This Vegetable Will Fix Everything Wrong In Your Body!


Beets are very healthy vegetable because they have very powerful medicinal properties and they offer relief in case of many different ailments and diseases.

 The anthocyanins it contains give them the red color and they also have strong anti-cancer properties.

Moreover, beets also contain betaine, a natural anti-inflammatory agent that supports the heart health, along with important minerals and vitamins including the vitamins B1, B2, B12 and C, iron, copper, magnesium, iodine, phosphorus, andpotassium.

Beets boost the blood flow, regulate the cholesterol levels, and they support the healthy liver function.

Beets are able to fight anemia and detoxify the body. They also decelerate the aging process and protect the blood vessels. They are high in cellulose, antioxidants, and pectin, a special type of fiber which boosts digestion. Thisextremely healthy vegetable protects against liver disease as well.

 Beets also boost the stamina, endurance, and performance during a workout, so they are really beneficial for athletes.

You can eat beets raw, juiced, baked, andcooked. You should not throw away the leaves, because you can cook them because they are rich in potassium (644 mg. per half a cup).

Some studies have shown that the elimination of sodium and the consumption of potassium-rich foods can lower the risk of heart diseases and stroke by even 21%.

Source: www.healthyfoodhouse.com

Australian Scientists Prove Time Travel Is Possible.


There are some physicists who believe that time travel can be done.

At the University of Queensland, Australia a team of scientists have examined how time-traveling photons react; proving that, at the quantum level, the grandfather paradox-which makes time travel impossible-could be fixed. In the study, photons (single particles of light) to play out quantum particles traveling back from time. Through behavioral study, scientists have unveiled much stranger aspects of modern physics. 

“The properties of quantum particles are ‘uncertain to start with, so this gives them enough wiggle room to avoid inconsistent time travel situations. Our study provides insights into where and how nature might behave differently from what our theories predict,” says co-author Professor Timothy Ralph.

The Daily Mail further states: In the simulation, the researchers examined the behavior of a photon traveling through time and interacting with its older self. In their experiment they made use of the closely related, fictitious, case where the photon travels through normal space-time and interacts with another photon that is stuck in a time-travelling loop through a wormhole, known as a closed timelike curve (CTC).

Simulating the behavior of this second photon, they were able to study the behavior of the first – and the results show that consistent evolutions can be achieved when preparing the second photon in just the right way.

Physicists believe that due to Albert Einstein’s theories of general and special relativity, time travel is indeed a possibility. Special Relativity means that time and space are the same aspect, known as the space-time continuum, and time can either speed up or slow down, depending on your speed, relative to something other.

General Relativity states that it would be entirely possible to go back in time through a space-time path. In 2012, physicists Serge Haroche and David Wineland shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for the demonstration of “quantum weirdness” and how it can’t exist at the subatomic micro-world level, and how it can appear itself in the macro-world.

“The question of time travel features at the interface between two of our most successful yet incompatible physical theories – Einstein’s general relativity and quantum mechanics. Einstein’s theory describes the world at the very large scale of stars and galaxies, while quantum mechanics is an excellent description of the world at the very small scale of atoms and molecules,” says Martin Ringbauer, a PhD student at University of Queensland’s School of Mathematics and Physics, and a lead author of the paper.

In a documentary from the BBC, astrophysicist Stephen Hawking finds that it isn’t possible to go back into time. There isn’t a lot to look forward to at all.

Now, there are some developments in quantum theories that could deliver understanding of how to take on time travel paradoxes.

 

New find offers hope for some Hemophiliacs


The human factor VIII (hFVIII) gene therapy has been improved to identify the exact virus to take the treatment forward
These design improvements are crucial as the practical application of gene therapy for hemophilia progresses. (Photo: Pixabay)

 These design improvements are crucial as the practical application of gene therapy for hemophilia progresses.

A team of researchers has improved the vectors for delivering human factor VIII (hFVIII) gene therapy to treat Hemophilia A.

The University of Pennsylvania study examined 42 combinations of promoters and enhancers for hFVIII gene expression to identify the optimal adeno-associated virus (AAV)-based gene therapy delivery vector constructs to take forward into development.

Evaluation of the different combinations in mice that lack factor VIII demonstrated the significant and differing effects the vector components had on liver-specific expression of the hFVIII transgene.

