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This Biodegradable Pill Could Replace Painful Injections

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Image: MIT

Many drugs cannot be taken orally as they get broken down in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract by enzymes before they’re absorbed. Until now, these drugs have had to be delivered via injection, which can be painful, and previous attempts to ‘encapsulate’ them have been expensive, impractical and ultimately unsuccessful.

But there may be a better solution. Published in the Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US have collaborated with the Massachusetts General Hospital to design an acrylic capsule that’s covered with tiny stainless steel needles.

The capsule can be swallowed, and once it reaches the GI tract, the pH-sensitive coating dissolves, uncovering the small micro-needles. The drug is then released into these needles, which slowly inject it directly into the stomach lining. Thankfully, as there are no pain receptors in the GI tract, this process is painless.

The prototype has been tested on pigs, where a needle-coated capsule containing insulin – the hormone required by diabetics that regulates blood sugar levels – was administered orally. The results showed that this insulin was successfully injected into the stomach lining, small intestine, and colon, and that there were no signs of tissue damage as the capsule moved through the digestive tract.

Of particular interest was the fact the pigs’ blood glucose levels decreased more rapidly after they were given insulin via the needle-coated capsule than when the drug was administered via subcutaneous injection, suggesting this new method may actually be more effective.

“The kinetics are much better, and much faster-onset, than those seen with traditional under-the-skin administration,” said Giovanni Traverso, one of the lead researchers of the study, in a press release.

The team predict that this revolutionary form of drug delivery will be beneficial for vaccines, as well as antibodies required in cancer treatments and other autoimmune disorders such as Crohn’s disease.

“For molecules that are particularly difficult to absorb, this would be a way of actually administering them at much higher efficiency,” said Traverso.

The next step is to refine the capsule so that it is made of a degradable polymer that can naturally release its drug alongside the contractions of the digestive tract.

This new method of drug delivery can potentially redefine the face of immunisation and other needle-administered practises. The real question is, will people feel more comfortable with many small needles inside of them, as opposed to one large one outside of them?

This Biodegradable Pill Could Replace Painful Injections

This Biodegradable Pill Could Replace Painful Injections.

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Sunday, November 11, 2018

 

 

Watch more about the new drug-delivery method:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBCa5bM3zjg?enablejsapi=1]
source MIT
This article was originally published at www.sciencealert.com

How Do Hypnic Jerks Occur?

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How Do Hypnic Jerks Occur?

Why You Feel Like You’re Falling When Going to Sleep?

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Thursday, November 8, 2018

The most detailed map of the brain ever created!

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The most detailed map of the brain ever created!

The most detailed map of the brain ever created!

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Sunday, November 4, 2018

World of Atoms

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https://www.facebook.com/clubphysicsnp/videos/222766195065530/

Here is why your brain is protected from viruses and bacteria

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Here is why your brain is protected from viruses and bacteria

Here is why your brain is protected from viruses and bacteria.

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Tuesday, November 6, 2018

 

 

Stress Depression and their effect to Brain

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How Stress Affects Your Brain

Stress Changes Your Brain and Affects its Functions.

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Wednesday, November 7, 2018

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQd_i0jm1NE

Stress symptoms: Effects on your body and behavior

Stress symptoms may be affecting your health, even though you might not realize it. You may think illness is to blame for that nagging headache, your frequent insomnia or your decreased productivity at work. But stress may actually be the culprit.

Common effects of stress

Indeed, stress symptoms can affect your body, your thoughts and feelings, and your behavior. Being able to recognize common stress symptoms can give you a jump on managing them. Stress that’s left unchecked can contribute to many health problems, such as high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity and diabetes.

