
Thursday, 14 June 2012
Extrahepatic portal vein obstruction: Indian doctor cures 10yr old using testube veins.
Doctor Holgersson in group photograph with his team
A Mumbai-born Indian doctor Suchitra Holgersson made a landmark breakthrough in medical science, as the first biologically tissue-engineered vein grown from a patient's own stem cells has been successfully transplanted into a 10-year-old girl with portal vein obstruction, dramatically enhancing her quality of life, reports The Lancet.
The report says, a team of doctors, funded by the Swedish government, grew veins in test tubes and successfully transplanted them in a Swedish child.
The report says, "a 10 year old girl with extrahepatic portal vein obstruction was admitted to the Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden, for a bypass procedure between the superior mesenteric vein and the intrahepatic left portal vein. A 9 cm segment of allogeneic donor iliac vein was decellularised and subsequently recellularised with endothelial and smooth muscle cells differentiated from stem cells obtained from the bone marrow of the recipient. This graft was used because the patient's umbilical vein was not suitable and other strategies, like liver transplantation, require lifelong immunosuppression." The results could offer hope of growing human cells in laboratory and a potential new way for patients lacking healthy veins to undergo dialysis or heart bypass surgery without the problems of synthetic grafts (that are prone to clots and blockages) or the need for lifelong immunosuppressive drugs.
Culled from NDTV

Wednesday, 13 June 2012
Ex-Tunisia president jailed 20yrs in absentia
Ali
A Tunisian military court has convicted the former President in absentia of inciting violence and sentenced him to 20 years in prison.
Former President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was overthrown in a month-long popular uprising last year and fled to Saudi Arabia on January 14, 2011.
Ben Ali's Wednesday conviction was for an incident, the day after he left when security forces opened fire on protesters in the central town of Ouardanine, killing four. Ben Ali has already been convicted of drug trafficking, illegal arms trading and abuse of the public funds and sentenced to 66 years in prison by a civilian court.
At least 338 people died in the uprising and another 2,147 were wounded.
Culled from NDTV

Tuesday, 12 June 2012
Protests rock Russia as tens of thousands march against Vladimir Putin’s rule
Putin
....
Tens of thousands of Russians flooded Moscow’s tree-lined boulevards today- Tuesday in the first massive protest against President Vladimir Putin’s rule since his inauguration in May — a rally that came even as police interrogated key opposition leaders. Since embarking on his third presidential term, Putin has taken a stern stance toward the opposition, including signing a repressive new bill last week introducing heavy penalties for taking part in unauthorized rallies.
Police on Monday searched opposition leaders’ apartments, carting away computers, cellphones and other personal items. They also demanded that opposition leaders come in for questioning Tuesday just an hour before the rally began — widely seen as a crude attempt by the government to scare the protesters.
The march was being held on Russia Day, a national holiday that honors June 12, 1990, when Russian lawmakers decided that Russian laws should take priority over Soviet Union laws. The Soviet Union then collapsed in 1991.
Leftist politician Sergei Udaltsov snubbed the summons, saying he considered it his duty to lead the protest as one of its organizers. Russia’s Investigative Committee said it wouldn’t immediately seek his arrest but would interrogate him later.
Udaltsov said he and another opposition leader, Boris Nemtsov, were handed summons by police right at the rally.
Culled from Chicago SUN Times


Elinor Ostrom, 1st woman to win economics Nobel, dies at 78yrs
Elinor Ostrom
.......
Indiana University professor Elinor Ostrom, the first woman to win a Nobel Prize in economics, has died at age 78.
University spokesman Steve Hinnefeld said Ostrom died from cancer Tuesday morning at a Bloomington hospital.
Hinnefeld says the school was informed of Ostrom’s death by her longtime friend and IU colleague, Michael McGinnis, a professor of political science.
Ostrom shared the 2009 Nobel Prize for economics with Oliver Williamson from the University of California, Berkeley. Both researchers were honored for analyzing the rules by which people exercise authority in companies and economic systems.
Ostrom had been an Indiana University faculty member since 1965.
Culled from Chicago Sun Times

Police bar three veiled women from entering France

Corrupt practices: S/Africa police chief Bheki Cele fired by Jacob Zuma

Friday, 8 June 2012
NATO apologizes for deaths in Afghan airstrike


Suicide bomber strikes police HQ in Borno

Thursday, 7 June 2012
UK ministers boycott England games in Ukraine

Birmingham riots: Six men jailed

Lake Chad Shrinks from 25,000 to 2,000km2

Hundreds of thousands may lose Internet in July, Facebook warns

Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Protests rock Israel as thousands oppose unpopular bill proposed by Netanyahu

WHO warns of increasing drug resistance to gonorrhea that infect millions

46yr old gardener pleads guilty to murder of 86yr old employer


American mom jailed for posing as dead son to collect insurance money

South Carolina mom jailed for cheering too loudly at daughter's graduation

Venus makes rare movement across Sun

Tuesday, 5 June 2012
Heat waves kill 30 in Western Bengal

Chineese hospitals to pay 785 dollars to sperm donors

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