Researcher James M. Wilson and coauthors developed and compared the different AAV vectors to overcome the challenge of delivering the relatively large hFVIII gene and to achieve therapeutic levels of factor VIII gene expression. They also compared the levels of antibody generated against the various AAV transgene delivery vectors.

“Dr. Wilson’s group and their colleagues at Dimension Therapeutics continue to improve the design of AAV vectors designed to treat the more common form of hemophilia, hemophilia A,” said Editor-in-Chief Terence R. Flotte. “These design improvements are crucial as the practical application of gene therapy for hemophilia progresses.”The study appears in the journal Human Gene Therapy.

Source:http://www.deccanchronicle.com

 

Statins Increase Diabetes Risk by up to 50% in Older Women


Statin therapy increases the risk of new-onset diabetes in elderly women by 33%, and the higher the dose, the greater the risk, a new analysis of the observational Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health shows.

“Clearly, statins have beneficial effects, including a reduction in the risk of cardiovascular events; however, the dose-response effect we observed suggests that it may be wise to avoid using higher doses of statins in older women,” lead author Mark Jones, MD, senior lecturer, school of public health, the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, told Medscape Medical Newsin an email.

 “GPs and their elderly female patients should be aware of the risks,” Dr Jones added in a University of Queensland statement, noting that those elderly women taking statins “should be carefully and regularly monitored for increased blood glucose to ensure early detection and management of diabetes.”

And, he and his colleagues suggest, it may be the case that statins could be stopped altogether in some elderly women.

Women Take Statins on Average, for 6.5 Years

The new analysis included 8372 Australian women aged between 76 and 82 years at baseline who were followed for 10 years; it ispublished in the March issue of Drugs and Aging.

Dr Jones and colleagues note that the majority of participants in statin trials have been males and that females, especially elderly ones, have been underrepresented.

 “Our group has expertise and experience in women’s health, including being involved with the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health for the past 20 years, and we focused on the older cohort of women [in this study] because we thought this is a population that has generally not been included in clinical trials,” Dr Jones explained to Medscape Medical News.

Previous studies have also shown an association between use and onset of diabetes, he and his colleagues add, and while often the benefits of statins are said to outweigh the risk of diabetes, this depends on the indication for statins in the first place. For example, statin use in primary prevention of cardiovascular disease remains controversial, they say.

The primary outcome of their analysis, new-onset diabetes, was based on a new prescription for insulin, insulin analogues, or other glucose-lowering agents. And statin exposure was determined based on prescriptions dispensed between July 1, 2002 and August 31, 2013.

 “We found that almost 50% [49%] of women in their late seventies and eighties in the study took statins, and 5% were diagnosed with new-onset diabetes,” Dr Jones noted.

The mean interval for which women took a statin was 6.5 years.

While women could have taken different statins at different doses over the 10-year follow-up interval, the greatest proportion of participants received atorvastatin followed by simvastatin, the researchers explain.

And when there was a change in the dose of a statin, it tended to be toward a higher dose over time.

Risk of Diabetes Ranged From 17% to 51%

The risk of new-onset diabetes went from a low of 17% with the lowest doses of a statin to a high of 51% for those taking the highest doses.

 At an adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of 1.33% for the overall cohort, this risk translates into a number-needed-to-harm of 131 patients for every 5 years of treatment with a statin.

New-Onset Diabetes by Statin Dose*

Statin dose Hazard ratio P
Low dose 1.17 0.35
Mid dose 1.26 0.077
High dose 1.46 0.005
Very high dose 1.51 0.004
*Compared with no statin use

“What’s most concerning was that we found a ‘dose effect,’ where the risk of diabetes increased as the dosage of statins increased, [and] over the 10 years of the study, most of the women progressed to higher doses of statins,” Dr Jones observed.

 He and his colleagues therefore recommend that ongoing risk assessment is “critical” to ensure optimal health outcomes and quality of life in older women.

Deprescribe Statins in Older Women

The results suggest “elderly women should not be exposed to higher doses of statins,” they add.

Indeed, in some cases, it may be wiser to stop statins altogether in this patient group, they note, adding that, in their study, around one-third of users didn’t fill a prescription for statins in the last 6 months prior to death or end of follow-up.

 “The women in our study would have been aged 86 to 92 at the end of follow-up and, depending upon reason for initial prescribing—primary or secondary prevention—serious consideration could perhaps now be recommended for statin deprescribing in women of this age,” they conclude.
Source: medscape.com

More older women are drinking hard


New research finds an increase in binge drinking among older women.

