Cholesterol-lowering drugs can help in asthma treatment: study


 
Asthma
Asthma patients who take cholesterol-lowering drugs alongside inhaled corticosteroids are half as likely to require hospital attention, a new study has claimed.
Researchers at the University of Mississippi found that statins which have anti-inflammatory properties could be helpful in treating asthma which is an inflammatory condition, a news report said.
"We know statins have uses beyond the treatment of heart conditions. They have anti-inflammatory properties, which means they have other as yet mostly unexplored purposes. Asthma is an inflammatory condition so there is clearly a link," consultant physician Dr Shahid Hamid, at Princess Royal University Hospital in Kent said.
The research studied 479 patients on statins and inhaled corticosteroids, and 958 just taking corticosteroids. At least one asthma-related hospitalisation was observed in 3.79 per cent of the first group, compared with 6.47 per cent of the second group.
"This is the most promising study yet, doctors are aware patients admitted to hospital with pnuemonia have a better prognosis if given statins," he was quoted by the paper as saying.
However, there has been controversy about taking statins for asthma and they may have unpleasant side effects.
"It is still too soon to start prescribing statins as a matter of course," Hamid said.

Discovery of New White Blood Cell Reveals Target for Better Vaccine Design

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ScienceDaily (July 27, 2012) — Researchers in Newcastle and Singapore have identified a new type of white blood cell which activates a killing immune response to an external source -- providing a new potential target for vaccines for conditions such as cancer or Hepatitis B.
Publishing in the journal Immunity, the team of researchers from Newcastle University in collaboration with A*STAR's Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN) describe a new human tissue dendritic cell with cross-presenting function.
Dendritic cells (DCs) are a type of white blood cell that orchestrate our body's immune responses to infectious agents such as bacteria and viruses, as well as cancer cells. They are also very important for eliciting the immune response generated by vaccines.
DCs kick start an immune response by presenting small fragments of molecules from micro-organisms such as bacteria and viruses, or from vaccines or tumours, called antigens on their surface. This leads to activation of another white blood cell subset called T cells, which specialise in killing cells and are crucial for eliminating cancerous or infected cells. Most cells are only able to present antigens from within themselves, and so will only elicit an immune response if they are infected themselves. Only a specialised subset of DCs is able to generate a response to an external source of antigen, for example bacteria, vaccines and tumours.
The identity of human tissue DCs that are capable of presenting external antigen to activate the cell-killing response by T cells -- a process termed 'cross-presentation' -- has remained a mystery. Their discovery, as revealed by this research, will help scientists to design better targeted vaccine strategies to treat cancer and infections such as Hepatitis B.
"These are the cells we need to be targeting for anti-cancer vaccines," said Dr Muzlifah Haniffa, a Wellcome Trust Intermediate Fellow and Senior Clinical Lecturer at Newcastle University. "Our discovery offers an accessible, easily targetable system which makes the most of the natural ability of the cell." The researchers also showed for the first time that dendritic cell subsets are conserved between species and have in effect created a map, facilitating the translation of mouse studies to the human immune system.
"The cross-species map is in effect a Rosetta stone that deciphers the language of mouse into human," explains Matthew Collin, Professor of Haematology from Newcastle University.
In the paper the researchers describe how the cross-presenting DCs were first isolated from surplus plastic surgery skin which was digested to melt the gelatinous collagen to isolate the cells. This research will have significant impact on the design of vaccines and other targeted immunotherapies.
The Rosetta Stone of our immune system: Mapping Human and Mouse dendritic cells
The Newcastle University team in collaboration with A*STAR's Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN) have for the first time ever aligned the dendritic cell subsets between mouse and humans allowing the accurate translation of mouse studies into the human model for the first time.
The researchers isolated the dendritic cells from human blood and skin and those from mouse blood, lung and liver. Using gene expression analysis, they identified gene signatures for each human dendritic cell subset. Mouse orthologues of these genes were identified and a computational analysis was performed to match subsets across species.
This provides scientists for the first time with an accurate model to compare DCs between species. Professor Matthew Collin explains: "This is in effect a Rosetta stone that deciphers the language of mouse into human. It can put into context the findings from the extensive literature using mouse models to the human settings."
Dr. Haniffa added: "These gene signatures are available in a public repository accessible for all researchers to benefit from the data. It will allow detailed knowledge of individual human dendritic cell subsets to enable specific targeting of these cells for therapeutic strategy."
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Google unveils world’s fastest net connection


ONDON: Internet giant Google has unveiled what it says is the world's fastest internet connection through its ultrahigh-speed service, offering lightning-fast access of one gigabit per second.
The service which uses optical fibre to deliver speeds far in excess of traditional web services, offering speeds faster than almost anywhere else on Earth.
The web search leader unveiled its ultra-high speed Google Fiber service in Kansas City, Missouri, and it hopes to roll out the service to other cities later, the Daily Mail reported.
"Access is the next frontier that needs to be opened, we're going to do it profitably. That is our plan," Google chief financial officer Patrick Pichette said. "We are at a crossroad," he added, noting that internet speeds had leveled out for broadband since around 2000. We at Google believe there is no need to wait," he said.
Google Fiber's ultra highspeed connections and television offerings are aimed at surpassing those of current providers, allowing users to search live channels, Netflix, YouTube, recorded shows and tens of thousands of hours of on-demand programming . However, no phone service is available.
Google said it also intends to roll out product packages for businesses, but would not provide details.
Google Fiber includes more than 100 networks and costs $120 a month for a package of TV, 1 gigabit per second Internet speeds and 1 terabyte of cloud storage.


CO2 Capture from Atmospheric Air Necessary to Address Global Warming

Published on July 25, 2012 at 7:42 AM
By Gary Thomas

Researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology have shown the economic and chemical feasibility for extracting CO2 directly from air. They utilized new adsorbent materials in the novel method to capture CO2.

Stephanie Didas, a Georgia Tech Ph.D. candidate, loads an aminosilica sample into a custom-built volumetric adsorption system for measuring adsorption isotherms of different carbon dioxide capture materials. Credit: Gary Meek
The technique may also be used to capture CO2 from power plant flue gases. The captured CO2 may be used for improving oil recovery and for producing fuel from algae.
Coal-burning power plants and chemical facilities contribute to less than 50% of the global CO2 emissions. Transport vehicles such as planes, ships, trucks and buses account for the rest of the emissions and capturing these emissions are comparatively more expensive. According to the researchers, the operating costs involved were approximately $100 per ton when using a large CO2 removal unit that has the capacity to remove 1000 ton of CO2 per annum. Removal of CO2 from flue gas alone will not help address the global CO2 emissions. Air capture is required.
The atmosphere contains 400 ppm of CO2 while flue gases contain about 15%. The difference in capture efficiency and economic feasibility can be addressed by establishing CO2 removal units at sequestration locations.
The Georgia Tech researchers have modeled a batch extraction process that demonstrates economic feasibility. Dry amino-modified silica material is coated onto a ceramic honeycomb structure. The air is blown through the structure and the material captures the gas. Later steam is flown through the structure in order to release the gas.
The researchers have been conducting studies on metal-organic framework materials and have published papers in Journal of the American Chemical Society, ChemSusChem, and Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research on alternate adsorbent materials.

a chemical that could allow people with degenerative blindness to see again.


