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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Lala Daidai Genome – Video

Posted: April 13, 2015 at 11:46 am


Lala Daidai Genome
I valued to sing this song, I hope you #39;ll like it ~ ~ Credits ~ Title : (Daidai Genome) Original vocals : Hatsune Miku Append Music, Lyrics : mezame-P Illustration : F*cla Video...

By: Lala

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Whole genome sequencing should not be confused with DNA profiling. We ofer WGS. – Video

Posted: at 11:45 am


Whole genome sequencing should not be confused with DNA profiling. We ofer WGS.
Whole genome sequencing (also known as full genome sequencing, complete genome sequencing, or entire genome sequencing) is a laboratory process that determines the complete DNA sequence ...

By: Torsten Kunert

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Whole genome sequencing should not be confused with DNA profiling. We ofer WGS. - Video

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Download The Developing Genome An Introduction to Behavioral Epigenetics PDF – Video

Posted: at 11:45 am


Download The Developing Genome An Introduction to Behavioral Epigenetics PDF
Download PDF Here: http://bit.ly/1NWnw78.

By: ozi rohman

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Genes Don't Cause Racial Health Disparities, Society Does

Posted: at 11:45 am

Researchers are looking in the wrong place: White people live longer not because of their DNA but because of inequality.

On April 24, 2003, shortly after the completion of the human genome project, its director Francis Collins and his team posed 15 grand challenges to the scientific community. They dared researchers to harness the genome to crack puzzles of biology, health, and society. In particular, they called for genome-based tools to close health disparities. Since then, the United States has pumped more than $1 billion a year into genomics research. What do we have to show for it?

What we found in the literature published from 2007 to 2013 was basically nothing, said Jay Kaufman, the lead author of the first study to examine available genetic data for evidence that explains a major racial health disparity. For many years, researchers speculated that what they couldnt explain about disparities must be the fingerprint of some mysterious genetic component. But since they are now able to scan the entire genome, this speculation appears both lazy and wrong. When it comes to why many black people die earlier than white people in the U.S., Kaufman and his colleagues show we've been looking for answers in the wrong places: We shouldn't be looking in the twists of the double helix, but the grinding inequality of the environment.

It is no secret that a longer life is a white privilege in the U.S. In 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that white men lived more than four years longer than black men, and white women lived more than three years longer than black women. The main reason for the racial mortality gap is heart disease. Theres a huge number of years of life lost because some people have the black life expectancy and not the white life expectancy, Kaufman said. Its killing people prematurely on the basis of race.

To understand if there is any genetic reason for these deaths, Kaufmans team reviewed six years of genome-wide studies of cardiovascular disease. Having crawled across the genome for every possible variant that could trigger deadlier disease, they only found three that fit the billand two of them suggested that whites, not blacks, should be on the suffering side of the disparity. Were spending a huge amount of money on these studies, he said, but if you are interested in understanding disparities, all this money thats been spent has come up with basically nothing.

Maybe this finding isnt entirely earth-shattering. After all, it is almost universally agreed that race is a social construct. In 2005, only two years after the sequencing of the human genome, the editors of Nature Biotechnology put it like this: Pooling people in race silos is akin to zoologists grouping raccoons, tigers, and okapis on the basis that they are all stripey. Perhaps, then, the better question is: Why do we continue to search for a connection between race and genetics to explain health disparities?

One reason has less to do with biology and more to do with finances. Take BiDil, the first race-specific medication, which made a cameo on House, M.D. BiDil is a combination of two generic drugs for heart failure that have been on the scene for decades. In 2005, the Food and Drug Administration approved the old drugs for a new purpose: the treatment of heart failure in a single race, African Americans. Jonathan Kahn, author of Race in a Bottle, has written extensively on the history of this medication. There is no doubt that BiDil works for African Americans. The sleight of hand, Kahn points out, is that the clinical trial for the drugs approvalthe African American Heart-Failure Trialhad no comparison group. Researchers only studied BiDil in African Americans. The drug likely worked not because they are black, but because they are human. But the juicier claim is that NitroMed, the company behind BiDil, was able to extend its patent to 2020, which otherwise would have expired in 2007. The magic touch was the race-specific label, which made the old method new again.

Another reason for the persistence of race and genetics in biomedical research is much more subtle. Certain diseases cluster in populations, such as Tay-Sachs, which is most common in people with an Ashkenazi Jewish background. In such cases, some researchers say we should turn our attention away from race and toward ancestry. If it is true that there are differences in disease risk between human groups, then what we need is a more clever way to dice up humanity. It has nothing to do with race, it has more to do with ancestry, explained Rick Kittles, the director of the Center for Population Genetics at the University of Arizona and co-founder of African Ancestry, Inc. We talk about ancestry, we talk about shared genetic backgrounds. That is a better proxy for biology than race. If someone says theyre of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry, and they have a family history of Tay-Sachs, thats not because of a race. Thats because of shared ancestry. If a person of West African descent has a family history of prostate cancer, thats a shared genetic background.

But this only takes us in a circle. Even when researchers study ancestry, it is often just race in a phony moustache and glasses. Take the creation of ancestry informative markers (AIMs). They are a collection of genetic variants between four populations: Europeans, West Africans, Indigenous Americans, and East Asians. They are used for both the sort of recreational ancestry mapping that promises to uncover roots and to understand disease risk. In 2007, an article in Science magazine with 14 co-authors, including Kaufman, pointed out some of the problems with this model: People from the Middle East and India are classified as Native American, even though no archaeological, genetic, or historical evidence supports this suggestion, and East Africans are left out of the mix entirely.

