Shrinking of Renuka Lake concerns Himachal locals

Sirmour (Himachal Pradesh), Apr 29 (ANI): People in Himachal Pradesh”s Sirmour District are very concerned over the shrinking of the state”s Renuka Lake.

Many feel the lake”s shrinking would affect business, as the area is a major tourist spot.

“A lot of tourists come here to see the natural beauty of this lake. In case it dries up, the business which is generated by this lake will also come to an end,” said Sandeep Sharma, a local photographer.

Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Prem Kumar Dhumal has said steps are being taken to protect the lake, beginning with a ban on plastic bags.

“In order to protect it, we have banned the plastic bags as wherever there is a river or a lake, people throw plastic bags. This ban should preserve the lake. The society and the government should come together to take the initiative,” said Prem Kumar Dhumal.

Renuka Lake is seen as an embodiment of the Goddess Renuka. It is the largest natural lake in the state, and is shrinking due to silt deposition and dumping of waste materials. (ANI)

Grim weather up in North linked to prostate cancer risk

London, April 21 (ANI): A new research by scientists at Idaho State University has suggested that grim weather up in North may be making men more prone to prostate cancer.

Dr Sophie St-Hilaire, from Idaho State University, and colleagues believe that a combination of cold temperatures and lack of sun could help explain higher rates of the disease in northerly parts of the world.

It has been claimed that poor exposure to the sun””s rays can lead to vitamin D deficiency, which may increase prostate cancer risk.

Meanwhile, cold weather might help to slow the degradation of cancer-triggering industrial pollutants, say US researchers.

Cold temperatures were also believed to help the chemicals precipitate out of the atmosphere and fall to the ground.

“We found that colder weather, and low rainfall, were strongly correlated with prostate cancer,” the Daily Express quoted St-Hilaire as saying.

“Although we can””t say exactly why this correlation exists, the trends are consistent with what we would expect given the effects of climate on the deposition, absorption, and degradation of persistent organic pollutants including pesticides,” St-Hilaire added.

The research has been published online in the International Journal of Health Geographics. (ANI)

Dennis Hopper”s bitter divorce taking a toll on his health and bank account

New York, Mar 25 (ANI): Dennis Hopper”s divorce from wife Victoria has not only left him cash-strapped, but it’s also taking a toll on his health.

According to new court documents obtained by TMZ.com, Hopper has become extremely ill from his battle with advanced prostate cancer, and now weighs only a little more than 100 pounds.

“It is doubtful that Mr. Hopper will ever recover sufficiently to be subject to a deposition,” the New York Daily News quoted one of his doctors reportedly as saying in a declaration.

The 73-year-old actor”s nasty divorce case, which began in January when he filed documents to end his 14-year marriage, has also left him nearly broke.

In the legal documents, Hopper has stated that he is only able to afford 5,000 dollars a month in spousal support to his estranged wife.

His CPA has revealed that the actor”s liquid assets add up to 300,280 dollars, as well as another 10,900 dollars in his corporations.

“Hopper has basically lived on income derived from new acting services,” the CPA reportedly wrote.

And owing to his condition, Hopper has reportedly been unable to work.

He is said to have earned only 57,000 dollars in residuals in 2009, and is expected to make the same amount in 2010.

However, Victoria doesn”t believe the actor has financial woes, alleging the bulk of his net worth comes from art he created and sold.

Hopper counteracted the claim by explaining that his art earnings have barely been enough to survive on.

According to the statement, Hopper claims to have made 1,895,000 dollars from his art sales, but his expenses to create and store the work added up to 1,850,000 dollars, leaving him with only 45,000 dollars in net profits over the past nine years.

The actor has reportedly been living on a 450,000 dollars line of credit, with “no further borrowing possible.” (ANI)

Oprah settles defamation lawsuit

Oprah Winfrey has agreed to settle a lawsuit in which she had been accused of defamation by the former headmistress of her South African school for girls.

A statement issued by lawyers for the two women said they had resolved the dispute “peacefully to their mutual satisfaction”.

Lerato Nomvuyo Mzamane claimed in a 2008 suit that Winfrey had damaged her personal and professional reputation in two statements made in 2007.

In the statements, Winfrey suggested Ms Mzamane had failed to deal adequately with allegations at the school that students were being abused by a member of staff.

The Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls was opened in a town south of Johannesburg in January 2007.

A trial over the defamation case was scheduled to begin on March 29 in Philadelphia.

Court documents containing hundreds of pages of claims and counter-claims were filed by both sides.

But today’s seven-line statement said both women had withdrawn their allegations.

“Ms Winfrey testified in her deposition that she did not intend the implications placed on her words by the plaintiff,” the statement said.

“Ms Mzamane testified in her deposition that she has no evidence that Ms Winfrey knowingly made a false statement about her or entertained serious doubt about what she said.”

Winfrey has spent $US40 million on the academically selective school in South Africa.

It is designed to provide high-quality education to top-performing students from poor families.

- Reuters

Headley can be made to testify before Indian officials: Chidambaram

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Friday claimed that there is a good chance that alleged Lashkar operative David Coleman Headley could be made to testify in judicial proceedings where Indian officials are involved.

“There is a good chance that he will testify in judicial proceedings where Indian investigators will have a right to question him,” Chidambaram said.

Addressing the media, Chidambaram said Thursday’s development in the Headley case is not a setback.

“It is not a setback. We have not yet charged Headley. We will charge Headley at an appropriate time,” Chidambaram said.

On Thursday (US time), Headley pleaded guilty before a Chicago court, admitting he had scouted for targets ahead of a brazen terrorist attack on Mumbai on 26 November 2008.

As a result, as per law, Headley will not face any trial or won’t be given the death penalty.

Under the plea bargain, Headley has escaped the death penalty. He also cannot be extradited from the US to India, Pakistan or Denmark.

Chidambaram said India would continue to press for Headley’s extradition.

“We will continue with our plea for extradition of Headley,” he said.

“We have been given a significant amount of information by the US gathered during investigation in the Headley case,” Chidambaram added.

He further said extradition would be difficult when a person is being interrogated in a country. I don’t know when their court procedure would come to an end.

In his guilty plea Headley has agreed to take part in foreign judicial proceedings through deposition, video conferencing or Letters Rogatory.

Chidambaram said India would request for access to Headley to question him and also to make him testify.

He further said the development in related to Headley’s case would not hinder the 26/11 proceedings in India.

“It (26/11 trial) is final stage, the final argument is expected to start in a couple of days or by next week, it (Headley case) will not affect 26/11 trial,” Chisdambaram said.

On Thursday, Headley pleaded guilty to a dozen charges in a Chicago Court and admitted his role in planning the 26/11 Mumbai terror strike. (ANI)

India can quiz 26/11 convict Headley in US

Chicago, Mar 19 (ANI): Despite Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) operative David Coleman Headley being assured about no extradition to India, the Indian authorities can have access to him in the United States and question him with respect to all the charges levelled on him.

Headley, who has been charged by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for conspiring in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks, has pleaded guilty to all 12 charges levelled against him in a US court.

It is reported that Headley struck a deal with US prosecutors, which concludes him not being extradited to India and not receiving the death penalty.

The admissions were made as part of a plea agreement that brought U.S. prosecutors one of the most significant convictions since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, with Headley agreeing to testify against his Canadian co-accused Tahawwur Hussain Rana in exchange for being spared the death penalty or future extradition to India.

The agreement says that when directed by the United States Attorney”s Office, he will fully and truthfully testify in any foreign judicial proceedings held in the United States by way of deposition, video-conferencing or letters rogatory.

This indicates that he can be questioned in the United States under American supervision.

Union Home Secretary G K Pillai had on Thursday said that India would lodge a protest if Headley is let off lightly, adding that New Delhi would continue to demand access Headley.

Forty-nine-year-old Headley is accused of being a scout for the deadly 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks in which at least 166 people, including six Americans, were killed and for a plot to kill a Danish cartoonist. (ANI)

Stem cell transplantation may correct rare genetic disorder in kids

Washington, Sep 18 (ANI): Scripps Research Institute scientists have offered new hope for parents whose children suffer from the rare genetic disorder ‘cystinosis’ by showing through an experiment on mice that stem cell transplantation can successfully correct the defect.

“After meeting the children who suffer from this disease, like an 18-year-old who has already had three kidney transplants, and the families who are desperately searching for help, our team is committed to moving toward a cure for cystinosis, a lysosomal storage disorder. This study is an important step toward that goal,” said principal investigator Stephanie Cherqui.

