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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Psoriasis Revolution Customer Reviews – Video

Posted: April 8, 2015 at 5:43 pm


Psoriasis Revolution Customer Reviews
Psoriasis Revolution by Dan Crawford download online: http://tinyurl.com/PsoriasisRevolutionDownloadPDF Discover how he cured himself of severe Psoriasis and taught thousands of people ...

By: Gillevet Dilan

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A Psoriasis Journey – Video

Posted: at 5:43 pm


A Psoriasis Journey
An interview by Dr. Benjamin Barankin, Dermatologist at Toronto Dermatology Centre, Toronto Psoriasis Centre with psoriasis patient Beverly. To view "A Biologic Experience" Part 2 of the interview...

By: Toronto Dermatology Centre

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Subtype of lethal prostate cancer discovered by researchers

Posted: at 5:42 pm

Researchers at Upstate Medical University and Harvard University have linked the loss of key gene, WAVE1, to a lethal form of prostate cancer, according to a study published in the journal Oncotarget.

Prostate cancer is the most common form of cancer in men and is responsible for 27,000 deaths annually. About 220,000 new cases of prostate cancer are diagnosed each year.

Using bioinformatic meta-analysis to compare several publicly available databases, researchers found that alterations in the WAVE1 gene were associated with a shorter period of remission in patients who were treated for prostate cancer. Strikingly, the study also showed that 22.9 percent of the prostate cancers reviewed in the database harbored the WAVE1 gene deletion.

"We observed that prostate cancer tumors contain a frequent deletion of the WAVE 1 gene. What's important, though, is that this WAVE1 gene deletion occurs in metastatic and lethal cancer, thus suggesting that, the WAVE1 gene loss may represent an aggressive subtype of prostate cancer which is more challenging to treat and more likely to progress," said study coauthor Leszek Kotula, MD, Ph.D., associate professor of urology and biochemistry and molecular biology at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, N.Y. "It is possible that patients who have tumors characterized by the deletion of the WAVE1 gene may benefit from earlier intervention, such as surgery or radiation therapy."

WAVE gene complexes are involved in cell motility and migration, cellular adhesion and cell-to-cell communication, numerous processes that can play a role in tumor progression and metastasis. "It is clear that disruption of the WAVE complex is associated with human cancers, including prostate cancer. However, what we have determined is that because lethal prostate cancers show this disruption, we may be able to identify mechanisms that lead to the tumor cell acquiring resistance to advanced therapies. Nonetheless, understanding the biological consequences of this deletion will require further investigation," said study coauthor Adam G. Sowalsky, Ph.D., instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School.

The study, published in Oncotarget March 31, was funded by the National Institutes of Health and Department of Defense. Primary authors are Leszek Kotula, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of urology and biochemistry and molecular biology; and Adam G. Sowalsky, Ph.D., instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School. Other authors of the study include Dr. Pier Paolo Pandolfi, Dr. Steven Balk, Rachel Schaefer (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA), and Dr. Gennady Bratslavsky and Rebecca Sager (Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY).

The study builds on earlier research (funded by the Department of Defense and the Kirby Foundation, Morristown, N.J.) by Kotula that implicated another gene, ABI1, as a tumor suppressor in prostate cancer. For the Oncotarget study researchers sought to find other genes that cooperate with ABI1 in the progression of prostate cancer, thus finding the WAVE1 gene as a culprit.

Kotula said his lab is now replicating the gene deletion in mice. Such work can aid in the development of drugs or new treatments to suppress tumors or provide more precision in the treatment of these aggressive cancers.

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The above story is based on materials provided by SUNY Upstate Medical University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

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Subtype of lethal prostate cancer discovered by researchers

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Researchers Identify Subtype of Lethal Prostate Cancer

Posted: at 5:42 pm

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Newswise SYRACUSE, N.Y. Researchers at Upstate Medical University and Harvard University have linked the loss of key gene, WAVE1, to a lethal form of prostate cancer, according to a study published in the journal Oncotarget.

Prostate cancer is the most common form of cancer in men and is responsible for 27,000 deaths annually. About 220,000 new cases of prostate cancer are diagnosed each year.

