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Sunday, 22 June 2014

Sunbathing 'may be addictive' warning

Sunbathing 'may be addictive' warning

Man applies sun cream on the beach  

Spending time basking in the sun's warming rays may have addictive properties, claim researchers in the US.

Their study, published in the journal Cell, showed that sunlight led to the production of endorphins in the skin.
The Harvard Medical School team said their experiments on mice showed repeated UV exposure led to addiction in the animals.
Other scientists said describing it as "addiction" was a step too far.
There have been previous suggestions that people can get addicted to the sun.
A study of university students using tanning salons suggested around one in three met the definition for addiction.
Other trials showed withdrawal symptoms could appear, including nausea, jitteriness and shaking, when enthusiastic tanners were given a drug used to treat addiction.
 Happy chemical
Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School were exploring how such addiction might occur.
 Woman sunbathing
Mice with a shaved back were exposed to the equivalent of half an hour of midday Florida sun every day for six weeks.
They showed UV radiation led to the production of a protein in the skin called proopiomelanocortin. This is broken down into the pigment melanin, which gives you a tan, but the team showed pleasure chemicals, or endorphins, were also produced.
The chemicals act on the same systems in the body as other opioids such as heroin and morphine.
Giving the mice drugs to block opioids, which are used in rehab clinics, led to withdrawal symptoms including shaking and tremors.
The mice then started to avoid the place where the drugs were being administered, which the researchers said was a hallmark of addictive behaviour.
But their experiments do not show the mice actively seeking out the UV light in the same manner as a drug addict. 
 Sun setting
Dr David Fisher, one of the researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital, told the BBC: "I would say at this stage, with reasonable confidence, that this pathway really does exist and is probably present in everybody.
"People who may have no intention of using any drugs may just think they're going out to enjoy a great day outdoors and may be becoming addicted and exposing themselves and their children to UV in a fashion which could elevate their risk of developing skin cancer.
"It sounds like a cruel joke to be addicted the most ubiquitous carcinogen in the world, it is plausible that there is an evolutionary advantage and we suspect that may relate to vitamin D."
However, other scientists are not convinced.
'Not supported'
Dr David Belin, who researches addiction at the University of Cambridge, said: "I'm not disregarding the interest of looking into addiction to UV light, I think this is a very interesting field and their study is going to be seminal even though their conclusions are not supported by their results."

He said UV-addicted mice would show a preference for spending time under a UV lamp to the expense of everything else, even eating - something the researchers do not report.
If people were sun-addicted then: "You would have people giving up their family lives to get access to sunshine, you would have people who lose their jobs because they spend their day on the beach, people would maintain UV-seeking behaviour to the detriment of their everyday life.
"British people would go on holiday to the south of France and would never come back."
He added that other tan-is-beautiful social pressures may be behind addict-like behaviour in some people using sun beds.
However, he said the study itself was "outstanding" and showed that "lying on the beach recruits your opioid system and on its own it might be something you really like."
Dr Clare Stanford, a reading in experimental psychopharmacology at University College London, said: "This study does not provide the sort of evidence needed to show addiction to UV light in mice and it is even less certain that the work predicts addiction in humans.
"This would require testing whether the mice preferred UV light or non-UV light, which was not done in this paper."
 Ouch
 Man very sunburnt
Dr Fisher said he was motivated by the "remarkable embarrassment" of rising rates of skin cancer in the US despite widespread knowledge of the dangers of UV radiation.
He said using a suncream which blocked both UVA and UVB would probably prevent addiction.
However, he did say there should be more thought about tanning salons.
His report concluded: "It may be necessary to more proactively protect individuals, including teens, from the risks of an avoidable, potentially life-threatening exposure and to view recreational tanning and opioid drug abuse as engaging in the same biological pathway."
'Fake it'
Sarah Williams, a senior health information officer at Cancer Research UK, said: "With most cases of skin cancer linked to too much exposure to UV from the sun and sun beds, it's important that people know the dangers and how to protect themselves.
"While we all need some sun for strong and healthy bones, when the sun is strong it's important to spend time in the shade and cover up with clothing.
"Sunscreen with at least SPF15 and a high star rating can help protect the parts you can't cover and avoid using sun beds. 

"We'd like to see more people celebrating their natural skin tone, but if you really want a tanned look, it's safer to fake it."

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Thursday, 19 June 2014

Bird flu 'danger zones' mapped

Bird flu 'danger zones' mapped.

Shanghai

The "danger zones" in Asia which are vulnerable to a deadly bird flu have been mapped by scientists. 

