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Archive for June, 2011

Call to curb lab tests on dogs

Man’s best friend bears a heavy burden in the pharmaceutical industry. Every year, tens of thousands of dogs are subjects in drug-toxicity studies in Europe and the United States, even though many scientists think that they are poor predictors of drug effects in humans. Discussions on this sensitive issue have now been opened up by a hefty donation from Hildegard Doerenkamp, a Swiss philanthropist and passionate dog-lover, to the Zurich-based Doerenkamp–Zbinden Foundation, which supports work to reduce animal testing.

Toxicology researchers from academia and industry, and animal-welfare groups met in Budapest last week to develop an action plan and discuss how to spend Doerenkamp’s donation of more than €1 million (US$1.4 million) to drive change. Scie

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Nuclear radiation affects baby gender

Ionizing radiation is not without danger to human populations Indeed, exposure to nuclear radiation leads to an increase in male births relative to female births, according to a new study by Hagen Scherb and Kristina Voigt from the Helmholtz Zentrum München Their work shows that radiation from atomic bomb testing before the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963, the Chernobyl accident, and from living near nuclear facilities, has had a long-term negative effect on the ratio of male to female human births sex odds Their work is published in the June issue of Springer’s journal, Environmental Science and Pollution Research

Ionizing radiation from nuclear activity is known to have mutagenic properties and is therefore likely to have detrimental reproductive effects It is thought that it may cause men to father more sons and mothers to give birth to more girls Scherb and Voigt look at the long-term effects of radiation exposure on sex odds – a unique genetic indicator that may reveal differences in seemingly normal as well as adverse pregnancy outcomes between maternal exposure and paternal exposure In particular, they focus on sex odds data with respect to global atmospheric atomic bomb test fallout in Western Europe and the US, fallout due to nuclear accidents in the whole of Europe, and radioactive releases from nuclear facilities under normal operating conditions in Switzerland and Germany

Their analyses show a significant gender gap in all three cases:

  • Increases in male births relative to female births in Europe and the US between 1964-1975 are a likely consequence of the globally emitted and dispersed atmospheric atomic bomb test fallout, prior to the test ban in 1963, that affected large human populations overall after a certain delay
  • There was a significant jump of sex odds in Europe in the year 1987 following Chernobyl, whereas no such similar effect was seen in the US, which was less exposed to the consequences of the catastrophe
  • Among populations living in the proximity of nuclear facilities within 35km or 22 miles, the sex odds also increased significantly in both Germany and Switzerland during the running periods of those facilities

Taken together these findings show a long-term, dose-dependent impact of radiation exposure on human sex odds, proving cause and effect What is less clear is whether this increase in male births relative to female births is the result of a reduced frequency of female births or an increased number of male births The authors estimate that the deficit of births and the number of stillborn or impaired children after the global releases of ionizing radiation amount to several millions globally

Scherb and Voigt conclude: “Our results contribute to disproving the established and prevailing belief that radiation-induced hereditary effects have yet to be detected in human populations We find strong evidence of an enhanced impairment of humankind’s genetic pool by artificial ionizing radiation”

Autopsy Study Provides New Theory On Shaken Baby Syndrome

Findings from a series of autopsies could alter the debate over the controversial diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome.

A new study suggests that babies can die by violent shaking alone — but not in the way doctors have previously thought.

A team of researchers who conducted autopsies on 35 babies in Miami, Dallas and Calgary, Alberta, report that when children die after being violently shaken, they die of neck injuries and not from brain trauma.

 

The findings were just published in Academic Forensic Pathology, the journal of the National Association of Medical Examiners.

Shaken baby syndrome is commonly invoked to prosecute child abuse. But growing numbers of medical experts — particularly forensic pathologists — have raised doubts about the diagnosis.

Skeptics question whether it’s possible to shake a baby so violently that the child dies from brain injury but without other visible marks or trauma to the neck and spine.

The confusion over the science sometimes results in the conviction of innocent parents and prison. A seri

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Remedies for a Stiff Neck

Causes of a Stiff Neck

Most of the time, the main reason for a stiff neck is poor posture. This does not necessarily mean that you always sit wrong, just that there are some things that you do that puts unneeded pressure on the muscles of your neck. One of these is moving your head from left to right while typing. In fact, if you work in front of a computer all day there are plenty of other possible faux-pas that will cause a stiff neck. If the armrests on your chair are too high it can cause you to sit in an awkward position. If the monitor is not as the same level with your line of sight you can either look up or down at it all day in order to see properly.

If you talk a lot on the phone, avoid multitasking by holding the phone between your head and shoulder so that both your hands are free.

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