Thứ Ba, 8 tháng 7, 2014

TB in children 'much more common'

TB rates in children 'much higher than WHO estimates'


Childhood TB can be harder to detect than the adult form of the diseaseResearchers say 15 million children are living in homes with adults who have the disease

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More than 650,000 children worldwide develop tuberculosis each year, research in the journal Lancet Global Health suggests.
The figure stands almost 25% higher than current predictions made by the World Health Organization.
Scientists say health officials may be missing an "enormous opportunity" to prevent the disease from spreading.
The World Health Organization plans to revise its estimates in its next report.
Tuberculosis (TB) in children can be difficult to detect - younger people harbour fewer bacteria than adults and it is more challenging to collect samples from them.
Alternative approaches
The World Health Organization put together the first international estimates in children in 2012, predicting some 530,000 cases that year.
But researchers say these figures - which rely on reports of cases to national authorities - do not give the full picture as the quality of surveillance varies across the globe.
And scientists say some cases will be missed as a perception persists that children are not infectious and present a less pressing problem than adults.
Responding to the WHO's call for alternative approaches to the problem, the team from the University of Sheffield, Imperial College London, and the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development created a mathematical model, focusing on data from adults with the disease.
Taking into account the natural behaviour of the bacteria and the rates of adult TB in households and communities in 22 countries with the highest levels of disease, they were able to estimate how many children have tuberculosis.
They suggest some 15 million children currently live in the same household as an adult with infectious TB.
And nearly 53 million children have inactive TB - a form of the disease which can progress to the infectious, active type at any time.
'Often ignored'
These estimates indicate nearly two-thirds of the cases of active TB may be missed every year.
Dr Peter Dodd of the University of Sheffield and lead author of the research, said: "Children are an often ignored but important part of TB control efforts.
"Our findings highlight an enormous opportunity for preventative antibiotic treatment among children who are living in the same household as an adult with infectious TB.
"Wider use of preventative treatment would probably substantially reduce the numbers of children who develop the disease."
Dr Ruth McNerney from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who was not involved in the research says: "We know children develop and die from TB but we do not know how many.
"Solving this problem is very important - treating children appropriately when they are exposed the disease may help prevent the disease from reappearing in later life."
Andrea Cruz and Jeffrey Starke from the Baylor College of Medicine, USA, who were not involved in the research but contributed to a related article in the journal said: "These findings show that what often has been taken as truth - that control of TB in adults will inevitably result in improved tuberculosis control for children - is fallacious as a stand-alone control strategy."

Similar memories benefit from 'extra space' in brain

Similar memories overlap physically in the brain and this produces less confusion if the brain area responsible is larger, according to new research.
Scientists scanned the brains of 15 people recalling four similar scenes, in a study published in PNAS.
They spotted overlapping memory traces in a specific corner of the hippocampus called "CA3", a known memory area.
If their CA3 was bigger, the subjects were less confused and there was less overlap in the traces.
Most of us store many similar memories, relating to the places we spend most time and the people we know best. Normally we can tell them apart, though some of us may be better at it than others.