The virus, called H7N9, has infected 433 people mostly in China and has killed 62.

The study, published in Nature Communications, showed parts of Bangladesh, India and Vietnam could easily sustain the virus.
The research group said those areas should monitor poultry to ensure any threat is detected.
The H7N9 virus spread from birds to people and was first detected in March 2013 in China.
New viruses are always a concern because of their unknown potential to spread round the world as a deadly pandemic.
Data from the H7N9 outbreak was used to build a computer model of other at-risk areas in Asia.
It involved mapping 8,000 live-poultry markets and assessing how close together they needed to be to spread the infection.
Threat zones.
 Infection risk map 
The higher the peaks the greater the potential risk for H7N9 bird flu.
The map does not show where the virus will end up next, just those areas where conditions are suitable to sustain the virus if it managed to get there.
Bangladesh, northern India, the Mekong and Red River deltas in Vietnam and isolated parts of Indonesia and Philippines were identified as at-risk areas.
Thailand was not a risk zone due to cultural differences, which mean live-poultry markets are not common. It is also noticeable that the whole of China is not equally at risk.
H7N9 is not deadly in birds so there is no "body count" to help track the spread of the disease.
Dr Tim Robinson, a senior spatial analyst at the International Livestock Research Institute in Nairobi, told the BBC: "It is a risk map showing, if the virus arrived to an area, how likely it would be to spread and continue from there.
"H7N9 can spread very quietly throughout the poultry population.
"The main use of the maps is to target surveillance, I think these maps can show areas where there's a high chance of the disease flaring up if it arrives."
 Scientists testing chickens 
Chinese health workers inoculating chickens at a farm in Shangsi
What is missing from the maps is how the virus is likely to spread.
The researchers want to factor in data on how poultry are traded in Asia.
Dr Simon Hay, from the University of Oxford, said: "H7N9 is confined to China at the moment and all the neighbouring countries are worried about when their chicken industry might be infected."
"The maps are a prediction if you dropped a new infection in that location would it stick and hold as a disease."
He said the tools developed could be quickly applied to other bird flus making the the jump to people in the future.
Yet the great fear in novel avian influenza is that the virus starts to spread rapidly between people.
"I think the maps become redundant at that point," Dr Hay added.
"It's a very different disease process then, if it does jump to human-to-human transmission then you would use a classical influenza model using the proximity of people, volume of air flights and the amount of people moving between cities." 

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Iraq formally asks US to launch air strikes against rebels

Iraq formally asks US to launch air strikes against rebels.

Alleged ISIS militants in the town of Baiji (taken from a video posted on 17 June)

Alleged ISIS militants in the town of Baiji in recent days.

 

  Shia women holds up her weapon in Najaf (18 June 2014) 

Shia women in the city of Najaf show their willingness to join Iraqi security forces in the fight against ISIS

Iraq has formally called on the US to launch air strikes against jihadist militants who have seized several key cities over the past week.
"We have a request from the Iraqi government for air power," confirmed top US military commander Gen Martin Dempsey in front of US senators.
Earlier the Sunni insurgents launched an attack on Iraq's biggest oil refinery at Baiji north of Baghdad.
Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki earlier urged Iraqis to unite against the militants.
Government forces are battling to push back ISIS (Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant) and its Sunni Muslim allies in Diyala and Salahuddin provinces, after the militants overran the second city, Mosul, last week.
US President Barack Obama met senior Congress members on Wednesday to discuss the Iraq crisis. The White House said Mr Obama had "reviewed our efforts to strengthen the capacity of Iraq's security forces to confront the threat from ISIL [ISIS], including options for increased security assistance".

Ahead of the briefing Senate leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, said he did not "support in any way" getting American troops involved in the Iraqi "civil war".
But Gen Dempsey told a Senate panel that it was in America's "national interest to counter [ISIS] wherever we find them".