In the study, the researchers used bone marrow stem cell transplantation to address symptoms of cystinosis in a mouse model.

The procedure virtually halted the cystine accumulation responsible for the disease, and the cascade of cell death that follows.

Cystine is a by-product of the break down of cellular components the body no longer needs in the cell’s “housekeeping” organelles, called lysosomes.

Normally, cystine is shunted out of cells, but in cystinosis a gene defect of the lysosomal cystine transporter causes it to build up, forming crystals that are especially damaging to the kidneys and eyes.

Cystinosis is a rare but devastating disease affecting children as young as six months, who begin to suffer renal dysfunction, which grows progressively worse with time. Other symptoms include diabetes, muscular disease, neurological dysfunction, and retinopathy.

The only available drug to treat cystinosis, cysteamine, while slowing the progression of kidney degradation, does not prevent it, and end-stage kidney failure is inevitable.

In the new study, the researchers found that transplanted bone marrow stem cells carrying the normal lysosomal cystine transporter gene abundantly engrafted into every tissue of the experimental mice.

This led to an average drop in cystine levels of about 80 percent in every organ.

Not only it prevented kidney dysfunction, there was less deposition of cystine crystals in the cornea, less bone demineralization, and an improvement in motor function.

“The results really surprised and encouraged us. Because the defect is present in every cell of the body, we did not expect a bone marrow stem cell transplant to be so widespread and effective,” says Cherqui.

Cherqui said that adult bone marrow stem cell therapy is particularly well suited as a potential treatment for cystinosis because these cells target all types of tissues.

In addition, stem cells reside in the bone marrow for the duration of a patient’s life, becoming active as needed, a particular benefit for a progressive disease like cystinosis.

The study has been published in the journal Blood. (ANI)

Newly developed thin films show promise for solar applications

Washington, September 9 (ANI): Researchers at Ben-Gurion University (BGU) of the Negev in Israel have developed thin films that exhibit carrier multiplication (CM), which shows promise future solar applications.

The films were synthesized at BGU by Professor Yuval Golan and PhD student Anna Osherov of the Department of Materials Engineering and the Ilse Katz Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology.

One of the important factors limiting solar-cell efficiency is that incident photons generate only one electron-hole pair, irrespective of the photon energy.

Any excess photon energy is lost as heat.

Carrier Multiplication (CM) has been thought to be enhanced significantly in nanocrystalline materials such as quantum dots, owing to their discrete energy levels and enhanced Coulomb interactions.

The BGU team demonstrated that contrary to this expectation, for a given photon energy, carrier multiplication occurs more efficiently in bulk PbS and PbSe films than in nanocrystalline films of the same materials.

“Films developed at BGU show CM, in which each incoming photon (tiny quantity of sunlight) creates more than one electron-hole pair,” Golan explained.

“This can potentially be used for making more efficient solar cells. The new physics behind this work are that while CM has been mostly demonstrated in nanocrystalline materials (“quantum dots”), we now show that CM can be obtained also in single crystal (‘bulk’) films of lead sulfide and lead selenide,” he said.

Notably, the films were prepared using chemical solution deposition, an attractive, inexpensive deposition technique for which the Golan group at BGU has received considerable recognition. (ANI)

Junk food cholesterol may pose the greatest heart disease risk

Washington, Aug 21 (ANI): Health freaks know that high levels of total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol can increase the risk of heart attacks. Now, scientists have discovered a little-known type of cholesterol which may prove to be the most lethal of all.

Cholesterol called oxycholesterol is virtually unknown to the public and may be the most serious cardiovascular health threat of all.

Fried and processed food, particularly fast food, contains high amounts of oxycholesterol.

Scientists from China presented one of the first studies on the cholesterol-boosting effects of oxycholesterol at the 238th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society.

The researchers hope their findings raise public awareness about oxycholesterol, including foods with the highest levels of the substance and other foods that can combat oxycholesterol’s effects.

“Total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL), and the heart-healthy high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) are still important health issues,” says study leader Zhen-Yu Chen, Ph.D., of Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“But the public should recognize that oxycholesterol is also important and cannot be ignored. Our work demonstrated that oxycholesterol boosts total cholesterol levels and promotes atherosclerosis ["hardening of the arteries"] more than non-oxidized cholesterol,” the expert added.

