Friday, June 26, 2009

Variation in the Same Gene Affects Rate of Parasite Infection in Both Humans and Baboons


Humans and baboons share similar evolutionary histories and environments in the East African savanna. Parallel evolution has also been demonstrated in how variation of the Duffy gene affects their respective resistance or susceptibility to infection by malaria parasites. The mechanism is well-known in humans: when the Duffy gene is on, it builds receptors on the surface of red blood cells allowing malaria parasites to land. When the gene is off--there is no infection.

In baboons--there is also a definite link from genetic variation to degree of infection by a malaria-like parasite, but the mechanism is less clear. When the gene is on, more receptors are built, but the incidence of infection is also lower. When the gene is off, the opposite is true.

Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Can Alzheimer's Be Cured?

P. Murali Doraiswamy is the head of biological psychiatry at Duke University and is a Senior Fellow at Duke’s Center for the Study of Aging. He’s also the co-author of The Alzheimer’s Action Plan, a guide for patients and family members struggling with the disease. Mind Matters editor Jonah Lehrer chats with Doraiswamy about recent advances in Alzheimer’s research and what people can do to prevent memory loss.

US : Nothing But the Facts on Health Care

Pass on the Salt for Health's Sake : Sodium Intake Rising Among Canadians

Friday, June 19, 2009

La Maladie de Lyme Gagne du Terrain au Canada

Un Meilleur Diagnostic de l'Alzheimer

Des chercheurs québécois tentent de mettre au point un test qui permettrait de diagnostiquer plus facilement la maladie d?Alzheimer.
© Archives

Soins de santé au Canada : Accouchements par le Siège: Nouvelles Directives

La césarienne n'est pas toujours la méthode la plus appropriée lorsque le bébé se présente par le siège.
© Archives

Key Challenges in the Health Care Debate

Health Workers not Taking Pandemic Precautions: CDC

Many US health-care workers who fell sick with swine flu likely didn't take precautions to protect themselves on the job, according to a report released ...

Thursday, June 18, 2009

USA : Poll: Many Worried About Paying for Health Care

Drink-Driving Limits : One for the Road


Drink-driving limits around the world. Clarification: Pakistan, Mauritania and the Comoros forbid alcohol, but are labelled by the WHO as "No limit stipulated" because there is no specific legislation governing blood alcohol concentration.

Health-Care Reform : A Spoonful of Sugar

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Sinus Infections Can Cause Toxic Shock in Kids

You Age As You Eat : Keeping Fibre Front of Mind


In addition to being high in protein and nutrients, lentils and beans also contain high levels of dietary fibre that can help keep digestive systems regular and healthy into the later stages of life.