Using bioinformatic meta-analysis to compare several publicly available databases, researchers found that alterations in the WAVE1 gene were associated with a shorter period of remission in patients who were treated for prostate cancer. Strikingly, the study also showed that 22.9 percent of the prostate cancers reviewed in the database harbored the WAVE1 gene deletion.

We observed that prostate cancer tumors contain a frequent deletion of the WAVE 1 gene. What's important, though, is that this WAVE1 gene deletion occurs in metastatic and lethal cancer, thus suggesting that, the WAVE1 gene loss may represent an aggressive subtype of prostate cancer which is more challenging to treat and more likely to progress, said study coauthor Leszek Kotula, MD, Ph.D., associate professor of urology and biochemistry and molecular biology at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, N.Y. It is possible that patients who have tumors characterized by the deletion of the WAVE1 gene may benefit from earlier intervention, such as surgery or radiation therapy."

WAVE gene complexes are involved in cell motility and migration, cellular adhesion and cell-to-cell communication, numerous processes that can play a role in tumor progression and metastasis. It is clear that disruption of the WAVE complex is associated with human cancers, including prostate cancer. However, what we have determined is that because lethal prostate cancers show this disruption, we may be able to identify mechanisms that lead to the tumor cell acquiring resistance to advanced therapies. Nonetheless, understanding the biological consequences of this deletion will require further investigation, said study coauthor Adam G. Sowalsky, Ph.D., instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School.

The study, published in Oncotarget March 31, was funded by the National Institutes of Health and Department of Defense. Primary authors are Leszek Kotula, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of urology and biochemistry and molecular biology; and Adam G. Sowalsky, Ph.D., instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School. Other authors of the study include Dr. Pier Paolo Pandolfi, Dr. Steven Balk, Rachel Schaefer (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA), and Dr. Gennady Bratslavsky and Rebecca Sager (Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY).

The study builds on earlier research (funded by the Department of Defense and the Kirby Foundation, Morristown, N.J.) by Kotula that implicated another gene, ABI1, as a tumor suppressor in prostate cancer. For the Oncotarget study researchers sought to find other genes that cooperate with ABI1 in the progression of prostate cancer, thus finding the WAVE1 gene as a culprit.

Kotula said his lab is now replicating the gene deletion in mice. Such work can aid in the development of drugs or new treatments to suppress tumors or provide more precision in the treatment of these aggressive cancers.

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Researchers Identify Subtype of Lethal Prostate Cancer

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Drink Drank Punk – Politically Incorrect // Ensayo Chiclana – Video

Posted: at 5:42 pm


Drink Drank Punk - Politically Incorrect // Ensayo Chiclana

By: Juan Donday Rodrguez

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The Pat and Patti Show … politically incorrect is an understatement #310 – Video

Posted: at 5:42 pm


The Pat and Patti Show ... politically incorrect is an understatement #310
To say the duo goes beyond the pale and establish that political correctness is skill they do not possess ... is only offset by the amusement Pat, Patti and Deena exhibit in their bleeping...

By: Paulding.com

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The Pat and Patti Show ... politically incorrect is an understatement #310 - Video

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Kill La Kill Episode 9 – Censorship Comparison – Video

Posted: at 5:42 pm


Kill La Kill Episode 9 - Censorship Comparison
If I can, I might do these for KLK #39;s episodes......since there are some "naughty" scenes coming up.

By: ToonamiOPED2

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Kill La Kill Episode 9 - Censorship Comparison - Video

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SPONGEBOB | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Cartoon Parody Bleep Video – Video

Posted: at 5:42 pm


SPONGEBOB | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Cartoon Parody Bleep Video
This Week in Unnecessary Censorship, The Spongebob Squarepants Movie! Nope, not Sponge Out of Water, the ORIGINAL version =) Censorship tells the wrong story. Subscribe! comment! thanks...

By: NinjaPandaProductions

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SPONGEBOB | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Cartoon Parody Bleep Video - Video

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Governments who want to ban smoking from films should butt out

Posted: at 5:42 pm

Martin Ruetschi/Keystone/Redux

These should be salad days for anti-smoking crusaders. New data show only 15 per cent of Canadians currently smoke, and just 11 per cent on a daily basis. These are the lowest rates ever recorded; as recently as 1999, smokers made up a quarter of the population. The decline is even more pronounced among teenaged Canadians, suggesting this downward trend will continue well into the future. Despite such success, however, tobacco-control advocates seem perpetually unsatisfiedto the extent theyre now pushing measures that threaten the limits of good science, artistic freedom and civil society.