In the study, Chen’s group measured the effects of a diet high in oxycholesterol on hamsters, often used as surrogates for humans in such research. Blood cholesterol in hamsters fed oxycholesterol rose up to 22 percent more than hamsters eating non-oxidized cholesterol. The oxycholesterol group showed greater deposition of cholesterol in the lining of their arteries and a tendency to develop larger deposits of cholesterol. These fatty deposits, called atherosclerotic plaques, increase the risk for heart attack and stroke.

Most importantly, according to Chen, oxycholesterol had undesirable effects on “artery function.” Oxycholesterol reduced the elasticity of arteries, impairing their ability to expand and carry more blood. That expansion can allow more blood to flow through arteries that are partially blocked by plaques, potentially reducing the risk that a clot will form and cause a heart attack or stroke.

But a healthy diet rich in antioxidants can counter these effects, Chen said, noting that these substances may block the oxidation process that forms oxycholesterol. (ANI)

Earliest animals on Earth lived in lakes

Washington, July 28 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found evidence that the earliest animals on Earth lived in lakes.

Conventional wisdom has it that animal evolution began in the ocean, with animal life adapting much later in Earth history to terrestrial environments.

Now, a UC (University of California) Riverside-led team of researchers, studying ancient rock samples in South China, has found that the first animal fossils in the paleontological record are preserved in ancient lake deposits, not marine sediments as commonly assumed.

“We know that life in the oceans is very different from life in lakes, and, at least in the modern world, the oceans are far more stable and consistent environments compared to lakes which tend to be short-lived features relative to, say, rates of evolution,” said Martin Kennedy, a professor of geology in the Department of Earth Sciences who participated in the research.

“Thus it is surprising that the first evidence of animals we find is associated with lakes, a far more variable environment than the ocean,” he added.

The study raises questions such as what aspects of the Earth’s environment changed to enable animal evolution.

In their research, the authors focused on South China’s Doushantuo Formation, one of the oldest fossil beds that houses highly preserved fossils dated to about 600 million years ago.

These beds have no adult fossils. Instead, many of the fossils appear as bundles of cells interpreted to be animal embryos.

“Our first unusual finding in this region was the abundance of a clay mineral called smectite,” said lead author Tom Bristow, who worked in Kennedy’s lab.

“In rocks of this age, smectite is normally transformed into other types of clay. The smectite in these South China rocks, however, underwent no such transformation and have a special chemistry that, for the smectite to form, requires specific conditions in the water – conditions commonly found in salty, alkaline lakes,” he added.

The researchers’ work involved collecting hundreds of rock samples from several localities in South China, carrying out mineralogical analysis using X-ray diffraction, and collecting and analyzing other types of geochemical data.

“All our analyses show that the rocks’ minerals and geochemistry are not compatible with deposition in seawater,” Bristow said.

“Moreover, we found smectite in only some locations in South China, and not uniformly as one would expect for marine deposits. This was an important indicator that the rocks hosting the fossils were not marine in origin. Taken together, several lines of evidence indicated to us that these early animals lived in a lake environment,” he added. (ANI)

Enabling graphene-based technology via chemical functionalization

Washington, May 18 (ANI): A team of scientists has identified conditions for enabling graphene-based technology through chemical functionalization.

Graphene is an atomically thin sheet of carbon that has attracted significant attention due to its potential use in high-performance electronics, sensors and alternative energy devices such as solar cells.

While the physics of graphene has been thoroughly explored, chemical functionalization of graphene has proven to be elusive.

Now, researchers at Northwestern University, US, have identified conditions for chemically functionalizing graphene with the organic semiconductor perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic-dianhydride (PTCDA).

PTCDA self-assembles into a molecularly pristine monolayer that is nearly defect-free as verified by ultra-high vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy.

In addition, the PTCDA monolayers are stable at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, which suggest their use as a seeding layer for subsequent materials deposition.

Through chemical functionalization and materials integration, the outstanding electrical properties of graphene likely can be exploited in a diverse range of technologies including high-speed electronics, chemical and biological sensors and photovoltaics.

“Graphene has captured the imagination of researchers worldwide due to its superlative and exotic electronic properties,” said Mark Hersam, who led the research team.

