Bret Michaels was watching porn during haemorrhage

Melbourne, May 21 (ANI): Poison frontman Bret Michaels has revealed that he was channel surfing between ‘Busty Cops 3’ and sports when he suffered a brain haemorrhage in April.

Michaels, 47, suffered what doctors call a warning stroke and has been diagnosed with patent forum ovale, or hole in the heart.

“I was going back and forth from SportsCenter to Busty Cops 3,” News.com.au quoted him as telling Rolling Stone magazine.

He had to spend two weeks recovering in an Arizona hospital after his brush with death. (ANI)

Bret Michaels opens to Oprah Winfrey about haemorrhage ordeal

New York, May 19 (ANI): Poison frontman Bret Michaels has revealed to Oprah Winfrey that he wore his signature bandana during his hospital stay.

Michaels, 47, who suffered a brain haemorrhage last month, told Winfrey in an interview that he was determined to keep his head wrapped in the bandana.

“I said, ‘If I’m going out, I want to go out rockin’,” the New York Daily News quoted him as telling the talk show host.

Of the subarachnoid haemorrhage, the singer said he knew right away something “was severely wrong”.

“It just exploded instantly – ran from my temple down to the back of my skull,” he added.

The singer, who’s also known for his “Rock of Love” reality show on VH1, has quickly bounced back from his brush with death, with a planned performance at the Hard Rock Live show in Biloxi, Miss., next week. (ANI)

Hitler’s Berlin bunker: unseen pictures revealed

London, May 5 (ANI): After more than six decades since the end of Adolf Hitler’s regime in a Berlin bunker, many unpublished photographs of the underground lair have been revealed to the public.

These pictures, published by mirror.co.uk, capture the incredible drama of the Second World War’s final act, when Russian shells bombed the city to rubble.

While one picture shows the command centre after it had been burned by retreating German troops and then looted by Russians, another is that of American journalists examining the bloodstained sofa where Hitler shot himself after Braun took poison.

Life magazine’s William Vandivert took these photographs. (ANI)

Bret Michaels released from hospital after brain haemorrhage treatment

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Former Poison singer Bret Michaels has been discharged from the Arizona Hospital where he was being treated for brain haemorrhage.

The singer’s doctor Dr. Joseph Zabramski said that Michaels was no longer in a critical condition and has been discharged from the Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph”s Hospital in Phoenix to an undisclosed location to recuperate, as reported by TMZ.com.

The doctor also said that Bret’s condition is being monitored by a medical team.

The doc added that the singer is “very lucky” to be recovering so well. (ANI)

Poison man Bret Michaels ‘stabilizes’ after brain hemorrhage

New York, April 24(ANI): Poison frontman Bret Michaels is feeling better after being admitted to a hospital following a severe headache caused by a massive subarachnoid hemorrhage, it has emerged

The rocker was taken to an undisclosed hospital, where doctors found him suffering from subarachnoid hemorrhage or bleeding at the base of his brain stem, People.com reports.

Michaels, who is also a diabetic, had undergone an emergency appendectomy on April 12.

“After several CAT scans, MRIs and an angiogram, [doctors] decided to keep Michaels in the ICU and are running several tests to determine the cause,” the New York Daily News quoted a source, as saying.

The insider added: “[It] will be touch and go for the next few days while he is under intense observation.”

Meanwhile, Michaels’ rep said: “We will have no additional information until further testing is done.”

However, Ambre Lake, the Season 2 winner of ‘Rock of Love,’ revealed that the singer’s condition has improved.

Lake said she”s spoken with people who are close to Bret who say he”s stabilized and conscious, reports TMZ.com.

Michaels is a current participant in reality show ‘Celebrity Apprentice’.

Donald Trump, the host of the show said in a statement: “I am deeply saddened to hear about Bret Michaels. My thoughts and prayers are with him and his family at this time. He”s a great competitor and champion and I hope he will be fine.”

Michaels had written on his blog over the weekend: “They told me that if I had gone on stage like I wanted to, [my appendix] likely would have ruptured and I could have died. As I write this, I”m feeling pretty bad … to tell you the truth. (ANI)

Feedback sought on cane toad plan

North-west Western Australian residents have been invited to make submissions on a Commonwealth review of cane toad management.

The Federal Government is putting together an action plan to minimise the impact of the introduced species whose poison is toxic to many native species.

In announcing the public consultation period, Environment Minister Peter Garrett said the ability of native animals to adapt to the toad after a period of exposure offered some hope.

He says the plan would focus on identifying ways to protect high priority native species and engage local communities in the process.

