Popular Articles

Obama, Pope Focus On Abortion, 'Life' Issues In First Meeting
In their first meeting, President Obama and Pope Benedict XVI on Friday discussed their views on abortion, embryonic stem cell research and the rights of health care workers to object to procedures and services that go against their beliefs, the Los Angeles Times reports. During a 30-minute discussion, the pope expressed to Obama his beliefs about "the defense and promotion of life and the right to abide by one"s conscience," according to the Vatican. The Times reports that the statement was a "clear reference" to debates over abortion rights, embryonic stem cell research and "conscience" protections for health care providers who refuse care on moral or religious grounds (Chu, Los Angeles Times, 7/11).According to Time, Benedict showed "no intention of papering over differences on what the Vatican calls "life" issues," including abortion rights. Vatican spokesperson the Rev. Federico Lombardi said that the pope told him how Obama "explicitly expressed his commitment to reducing the number of abortions and to listen to the Church"s concerns on moral issues" (Israely, Time, 7/10). According to White House deputy national security aide Denis McDonough, Obama was "eager to find common ground on these issues and to work aggressively to do that" (Simpson/Feller, AP/Boston Globe, 7/11). However, "[I]t may just be that there"s issues that you can"t come to agreement on," McDonough added, noting that Obama believes that "you can disagree without being disagreeable" (Los Angeles Times, 7/11).Montsignor Georg Ganswein, the pope"s personal secretary, said that Obama was given a copy of "Dignitas Personae," or "The Dignity of a Person," a Vatican document released in December detailing the Roman Catholic Church"s most recent stance on bioethics issues (Time, 7/10). The document "hardened" the Church"s opposition to embryonic stem cell research, cloning and in vitro fertilization (AP/Boston Globe, 7/11). Obama assured the pope he would read the document that day on his flight from Italy to Ghana. Ganswein said that the document "can help the president better understand the position of the Catholic Church." Lombardi noted that it "would be ambiguous to hide or minimize what we believe," adding, "It"s not meant to be divisive or polemical" (Time, 7/10).
generic viagra online
USC Researchers Uncover Mechanism That Allows Influenza Virus To Evade The BodyÂðs Immune Response
California (USC) have identified a
News of the day
Indian Health Service Loses Equipment At Alarming Rate
The Associated Press reports that "the Indian Health Service is continuing to lose equipment at an alarming rate despite efforts to better account for the agency"s property, according to congressional investigators. In a report issued Wednesday, the Government Accountability Office said the government agency lost about 1,400 items worth $3.5 million between October 2007 and January 2009 - including $37,000 in lab equipment at a Navajo health care facility and a $7,300 trailer in Nashville, Tenn. Those losses came after an estimated $15.8 million in equipment was unaccounted for between the 2004 and 2007 budget years. Those losses were reported by the GAO in June 2008, when investigators also charged that the Indian Health Service had falsified documents to cover up some of the missing property."
Nutrition

Scientists Discover Possible Link Between Missing DNA And Neuroblastoma, A Deadly Childhood Cancer

Discovering for the first time that copy number variation or CNV, where a strip of DNA is duplicated or missing, may increase risk of developing cancer, US scientists found a link between a particular CNV and neuroblastoma, a deadly cancer that mostly affects children. The study was led by Dr John M Maris, chief of Oncology and director of the Cancer Center at The Children"s Hospital of Philadelphia and is published in the 18 June issue of the journal Nature. Maris is also on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and scientists from several other research centres worked on the research with him. The discovery is particularly remarkable because it is the first to show that repeated or deleted strips of genetic code may be linked to cancer as opposed to variations in the code sequence or single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs or "snips"). Using a grammatical comparison, a CNV would be a repeated or missing word in a phrase while an SNP would be one or more words spelled incorrectly. Maris said the finding opens the door to studying how CNVs might increase cancer risk. Neuroblastoma is the most common solid cancer of young children, sometimes beginning before birth, and accounts for 15 per cent of all early childhood deaths. It forms in the nerve tissue and usually begins in the adrenal glands that sit above the kidneys, but it can also start in the neck, chest or spinal cord. Unfortunately it has often already spread to other parts of the body before diagnosis. Maris told the press: "Only two years ago we had very little idea of what causes neuroblastoma." "Now we have unlocked a lot of the mystery of why neuroblastoma arises in some children and not in others," he added. Last month the team published the result of the largest gene study to date in childhood cancer research where they reported the result of a genome-wide association study that showed variants in the BARD1 gene increased a child"s susceptibility to a high-risk type of neuroblastoma. This month they report the findings of a second genome-wide association study where using highly automated gene-analyzing technology they found a CNV along a structurally weak section of chromosome 1 that may be linked to developing neuroblastoma. They used specimens from around the world that had been collected through the Children"s Oncology Group, and technology from the Hospital"s Center for Applied Genomics which is directed by Dr Hakon Hakonarson, a co-author on both studies. Talking about the first study, Maris said that: "Researchers have suspected that variants in BARD1 also increased the risk of breast cancer, but no one has found compelling evidence of this." But they were surprised, he added, when their genome-wide association studies "found that BARD1 is a susceptibility gene for neuroblastoma, and perhaps other cancers as well". He and his team are now trying to understand the underlying mechanism by which BARD1 variants affect nervous system cells to become cancerous while the child is in the womb or soon after. Meanwhile, in the second study, with lead author Dr. Sharon Diskin, also of The Children"s Hospital of Philadelphia, Maris and colleagues found that a common CNV at a chromosome 1q21.1 is associated with the childhood cancer neuroblastoma. That region of the chromosome contains many genes that are involved in the development of the nervous system, and the researchers found that a transcript within the inherited CNV, called NBPF23, a previously unknown neuroblastoma breakpoint family gene, is involved in the early stages of tumor formation. These findings build on previous work by Maris and colleagues such as last year when they found the ALK gene was involved in making patients susceptible to a rare familial form of neuroblastoma. In another study they also found a region on chromosome 6 that raised the risk of a non- hereditary form of the disease. As scientists reveal more of the genetic landscape of neuroblastoma, the better the chances of developing targeted treatments that improve the quality of life for children with this complex disease said Maris. "Copy number variation at 1q21.1 associated with neuroblastoma." Sharon J. Diskin, Cuiping Hou, Joseph T. Glessner, Edward F. Attiyeh, Marci Laudenslager, Kristopher Bosse, Kristina Cole, Yaç«l P. Mossç©, Andrew Wood, Jill E. Lynch, Katlyn Pecor, Maura Diamond, Cynthia Winter, Kai Wang, Cecilia Kim, Elizabeth A. Geiger, Patrick W. McGrady, Alexandra I. F. Blakemore, Wendy B. London, Tamim H. Shaikh, Jonathan Bradfield, Struan F. A. Grant, Hongzhe Li, Marcella Devoto, Eric R. Rappaport, Hakon Hakonarson & John M. Maris. Nature, 459, 987 -991, Published online 18 June 2009. doi:10.1038/nature08035 Additional s: Children"s Hospital of Philadelphia, NIH . Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):