Common effects of stress on your body

  • Headache
  • Muscle tension or pain
  • Chest pain
  • Fatigue
  • Change in sex drive
  • Stomach upset
  • Sleep problems

Common effects of stress on your mood

  • Anxiety
  • Restlessness
  • Lack of motivation or focus
  • Feeling overwhelmed
  • Irritability or anger
  • Sadness or depression

Common effects of stress on your behavior

  • Overeating or undereating
  • Angry outbursts
  • Drug or alcohol abuse
  • Tobacco use
  • Social withdrawal
  • Exercising less often

Act to manage stress

If you have stress symptoms, taking steps to manage your stress can have numerous health benefits. Explore stress management strategies, such as:

  • Regular physical activity
  • Relaxation techniques, such as deep breathing, meditation, yoga, tai chi or getting a massage
  • Keeping a sense of humor
  • Socializing with family and friends
  • Setting aside time for hobbies, such as reading a book or listening to music

Aim to find active ways to manage your stress. Inactive ways you may use to manage stress — such as watching television, surfing the Internet or playing video games — may seem relaxing, but they may increase your stress over the long term.

And be sure to get plenty of sleep and eat a healthy, balanced diet. Avoid tobacco use, excess caffeine and alcohol intake, and the use of illicit substances.

When to seek help

If you’re not sure if stress is the cause or if you’ve taken steps to control your stress but your symptoms continue, see your doctor. Your doctor may want to check for other potential causes. Or, consider seeing a professional counselor or therapist, who can help you identify sources of your stress and learn new coping tools.

Also, if you have chest pain, especially if it occurs during physical activity or is accompanied by shortness of breath, sweating, dizziness, nausea, or pain radiating into your shoulder and arm, get emergency help immediately. These may be warning signs of a heart attack and not simply stress symptoms.

How Hearing Works

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How Hearing Works

 

How Hearing Works

How Hearing Works.

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Friday, July 13, 2018

 

how hearing works

 

Hearing is an essential part of how we communicate with others and become aware of sounds that happen in our immediate environment. Our hearing abilities start in our ears with the channeling of sound along the hearing pathway which are turned into electrical signs that travel to the brain (shown in the diagram above).

The hearing pathway is divided into four distinct sections that play important and unique parts in our overall hearing abilities.

These sections are shown below show in more detail how hearing works:

  • Outer Ear
  • Middle Ear
  • Inner Ear
  • Vestibule.

Hearing Loss occurs when one or more parts of the ear and/or the parts of the brain that make up the hearing pathway do not function normally.

For a quick and visual overview of how hearing works, hearing loss and hearing technologies try using our Interactive Ear.

Outer Ear

outerear

The Outer Ear captures and concentrates the sounds we hear and channels them into the Middle Ear. The Outer Ear is made up of two parts called the Pinna and the Ear Canal. The Pinna is a soft and flexible tissue that makes up the most of the visible ear. It plays an important role in shaping the sound to help the brain work out the direction from which sounds are coming.

The Ear Canal is the physical pathway that directs sound, which has arrived at the Outer Ear, also known as the Pinna into the Middle Ear.

Middle Ear

middle

The Middle Ear starts with the Tympanic Membrane, better known as the Eardrum, which vibrates due to differences in pressure caused by soundwaves.

The Eardrum is connected to three small interconnected bones called the Ossicles that vibrate with the Eardrum.

The last of these bones, called the Stapes, the passes on these vibrations into the Inner Ear.

 

Inner Ear

InnerEar

The Inner Ear contains the organs that create our sense of hearing and balance. The Cochlea is the organ in that converts mechanical sound vibrations into nerve signals. using hair-like nerve filaments, called hair cells. These hair cells are arranged so that different cells respond to different pitches.

The electrical currents produced in the Cochlea are then transmitted to the auditory nerve, which passs through several ‘relay stations’ in the Brainstem before reaching a more complex part of the brain, the Auditory Cortex, where the information contained sound can interpret and understood.

The Vestibule

vestibule

The Vestibule, with its Semicircular Canals, is the organ that provides us with our sense of balance, direction and spatial orientation. Vestibule problems can be linked to hearing problems such as Hyperacusis,Meniere’s Disease, Tinnitus and Vertigo, which can also affect a person’s balance.

 

 

https://youtu.be/0NJ_EAQjR3c

 

 

 

 

 

How Mosquitoes Use Six Needles to Suck Your Blood

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 How Mosquitoes Use Six Needles to Suck Your Blood

An Anopheles mosquito bites into a human arm.An Anopheles mosquito bites into a human arm. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

 

“Why are some people more likely to get bitten than others?” asked Luckhart. “The volatile fatty acids given off by our skin are quite different. They reflect differences between men and women, even what we’ve eaten. Those cues are different from person to person. There’s probably not one or two. It’s the blend that’s more or less attractive.”

