Nanotech breath sensor can tell if someone has diabetes or not

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A nanotechnology-based sensor could soon tell whether someone has Type I diabetes – just by analysing their breath.

The sensor, which has been successfully tested by researchers in Switzerland, could also be used by emergency room doctors to determine whether a patient has developed diabetic ketoacidosis, a potentially serious complication that happens when diabetics do not take enough insulin.

Even diabetics could use the technology someday in their own homes, to determine whether they need more insulin.

Professor Sotiris E. Pratsinis and colleagues at ETH Zurich in Switzerland explain that everyone has a little bit of acetone in their breath.

But people with Type I diabetes release unusually high levels of the chemical when they exhale.

If they have diabetic ketoacidosis, a dangerous buildup of acetone in the blood, they exhale even-larger amounts of acetone.

The researchers built an extremely sensitive acetone detector by directly depositing from a flame plume a thin film of semiconducting, mixed ceramic nanoparticles between a set of gold electrodes.

The device acts like an electrical resistor. When it gets hit with a puff of acetone-filled air, its resistance drops, allowing more electricity to pass between the electrodes.

If a diabetic were to breathe on the sensor, its resistance would suddenly drop.

When a healthy person exhales onto the nanoparticles, their resistance will not change very much.

The scientists found this new sensor can detect acetone in extremely moist air, an attribute that is critical for any breath test.

It is sensitive enough to detect acetone at 20 parts per billion, a concentration that is 90 times lower than the level at which it can be found in the breath of diabetic patients.

The study has been published in ACS” Analytical Chemistry, a semi-monthly journal. (ANI)

Homeopathy is witchcraft, according to Brit docs

London, May 16 (ANI): The British Medical Association has likened homoeopathy to “witchcraft”, and declared that the National Health Service should not pay for it.

Denouncing the use of the alternative medicine, hundreds of members of the BMA said taxpayers should not foot the bill for remedies with no scientific basis to support them, reports The Telegraph.

Dr Tom Dolphin, deputy chairman of the BMA”s junior doctors committee in England said: “Homeopathy is witchcraft. It is a disgrace that nestling between the National Hospital for Neurology and Great Ormond Street [in London] there is a National Hospital for Homeopathy which is paid for by the NHS”

Devised in the 18th century by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann, the alternative medicine is based on a theory that substances which cause symptoms in a healthy person can, when vastly diluted, cure the same problems in a sick person. (ANI)

Navratilova diagnosed with breast cancer

Tennis legend Martina Navratilova has revealed she has been diagnosed with breast cancer.

The 53-year-old, who won 18 grand slam titles including nine Wimbledon singles titles, said she cried after finding out she had the disease.

Navratilova, 53, said when she heard the diagnosis she felt she had suffered her “personal 9/11″.

“I was devastated,” she told (US) ABC television’s Good Morning America on being diagnosed in February, when a routine mammogram revealed a cluster in her left breast.

She explained she had had a lumpectomy, that doctors had found the disease had not spread to her lymph nodes and that there was a “very small chance” of the cancer recurring.

“It is just in that one breast,” Navratilova said.

“I’m OK and I’ll make a full recovery.”

But she said that emotionally it had been a difficult time.

“I’m this healthy person, I’ve been healthy all my life, and all of a sudden I have cancer. Are you kidding me?” she said.

Navratilova told US magazine People: “It knocked me on my ass, really. I feel so in control of my life and my body, and then this comes, and it’s completely out of my hands.”

According to the report, doctors say the former Wimbledon champion’s prognosis is excellent because the tumour was detected at an early stage.

Navratilova has already had the lump removed and will begin six weeks of radiation therapy in May.

“It was a total shock because I’ve been so healthy,” she added.

“I thought, ‘I’m going to lose my boob and then my hair, and I don’t have that much. There’s a good chance it won’t come back’.”

The former world number one said she had intended to keep the news quiet but changed her mind when she realised she could persuade other women to go for check-ups.

“The sooner you catch it, the better,” she said.

“So get the bloody mammogram.