WASHINGTON: In a major advance in the field of vision restoration, scientists claimed to have discovered a chemical that could allow people with degenerative blindness to see again.

A team of University of California in collaboration with researchers at the University of Munich and University of Washington are working on an improved compound that temporarily restores some vision to blind mice. The compound called 'AAQ' is less invasive than implanting light-sensitive electronic chips in the eye.

The approach could eventually help those with retinitis pigmentosa, a genetic disease that is the most common inherited form of blindness, as well as age-related macular degeneration, the most common cause of acquired blindness in the developed world. In both diseases, the light sensitive cells in the retina, the rods and cones, die, leaving the eye without functional photoreceptors.

The chemical AAQ acts by making the remaining, normally "blind" cells in the retina sensitive to light, said lead researcher Richard Kramer, UC Berkeley professor of molecular and cell biology.

AAQ is a photoswitch that binds to protein ion channels on the surface of retinal cells.

When switched on by light, AAQ alters the flow of ions through the channels and activates these neurons in the same way rods and cones are activated by light.

"This is similar to the way local anesthetics work: they embed themselves in ion channels and stick around for a long time, so that you stay numb for a long time," Kramer said. "Our molecule is different in that it's light sensitive , so you can turn it on and off and turn on or off neural activity," said Kramer.

Because the chemical eventually wears off, it may offer a safer alternative to other experimental approaches for restoring sight, such as gene or stem cell therapies, which permanently change the retina . "This is a major advance in the field of vision restoration ," said co-author Russell Van Gelder, from the University of Washington. PTI

Now, a cancer drug to flush out dormant HIV


WASHINGTON: A drug used to treat certain types of cancer is able to dislodge hidden virus in patients receiving treatment for HIV, researchers have claimed.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in a study found the existence of persistent reservoirs of dormant HIV in the immune system that are not attacked by anti-AIDS drugs, believed to be a major reason why infection re-emerges once patients stop taking their medication. The disruption of these reservoirs is critical to finding a cure for AIDS.

Researchers at UNC, working in collaboration with scientists from the Harvard School of Public Health, National Cancer Institute and the University of California undertook a series of experiments designed to evaluate the potential of the drug vorinostat . Vorinosta is a deacetylase inhibitor that is used to treat some types of lymphoma, to activate and disrupt the dormant virus.

Laboratory experiments measuring active HIV levels in CD4+T cells, which are specialized white blood cells that the virus uses to replicate, showed that vorinostat unmasked the hidden virus in these cells. Subsequently, vorinostat was administered to eight HIV-infected men who were medically stable on antiretroviral therapy and the levels of active HIV virus were measured and compared to the levels prior to administration.

Scientists discover solar system, parallels our own




Scientists have discovered a distant solar system very much like our own, in which the orbits of all known planets lie in nearly the same plane and are aligned with the star's rotation.
In recent years, astronomers have discovered a flurry of solar systems filled with exotic planets such as massive "hot Jupiters" that orbit close to their parent star, and rocky "super Earths" between one and 10 times the size of our planet. Some of these exoplanet systems have been discovered through wobbles of the star due to gravitational interactions with the orbiting planets; others betrayed their presence when planets regularly passed in front of, or transited, their parent star, temporarily blocking some of the light streaming toward telescopes here.
Earlier this year, using data gathered by NASA's Kepler spacecraft (which is designed to monitor thousands of stars for hints of transiting planets), scientists discovered three planets circling a star dubbed Kepler-30, which is about the size and mass of our sun. One planet, with a diameter about four times that of Earth, orbits the star every 29 days; the other two, each with a diameter at least 10 times that of Earth, orbit the star every 60 days and 143 days, respectively. Further analysis revealed a huge, dark starspot on Kepler-30, similar to the sunspots that blemish the face of our sun.
By tracking the spot, researchers determined that the star rotates once every 16 days or so. That's about half the time our sun needs to rotate, which suggests that Kepler-30 is a relatively young, very active star --and that, in turn, helps explain why its starspot is so large and so persistent, says team leader Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda, an astrophysicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.
Now, detailed analyses of the variations in light reaching Kepler's sensors over a 30-month period reveal that the three known planets not only pass in front of the star as seen from Earth, but they repeatedly pass in front of the dark spot on Kepler-30's surface. This reveals critical information about the distant solar system, Sanchis-Ojeda and his colleagues suggest: The planets' orbits are aligned within a few degrees of one another, and the planes of those orbits are closely aligned with the rotational plane of the parent star, a remarkable parallel to our solar system, the team reports Wednesday in Nature.
"For the first time, we can probe a system of planets that looks like our own," says Sanchis-Ojeda.
Although the Kepler-30 system isn't the only one known to have planets orbiting in closely aligned planes, it is the first for which scientists have also determined the plane in which the parent star rotates.
"There are relatively few solar systems like ours," says Drake Deming, an astronomer at the University of Maryland, College Park. "Every time we find one more, that's a big increase."
The team's analytical technique could be used to find more solar systems like ours, Deming says. Many of the stars in Earth's neighborhood are small stars called red dwarfs. Standard planet-detection methods don't work well with red dwarfs because they're cool and emit relatively little light, mostly in red and infrared wavelengths at which Kepler and other planet-observing sensors now in use aren't efficient.
But these stars are also very active and often have large starspots, so if spaceborne instruments specifically designed to scan for transiting planets around such stars were launched, the results could shed new light on how common planetary systems similar to our own might be. "We don't really understand how such systems form around cool stars," Deming notes.

Low-cost phone-based device fights anaemia

A $20 device called HemoGlobe could offer a “prick-free” system for detecting and reporting anaemia, a disease responsible for the death of 1 lakh mothers and 6 lakh babies annually
 


An illustration of the anaemia detecting device, HemoGlobe, that uses a cellphone and will cost less than Rs 1,200 to mass produce

Could a low-cost screening device connected to a cell phone save thousands of women and children from anaemiarelated deaths and disabilities? That's the goal of Johns Hopkins engineering undergraduates who've developed a noninvasive way to identify women with this dangerous blood disorder.