In other developments:
  • UK Prime Minister David Cameron told Parliament in London that ISIS was also plotting terror attacks on Britain
  • India confirmed that 40 of its citizens had been kidnapped in the violence-hit Iraqi city of Mosul
  • Saudi Foreign Minister Saud bin Faisal warned that Iraq faced the risk of civil war
  • Turkey is investigating reports that 15 Turkish builders were abducted by ISIS on Tuesday; 80 Turks were kidnapped in Mosul last week
A detailed look at what ISIS says about itself, in two annual reports, is very revealing.
Get past the gruesome audit of violence - the numbers of people they claim to have killed through car bombs, suicide attacks and even "apostates run over" - and a picture emerges of an "increasingly structured organisation", in the words of an analysis by the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
The statistics show a major ISIS focus, over the past two years, on Nineveh province, which may help to explain the Iraqi army's headlong flight from Mosul last week. More than 30% of ISIS attacks in both 2012 and 2013 were focussed on Nineveh, with a particular emphasis on threats against members of the Iraqi military and intimidation of local journalists.
But the reports suggest ISIS has nationwide ambitions, to take over large parts of the country. In the absence of a considered strategy, warn the authors of the ISW study, ISIS "will become a permanent fixture in the Middle East".

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Microwave helmet 'can spot a stroke'

Microwave helmet 'can spot a stroke'.

stroke cap

The prototype device is still undergoing modification and needs larger tests.

Scientists say they have devised a helmet that can quickly determine whether a patient has had a stroke.
It could speed diagnosis and treatment of stroke to boost chances of recovery, the scientists say.
The wearable cap bounces microwaves off the brain to determine whether there has been a bleed or clot deep inside.
The Swedish scientists who made the device plan to give it to ambulance crews to test after successful results in early studies with 45 patients.
Race against time.
 haemorrhagic stroke

 A weak blood vessel can rupture and cause a haemorrhagic stroke.

 

When a person has a stroke, doctors must work quickly to limit any brain damage.
If it takes more than four hours to get to hospital and start treatment, parts of their brain tissue may already be dying.
Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Time lost is brain lost”
Dr Shamim Quadir Stroke Association
But to give the best treatment, doctors first need to find out if the stroke is caused by a leaky blood vessel or one blocked by a clot.
A computerised tomography (CT) scan will show this, but it can take some time to organise one for a patient, even if they have been admitted as an emergency to a hospital that has one of these scanners.
Any delay in this "golden hour" of treatment opportunity could hamper recovery.
Vital window
To speed up the process, researchers in Sweden, from Chalmers University of Technology, Sahlgrenska Academy and Sahlgrenska University Hospital, have come up with a mobile device that could be used on the way to hospital.
The helmet uses microwave signals - the same as the ones emitted by microwave ovens and mobile phones but much weaker - to build a picture of what is going on throughout the brain.
Tests with an early prototype - a refashioned bicycle helmet - found it could accurately distinguish between bleeds (haemorrhagic stroke) and clots (ischaemic stroke), although not 100% of the time.
They have since built and tested a custom-made helmet to better fits skulls of different shapes and sizes, and they have tested it out with the help of nurses and patients at a local hospital ward.
Ultimately, they want to fit it into the pillow the patient rests their head on.
The researchers say their device needs more testing, but could be a useful aid in the future.
Doctors would probably still need to use other diagnostic methods too, they told Transactions on Biomedical Engineering journal.
Investigator Prof Mikael Persson said: "The possibility to rule out bleeding already in the ambulance is a major achievement that will be of great benefit in acute stroke care."
Dr Shamim Quadir, of the UK's Stroke Association, said: "When a stroke strikes, the brain is starved of oxygen, and brain cells in the affected area die. Diagnosing and treating stroke as quickly as possible is crucial.
"While this research is at an early stage, it suggests that microwave-based systems may become a portable, affordable, technology that could help rapidly identify the type of stroke a patient has had, and get them treated faster.
"By diagnosing and treating stroke as early as possible, we can minimise the devastating impact of stroke, secure better outcomes for patients and, ultimately, save lives. Time lost is brain lost."

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Monday, 16 June 2014

Kenya attack: Mpeketoni near Lamu hit by al-Shabab raid

Kenya attack: Mpeketoni near Lamu hit by al-Shabab raid.

A man stands in front of the still-smouldering shell of a building set on fire by militants in the town of Mpeketoni on the coast of Kenya on 16 June 2014  

Gunmen rampaged through the town for about five hours.

 A man observes the remains of destroyed vehicles and buildings in the town of Mpeketoni in Kenya on 16 June 2014  

Hotels, restaurants and the police station were attacked.

At least 48 people have died after al-Qaeda-linked militants attacked hotels and a police station in a Kenyan coastal town, officials say.

