quarta-feira, 21 de maio de 2014

Compound reverses symptoms of Alzheimer's disease in mice

 


A molecular compound developed by Saint Louis University scientists restored learning, memory and appropriate behavior in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, according to findings in the May issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. The molecule also reduced inflammation in the part of the brain responsible for learning and memory. (stock image)

A molecular compound developed by Saint Louis University scientists restored learning, memory and appropriate behavior in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, according to findings in the May issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. The molecule also reduced inflammation in the part of the brain responsible for learning and memory.

The paper, authored by a team of scientists led by Susan Farr, Ph.D., research professor of geriatrics at Saint Louis University, is the second mouse study that supports the potential therapeutic value of an antisense compound in treating Alzheimer's disease in humans.

"It reversed learning and memory deficits and brain inflammation in mice that are genetically engineered to model Alzheimer's disease," Farr said. "Our current findings suggest that the compound, which is called antisense oligonucleotide (OL-1), is a potential treatment for Alzheimer's disease."

Farr cautioned that the experiment was conducted in a mouse model. Like any drug, before an antisense compound could be tested in human clinical trials, toxicity tests need to be completed.

Antisense is a strand of molecules that bind to messenger RNA, launching a cascade of cellular events that turns off a certain gene.

In this case, OL-1 blocks the translation of RNA, which triggers a process that keeps excess amyloid beta protein from being produced. The specific antisense significantly decreased the overexpression of a substance called amyloid beta protein precursor, which normalized the amount of amyloid beta protein in the body. Excess amyloid beta protein is believed to be partially responsible for the formation of plaque in the brain of patients who have Alzheimer's disease.

Scientists tested OL-1 in a type of mouse that overexpresses a mutant form of the human amyloid beta precursor gene. Previously they had tested the substance in a mouse model that has a natural mutation causing it to overproduce mouse amyloid beta. Like people who have Alzheimer's disease, both types of mice have age-related impairments in learning and memory, elevated levels of amyloid beta protein that stay in the brain and increased inflammation and oxidative damage to the hippocampus -- the part of the brain responsible for learning and memory.

"To be effective in humans, OL-1 would need to be effective at suppressing production of human amyloid beta protein," Farr said.

Scientists compared the mice that were genetically engineered to overproduce human amyloid beta protein with a wild strain, which served as the control. All of the wild strain received random antisense, while about half of the genetically engineered mice received random antisense and half received OL-1.

The mice were given a series of tests designed to measure memory, learning and appropriate behavior, such as going through a maze, exploring an unfamiliar location and recognizing an object.

Scientists found that learning and memory improved in the genetically engineered mice that received OL-1 compared to the genetically engineered mice that received random antisense. Learning and memory were the same among genetically engineered mice that received OL-1 and wild mice that received random antisense.

They also tested the effect of administering the drug through the central nervous system, so it crossed the blood brain barrier to enter the brain directly, and of giving it through a vein in the tail, so it circulated through the bloodstream in the body. They found where the drug was injected had little effect on learning and memory.

"Our findings reinforced the importance of amyloid beta protein in the Alzheimer's disease process. They suggest that an antisense that targets the precursor to amyloid beta protein is a potential therapy to explore to reversing symptoms of Alzheimer's disease," Farr said.


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Saint Louis University Medical Center. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Susan A. Farr, Michelle A. Erickson, Michael L. Niehoff, William A. Banks, John E. Morley. Central and Peripheral Administration of Antisense Oligonucleotide Targeting Amyloid-β Protein Precursor Improves Learning and Memory and Reduces Neuroinflammatory Cytokines in Tg2576 (AβPPswe) Mice. Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 2014 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-131883

15 Ways to Be a Natural Beauty

 

 

Beauty

Adults who lose weight at any age could enjoy improved cardiovascular health

 


Weight loss at any age in adulthood is worthwhile because it could yield long-term heart and vascular benefits, suggests new research published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.

The findings are from a study examining the impact of lifelong patterns of weight change on cardiovascular risk factors in a group of British men and women followed since birth in March 1946. They showed that the longer the exposure to excess body fat (adiposity) in adulthood the greater the cardiovascular-related problems in later life, including increased thickness of the carotid artery walls, raised systolic blood pressure, and increased risk of diabetes.

For the first time, the findings also indicate that adults who drop a BMI category -- from obese to overweight, or from overweight to normal -- at any time during adult life, even if they regain weight, can reduce these cardiovascular manifestations.

The study used data from 1273 men and women from the UK Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development (NSHD). Participants were classified as normal weight, overweight, or obese in childhood and at 36, 43, 53, and 60-64 years of age. Cardiovascular phenotyping between the ages of 60 and 64 years with carotid intima media thickness (cIMT; a surrogate marker for cardiovascular events) was used to assess the effect of lifetime exposure to adiposity on cardiovascular risk factors.

According to lead author Professor John Deanfield from University College London (UCL) in the UK, "Our study is unique because it followed individuals for such a long time, more than 60 years, and allowed us to assess the effect of modest, real-life changes in adiposity. Our findings suggest that losing weight at any age can result in long-term cardiovascular health benefits, and support public health strategies and lifestyle modifications that help individuals who are overweight or obese to lose weight at all ages."

Commenting on the study, Elizabeth Cespedes and Frank Hu from the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, USA, write, "Although it is encouraging that even transitory weight loss during adulthood has cardiovascular benefits, only 2% of participants in the present study had a sustained reduction in BMI category in adulthood, underscoring the importance of weight maintenance and prevention of weight gain as priorities for public health programming and policy. Improvements in diet and increases in physical activity are crucial levers of long-term weight maintenance and prevention of weight gain in middle-age and early adulthood. Overweight individuals might have even greater health benefit from lifestyle changes such as increased physical activity than do normal weight individuals. The results of this study affirm a continued emphasis on public health policies that enable lifestyle changes to achieve and, especially, to maintain a healthy BMI."

They add that, "Ideally, future research will address long-term patterns of intentional versus unintentional weight loss, the means to achieve weight loss, and the weight loss maintenance necessary to reduce cardiovascular endpoints."


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by The Lancet. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Marietta Charakida, Tauseef Khan, William Johnson, Nick Finer, John Woodside, Peter H Whincup, Naveed Sattar, Diana Kuh, Rebecca Hardy, John Deanfield. Lifelong patterns of BMI and cardiovascular phenotype in individuals aged 60–64 years in the 1946 British birth cohort study: an epidemiological study. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, 2014; DOI: 10.1016/S2213-8587(14)70103-2

Category: Improving Sleep In Arthritis

 

Pain is always a big hindrance for having a good rest or an adequate sleep. Conditions such as arthritis can greatly affect sleep quality and those who do not get the right amount of sleep will most likely have ill health. How does arthritis and its symptoms affect sleep either day or night?
Arthritis is one of the many diseases out there that presents common problems when sleeping.

These problems include waking up often times at night, struggling to sleep, waking up very early in the morning, and feeling tired after waking up. Sleeping is supposed to freshen you up but if you have arthritis you will not feel that your energy has been restored. You must put in mind that if you have a ruthless sleep pattern then you are most likely suffering from these problems.

If you have sleep problems then you might be experiencing fatigue all the time and this factor alone can worsen your arthritis as well as your overall mood and concentration. Muscle tension and more pain are just some of the things you will get from lack of sleep. How can you make sleeping a wonderful experience even when you have arthritis?