More older American women than ever are drinking — and drinking hard, a new study shows.

Most troubling was the finding that the prevalence of binge drinking among older women is increasing dramatically, far faster than it is among older men, the researchers noted.

The difference was striking: Among men, the average prevalence of binge drinking remained stable from 1997 to 2014, while it increased an average of nearly 4 percent per year among women, the researchers found.

Increased drinking and binge drinking can be a serious health problem for women, said study author Rosalind Breslow, an epidemiologist at the U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

Women don’t tolerate alcohol as well as men, and they start to have alcohol-related problems at lower drinking levels than men, Breslow explained.

She pointed out that on average, women weigh less than men, and have less water in their bodies than men do. (Alcohol dissolves in water).

“So, after a man and woman of the same weight drink the same amount of alcohol, the woman’s blood alcohol concentration will tend to be higher, putting her at greater risk for harm,” Breslow said.

For the study, Breslow and her colleagues collected data on more than 65,000 men and women aged 60 and older who were current drinkers. Among these, more than 6,500 men and 1,700 women were binge drinkers.

Older adults, in general, are at greater risk of the effects of alcohol than younger adults, Breslow noted. “They’re more sensitive to the effects of alcohol, which can contribute to falls and other injuries, a major problem in older people,” she said.

As the U.S. population ages, the number of men and women 60 and older who drink will likely increase further, bringing with it more alcohol-related problems.

In the study, said Breslow, “we found that between 1997 and 2014, the proportion of older male drinkers in the U.S. population increased about 1 percent per year, and female drinkers increased nearly 2 percent per year.”

It’s not clear why this is happening, Breslow added.

“We did find that more younger boomers, ages 60 to 64, both men and women, were drinking than people of the same age in past generations,” Breslow added.

Whether drinking is increasing among certain racial or ethnic groups isn’t something the researchers analyzed, she said.

But alcohol can have devastating consequences, particularly for older adults, Breslow said.

“Too much drinking increases your chances of being injured or even killed. Alcohol is a factor, for example, in about 60 percent of fatal burn injuries, drownings and homicides; 50 percent of severe trauma injuries and sexual assaults; and 40 percent of fatal motor vehicle crashes, suicides and fatal falls,” she said.

In addition, heavy drinkers have a greater risk of liver disease, heart disease, sleep disorders, depression, stroke, bleeding from the stomach, sexually transmitted infections from unsafe sex, and several types of cancer, Breslow said. They may also have problems managing diabetes, high blood pressure and other chronic conditions.

“Think before you drink,” she said. Adults over age 65 who are healthy and do not take medications should not have more than three drinks a day or seven drinks in a week, Breslow said.

“Based on your health and how alcohol affects you, you may need to drink less or not at all,” she added.

Another alcohol abuse expert also felt that the rise in binge drinking among older women was the most concerning finding in the study.

“We know that, overall, women are more sensitive to the negative health consequences of alcohol than men,” said Dr. J.C. Garbutt, medical director of the University of North Carolina Alcohol and Substance Abuse Program, in Chapel Hill.

“These consequences include liver disease, high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease and cognitive impairment — serious problems — and addiction to alcohol is possible as well,” he said.

Garbutt said he couldn’t explain the increase in binge drinking among older women.

“One would have to think there are major cultural factors at work, including the greater acceptability for women to drink, family structural changes, and perhaps greater access. But we really don’t know so it would be premature to speculate,” he said.

“Regardless, this speaks to the need to continue to educate the public about the harms of alcohol, including the increased risk to women and older individuals,” he said.

The report was published March 24 in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

A study published last October also found the gap in drinking between men and women is closing.

Women across the globe are now nearly as likely as men to drink and to engage in excessive drinking, according to researchers with the National Drug and Alcohol Research Center at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

Soure:http://www.cbsnews.com

World’s First Head Transplant A Success After ninteen hour operation.


Johannesburg, South Africa — A 36-year-old man has undergone the world’s first successful head transplant. The ground-breaking operation took a team of surgeons nineteen hours to complete and has allowed the patient to be cancer-free.

Paul Horner, who was diagnosed with bone cancer five years ago, was on the verge of death when he was approved for the controversial and possibly deadly operation.