Indian-origin woman convicted of killing lover with poison

LONDON: An Indian-origin woman faced life sentence after being found guilty of poisoning her former lover to death, using an ancient Indian herb in the first such case in Britain in 128 years. ( Watch Video )

Lakhvir Kaur Singh, a 40-year-old mother of three was convicted of killing her ex-lover Lakhvinder Cheema, 39, and leaving his fiancé seriously ill after lacing their curry with Aconite – a poison that finds a mention in ancient Indian texts.

Indian Aconite, known as the ‘queen of poisons’, is found in the Himalayan foothills and known in India as Halahal – the poison that mythology holds turned Shiva’s neck blue.

The last time an English court convicted anyone of using the poison was in an infamous case surrounding the murder of an 18-year-old man by his brother-in-law, a doctor named George Henry Lamson, who was hanged in April 1882.

Cheema, known as Lucky, was blinded and paralysed while his fiancé, Gurjeet Choough, now 22, fell into a coma after eating the poisoned curry in January last year.

A London court heard on Wednesday how Lakhvir, consumed with jealousy, procured the herb from India and then gained access to Lucky’s house, where she put the poison into their curry.

Lakhvir and Lucky had been lovers for about 15 years prior to his engagement to Gurjeet – an arranged match – whom Lakhvir accused of seeking to marry Lucky only to obtain residence in Britain.

The court was told Gurjeet and Lucky fell violently sick after eating the curry, with paralysis taking hold very quickly. They had both lost their sight and were losing the use of their limbs – by the time they reached the hospital Lucky was completely paralysed. He died within an hour of being admitted. Gurjeet was put into a medical coma and recovered two days later.

Lakhvir was arrested Jan 28, 2009, and a small packet of the poison was found in her coat pocket and another in her handbag. Expert forensic analysis identified that Aconite was present in both of the victims and the remains of the curry they ate.

Lakhvir claimed she used it for a herbal remedy for a skin complaint by mixing it with cow’s urine.

Detective Inspector Tony Bishop of Scotland Yard said: “This was a premeditated murder by a woman who could not accept that her lover had found happiness with someone else and planned to get married.”

“Singh planned this murder, we believe bringing the poison from India, and added it to the food that she knew would be eaten by Lucky and Gurjeet. The poison that Singh used caused appalling symptoms meaning that the last hours of Lucky’s life were extremely traumatic and must have been terrifying.”

Suzanne Somers says chemotherapy killed Patrick Swayze

New York, Sep 19 (ANI): Actress Suzanne Somers, who is herself a cancer survivor, thinks that chemotherapy has killed Patrick Swayze.

The ‘Three’s Company’ star gave her opinion on the ‘Ghost’ star’s death while speaking to Shinan Govani at the party for Tom Ford’s movie, ‘A Single Man’, at the Toronto Film Festival.

“They took a beautiful man” and “put poison in his body,” the New York Post quoted her as saying.

Somers, who has a book about cancer coming out next month, said: “Why couldn’t they have built him up nutritionally and gotten rid of the toxins? . . . I hate to be this controversial . . . but I have to speak out.”

Other stars present at the party included Julianne Moore, Naomi Watts, Clive Owen, and Colin Firth. (ANI)

Novel therapeutic target for Parkinson’s disease identified

Washington, Aug 29 (ANI): Scientists from University of Helsinki Institute of Biotechnology have identified a novel therapeutic target for Parkinson’s disease.

Lead researcher Professor Raimo K. Tuominen and colleagues have identified a growth factor that can be used to halt the progress of damage brought on by a nerve poison, and possibly restore the function of damaged cells.

The team is investigating two new nerve growth factors. MANF (mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor) and CDNF.

MANF is released from glial cells in the midbrain and is a member of the same growth factor family as CDNF.

The team found that in the experimental PD model, MANF and CDNF injections into the brain prevented dopamine nerve destruction caused by nerve poison and to some extent even restored the function of damaged cells in rats.

This suggests that MANF spreads more readily in brain tissue than other known growth factors.

This may be a highly significant finding in respect to the development of growth factor therapy for PD. (ANI)

Hooch claims two lives in Ahmedabad

Ahmedabad, Aug 29 (ANI): Ahmedabad police recovered the bodies of two persons who died after allegedly consuming illicit liquor on Friday.

Three other persons are undergoing treatment at the hospital.

Relatives of victims accused the government of not taking steps to prevent the vending of illicit liquor.

“My father was complaining of a headache so I asked him to go to hospital but he didn’t want to go there then I said that take some tea. When we went for tea then we saw the dead body of a man who consumed liquor a day before, he died today after complaining of vomiting and stomach ache…there is no one to take care of poor, every one cares of rich people,” said Seema Ben, daughter of a victim.