There are so many thing that you can do to improvise sleep. You can start by keeping track of your sleeping habits by documenting them in a diary or notebook. Try to avoiding sleeping during the day time so that you can establish a normal or regular sleep pattern. Avoid drinking coffee in the afternoon or at night and don’t drink or eat too much before sleeping. Stay away from alcohol and do not smoke (if you are a smoker) at night or during bedtime.

Sometimes you might not realize it but your mattress or pillows are the culprit behind your sleep problems. Check if they are comfortable enough and I not then better change them with new and snug ones. Additionally, exercise is an important element for getting that sleep you need. It keeps your body well circulated. However, put in mind that you must not exercise three hours before sleeping. You can also take a warm and relaxing bath before heading to bed.

Medications can also be answers towards getting that good rest with arthritis. NSAID or non-steroidal anti inflammatory drugs and painkillers like Paracetamol can help you minimize pain. Sedatives such as Zopiclone and Temazepam and anxiolytics like Alprazolam can provide quick and temporary sleep. Nonetheless, if you take these drugs you should take note of their side effects which are reasons why you cannot use the same medication for a long period.

There are also herbal supplements that can contribute to the induction of sleep. Herbal therapy used for arthritis has become popular treatment methods because of lesser side effects and are considered as safe and effective methods. With the right therapy and medication, your arthritis can be well taken cared and your pain problems can go away. Without pain anymore, you can already  have that long, quality sleep you have longed for .

Filosofia

 

 

Filosofia em português brasileiro

Brazil

 

Brazil - A Users' Guide

Rio de Janeiro Travel Guide

 

 

Rio de Janeiro- Brazil

The Hidden Street of Porto Alegre Brazil is Probably the Most Beautiful Street in the World

 

 

hidden-street3

Rua Gonçalo de Carvalho has been called the most beautiful street in the world, but we feel it might be more appropriate to claim it is the best camouflaged street in the world. This magnificent street in Porto Alegre is surrounded by rosewood trees which have grown to tower over the streets closing above the street to completely obscure it from view. At street level, you feel as if you are driving in a long tunnel of greenery, the light dimmed by the thick branches and leaves above. From the sky, the street appears as a forest of trees winding through the city, with no glimpse there are cars, people, and activity lurking below.

It is rare in any major city to see this volume of trees, but it is even more unusual to see them covering a street instead of isolated in a park. Beauty provided by Mother Nature and preserved by the citizens of Porto Alegre.

Photo above Photo by Adalberto Cavalcanti.

hidden-street2

Photo by Adalberto Cavalcanti.

hidden-street1

Photo by Hostel Portotche.

hidden-street

Photo by Roberto Filho.

Hybrid electric vehicles: Logged driving route can reduce energy consumption by 10 percent

 

Scientists at Chalmers University of Technology have come up with a method to automatically identify recurrent travel routes from logged driving data and compute optimal control rules for these. Moreover, Viktor Larsson has developed methods to make the calculations more efficient in terms of computation time and memory. The strategy can reduce fuel consumption by up to 10 percent compared to conventional methods.

For long distance driving, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles use the internal combustion engine more than necessary. At Chalmers University of Technology, a method has been developed to make the car remember the commuter routes and thereby make optimal use of the battery. The strategy can reduce fuel consumption by up to 10 percent compared to conventional methods.

Plug-in hybrids can reduce our dependence on fossil fuels significantly, but for longer trips both electricity and gasoline or diesel are still needed to travel the entire distance. The common solution today is that the internal combustion engine takes over when the battery is depleted of energy -- a strategy that provides low energy efficiency in the long run.

By scheduling the use of the battery, fuel consumption can be decreased considerably for some trips. However, in such cases the car must have prior knowledge of the route to be traversed. Viktor Larsson from Chalmers University of Technology has developed a method that allows the car itself to identify recurrent routes and pre-compute when the battery should be used, and when running the car on petrol is more energy efficient. The method can be implemented in vehicles that are already in production, using existing technology. Viktor Larsson explains how it could work:

"After each trip, the vehicle can upload driving statistics to a server that identifies recurrent routes and calculates an optimal strategy for the energy management. The strategy is transferred to the car. For the next trip, the car can either try to identify the route completely by itself or ask the driver to verify if any of the most common routes will be driven."

It is also possible that the system could be available in an app on the driver's smartphone, instead of running on a server.

During the last year, Viktor Larsson has conducted the research in collaboration with Volvo Car Corporation, and has developed features that have been simulated and tested in an actual vehicle -- the V60 Plug-in Hybrid.

"In the simulations we made, we saw that fuel consumption could be reduced by up to 10 percent compared to the strategy currently in use," says Viktor Larsson.


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Chalmers University of Technology. The original article was written by Emilia Lundgren. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

The brain: Key to a better computer

 

"Today's computers are wonderful at bookkeeping and solving scientific problems often described by partial differential equations, but they're horrible at just using common sense, seeing new patterns, dealing with ambiguity and making smart decisions," said John Wagner, cognitive sciences manager at Sandia National Laboratories.

In contrast, the brain is "proof that you can have a formidable computer that never stops learning, operates on the power of a 20-watt light bulb and can last a hundred years," he said.

Although brain-inspired computing is in its infancy, Sandia has included it in a long-term research project whose goal is future computer systems. Neuro-inspired computing seeks to develop algorithms that would run on computers that function more like a brain than a conventional computer.

"We're evaluating what the benefits would be of a system like this and considering what types of devices and architectures would be needed to enable it," said microsystems researcher Murat Okandan.

Sandia's facilities and past research make the laboratories a natural for this work: its Microsystems & Engineering Science Applications (MESA) complex, a fabrication facility that can build massively interconnected computational elements; its computer architecture group and its long history of designing and building supercomputers; strong cognitive neurosciences research, with expertise in such areas as brain-inspired algorithms; and its decades of work on nationally important problems, Wagner said.

New technology often is spurred by a particular need. Early conventional computing grew from the need for neutron diffusion simulations and weather prediction. Today, big data problems and remote autonomous and semiautonomous systems need far more computational power and better energy efficiency.

Neuro-inspired computers would be ideal for robots, remote sensors

Neuro-inspired computers would be ideal for operating such systems as unmanned aerial vehicles, robots and remote sensors, and solving big data problems, such as those the cyber world faces and analyzing transactions whizzing around the world, "looking at what's going where and for what reason," Okandan said.

Such computers would be able to detect patterns and anomalies, sensing what fits and what doesn't. Perhaps the computer wouldn't find the entire answer, but could wade through enormous amounts of data to point a human analyst in the right direction, Okandan said.

"If you do conventional computing, you are doing exact computations and exact computations only. If you're looking at neurocomputation, you are looking at history, or memories in your sort of innate way of looking at them, then making predictions on what's going to happen next," he said. "That's a very different realm."

Modern computers are largely calculating machines with a central processing unit and memory that stores both a program and data. They take a command from the program and data from the memory to execute the command, one step at a time, no matter how fast they run. Parallel and multicore computers can do more than one thing at a time but still use the same basic approach and remain very far removed from the way the brain routinely handles multiple problems concurrently.

The architecture of neuro-inspired computers would be fundamentally different, uniting processing and storage in a network architecture "so the pieces that are processing the data are the same pieces that are storing the data, and the data will be processed with all nodes functioning concurrently," Wagner said. "It won't be a serial step-by-step process; it'll be this network processing everything all at the same time. So it will be very efficient and very quick."