“However, harnessing these properties requires the development of chemical functionalization strategies that will allow graphene to be seamlessly integrated with other materials that are commonly found in real-world technology,” said Hersam.

“The stability and uniformity of the chemistry demonstrated here suggest that it can be used as a platform for many device applications,” he added. (ANI)

Paris Hilton embroiled in $8.3M movie promotion lawsuit

New Delhi, May 08 (ANI): Paris Hilton has defended herself against a lawsuit claiming she owes investors 8.3 million dollars for not fully promoting her 2006 film ‘Pledge This!”

The lawsuit was filed in Miami by Worldwide Entertainment Group Inc, reports the China Daily.

Company spokesperson Michael Goldberg has claimed Hilton’s failure to plug the movie’s DVD release cost investors more than 8.3 million dollars.

In a Miami Federal Court deposition, the socialite insists she honoured her contract and blames her overflowing work schedule for not meeting what she claims were last-minute demands.

“Any chance I got, any red carpet, any press, if I was doing something for another product … I would just bring it up. ‘Oh, my new sorority film, it’s going to be sexy, it’s going to be really hot girls’ — like I really, you know, did my best,” she said.

Hilton’s lawyer, Michael Weinstein added at a pre-trial motion hearing: “She’s the single busiest person on the planet.” (ANI)

Varun Gandhi deposes before NSA board in Lucknow

Lucknow, April 28 (ANI): BJP’s firebrand leader Varun Gandhi on Tuesday deposed before the National Security Act board here following recent directions of the Supreme Court justifying imposition of the NSA against him in connection with his hate-speech.

Sources said that the deposition before the NSA board took place in camera.

Earlier, BJP supporters gave a rousing welcome to Varun on his arrival in the city by helicopter. He was escorted to the party headquarters where he reportedly addressed the gathering.

Las month, the Uttar Pradesh police booked Varun Gandhi, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s candidate from Pilibhit, under the stringent National Security Act, charging him under the NSA for allegedly inciting communal tension and provoking a riot by his supporters. He was booked under Section 2 and Section 3 of the NSA.

Pilibhit’s District Magistrate Ajay Chauhan had issued the order to invoke NSA on Varun, who was already lodged in the district jail.

The NSA was invoked on the grounds of public administration and peace being disturbed by Gandhi, said Additional Cabinet Secretary Vijay Shanker Pandey to media in Lucknow at that time.

Pandey said the basis for slapping NSA were “Charges of inciting communal passion by making provocative and inflammatory speeches during meetings held on March 7 at Dalganj and on March 8 at Barkhera area of Pilibhit district have been confirmed.”

The NSA action had come on a day when Gandhi was slapped with fresh charges by the Pilibhit police including attempt to murder, a non-bailable offence, in connection with the Saturday’s violence (in March) involving his supporters around the Pilibhit district jail, following his arrest.

The maximum period of detention under the NSA is one year with no provision for bail. The government invokes the NSA on the basis of the district magistrate’s report, after which the accused is kept in preventive detention.

During the three-week period, the accused is provided with the grounds for invoking the NSA and he can challenge the detention before a three-member advisory board headed by a high court judge.

If the board holds that the grounds for detention are justified, then the applicant can only challenge it in Supreme Court.

Pandey stated that on March 18, deviating from the programme he (Varun) had sent to the superintendent of police, he changed his route and timing in a planned manner, thus affecting general administration adversely.

The additional cabinet secretary said that the government had issued an order to ensure strict enforcement of the model code of conduct. (ANI)

Vehicular pollutants stick to the lung more than other smoke, dust particles

London, April 2 (ANI): In what may lead to a change in the way air pollution is evaluated, scientists at Lund University in Sweden have shown that the tiny particles from traffic fumes are far “stickier” than other smoke and dust particles.

Research leader Jakob Londahl came to this conclusion after measuring how many airborne particles stay behind in the lungs.

For that purpose, the researchers used a new device called RESPI, which brings air being inhaled in through one chamber, and exhaled air out through a second chamber.

The device helped the researchers analyse particle number and size in both chambers.

Londahl asked nine healthy adults to breathe into the RESPI device while standing on the kerbside of a six-lane Copenhagen boulevard, which sees around 65,000 vehicles pass by on a typical weekday.

