Missing protein in rare genetic brain disorder restored

Washington, Sep 7 (ANI): By using protease inhibitors, researchers at the University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) have restored to normal levels a key protein that is involved in early brain development, and causes the rare brain disorder lissencephaly.

Reduced levels of the protein called LIS1 have been shown to cause lissencephaly, which is characterized by brain malformations, seizures, severe mental retardation and very early death in human infants.

The findings in mice offer a proof-of-principle that the genetic equivalent to human lissencephaly, also known as “smooth brain” disease, can be treated during pregnancy and effectively reversed to produce more normal offspring.

The researchers are hoping that this approach could also be used to treat other defects in utero, or even those manifesting after birth, when caused by a partial deficiency in one gene, according to Dr. Anthony Wynshaw-Boris.

“Researchers have not considered it possible to treat such a pervasive, early developmental brain disorder as lissencephaly. Not only were we able to show a clear cellular effect from using these protease inhibitors, but also were able to treat the disorder in utero,” Nature quoted Wynshaw-Boris as saying.

The work is the culmination of 15 years of collaborative research into the cause and mechanisms of lissencephaly, which is caused by a deletion or loss of one copy of the LIS1 gene, and affects an estimated one in 50,000-100,000 infants.

In 1998, the researchers reported of producing a mouse with the same mutation that displayed defective brain development.

The current research used these mice, and found that the protein calpain degrades the LIS1 protein to less than half its normal levels near the surface of the cells.

The team then used a specific small-molecule protease inhibitor of calpain in these mice.

At a cellular level, the protease inhibitors enabled LIS1 protein to be expressed at near-normal levels.

The team then gave daily injections of a calpain inhibitor to pregnant mice whose foetuses had the mouse-model of this defect.

They observed that the resulting offspring had more normal brains and showed no sign of mental retardation.

“This study is really a proof-of-principle not only for treating complex developmental brain disorders, but also for any disorder with reduced protein levels where proteases normally play some role in breaking down that protein. This will be much more difficult to apply to humans, because of the safety issues involved, but it could lead to new therapies that might be effective for a wide range of developmental disorders,” said the researchers.

The findings have been published in the journal Nature Medicine. (ANI)

Pressmart delivers newspapers on Kindle and Sony eReader

London, Aug 25 (ANI/Business Wire India): Pressmart, a leading provider of multi-channel news publishing services, today announced the availability of eEditions compatible for reading on eReader devices like Kindle and Sony.

This unique technology enables news publishers to attract new subscribers who wish to read news and access their favorite newspaper content on the eReader screen in its original format.

With this latest addition to Pressmart on-demand digital delivery platform, publishers can go digital on web, mobile, eReader, podcast and RSS in a matter of minutes even if they do not have any technical knowledge.

Additionally, Pressmart offers access to state-of-art marketing, subscription and advertising tools using which publishers can start monetizing from digital delivery from almost day one.

Publishers can also benefit from Pressmart’s content delivery partnerships with news aggregators, telecom carriers, leading distributors and handset majors such as Motorola, Airtel, Curtis, BSNL, Spice and Samachar.com.

Some of the leading publishing titles such as Philadelphia Inquirer, The San Diego Union-Tribune, Orlando Sentinel, Birmingham Post, Bangkok Post, theSun, Hindustan Times, Deccan Chronicle and Indian Express have partnered with Pressmart for repurposing content on new media delivery channels.

“Today’s product launch is an important milestone for Pressmart, reinforcing our position as a leading innovator in the digital publishing market and setting a new technology benchmark.” said Sanjiv Gupta, Chairman and CEO of Pressmart.

“It is our goal to continue to lead the evolution of the industry whilst delivering a first-class reading experience through our ‘Digital Editions’ in a format that today’s generation can use,” Gupta added. (ANI)

13,000 yr old spear tip sheds light on ancient Americans

Washington, August 25 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed a rare Clovis point spearhead in the town of Sahuarita, Arizona, US, dating back to 11,000 to 13,000 years, which could help illuminate the way early humans lived in this part of the state.

According to a report in The Sahuarita Sun, the white rock spearhead, roughly two inches long and an inch wide and missing its tip, likely dates back 11,000 to 13,000 years when the earliest well-established human inhabitants of North America fastened objects like it to the end of wood poles and hurled them at mammoths, bears and other large prey.