Unlike today's computers, neuro-inspired computers would inherently use the critical notion of time. "The things that you represent are not just static shots, but they are preceded by something and there's usually something that comes after them," creating episodic memory that links what happens when. This requires massive interconnectivity and a unique way of encoding information in the activity of the system itself, Okandan said.

More neurosciences research opens more possibilities for brain-inspired computing

Each neuron in a neural structure can have connections coming in from about 10,000 neurons, which in turn can connect to 10,000 other neurons in a dynamic way. Conventional computer transistors, on the other hand, connect on average to four other transistors in a static pattern.

Computer design has drawn from neuroscience before, but an explosion in neuroscience research in recent years opens more possibilities. While it's far from a complete picture, Okandan said what's known offers "more guidance in terms of how neural systems might be representing data and processing information" and clues about replicating those tasks in a different structure to address problems impossible to solve on today's systems.

Brain-inspired computing isn't the same as artificial intelligence, although a broad definition of artificial intelligence could encompass it.

"Where I think brain-inspired computing can start differentiating itself is where it really truly tries to take inspiration from biosystems, which have evolved over generations to be incredibly good at what they do and very robust against a component failure. They are very energy efficient and very good at dealing with real-world situations. Our current computers are very energy inefficient, they are very failure-prone due to components failing and they can't make sense of complex data sets," Okandan said.

Computers today do required computations without any sense of what the data is -- it's just a representation chosen by a programmer.

"Whereas if you think about neuro-inspired computing systems, the structure itself will have an internal representation of the datastream that it's receiving and previous history that it's seen, so ideally it will be able to make predictions on what the future states of that datastream should be, and have a sense for what the information represents." Okandan said.

He estimates a project dedicated to brain-inspired computing will develop early examples of a new architecture in the first several years, but said higher levels of complexity could take decades, even with the many efforts around the world working toward the same goal.

"The ultimate question is, 'What are the physical things in the biological system that let you think and act, what's the core essence of intelligence and thought?' That might take just a bit longer," he said.

Understanding biomechanics behind amazing ant strength opens door to advanced robotics

 


To better understand the strengths and upper limits of the ant’s neck, the researchers reverse-engineered the biomechanics by developing 3-D models of the of the ant’s internal and external anatomy.

A recent study into the biomechanics of the necks of ants -- a common insect that can amazingly lift objects many times heavier than its own body -- might unlock one of nature's little mysteries and, quite possibly, open the door to advancements in robotic engineering.

A small group of engineers at The Ohio State University combined laboratory testing and computational modeling conducted at the Ohio Supercomputer Center to determine the relationship between the mechanical function, structural design and material properties of the Allegheny mound ant (Formica exsectoides). Their results were recently published in an article, "The exoskeletal structure and tensile loading behavior of an ant neck joint," in the Journal of Biomechanics.

The study focused on the ant's neck -- the single joint of soft tissue that bridges the stiff exoskeleton of the ant's head and thorax. When an ant carries food or any other object, the neck joint supports the full weight of the load.

"Loads are lifted with the mouthparts, transferred through the neck joint to the thorax, and distributed over six legs and tarsi that anchor to the supporting surface," explained Carlos Castro, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Ohio State. "While previous research has explored attachment mechanisms of the tarsi (feet), little is known about the relation between the mechanical function and the structural design and material properties of the ant."

To better understand the strengths and upper limits of the ant's neck, the researchers reverse-engineered the biomechanics by developing 3-D models of the of the ant's internal and external anatomy. The models were created by importing X-ray cross-section images (microCT) of ant specimens into a modeling program (ScanIPþFE) that assembled the segments and converted them into a mesh frame model of more than 6.5 million elements.

The model then was loaded into a finite element analysis program (Abaqus), an application that creates accurate simulations of complex geometries and forces, and the data was processed on the powerful Oakley Cluster, an array of 8,300 processor cores (Intel Xeon) at the Ohio Supercomputer Center.

The simulations were run in conjunction with lab experiments that used a centrifuge to measure changes in the ants' anatomies under a range of calculated loads. The experiments revealed that the neck joints could withstand loads of about 5,000 times the ant's body weight, and that the ant's neck-joint structure produced the highest strength when its head was aligned straight, as opposed to turned to either side.

"Our results accurately pinpoint the stress concentration that leads to neck failure and identify the soft-to-hard material interface at the neck-to-head transition as the location of failure," said Castro. "The design and structure of this interface is critical for the performance of the neck joint. The unique interface between hard and soft materials likely strengthens the adhesion and may be a key structural design feature that enables the large load capacity of the neck joint."

The simulations confirmed the joint's directional strength and, consistent with the experimental results, indicated that the critical point for failure of the neck joint is at the neck-to-head transition, where soft membrane meets the hard exoskeleton.

"The neck joint [of the ant] is a complex and highly integrated mechanical system. Efforts to understand the structure-function relationship in this system will contribute to the understanding of the design paradigms for optimized exoskeleton mechanisms," said former Ohio State student Vienny N. Nguyen in her 2012 master's thesis on this research. Nguyen, now a robotics engineer at Johnson Space Center, earlier worked on the project under the supervision of Blaine Lilly, an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Ohio State. Nguyen and Lilly are co-authors with Castro on the journal paper.

"As we look to the future of human-assistive devices and ultra-light robotics," she said, "the development of 3-dimensional models for visual analysis and loading and kinematic simulation will also serve as tools for evaluating and comparing the functional morphology of multiple species and types of joints."

This project was supported by funding from Ohio State's Institute for Materials Research and Nguyen's National Science Foundation graduate research fellowship.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

Why wait for the future when many of today’s technologies look as though they got here in a time machine? Here are 10 real-life technologies that come from the future.

A couple of clarification points before we get started. By real-world, I mean any kind of technology that actually, physically exists (no vapourware, no conceptual designs, etc.). It needs to be functional, whether it be a fully fledged product, or a working prototype in the lab. And second, we’re strictly going for form over function, here. A futuristic appearance in this case means everything.

Okay, let’s take a trip to the next century and beyond.

1. Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit

The first stealth bomber was developed back in the 1980s. That's some 30 years ago — and it still looks like something that Buck Rogers should be pimpin'.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

Credit USAF.

The B-2 is considered a first-strike weapon (at least that’s what the enemy thinks of it), and it can carry upwards of 16 B83 nuclear bombs. Its sleek, innovative design allows it to penetrate dense anti-aircraft defences.

And if you think that’s crazy futuristic, consider the U.S. Navy’s X-47B, which just became the first unmanned stealth aircraft to land on an aircraft carrier:

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

2. The Oracle AC72 Catamaran

Priced at $10 million apiece, this catamaran is the pride and joy of Larry Ellison. These badboys are used in the America’s Cup — and they’re revolutionizing the sport. The radical yacht features a scrim of netting stretched between twin knifelike hulls, each 72 feet long, but just a few feet wide. Connecting the two blades are girder-like crossbeams.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

But the pièce de résistance is the rigid wing which towers 13 stories in height, serving as the boat’s veritable engine. When moving at full tilt — often at speeds twice the windspeed — the catamaran appears to fly through the air. Which is actually kind of the point.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

The boats are so expensive that only four teams could opt into the challenge.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

And they’re also dangerous. Like, really dangerous. Earlier this year, Olympic gold medalist Andrew Simpson was killed during a capsize of the AC72 catamaran while training for the America’s Cup in San Francisco Bay.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

Credit: Guilain GRENIER/ ORACLE TEAM USA

3. NASA’s Xenon-Ion Engine

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

If you were to imagine what a “xenon-ion space engine” was supposed to look like, you would probably picture something that looks exactly like this. This functional prototype sits in a vacuum chamber where it’s being tested at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. It could be used by 2019 to propel an asteroid-retrieving robotic probe.

