Thursday, August 12, 2010

Scientists find new superbug spreading from India

A friend has sent you a News Pro article
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE67A0YU20100812
Scientists find new superbug spreading from India

LONDON (Reuters) - A new superbug from India could spread around the world -- in part because of medical tourism -- and scientists say there are almost no drugs to treat it. Researchers said on Wednesday they had found a new gene called New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase, or NDM-1, in patients in South Asia and in Britain. U.S. health officials said on Wednesday there had been three cases so far in the United States -- all from patients who received recent medical care in India, a country where people often travel in search of affordable healthcare. NDM-1 makes bacteria highly resistant to almost all antibiotics, including the most powerful class called carbapenems. Experts say there are no new drugs on the horizon to tackle it. "It's a specific mechanism. A gene that confers a type of resistance (to antibiotics)," Dr. Alexander Kallen of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta said in a telephone interview. With more people traveling to find less costly medical treatments, particularly for procedures such as cosmetic surgery, Timothy Walsh, who led the study, said he feared the new superbug could soon spread across the globe. "At a global level, this is a real concern," Walsh, from Britain's Cardiff University, said in telephone interview. "Because of medical tourism and international travel in general, resistance to these types of bacteria has the potential to spread around the world very, very quickly. And there is nothing in the (drug development) pipeline to tackle it." Almost as soon as the first antibiotic penicillin was introduced in the 1940s, bacteria began to develop resistance to its effects, prompting researchers to develop many new generations of antibiotics. But their overuse and misuse have helped fuel the rise of drug-resistant "superbug" infections like methicillin-resistant Staphyloccus aureus, or MRSA. MEDICAL TOURISM In a study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal on Wednesday, Walsh's team found NDM-1 was becoming more common in Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan and was also imported back to Britain in patients returning after treatment. "India also provides cosmetic surgery for other Europeans and Americans, and it is likely NDM-1 will spread worldwide," the scientists wrote in the study. Walsh and his international team collected bacteria samples from hospital patients in two places in India, Chennai and Haryana, and from patients referred to Britain's national reference laboratory from 2007 to 2009. They found 44 NDM-1-positive bacteria in Chennai, 26 in Haryana, 37 in Britain, and 73 in other sites in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. Several of the British NDM-1 positive patients had traveled recently to India or Pakistan for hospital treatment, including cosmetic surgery, they said. NDM-1-producing bacteria are resistant to many antibiotics including carbapenems, the scientists said, a class of the drugs reserved for emergency use and to treat infections caused by other multi-resistant bugs like MRSA and C-Difficile. Kallen of the CDC said the United States considered the infection a "very high priority," but said carbapenem resistance was not new in the United States. "The thing that is new is this particular mechanism," he said. Experts cited two drugs that can stand up to carbapenem-resistant infections -- colistin, an older antibiotic that has some toxic side effects, and Pfizer's Tygacil. For many years, antibiotic research has been a "Cinderella" sector of the pharmaceuticals industry, reflecting a mismatch between the scientific difficulty of finding treatments and the modest sales such products are likely to generate, since new drugs are typically saved only for the sickest patients. But the increasing threat from superbugs is encouraging a rethink at the few large drugmakers still hunting for new antibiotics, including Pfizer, Merck, AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis. Anders Ekblom, global head of medicines development at AstraZeneca, whose Merrem antibiotic was the leading carbapenem, said he saw "great value" in investing in new antibiotics. "We've long recognized the growing need for new antibiotics, he said. "Bacteria are continually developing resistance to our arsenal of antibiotics and NDM-1 is just the latest example." (Additional reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by Myra MacDonald and Peter Cooney ) Science Health

This information was sent to you from News Pro. Download FREE News Pro for your mobile phone: http://reuters.com/mobile

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Missing you.

Oh How I Miss You,

How I miss you 
My love so true
Oh, How I miss you
This much is true.

When I am apart
from you,
My Heart flutters.
When I am away
from you,
My heart falls.

You lift me,
when I fall,
You make me better,
when I am down.

When I am alone,
I think of you,
When I am away from you
I think of you.

There is no other,
Place I'd rather be,
Than to have you,
here with me.

When you are down,
I lift you up.
When you are sad,
I cheer you up.

Together we can do it,
Together we will pursue,
All our lives' dreams
and callings, forever
thru our eyes.

Two are better than one,
When one falters, the
other can pick up.
Balance they may bring,
one to another, to 
even out the disposition
of the other.

It's what we are,
two human beings,
innately in need
of complementary security.
We forge and we work,
Sharpening one to the other.
Creating ourselves new,
thru the perceptions of
the other.

Oh, how I miss you,
My love is so true,
Oh I miss you,
Thru and thru.

When you return,
enlightened times we'll
share, for when you return,
we'll have new stories
to bare.

That's how we grow, one to
another, that's how we improve,
ourselves over single simpler 
behaviour. 

We will grow stonger as
two strands binding when
wet,
Two whole individuals
we truly are.

Stronger indeed, when
our strengths are combined.
Better than rope, a link,
or a chain, when we are together, our weaknesses
go away. Our strengths are 
enhanced, made better and 
better, like iron forging iron,
we will always be stronger.

I look forward to the day,
when we are long together,
when no longer need to say
we miss each other.

:-*

Sunday, July 04, 2010

IEEE-USA Today's Engineer

Protecting Your Personal Information on Facebook
And I thought I Knew Everything about Facebook Privacy:
IEEE-USA Today's Engineer

Saturday, July 03, 2010

News

Supreme Court nominee Kagan WSJ Article
Click timestamp below:
July 2, 2010 11:37 PM

The Food Color Rainbow

So apparently if we eat the variety of the plant rainbow we can be confident to ward off many of life's ills. And now that I look at it on this handy chart it doesn't really seem that hard and even looks somewhat yummy. Stay hungry, my friends...

Friday, July 02, 2010

The Fourth Weekend

Ahh, here it is. The classic fourth o July holiday. Fun in the sun and bbq on the patio. Delectable treats for one and all. Looking forward to the long weekend and relaxation.

Will try not to forget how to be creative and focused...