However, police officials said that whether the victims had died after consuming illicit or poison could be ascertained only after reviewing post mortem reports.

“We can’t say that the victims consumed illicit liquor or not at this moment of time. However, doctors at the VS Hospital are said that the victims consumed some chemical but we would only say something on this only after reviewing post mortem reports,” said H. K. Mehta, additional commissioner of Police, Ahmedabad.

At least 132 people died of consuming illicit liquor in Ahmedabad in July.

Illicit liquor, also known as grog or hooch, is a flourishing beverage in India, particularly in states like Gujarat where prohibition is in force.

The illicit liquor is much cheaper as compared to the licensed drinks, which cannot be afforded by most of the people from the poorer sections of society. (ANI)

Haryana Police free missing kids

Haryana, Aug 27 (ANI): The Haryana Police has released two kids-Nikita and Himanshu – after their grandparents promised to prevent them from protesting.

The eight-year-old Nikita and seven-year-old Himanshu were staging a dharna outside the Haryana Court demanding arrest of the rapists of their mother.

In 2006, their mother Alka, was gang raped by five men in Sonepat district.

After three years of waiting for justice, Alka along with her husband Sunil consumed poison. Alka died but Sunil survived. However, shockingly, he was arrested on charges of murdering his wife.

Alka’s two children, along with their grandparents and other relatives, have been camping on the footpath outside the court for over a month. (ANI)

Mozart ‘killed by superbug like MRSA, not poison’

London, Aug 18 (ANI): Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was killed by a bacterial infection akin to MRSA, claim Dutch researchers.

Mozart died at age 35 – young by even 18th century standards. His untimely death has remained a mystery ever since he passed away in the early hours of 5 December 1791.

Some claimed he was poisoned, others said he simply wore himself out by composing more than 600 pieces during his short life.

Now, a group of boffins has suggested that he died from a bacterial infection spread by soldiers which was rife in Vienna at the time, reports The Telegraph.

The researchers, who studied the city’s death register, found that the three most common causes of death among men of his age were tuberculosis, severe weight loss and a condition called ‘oedema’ or ‘dropsy’ – an accumulation of fluids causing the body to swell up.

And, Mozart’s symptoms match the last of the three, according to Dr Richard Zeger, from the Academic Medical Centre in Amsterdam, who said it could have been caused by a bacterial infection.

He said: “I think you can compare this to a superbug like MRSA or C.difficile.”

Mozart’s sister-in-law Sophie Haibel, who saw him days before he died, said he was covered in a rash – consistent with a bacterial infection – and severely swollen – consistent with oedema or dropsy.

At the time Vienna was full of soldiers from the Austro-Turkish war who had been struck down by disease.

Zeger said: “Austria was at war at the time so people were living in a bad condition and most of the deaths were among soldiers. You can see there was clearly an epidemic and we found that it started in a military hospital. There was some kind of inflammatory disease that almost everyone contracted and some people died. It was an epidemic of oedema, which is a collection of fluid.

“When your kidneys fail, they can’t secrete body fluids so fluid accumulates in your body, which causes people to swell up and get worse and worse.”

This kind of a condition could have been caused by being infected with bacteria from the Staphylococcus aureus (SA) family, or which MRSA is a more recent member.

“Mozart’s body had swollen up so badly he was not able to turn around any more in his bed, showing he had post-streptococcal complications,” said Zeger.

In those times, antibiotics like penicillin were nowhere present, so strictly speaking the bacteria would not have been a ‘super’ bug as it could not have developed any resistance in the way that methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has done.

Zeger postulated: “We still see the streptococcal infection today in close communities like schools and armies so that would be a good reason behind the epidemic.

“In Mozart’s time, several soldiers in the army were also musicians who might have performed in Vienna, where Mozart might have contracted it.” (ANI)

Secrets ingredients of scorpion venom unraveled

Washington, July 1 (ANI): Chinese scientists have unravelled the protein composition of the Scorpiops jendeki scorpion’s venom.

Experts at Wuhan University claim that they are the first research team to have analysed venom in this arachnid, and discovered nine novel poison molecules, never before seen in any scorpion species.

Dr. Yibao Ma led the team of researchers to study the sting of S. jendeki, a member of the family Euscorpiidae, which covers Europe, Asia, Africa, and America.

“Our work greatly expands the current knowledge of scorpion venoms. We found ten known types and nine novel venom peptides and proteins. These molecules provide a rich, hitherto-unexplored resource for drug development as well as clues into the evolution of the scorpion venom arsenal,” he said.