4

NASA shows off a prototype of its new xenon-ion engine

In 2019, NASA will send out a robotic probe to retrieve an asteroid. And it’ll be this little piece … Read more

4. Boston Dynamics’ PETMAN Humanoid Robot

The Department of Defense asked Boston Dynamics to create a humanoid robot to test the performance of protective clothing designed for hazardous environments. Instead, they created something that will haunt us in our nightmares forever.

4

Meet the Pentagon's latest robotic abomination: ATLAS

No, it's not a souped-up version of Robby the Robot — it's ATLAS, DARPA's latest… Read more

5. Google’s Server Farm

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

All images: Google.

Steven Levy from Wired puts this modern marvel this way:

This is what makes Google Google: its physical network, its thousands of fiber miles, and those many thousands of servers that, in aggregate, add up to the mother of all clouds. This multibillion-dollar infrastructure allows the company to index 20 billion web pages a day. To handle more than 3 billion daily search queries. To conduct millions of ad auctions in real time. To offer free email storage to 425 million Gmail users. To zip millions of YouTube videos to users every day. To deliver search results before the user has finished typing the query. In the near future, when Google releases the wearable computing platform called Glass, this infrastructure will power its visual search results.

4

This computer took 40 minutes to simulate one second of brain activity

And it required 82,944 processors, to do it — showing that we're still quite a ways off from… Read more

7. Virgin America’s Plane Cabins

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

This is the interior of the Airbus A320. But you could be forgiven for thinking it was the inside of a spaceship headed for the Gamma Quadrant. (Photos: Virgin America)

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

 

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

8. Dyson’s 10-inch Air Multiplier

First off, anything with the word 'Dyson' in it has to be cool. Second, how the hell does this bladeless fan actually work?

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

How Stuff Works explains:

As you might imagine, there are a few scientific principles at play here. There's also an electronic element. While the tube doesn't have any blades inside it, the pedestal of the fan contains a brushless electric motor that takes in air and feeds it into the circular tube. Air flows along the inside of the device until it reaches a slit inside the tube. This provides the basic airflow that creates the breeze you'd feel if you stood in front of the fan. Dyson claims that the Air Multiplier generates a breeze with 15 times more air than what the device actually takes in.

According to Dyson, the breeze generated by the Air Multiplier is more consistent and steady than one from a standard fan with blades. Since there are no rotating blades, the breeze from the fan doesn't buffet you with short gusts of air. [h/t Mark McAllister]

9. The Vestas SailRocket

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

Don’t be fooled by the name. There are no rockets used to power this thing — it opts instead for wind which it captures by using a highly engineered sail.

10 Real Technologies That Look Insanely Futuristic

Late last year the VSR2 set the work record for 500-meter sailing speed by reaching 54.1 knots (62.2 mph). But during an unofficial run it reached 65.8 knots (74.6 mph). (Photo: Jonathan Torgovnik)

10. Levitron World Stage Levitating Globe

This thing belongs on a starship captain’s desk.

Top image: USAF.

70% da população dos EUA está infectada com HPV

 

AFP

 

Remédio contra HPV

Cerca de 70% dos americanos estão infectados com alguma cepa do vírus do papiloma humano (HPV), entre as quais apenas um pequeno número é responsável pelo desenvolvimento de algum tipo de câncer, segundo estudo divulgado nesta terça-feira.

Os cientistas detectaram 109 cepas deste vírus, das 148 conhecidas, em amostras de tecidos provenientes da pele, vagina, cavidade bucal e intestinos de adultos saudáveis, segundo trabalhos apresentados na conferência da Sociedade Americana de Microbiologia, celebrada em Boston (Massachusetts, nordeste).

Apenas 4 dos 103 homens e mulheres com DNA tornado público nos bancos de dados do governo federal apresentaram um dos dois tipos de HPV conhecidos por provocar a maior parte dos cânceres de colo de útero, garganta e também verrugas genitais.

"A fauna microbiana do HPV em pessoas com boa saúde é surpreendentemente mais vasta e complexa do que pensávamos", afirmou Yingfei Ma, pesquisadora da faculdade de Medicina de Langone, da Universidade de Nova York e principal autora do estudo.

"São necessários mais controles e pesquisas para determinar como as cepas destes papilomas que não causam câncer interagem com as cepas responsáveis por tumores cancerosos, os genótipos 16 e 18, e explicar porque estas cepas causam câncer", acrescentou.

Enquanto a maior parte destes vírus parece até agora inofensiva e permanece "adormecida" durante anos, sua presença abundante no organismo sugere a existência de um delicado equilíbrio, no qual as cepas virais se neutralizam reciprocamente e evitam que outras, mais patogênicas, se multipliquem de forma incontrolável, explicaram os pesquisadores.

As infecções por estes vírus parecem acontecer por meio do contato com a pele. O HPV continua sendo a fonte de infecção venérea mais frequente nos Estados Unidos. Segundo infectologistas, quase todos os homens e mulheres contraíram algum subtipo em um momento da vida.

Os resultados da pesquisa, disseram, lançam luz sobre as fragilidades dos exames atuais para detectar o HPV, desenvolvidos para identificar apenas uma dezena de cepas, mais vinculada ao desenvolvimento do câncer de útero.

Promising cancer drug data helps AstraZeneca in Pfizer fight

 

The logo of AstraZeneca is seen on medication packages in a pharmacy in London April 28, 2014. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

 

(Reuters) - New data showing an experimental AstraZeneca lung cancer drug shrank tumors in more than half of patients gave the British group fresh ammunition to argue that Pfizer's takeover offer undervalues it substantially.

Britain's second-biggest drugmaker said on Thursday the strong results were among a raft of recent updates that showed accelerating progress in its pipeline of experimental medicines.

AstraZeneca has rejected a $106 billion approach from U.S. rival Pfizer, arguing that it has a bright independent future due to its promising line-up of new drugs. Pfizer is widely expected to return with a sweetened offer in coming days.

"We continue to build our pipeline and we are encouraged by the progress in the development of key assets," Chief Executive Pascal Soriot said in a statement.

Its new lung cancer drug, known as AZD9291, targets a genetic mutation that helps tumors evade current treatments. AstraZeneca believes it could sell as much as $3 billion a year.

Results from an early-stage Phase I trial of the drug, released late on Wednesday, showed AZD9291 shrank tumors in 51 percent of patients. Tumors shrank in 64 percent of patients found to have the mutation, known as T790M, which develops in about half of lung cancers that become resistant to drugs known as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors.

Savvas Neophytou, an analyst at brokerage Panmure Gordon, said the results were impressive and "AstraZeneca’s management is right to be excited by the pipeline".

AstraZeneca shares were 0.8 percent higher in slightly lower London market by 1400 GMT.

EGFR drugs, such as Roche's Tarceva and AstraZeneca's own Iressa, are used to treat various solid tumor cancers with mutated or overactive EGFR. Around 15 percent of patients with non-small cell lung cancer, the most common form of the disease, have mutations in the EGFR gene.

But most of them will eventually become resistant to available EGFR inhibitors, said Dr Pasi Janne, professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School in Boston and the study's lead investigator.