“We found most traffic fume particles to be very small and hydrophobic (having little affinity for water), meaning they did not grow bigger once inside the wet lung. But small particles get deposited in the lung more easily,” New Scientist magazine quoted the researcher as saying.

Having noted the street measurements, the researchers compared them with the deposition of particles inhaled from an open fire and a biomass burner, which was measured in a previous study.

The team observed that for each microgram of particles inhaled, 16 times as many of the tiny traffic particles got retained in the lung than either the larger soot particles from wood smoke or the moisture-sensitive salts from the biomass burner that clump into bigger particles once inside the lung.

According to them, the traffic deposits also had three times the surface area of those inhaled in the biomass combustion study.

“There is some debate as to what characteristics of particles make them unhealthy – if it is mass or surface area or number. Our results support that it is the latter two, but at the moment, most air quality policies limit amounts by mass,” says Londahl.

The researchers next plan to study how the deposition of traffic exhaust particles differs between healthy people and those with respiratory diseases.

A research article on this study has been published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology. (ANI)

Light-activated antibacterial coating may help fight hospital-acquired infections

Washington, Mar 31 (ANI): Scientists at the UCL Eastman Dental Institute have developed a new tool to combat hospital-acquired infections- antibacterial coating that is activated by light.

The research team, led by Zoie Aiken, have tested the new coating with antibacterial properties, and found that it could kill 99.9 percent of Escherichia coli bacteria when a white hospital light was shone on its surface to activate it.

Made of titanium dioxide with added nitrogen, the veneer-like surface, when activated by white light-similar to those used in hospital wards and operating theatres-produced a decrease in the number of bacteria surviving on the test surface.

The hospital environment is usually full of microbes responsible for healthcare-associated infections (HCAI).

Thus, there’s a need for new ways to prevent the spread of these pathogens to patients.

And it is possible to apply antibacterial coatings to frequently touched hospital surfaces to kill any bacteria present and help reduce the number of HCAI.

Titanium dioxide based coatings can kill bacteria after activation with UV light.

And the addition of nitrogen to these coatings enables photons available in visible light to be utilised to activate the surface and kill bacteria.

Aiken said: “The activity of the coating will be assessed against a range of different bacteria such as MRSA and other organisms which are known to cause infections in hospitals. At present we only know that the coating is active against Escherichia coli. However, E. coli is more difficult to kill than bacteria from the Staphylococcus group which includes MRSA, so the results to date are encouraging.

“The coating has currently been applied onto glass using a method called APCVD (atmospheric pressure chemical vapour deposition.

“We are also experimenting with different materials such as plastic. As an example, the coating could be applied to a plastic sheet that could be used to cover a computer keyboard on a hospital ward. The lights in the ward will keep the coating activated, which will in turn continue to kill any bacteria that may be transferred onto the keyboard from the hands of healthcare workers.”

The study was presented at the Society for General Microbiology meeting in Harrogate. (ANI)

Now, biomarker test to diagnose or rule out Alzheimer’s disease

Washington, Mar 17 (ANI): In a breakthrough study, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have pioneered a biomarker test that can confirm or rule out Alzheimer’s disease.

The test measures cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of two of the disease’s biochemical hallmarks – amyloid beta42 peptide and tau protein.

With this information in hand, the scientists also predict whether a person’s mild cognitive impairment would convert to Alzheimer’s disease over time.

The research team, led by Dr. Leslie M. Shaw, Co-Director of the Penn Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) Biomarker Core, could detect this devastating disease at the earliest stages, before dementia symptoms appeared and widespread irreversible damage occurred.

By improving upon a previously suggested pathological CSF biomarker signature, the researchers found evidence of neuron degeneration – marked by an increase in CSF concentration of tau proteins – and plaque deposition, indicated by a decrease in amyloid beta42 concentration.

Also, people with two copies of the genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, APOE e4 , had the lowest concentrations of amyloid beta42, compared to those with one or no copies.

“With this test, we can reliably detect and track the progression of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Shaw.

He added: “Validated biomarker tests will improve the focus of Alzheimer’s clinical trials, enrolling patients at earlier stages of the disease to find treatments that can at least delay -and perhaps stop- neurodegeneration. In addition, prevention trials can test methods to delay or block mild cognitive impairment from converting to full-blown Alzheimer’s.”

