Businessman disappears from his home

Forensic officers have just entered the Mt Pleasant property at the centre of a missing persons investigation.

Major Crime detectives are investigating the disappearance of a businessman who is in his forties.

He was reported missing by his sister last night.

Neighbours say the man from Bateman Road was last seen on Sunday.

The property has been on the market for eight weeks with an asking price of more than $3 million.

It is understood the missing man had purchased a property in Sydney and was intending to move interstate.

Forensic officers are travelling to the home which remains under police guard.

Novel way to improve bone health in cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment

Washington, Sept 16 (ANI): Scientists looking for ways to reduce bone loss in astronauts claim to have found a novel way of improving the bone health of cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment.

“Our studies indicate significant bone loss at the radiation levels astronauts will experience during long missions to the moon or Mars,” said Ted Bateman, a member of NSBRI’s Musculoskeletal Alterations Team.

The study conducted over mouse models has shown that bone loss begins within days of radiation exposure through activation of bone-reducing cells called osteoclasts.

Under normal conditions, these cells work with bone-building cells, called osteoblasts, to maintain bone health.

“Our research challenges some conventional thought by saying radiation turns on the bone-eating osteoclasts. If that is indeed the case, existing treatments, such as bisphosphonates, may be able to prevent this early loss of bone,” he added.

He said even though the research is being performed to protect the health of NASA astronauts, cancer patients, especially those who receive radiation therapy in the pelvic region, could benefit from the research.

“We know that older women receiving radiotherapy to treat pelvic tumors are particularly vulnerable to fracture, with hip fracture rates increasing 65 percent to 200 percent in these cancer patients,” said Bateman.

Once a person loses bone, their long-term fracture risk depends on their ability to recover lost bone mass.

For older cancer patients, early introduction of bisphosphonates and other forms of treatment could help greatly since the process of regaining bone mass can be more difficult due to lower activity levels. (ANI)

New test can help assess efficacy of Alzheimer’s drugs

Washington, Apr 10 (ANI): Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have developed a new test that can assess whether an Alzheimer’s drug could really reduce the production of amyloid beta (A-beta)- one of the possible underlying causes of Alzheimer’s disease in humans.

With the test, called stable isotope-linked kinetics (SILK), the researchers showed that an Alzheimer’s drug given to healthy volunteers reduced A-beta production

The test could speed up the development of new treatments for the disease.

In the clinical trials by Eli Lilly and Company, the scientists are studying the drug candidate, LY450139, which is also known as semagacestat.

Ongoing clinical trials are studying the effect that semagacestat may have on cognitive function and biochemical and brain imaging biomarkers in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

The researchers said that they wanted to see if SILK could detect the drug’s impact on A-beta synthesis in healthy volunteers.

“Bringing an Alzheimer’s disease drug into clinical trials from tests in animal models has always been challenging. We haven’t had a way to quickly and accurately assess a drug’s effects, and that meant there always had to be some degree of educated guesswork when it came to setting the optimal dosage for humans. SILK may help to eliminate much of that guesswork,” said study director Randall Bateman.

The researchers are currently using SILK to know if increased A-beta production, reduced clearance or a combination of the two lead to the A-beta buildup in the brain- a process believed to trigger Alzheimer’s disease.

Until SILK, there has not been a way to directly measure the production or clearance of A-beta.

Scientists have assessed the efficacy of potential new Alzheimer’s drug candidates by monitoring the cognitive functions of patients with the disease for extended periods of time, which require large, lengthy and expensive studies.

In the new study, the scientists reported a dose-dependent drop in A-beta production, and measured an 84 percent reduction in A-beta production with the highest study drug dose.

The SILK procedure takes 36 hours, but provides scientists a more detailed assessment of amyloid beta production and clearance levels than they can obtain through conventional methods.

“You could use a spinal tap to look directly at the amount of A-beta present in the cerebrospinal fluid, but we’ve shown that natural processes cause A-beta levels to change dynamically. Such changes make it more difficult to assess the effects of a drug in that fashion,” said Bateman.

The results have been published in Annals of Neurology. (ANI)

Lost letter reaches destination after 90 years!

London, Feb 23 (ANI): It was certainly a letter from the distant past, when a Brit women received a note, addressed to a man who used to live in her home in 90 years ago.

The letter was an RSVP note to a party hosted by a Percy Bateman and his partner Grace. It was sent by a friend called Buffy in 1919.

Lost on its way, the letter made it to the door of Jane Barrett, who had no idea of the previous inhabitants of her house.

Thus, she issued an appeal for any relatives to come forward to solve the mystery.

And now, Bateman’s 85-year-old daughter, Stella Pontin, has revealed that the letter was a reply to her father Percy by family friend Charles Babington, known as Buffy.

In 1919 Percy Bateman and his girlfriend Grace Stewart hosted a Boxing Day gathering at their home at 22 Abbotsbury Road, Weymouth.

According to the Telegraph, the RSVP, which was posted on November 29, stated: “Dear Percy, Many thanks for the invitation, be delighted. See you on the 26th December. Regards Buffy.”

However, it never made it to its destination and had been lost for the last eight decades and reached its destination, which is now a guesthouse owned by Barrett.

The letter was posted in a plastic bag with a note from the Royal Mail apologising for any delay.

And now, Barrett, 56, has finally handed it over to Pontin, who still lives in Weymouth.

Barrett said: “It is a mystery as to where the letter has been all these years but at least we now know who the people in it were. It is very interesting to find out a bit of history about my guesthouse and the people who lived here.” (ANI)