These Clovis people, as they’re now called, are the predecessors of the ancestors of Native Americans.

They hunted and gathered all over the continent and in the Southwest, they primarily inhabited New Mexico and the San Pedro basin, which runs north from Sonora, Mexico, along the San Pedro River in Southeastern Arizona.

As a result, the bulk of the state’s Clovis points are found at mammoth kill-sites near Naco and Sierra Vista.

But a find in the Tucson basin, which roughly covers the area between the Santa Rita Mountains and north Tucson, could indicate a broader inhabitancy, according to Arthur Vokes, who has curated the Arizona State Museum’s architectural repository for nearly 30 years.

“Human beings have been in this region for about 11,000 years or so. It does reflect the age of regular occupation here,” he said.

By examining the type of rock the point is made out of, Vokes said he could learn about ancient trade and hunting routes.

The spearhead was discovered during a routine archaeological survey on Arizona State Trust land by an environmental consulting company, according to Steve Ross, an archaeologist with the State Land Department.

It’s distinguishable from more contemporary arrowheads because it’s larger and matches a style of tool construction used by ancient people halfway around the world.

“Through research, they’ve traced this type of point-making back to the Asia area,” Ross said. “So as they migrated over the land bridge (between modern-day Russia and Alaska,) they brought this type of point-making with them,” he added.

According to Ross, spearheads like it were eventually phased out, perhaps due to extinction of large animals or even the annihilation of the Clovis people by an environmental event, like a comet. (ANI)

Sean Penn, Robin Wright agree on how to divide property upon divorce

New Delhi, August 20 (ANI): Court documents suggest that Robin Wright, 43, and her husband Sean Penn, 49, have reached an agreement as to how they will divide property in their divorce.

Wright filed for divorce on August 12 in San Rafael, California, citing irreconcilable differences with Penn.

According to reports, the couple who have been together for more than a decade have agreed to share custody of their 16-year-old son, named Hopper Jack.

They also have an 18-year-old daughter, named Dylan Francis, says a China Daily report.

Representatives for Wright and Penn were not available for comment.

The couple have been ordered to appear in court on December 17, according to court filings. (ANI)

New water desalination system helps cut costs, time in producing clean water

Washington, July 14 (ANI): Scientists have developed a new water desalination and filtration system that helps cut costs and time in producing clean water.

The new mini-mobile-modular (M3) “smart” water desalination and filtration system has been made by researchers at the UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.

In designing and constructing new desalination plants, creating and testing pilot facilities is one of the most expensive and time-consuming steps.

Traditionally, small yet very expensive stationary pilot plants are constructed to determine the feasibility of using available water as a source for a large-scale desalination plant.

The M3 system helps cut both costs and time.

“Our M3 water desalination system provides an all-in-one mobile testing plant that can be used to test almost any water source,” said Alex Bartman, a graduate student on the M3 team who helped to design the sensor networks and data acquisition computer hardware in the system.

“The advantages of this type of system are that it can cut costs, and because it is mobile, only one M3 system needs to be built to test multiple sources. Also, it will give an extensive amount of information that can be used to design the larger-scale desalination plant,” he added.

The M3 demonstrated its effectiveness in a recent field study in the San Joaquin Valley in which it desalted agricultural drainage water that was nearly saturated with calcium sulfate salts, accomplishing this with just one reverse osmosis (RO) stage.

“In this specific field study by our team, in the first part of the reverse osmosis process, 65 percent of the water that was fed in was recovered as drinking water, or potable water,” said Yoram Cohen, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and lead investigator on the team.

“We can potentially go up to 95 percent recovery using an accelerated chemical demineralization process that was also developed here at UCLA,” he added.

According to Bartman, the M3 could also be deployed to various locations and used to produce fresh water in emergency situations.

“The M3′s ‘smart’ nature means it can autonomously adapt to almost any variation in source water, allowing the M3 system to operate in situations where traditional RO desalination systems would fail almost immediately,” he said.

Though the system is compact enough to be transported anywhere in the back of a van, it can generate 6,000 gallons of drinking water per day from the sea or 8,000 to 9,000 gallons per day from brackish groundwater.

By Cohen’s estimate, that means producing enough drinking water daily for up to 6,000 to 12,000 people. (ANI)

Genetic region linked with rare ability to recognize, name musical notes identified

Washington, July 3 (ANI): Scientists at the University of California-San Francisco (UNSF) say that they have identified a particular region of genes on human chromosome eight that is linked to perfect pitch, the rare ability to recognize and name musical notes without any reference pitch for comparison, at least in people of European ancestry.