Currently, researchers are conducting further validation studies of the research test system.

Additional work is needed to develop additional biomarkers, as well as identify more genetic risk factors that will help distinguish Alzheimer’s from other neurodegenerative diseases characterized by cognitive impairments.

The study appears in the online edition of the Annals of Neurology. (ANI)

Drunken man awarded $2.3M for losing leg in subway

New York, Feb 18 (ANI): A drunken man, who lost his leg after he fell on the track of a subway train, has been awarded a whopping 2.3 million dollars by a Manhattan jury, which blamed NYC Transit for the accident.

Brooklyn resident Dustin Dibble, 25, confessed that he’d been boozing with friends for four hours before he fell on the tracks at the 14th Street Station, where a train accident cost him his right leg.

Official records revealed that Dibble had a .18 blood-alcohol level at the time of accident, more than double the legal limit if he were driving.

Dibble also said that he was so drunk that he didn’t remember anything about the 1:50 a.m. accident.

In fact, he didn’t even remember how he ended up on the tracks, but the jury still found he didn’t bear the majority of the blame.

Dibble’s lawyer, Andrew Smiley, said that the NYC Transit was the bigger culprit because a driver is supposed to stop the train if he sees a big mass in front of the train.

“A subway- train operator is obligated to stop a subway train before it strikes a large object on the tracks, even if it is not known that the object is actually an intoxicated person,” the New York Post quoted Smiley as saying.

Train operator Michael Moore, a long-time MTA vet with a sparkling record, said in a deposition: “I saw what I thought was garbage on the track” and continued into the station.

He added: “I saw movement and I put the train into emergency” – meaning he hit the emergency brake.”

When asked whether his client’s drunkenness was one of the major reasons of the accident, Smiley said, “We never disputed that.”

“It was just an accident [but] it wasn’t my choice to lose my leg,” said Dibble.

While a spokesman for NYC Transit, Paul Fleuranges, said that lawyers were reviewing the February 9 verdict, Mayor Bloomberg’s office declined comment.

The jury returned a 3.5 million dollars verdict in Dibble’s favour, but also found him 35 percent responsible.

Thus, Dibble will now collect 2,336,713 dollars. (ANI)

Efforts to save wetlands in Kashmir

Srinagar, Feb 13 (ANI): The Wildlife Department in Kashmir has taken all the measures to save the wetlands as deposition of silt and, human encroachment have led to drop in water levels and increase in pollution level.

The State of Jammu and Kashmir has nineteen wetlands, with nine of them in Kashmir Valley.

Experts predict that these wetlands will vanish in about seven years if the authorities continue to neglect them.

The Hokersar wetland, situated at 16 kilometres north of Srinagar, is just one of the favoured destination for migratory birds. It has shrunk to 4.5 square kilometers against its original area of 13.75 squareilometers. large number of satellite wetlands found in areas adjourning bigger water bodies have completely vanished due to rampant urbanisation and encroachment.

Some believe that the diversion of flood channels to wetlands has caused them to dry up.

The wildlife protection department of the state is embarking on a massive de-silting and de-weeding campaign to regain the wetlands and the Central Government has agreed to provide funds to help to save these wetlands.

AK Srivastav, Chief Wildlife Warden said that the department was doing its best to save these wetlands.

“Wetlands in Kashmir are very important for us and we are trying our best to save them. We are talking all the scientific measures to save them. The Government of India has been asked for funds to save these wetlands. Three wetlands have been included in the Prime Minister’s construction package namely: Wular Lake, Surinsar Mansar in Jammu region and Sobrari wetland in Ladakh,” said A.K. Srivastav.

Even the local Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) are working for protection of wetlands.

“Kashmir valley is known for its wetlands all over the world. But I think people in Jammu and Kashmir do not know much about the wetlands. We are trying to create awareness among them on this issue. We want to make them understand that wetlands are nature’s kidneys. If the wetlands are there then agriculture and horticulture in the state will also thrive,” said Nazir, a member Non-Governmental Organization (NGO).

Wetlands are among the most important life support systems for a large species of birds, yet two-thirds of these wetlands in Kashmir have been reportedly destroyed since 1950s.

The surviving wetlands are among the threatened natural areas and are in need of serious protection and preservation. The migratory birds fly in groups over continents in search of food. They travel long distances to inhabit amenable environments on seasonal basis.

