‘Two for one’ breast boosting technique not as viable as it seems

London, Sep 16 (ANI): A technology that was claimed as the ultimate solution to give a boost to women’s breasts by using fat removed from thighs is not viable as it seems, say experts.

Mel Graham, chairman of the Harley Medical Group, recently claimed that the “two for one” procedure could extract excess fat from where it was not wanted – the belly, hips or thighs – and relocate it to the bust.

However, rival cosmetic surgeons criticised the “hype” surrounding the new operation, insisting that it was “premature”.

“(This) is setting consumers up for disappointment and there are many reasons for vigilance,” the Independent quoted Dai Davies, of Plastic Surgery Partners in Harley Street, as saying.

He said that doctors have long been experimenting with innumerable aids to give women larger busts, including using body fat as a procedure.

The technique of removing fat by liposuction, and then injecting it into the chest has been tried for almost 20 years but with limited success, said Davies.

“Where you are injecting small amounts of fat into the face, which has a good blood supply, there is good evidence that it works. Most plastic surgeons would agree there is a place for it. But this involves injecting a large blob of fat into the breast area. Fat consists of living cells and living cells must have a blood supply, otherwise they die,” he explained.

In a Japanese study last year, 230 women underwent fat transfer, and it was found that, on average, half the fat injected was lost and all the women needed a second procedure after a year.

There are also fears that dying fat cells could cause micro-calcification in the breast leading to difficulties in breast screening and an increase in biopsies – an invasive procedure to remove tissue to check for cancer.

“I don’t think we should be a testing ground for all these techniques. You are feeding on a susceptible group of people. There should be controls but, sadly, the Government has decided it won’t implement regulation,” said Davies.

Professor David Sharpe, a plastic surgeon in Yorkshire and the founding chairman of the breast special interest group of BAAPS, said: “This sounds like another example of creative marketing. Breast implants are a well-tried and tested method. At the moment, I would stick with that.”

Mel Braham, chairman of the Harley Medical Group, said results of a US trial to be presented next month would demonstrate the success of the operation.

“The results will be assessed by our medical board and, if approved, the operation will be introduced next year. I don’t take risks with patients. I am confident this is a safe procedure,” he said. (ANI)

Large cylindrical blob of cold material found beneath US West Great Basin

Washington, May 27 (ANI): A team of geologists has found a large cylindrical blob of cold material far below the surface of the US West Great Basin.

The Great Basin in the western US is a desert region largely devoid of major surface changes.

The area consists of small mountain ranges separated by valleys and includes most of Nevada, the western half of Utah and portions of other nearby states.

For tens of millions of years, the Great Basin has been undergoing extension – the stretching of Earth’s crust.

While studying the extension of the region, geologist John West of Arizona State University (ASU) was surprised to find that something unusual existed beneath this area’s surface.

West and colleagues found that portions of the lithosphere – the crust and uppermost mantle of the Earth – had sunk into the more fluid upper mantle beneath the Great Basin and formed a large cylindrical blob of cold material far below the surface of central Nevada.

“It was an extremely unexpected finding in a location that showed no corresponding changes in surface topography or volcanic activity,” said West.

West compared his unusual results of the area with tomography models – CAT scans of the inside of Earth – done by geologist Jeff Roth, also of ASU.

West and Roth, both graduate students; working with their advisor, Matthew Fouch, concluded that they had found a lithospheric drip.

“The results provide important insights into fine-scale mantle convection processes, and their possible connections with volcanism and mountain-building on Earth’s surface,” said Greg Anderson, program director in NSF’s Division of Earth Sciences.

A lithospheric drip can be envisioned as honey dripping off a spoon, where an initial lithospheric blob is followed by a long tail of material.

When a small, high-density mass is embedded near the base of the crust and the area is warmed up, the high-density piece will be heavier than the area around it and it will start sinking.

As it drops, material in the lithosphere starts flowing into the newly created conduit.

Seismic images of mantle structure beneath the region provided additional evidence, showing a large cylindrical mass 100 km wide and at least 500 km tall.