"The issue of drug resistance has been the bane of chemotherapy treatment of cancer for decades," Dr Peter Yu, president-elect of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), said during a press conference.

$45 BLN SALES TARGET

AZD9291 is one of several new drugs flagged by AstraZeneca last week in a bid to convince investors of the strength of its experimental pipeline, which includes several innovative cancer drugs, as well as treatments for diabetes, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis.

Overall, the British company forecasts these new products will help its sales rise 75 percent to $45 billion by 2023. [ID:nL6N0NS337]

The Phase I trial for AZD9291, featured ahead of the annual ASCO meeting later this month, involved 199 patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer with EGFR mutations whose disease worsened despite treatment with a current EGFR drug.

The most common side effects seen in the trial included diarrhea and rash, but researchers said the level of toxicity was less severe than is seen with available EGFR inhibitors.

AstraZeneca is currently conducting a Phase 2 study of AZD9291 in patients with the T790M mutation at a daily dose of 80 milligram, which it said could enable accelerated regulatory filing in the second half of next year.

AZD9291 has been granted "breakthrough" status by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a second-line therapy for non-small cell lung cancer. AstraZeneca will also study the drug as an initial treatment for eligible lung cancer patients.

Investors are keen to get a look at other cancer data from AstraZeneca due to be presented at the ASCO meeting.

The company's MEDI4736 has the potential to become one of the first in a new class of drugs known as anti-PDL1 treatments that fight cancer by boosting the immune system. It is initially being tested as a treatment for non-small cell lung cancer and AstraZeneca said data to date had shown "durable clinical activity and acceptable safety".

AstraZeneca has forecast potential peak sales for MEDI4736 of $6.5 billion, including combination therapies.

An AstraZeneca spokeswoman said updated data from trials of MEDI4736 will be presented at the conference at the end of May.

Data from another of the company's experimental cancer drugs, olaparib for ovarian cancer, will be featured at the ASCO meeting. AstraZeneca has forecast peak olaparib sales of $2 billion, compared with consensus analyst estimates of $1.5 billion to $3 billion.

It has also had encouraging results combining olaparib and another drug called cediranib.

(Editing by Tom Pfeiffer and Erica Billingham)

Senado aprova PEC que garante defensorias públicas em todo o país

 

Da Redação

Em duas votações unânimes nesta terça-feira (20), o Senado aprovou a PEC das Defensorias, que fixa prazo de oito anos para que a União, os estados e o Distrito Federal dotem todas as comarcas de defensores públicos. A proposta também amplia a definição de Defensoria Pública na Constituição, classificando-a como instituição permanente e instrumento do regime democrático. Foram 61 votos favoráveis na votação em primeiro turno e 59 votos favoráveis no segundo turno. Não houve votos contrários nem abstenções. A PEC 4/2014 será promulgada pelo Congresso Nacional.

- Hoje entregamos o grande sonho dos defensores públicos de todo o Brasil – afirmou o presidente do Senado, Renan Calheiros, ao apoiar a aprovação da matéria e registrar a presença da presidente da Associação Nacional dos Defensores Públicos, Patrícia Kettermann.

De autoria dos deputados Mauro Benevides (PMDB-CE), Alessandro Molon (PT-RJ) e André Moura (PSC-SE), todos presentes no Plenário do Senado, a PEC determina também que o número de defensores deverá ser proporcional à demanda efetiva pelo serviço e à respectiva população abrangida. Durante o prazo de oito anos, os defensores deverão trabalhar, prioritariamente, nas regiões com maiores índices de exclusão social e de grande concentração de habitantes. Mauro Benevides já exerceu três mandatos de senador e foi presidente do Senado entre 1991 e 1993.

A proposta também amplia a definição de Defensoria Pública na Constituição, classificando-a como instituição permanente e instrumento do regime democrático.

Além da orientação jurídica, fica especificado que cabe à defensoria a promoção dos direitos humanos. Quanto à defesa dos necessitados, o texto da PEC deixa claro que ela abrange os direitos individuais e coletivos, de forma integral e gratuita, seja na via judicial ou extrajudicial.

A unidade, a indivisibilidade e a independência funcional são listadas como princípios institucionais da Defensoria Pública. O texto determina ainda que será aplicado aos defensores, “no que couber”, o artigo da Constituição que trata dos princípios a serem observados na apresentação de um novo projeto de Estatuto da Magistratura pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF).

A Defensoria Pública foi prevista na Constituição de 1988, como forma de assegurar a todos os necessitados o acesso à Justiça. Cabe ao defensor orientar o cidadão, de forma gratuita, em questões e processos judiciais. Apesar de a Constituição ter sido promulgada há 20 anos, a instituição da Defensoria Pública ainda não funciona plenamente no país.

Estudo elaborado pelo Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea), chamado Mapa da Defensoria Pública no Brasil, mostrou que apenas 59% dos cargos de defensor público estão providos, cobrindo 28% das comarcas brasileiras, e que somente 38% dos cargos de defensor público federal estão ocupados, atendendo a só 22% das seções judiciárias.

Quase todos os senadores presentes no Plenário apoiaram e comemoraram a aprovação da PEC. O senador Eduardo Amorim (PSC-SE) lamentou que a Defensoria Pública esteja presente em apenas 28% das comarcas brasileiras. Rodrigo Rollemberg (PSB-DF) afirmou que a nova emenda constitucional vai “garantir justiça para os mais pobres”.

O presidente Renan Calheiros disse que o Senado está dando mais um passo no reconhecimento da importância da Defensoria Pública para a democracia brasileira.

- O Senado valoriza a missão primordial da Defensoria Pública: dar assistência gratuita e de qualidade àqueles que não podem pagar – disse Renan.

Para o presidente do Senado, a aprovação da PEC fortalece as condições para o exercício da atividade do defensor público como agente da transformação social no Brasil.

- O compromisso do Senado é com o fortalecimento das instituições públicas e com a justiça social – acrescentou.

Randolfe Rodrigues (PSOL-AP) disse que os defensores públicos defendem “a parte mais frágil da sociedade, aqueles que não têm recursos”. Para ele, o defensor completa a “função essencial da Justiça prevista na Constituição”. Lúcia Vânia (PSDB-GO) afirmou que a democracia brasileira “está de parabéns”. Vital do Rêgo (PMDB-PB) disse que a aprovação da PEC “faz justiça a quem faz justiça ao povo brasileiro”.

José Pimentel (PT-CE) acredita que a emenda constitucional vai assegurar um defensor público em cada vara da justiça brasileira. Ana Rita (PT-ES) acrescentou que o Congresso estava dando “caráter permanente e definitivo às defensorias públicas”. Paulo Paim (PT-RS) destacou a coragem de Renan Calheiros em pautar a PEC das Defensorias e a PEC da cota para negros no serviço público para votação em Plenário nesta terça-feira (20).

Os seguintes senadores também apoiaram e comemoraram a aprovação da PEC e ressaltaram a importância dos defensores públicos para o país: Cássio Cunha Lima (PSDB-PB), Gim (PTB-DF), Eduardo Braga (PMDB-AM), Eunício Oliveira (PMDB-CE), Sérgio Petecão (PSD-AC), Mário Couto (PSDB-PA), Inácio Arruda (PCdoB-CE), Romero Jucá (PMDB-RR), Humberto Costa (PT-PE), Antônio Carlos Valadares (PSB-SE), Cristovam Buarque (PDT-DF), Lindbergh Farias (PT-RJ), Ana Amélia (PP-RS), Flexa Ribeiro (PSDB-PA), Jader Barbalho (PMDB-PA), Wellington Dias (PT-PI), Ivo Cassol (PP-RO), Pedro Taques (PDT-MT), Jayme Campos (DEM-MT), Anibal Diniz (PT-AC), Benedito de Lira (PP-AL), Paulo Davim (PV-RN), Eduardo Suplicy (PT-SP), entre outros.

Agência Senado

Senado aprova cota para negros em concursos públicos

 

Paola Lima

O Senado aprovou nesta terça-feira (20) a reserva de vagas para negros ou pardos em concursos públicos federais. Em votação simbólica, os senadores aprovaram o Projeto de Lei da Câmara (PLC) 29/2014, que garante aos candidatos negros 20% das vagas de concursos a serem realizados por órgãos da administração pública federal, autarquias, fundações, empresas públicas e sociedades de economia mista controladas pela União.

Durante a votação, o Plenário e as galerias contavam com a presença de deputados e representantes de entidades de defesa da igualdade racial. Para entrar em vigor, a reserva só precisa ser sancionada pela presidente da República, Dilma Rousseff.

Pelo texto, de iniciativa do próprio Poder Executivo, os candidatos deverão se declarar negros ou pardos no ato da inscrição do concurso, conforme o quesito de cor ou raça usado pelo IBGE. Esses candidatos concorrerão em duas listas: a de ampla concorrência e a reservada. Uma vez classificado no número de vagas oferecido no edital do concurso, o candidato negro será convocado pela lista de ampla concorrência. A vaga reservada será ocupada pelo próximo candidato negro na lista de classificação.

- Temos de esclarecer que a cota é aplicada no processo de classificação. Todas as pessoas vão disputar as vagas no concurso público em pé de igualdade. Não haverá nenhuma possibilidade de se fazer injustiça. Todas as pessoas farão o processo seletivo e, apenas na hora de preencher as vagas, é que será observada a cota de 20% - explicou a senadora Ana Rita (PT-ES), que relatou o projeto na Comissão de Direitos Humanos e Legislação Participativa (CDH).

Dez anos

O projeto determina ainda que a reserva de 20% será aplicada sempre que o número de vagas oferecidas no concurso seja igual ou superior a três. Ou seja, se forem três vagas, uma já fica reservada aos candidatos negros. A cota racial terá validade de dez anos e não se aplicará a concursos cujos editais tenham sido publicados antes da vigência da lei.

A proposta prevê punições caso seja constatada falsidade na declaração do candidato. As sanções vão da eliminação do concurso à anulação do processo de admissão ao serviço ou emprego público do candidato que fraudar os dados.

Relator do projeto na Comissão de Constituição, Justiça e Cidadania (CCJ), o senador Humberto Costa (PT-PE), considerou “histórica” sua aprovação pelo Senado.

- Creio que hoje é um dia histórico porque no nosso país, ao longo dos últimos anos, temos procurado enfrentar um problema secular que existe no Brasil da discriminação e do preconceito racial – comemorou o senador.

Humberto Costa citou dados do Censo 2010, segundo os quais 50,7% da população brasileira são negros e mestiços, número que, entre os funcionários públicos federais, fica em apenas 30%. Quando os cargos são mais importantes, o índice cai ainda mais: entre os diplomatas apenas 5,9% são negros; nos auditores da receita são 12,3%; e na carreira de procurador da fazenda nacional, 14,2%.

Discriminação positiva

O senador José Sarney (PMDB-AP) lembrou ter sido o responsável por iniciar a discussão sobre cotas raciais no país, ao apresentar projeto reservando cotas para negros nas vagas no ensino superior e em concursos públicos, há 15 anos. Seu projeto, entretanto foi considerado inconstitucional à época pela Câmara dos Deputados, sob o argumento de criava discriminação entre as pessoas, o que era inconstitucional.

- Invoquei o fato de que as discriminações positivas estavam presentes na Constituição, como no caso dos deficientes físicos, que tinham direito à discriminação positiva. Quero me congratular com a presidente Dilma, que, com sua sensibilidade, consagra, de uma vez por toda, este princípio que, sem dúvida alguma, é um grande avanço e uma grande conquista para a raça negra no Brasil – elogiou Sarney.

A senadora Lúcia Vânia (PSDB-GO) lembrou que, neste mês, completam-se 126 anos da Lei Áurea e 319 anos da morte de Zumbi dos Palmares.

- Se ainda temos que discutir a instituição de cotas para acesso ao serviço público da parte da população negra é porque a Lei Áurea, embora se constitua um marco no processo de emancipação do negro, não trouxe consigo os instrumentos que amparassem o negro no período pós-libertação.

Emenda rejeitada

O Plenário rejeitou a emenda apresentada pela senadora Vanessa Grazziotin (PCdoB-AM) para estabelecer a reserva de 40% das vagas de concursos públicos federais a residentes do estado onde os cargos serão preenchidos. Ela já havia sido rejeitada tanto na Comissão de Direitos Humanos e Legislação Participativa (CDH) quanto na CCJ. De acordo com o relator na CCJ, o conteúdo da emenda tratava de tema diverso ao contido no projeto em análise.

Agência Senado

Conheça 5 benefícios da cenoura para cães

 

por Andressa Monteiro

 

Alimento é rico em vitamina A e faz bem para filhotes e fêmeas gestantes

Embora não seja essencial à dieta dos cães, a adição de vegetais frescos e de poucas calorias, é uma ótima forma de variar o cardápio, oferecendo uma rica fonte de fibras e nutrientes que combatem o câncer e diferentes tipos de inflamações – incluindo a cenoura. Dessa forma, preparamos uma lista com cinco benefícios que ela oferece à alimentação do seu pet, além de ser super saudável e barata.

cao_cenoura

Vitamina A

A cenoura possui muita vitamina A e betacaroteno – que faz bem para a visão, pele e mucosas.
 No entanto, ela também regula o aparelho digestivo e o sistema nervoso.


 

Sais minerais

O alimento contém sais minerais, como o fósforo, o cloro, o potássio, o cálcio e o sódio, fundamentais para o bom equilíbrio do organismo. Já o Complexo B presente na cenoura ajuda a regular o sistema nervoso e o aparelho digestivo.


 

Saúde bucal

A saúde bucal do seu bicho de estimação agradece ao ingerir uma pequena porção semanal de cenoura, pois ela limpa os dentes e desenvolve os músculos mastigadores do cão. Além disso, quando os dentes de um filhote estão nascendo, a gengiva costuma coçar muito. Porém, ao mastigar uma cenoura crua, o incômodo se torna menor.

 

Gravidez

A ingestão de cenoura aumenta o volume sanguíneo, assim como a produção de leite – ideal para as cadelas que estão grávidas.

 

Sistema imunológico

Apetitosas e fáceis de serem encontradas no mercado, as cenouras possuem nutrientes que irão estimular e melhorar o sistema imunológico do cachorro.

 

Cuidados com a saúde do pet

Fique alerta com a ingestão em excesso de cenouras. Alguns cães podem desenvolver problemas como prisão de ventre, hemorróidas, diarréia e até alergia. O alimento deve ser servido cru e em pedaços, como petisco ou cozida e misturada à ração.