The device, HemoGlobe, is designed to convert the existing cell phones into a “prick-free” system for detecting and reporting anaemia at the community level.

The device's sensor, placed on a patient's fingertip, shines different wavelengths of light through the skin to measure the hemoglobin level in the blood.

On a phone's screen, a community health worker quickly sees a colour-coded test result, indicating cases of anaemia, from mild to moderate and severe. If anaemia is detected, a patient would be encouraged to follow a course of treatment, ranging from taking iron supplements to visiting a hospital for lifesaving measures.

After each test, the phone would send an automated text message with a summary of the results to a central server, which would produce a real-time map showing where anaemia is prevalent.

This data could facilitate follow-up care and help health officials to allocate resources where the need is most urgent. Soumyadipta Acharya, the project's principal investigator, said the device could be important in reducing anemia-related deaths.

International health experts estimate that anemia contributes to 1,00,000 maternal deaths and 6,00,000 newborn deaths annually.

Anaemia occurs when a person has too few healthy red blood cells, which carry critical oxygen throughout the body. This is often due to a lack of iron, and therefore a lack of hemoglobin, the iron-based protein that helps red blood cells store and release oxygen.

Anaemic mothers face many complications before and during birth, including death from blood loss associated with the delivery. In addition, a baby that survives a birth from an anaemic mother may face serious health problems.

Health officials in developing countries have tried to respond by making iron supplements widely available. According to Acharya, however, the problem of anaemia remains intractable.

“This device has the potential to be a gamechanger,” Acharya said. “It will equip millions of health care workers across the globe to quickly and safely detect and report this debilitating condition in pregnant women and newborns.”

The HemoGlobe student inventors have estimated their phone-based systems could be produced for $10 to $20 each.
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IS THERE A SIMILAR METHOD FOR BLOOD SUGAR? 




A single pill could treat Alzheimer's, Parkinson's AND multiple sclerosis

A single pill could treat Alzheimer's, Parkinson's AND multiple sclerosis

  • A Phase I trial assessing the drug's safety in human patients is under way
By Daily Mail Reporter
|
Early results from animal studies suggest new class of drug could be very effective against brain diseases
Early results from animal studies suggest new class of drug could be very effective against brain diseases
One pill with the potential to treat conditions including Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis and strokes has been unveiled by scientists.
Given early enough, it may even be able to stop full-blown Alzheimer’s from taking hold.
It works by dampening down the inflammation thought to be at least partly to blame for many degenerative brain conditions, as well damage caused by head injuries and strokes.
Animal tests have been encouraging and the pill has been given to humans for the first time, although the results have yet to be released.
Early results from animal studies suggest it could be effective against a plethora of devastating brain conditions.
They include Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis (MS), motor neurone disease, frontotemporal dementia, and complications from traumatic brain injury.
Two of the drugs, known as MW151 and MW189, have been patented by US scientists at Northwestern University in Chicago.
They work by blocking excess production of damaging immune system signalling molecules called pro-inflammatory cytokines.
New research published today in the Journal of Neuroscience showed how early treatment with MW151 prevented the development of full-blown Alzheimer's in laboratory mice.

Scientists say the drugs offer a completely different approach to treating the disease to others currently being tested.

These target the accumulation of beta amyloid protein deposits in the brain which are a key feature of Alzheimer's.

HOW A KNOCK ON THE HEAD CAN INCREASE YOUR RISK OF DEMENTIA

Being knocked unconscious could increase the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, research shows.
Moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injuries (TBI) from accidents that result in a loss of consciousness disrupt proteins that regulate an enzyme associated with the disease.
New research identifies the complex mechanisms that result in a huge increase in the enzyme BACE1 in the brain after an accident.
The results may lead to the development of a drug treatment that targets this mechanism to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease.
Lead author Dr Kendall Walker at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston said: 'A moderate-to-severe TBI, or head trauma, is one of the strongest environmental risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease.
'A serious TBI can lead to a dysfunction in the regulation of the enzyme BACE1.
'Elevations of this enzyme cause elevated levels of amyloid-beta, the key component of brain plaques associated with senility and Alzheimer’s disease.'
In contrast the new drugs are designed to stop inflammation disrupting wiring in the brain and killing neurons.
Pro-inflammatory cytokines cause the synapses, the connections between brain cells, to misfire. Eventually the whole organisation of the brain falls into disarray, like a failing computer, and neurons die.
'In Alzheimer's disease, many people now view the progression from mild cognitive impairment to full-blown Alzheimer's as an indication of malfunctioning synapses, the pathways that allow neurons to talk to each other,' said Professor Martin Watterson, one of the study leaders at Northwestern University's Feinberg School.
'High levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines can contribute to synaptic malfunction.'
Mice genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer's were given MW151 three times a week starting at six months of age. A comparable stage in humans would be when a patient begins to experience mild mental decline.
At 11 months, by which time the mice should have developed full-blown Alzheimer's, cytokine levels in the brains of the animals were found to be back to normal. Their synapses were also working normally.
Untreated mice had abnormally high brain levels of cytokines and their synapses were misfiring.
Co-author Dr Linda Van Eldik, director of the Sanders-Brown Centre on Aging at the University of Kentucky, said: 'The drug protected against the damage associated with learning and memory impairment. Giving this drug before Alzheimer's memory changes are at a late stage may be a promising future approach to therapy.'
Harmful inflammation also plays a role in a wide range of other neurodegenerative disorders, raising the prospect of using the drug to treat many different conditions.
Earlier tests on mice showed that MW151 reduced the severity of a disease similar to MS in humans that strips nerve fibres of their insulating myelin covering.
In other mouse experiments, the drug prevented a surge of pro-inflammatory cytokines after traumatic brain injury.
'If you took a drug like this early on after traumatic brain injury or even a stroke, you could possibly prevent the long-term complications of that injury including the risk of seizures, cognitive impairment, and, perhaps, mental health issues,' said Professor Mark Wainright, also from Northwestern's Feinberg School.
Parkinson's, non-Alzheimer's dementia and motor neurone disease were other conditions that could potentially be tackled using the new approach.
A key advantage of the drug is that it can be swallowed as a pill, rather than being injected. It easily crosses the 'blood brain barrier', a physical and molecular fortress wall that stops toxic molecules entering the brain.
Results are yet to be released from the first Phase I trial assessing the drug's safety in human patients.
This is the first step in winning clinical approval for a new treatment.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2178306/A-single-pill-treat-Alzheimers-Parkinsons-AND-multiple-sclerosis.html#ixzz21k31TU9J

Gene therapy to regenerate bones

LONDON: Scientists claimed to have developed a new method which can mimic real bone tissue and regenerate bones using gene therapy.