“I went four years between mammograms. I let it slide. Everyone gets busy, but don’t make excuses. I stay in shape and eat right, and it happened to me. Another year and I could have been in big trouble.”

Born in Prague, Navratilova fled to the United States in 1975 at the height of the Cold War.

She became a US citizen six years later but regained her Czech nationality two years ago, and has dual nationality.

With lifestyle diseases on the rise, healthcare should be future focus: Ansari

Ranchi (Jharkhand), Sep.10 (ANI): Vice President M Hamid Ansari on Thursday said with the number of lifestyle diseases increasing, healthcare facilities should be strengthened to meet future demands of the country.

“The facilities we have is sufficient for now, but not sufficient for future,” Ansari said while dedicating the new HCG Curie-Abdur Razzaque Ansari Cancer Institute (C-ARACI) to the nation.

He said there has been huge progress in healthcare in the country, but the increase in new diseases has also kept in tandem with the improving system.

“There weren’t too many diseases 50 years ago. But now there has been an increase (in diseases) following changing lifestyles and diagnosis of new diseases,” he added.

Ansari said development of the health sector was crucial in maintaining the happiness index.

“A healthy person is a happy person. An ailing person, howsoever rich, is an unhappy person,” Ansari said while lauding the contribution of non-governmental institutes like Ranchi’s C-ARACI in developing health care facilities. (ANI)

MTV Brings The Trials and Tribulations of Steve-O to Life in ‘Steve-O: Demise and…

MTV Brings The Trials and Tribulations of Steve-O to Life in ‘Steve-O: Demise
and Rise’ Airing on Sunday, May 3rd at 10:00pm ET/PT

“Steve-O: Demise and Rise” Is The Latest In A Series of Self-Doc Programming
Set To Air On The Network

NEW YORK, April 16 /PRNewswire/ — MTV continues to experiment and break the
mold in documentary filmmaking with the release of “Steve-O: Demise and Rise,”
a self-documented look inside the mind of a man struggling with drug and
alcohol addiction. This explosive special gives a raw, intimate first-hand
account of Steve-O’s downward spiral to when he ultimately hits rock bottom
and is saved by the intervention of friends and his own will to do whatever it
takes to get – and stay – sober. “Steve-O: Demise and Rise” airs on Sunday,
May 3rd at 10pm ET/PT.

“Addiction is a brain disease that kills. Steve suffered from the profound
consequences of long-standing polydrug addiction. The disease brought him to
the edge of sanity and one night nearly took his life,” said Dr. Drew Pinsky.
“His recovery has been an inspiring but gut-wrenching process. Steve remains
an inspiration to all. Those that have come to know him through this process
love him.”

“This documentary captures the most frightening moments of my friend at the
apex of his addiction. I know because I was there,” said Johnny Knoxville.
“More importantly though it offers hope, and documents the tremendous amount
of courage and hard work on Steve-O’s behalf to turn that hope into a healthy
person.”

Steve-O, a self-professed ham in front of the video camera, never leaves home
without it. Since his early teens, Steve-O has captured moments of his life on
tape, including everything from his days as an amateur stuntman and
flea-market clown to his rise to fame as popular member of “Jackass” and
“Wildboyz.” Consequently, the darkest hours of Steve-O’s life are also
captured. Viewers will see moments of extreme substance abuse, including the
marathon nitrous oxide sessions, terrorizing his next door neighbor, his
ill-fated attempt at being a gangsta-rapper and several infamous public
displays of self-destructive behavior. All of Steve-O’s antics lead to his
friends stepping in, turning off the camera and forcibly admitting him to the
medical center where he was forced to begin the process of learning to live
sober.

Since his intervention, it hasn’t been without hurdles that Steve-O has tried
to stay clean, sober and focused on making amends to those closest to him hurt
by his addiction — his family and friends. Steve-O’s journey has taken him
through highs and lows, and this documentary follows them all, right up until
his first performance this year on ABC’s “Dancing With The Stars.” Now faced
with the daily challenge of living a clean life while still being the Steve-O
that everyone loves, he wants it to be known that he is not the poster child
for drug addiction or recovery but wants to show how truly difficult it is to
stay sober every day.