Formas de preparo ao cozinhar legumes e verduras

Escolha cenouras lisas, sem irregularidades e de cor uniforme, pois manchas verdes podem indicar um sabor forte e desagradável. 
 Para que possam ser digeridos adequadamente, aproveitando-se todos os nutrientes de cada alimento, os cães precisam ingerir legumes, verduras e vegetais triturados, em uma espécie de “purê” ou cozinhando-os.

Legumes triturados não precisam ser cozidos e vice-versa. Mas, no caso, a mandioquinha, o inhames, o cará e as batatas-doces, precisam ser cozidos, devido à uma toxina que pode causar diarréia se não for aquecida. Já as folhas verdes devem ser servidas trituradas e cruas para que preservem todos os seus nutrientes.

Outra dica interessante é criar uma combinação de quatro ou mais legumes crus, usando um processador de alimentos para fazer o purê – que pode ser congelado e consumido a longo prazo em pequenas porções na dieta do seu pet. Porém, o ideal é servir a refeição logo que ela estiver pronta, resultando em uma menor perda de nutrientes por eles não estarem congelados. Se a escolha dos donos for a de cozinhar os alimentos, prefira o cozimento no vapor, por cerca de 15 a 20 minutos. Essa é a melhor forma de conservar os nutrientes. Procure não acrescentar temperos e sal.

Meta de comércio da China está ameaçada pelo 3º ano seguido

 

A China pode não cumprir sua meta de crescimento do comércio exterior pelo terceiro ano seguido em 2014, com os custos trabalhistas mais altos e uma demanda global mais fraca afetando o que tem sido um dos principais motores da economia, afirmou ontem um autoridade do Ministério do Comércio.

O governo tem uma meta de crescimento de 7,5% em exportações e importações neste ano. Após um começo fraco em 2014, o ministério disse que as exportações e importações combinadas precisam crescer a uma taxa anual média de 11,3% a cada mês de maio a dezembro.

"A situação do comércio exterior é complexa e sombria este ano. Alcançar a meta anual de 7,5%é uma tarefa muito árdua", disse o chefe do departamento de comércio exterior no Ministério do Comércio,Zhang Ji, em uma coletiva. "A recuperação econômica dos países desenvolvidos permanece lenta enquanto que o crescimento das economias emergentes está se enfraquecendo."

A China não alcançou suas metas de crescimento de 8% em 2013 e io%em 2012.0 crescimento econômico anual desacelerou a74% no primeiro trimestre, aumentando o risco de que o país pode não atingir a meta de crescimento econômico - de 7,5% para 2014 - pela primeira vez em 15 anos.

Na semana passada, o governo chinês anunciou uma série de medidas para sustentar o setor comercial, incluindo mais isenções fiscais, garantias de crédito e opções de hedge cambial a seus exportadores.

Zhang disse que o ministério montou uma força-tarefa especial para implementar as medidas, com a maior parte a ser feita em maio e junho.

O comércio exterior da China cresceu a uma taxa anual de 15,9% entre 1978 e 2013, respondendo por um quinto do crescimento econômico nos últimos anos e criando milhões de empregos, disse Zhang, acrescentando que o setor emprega diretamente mais de 100 milhões de pessoas.

Zhang disse também que um período de alto crescimento para o setor de comércio da China acabou uma vez que custos mais altos reduzem sua competitividade e os Estados Unidos e a Europa tentam impulsionar seus setores de manufatura e exportação.

Reformas. Ainda ontem, o gabinete da China aprovou planos detalhados a serem executados este ano para avançar com reformas econômicas, ressaltando a determinação de Pequim para fomentar um crescimento mais sustentável.

Pequim vai permitir que governos regionais dependam mais da venda de títulos municipais para seu financiamento, diminuindo gradualmente a dependência deles de veículos de financiamento oficiais, segundo um comunicado da Comissão Nacional de Desenvolvimento e Reforma, a principal agência de planejamento econômico do país, publicado no site oficial do governo.

Fonte: O Estado de S. Paulo com Reuters

10 novidades do mercado que você precisa saber

 

Impsa estuda lançar oferta pública no Brasil ou EUA

Divulgação/Seara

Fábrica da Seara

IPO da JBS Foods pode movimentar 5 bilhões de reais

São Paulo - Veja o que você precisa saber.

1- IPO da JBS Foods pode movimentar R$ 5 bilhões. A JBS Foods, unidade de alimentos processados da JBS, pediu registro para uma oferta inicial de ações, a primeira de uma empresa brasileira em 2014, que pode movimentar cerca de 5 bilhões de reais, segundo uma fonte.

2- Quem está na moda e quem está por fora entre as varejistas.O primeiro trimestre do ano foi marcado por uma forte divergência no desempenho do lucro das varejistas brasileiras, em meio ao cenário de fraca demanda. Para a equipe de análise do HSBC Global Research, essa diferença de desempenhos nos resultados deve persistir no próximo trimestre.

3- 20 empresas com os maiores prejuízos do 1º trimestre de 2014. A CelgPar, do setor energia elétrica, registrou o maior prejuízo do primeiro trimestre. No período, a companhia somou perdas de 276,6 milhões de reais, segundo levantamento da Economatica.

4- Impsa estuda lançar oferta pública no Brasil ou EUA. A empresa argentina Impsa, geradora de energia eólica e produtora de equipamentos para este segmento, analisa oportunidades para lançamento no Brasil ou nos Estados Unidos de oferta pública inicial (IPO, pela sigla em inglês) de sua subsidiária brasileira Impsa Wind.

5- Petrobras confirma potencial de concessão com Repsol e BG. A Petrobras confirmou na terça-feira o grande potencial petroleiro de uma concessão em águas muito profundas no oceano Atlântico que compartilha com a hispânico-chinesa Repsol Sinopec e a britânica BG.

6- Embraer antecipa vendas de jatos com espaço para bagagens. Numa época em que companhias aéreas estão apertando os passageiros ao cobrar em média US$ 25 pelas bagagens despachadas, a Embraer está criando mais espaço para a bagagem de mão.

7- EUA aprovam Ardent Mills, fusão de gigantes dos grãos. A ConAgra Foods, a Cargill e a CHS receberam a aprovação do órgão antitruste dos Estados Unidos na terça-feira para a fusão de suas operações de produção de farinha depois de concordarem em vender quatro moinhos para uma empresa japonesa.

8- STJ decide sobre perdas de poupadores em planos econômicos. O Superior Tribunal de Justiça (STJ) retoma hoje (21) à tarde o julgamento sobre a contagem de juros de mora em casos de perdas na poupança causadas por planos econômicos passados.

9- Distribuidores de aços planos se preparam para 2º tri fraco. Os distribuidores de aços planos do Brasil esperam um segundo trimestre de vendas relativamente ruim em relação ao ano passado, apesar de o resultado do setor em abril ter ficado acima do esperado.

10- Emprego no setor de material de construção deve subir 2%. O nível de emprego na indústria de materiais de construção deve fechar o ano em alta de 2%, apesar da perspectiva de crescimento menor do setor em 2014, disse à Reuters nesta terça-feira o presidente da associação que representa o segmento, Walter Cover.

Engineers build world's smallest, fastest nanomotor: Can fit inside a single cell

 


Simple nanomotor.

Researchers at the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have built the smallest, fastest and longest-running tiny synthetic motor to date. The team's nanomotor is an important step toward developing miniature machines that could one day move through the body to administer insulin for diabetics when needed, or target and treat cancer cells without harming good cells.