Researchers from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) have developed a method of repairing bone using synthetic bone graft substitute material, which combined with gene therapy, can mimic real bone tissue and can regenerate bone in patients who have lost large areas of bone from either disease or trauma.

The researchers have developed an innovative scaffold material made from collagen and nano-sized particles of hydroxyapatite which acts as a platform to attract the body's own cells and repair bone in the damaged area using gene therapy. The cells are tricked into overproducing bone producing proteins known as BMPs, encouraging regrowth of healthy bone tissue, The method can be applied to regenerate tissues in other parts of the body.

"Previously, synthetic bone grafts had proven successful in promoting new bone growth by infusing the scaffold material with bone producing proteins," professor Fergal O'Brien, Principal Investigator on the project said in a statement.

"These proteins are already clinically approved for bone repair in humans but concerns exist that the high doses of protein required in clinical treatments may have negative side effects such as increasing the risk of cancer," O'Brien added.

"By the body to produce the bone-producing protein itself these negative side effects can be avoided and bone tissue growth is promoted efficiently and safely," O'Brien said.

first step to virtual sex -Virtual Lips for Long-Distance Lovers

THE GIST
  • Connect the device to a computer via a USB port.
  • Link up online.
  • Start making out.
kissenger
The Kissenger is shaped like a small head with oversized silicone lips. Click to enlarge this image.
Youtube screen grab

Finding it hard to keep up the passion in a long-distance relationship? Help might be on the way.
A robotics professor in Singapore has invented a gadget equipped with motion-sensitive electronic "lips" that allow amorous but absent couples to exchange long-distance smooches via the Internet.
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Predictions made by Ray KurzweilAccording to Ray Kurzweil, 89 out of 108 predictions he made were entirely correct by the end of 2009. An additional 13 were what he calls “essentially correct" (meaning that they were likely to be released within a few years of 2009), for a total of 102 out of 108. Another 3 are partially correct, 2 look like they are about 10 years off, and 1, which was tongue in cheek anyway, was just wrong.

2019

  • Devices that deliver sensations to the skin surface of their users (i.e.--tight body suits and gloves) are also sometimes used in virtual reality to complete the experience. "Virtual sex"--in which two people are able to have sex with each other through virtual reality, or in which a human can have sex with a "simulated" partner that only exists on a computer—becomes a reality.
  • Just as visual- and auditory virtual reality have come of age, haptic technology has fully matured and is completely convincing, yet requires the user to enter a V.R. booth. It is commonly used for computer sex and remote medical examinations. It is the preferred sexual medium since it is safe and enhances the experience.
  • ====================================================================
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BLOG: Kiss Transmitter Lets You Make Out Over the Internet
Shaped like a small head with oversize silicone lips, the "Kissenger" -- short for Kiss Messenger -- was unveiled in June at a scientific conference in Britain and is still being refined for commercial launch.
"It can be used between humans to improve their communication," its creator Hooman Samani told AFP.
Couples just have to connect the devices to computers via USB cables, link up online and start kissing the silicone material to trigger sensors that move the gadget on the other side.
They can stare at each other on screen while exchanging kisses.
"The main issue is to transmit the force and pressure, and also the shape of the lip," Samani said.
The "special silicone material" chosen for the lips offers "the best sensation and feeling," said the scientist, who has personally tested the device.
But the Kissenger is not yet ready for the market despite "a lot of offers" from interested parties because there are "ethical issues" that need to be resolved on top of the technical aspects, he said.
BLOG: Robot Prostitutes, the Future of Sex Tourism
"Kissing is very intimate so in order to have a product in market which is going to deal with this sensitive issue we have to do proper studies and investigation on the social point of view, cultural point of view," he said.
The device is still being refined at a laboratory jointly set up by the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Keio University of Japan.
Samani calls his field of study "lovotics" -- research into the relationship between robots and humans -- and the Kissenger is just one of several devices being developed by his team.
=========================================================================

Kissenger: virtual lips for long-distance lovers

Sapa-AFP | 23 July, 2012 09:21

Lips. File picture.
Image by: Time LIVE

Finding it hard to keep up the passion in a long-distance relationship? Help might be on the way.A robotics professor in Singapore has invented a gadget equipped with motion-sensitive electronic “lips” that allow amorous but absent couples to exchange long-distance smooches via the Internet.

Shaped like a small head with oversize silicone lips, the “Kissenger” — short for Kiss Messenger — was unveiled in June at a scientific conference in Britain and is still being refined for commercial launch.
“It can be used between humans to improve their communication,” its creator Hooman Samani told AFP.
Couples just have to connect the devices to computers via USB cables, link up online and start kissing the silicone material to trigger sensors that move the gadget on the other side.
They can stare at each other on screen while exchanging kisses.
“The main issue is to transmit the force and pressure, and also the shape of the lip,” Samani said.
The “special silicone material” chosen for the lips offers “the best sensation and feeling”, said the scientist, who has personally tested the device.
But the Kissenger is not yet ready for the market despite “a lot of offers” from interested parties because there are “ethical issues” that need to be resolved on top of the technical aspects, he said.
“Kissing is very intimate so in order to have a product in market which is going to deal with this sensitive issue we have to do proper studies and investigation on the social point of view, cultural point of view,” he said.
The device is still being refined at a laboratory jointly set up by the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Keio University of Japan.
Samani calls his field of study “lovotics” — research into the relationship between robots and humans — and the Kissenger is just one of several devices being developed by his team.