While the S. jendeki venom has never been studied before, the researchers found that it contains ten known poisons, with markedly diverse modes of action and nine new types of venom peptide, whose biological effects are yet to be determined.

However, the scorpion itself is considered harmless – probably because it cannot deliver enough of the poison to cause any damage to a healthy human.

Interestingly, neurotoxins, which are major poisons in the venom of another scorpion species that can kill humans, were not found in the S. jendeki venom.

Ma concluded: “Many types of venom peptides and proteins have been obtained from diverse scorpion species. Some are widely distributed among scorpions from different families, while others, like some of those discovered in our study, appear to be restricted to particular scorpion lineages. The presence of these common and uncommon venom molecules among different lineages reflects the dynamic evolutionary process of the scorpion venom arsenal”.

The study has been published in the open access journal BMC Genomics. (ANI)

Drought-hit farmers wish to commit suicide in Jharkhand

Palamu (Jharkhand), June 28 (ANI): Absence of rains has taken a toll of many lives, especially of peasants, whose livelihood depends on rains.

A group of farmers in Jhakhand’s Palamu district, in a letter to the President of India, Prime Minister and Chief Justice of India, have asked for permission to commit suicide.

Acute drought like situation in the region has made the farmers desparate. The farmers say their cannot survive as they are facing drought for three successive years. The Government has not helped them .

“There is no water in the wells. There is no water in the tap. We do not have food to eat. So we are left with no choice but to commit suicide. We can consume poison and die. The government should give us permission to eat poison and die,” said Dulari Devi, a villager.

The District Commissioner, however, said that efforts are on to keep a track of the receding water level.

“We have got information about the receding water level in some places. We are keeping a track of the situation. We are trying to identify pockets where there is a possibility of water level receding to a great extent. In that case we might go for extra deep boring,” said Amitabh Kaushal, District Commissioner for Palamu.

Timely monsoon is vital for India’s largely agrarian based economy, as it determines farm output and subsequent rural demand for a range of products.he four-month (June-September) monsoon is the main source of water for irrigation in the country’s vast farmlands. By Girija Shankar Ojha (ANI)

Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts on German troops in final stages of WW II

London, June 26 (ANI): During the final stages of the Second World War, Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts packed into bombs and released from the air on German troops with the potential to kill or incapacitate anyone within 10,000 sq yds, according to released secret files.

Created by British and Canadian scientists, the designs show three different types of dart. One looks like a fountain pen, the others like a flat penknife. The Singer sewing machine company was even approached to “unwittingly” provide needles for the weapon.

Records show that they were tested on sheep and goats in Canada to establish the effectiveness of dropping the projectiles from high and low altitudes, The Times reported.

Documents released by the National Archives under the Freedom of Information Act include letters and notes collected over four years that demonstrate how close the British Government came to deploying the deadly darts.

Listed as “Top Secret”, it was written by an official from Porton Down, in Salisbury, which was then a government research centre for chemical and biological weapons. Scientists were working on the initiative with their counterparts at Suffield, a similar site in Canada.

The teams explored the most effective poison for the dart, comparing variations of urethane that caused death within 30 minutes with another substance, referred to only as “X” that killed its victim within 24 hours, The Times reported.

Sheep and goats were again used in the tests, showing that the poison induced muscle twitching, salivation, sweating, defecation and retching. The pulse rate slowed and blood pressure fell as the animals collapsed and died.

Death would occur if a dart stayed in the body for more than 50 seconds. If it was taken out sooner, the victim might suffer a temporary collapse. (ANI)

Scientists suggest new animal model to test carcinogen risk

Washington, June 19 (ANI): Researchers at Oregon State University have suggested a new and improved method to test carcinogen risk.

They said that trout can be a superior animal model than laboratory rats, and other traditional methods of assessing the risk of carcinogens.

“The whole foundation of modern toxicology is that the dose makes the poison,” said George Bailey, an OSU distinguished professor emeritus of molecular and environmental toxicology.

“You can die from eating a few tablespoons of ordinary table salt at one time, but that doesn’t mean that table salt is a poison at the doses that humans normally consume.

“With compounds that we know can cause cancer, the real question is how much is too much.

“What we have found is that traditional approaches to making that evaluation, which are almost always based on studies done at very high doses with laboratory rodents, may not always give us answers that are reasonably accurate,” he added.

Researchers are usually trying to determine what can cause cancer at levels considered unacceptable.

However, the age-old problem they have faced is the cost and laboratory logistics making it virtually impossible to test millions of rats.

“When using rodents, it simply was not possible to study larger numbers of animals, the cost was too prohibitive,” said Linus Pauling Institute at OSU.

