Showing posts with label Disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disease. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Watching a Time Lapse of Burning Man Is Like Seeing a Disease Spread [Video]

By Casey Chan Oct 16, 2011 11:00 AM 6,404 8

Watching a Time Lapse of Burning Man Is Like Seeing a Disease Spread This time lapse video shows 5 weeks of Burning Man 2011 in 5 minutes. It covers the entire event—from set up to everyone leaving—at about 3 hours every second. It's like watching a disease spread on the face of the Earth.

The nighttime part seems to be the most fun with crazy lights and fires burning abound while the day time sequences look hot, dusty and hot and dusty. Does this time lapse video capture the soul of Burning Man or do you have to be up close to partake on the crazy? [Playa Time via Laughing Squid]

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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Black Death DNA ID'd by Scientists and What It Means For the Next Zombie Plague [Disease]

Black Death DNA ID'd by Scientists and What It Means For the Next Zombie PlagueThe source of Black Death, a plague that devastated Europe in the 14th century, has finally been pinpointed thanks to an analysis of rotting bones and teeth extracted a mass burial site in London.

Until this study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, some scientists were skeptical that the incredibly deadly plague came from the Yersinia pestis bacterium, despite a fair amount of evidence that it did. The latest research is proof positive that Y pestis is to blame. Scientists took DNA from 53 bones and 43 teeth that had been buried in East Smithfield, a cemetery build preemptively in 1348 in expectation of much death.

The effort wasn't wasted: two years after the cemetery was in place, the bubonic plague had killed one-third of London's population. East Smithfield holds 2,400 of the victims stacked five deep.

The plague still exists, but it behaves much differently than it did back then. For example, today the plague is carried by rats and is contracted directly from them (or their fleas). In the 14th century, the Black Death passed from person to person, which is what made its destruction so swift. That difference among others made some scientists doubt that the same bacterium caused the disease back then and today.

Knowing that it's one and the same is important because scientists fear the bacterium could morph to become the evil satan of a pathogen it was during medieval times. But they still don't know what made the old Y Pestis so much more deadly than the modern version. If they can figure that out, they'll have a better idea of how to combat the next zombie plague.

"It's probably exceptionally important to find out what made this bug so deadly in the past," Hendrik Polinar, one of the authors of the study, told The New York Times.

Makes sense to me—someone give these scientists more money to figure it out, STAT! Look at those plague researchers. If they're willing to do that for the greater good, I'm happy for my tax money to help make their work happen. And a giant thank you to the (mostly Canadian) organizations who funded (scroll down to acknowledgements) this study.

If you are disease (or DNA) obsessed, you can also see all the DNA sequences for free online.

[PNAS; Image: National Geographic]

You can keep up with Kristen Philipkoski, the author of this post, on Twitter, Facebook, and occasionally Google+ Related Stories

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

An Electronic Sensor Could Smell the Stench of Heart Disease [Medicine]

An Electronic Sensor Could Smell the Stench of Heart DiseaseGo ahead and add heart disease to the never ending list of ailments that can be detected by a non-human nose, German researchers have created a sensor that can smell heart disease.

According to Cnet's Elizabeth Armstrong Moore, the device in question is a metal-oxide gas sensor that is strapped on the arm like a blood pressure sensor and can operate with 90% accuracy.

The system includes three thick-film metal oxide-based gas sensors with heater elements. Each is tailored to sense different odorant molecular types. As oxygen reacts to the heated sensor surface, the molecules interact with the sensors and change the free charge carrier concentrations, and thus conductivity, in the metal oxide layer.

Having already collected the relevant parameters for heart failure (BNP, creatinine, clinical history, etc.) in 126 patients in 2010, physicians blinded to those results then used the electronic nose to assign the patients to one of three groups: no heart failure, and then two types of chronic heart failure—compensated (a condition where treatment is able to compensate for the failure) and decompensated (where treatment is not working, and can be caused by arrhythmias, infections, electrolyte disturbances, etc.).

So let's tally, shall we? There's a handheld device that can detect cancer, a dime-shaped device that can detect cancer andHIV, a sensor that can "smell" cancer, a microscope that can spot cancer, dogs that smell cancer as though it were halitosis, and now this, a sensor that detects heart disease. Terminal illnesses can run, but they can't hide. [Cnet]

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