Scientists decode brain waves to eavesdrop on what we hear

BERKELEY —
Neuroscientists may one day be able to hear the imagined speech of a patient unable to speak due to stroke or paralysis, according to University of California, Berkeley, researchers.
This content requires the QuickTime Plugin. Download QuickTime Player.Already have QuickTime Player? Click here.Frequency spectrograms of the actual spoken words (top) and the sounds as reconstructed by two separate models based solely on recorded temporal lobe activity in a volunteer subject. The words – Waldo, structure, doubt and property – are more or less recognizable, even though the model had never encountered these specific words before. Credit: Brian Pasley, UC Berkeley
These scientists have succeeded in decoding electrical activity in the brain’s temporal lobe – the seat of the auditory system – as a person listens to normal conversation. Based on this correlation between sound and brain activity, they then were able to predict the words the person had heard solely from the temporal lobe activity.
“This research is based on sounds a person actually hears, but to use it for reconstructing imagined conversations, these principles would have to apply to someone’s internal verbalizations,” cautioned first author Brian N. Pasley, a post-doctoral researcher in the center. “There is some evidence that hearing the sound and imagining the sound activate similar areas of the brain. If you can understand the relationship well enough between the brain recordings and sound, you could either synthesize the actual sound a person is thinking, or just write out the words with a type of interface device.”
“This is huge for patients who have damage to their speech mechanisms because of a stroke or Lou Gehrig’s disease and can’t speak,” said co-author Robert Knight, a UC Berkeley professor of psychology and neuroscience. “If you could eventually reconstruct imagined conversations from brain activity, thousands of people could benefit.”
In addition to the potential for expanding the communication ability of the severely disabled, he noted, the research also “is telling us a lot about how the brain in normal people represents and processes speech sounds.”
Pasley and his colleagues at UC Berkeley, UC San Francisco, University of Maryland and The Johns Hopkins University report their findings Jan. 31 in the open-access journal PLoS Biology.
Help from epilepsy patients
They enlisted the help of people undergoing brain surgery to determine the location of intractable seizures so that the area can be removed in a second surgery. Neurosurgeons typically cut a hole in the skull and safely place electrodes on the brain surface or cortex – in this case, up to 256 electrodes covering the temporal lobe – to record activity over a period of a week to pinpoint the seizures. For this study, 15 neurosurgical patients volunteered to participate.
An X-ray CT scan of the head of one of the volunteers, showing electrodes distributed over the brain’s temporal lobe, where sounds are processed. Credit: Adeen Flinker, UC Berkeley
Pasley visited each person in the hospital to record the brain activity detected by the electrodes as they heard 5-10 minutes of conversation. Pasley used this data to reconstruct and play back the sounds the patients heard. He was able to do this because there is evidence that the brain breaks down sound into its component acoustic frequencies – for example, between a low of about 1 Hertz (cycles per second) to a high of about 8,000 Hertz –that are important for speech sounds.
Pasley tested two different computational models to match spoken sounds to the pattern of activity in the electrodes. The patients then heard a single word, and Pasley used the models to predict the word based on electrode recordings.
“We are looking at which cortical sites are increasing activity at particular acoustic frequencies, and from that, we map back to the sound,” Pasley said. He compared the technique to a pianist who knows the sounds of the keys so well that she can look at the keys another pianist is playing in a sound-proof room and “hear” the music, much as Ludwig van Beethoven was able to “hear” his compositions despite being deaf.
The better of the two methods was able to reproduce a sound close enough to the original word for Pasley and his fellow researchers to correctly guess the word.
“We think we would be more accurate with an hour of listening and recording and then repeating the word many times,” Pasley said. But because any realistic device would need to accurately identify words heard the first time, he decided to test the models using only a single trial.
“This research is a major step toward understanding what features of speech are represented in the human brain” Knight said. “Brian’s analysis can reproduce the sound the patient heard, and you can actually recognize the word, although not at a perfect level.”
Knight predicts that this success can be extended to imagined, internal verbalizations, because scientific studies have shown that when people are asked to imagine speaking a word, similar brain regions are activated as when the person actually utters the word.
“With neuroprosthetics, people have shown that it’s possible to control movement with brain activity,” Knight said. “But that work, while not easy, is relatively simple compared to reconstructing language. This experiment takes that earlier work to a whole new level.”
Based on earlier work with ferrets
The current research builds on work by other researchers about how animals encode sounds in the brain’s auditory cortex. In fact, some researchers, including the study’s coauthors at the University of Maryland, have been able to guess the words ferrets were read by scientists based on recordings from the brain, even though the ferrets were unable to understand the words.
The ultimate goal of the UC Berkeley study was to explore how the human brain encodes speech and determine which aspects of speech are most important for understanding.
“At some point, the brain has to extract away all that auditory information and just map it onto a word, since we can understand speech and words regardless of how they sound,” Pasley said. “The big question is, What is the most meaningful unit of speech? A syllable, a phone, a phoneme? We can test these hypotheses using the data we get from these recordings.”
Coauthors of the study are electrical engineers Stephen V. David, Nima Mesgarani and Shihab A. Shamma of the University of Maryland; Adeen Flinker of UC Berkeley’s Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute; and neurologist Nathan E. Crone of The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md. The work was done principally in the labs of Robert Knight at UC Berkeley and Edward Chang, a neurosurgeon at UCSF.
Chang and Knight are members of the Center for Neural Engineering and Prostheses, a joint UC Berkeley/UCSF group focused on using brain activity to develop neural prostheses for motor and speech disorders in disabling neurological disorders.
The work is supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health and the Humboldt Foundation.
PLoS Biology Podcast Episode 2: Decoding speech from the human brain (interview with Brian Pasley and Robert Knight) by Public Library of Scien

A supercomputer that can unravel secrets of universe


LONDON: Renowned theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking has launched the most powerful shared-memory supercomputer in Europe.

Hawking anticipates that the COSMOS supercomputer , manufactured by SGI and the first system of its kind, will open up new windows on the universe.

During the launch, which is part of the Numerical Cosmology 2012 workshop at the Centre for Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge, Hawking said, "We have made advances in cosmology and particle physics. Cosmology is now a precision science, so we need machines like COSMOS to reach out and touch real universe, to investigate whether our mathematical models are correct," he said.

Hawking added, "I hope that we will soon find an ultimate theory which, in principle , would enable us to predict everything in the universe," he said. "Even if we do find the ultimate theory , we will still need supercomputers to describe how something as big and complex as universe evolves, let alone why humans behave the way they do," he said.

'Saturn's moon Titan is Earth-like'

Titan , Saturn's largest moon is "a weirdly Earth-like place" when it comes to geology, astronomers have claimed. Titan boasts landscapes shaped by the flow of rivers, though they are rivers of liquid methane, not of water. And, like Earth, the surface of Titan is surprisingly free of craters, implying that geological activity is constantly reshaping the moon, as also happens here. "It's a weirdly Earth-like place," Taylor Perron, assistant professor of geology at MIT said, "even with this exotic combination of materials and temperatures" .

In a first, 'life' recreated in computer


WASHINGTON: Scientists claim to have developed the world's first complete computer model of an organism, which can use computer-aided design for better diagnosis and treatment of diseases.

A team of Stanford researchers , including an Indian, used data from more than 900 scientific papers to account for every molecular interaction that takes place in the life cycle of Mycoplasma genitalium, the world's smallest free-living bacterium.

The model represents a stepping-stone toward the use of computer-aided design in bioengineering and medicine, according to the Journal 'Cell' .

"This achievement demonstrates a transforming approach to answering questions about fundamental biological processes," said James M Anderson, director National Institutes of Health Division of Program Coordination, Planning and Strategic Initiatives . "Comprehensive computer models of entire cells have the potential to advance our understanding of cellular function and, ultimately, to inform new approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of disease," he said.

