Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Scientists find bird flu antibody


By Neil Bowdler
BBC science reporter

A chicken farm north of Cairo, Egypt 28/04/07
It's hoped human trials of the bird flu antibody could begin soon
Antibodies that could protect against bird flu in humans have been isolated by an international team of scientists.

The discovery could lead to treatments that complement flu vaccines in the event of a human epidemic of the virus.

The H5N1 bird flu virus is estimated to have killed more than 180 people around the world since 2003.

Some countries are already stockpiling vaccines for a possible bird flu outbreak in humans, but no one knows how effective they might be.

'Emergency antidote'

This is because the particular strain of bird flu that might eventually spark a human pandemic is unknown.

But scientists working in Switzerland, Vietnam and the United States say they have isolated antibodies that they hope could offer protection against several different strains of the virus simultaneously.

Antibodies are used by our immune system to neutralise bacteria and viruses - in this case, the scientists have isolated antibodies that bird flu survivors in Vietnam produced to fight off the disease.

Professor Antonio Lanzavecchia, at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine in Switzerland, says the antibodies have already proven effective in the lab and in mice and he is confident that they could be used in humans.

"We in a way exploit the immune response of an individual who has been infected and has survived the infection and of course has made antibodies that neutralise these viruses," he said.

"And using this technique, we can isolate the cells that make these antibodies so that this antibody can now be reproduced in vitro and eventually massively produced to treat other individuals."

The antibodies could be used to protect key workers, such as nurses and doctors, in countries where a bird flu epidemic strikes.

The researchers say it could also be used as an emergency antidote in people who have already been infected with bird flu - if administered within a few days.

It is hoped human trials could begin shortly.

Religious belief is inconsistent with reason and corrosive to the human mind - Sue Blackmore

Blackmore: "Religious faith is something that we should struggle to throw off when we have better ways of learning the truth about the universe we live in; something we should overcome rather than something we should respect."
Faith is corrosive to the human mind. If someone genuinely believes that it is right to believe things without reason or evidence then they are open to every kind of dogma, whim, coercion, or dangerous infectious idea that's around. If someone is convinced that it is acceptable to base their beliefs on what is written in an ancient book, or what some teacher tells them they must believe, then they will have no true freedom of thought; they will be trapped by their faith into inconsistency and untruths because they are unable to throw out false ideas when evidence against them comes along.
I want to be clear about some things I am not saying. First I am not saying that everything has to be rational. There is much about human life that has little or nothing to do with rationality; there's love and affection, art and poetry, happiness, beauty and intuition. But none of these things has to be taken on faith.
I, for one, do not want to live in a world where religious faith is respected.
 blog it

A collection of badass panoramas

Get out your wide-angle vision and prepare to be amazed!
clipped from www.ptgui.com
Mt. Cascade, Canada
Dolomite Mountains, Italy (2)
The Horsehead Nebula in One-Shot-Color
Grand Prismatic Spring
Vetter Mountain Lookout Operator
Natexpo 2005
San Diego Downtown Reflections
Tatras, Slovakia
Limoges, France
Ananda temple, Bagan, Myanmar
 blog it

20 Words You Can Use Instead of AMAZING

clipped from www.thetrukstop.com

Unimaginable


Unanticipated


Phenomenal


Remarkable


Unbelievable


Breathtaking


Tremendous


Unexpected


Spectacular


Unthinkable


Unforeseen


Significant


Stunning


Startling


Splendid


Wonderful


Overwhelming


Stupefying


Staggering


Unpredicted

 blog it

This Modern Life (image)

Just like me
 blog it

Hardest Working Countries - hours worked

No matter how busy we think we are...there's always someone to top it.
clipped from money.cnn.com

They work harder for the money

A U.N. study finds the United States doesn't crack the top five developed nations for putting in extra long work hours.