Witnesses in Mpeketoni said gun battles lasted several hours, while several buildings were set on fire.
The town is on the mainland near Lamu island, a well-known tourist resort.
Somalia's al-Shabab group said the attack was carried out to avenge the presence of Kenyan troops in Somalia and the killing of Muslims.
Kenya sent troops to Somalia in 2011 to help the weak UN-backed government defeat the militants.
The BBC's Anne Soy in Mpeketoni says she was told the gunmen shot dead anyone who was unable to recite verses from the Koran.
This is the most deadly attack in Kenya since last September, when at least 67 people were killed during a siege by al-Shabab fighters at Nairobi's Westgate shopping centre.

Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku described the attackers as bandits, and said they had crossed a "red line".
Police fought fierce battles with the gunmen, who fled into a nearby forest, Mr Ole Lenku said.
John Waweru Resident
The attack started at 20:30 local time (17:30 GMT) on Sunday as locals were watching a football World Cup match on television.
Local residents told the BBC the gunmen hijacked a van and used it to attack various locations across Mpeketoni, which tourists travelling by road pass through before crossing to Lamu.
Our correspondent says there are five burnt-out police vehicles in front of the police station, which was the first building to be attacked.
She says she can still smell burning rubber, while smoke is billowing out from one of the vehicles.
 Timeline of Somali raids in Kenya
  • September 2011: UK national Judith Tebbutt kidnapped and her husband David killed in raid on Kiwayu island, north of Lamu. She was released six months later by a pirate gang
  • October 2011: Kenya sends troops into Somalia following Tebbutt's kidnapping and cross-border raids by al-Shabab; Al-Shabab warns of revenge attacks
  • Since then, numerous attacks in Nairobi, Mombasa and north-eastern region of Kenya, inhabited by ethnic Somalis
  • September 2013: At least 67 people killed after al-Shabab militants take control of Westgate shopping centre in Nairobi
  • May 2014: UK issues travel advisory, warning of increased risk of terror attack in Nairobi and coastal areas - UK tourists evacuated
  • June 2014: At least 48 people killed in raid on Mpeketoni All those killed are believed to be locals. The Kenya Tourism Board (KTB) says no foreigners were in the town at the time of the attack.
    Witnesses said gunmen, who had their faces covered, threw explosives into the local police station before entering and stealing weapons.
     People gather around the wreckage of a car in Mpeketoni, in Lamu county along the Kenyan coast, on 16 June 2014 
    Mpeketoni is on the mainland near the tourist resort of Lamu 
     A house destroyed in Mpeketoni, Kenya, during an attack on  16 June 2014
     Islamist militant group al-Shabab says it carried out the attack
     Aftermath of attack 
    Police say they are searching for the attackers
    Kenya has been on high alert recently following warnings that al-Shabab was planning more attacks.
    The US and UK have issued advisories to their nationals to keep away from parts of the Kenyan coast.
    Sunday's attack comes days after the UK government closed its consulate in the port city of Mombasa, citing heightened security threats.
    Surveillance aircraft District deputy commissioner Benson Maisori said hotels, restaurants, banks and government offices had also been torched, the AFP news agency reports.
    "There were around 50 attackers, heavily armed in three vehicles, and they were flying the Shabab flag. They were shouting in Somali and shouting 'Allahu Akbar' [God is Great]," he said.
    Lamu County police commander Leonard Omollo told Reuters news agency that the gunmen singled out men, sparing the lives of women and children. 
     

    Start Quote

    I heard them shouting in Somali as they fired around. I lost two of my brothers, and I escaped”.
line

Ukraine crisis: Russia condemns attack on Kiev embassy.

Ukraine crisis: Russia condemns attack on Kiev embassy

Open source image of a lone T-64 battle tank in Snizhne, with no markings, Nato image  

A lone T-64 battle tank is shown in Snizhne, Ukraine, with no markings.

Russia has reacted angrily to a violent protest outside its embassy in Ukraine, which saw windows smashed, the Russian flag torn down and cars overturned.