Biology over the past two decades has been marked by the rise of high-throughout studies producing enormous troves of cellular information. A lack of experimental data is no longer the primary limiting factor for researchers . Instead, it's how to make sense of what they already know. "Many of the issues we're interested in aren't single-gene problems," said Covert, adding "they're the complex result of hundreds or thousands of genes interacting" . "This situation has resulted in a yawning gap between information and understanding that can only be addressed by "bringing all of that data into one place and seeing how it fits together" , said Stanford bioengineering graduate student and co-first author Jayodita Sanghvi.

Mycoplasma genitalium is a humble parasitic bacterium known mainly for showing up uninvited in human urogenital and respiratory tracts. The pathogen also has the distinction of containing the smallest genome of any free-living organism - only 525 genes, as opposed to the 4,288 of E coli, a more traditional laboratory bacterium. The model will help to demonstrate a number approaches , including detailed investigations of DNA-binding protein dynamics and identification of new gene functions.

Planet discovered 'right at Earth's front door' could harbour life

Last Updated: Friday, July 20, 2012, 14:13
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Planet discovered `right at Earth`s front door` could harbour life  Melbourne: Astronomers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the Carnegie Institution of Washington believe they have discovered a planet right at Earth’s front door that may be capable of supporting human life.

The planet is 22 light years away, previously thought to be 20 light years, and is formally known as Gliese 581g, but lead researcher Professor Steven Vogt told News.com.au that he has since named it after his wife.

“I called it ‘Zarmina’s world’. It’s not just in our backyard, it’s right in our face,” Professor Vogt said.

The study, which was released to News.com.au this week, showed that the planet was twice the size of earth. It is known as a “super Earth” due to its ability to hold on to its gassy atmosphere, which increases its chances of retaining liquid.

Whether this liquid is frozen and stored under the surface or flowing freely across the planet, the researchers can’t say.

The scientist from the University of California said that the planet has “churchly weather” similar to what we experience in Australia.

“From the energy bounds and brightness of the star we can tell that the temperatures would be just about right to stand on the surface and feel the warmth of the alien star on your face, like standing in the park in Sydney,” he explained.

However the researchers were unable to determine what the surface of the planet is like, Professor Vogt said.

The planet exists in what is known as the “Goldilocks Zone” - an area near earth that isn’t too hot, or cold but is just right for sustaining life.

Prof Vogt is sure that scientists will eventually be able to send out probes in search for advanced civilisations

“If you get lucky and find civilisations, you’d be able to have a two-way conversation within a human life-time. You don’t want to have to spend 1000 years waiting to hear ‘wazzup’, and then another 1000 years before they get to hear not much, and you?’” he said.

The researcher said after making first contact, scientists may receive an answer within 44 years.

“Within a few hundred years you could be able to receive picture postcards from an iPhone or Android and be able to listen to what they sound like, and sample their way of life from a spacecraft,” he said.

“There is something out there,” Prof Vogt stated.

The study will be published in European astrophysics journal, Astronomisch Naschrischten (AEST)

Leading scientists issue research road map to an AIDS cure




Visitors look at the new panels to the AIDS Quilt on exhibit on the Washington Mall April 29, 2000. Over twelve years later International AIDS specialists on Thursday, July 19, 2012, released what they call a road map for research towards a cure for HIV.

Visitors look at the new panels to the AIDS Quilt on exhibit on the Washington Mall April 29, 2000. Over twelve years later International AIDS specialists on Thursday, July 19, 2012, released what they call a road map for research towards a cure for HIV.
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Published Friday, Jul. 20, 2012 6:41AM EDT
Last Updated Friday, Jul. 20, 2012 7:21AM EDT

WASHINGTON -- For years it seemed hopeless. Now the hunt for a cure for AIDS is back on.

International AIDS specialists on Thursday released what they call a road map for research toward a cure for HIV -- a strategy for global teams of scientists to explore a number of intriguing leads that just might, years from now, pan out.

"Today's the first step," said French Nobel laureate Francoise Barre-Sinoussi, co-discoverer of the HIV virus who also co-chaired development of the strategy.

"No one thinks it's going to be easy," added strategy co-chair Dr. Steven Deeks of the University of California, San Francisco. "Some don't think it's possible."

The announcement came just before the International AIDS Conference begins on Sunday, when more than 20,000 scientists, activists and policymakers gather in the nation's capital with a far different focus: how to dramatically cut the spread of the AIDS virus, what they call "turning the tide" of the epidemic, using some powerful tools already in hand.

Chief among them is getting more of the world's 34 million HIV-infected people on life-saving medications, so they stay healthier and are less likely to infect others. By itself, that is a huge hurdle. Just 8 million of the 15 million treatment-eligible patients in AIDS-ravaged poor regions of the world are getting the drugs.

But Barre-Sinoussi, president-elect of the International AIDS Society, which hosts the conference, said that lifelong treatment, as good as it is, isn't the end-all solution -- and that science finally is showing that a cure "could be a realistic possibility."

The panelists refused to estimate Thursday how much this research would cost. But already, the National Institutes of Health has increased spending on cure-related research, about $56 million last year, according to a report in this week's issue of the journal Nature. Scientists attempting cure research will meet Friday and Saturday, ahead of the AIDS conference, to compare notes.

And the new strategy won praise from Michel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS, the Joint United Nations Program on HIV and AIDS.

"The previous generation fought for treatment," he said. "Our generation must fight for a cure."

Today's anti-HIV drugs can tamp down the virus to undetectable levels -- but they don't eradicate it. Instead, tiny amounts of the virus can hide out in different tissues and roar back if medication is stopped.

That means there's no certainty of developing a cure.

"I'm not sure we can, but we're going to try," Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a recent interview. "This virus is uncanny in its ability to be able to integrate itself into a cell, as a reservoir, and no matter what we've done so far, we have not been able to eliminate that reservoir."

Yet one person in the world apparently has been cured: Timothy Ray Brown of San Francisco, who in 2006 was living in Berlin when in addition to his HIV, he got leukemia.

Brown underwent a blood stem cell transplant -- what once was a bone marrow transplant -- to treat the cancer. His own immune system was destroyed. And his German transplant surgeon found a donor who was among the 1 per cent of whites who have a gene mutation that makes them naturally resistant to HIV -- their cells lack the specific doorway the virus uses to get inside.

It worked. Brown has been off HIV medications for five years and is doing well, Deeks said Thursday.