Reporting their work in American Journal of Human Genetics, the researchers say that their next step will be to identify a specific gene.

The finding, part of a larger examination of families of various ancestries – Europeans, Ashkenazi Jews, Indians and East Asians – is the first significant genetic evidence of a role of genes in perfect pitch.

The researchers say that it is likely that multiple genes are involved in all cases of perfect pitch, and that different genes could be associated with different ethnic backgrounds.

But despite that, they say, the finding is an important advance in their effort to move in on the relative roles of early musical training and genetic inheritance on perfect pitch.

Professor Jane Gitschier, the senior author of the study who is a singer herself, says that it is an advance in the team’s effort to explore the relative contributions of environmental factors and genes on learning and other behaviours.

“Perfect pitch is a window into the way in which multiple genes and environmental factors influence cognitive or behavioural traits,” she says.

The team has learnt over the last decade that both factors contribute to perfect pitch.

“What’s exciting now is that we now have made the first foray into teasing out the genes that may be involved,” she says.

Besides continuing to identify and collect data on families with multiple cases of perfect pitch, the researchers plan to analyse candidate genes for variations that might be associated with perfect pitch in participants of European ancestry.

For this purpose, the team plans to recruit and study individuals of European ancestry without perfect pitch, but with equivalent early musical training.

The ongoing effort is supported in part by a grant by the NAMM Foundation, which was established by the international music products industry association with the aim of promoting “active participation in music making across the lifespan,” in part by supporting scientific research. (ANI)

Kaka admits to snubbing Chelsea for Real

Madrid (Spain), July 1 (ANI): Brazilian star forward Kaka has admitted that he snubbed Chelsea boss Carlo Ancelotti because Real Madrid are ‘the biggest club in the world’.

The 62-million-pound superstar, who was paraded before 50,000 adoring fans at the Bernabeu, confessed that he could have joined the Blues when Ancelotti tried to hijack the deal.

But according to Sun Sport, Kaka, 27, said: “I thanked him for everything he did for me in all the years we spent together at Milan and all the triumphs we lived.”

“But I had made the decision a long time ago that if I left Milan I would only go to Madrid – and that meant I couldn’t join him at Chelsea,” he added.
The Brazil superstar knew his days at Milan were numbered when the San Siro giants gave him permission to speak to Manchester City back in January.

“After the season, because of the financial crisis, Milan were ready to let me go. I had offers but my desire was always to play at the Bernabeu,” Kaka said.
Kaka insisted there will not be any problems with winger Cristiano Ronaldo, who will be presented on Monday after his world-record 80 million pound move. (ANI)

Clooney, Becks support Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi release campaign

London, May 27 (ANI): Global stars of the likes of George Clooney and David Beckham have joined hands with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown for preparing a support message for Burma’s opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Popular faces around the world have been asked to write 64-word messages of support for the political figure.

The message will be delivered on her 64th birthday on June 19.

Suu Kyi, who was first held under house arrest 19 years ago, and has spent almost 13 years as a captive ever since.

Currently, she stands accused of breaking the terms of her confinement.

The launch of the website 64forSuu.org is timed to coincide with the date her imprisonment should have stopped.

The website features a range of messages from various dignitaries around the world.

“I add my voice to the growing chorus of those demanding your release.

For too long the world has failed to act in the face of this intolerable injustice. That is now changing. The clamour for your release is growing across Europe, Asia, and the entire world. We must do all we can to make this birthday the last you spend without your freedom,” the Telegraph quoted Gordon Brown as saying in his message.

Stephen Fry, Eddie Izzard, Kevin Spacey and Sarah Brown will also submit Twitter entries to the site.

Many celebrities, including Clooney, Beckham and ‘Bond’ star Daniel Craig, have signed a message from campaign group ‘Not on Our Watch’.

The message says: “Nineteen years ago, the Burmese people chose Aung San Suu Kyi as their next leader. For most of those 19 years she has been kept under house arrest by the military junta that runs the country. We must not stand by as she is silenced again. Now is the time for the international community to speak with one voice: Free Aung San Suu Kyi.” (ANI)

Ancelotti decides to give Chelsea coaching job a miss

Rome, May 25 (ANI): A C Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti has decided to give the Chelsea coaching job a miss, by saying that he will stay on at the San Siro next season.