The Oregon State University researchers have revealed that rainbow trout may for many purposes be as or more accurate in determining what compounds, at what levels, can pose a risk of human cancer.

They have pioneered the use of trout for studies of this type for 40 years, and researchers believe that it may now be time to greatly expand the use of that research.

“We can do experiments with trout in large numbers at very low cost, about 5 percent of what a rodent study would cost,” she said.

“For most studies of carcinogens, exposing 2,000 rodents would be a huge project. For us, working with 2,000 trout is a pilot study,” she added.

The OSU scientists recently completed the largest study ever done with animals in toxicology, exposing 40,800 trout to what’s considered an “ultra-low” dose of dibenzo-a,l-pyrene, a chemical that can cause liver cancer and is part of a broad field of toxic compounds called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs.

The study determined that a tolerable threshold for human exposure to this toxic chemical would be 500 to 1,500 times higher than is outlined by the Environmental Protection Agency.(ANI)

Russian woman nicknamed Black Widow drugged and raped 10 men

Melbourne, Jun 19 (ANI): A young Russian woman, nicknamed the Black Widow for her collection of spiders, is on trial after being accused of sedating and raping 10 men.

According to Life.ru, Valeria K., 32, a quiet good-looking woman from the city of Tambov, shocked police when they discovered that she was the mysterious rapist who abused 10 local men after poisoning them with clonidine.

Valeria would get acquainted with the men and invite them to her place, where she would give them drinks mixed with the poison, causing them to fall asleep for almost 24 hours.

Once her victims were sedated, she would undress them and then rape them, tightening a rope on their male organs to keep them erect.

The men would wake up in the hospital with clonidine poisoning and penis trauma, and remember only a friendly brunette who had given them drinks.

When the police finally identified her, she was placed under arrest, but they presently know of only the ten victims, with one refusing to file a complaint against her.

“It was great,” the Daily Telegraph quoted the unnamed man as saying.

“I like hot women. I only wish she hadn’t use the clonidine on me,” he added. (ANI)

Son accidentally kills father while trying to poison wife’s lover

Phnom Penh – A Cambodian man accidentally killed his father while trying to poison his wife’s lover with a tainted bottle of alcohol, national media reported Thursday.

Police said Chhouy Chhim gave the poisoned alcohol as a gift to Chan Sarith, who he accused of having an affair with his wife, the Cambodia Daily reported.

But Chan Sarith shared the bottle with Chhouy Chhim’s father, who later died in hospital.

Three other men were hospitalized after tasting the deadly drink.

Police said Chhouy Chhim was being held for questioning and his wife planned to file for divorce. (dpa)

Poison resistant ‘super rats’ invade Britain

London, May 16 (ANI): A new breed of “super rat” with DNA that makes them resistant to poison and subsequently almost impossible to kill are evolving in the British corners, experts have warned.

According to Professor Robert Smith at the University of Huddersfield, genetic mutations have led rats across the country to develop protection against standard toxins.

Ratcatchers in Berkshire and Hampshire first reported that their poisons were no longer working on the vermins and scientists accorded the reason to boosted immunity among the pests, thanks to an entirely new strand of DNA.

Smith, from the applied sciences department, said these “super rats” could be spreading across the country, that is believed to have witnessed a rise of more than 200 per cent in rat population since 2007.

“Natural selection means that when you have a rat population in your town, poison will kill the ones that aren’t resistant, the ones that survive may have the gene, they then have babies who can receive the gene themselves,” Telegraph quoted him as saying.

“There are mutations and changes in their DNA that alter the ability of rats to deal with these poisons. It appears to be moving west and has now been located in Swindon and Bristol. It is a warning of things to come,” he added. (ANI)

Ranting UK hate preacher to target teens at `jihad’ summer school

London, May 7 (ANI): Ranting Islamic hate preacher Anjem Choudary is planning to peddle his hate to teenagers at a “jihad” summer school.

According to the Daily Star, this vile extremist has appointed himself principal lecturer of a 20-week course in his twisted version of Islam, and there are fears that Choudary and his followers will indoctrinate a new generation of Muslim fanatics.

The minimum age advertised is 15, but his School of Shari’ah has promised to consider even younger students.

They will learn about the Islamic “struggle” and how to enter the “Gardens of Paradise”.

Tory MP Philip Davies, 37, said: “This is appalling. We know what this character is like and the kinds of things he will be saying. We need summer schools to encourage people to integrate into British society. The last thing we need is individuals like this spreading their poison and indoctrinating more people into their cause.”

Choudary, 41, has joined fellow fanatics to set up the School of Shari’ah, based in east London. (ANI)