That dangerous and expensive transplant isn't a practical solution, but it has sparked a variety of research into other possible ways to eradicate HIV. Already, 12 early-stage studies involving small numbers of patients -- fewer than 200 people worldwide -- are under way, the international panel said Thursday. Results to see if any are promising enough to pursue should be out in the next year or two.

The priorities of the new cure research strategy:

Determine why HIV hibernates and persists.
Learn why some people are naturally resistant. In addition to that 1 per cent of people with the gene mutation, researchers now are studying a small group of patients in France who started medication soon after they were infected and many years later were able to stop the drugs without the virus rebounding.
Develop and test strategies to make HIV patients more naturally resistant. Already gene therapy studies are under way to knock that HIV doorway out of people's own infection-fighting blood cells.
Learn where all those secret reservoirs are.
Develop strategies to attack the reservoirs. One new attempt uses drugs to wake up the dormant HIV so the immune system can spot and attack it, what Deeks called the "shock and kill approach." Last spring, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, researchers reported that a drug normally used for lymphoma made some latent HIV rapidly detectable in six patients. Deeks has a similar study under way using an old anti-alcoholism drug.
Develop good tests to measure these tiny amounts of dormant HIV, crucial to telling if any cure attempts are promising short of taking patients off their regular medication.

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Indian scientists try to crack monsoon source code


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Indian scientists try to crack monsoon source code

A farmer works in a paddy field on the outskirts of Agartala, capital of India's northeastern state of Tripura, July 9, 2012. REUTERS/Jayanta Dey

NEW DELHI/BHUBANESHWAR | Fri Jul 20, 2012 3:05pm IST
(Reuters) - Scientists aided by supercomputers are trying to unravel one of Mother Nature's biggest mysteries -- the vagaries of the summer monsoon rains that bring life, and sometimes death, to India every year.
In a first-of-its-kind project, Indian scientists aim to build computer models that would allow them to make a quantum leap in predicting the erratic movements of the monsoon.
If successful, the impact would be life-changing in a country where 600 million people depend on farming for their livelihoods and where agriculture contributes 15 percent to the economy. The monsoon has been dubbed by some as India's "real finance minister".
"Ultimately it's all about water. Everybody needs water and whatever amount of water you get here is mainly through rainfall," said Shailesh Nayak, secretary of the Earth Sciences Ministry.
India typically receives 75 percent of its annual rain from the June-September monsoon as moisture-laden winds sweep in from the southwest of the peninsula.
The importance of the recently launched five-year "monsoon mission" has been underscored by this summer's patchy and below-average rains, which have provoked much anxious sky-watching and fears of drought in India's northwest, even as floods in the northeast displaced 2 million people and killed more than 100.
Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar cautioned this week that there was no need for alarm just yet, although he fretted that the monsoon was "playing hide-and-seek".
Working with counterparts in the United States and Britain, Indian scientists are trying to crack the monsoon's "source code" using super-fast computers to build the world's first short-range and long-range computer models that can give much more granular information about the monsoon's movements.
This would help India conserve depleting water resources and agricultural output would get a boost as farmers would be able to plan their crops better. Armed with more precise forecasts, state governments would be better prepared, in theory, for disasters such as the recent floods in Assam.
It would also bring more certainty to economic policy- making. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government is gambling on a normal monsoon this year to boost weak economic growth.
Weather forecasting, however, is just one of the challenges facing India's agricultural sector. Water conservation and proper irrigation remain a problem, agricultural policy-making is muddled and the government is under pressure to cut expensive diesel subsidies, which mostly benefit richer farmers.
EXTENDING SHORT-TERM FORECASTS
More than half of the arable land in India, one of the world's biggest producers of cotton, rice, sugar and wheat, is rain-fed. A successful monsoon means rural residents have more money to spend on everything from motorcycles to refrigerators.
"We do feel under a lot of pressure," said S.C. Bhan, senior scientist at the India Meteorological Office (IMD), when asked about the challenges the IMD faces in trying to correctly predict the monsoon's movements.
The weather office publishes a forecast in April predicting how much rain will fall over the four months and whether the monsoon will be "normal". It does this by comparing sea temperatures, wind speeds and air pressure with data from the past 50 years.
In June, the forecast is updated to give monthly rainfall figures for July and August -- the main growing months -- as well as seasonal figures for four broad regions.
Despite advances in computer weather models, the statistical model remains the most accurate long-range forecaster of monsoon rains, Bhan said.
But only up to a point.
Many of the weather office's long-range summer monsoon predictions last year were inaccurate. It also struggled to predict extreme weather events such as the drought in 2009 -- a year when it had forecast normal monsoon rains.
There is a lot the IMD struggles to predict -- when the rains will arrive throughout the country, where exactly they will fall, which parts will receive the most and how long they will last. Short-range forecasts give more precision but offer only a five- to seven-day window into the future, which farmers say is too short.
The monsoon mission aims to extend those short-term forecasts to at least 15 days and enable the weather office to give much more detailed seasonal projections.
"If anybody can tell me there is going to be a dry spell after initial showers that will make a lot of difference for me. It means life or death for farmers," said P. Chengal Reddy, leader of a national consortium of farmers' associations.
Several farmers in Maharashtra state, already at the end of their tether and deeply in debt after buying fertilizer and seeds, reportedly killed themselves last month after rains abruptly stopped, farmers' rights activist Kishor Tiwari said.
Many farmers ignore the weather forecasts and rely instead on Hindu astronomical almanacs and signs in nature.
"We were able to guess from the nature of the croaking of frogs if there would be any rain in the near future," said Trilocha Pradhan, 63, who farms about seven acres of rice paddy in the mostly agricultural state of Odisha. "Such croaking is rare today," he added, blaming the effects of climate change.
(Additional reporting by Ratnajyoti Dutta and Diksha Madhok in NEW DELHI, and Vikas Vasudeva in CHANDIGARH; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

100 yrs on, France’s radium craze turns health scare

CHAVILLE, FRANCE: The Belle Epoque, France's golden era at the turn of the last century, bequeathed Paris elegant landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower, but also a more sinister legacy of radioactive floors and backyards which the capital is only now addressing.

When the Franco-Polish Nobel Prize winner Marie Curie discovered the radioactive element radium in 1898, she set off a craze for the luminescent metal among Parisians, who started using it for everything from alarm clock dials to lipsticks and even water fountains.

"The history of radium started in Paris," said Eric Lanes, head of radioactive decontamination at France's national agency for radioactive waste, ANDRA.

After Curie showed that radium could be used to destroy cancerous cells, people assumed that the new element had miraculous healing properties and started putting it in everything from body lotions to cough syrups.