Researchers still haven’t figured out what about their volatile fatty acids makes some people more attractive to mosquitoes than others. What scientists have recently discovered is that once a mosquito’s proboscis pierces the skin, one of its six needles, called the labrum, uses receptors on its tip to find a blood vessel.

“Those receptors responded to the chemicals in the blood,” said UC Davis biochemist Walter Leal, whose lab made the finding. “Mosquitoes don’t find the blood vessel randomly.”

Instead, chemicals in our blood waft up like a “bouquet of smells” that guides the way — unwittingly, but surely — to our blood vessel. The labrum then pierces the vessel and serves as a straw.

UC Davis post-doctoral researcher Young-Moo Choo, in Leal’s lab, discovered a receptor by dissecting mosquitoes’ mouthparts and genetically testing them. Choo hopes his finding of this receptor, called 4EP, and the discovery of other receptors on the labrum, will help drug companies develop new mosquito repellents.

“First they’d need to find a repellent against the receptors,” said Choo. “Then they’d treat people’s skin with it. When the mosquito tried to penetrate the skin, it would taste or smell something repulsive and fly away.”

Scientists have been trying to figure out the anatomy of the mosquito bite for decades. It’s a job made difficult by the challenge of dissecting mosquitoes’ delicate mouthparts, which tend to fall apart in the hands of beginners. Choo attributed his dissecting abilities to his experience using chopsticks in his native South Korea. Video, powerful microscopes and genetic analyses have helped researchers figure out how the feeding system works.

 

A protective sheath called the labium bends back as a mosquito pushes needle-like mouthparts into human skin.A protective sheath called the labium bends back as a mosquito pushes needle-like mouthparts into human skin. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

 

When a mosquito pierces the skin, a flexible lip-like sheath called the labium scrolls up and stays outside as she pushes in six needle-like parts that scientists refer to as stylets.

Two of these needles, called maxillae, have tiny teeth. The mosquito uses them to saw through the skin. They’re so sharp you can barely feel the mosquito biting you.

“They’re like drill bits,” said Leal.

Another set of needles, the mandibles, hold tissues apart while the mosquito works.

This illustration shows the six needle-like mouthparts that female mosquitoes use to bite us. They use two maxillae (blue) to saw into the skin and two mandibles (yellow) to hold the tissues apart as they saw. They drool saliva into us with the hypopharynx (green) and suck up blood with the labrum (red). This illustration shows the six needle-like mouthparts that female mosquitoes use to bite us. They use two maxillae (blue) to saw into the skin and two mandibles (yellow) to hold the tissues apart as they saw. They drool saliva into us with the hypopharynx (green) and suck up blood with the labrum (red). (Teodros Hailye/KQED, based on research by Young-Moo Choo and colleagues)

In 2012, scientists at the Pasteur Institute in France filmed what happened once a mosquito proboscis had penetrated through mouse skin. The video shows the sharp-tipped labrum needle probing under the mouse’s skin, then piercing a vessel and sucking blood from it.

The labrum is shaped like a gutter. In order to become a straw it actually needs another mouthpart to lay over it. That mouthpart, called the hypopharynx, serves a dual purpose, as it also allows the mosquito to drool saliva into us.

 

When a female mosquito feeds, she separates the water from the red blood cells and squeezes it out through her rear end to make room for more blood.When a female mosquito feeds, she separates the water from the red blood cells and squeezes it out through her rear end to make room for more blood. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

As a mosquito’s gut fills up with blood, she separates the water in the blood from the red blood cells and squeezes it out through her rear end.

“She does that to concentrate the red blood cells,” said Luckhart. “The red blood cells provide a large protein component.”

By squeezing water out, she can fit five to ten times more blood inside her.

The sixth needle — called the hypopharynx — drips saliva into us which contains chemicals that keep our blood flowing.