Smoking is obviously a significant health risk. While adults may choose to take it up in full knowledge of its dangers and costs, we properly restrict adolescents from making a similar choice. But how far should this effort go? The conference, Silencing Big Tobacco on the Big Screen, held in Toronto earlier this month, garnered considerable attention for its proposal that all movies featuring characters who smoke should be rated 18A (those under 18 need adult accompaniment). Impressionable young moviegoers would thus be shielded from the sight of such Hollywood role models as Cruella de Vil, the cigarette-wielding, dog-napping villain of the Disney movie 101 Dalmatians, and Gandalf, the pipe-puffing wizard from The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit movies.

Public health groups claim, with scientific certainty, that movie censorship will prevent teens from taking up the habit. U.S. research argues that 37 per cent of all teenaged smokers do so because theyve been influenced by movies. Building on this, a study released last year by the Ontario Tobacco Research Unit obsessively toted up every glimpse of tobacco smoke across a decades worth of top-grossing films and declared that 4,237 residents of the province will die prematurely as a result of tobacco imagery in movies. Despite such exactitude, however, these claims are complicated by important questions of causality. Does the sight of a smoker in a movie seduce innocent teenagers into a lifetime of cigarette use, or do teenagers predisposed to rebellious behaviour simply prefer movies that show smoking, not to mention plenty of other equally risky activities? While anti-smoking researchers insist that their studies carefully isolate the effect of smoking on young viewers, teasing out such a nuance is simply not feasible, as Simon Chapman, editor emeritus of the academic journal Tobacco Control, has pointed out. Chapman strongly chastises the censorship movement for its crude reductionism and questionable precision in ignoring the near-perfect correlation between smoking and other dangerous activities in movies. The only solution to this statistical obstacle, he notes, would be to conjure a genre of movies full of smoking but lacking car chases, violence, guns, drugs, alcohol, sex, nudity, profanity and abuse of authority. Good luck with that.

The proof arising from this data is often underwhelming, as well. One of the most frequently referenced studies claiming to prove a link between cinematic smoking and youth behaviour surveyed 2,603 adolescents over 2 years. Only six became new regular smokers. Most of the subjects mustered as evidence of the power of movie-induced smoking took just a few puffs of a cigarette over the entire period. Its hardly a smoking gun. As the study itself reveals, parental behaviour exerts far more influence on adolescent tobacco use than personal taste in movies.

And, even setting aside serious defects of science, does anyone really think slapping an 18A rating on a movie will prevent unaccompanied teenagers from seeing the forbidden act of smoking? The tidal wave of pornography available for free on the Internet suggests not.

Then again, the end game is not to hide teenaged eyes from smoking in movies, but to eliminate it entirely. Faced with proposed ratings guidelines, advocates hope Hollywood will eventually remove cigarettes from all (or nearly all) of its movies to ensure the widest possible audience for its product. The campaign thus seeks control over the content of a popular art form through government regulation and coercion. Forcing the movie industry to deliver state-sanctioned religious or moral instruction would be immediately repulsive to Canadian society. Why should such a thing be acceptable in the name of promoting anti-smoking policy?

Lately, it has become popular for tobacco opponents to talk of de-normalizing cigarette use. New rules in Ontario and elsewhere, for example, have banned smoking outdoors in parks and sports fieldswhere second-hand smoke poses no legitimate health threat to othersto control what is considered normal, everyday behaviour. Plans to censor movies are similarly offensive, in that they also seek to limit what may be seen in public space. Disseminating information on the hazards of smoking remains an important function for the field of public health. But it is the not job of government to decide what normal looks like.

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Rand Paul Announces Presidential Bid for 2016 Election – Video

Posted: at 5:42 pm


Rand Paul Announces Presidential Bid for 2016 Election
Rand Paul officially announced Tuesday morning that he will be running for president in the 2016 election. The Kentucky senator #39;s site also says he #39;s running to "restore liberty and prosperity...

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