Duana Fullwiley, an anthropologist at Stanford, took an even closer look at how AIMs were dreamed up and used in the laboratories of some prominent researchersMark Shriver at Penn State and Esteban Gonzlez Burchard at UCSF. What she found is that this new system is no better than a find-and-replace of race with ancestry. In one striking example, she unearthed a patent application that straight-up defines biogeographical ancestry as simply the heritable component of race. In her 2008 article, The Biologistical Construction of Race, Fullwiley concludes that the very continents and peoples chosen for this product were selected due to their perceived proximity to what we in North America imagine race to be.

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Genes Don't Cause Racial Health Disparities, Society Does

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Crushing impact of conflict in Syria on people: UN reports

Posted: at 11:45 am

Four years of armed conflict, economic disintegration and social fragmentation in Syria have hollowed out its population by 15 percent, forced some 10 million people to flee their homes and reduced life expectancy by two decades, from nearly 76 years of age to 56, according to a United Nations-backed report released on Monday on the "catastrophic" impact of the conflict.

The report is produced by the Syrian Centre for Policy Research with the support of the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

"Measured in terms of human development capacity and choices, the [Human Development Index] HDI value of Syria degraded by 32.6 per cent since 2010, falling from just below a middle ranking position to 173rd position of 187 countries," it said.

Syria has become a country of poor people, with an estimated 4 in every 5 Syrians now living in poverty, 30 percent of the population having descended into abject poverty, according to the report.

The report details the tragic context facing all people in Syria, including the lives of Palestine refugees that have not been spared the trauma, UNRWA says, noting that the agency delivers humanitarian aid to 460,000 refugees who are wholly dependent on it to help them meet minimum daily needs.

During the last four years, more than 10 million Syrians have been forced to flee their homes and neighbourhoods because of violence, fear, intimidation and homelessness.

"The population of Syria was hollowed out by 15 percent as 3.33 million Syrians fled as refugees to other countries, together with a 1.55 million persons who migrated to find work and a safer life elsewhere," the report explained.

It added, "Within the remaining population of Syria, some 6.80 million people had been internally displaced."

The report drew attention to "the appalling loss of life," as the death toll increased in the past year reached 210,000 persons. And together with the 840,000 people who were wounded, 6 per cent of the population were killed, maimed or wounded during the conflict, it said.

"Equally horrendous is the silent disaster that has reduced life expectancy at birth from 75.9 years in 2010 to an estimated 55.7 years at the end of 2014, reducing longevity and life expectancy by 27 per cent," the report noted.

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NEW – My SEACRET Regimen for Eczema free face – Video

Posted: at 11:45 am


NEW - My SEACRET Regimen for Eczema free face
NEW - My SEACRET Regimen for Eczema free face https://www.seacretdirect.com/aschroter/ Regimen 1. Mineral Soap 2. Facial Cleansing Milk 3. Mineral Rich Refining Toner 4. Age Defying REVIVE...

By: Amanda Schroter

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Dermatitis/Eczema: A Brief Discussion of Types of Dermatitis and an Overview of Management Options – Video

Posted: at 11:45 am


Dermatitis/Eczema: A Brief Discussion of Types of Dermatitis and an Overview of Management Options
In this video, Dr. Mark Davis discusses the various types of dermatitis/eczema and discusses various management/treatment options.

By: Mayo Clinic

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You want me to do WHAT to fix my son's eczema?

Posted: at 11:45 am

JOSEFA PETE

Last updatedMon Apr 13 03:00:00 UTC 2015

Gunnar Pippel 123RF

Eczema, also known as dermatitis, affects one in three Australians and one in five New Zealanders at some stage in their lives

Eczema in babies can be a hard diagnosis to face as a new mum, but that's exactly what I faced with my first son when he was just a few months old. He suffered from an all-over, ceaseless rash that consumed his happy spirit, while I chased my tail from one medical appointment to the next trying to ease his discomfort.

Eczema, also known as dermatitis, affectsone in three Australiansand one in five New Zealandersat some stage in their lives. While eczema isn't contagious nor life threatening, the symptoms of this condition can have a significant impact on a person's quality of life.

My son's quality of life was definitely consumed by his constant itch, red raw skin and a cycle of skin infections. It seemed that everything we tried worked for a little while, then the eczema flared up again.

Our saving grace came from a nurse and I'm still thankful for her advice today although at the time, her tip was so confronting I wanted to cry and run from the room.

"The first thing you need to do is wet your son's night romper, barely ring out the water and pop him into it all wet. That's his new sleep routine."

My reaction was almost manic. "You want me to dowhat?! He'll catch his death of cold!"

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Coming Out of the Closet – Video

Posted: at 11:44 am


Coming Out of the Closet

By: Politically Incorrect Bob

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Coming Out of the Closet - Video

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The Politically Incorrect Shakespeare – Video

Posted: at 11:44 am


The Politically Incorrect Shakespeare
I find that I enjoy Shakespeare plays best when I have brushed up on the written text ahead of time. Reading Romeo and Juliet this last week in anticipation of an imminent trip to the Stratford...

By: Arts Entertainment

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