Brit men having moob jobs on the rise

London, Sep 18 (ANI): It has emerged that more and more Brit men are having cosmetic surgery to get rid of their “moobs”.

According to the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS), there has been a 44 per cent year-on-year rise in the number of men wanting to get rid of their ‘man boobs’.

The AGM of BAAPS in Cardiff heard that the procedure is now the fifth most popular cosmetic op for men, with more than 1,000 men forking out more than 2,000 pounds to get rid of their flabby breasts in the last 12 months.

Delegates were told over the past five years the numbers of men losing their moobs have shot up by an amazing 1,000 per cent.

“We are seeing men of all ages coming in to have their breasts made smaller,” the Sun quoted plastic surgeon Douglas McGeorge as saying.

“They are losing their inhibitions about the operation and deciding to undergo an operation which previously was a women’s operation,” he said.

McGeorge, who is based in Chester, revealed that a recent patient, who had never taken his shirt off, was typical of the men queuing up for the op.

“It was a grandfather who had never taken off his T-shirt in his life because he was so embarrassed about the size of his breasts,” he said.

“He had never been able to strip to the waist on the beach in front of his own children – but was determined not to be in the same position with his grandchildren,” he stated.

The moob jobs pushed out facelifts to become the fifth most popular plastic surgery for British men after nose jobs, eyelifts, ear corrections, and liposuction.

“Reasons for the upsurge include men being more open now about their physique than years ago,” plastic surgeon Fazel Fatah said.

“And they can get more and more information about it from internet sites which encourage them to have the op,” he added. (ANI)

Secret behind “delta wing” dolphins’ speed and agility revealed – partly

London, June 21 (ANI): US researchers have partly been successful in solving the mystery behind the speed and agility of dolphins and porpoises.

They believe the secret can be explained by the mammals’ ability to deploy flippers in the same “delta wing” pattern as jet fighters.

Boffins have found that the sea mammals use swept-back design to generate lift while minimising drag from the water – a similar mechanism to that used by aircraft.

Tiny twists to the flippers can also generate sharp changes in direction – the key to agility, reports The Times.

The finding may come handy in explaining how they are able to reach extraordinary speeds, such as the 20mph achieved by the striped dolphin.

Theoretically speaking, such speeds in water should produce so much friction that the creature should never be able to sustain them – or so researchers have thought.

However, Frank Fish from West Chester University, Pennsylvania, worked with the US Naval Academy and other researchers to build up exact profiles of the flippers of seven species, from the Amazon river dolphin and pygmy sperm whale to the striped dolphin.

To reach the conclusion, the shapes were analysed with computerised tomography of real flippers, and the researchers built exact scale models for testing in a water tunnel, they told a meeting of the American Physical Society.

“We found that swept-back flippers generate lift like modern delta-wing aircraft,” said Fish. (ANI)

Endoscopic surgery can effectively relieve sinusitis symptoms

Washington, May 1 (ANI): A new study claims that endoscopic sinus surgery can significantly relieve symptoms of chronic rhinosinusitis – inflammation of the sinus cavities.

The research team, led by a Georgetown physician, conducted the first large-scale analysis of surgical outcomes from the procedure.

In the May issue of Otolaryngology Head Neck Surgery, researchers found that symptoms usually associated with the chronic condition, including nasal obstruction, facial pain, postnasal discharge, headaches, and impaired smell, all substantially improved after endoscopic sinus surgery.

“This kind of surgery is indeed beneficial to patients when standard medical treatment doesn’t resolve the condition,” says the study’s lead investigator, Alexander C. Chester, MD, a physician and clinical professor at Georgetown University Medical Center. Two other physicians from St. Louis University School of Medicine collaborated in the study.

Endoscopic sinus surgery is an extremely common procedure – about 200,000 procedures are performed each year – yet this is the first meta-analysis of symptom relief following the surgery, Chester says. It was conducted by examining 21 different published studies, which included 2,070 patients, analyzing improvement for each symptom.

“Reports of relative symptom relief vary across studies, so it was important to pool the study results. We wanted to know not only if symptoms improve overall, but if they improve to a similar degree, and if these benefits last,” says Chester.

“Our findings offer reassurance that, with minor exceptions, individual symptoms usually improve substantially and similarly following surgery,” Chester, an internist, said.

The researchers assessed symptom relief using two different measures. The most precise is called “effect size” where any effect greater than .8 is considered a large effect. The researchers found that with a 1.73effect size, nasal obstruction improved the most, followed by postnasal discharge (1.19), facial pain (1.13), headache relief (.98) and improvement in smell (.97). A second way of measuring symptoms, which is less accurate but more commonly used, compares the percent of improvement after surgery compared to before surgery. They found the following percentage improvements: 61 percent in facial pain, 59 percent in nasal obstruction, 53 percent in headache, 49 percent in smell, and 47 percent in postnasal discharge.

They also found that improvements do not decrease over time, as some smaller studies had suggested. (ANI)

English FA charges five players with breaching betting rules

London – The English Football Association charged five players on Tuesday with breaching football’s betting rules.

The five – four who played for Accrington Stanley and one who played for Bury – were charged with betting on the match when the two sides met in the final game of League Two last season.

If found guilty, the five – Jay Harris, David Mannix, Robert Williams and Peter Cavanagh, of Accrington, and Andrew Mangan of Bury at the time – could face suspensions.

Harris and Cavanagh played in the game, which was won 2-0 by Bury, but some bookmakers voided their markets on the match after noticing unusual betting activity.

“All five are alleged to have placed bets on Bury to win this match,” the FA said in a statement.

“Mannix is alleged to have placed stakes to the value of approximately 4,000 pounds (5,944 dollars); Mangan 3,500 pounds; Harris 2,000 pounds; Williams 1,000 pounds; and Cavanagh on a five- pound accumulator.”

Harris, who has since left to join Chester City, faces other charges after reportedly betting on other games, while Cavanagh is accused of betting on another Accrington Stanley matches in which he played and a number of other League Two games.

Neither players, managers nor coaching staff are allowed to bet on any matches in which they are playing in, or concerning their teams.(dpa)

Peaches Geldof doesn’t regret her short-lived marriage to Max Drummey

London, Mar 31 (ANI): Peaches Geldof has admitted that she doesn’t regret her brief marriage to rocker Max Drumney and would love to ‘tell her kids’ about it one day.

The daughter of Sir Bob Geldof exchanged wedding vows with the Chester French frontman in Las Vegas in August last year – after a whirlwind romance lasting less than a month.

In her first interview since the couple divorced in February, Peaches, 20, has told Grazia magazine that she and Max are still friends and talk regularly.

“Max and I are really good friends. We were just too young. That’s all it was,” the Mirror quoted Peaches, as saying.

“I still love the idea that we did it. I love the idea I can tell my kids one day about it and I know he does too,” she added. (ANI)

Peaches Geldof’s lonely NYE without hubby

London, Jan 6 (ANI): Socialite Peaches Geldof spent a lonely New Year without her hubby Max Drummey by her side.

In fact, the duo, who tied the knot five months back, was not together for the Christmas as well, reports The Mirror.

Geldof married Max Drummey, an American musician from the band Chester French on 5 August 2008 at A Little White Chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada.

However, after just 96 days of matrimony, a British tabloid reported that Peaches” marriage is set to end in divorce

While Geldof denied the claims, her lonely Christmas and New Year has again fuelled the rumours of the split. (ANI)