduced indefinitely, achieving a sort of generational immortality. Moreover, it has been well established that DAF-16/FOXO plays a role in nematodes living longer.

Achieving longer life suggests that theres an effect on the aging of somatic cells the cells that make up the body and organs of an organism.

Thats the really interesting thing about this, said Ahmed, a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. What weve found implies that theres some sort of relationship between somatic cell aging and this germ line immortality process weve been studying.

What that relationship is, precisely, remains unknown. But so does the exact mechanism by which human somatic cells age as they divide throughout our lives. That is, exactly how we age at the cellular level is still not entirely understood.

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Zoltan Istvan talks about, "The Transhumanist Wager" – Video

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Zoltan Istvan talks about, "The Transhumanist Wager"
Quite possibly the most interesting man in the world...Zoltan Istvan.

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