“The idea of a lithospheric drip has been used many times over the years to explain things like volcanism, surface uplift, surface subsidence, but you could never really confirm it – and until now, no one has caught a drip in the act, so to speak,” said Fouch. (ANI)

First animals on Earth resembled blobs of gelatinous goo, reveal 850 mln yr old fossils

London, May 12 (ANI): Scientists have discovered 850 million year old fossil traces in Canadian rocks, which resembled blobs of gelatinous goo, that has potentially solved a major problem for the origin of animal life.

The previous oldest animal fossils date from “only” 650 million years ago, although “molecular clocks” based on rates of genetic divergence indicate that animals should have originated about 850 million years ago.

According to a report in New Scientist, the new findings may therefore help solve the problem of the 250 million-year-gap.

Palaeontologists have looked long and hard for traces left by the first multi-celled organisms, fully aware that the soft-bodies might have left very few fossils.

The breakthrough came when Elizabeth Turner, of Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, spotted odd patterns in the rocks of 850-million-year-old limestone reefs in the Mackenzie Mountains of Canada’s Northwestern territory.

She has spent the last 15 years, with Fritz Neuweiler of University Laval in Quebec, trying to deduce their origin.

Now, Turner and Neuweiler, along with David Burdige of Old Dominion University in Virginia, have shown that the patterns match the distinctive textures found in reefs built by sponges.

Studies of modern sponges show that when their collagen structure decays it calcifies and leaves a signature pattern.

Since collagen is a fibrous protein found only in animals, some ancestral animal must have lived in the ancient reef, argue researchers.

The animal consisted of “cells living embedded in a scaffold of collagen, which they extruded to make their home,” said Turner.

“There probably were more than one type of cell, but we can’t tell. Nothing like it lives today, but if we saw one, it would look like a little blob of gelatinous goo,” she added.

The presence of animals this early in Earth’s history would resolve the long-standing disparity between molecular clocks and the fossil record, and show that the evolution of animals began before the Earth slipped twice into a global deep freeze.

“I applaud the approach of looking for distinctive textures seen along with sponge skeletons in younger rocks,” said Andrew Knoll of Harvard University. “It’s a good first step, but it’s not yet proof, he added. (ANI)

Scientists discover mysterious ‘space blob’ at cosmic dawn

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Using information from a suite of telescopes, astronomers have discovered a mysterious, giant ‘space blob’ that existed at a time when the universe was only about 800 million years old.

Dubbed extended Lyman-Alpha blobs, such objects are huge bodies of gas that may be precursors to galaxies.

This blob was named Himiko for a legendary, mysterious Japanese queen, as it was discovered early in the history of the universe in a Japanese Subaru field.

It stretches for 55 thousand light years, a record for that early point in time. That length is comparable to the radius of the Milky Way’s disk.

But, researchers are puzzled by the object.

Even with superb data from the world’s best telescopes, they are not sure what it is.

Because it is one of the most distant objects ever found, its faintness does not allow the researchers to understand its physical origins.

It could be ionized gas powered by a super-massive black hole; a primordial galaxy with large gas accretion; a collision of two large young galaxies; super wind from intensive star formation; or a single giant galaxy with a large mass of about 40 billion Suns.

“The farther out we look into space, the farther we go back in time,” explained lead author Masami Ouchi, a fellow at the Observatories of the Carnegie Institution who led an international team of astronomers from the US, Japan, and the United Kingdom.

“I am very surprised by this discovery. I have never imagined that such a large object could exist at this early stage of the universe’s history,” Ouchi added.

“According to the concordance model of Big Bang cosmology, small objects form first and then merge to produce larger systems. This blob had a size of typical present-day galaxies when the age of the universe was about 800 million years old, only 6 percent of the age of today’s universe!” Ouchi further added.

No extended blobs have previously been found when the universe was younger.

Himiko is located at a transition point in the evolution of the universe called the reionization epoch.

It’s as far back as we can see to date, and at 55 thousand light years, Himiko is a big blob for that time.