“I am Milan coach until June 30, 2010. I would say that it’s 100 per cent certain that I will still be at Milan next year. But it’s obvious I’d say yes if you asked me if I’d love to coach Chelsea,” the Daily Express quoted Ancelotti, as saying.

Meanwhile, controversial Chelsea striker Didier Drogba continues to insist that he wants to stay on at Stamford Bridge.

“I want to stay here as long as they want me,” he said. (ANI)

Gordon Brown writes open letter of support to Aung San Suu Kyi’s democracy crusade

London, May 19 (ANI): British prime Minister Gordon Brown has sent a message of personal support and solidarity to the arrested Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, saying that she is “not alone” in her fight to reinstate democracy in Burma.

“We should not rest until you are able to play your rightful role in a free and secure Burma. I want you to know: you are not alone,” The Independent quoted Brown’s letter, as stating.

Last week, Suu Kyi was charged with violating the terms of her house arrest by allowing an American man to stay in her home for two days. She could face up to five years’ imprisonment for the intrusion.

Brown’s open letter includes a pledge to fight her cause, and encourage Burma’s Asian neighbours “to work even harder for your release and that of all political prisoners in Burma.”

Brown has long admired Nobel Prize winner Suu Kyi, 63, who was first placed under house arrest 20 years ago. In 2007, he dedicated a chapter of his book on courage to her, comparing her fight to bring democracy to Burma to that of Nelson Mandela’s struggle in South Africa.

“People are standing with you, not just here in Britain but everywhere that democracy and freedom are upheld. We are heartened by your tremendous courage, your inspirational leadership, and by the knowledge that no oppression is so great that the forces of liberty cannot prevail,” his letter reads.

Suu Kyi went on trial in Rangoon on Sunday. The British ambassador was denied access to the proceedings.

According to Downing Street sources, Brown hoped his intervention would help focus attention on Suu Kyi’s plight at a time when she faces fresh persecution from the military junta.

“I say to the generals who imprison you: the time for a transition to democracy is now. By excluding you from that future, by silencing and imprisoning you, they condemn your country to further decades of poverty and exclusion,” said Brown, who along with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, wrote a similar message on her birthday last summer. (ANI)

Indian origin student wins supersonic research contest in US

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Sidharth Krishnan, a student of Indian origin from Singapore, has won top honors in the non-US category of a high school supersonic research contest.

Teenagers from eight states and 11 foreign countries took part in the competition, which was sponsored by NASA.

The students were asked to write a well-documented research paper describing what needs to be accomplished to make supersonic flight available to commercial passengers by 2020.

More than 120 teenagers submitted 60 entries in four categories: US individual, US team, non-US individual and non-US team.

While Edric San-Miguel, a junior from Norfolk Technical Center in Norfolk, Virginia, earned the top score among all the entries, Sidharth Krishnan, a senior from Anglo-Chinese Junior College in Singapore, won top honors in the non-US category.

“All the conceptual designs were imaginative and innovative,” said Bob Mack, a veteran supersonics researcher at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, who reviewed all the top papers.

“The design in the winning paper showed the student had a definite respect and appreciation for technical realities while still being imaginative,” he added.

Students could choose from two options in the competition.

They could write a research paper to discuss the challenges and solutions of supersonic flight or propose a design for a small supersonic airliner that could enter commercial service in 2020.

A group of NASA engineers reviewed all the entries.

The judges based their scores on how well students focused their papers and how well they addressed four basic criteria: informed content, creativity and imagination, organization, and writing.

NASA will award the top scoring papers from the US a cash prize of 1,000 dollars for the individual award winner and 1,500 dollars for the team.

Non-US students will receive an engraved trophy, but are not eligible for cash prizes. All participants will receive a NASA certificate. (ANI)

Personalised cancer treatment comes closer to reality

London, May 18 (ANI): Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have announced the development of an efficient system for delivering siRNA into primary cells, which may one day lead to personalized cancer treatment.

“RNAi has an unbelievable potential to manage cancer and treat it,” Nature magazine quoted Dr. Steven Dowdy, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and professor of cellular and molecular medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine, as saying .

“While there’s still a long way to go, we have successfully developed a technology that allows for siRNA drug delivery into the entire population of cells, both primary and tumor-causing, without being toxic to the cells,” he added.