Doctor Tom Downey, who was part of the South African team who carried out the operation, told CNN he is thrilled about the results.

“It’s a massive breakthrough,” Downey said. “We’ve proved that it can be done – we can give someone a brand new body that is just as good, or better, than their previous one. The success of this operation leads to infinite possibilities.”

Surgeons at Charlotte Maxexe Johannesburg Academic Hospital inJohannesburg carried out the operation in February but waited until they could confirm it was successful before they made any public statement.Downey spoke to reporters about the complexity behind the first ever head transplant.

“This procedure is another excellent example of how medical research, technical know-how and patient-centered care can be combined in the quest to relieve human suffering.”

The operation was led by Professor Myron Danus and took place on February 10th of this year.“Our goal is for Horner to be fully functional in two years and so far we are very pleased by his rapid recovery,” said Danus. “Before the operation, Horner’s body was riddled with cancer and he had less than a month to live. We were fortunate enough to find a donor body; a 21-year-old man who has been brain dead from a serious car accident that happened in 2012. The boys body worked just fine, but his brain was not functioning whatsoever, and there was absolutely no chance of recovery.” Danus continued, “We received approval from the young man’s parents to use their sons body to do the operation. They were extremely happy their son could save a life even in the vegetated state that he was in.”

Doctors say Horner has made an 85% recovery; walking, talking and doing the normal things a healthy individual does.

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The Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital, nicknamed Joburg Gen is an accredited general hospital in Parktown, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa. It has 1,088 beds. The hospital’s professional and support staff exceeds 4,000 people.

Even though Horner lives in the United States, the first-of-its-kind operation had to be done overseas in a location where the medical guidelines are not as strict.

Ancient particle accelerator discovered on Mars.


New images of the surface of Mars taken by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter probe have revealed the presence of the largest particle accelerator.

The search for water, or even signs of life, on the planet Mars has been ongoing for some time. But with today’s announcement by CERN and NASA scientists, the exploration of the red planet has revealed a major new discovery. New images of the surface of Mars taken by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter probe, analysed by an interdisciplinary team of experts from the fields of geology, archaeology and particle physics, have revealed the presence of the largest particle accelerator ever built. The team has shown that Olympus Mons, previously thought to be the largest volcanic formation in the solar system, is in fact the remains of an ancient particle accelerator thought to have operated several million years ago.

A landslide stretching over several kilometres spotted by the probe’s high-resolution camera, sparked the scientists’ attention. This apparently recent event revealed a number of structures, which intrigued the scientists, as their shapes clearly resembled those of superconducting accelerating cavities such as those used in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). With a circumference of almost 2000 kilometres, this particle accelerator would have been around 75 times bigger than the LHC, and millions of times more powerful. However, it is not yet known which type of particles might have been accelerated in such a machine.

Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, the meaning of which was previously a mystery, seem to corroborate these observations, leading scientists to believe that the pyramids might have served as giant antennae 

This major discovery could also help to explain the Egyptian pyramids, one of archaeology’s oldest mysteries. Heavily eroded structures resembling pyramids also appear on the images in the immediate vicinity of Olympus Mons. In addition, ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, the meaning of which was previously a mystery, seem to corroborate these observations, leading scientists to believe that the pyramids might have served as giant antennae. The pyramids on Earth might therefore have allowed the accelerator to be controlled remotely. “The accelerator control room was probably under the pyramids,” said Friedrich Spader, CERN’s Head of Technical Design.

This particle accelerator – a veritable “stargate” – is thought to have served as a portal into the solar system for a highly technologically advanced civilisation with the aim of colonisation. “The papyrus that was recently deciphered indicates that the powerful magnetic field and the movement of the particles in the accelerator were such that they would create a portal through spacetime,” said Fadela Emmerich, the leader of the team of scientists. “It’s a phenomenon that is completely new to CERN and we can’t wait to study it!” Such a technology could revolutionise space travel and open the way for intergalactic exploration.

Olympus Mons was until now considered to be the biggest volcano in the solar system, with its most recent lava flows estimated to be about 2 million years old. Scientists believe that this dating is quite accurate, on the basis of the latest measurements carried out by NASA’s Mars Odyssey probe. “This would mean that the particle accelerator was last used around 2 million years ago,” suggested Eilert O’Neil, the geologist who led this aspect of the research.