“If this was the discovery of a class of objects that are ancestors of today’s galaxies, there should be many more smaller ones already found-a continuous distribution,” said Carnegie’s Alan Dressler, a member of the team. (ANI)

Sarah Palin’s political ambitions go ahead despite family discord

London, Mar 13 (ANI): Alaska Governor Sarah Palin’s political career in the Republican Party is still going strong despite there being so many upheavals in her family life.

While her selection as the Republican vice-presidential choice late last summer came as a big surprise, the news about Palin’s 17-year-old daughter Bristol being five months pregnant by her boyfriend from school astonished most.

The news did not hamper Palin’s political career in any way as the young couple were in love and committed to having the baby, which worked perfectly for the Governor’s stand against abortion.

Now six months down the line, the marriage between the two teenagers is over, with Levi Johnston revealing that it had ended a “while ago”.

Johnston’s sister Mercede is reported to have told a magazine that on top of the break-up Bristol was making it difficult for Levi to visit their baby, Tripp, on the grounds that “she doesn’t want [the baby] around ‘white trash’!”

Bristol lashed back, saying in a statement that “unfortunately my family has seen many people say and do many things to cash in on the Palin name. Sometimes greed clouds good judgment.”

Even with so much family problems, Palin has managed to attract supporters, even with her stand for an abstinence-only approach to sex, and opposition to abortion.

Michael Tanner, senior fellow at the conservative think-tank the Cato Institute, thinks that even seemingly negative stories about her family work to her benefit.

“The Bristol story will inevitably draw snide comments from media figures like Jon Stewart who will have something nasty to say about this; and every time that happens her followers get that much tighter around her,” the Guardian quoted her as saying.

Tanner has been struck in the four months since the presidential election by how loyal and fervent Palin’s core support of small-town conservatives has remained.

He wrote a recent blob gently chiding Palin for her stance on the economy and he was inundated with angry emails.

“I was amazed by how passionate they were, they really believe she shouldn’t be attacked,” he added. (ANI)

Scientists discover oldest fossilized brain, dating back to 300 mln yrs

Washington, March 3 (ANI): In a wholly unexpected and rare discovery, scientists have found the oldest brain in fossilized form in Kansas, US, which dates back to 300 million years.

The brain, found in a shale in Kansas and Oklahoma, belong to Iniopterygians, which are extinct relatives of modern ratfishes, also known as “ghost sharks” or chimaeras.

Chimaeras are obscure relatives of sharks and rays that were extensively described by Museum Curator Bashford Dean in 1906 and number about 40 species.

But, in the late Paleozoic, relatives of chimaeras were relatively common in the oceans of the world with a huge diversity of shapes and sizes, and iniopterygians were a bizarre part of this radiation.

The new discovery is described with several other intact braincases-the first three-dimensional fossils from this group of extinct marine fishes.

When Alan Pradel of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris CAT scanned the 300-million-year-old fossilized iniopterygian from Kansas, he and his colleagues saw a symmetrical blob nestled within the braincase.

This turned out to be the oldest brain found in fossil form.

According to John Maisey, curator in the Division of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History and a co-author of the report, “Fossilized brains are unusual, and this is by far the oldest known example.”

The new research looked at four 3-dimensional braincases of iniopterygians found in shales from Kansas and Oklahoma.

The specimens share several features with living ratfishes, which means that these skull features have been conserved in the group for the last 300 million years.

Complete reconstructions of these skulls were made with a CAT scan and X-ray synchrotron microtomography, and the imaging of one skull showed a dense, symmetrical object sitting within the large braincase.

This was the mineralized brain.

The specimen that included the brain was imaged as a holtomography by Paul Tafforeau and colleagues at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility.

This more powerful scan brought the brain to light in great detail.

It is a tiny (about 1.5mm by 7 mm in size), symmetrical shape that sits within a large braincase. As in many lower vertebrates, the brains of these fish ceased to grow as their skulls continued to expand.

The brain has a large lobe for vision and an optic nerve that stretches to the correct place on the braincase; both of these features correlate well with the large eye sockets.

“There is nothing like this known today; it is really bizarre,” said Maisey.

“But now that we know that brains might be preserved in such ancient fossils, we can start looking for others,” he added. (ANI)