“Your blood tends to coagulate immediately upon contact with the air,” said Leal. “They spit some chemicals so the blood doesn’t coagulate.”

The common house mosquito in California (Culex pipiens) can transmit West Nile virus by biting infected birds, then biting humans. The common house mosquito in California (Culex pipiens) can transmit West Nile virus by biting infected birds, then biting humans. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

Mosquito saliva also makes our blood vessels dilate, blocks our immune response and lubricates the proboscis. And it causes us to develop itchy welts, and serves as a conduit for dangerous viruses and parasites.

“Infected mosquitoes spit highly variable doses, anywhere from one infectious virion to 10,000,” said UC Davis virologist Lark Coffey, referring to virus particles. “The number of virions needed to productively infect mice can be as low as one. In theory, one might be enough to cause diseases like dengue or West Nile.”

It only takes eight to 20 early-stage malaria organisms to cause the disease.

“Within 20 minutes they make it to the human liver,” said Luckhart. “It’s a very fast process.”

The results of that speedy delivery are deadly. Malaria sickened more than 300 million people in 2015, and killed roughly 635,000, mostly children under the age of five and pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa.

“It’s probably an underestimate,” said UC Davis medical entomologist Gregory Lanzaro, “because reporting is terrible.”

Dengue fever, a disease transmitted by striped black and white mosquitoes called Aedes aegypti, is estimated to make almost 400 million people sick with jabbing joint pain each year, including a recent outbreak in Hawaii that sickened 260.

Aedes aegypti mosquitoes transmit the viruses that cause Zika and dengue. They bite during the day and can lay their eggs in as little as a bottle-cap-full of water.Aedes aegypti mosquitoes transmit the viruses that cause Zika and dengue. They bite during the day and can lay their eggs in as little as a bottle cap full of water. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

Scientists also believe that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are the main culprit for more than 350 confirmed cases of congenital malformations associated with the Zika virus in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco. Since last October, an unusually high number of babies have been born there with small heads and a host of health problems like convulsions and persistent crying suspected of being caused by a Zika virus infection early in their mother’s pregnancy.

“We don’t yet know these babies’ life expectancy,” said Dr. Regina Ramos, who cares for these babies at the University of Pernambuco’s Oswaldo Cruz Hospital and participated via Skype in a symposium on Zika at UC Davis on May 26.

Aedes aegypti mosquitoes arrived in California in 2013, to the town of Clovis, near Fresno, and they’ve since been found in pockets throughout California, including Hayward and San Mateo. No locally transmitted cases of Zika have occurred in the continental U.S., though three babies with malformations associated to the virus have been born to mothers who contracted the disease elsewhere.

Mosquitoes don’t get anything out of making us sick ― they just incidentally pass germs onto us. In fact, researchers have found that some viruses started out as mosquito-only viruses. This isn’t hard to believe, as mosquitoes developed 200 million years before humans.

“As mosquitoes evolved the habit of drinking blood, some viruses have tracked that evolutionary path and become human-vectored viruses,” said microbiologist Shannon Bennett, chief of science at the California Academy of Sciences.

 

How Mosquitoes Use Six Needles to Suck Your Blood

Seen up close, the anatomy of a mosquito bite is terrifying. The most dangerous animal in the world uses six needle-like mouthparts to saw into our skin, tap a blood vessel and sometimes leave a dangerous parting gift.

Posted by Deep Look • PBS on Thursday, July 12, 2018

 

New Self-Healing Concrete Uses Fungus To Fix Cracks

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USING FUNGI TO FIX BRIDGES

Assistant professor Congrui Jin (center) with two Binghamton University graduate students from the Mechanical Engineering Department. Image Credit: Jonathan Cohen.

Binghamton University researchers have been working on a self-healing concrete that uses a specific type of fungi as a healing agent.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC88GhAiXgk?showinfo=1&controls=1&modestbranding=1&portrait=0&rel=0&enablejsapi=1&origin=https:%2F%2Fwww.binghamton.edu]

America’s crumbling infrastructure has been a topic of ongoing discussion in political debates and campaign rallies. The problem of aging bridges and increasingly dangerous roads is one that has been well documented and there seems to be a consensus from both democrats and republicans that something must be done.