Russia accused Ukrainian police of doing nothing to stop the attack, and called it a "grave violation of Ukraine's international obligations".
Meanwhile Nato released images which it says back up Ukrainian claims that Russian tanks crossed into Ukraine.
Moscow has denied sending the tanks to help pro-Russian rebels in the east.
A range of images show the T-64 tanks first at a Russian military staging area near Rostov-on-Don, and then apparently inside Ukraine earlier this week.
Unlike Ukrainian armoured vehicles, the tanks have no markings or camouflage.
Nato says the pictures "raise significant questions'' about Russia's role in eastern Ukraine.
 Analysis: Jonathan Marcus, BBC diplomatic correspondent
Now Nato has released satellite imagery, linked to existing video material, which appears to give added weight to assertions from the Ukrainian authorities that the tanks used by separatist forces that crossed into its country just a few days ago were indeed supplied by the Russians.
The evidence shown comes from Nato military sources and is not necessarily conclusive. But, despite Russian denials, it is strongly suggestive of the narrative that Nato is setting out.
It should be noted that Russian spokesmen have denied a number of things in regard to operations in Ukraine which have turned out to be untrue.
line
Saturday's disturbance in Kiev occurred when several hundred protesters hurled eggs and paint at the Russian embassy.
One petrol bomb was also hurled, windows smashed and flags torn down.
The protesters - some wearing balaclavas - overturned cars with diplomatic plates. One protester held a sign saying: "Russia is a killer."
 Ukrainian protesters destroy cars near the Russian embassy in Kiev, 14 June 
The protesters destroyed diplomatic vehicles and smashed windows.
Russia's protest against the incident was echoed by the US state department. "The United States condemns the attack on the Russian embassy in Kiev, and calls on Ukrainian authorities to meet their Vienna convention obligations to provide adequate security," it said.
Retaliation threat
Earlier on Saturday, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko vowed to retaliate against pro-Russia separatists in the east after a military plane was shot down by anti-aircraft fire, killing all 49 people on board.
Those involved in such "cynical acts of terrorism" must be punished, said Mr Poroshenko, who summoned security officials for an emergency meeting.
The Ilyushin-76 transport was attacked by separatist forces as it was about to land in the city of Luhansk.

It is thought to be the biggest loss of life suffered by government forces in a single incident since the Ukrainian government in Kiev began an operation to try to defeat the insurgency in the east.
Rebel fighters were seen combing through the charred wreckage of the plane, south-east of Luhansk, on Saturday.
"This is how we work," one of them, who identified himself as Pyotr, told Reuters news agency. "The fascists can bring as many reinforcements as they want but we will do this every time."
The incident came less than a week after pro-Russia rebels launched a series of attacks on Ukrainian forces at Luhansk International Airport.
The airport has been under the control of government forces but the rebels hold most of the rest of the city.
The eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk declared independence last month. In March Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in the wake of the removal of Ukraine's pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych.
The "anti-terrorist operation" by Ukrainian government forces has left at least 270 people dead over the past two months.
Mr Poroshenko had said that fighting must end "this week" following his inauguration last Sunday.

Saturday, 14 June 2014

Sexual violence in war: Jolie praises leaders at summit end

Sexual violence in war: Jolie praises leaders at summit end.

(l-r) US Secretary of State John Kerry, British Foreign Secretary William Hague and US actress Angelina Jolie at a joint news conference at the end of the 'End Sexual Violence in Conflict' summit in London, on 13 June 2014 

Angelina Jolie has said sexual violence in conflict is now "firmly on the top table of international diplomacy", as a global conference on the subject ended.

The actress and UN special envoy praised male leaders prepared to confront "the taboo" around the issue.
Ms Jolie was speaking alongside UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, who co-hosted the London summit with her.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said it was time to "banish sexual violence to the dark ages".
Their statements came at the close of the End Sexual Violence in Conflict summit, which brought together representatives from more than 120 countries.
'Heartening'

The four-day event - the largest ever of its kind - was the result of an intense two-year campaign to raise awareness.
"One of the most heartening aspects of this summit has been to see so many male leaders... prepared to confront the taboo surrounding sexual violence in conflict," Ms Jolie said at a news conference to end the meeting.
"This subject is now firmly on the top table of international diplomacy - and we will work to ensure it stays there," she said. 
 (l-r) British Foreign Secretary William Hague, US actress Angelina Jolie and US actor Brad Pitt at the final day of the "End Sexual Violence in Conflict" summit in London, on 13 June 2014 
Ms Jolie, a UNHCR special envoy, was joined at the final day of the summit by her partner Brad Pitt.
 
"Warzone rape is not simply a woman's issue, a humanitarian issue: it goes to the heart of international peace and security."
'Turning point'
The conference saw hundreds of officials, diplomats, activists and survivors of rape in conflict zones come together to discuss ways to better prosecute offenders and protect victims.
"It's been an unprecedented event and a turning point in the campaign over the past two years," said Mr Hague at the close of the summit on Friday.
US Secretary of State John Kerry, who appeared as a guest speaker, echoed Ms Jolie and Mr William Hague by calling for an end to impunity.
He said sexual violence in war was a stain on the conscience of the world that must be brought to an end.
The Global Summit on Sexual Violence in Conflict aimed to: