What a ‘good mom’ does for her kid

http://youtu.be/jgC3pmY8eaI

It’s so appalling to me that we live in a country where the justice system goes after “crimes” like this, and yet banks and grand-scale thieves walk free. It’s just crazy, isn’t it?

Madison, MN- A mother in Minnesota was charged with child endangerment after giving her son medical marijuana oil from Colorado after she had exhausted all other options to combat the boy’s seizures and chronic pain.

Angela Brown said she’s spent three years watching her son Trey suffer from seizures and extreme pain after he had sustained a severe brain injury during a baseball game. At age 11, Trey was hit in the temple by a baseball and suffered from a stroke and a coma following the injury. The pain that Trey experienced was described as severe. “It just hurts in my brain, just everywhere in there,” said Trey, now 15. “I really can’t explain the pain.”

The pain that Trey had been going through greatly affected his learning; he was unable to attend school and had begun hurting himself. “I was afraid to go to the bathroom,” said Angela Brown. “Because I was afraid that he- that I would come back and he would be harming himself.”

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Bio-pharming?

H/t to Ron for this really interesting story about the new Ebola treatment:

With the seemingly miraculous recovery of two American missionaries infected with the Ebola virus while treating patients in Liberia, ZMapp, the experimental drug that appears to have cured Dr. Kent Brantley and Nancy Writebol of the deadly disease, has rushed to the spotlight.

Aside from the highly unusual fact that it had only ever been tested on monkeys, ZMapp has another distinction that has drawn attention — it engineered in tobacco leaves in a process called biopharming.

While most FDA-approved drugs that involve antibodies, vaccines and other proteins are produced in animal cells farmed in expensive bioreactors, starting in the 1980s, scientists discovered they could also engineer proteins in plant cells.

As was the case with ZMapp, many companies settled on the tobacco plant as the ideal host for bioengineered proteins, because it grows so quickly and produces a high yield.

“It is not the same plant as the tobacco that is smoked,” explained Jean-Luc Martre, a spokesman for Medicago, a Quebec-based company jointly owned by Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma America and Phillip Morris International.

Rather, it’s a close cousin called nicotiana benthamiana, a plant native to Australia.

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Psychedelics

Kind of crazy that it took this long to get the ball rolling on research. I knew a shrink who was using MDMA back in 1973:

Almost immediately after Albert Hofmann discovered the hallucinogenic properties of LSD in the 1940s, research on psychedelic drugs took off. These consciousness-altering drugs showed promise for treating anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and addiction, but increasing government conservatism caused a research blackout that lasted decades. Lately, however, there has been a resurgence of interest in psychedelics as possible therapeutic agents. This past spring Swiss researchers published results from the first drug trial involving LSD in more than 40 years.

drugs

There is hope that the “Walking Dead” will not become reality in Atlanta…

So, most everybody knows that two healthcare workers that were treating Ebola patients in Africa were brought to Emory Hospital here in Atlanta for treatment after they contracted the disease. There has been a real psycho nutbag freak out that there is an “isolation area” for these patients. Unfortunately, some of these big screamers don’t know that every hospital has an “isolation area.” My ex-husband was in an isolation area within a rural hospital after he contracted Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. But, I digress…

Good news! There is a serum that may be helping these healthcare workers.… and it comes from… tobacco!

The drug being credited with potentially saving the lives of two American missionaries infected with the deadly Ebola virus was produced in Owensboro.

The serum wasn’t manufactured but grown — in a greenhouse full of genetically modified tobacco plants.

Kentucky BioProcessing, acquired by Reynolds American in January, conducts contract research and development for San Diego-based Mapp Biopharmaceutical, said David Howard, spokesman for RAI Ser vices, a subsidiary of Reynolds American.

“In the last week, Kentucky BioProcessing complied with a request from Emory University and Samaritan’s Purse to provide a very limited amount (of the compound) to Emory, and KPB has done that,” Howard said.

CNN and NBC News reported Monday that ZMapp had been given to Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol, who have been described as showing significant improvement.

The experimental drug apparently had never been tested on humans.

In 2007, Mapp, working under contract for the U.S. Department of Defense and other federal agencies, engaged KBP to develop a process to manufacture a compound designed to be a post-exposure treatment for Ebola virus.

That compound was MB-003 or ZMapp, a cocktail of antibodies that has proven to be the most effective treatment so far in fighting off the Ebola virus.

In a study published last year, scientists at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases reported that 43 percent of infected nonhuman primates recovered after receiving the treatment intravenously 104 to 120 hours after infection — after symptoms developed.

“Mapp Biopharmaceutical has the structure of this protein to battle the Ebola. And KPB is building that protein,” Howard said.

In Owensboro, tobacco plants are “infected” with the protein, he said, and then they reproduce it “like a photocopier.”

The desired proteins are extracted from the plants and purified into a serum.

Scientists have long known that tobacco readily picks up genes inserted into it. The Owensboro facility uses that ability to quickly and inexpensively produce large volumes of a compound within weeks.