However, spending on infrastructure improvement has continually gone down. The New York Times reported in 2016, based on a report for the Bureau of Economic Analysis, that “in the 1950s and ’60s, federal, state and local governments were spending twice as much on the nation’s public infrastructure, relative to the size of the economy, as they are today.”

The hesitancy to invest in America’s infrastructure may come from a number of sources, but the fact remains that most want something to be done before the consequences are too severe.

Binghamton University assistant professor Congrui Jin has been working on this problem since 2013, and recently published her paper “Interactions of fungi with concrete: significant importance for bio-based self-healing concrete” in the academic journal Construction & Building Materials.

This research is the first application of fungi for self-healing concrete, a low-cost, pollution-free and sustainable approach.

New Self-Healing Concrete Uses Fungus To Fix Cracks

New self-healing concrete uses fungus to fix cracks.

Posted by Hashem Al-Ghaili on Thursday, July 5, 2018

Why is infrastructure crumbling?

Jin’s studies have looked specifically at concrete and found that the problem stems from the smallest of cracks in the concrete.

“Without proper treatment, cracks tend to progress further and eventually require costly repair,” said Jin. “If micro-cracks expand and reach the steel reinforcement, not only the concrete will be attacked, but also the reinforcement will be corroded, as it is exposed to water, oxygen, possibly CO2 and chlorides, leading to structural failure.”

These cracks can cause huge and sometimes unseen problems for infrastructure. One potentially critical example is the case of nuclear power plants that may use concrete for radiation shielding.

What can be done?

While remaking a structure would replace the aging concrete, this would only be a short-term fix until more cracks again spring up. Jin wanted to see if there was a way to fix the concrete permanently.

“This idea was originally inspired by the miraculous ability of the human body to heal itself of cuts, bruises and broken bones,” said Jin. “For the damaged skins and tissues, the host will take in nutrients that can produce new substitutes to heal the damaged parts.”

Jin worked with associate professor Ning Zhang from Rutgers University, and professor Guangwen Zhou and associate professor David Davies from Binghamton University with support from the Research Foundation for the State University of New York’s Sustainable Community Transdisciplinary Area of Excellence Program. Together, the team set out to find a way to heal concrete.

The team found an unusual answer, a fungus called Trichoderma reesei.

When this fungus is mixed with concrete, it originally lies dormant — until the first crack appears.

“The fungal spores, together with nutrients, will be placed into the concrete matrix during the mixing process. When cracking occurs, water and oxygen will find their way in. With enough water and oxygen, the dormant fungal spores will germinate, grow and precipitate calcium carbonate to heal the cracks,” explained Jin.

“When the cracks are completely filled and ultimately no more water or oxygen can enter inside, the fungi will again form spores. As the environmental conditions become favorable in later stages, the spores could be wakened again.”

The research is still in fairly early stages with the biggest issue being the survivability of the fungus within the harsh environment of concrete. However, Jin is hopeful that with further adjustments the Trichoderma reesei will be able to effectively fill the cracks.

“There are still significant challenges to bring an efficient self-healing product to the concrete market. In my opinion, further investigation in alternative microorganisms such as fungi and yeasts for the application of self-healing concrete becomes of great potential importance,” said Jin

 

 

Voyage into the world of atoms

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This animation shows the structure of matter at smaller and smaller scales. Zooming into a human hair, we pass through hair cells, fibril structures, keratin molecules, carbon atoms, nuclei, neutrons, protons, and finally quarks.

The Standard Model explains how the basic building blocks of matter interact, governed by four fundamental forces. Find out more: http://home.cern/…/physi…/standard-model

Voyage into the world of atoms

This animation shows the structure of matter at smaller and smaller scales. Zooming into a human hair, we pass through hair cells, fibril structures, keratin molecules, carbon atoms, nuclei, neutrons, protons, and finally quarks.The Standard Model explains how the basic building blocks of matter interact, governed by four fundamental forces. Find out more: http://home.cern/about/physics/standard-modelVideo: Daniel Dominguez/CERN

Posted by CERN on Sunday, April 15, 2018