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A larger CA3 may contain more neurons or more connections between neurons, which could allow greater physical separation of the different memory traces”
Dr Martin ChadwickWellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL
The CA3 region was thought to process each memory using distinct sets of brain cells. These findings suggest, however, that when two episodes incorporate similar content, they may in fact be "remembered" by physically overlapping networks - and more space could be beneficial.
"Our results may help to explain why we sometimes find it difficult to differentiate between similar past memories, and why some people are better at doing this than others," said Prof Eleanor Maguire, the study's senior author, from the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London (UCL).
The 15 subjects watched four short movies, showing two different actions happening in each of two different places. They were then prompted to remember each one, 20 times over, inside a brain scanner.
Scans revealed distinguishable memory activity in the CA3 region, but not three other compartments of the hippocampus. Importantly, the four different memory traces showed significant overlap.
Furthermore, that overlap was more apparent in people who said they were more confused by the similarities between the four memories.
Greater capacity
The scans combined fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) with detailed structural measurements of each brain, so as well as getting a read-out of brain activity, the team could measure the exact size of each person's CA3.
That was how they discovered that the size of this region, relative to the rest of the hippocampus, affected both the amount of overlap in the traces and the level of people's confusion.
"A larger CA3 may contain more neurons or more connections between neurons, which could allow greater physical separation of the different memory traces," Dr Martin Chadwick, who conducted the experiments, told BBC News.
Although overall brain size is not related to different individuals' mental abilities (Einstein's brain was smaller than average), the relative dimensions of different components have been linked to various characteristics.
hippocampus brain tissueThe populations of cells that process each memory in the hippocampus may overlap
An earlier study by Prof Maguire famously showed that as they hone their impressive mental street maps and navigational ability, London cab drivers develop a larger hippocampus, on average, than the rest of us.
Dr Hugo Spiers, a neuroscience lecturer at UCL who was not involved in the research, described the new paper as a "really useful" addition to that classic finding. "[The hippocampus] is quite a lot of brain," he told the BBC. "What they've now found is that this particular bit within it, the CA3, which is a very exciting bit of the brain, is larger in some people."
"The taxi driver study is about the overall size being related to navigating a big city, but that's very different to remembering what each of you said in an argument you had with your partner the other day. Most of us are really bad at that - it ends up as 'You said this' 'No I said that' - it might be the size of CA3 that influences who's going to win that argument!"
The CA3 region is remarkable because its widespread connections to other pockets of the brain are accompanied by a vast number of interconnections within the CA3 itself. This marked it out years ago, Dr Spiers explained, as a potentially useful component for memory storage and retrieval.
"You want something to reconnect with itself a lot, to allow you to retrieve rapidly stored memories - but it's got a limit," he said.
"We've got a better understanding, from this new work, about what this particularly important bit of the memory circuitry is doing."

Thứ Tư, 2 tháng 7, 2014

About Gac

moocos gac fruit 0010
http://moocos.com/about-gac.html

Gac fruit is from vietnam

DIFFERENT NAMES IN THE WORLD:

Common Name:  Gac
 (Original from Vietnamese)
Botanical Name: Momordica cochinchinensis Spreng

Other Names: Mu Bie Guo (China); Bhat Kerala (India); Fak Khaao (Thailand);

TRADITIONAL USE IN VIET NAM:

Traditionally, gac has been used as both food and medicine in the regions in which it grows. Other than the use of its fruit and leaves for special Vietnamese culinary dishes(like Xoi Gac), gac is also used for its medicinal and nutritional properties. In Vietnam, the seed membranes are said to aid in the relief of dry eyes, as well as to promote healthy vision. Similarly, in traditional Chinese medicine the seeds of gac, known in Mandarin Chinese as mùbiēzǐ (Chinese: ), are employed for a variety of internal and external purposes.

NUTRIENTS AND PHYTOCHEMICALS INSIDE GAC:

Lycopene/β-carotene/Vitamin C&E/zeaxanthin/zinc
Gac has high levels of fatty acid-bound carotenoids called lipocarotenes that facilitate that delivery of carotenoids to cells.Gac is an exceptional source of lycopene and beta-carotene. It has up to 70 times more lycopene than tomatoes, 10 times more beta-carotene than carrots, 60 times more vitamin C than oranges and 40 times more zeaxanthin than yellow corn. It also contains alpha-tocopherol, vitamin F, and minerals including iron and zinc.

Chủ Nhật, 22 tháng 6, 2014

gac fruit which is from heaven !

  moocos.com
 MOOCOS Viet Nam is a company focuses on Gac, We have Gac oil, Gac powder, Frozen Gac puree,Gac oil capsule,Gac jam,Gac seed.Our main market is US, EU, Japan, Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, China, but we are always looking for new customers from other areas.

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