"Cancerous cells are more sensitive to radiation than healthy ones. Curie understood that," said Lanes. "But some people embarked on businesses more akin to charlatans' tricks."

Curie herself died at 66 from her prolonged, unprotected exposure to radium. Lanes said the clean-up was being undertaken as a precautionary measure under a recent French law requiring that preventative steps be taken in a case of a suspected health risk even in the absence of conclusive scientific evidence.

"We have never found any worrying situations," Lanes said. "We're talking about levels that are too small to create a health impact." 

=========================================================================
 

A Glowing Complexion


The discovery of radium by Marie and Pierre Curie in 1898 led to its use, first as a research tool and then later in the development of medical and commercial applications.
[Radium] became involved in the physical system of alpha, beta, and gamma rays and the atomic structure; in the chemical system of atomic weights, emanations, and transmutations; in the medical system of cancer treatments and radon spas; in the commercial system of luminous watches, women’s cosmetics, and medical remedies; in the artistic system of luminous paintings and middle-class American culture; and in the industrial system of radium extractions, the production of luminous paint, and the beauty industry.
Rentetzi (2007, p. 1)

Medical and other uses of radium

Medically, radium was usually injected or taken in pills. It was used to treat a wide range of ailments including hair loss, impotence, atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, rheumatism, gout, sciatica, nephritis and anemia. The use of radium in medicine led to a craze for radium-based products, and radioactivity in general, during the 1920s and 1930s. Commerically, it was added to a wide range of products including wool for babies, water dispensers, chocolate, soda water, male supports, foundation garments, condoms, toothpaste, suppositories, cigarettes, cleaning products, boot polish, fertilisers, luminous paints and cosmetics.

Radior

Based in London, Radior Co. Ltd., marketed a line of radium cosmetics sometime before 1920. Their product range included Night Cream, Rouge, Compact Powder, Vanishing Cream, Talcum Powder, Hair Tonic, Skin Soap, Face Powder in six tints (Blanche, Naturelle, Rachel, Flesh Ochre and Brunette) and assorted pads which could be strapped to the face.
An ever-flowing Fountain of Youth and Beauty has at last been found in the Energy Rays of Radium.
When scientists discovered Radium they hardly dreamed they had unearthed a revolutionary “Beauty Secret.” They know it now. Radium Rays vitalize and energize all living tissue. This Energy has been turned into Beauty’s aid. Each and every ‘Radior’ Toilet Requisite contains a definite qualtity of Actual Radium.
Radior advertisement, 1918
According to the company the product sold well in the Britain, possibly due to the fact that it was taken up and distributed by Boots “in all their five hundred and eighty-five stores” (Advertising, 1920) as well as Harrods, Selfridges and Whiteley’s department stores in London. It was also available in selected stores in some parts of the Commonwealth.
“Radior” Chin straps are guaranteed to contain Radio-active substance and Radium Bromide. If placed on the face where the skin has become wrinkled or tired the radio-active forces immediately take effect on the nerves and tissues. A continuous steady current of energy flows into the skin, and before long the wrinkles have disappeared, the nerves have become strong and energised, and the tired muscles have become braced up and “ready for service.”
Radior advertisement (Sydney Morning Herald, 1915)
The product did less well in America when introduced there. In an interview, a company spokesperson, noted that market research put the cause for poor sales on the reduced use of radium in US medicine and public disbelief that such an expensive material could be used in cosmetic pads. The spokesperson explained that “It is possible to divide and subdivide radium until you can get as small an amount as one sixty-fourth of a cent’s worth. It seems incredible, I know, but chemists are used to these infinitesimal divisions. The radium would still be genuine and would retain all its valuable properties. For this reason and because of its enormous strength we are able to use it in these pads and still sell them at a profit.” (Advertiser, 1920). Radior countered the misconception with a guarantee that radium was present in every product. The good news is that the amount of radium used in each product was low.

Tho-Radium

In the early 1930s, a pharmacist, Alexis Moussali and a Parisian doctor, Alfred Curie, launched a French range of radioactive beauty products, first from the Rues des Capucines and then from 146 Avenue Victor Hugo. Alexis Moussali was probably the brains behind the commercial operation, with Alfred Curie possibly brought either because of his surname – (he was not related to Marie or Pierre Curie) and/or the fact that he was a doctor.
The product range, which included cleansing milk, skin cream, powder, rouge, lipstick and toothpaste, was called Tho-Radia as it contained thorium chloride and radium bromide, both of which were radioactive. The products were relatively expensive for the time, partly due to the cost of the radioactive materials. As with Radior, one hopes that the expense of the ‘active ingredients’ may have resulted in reduced amounts of thorium and radium being used.
The Tho-Radia cream was sold for 15 francs per 155 gram pot; soap, 3 francs per 100 gram bar; powder, 12 francs per 50 gram box; toothpaste, 6 francs per tube. Despite the relatively high price, it sold throughout France from 1933 through to the early 1960s. When tested in the 1960s the products were found to be radioactive (Mould, n.d. p. 3). Fortunately, I can find no indication that Tho-Radia products found a distributor in the English-speaking world.
Like other products of the time, Tho-Radia was advertised as being a scientific method of beauty (Méthod Scientific de Beauté). The ‘benefits’ of radium were highly publicised in the press and therefore well known by the general public in the 1930s. Product advertising shows the face lit from below which makes it look like it is ‘glowing’. What could be more healthy than a glowing complexion?
An associated booklet produced by the company proclaims that the beauty cream:
Elle stimule la vitalité cellulaire active la circulation, raffermit less tissues, élimine la graisse, empêche las deformation des pores, prevenient et guérit dartes, boutons, rougeeurs, defend la peau contre les miasmas et les intemperies de l’épipiderme, evite at supprime les rides, conserve la fraîcheaur et l’éclat du teint.
Translation:
Stimulates cellular vitality, activates circulation, firms skin, eliminates fats, stops enlarged pores forming, stops and cures boils, pimples, redness, pigmentation, protects from the elements, stops ageing and gets rid of wrinkles, conserves the freshness and brightness of the complexion.
(Tho-Radia Dictionary of Beauty, Dictionnaire soins de Beauté)

Hindsight is a wonderful thing

The use of radioactive materials in cosmetics is a good example of the what can go wrong when the beauty industry jumps too quickly on the bandwagon of a scientific advance. This is not a fault that they share alone. Despite this, and other ingredients that would also prove detrimental to health, the role of science in the beauty industry was to increase, not diminish during the century. Even today, when so many are demanding more ‘natural’ products we still look to science to ensure their purity and safety.
April 14th 2009

Sources

Rentetzi, M. (2007). Trafficking Materials and Gendered Experimental Practices. New York: Columbia University Press.