The researcher has revealed that his study focussed on the potential for a small section of protein called peptide transduction domain (PTD), which has the ability to permeate cell membranes, as a delivery mechanism for getting siRNAs into cancer cells.

In their previous work, he and his colleagues had generated over 50 “fusion proteins” using PTDs linked to tumour-suppressor proteins.

“Simply adding the siRNAs to a PTD didn’t work, because siRNAs are highly negatively charged, while PTDs are positively charged, which results in aggregation with no cellular delivery,” Dowdy said.

He said that his team solved the problem by making a PTD fusion protein with a double-stranded RNA-binding domain, termed PTD-DRBD, which masks the siRNA’s negative charge.

According to him, this allows the resultant fusion protein to enter the cell and deliver the siRNA into the cytoplasm, where it specifically targets mRNAs from cancer-promoting genes and silences them.

With a view to testing the PTD-DRBD fusion protein’s ability to deliver siRNA, the researchers generated a human lung cancer reporter cell line. They used green and fluorescent protein and analysed the cells using flow cytometry analysis.

Their efforts enabled them to determine the magnitude of RNA inhibitory response and the percentage of cells undergoing this response.

They found that the entire cellular population underwent a maximum RNAi response. Similar results were obtained in primary cells and cancer cell lines.

“We were subsequently able to introduce gene silencing proteins into a large percentage of various cell types, including T cells, endothelial cells and human embryonic stem cells. Importantly, we observed no toxicity to the cells or innate immune responses, and a minimal number of transcriptional off-target changes,” said Dowdy.

The researchers are of the opinion that the RNAi methods can be continually tweaked to combat new mutations, a way to overcome a major problem associated with current cancer therapies.

“Such therapies can’t be used a second time if a cancer tumor returns, because the tumor has mutated the target gene to avoid the drug binding. But since the synthetic siRNA is designed to bind to a single mutation and only that mutation on the genome, it can be easily and rapidly changed while maintaining the delivery system – the PTD-DRBD fusion protein,” said Dowdy. Cancer is a complex, genetic disease that is different in every patient. This is still in early stages, but I believe the siRNA-induced RNAi approach to personalized cancer treatment is the only thing on the table,” Dowdy added.

The study has been published in the advance on-line edition of the journal Nature Biotechnology. (ANI)

Burmese leader Suu Kyi ‘to be charged’ over American’s visit

London, May 14 (ANI): Burmese authorities are to charge the pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and her two maids over an incident in which an American swam across a lake to visit her at her house, her National League for Democracy party said on Thursday.

Police in the military-ruled nation detained John Yettaw, a US national, last week for gaining access to the 63-year-old Nobel laureate’s off-limits residence in Yangon and staying there for two days.

“Her lawyer said the authorities will charge the lady and her two maids at the court in Insein prison,” Nyan Win, a spokesman for her National League for Democracy party, referring to Myanmar’s most notorious jail.

According to The Telegraph, it is not known what the man’s motive was or what he did at Suu Kyi’s home, where he spent two days.

According to the New Light of Burma newspaper, a mouth piece for the military regime, he swam into the compound on Sunday night but was only detected and arrested as he swam out of the compound on Tuesday night.

Aung San Suu Kyi, 65, is the daughter of the country’s independence hero, General Aung San, and the world’s only Nobel peace laureate currently in detention. She has spent most of the last 19 years under house arrest since winning national elections in 1990. (ANI)

Cindy Crawford’s hubby faces lawsuit over sexual harassment

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Cindy Crawford’s husband Rande Gerber is facing a lawsuit filed by two former women employees who allege the business mogul sexually harassed them.

The women claim they lost their jobs at a restaurant owned by Gerber’s company after they rejected the advances made by the 47-year-old and other managers.

As per TMZ.com, one of the women alleged that the supermodel’s better half, in 2008, had tried to kiss her three times during the night, and then “put his hand up [her] dress in between her legs in an attempt to fondle her crotch.”

The ladies are reportedly seeking unspecified damages in the lawsuit filed in March in San Diego County Superior Court.

A Gerber Group spokesperson has denied the claims.

“These allegations were previously investigated and shown to be baseless. This lawsuit has no merit,” Us magazine quoted the spokesperson as saying.