The powerful synchrotron radiation emitted by the particle accelerator generated an intense heat, which explains the volcanic structure and the presence of lava flows. “We have also suspected for a long time that a large quantity of water must have existed on the surface of Mars. We can only assume that this water was used at the time to cool the machines,” revealed Friedrich Spader.

“We’re probably talking about forgotten technologies and a highly advanced ancient civilisation,” said Eilert O’Neil. “Maybe even our own distant ancestors.”

Source:http://home.cern/

NASA’s Age Reversing Pill Begins Human Testing Within 6 Months


Scientists have made a discovery that could lead to a revolutionary drug that reverses ageing.

Experiments from a team at the University of New South Walessuggest a treatment is possible to repair DNA damage from both ageing and radiation. The ‘call signaling’ molecule is called NAD+. NAD+ is naturally in every cell of the body and posseses a key role in protein interactions (which control DNA repair.).

When treating mice with an NAD+ ‘booster’ called NMN  , studies showed improvement in the cells’ ability to repair the damaged DNA.

“This is the closest we are to a safe and effective anti-ageing drug that’s perhaps only three to five years away from being on the market if the trials go well. In the study,  cells of old mice were indistinguishable from the young mice after just one week of treatment,” said lead author Professor David Sinclair.

Professor Sinclair pictured in the middle. 

The work has also drawn the attention of NASA which is interested in its uses in the challenge of keeping astronauts healthy while in space.  On short missions, astronauts experience accelerated ageing due to exposure from cosmic radiation, suffering from muscle weakness, memory loss and other symptoms when they return. On longer missions, like a trip to Mars, the situation would be far worse. Five per cent of the astronauts’ cells would die and their chances of cancer would approach near 100 per cent.

Professor Sinclair and his colleague Dr Lindsay Wu were winners in NASA’s iTech competition in December last year:

‘We came in with a solution for a biological problem and it won the competition out of 300 entries,’ Dr Wu said.

Cosmic radiation isn’t an issue exclusive to astronauts.  We are all exposed to radiation aboard aircraft. A London-Singapore-Melbourne flight is equivalent in radiation to a chest x-ray.

The other group that could benefit from this work is survivors of childhood cancers. 96 percent of childhood cancer survivors suffer a chronic illness by age 45. This includes cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, and certain forms of cancer.

The human trials for the anti ageing pill will begin this year at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in Boston.

Source:www.minds.com

NASA Studying How to Travel Faster than Light After Finding Trappist-1 ·


NASA recently reported finding a treasure trove of planets, all able to support life in a nearby solar system, called Trappist-1, according to a Harvard paper on the subject. Now, as if NASA hasn’t been using interstellar space travel for decades now, this arm of the military industrial system says it is beginning to study faster-than-light space travel.

Propulsion

Just over two years ago, NASA reported that a team may have unintentionally accelerated particles to faster-than-light speeds while using the EmDrive resonance chamber. This alone would result in faster than light travel by creating a warp bubble, something we’ve already seen depicted in episodes of Star Trek.

Then there are private companies which are said to be working on similar faster-than-light speed technologies.

Orbital ATK is working with NASA to create solar panels that can power up spaceship through its ion drives with collected sunlight, and Aerojet Rocketdyne is developing an ion thruster system, the Evolutionary Xenon Thruster-Commercial, or “NEXT-C” that would allow spaceships to travel in space three times faster than current interplanetary propulsion systems.

Meanwhile mainstream news outlets keep pumping us with the “information” that nothing can ever go faster than the speed of light, but in September of 2011, physicist Antonio Ereditato shocked the world by announcing that small particles called neutrinos had travelled faster than light, destroying Einstein’s theories of relativity.  This was supposedly discovered by compiling data from over 160 scientists working on the OPERA project.

 Of course, we have whistleblowers like Corey Goode, and William Tompkins who have been telling us that these technologies and many more have existed far longer than NASA is letting on.

Tompkins, a former employee of Douglas Aircraft has named dozens of unconventional propulsion programs that are listed within highly classified documents.

When Ben Rich, former director of Lockheed Skunkworks told us, “We already have the meansto travel among the stars but these technologies are locked up in Black Projects…and it would take an act of God to ever get them out to benefit humanity. Anything you can imagine, we already know how to do,” he wasn’t kidding, but apparently NASA still thinks we lemmings will believe that they are just now stumbling on ways to travel to Trappist-1 faster than the speed of light.

Source:http://themindunleashed.com