Archive for April, 2011

New Type of Drug Kills Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

By Katherine Bourzac
Technology Review

Nano killer: This drug-resistant staph bacterium has been split open and destroyed by an antimicrobial nanoparticle. Credit: IBM

Researchers at IBM are designing nanoparticles that kill bacteria by poking holes in them. The scientists hope that the microbes are less likely to develop resistance to this type of drug, which means it could be used to combat the emerging problem of antibiotic resistance. This type of drug has not had much success in clinical trials in the past, but initial tests of the nanoparticles in animals are promising.

Drug-resistant bacteria have become a major problem. In 2005, nearly 95,000 people in the United States developed a life-threatening staph infection resistant to multiple antibiotics, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It takes just one to two decades for microbes to develop resistance to traditional antibiotics that target a particular metabolic pathway inside the cell, says Mary B. Chan-Park, professor of chemical and biological engineering at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, who was not involved with the research. In contrast, drugs that compromise microbes’ cell membranes are believed to be less likely, or slower, to evoke resistance, she says.

“We’re trying to generate polymers that interact with microbes in a very different way than traditional antibiotics,” says James Hedrick, a materials scientist at IBM’s Almaden Lab in San Jose, California. To do this, Hedrick’s research group took advantage of past work on a library of polymer building blocks that can be mixed and matched to make complex nanoparticles. To make a nanoparticle that would selectively attack bacterial membranes and then break down harmlessly inside the body, the IBM group put together three types of building blocks. At the center of the polymer sequence is a backbone element that’s water-soluble and tailored to interact with bacterial membranes. At either end of the backbone is a hydrophobic sequence. When a small amount of these polymer chains are added to water, the differences between the ends and the middle of the sequence drive the polymers to self-assemble into spherical nanoparticles whose shell is entirely made up of the part that will interact with bacterial cells. This work is described this week in the journal Nature Chemistry.

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Tenn. Death Toll From Storms Rises To 30

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

WSMV.com

Storm deaths have reached 30 in Tennessee with persistent violent weather stretching some 185 miles from southeast Tennessee to the northeast corner.

The deaths confirmed Thursday included nine in Hamilton and Bradley counties, six in Greene County, four in Bledsoe County and one each in Sequatchie and Washington counties.

In one of the latest confirmed deaths, Sequatchie County Emergency Management Director Rusty Cheatham said a man died after being swept away by a rushing stream in the Cartwright community. The victim’s body was recovered after water carried him down the Cartwright Gulf around 9 p.m. Wednesday.

Scattered power outages were reported across East Tennessee Thursday morning.

The deaths in Hamilton County were north of Chattanooga.

Two people suffered minor injuries in the town of Chapel Hill, Tenn., in Marshall County after severe storms hit the area at about noon Wednesday, according to Marshall County EMA Director Bob Hopkins.

The injured people suffered bumps and bruises and were taken by private vehicle to a nearby hospital for treatment.

About 10 homes were flooded in the Woodstock Estates neighborhood in Clarksville. The same area was hit hard last year.

The neighbors are furious. They said they can’t sell their homes and blame the city for the flooding. Several of them said they’re planning to sue.

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Severe Weather: Track the Storms

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

by Meteorologists Tim Ballisty, Chris Dolce and Jonathan Erdman
Weather Channel

An awful, terrible, disturbing and deadly day of tornadoes unfolded on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 with more than 150 reported tornadoes striking several states in the South and even a few areas in the Mid-Atlantic. It was also the third straight day with widespread severe thunderstorms and tornadoes across portions of the South.

Map:
Tornado reports since Monday

In all, more than 170 people have lost their lives over the last three days and many more were injured.

Read:
Tornado cuts path of destruction, death toll grows

Today, the storm system responsible for producing this devastating outbreak will push off the East Coast. Before this happens, we will have to deal with one more day of severe thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes will be possible from New York to the Mid-Atlantic and northern Florida through the afternoon hours. You can find Thursday’s severe thunderstorm forecast map below.

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Stocks Stall After Three Days of Gains

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

By Ken Sweet
CNN Money.com

U.S. stocks straddled the breakeven point Wednesday following disappointing reports on U.S. economic growth and weekly jobless claims.

The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) rose 11 points, or 0.1%; S&P 500 (SPX) added 2 points; and the Nasdaq Composite (COMP) was flat.

Boeing (BA, Fortune 500),DuPont (DD, Fortune 500) and Disney (DIS, Fortune 500) were the Dow’s biggest gainers. Exxon Mobil (XOM, Fortune 500) was the biggest drag on the blue-chip index after it reported sales that fell short of forecasts. Exxon Mobil’s stock slid less than 1%.

After three days of gains, equities are taking a breather said traders.

“We’re just hanging in there at this point,” said Stephen Carl, head trader with Williams Capital. “There’s obviously no fuel to push stocks higher but we’re not selling off.”

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CDC Vaccine Scientist Who Downplayed Links to Autism Indicted by DOJ in Alleged Fraud Scheme

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

by Mike Adams
NaturalNews.com

CDC researcher Poul Thorsen, who famously headed up the “Denmark Study” that many claim disproved any link between autism and vaccines, has been indicted in Atlanta by a federal grand jury on charges of wire fraud, money laundering and defrauding research institutions of grant money.

Poul Thorson is a scientist who formerly worked for the CDC, and over the last several years, he oversaw millions of dollars in grant money that was used to conduct research to “prove” that vaccines have no link to autism. Dr. Thorson’s research papers include the famous “Danish Study” entitled Thimerosal and the occurrence of autism: negative ecological evidence from Danish population-based data. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/…)

This paper concludes that thimerosal, the mercury-based preservative used in vaccines around the world, has no statistically significant link to autism. It is one of the key papers used by vaccination proponents who argue that thimerosal is safe to inject into young children. That Poul Thorson’s credibility is now being called into question by a federal indictment of fraud and money laundering will, of course, have ripple effects throughout both the vaccine industries and autism support groups (more about that below).

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