Gerber is the owner of the Midnight Oil chain of bars and lounges and has been married for 11 years. He has two kids, Presley, 9, and Kaia, 7. (ANI)

Stem cells from fat tissue offer MS treatment hope

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): Stem cells derived from a patient’s own fat tissue can offer an effective treatment against multiple sclerosis (MS), say researchers from University of California San Diego.

The researchers demonstrated the possible effectiveness of stromal vascular fraction (SVF) cells in MS treatment.

“All three patients in our study showed dramatic improvement in their condition after the course of SVF therapy,” said lead researcher Dr. Boris Minev, from the Division of Neurosurgery, University of California San Diego.

“While obviously no conclusions in terms of therapeutic efficacy can be drawn from these reports, this first clinical use of fat stem cells for treatment of MS supports further investigations into this very simple and easily-implementable treatment methodology,” he added.

It is believed that SVF cells, and other stem cells, may be able to treat the condition by limiting the immune reaction and promoting the growth of new myelin sheath, which is often lost in MS.

“None of the presently available MS treatments selectively inhibit the immune attack against the nervous system, nor do they stimulate regeneration of previously damaged tissue. We’ve shown that SVF cells may fill this therapeutic gap,” said Minev.

First of the three patients, suffered frequent painful seizures for the previous three years, however after the treatment seizures had stopped completely and there were significant improvements in his cognition and a reduction of spasticity in his arms and legs.

The second patient reported improvements in his sense of balance and coordination, as well as an improved energy level and mood.

And the third one said his gait, balance and coordination improved dramatically over a period of several weeks.

The study appears in BioMed Central’s open access Journal of Translational Medicine. (ANI)

Medical experts sceptical of China’s organ transplantation practices

Washington, Apr 23 (ANI): A majority of doctors have expressed concerns over the organ transplantation practices in China.

According to a report, over 95 percent of organ donors in China are prisoners.

Globalization of medical and surgical technology has increased the capacity for countries worldwide to perform organ transplantation.

However, geographic variation in the availability of organs for transplantation and a parallel discrepancy in financial resources for healthcare have increasingly led desperate patients to transplant tourism.

The practice of transplant tourism has been condemned by numerous national and international healthcare organizations, who have cited serious concerns about clandestine international brokers, surreptitious payment, coercion of organ donors (and/ or donor families).

Moreover, substandard medical and surgical practices may lead to lower success rates and higher risk for transmission of infectious disease.

The majority of doctors surveyed said that they would provide post-transplantation care for patients who underwent liver transplantation at another domestic centre, in a foreign country or in China. However, respondents who suspected unethical procurement practices in China were more reluctant to do so.

They have also raised concerns over the unethical use of organs. International ethical guidelines exist to ensure that the donation of organs is voluntary, both in life and after death.

But not all countries adhere to these ethical guidelines. When travelling from one country to another country for organ transplant surgery, patients risk using an organ obtained in an unsafe or unethical manner.

In 2005, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported the transplantation of 66,000 kidneys, 21,000 livers and 6,000 hearts. Approximately 10 percent of these procedures occurred via transplant tourism.

The leading destination countries for transplant tourism include China, India, the Philippines and Pakistan.

Transplant tourism to China has been isolated as particularly controversial. Organ procurement from executed prisoners in China has been reported by the U.S. Department of State, non-governmental investigative reports and in medical literature.

“Physicians caring for patients in need of organ transplantation must balance the duty to the individual patient vs. the duty to society,” said Dr. Scott Biggins of the University of California San Francisco, which conducted a survey on healthcare professionals.

“We aim to raise awareness of the need for adherence to international accepted ethical standards for procurement of organs and regulation of transplant tourism by international regulatory and credentialing bodies,” he added.

The report appears in Clinical transplantation. (ANI)

Medical experts sceptical of China’s organ transplantation practices

Washington, Apr 23 (ANI): A majority of doctors have expressed concerns over the organ transplantation practices in China.

According to a report, over 95 percent of organ donors in China are prisoners.

Globalization of medical and surgical technology has increased the capacity for countries worldwide to perform organ transplantation.

However, geographic variation in the availability of organs for transplantation and a parallel discrepancy in financial resources for healthcare have increasingly led desperate patients to transplant tourism.

The practice of transplant tourism has been condemned by numerous national and international healthcare organizations, who have cited serious concerns about clandestine international brokers, surreptitious payment, coercion of organ donors (and/ or donor families).

Moreover, substandard medical and surgical practices may lead to lower success rates and higher risk for transmission of infectious disease.