Among the developed nations covered in the report, ILO found that the countries with the highest percentage of workers putting in a longer than 48-hour workweek are:

  • Japan: 39.3%
  • United Kingdom: 25.7%
  • Israel: 25.5%
  • New Zealand: 23.6%
  • Australia: 20.4%
  • Switzerland: 19.2%
  • United States: 18.1%

Among developing nations surveyed in the report, the highest percentage of workers putting in more than 48 hours are in:

  • Indonesia: 51.2%
  • Peru: 50.9%
  • Republic of Korea: 49.5%
  • Thailand: 46.7%
  • Pakistan: 44.4%
  • Ethiopia: 40%
  • Macao: 39.1%

While 40 hours is a standard work week in many countries, many others have longer ones. For instance, 48 hours is the standard in Peru, Thailand, Ethiopia and Pakistan, the ILO found.

Of all the countries surveyed, France has the shortest standard work week at 35 hours.

 blog it

"What the World Eats" Photo Essay

42, 000 Togrogs doesn't buy what it used to.
clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Chad: The Aboubakar family of Breidjing Camp

Food expenditure for one week: 685 CFA Francs or $1.23
Favorite foods: soup with fresh sheep meat

clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

United States: The Revis family of North Carolina

Food expenditure for one week: $341.98
Favorite foods: spaghetti, potatoes, sesame chicken

clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Ecuador: The Ayme family of Tingo

Food expenditure for one week: $31.55
Family recipe: Potato soup with cabbage

clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Mongolia: The Batsuuri family of Ulaanbaatar

Food expenditure for one week: 41,985.85 togrogs or $40.02
Family recipe: Mutton dumplings

clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Bhutan: The Namgay family of Shingkhey Village

Food expenditure for one week: 224.93 ngultrum or $5.03
Family recipe: Mushroom, cheese and pork

clipped from www.time.com
Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Germany: The Melander family of Bargteheide

Food expenditure for one week: 375.39 Euros or $500.07
Favorite foods: fried potatoes with onions, bacon and herring, fried noodles with eggs and cheese, pizza, vanilla pudding

 blog it

Iceberg: magnificient photo

what sank The Titanic!
clipped from www.dimaggio.org
Iceberg.jpg (35349 bytes)

Iceberg



This amazing photograph was allegedly taken by Global Marine Drilling in St.
Johns, Newfoundland.


The water was calm and the sun was almost directly overhead so the diver was able to take
this magnificent photo.

The weight of this iceberg is estimated to be 300 000 000 tons.

 blog it

Quotation: Happiness is......

Thought this was simple but profound.
clipped from www.forbes.com
"Happiness is someone to love, something to do, and something to hope for."
-Chinese Proverb
 blog it

7 Tips for Budding Entrepreneurs

clipped from www.esoupblog.com
1) Fail. Alot.
take a chance on the road less traveled even if that road takes you out of your comfort zone
2) Consider the option of NEVER getting a "real job"
Self-employment may
not be everyone's first best destiny, but you may not know until you
try
3) Start your own gig.
Even if you're 12 years old, start a store on
eBay.
4) If you have a choice between taking a job for money or because it is
something you would really love to do, don't go for the money.
If your
work happens to be something you are passionate about
, say something
you'd consider doing even if they didn't pay you, then the money will
follow eventually
5) Be passionate, but balance that with patience
manage
passion and focus it on positive results
6) Relationships rule. It isn’t who you know. It isn’t what you know. It is who knows what you know and what you can do.
Impress extroverts
7) The absolute biggest thing I wish I knew when I was first starting out,
is that you can create your own job if you don't see any that you like
 blog it

For Every Wheel, There's a Road.

clipped from www.maa.org

Riding on Square Wheels


It turns out that for just about every shape of wheel there's an appropriate road to produce a smooth ride, and vice versa.


Interestingly, triangular wheels don't work. As an equilateral triangle rolls over one catenary, it ends up bumping into the next catenary

 blog it