“Steve-O: Demise and Rise” is executive produced by Jeff Tremaine, Johnny
Knoxville, Stephen Glover and Derek Freda for Dickhouse Entertainment. Tim
Healy and Dave Sirulnick are Executive Producers for MTV.

About MTV
MTV is the dynamic, vibrant experiment at the intersection of music,
creativity and youth culture. For over 27 years, MTV has evolved, challenged
the norm, and detonated boundaries — giving each new generation a creative
outlet and voice that entertains, informs and unites on every platform and
screen. On-air, MTV has been the number one rated 24 hour ad-supported cable
network P12-24 for 17 straight years. Online, MTV.com scored double-digit
growth in 2007 and MTV launched 15 dynamic online communities and eight new
virtual worlds. On the go, MTV Mobile is the #1 music brand in the wireless
space – delivering 90% more streams than in 2006. And MTV’s successful sibling
networks MTV2, mtvU and MTV Tr3s each deliver unprecedented customized
content, super-serving music fans, college students and young American Latinos
like no one else. MTV is part of MTV Networks, a unit of Viacom (NYSE: VIA,
VIA.B), one of the world’s leading creators of programming and content across
all media platforms. Wanna know more? Come on in… www.mtvpress.com.

SOURCE MTV

Melissa Barreto, MTV, +1-212-846-7226, melissa.barreto@mtvstaff.com

Genetically mixed populations can help understand human diversity, origins: Expert

Washington, February 15 (ANI): A Penn State physical anthropologist says that genetic diseases and genetically mixed populations can prove useful in understanding human diversity and human origins.

“We wanted to get to a strategy to predict what a face will look like. We want to understand the path of evolution that leads to that part of the selection process,” said Mark D. Shriver, associate professor of biological anthropology.

He revealed that with an eye on pinpointing genes that influence the shape of the human face and head, he began with an online database of genes linked to disease-Online Mendelian Inheritance of Man.

If the symptoms of the disease involved the face or skull the gene implicated in the disease became a candidate for those facial traits, said the researcher.

Shriver says that the his approach works because, though he looked at genes implicated in disease, those same genes in a healthy person may also influence the same physical trait-length, width, shape, size-but within the range normal for healthy individuals.

The researcher highlights that fact that facial traits vary among humans, but do tend to group by population.

In general, according to him, West Africans have wider faces than Europeans and Europeans have longer faces than West Africans.

“There is a strong relationship between genetic ancestry and facial traits. Using individuals of combined ancestry, European and African, we can see how the target genes alter facial traits,” he told attendees at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The study was concentrated on a combined sample of African Americans with West African and European ancestry, whose genetic makeup was known through DNA testing.

The researchers made it simpler by eliminating anyone with Native American ancestry, so that only two genetic pools were represented-West African and European.

They reported on a sample of 254 individuals using three-dimensional imaging, and measured the distances between specific portions of the face.

Each individual had provided a DNA sample.

“We started with 22 landmarks on the faces that could be accurately located in all the images,” said Shriver, adding that these landmarks might be the tip of the nose, the tip of the chin, the outer corner of the eye or other repeatable locations.

The research team then recorded the distances between all the points in all directions, in order to have a distance map of each of the faces.

From their DNA profiles, Shriver could determine the admixture percentages of each individual, how much of their genetic make up came from each group.

He could then compare the genetically determined admixture to the facial feature differences and determine the relative differences from the parental populations.

“This type of study, done on admixed populations shows that each person is a composite of their ancestors and that the range of facial features is a continuum,” says Shriver.

He and his colleagues observed that there was a very strong statistical correlation between the amounts of admixture and the facial traits.

“We chose to look at African Americans because they were a large enough and available admixed population. We are trying to solidify our understanding of the origins of humans and the evolutionary processes. Looking at admixed populations shows us the influence genes have and how they relate to physical features,” said Shriver. (ANI)