The majority of doctors surveyed said that they would provide post-transplantation care for patients who underwent liver transplantation at another domestic centre, in a foreign country or in China. However, respondents who suspected unethical procurement practices in China were more reluctant to do so.

They have also raised concerns over the unethical use of organs. International ethical guidelines exist to ensure that the donation of organs is voluntary, both in life and after death.

But not all countries adhere to these ethical guidelines. When travelling from one country to another country for organ transplant surgery, patients risk using an organ obtained in an unsafe or unethical manner.

In 2005, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported the transplantation of 66,000 kidneys, 21,000 livers and 6,000 hearts. Approximately 10 percent of these procedures occurred via transplant tourism.

The leading destination countries for transplant tourism include China, India, the Philippines and Pakistan.

Transplant tourism to China has been isolated as particularly controversial. Organ procurement from executed prisoners in China has been reported by the U.S. Department of State, non-governmental investigative reports and in medical literature.

“Physicians caring for patients in need of organ transplantation must balance the duty to the individual patient vs. the duty to society,” said Dr. Scott Biggins of the University of California San Francisco, which conducted a survey on healthcare professionals.

“We aim to raise awareness of the need for adherence to international accepted ethical standards for procurement of organs and regulation of transplant tourism by international regulatory and credentialing bodies,” he added.

The report appears in Clinical transplantation. (ANI)

NYT wins five Pulitzers

New York, Apr.21 (ANI): The New York Times picked up five Pulitzer Prizes today, the most of any publication.

Times reporter David Barstow won the Investigative prize for his report on the relationship between the Pentagon and TV military analysts.

The Times also won staff awards for Breaking News in covering the Eliot Spitzer scandal – which included as many as 25 reporters – and International for political fallout in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Art critic Holland Cotter won for Criticism, and Damon Winter took the prize for Feature Photography.

The St. Petersburg Times won two awards: National Reporting (for PolitFact) and Feature Writing (Lane DeGregory).

The Washington Post, after picking up six last year, took home one award – Eugene Robinson for Commentary.

Other awards went to the Las Vegas Sun (Public Service) Los Angeles Times (Explanatory Reporting); Detroit Free Press (Local Reporting); Mark Mahoney of The Post-Star, Glens Falls, N.Y. (Editorial Writing); Steve Breen of The San Diego Union-Tribune (Editorial Cartooning); and The Miami Herald’s Patrick Farrell (Breaking News Photography).

Newsweek editor Jon Meacham won the Biography award for his book “American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.”

The rest of Letters, Drama and Music were as follows: “Olive Kitteridge” by Elizabeth Strout (Fiction); “Ruined” by Lynn Nottage (Drama); “The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family” by Annette Gordon-Reed (History); “The Shadow of Sirius” by W.S. Merwin (Poetry); “Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II” by Douglas A. Blackmon (General Nonfiction); and “Double Sextet” by Steve Reich, premiered March 26, 2008, in Richmond, Va. (Music). (ANI)

Clash leaves 12 dead in Mexico ahead of Obama’s visit

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Clash leaves 12 dead in Mexico ahead of Obama’s visit Mexico City – Twelve people were killed in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero in a clash between the military and suspected drug traffickers just hours ahead of US President Barack Obama’s visit to the country on Thursday.

Guerrero’s Public Security Minister Juan Heriberto Salinas Altes confirmed the deaths late Wednesday. He said the clash happened when a military patrol was attacked near San Nicolas del Oro.

The attackers were armed with rifles, police said. Several managed flee on vehicles they had been using in the region’s dirt roads, they added.

Obama was set to arrive in Mexico City on Thursday, for a brief visit focused on the fight against drug gangs.

Drug-related violence has left well over 7,000 people – including hundreds of military and police officers – dead in Mexico since the start of 2008. (dpa)

Fed’s Yellen: Biggest hedge funds need regulation

NEW YORK, April 16 (Reuters) – The most systemically important hedge funds should be regulated as such, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Janet Yellen, said on Thursday.

Answering audience questions after a speech to an economics conference in New York, Yellen said she hoped that the system, in which hedge funds are not subject to disclosure requirements, would change.

“The most systemically important hedge funds I would treat as systemically important” in the way they are regulated, she said. (Reporting by Kristina Cooke and Gertrude Chavez; Editing by Leslie Adler)