With the goal of powering these yet-to-be invented devices, UT Austin engineers focused on building a reliable, ultra-high-speed nanomotor that can convert electrical energy into mechanical motion on a scale 500 times smaller than a grain of salt.

Mechanical engineering assistant professor Donglei "Emma" Fan led a team of researchers in the successful design, assembly and testing of a high-performing nanomotor in a nonbiological setting. The team's three-part nanomotor can rapidly mix and pump biochemicals and move through liquids, which is important for future applications. The team's study was published in a recent issue of Nature Communications.

Fan and her team are the first to achieve the extremely difficult goal of designing a nanomotor with large driving power.

With all its dimensions under 1 micrometer in size, the nanomotor could fit inside a human cell and is capable of rotating for 15 continuous hours at a speed of 18,000 RPMs, the speed of a motor in a jet airplane engine. Comparable nanomotors run significantly more slowly, from 14 RPMs to 500 RPMs, and have only rotated for a few seconds up to a few minutes.

Looking forward, nanomotors could advance the field of nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS), an area focused on developing miniature machines that are more energy efficient and less expensive to produce. In the near future, the Cockrell School researchers believe their nanomotors could provide a new approach to controlled biochemical drug delivery to live cells.

To test its ability to release drugs, the researchers coated the nanomotor's surface with biochemicals and initiated spinning. They found that the faster the nanomotor rotated, the faster it released the drugs.

"We were able to establish and control the molecule release rate by mechanical rotation, which means our nanomotor is the first of its kind for controlling the release of drugs from the surface of nanoparticles," Fan said. "We believe it will help advance the study of drug delivery and cell-to-cell communications."

The researchers address two major issues for nanomotors so far: assembly and controls. The team built and operated the nanomotor using a patent-pending technique that Fan invented while studying at Johns Hopkins University. The technique relies on AC and DC electric fields to assemble the nanomotor's parts one by one.

In experiments, the researchers used the technique to turn the nanomotors on and off and propel the rotation either clockwise or counterclockwise. The researchers found that they could position the nanomotors in a pattern and move them in a synchronized fashion, which makes them more powerful and gives them more flexibility.

Fan and her team plan to develop new mechanical controls and chemical sensing that can be integrated into nanoelectromechanical devices. But first they plan to test their nanomotors near a live cell, which will allow Fan to measure how they deliver molecules in a controlled fashion.

Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1NkvH98yEE


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by University of Texas at Austin. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kwanoh Kim, Xiaobin Xu, Jianhe Guo, D. L. Fan. Ultrahigh-speed rotating nanoelectromechanical system devices assembled from nanoscale building blocks. Nature Communications, 2014; 5 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4632

Is there really cash in your company's trash?

 


One company's trash can be another's treasure. Take Marmite. Made from a by-product of commercial beer production, the yeast-based spread has topped toast throughout the Commonwealth for decades. By recuperating the waste product from one company, another was able to thrive.

Environmental concerns are at the forefront of government policy, so the time is right for companies worldwide to adopt this type of resource exchange, known as industrial symbiosis (IS).

A new study by Concordia University researcher Raymond Paquin published in Long Range Planning shows that this practice must become standard if companies are to continue advancing their environmental efforts.

"IS creates significant economic, environmental and societal value," says Paquin, a professor at Concordia's John Molson School of Business. "It goes beyond turning garbage into something useful -- it boosts company profits, creates new jobs and minimizes waste in our landfills."

Paquin's research confirms that companies that view their waste as a valuable resource can reduce disposal costs and boost revenues by reprocessing and selling it to other firms that can use it.

Paquin has studied thousands of firms engaged in IS across the United Kingdom.

"Companies have to think beyond their traditional business focus for IS to be a success," he says. "But it is well worth their time, both economically and environmentally,"

The additional business generated through IS exchanges has even allowed many companies to expand, hiring more employees and developing new arms to manage these transactions.

"It's a win-win situation," says Paquin, noting that the U.K.-founded National Industrial Symbiosis Programme has recently set up shop in Canada.

Although IS is not yet a common practice in North America -- unlike in the U.K., where landfills are close to capacity -- Paquin believes that this will soon change.

"Consumers and governments are increasingly calling for sustainable action on the part of corporations. As this research shows, industrial symbiosis is a proven approach for companies seeking to economically reduce their landfill and other environmental impacts. Smart firms are integrating IS into their core environmental strategies."


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Concordia University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Raymond L. Paquin, Timo Busch, Suzanne G. Tilleman. Creating Economic and Environmental Value through Industrial Symbiosis. Long Range Planning, 2013; DOI: 10.1016/j.lrp.2013.11.002

E-cigarettes boost quitting success among smokers, study finds

 

A woman displays a package of E-cigarette, an electronic substitute in the form of a rod, slightly longer than a normal cigarette, in Bordeaux, southwestern France, on March 25, 2008.  REUTERS/Regis Duvignau

 

(Reuters) - Smokers trying to quit are 60 percent more likely to report success if they switch to e-cigarettes than if they use nicotine products like patches or gum, or just willpower, scientists said on Tuesday.

Presenting findings from a study of almost 6,000 smokers over five years, the researchers said the results suggest e-cigarettes could play an important role in reducing smoking rates and hence cutting tobacco-related deaths and illnesses.

As well as causing lung cancer and other chronic respiratory diseases, tobacco smoking is also a major contributor to cardiovascular diseases, the world's number one killer.

"E-cigarettes could substantially improve public health because of their widespread appeal and the huge health gains associated with stopping smoking," said Robert West of University College London's epidemiology and public health department, who led the study.

Mainly funded by the charity Cancer Research UK and published in the journal Addiction, West's study surveyed 5,863 smokers between 2009 and 2014 who had tried to quit without using prescription medicines or professional help.

The results were adjusted for a range of factors that might influence success at quitting, West said - including age, nicotine dependence, previous attempts to give up smoking, and whether quitting was gradual or abrupt.

They showed that 20 percent of people trying to quit with the aid of e-cigarettes reported having stopped smoking conventional cigarettes.

That compared with just 10.1 percent of those using over-the-counter aids such as nicotine replacement patches or gum. Of those using willpower alone, 15.4 percent had managed to stop.

E-cigarettes contain nicotine - a stimulant not thought to be particularly harmful, although it is addictive - delivering it in a water vapour rather than in smoke from burning tobacco.

A relatively new product, they have become highly controversial, with public health opinion split over whether they might be a powerful tool in helping those hooked on cigarettes to finally give up, or whether they simply replace one bad habit with another.

Because switching to e-cigarettes from tobacco ones does not entail kicking the addiction to nicotine, some specialists say they could spell the end of smoking - which the World Health Organisation (WHO) calls "one of the biggest public health threats the world has ever faced".

But critics point to a lack of long-term scientific evidence to support the safety and effectiveness of e-cigarettes, and warn they may also re-normalise smoking, enticing children or other non-smokers to take it up.

West agreed that evidence about long-term use is e-cigarettes is scant, but stressed the balance of risks had to be weighed against the very strong evidence of tobacco's harms.

"It's not clear whether long-term use of e-cigarettes carries health risks, but from what is known about the contents of the vapour these will be much less than from smoking," he said.

Smoking tobacco kills half of all those who do it, according to the WHO, and has a death toll of 6 million people a year.

West said evidence shows that smokers who seek professional help from doctors or health clinics that provide stop-smoking services have the highest success rates in quitting.

"These almost triple a smoker's odds of successfully quitting compared with going it alone or relying on over-the-counter products," he said.

(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Catherine Evans)