KBP also has been selected for work on some of the biggest health threats on the planet, including H1N1 vaccine production, an anti-rabies antibody, norovirus or the “cruise ship virus,” HIV prevention, parvovirus, and HPV vaccine.

ZMapp, the drug used on the American Ebola victims, has not been approved in the United States or other countries, Howard said, but the Owensboro facility had begun ramping up production for anticipated drug approval testing protocols this year.

That process might be accelerated now.

“KBP is working closely with Mapp and other agencies to increase production, but that process will take several months,” Howard said.

This disease is horrifying to say the least. I hope for the best for the healthcare workers… Crossing my fingers.

Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2014/08/04/3365612/drug-given-to-american-ebola-victims.html?sp=%2F99%2F322%2F&ihp=1#storylink=cpy

Continue reading “There is hope that the “Walking Dead” will not become reality in Atlanta…”

Negativity bias

We proudly present to you:              Dr. debilis causa mett wurst Onkel Wart

I’m pretty sure I wrote about this before, but maybe you missed it the first time:

You could be forgiven for not having browsed yet through the latest issue of the journal Behavioral and Brain Sciences. If you care about politics, though, you’ll find a punchline therein that is pretty extraordinary.

Behavioral and Brain Sciences employs a rather unique practice called “Open Peer Commentary”: An article of major significance is published, a large number of fellow scholars comment on it, and then the original author responds to all of them. The approach has many virtues, one of which being that it lets you see where a community of scholars and thinkers stand with respect to a controversial or provocative scientific idea. And in the latest issue of the journal, this process reveals the following conclusion: A large body of political scientists and political psychologists now concur that liberals and conservatives disagree about politics in part because they are different people at the level of personality, psychology, and even traits like physiology and genetics.

That’s a big deal. It challenges everything that we thought we knew about politics—upending the idea that we get our beliefs solely from our upbringing, from our friends and families, from our personal economic interests, and calling into question the notion that in politics, we can really change (most of us, anyway).

The ultimate trip

We will miss u sir...#sasha #phikal #tihkal #schulgin #mdma #godfather # psychedelic #visionaryart #psychedelicart

The end of an era:

Alexander “Sasha” Shulgin, the pioneering pharmacologist who introduced MDMA to psychologists in the 1970s, has died aged 88 after a battle with liver cancer.

Shulgin was famed for having synthesized and tested over 200 psychedelic drugs.

He earned the title, the “Godfather of ecstasy”, after developing a new synthesis method for MDMA – the purest available form of ecstasy – in 1976. He passed it on to his therapist friend Leo Zeff, who began using the drug’s effects on an individual’s emotional states during sessions with clients.

Shortly after his introduction, ecstasy broke into the mainstream, infiltrating the club culture in New York and Chicago, and hitting the shores of Ibiza, before finally landing in the UK.

Stop right this minute

temple

If you’re a smoker. I mean it.

I just came from the Temple University Hospital Lung Center. I had to see a pulmonary specialist to screen me for my sleep study, and let me tell you, I am really, really glad I never smoked. So many of these people in the waiting area sounded like they were drowning.

When I was leaving, a young woman in the elevator who was on a portable oxygen generator asked for my help to put her phone in her pocket. She was struggling for breath and didn’t have the strength. Imagine, not being able to lift a cell phone.

Please don’t take your lungs for granted. It will suck in a major way for you if they stop working, and I can’t think of anything scarier than feeling like you are drowning and you’re not even in the water.

Job hazard for bloggers

2014 Vivid Sydney: GALAXIA II #11

Chicken or egg?

Mistrust of other people may put you at higher risk for dementia, according to a new study published in the journal Neurology. The study looked at the impact cynicism may have on long-term cognitive health.

Cynicism is defined as the belief that people are generally motivated by their own self interest and promotion and cannot be trusted.

For the study on 1,449 people, researchers at the University of Eastern Finland in Kuopio administered tests to screen for dementia, as well as questionnaires to gauge each person’s level of cynicism. Out of that number, 622 people completed two tests for dementia, with the second one eight years after the start of the study. The average age of study participants was 71.

When taking the cynicism questionnaire people responded to statements such as “I think most people would lie to get ahead” and “It is safer to trust nobody.” After scoring the questionnaire participants were divided into groups of low, moderate and high levels of cynicism.

A total of 46 people were diagnosed with dementia in the eight years between taking the two questionnaires. After adjusting for factors such high blood pressure and cholesterol, the researchers found people with high levels of cynicism were three times more likely to develop dementia than those with low levels of cynicism. A total of 164 people were found to have high levels of cynicism and 14 of them developed dementia. However, only nine out of 212 people with low levels of cynicism developed dementia.

Higher levels of cynicism also appeared to be linked to early death. However, after adjusting for factors such as income, health problems and lifestyle habits such as smoking the researchers found the link to be tenuous. Even still, there are a number of studies that show cynicism does impact physical health. A study published in American Journal of Epidemiology found that cynicism increases one’s risk for acute myocardial infarction.