During their six-month long stay in India, many of the birds lay eggs and bring up the chicks till they are capable to undertake journey back home. by Parvez Butt (ANI)

50 Cent’s wins legal battle against his ex

New York, Feb 6 (ANI): Rapper 50 Cent has won a lawsuit against his ex Shaniqua Tompkins, after a Manhattan judge gave his verdict against her.

Shaniqua claimed 50 Cent’s millions, as she is the mother of his child.

However, according to the verdict, she will not even get a single penny.

50 Cent was more than glad when Supreme Court Justice Carol Edmead refuted the suit, ruling that none of Tompkins’ allegations had merit.

“I knew that once the facts were heard that justice would prevail, I hope now that we can put this behind us and move forward with our lives,” the New York Daily News quoted 50 Cent as saying.

Tompkins began dating 50 Cent aka Curtis Jackson in 1995, when he was freshly paroled, unemployed and an aspiring rapper.

According to her, the rapper had vowed to take care of her once he became a star, while she was pregnant with his son in 1996.

“Even if we weren’t going to be together, we were down for life. That no matter what, whether we’re together or not that he would always take care of me. He said he would never see me fall,” Tompkins claimed, according to court paper.

The suit stated that Tompkins stood by 50 Cent, whose fortune is at least 50 million dollars, when he was a no-name, and that she bought him a diamond ring and watch because they were “part of the makeup of being a rapper.”

” It says she nursed him back to health after he was shot nine times in front of his grandma’s house in 2000, I did it because I loved him, and wanted him to be happy,” Tompkins said that in a deposition.

Tompkins had also claimed that she was forced to sign away her life rights to the production of Fitty’s movie, “Get Rich or Die Tryin’”, but the judge was buying none of it.

Instead, the mother of two will continue to receive 6,700 dollars in monthly child-support payments.

“In dismissing the case before trial, the court is sending a clear message, this is a complete and total victory for 50,” Brett Kimmel, a lawyer for the 50 Cent said. (ANI)

Water has played large role in shaping Martian landscape

Washington, Feb 6 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have determined that geologic features in Martian craters suggest deposition and flow of water and ice, which is further evidence for the large role that water has likely played in shaping the landscape of the Red Planet.

The research was done by scientists at the Tucson-based Planetary Science Institute (PSI) in the US.

Their results provide strong evidence that multiple wet and/or icy climate cycles have shaped the topography of the planet’s large craters.

“Studying crater degradation in potentially ice-rich environments is vital to understanding the geology of craters and their surroundings, as well as for determining whether the ice comes from the atmosphere or from below the ground,” said Daniel Berman, a PSI associate research scientist and lead author of the research paper.

Berman, along with PSI Senior Scientist David Crown and PSI Research Scientist Leslie Bleamaster III, surveyed the geologic features in two sets of mid-latitude craters.

Each set included about 100 craters, with the first set in the Arabia Terra region of the northern hemisphere and the second set in an area east of Hellas basin in the southern hemisphere.

The researchers selected craters that are greater than 20 km (about 12.5 miles) in diameter that have been completely or nearly completely photographed by cameras on various spacecraft, including the Mars Odyssey THEMIS VIS camera, the Mars Global Surveyor Mars Orbiter Camera, and the Viking Orbiter cameras.

They looked specifically for the following erosional or depositional features, the number and sizes of those features, and how the features are oriented.

Berman found that lobate flows, gullies, and arcuate ridges on the crater walls between latitudes of 30 to 45 degrees face the pole in their hemisphere, whereas equator-facing orientations are more common than pole-facing ones at latitudes between 45 and 60 degrees.

In the southern study area, narrow channels generally had pole-facing orientations, whereas wider valleys generally have equator-facing orientations.

The features’ pole-facing or equator-facing orientations could result from uneven heating of the crater walls.

Ice on walls that get more sunlight would melt faster, causing more water to flow and form the gullies and other features.

Further evidence for flowing ice is found on the crater floors, Berman observed. He found that the floors of small craters slope away from the walls that exhibit erosional/depositional features toward the more pristine ones.

These slopes have inclines of about 0.5 to 3 degrees. This suggests that ice-rich materials flowed from one crater wall to the other. (ANI)