Keyword: cure

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  • Home Quick remedies for Severe Gout Attack

    08/25/2009 9:05:40 PM PDT · by Global2010 · 61 replies · 2,534+ views
    self
    OK Guys/Gals. I have not had an attack in years but after attending a couple of Brewfests and relizing how good Ale is (I quit drinking beer do to gout years ago) and forgetting how crippling and excrutiating an attack of gout is well I have a whole foot invovled. As a careprovider I have to get up (I have an old wheelchair to use the pain is that bad). I dont want to go to the Doc and thought I would try some home flushing of the uric acid. Right now I have a combo in one ice pitcher...
  • Cure for radiation sickness found?

    07/19/2009 5:11:19 PM PDT · by Michel12 · 38 replies · 1,646+ views
    Ynet ^ | Ronen Bergman
    Medication that can protect humans against nuclear radiation has been developed by Jewish-American scientists in cooperation with a researcher and investors from Israel. The full story behind the dramatic discovery will be published in Yedioth Ahronoth's weekend edition. The ground-breaking medication, developed by Professor Andrei Gudkov – Chief Scientific Officer at Cleveland BioLabs - may have far-reaching implications on the balance of power in the world, as states capable of providing their citizens with protection against radiation will enjoy a significant strategic advantage vis-à-vis their rivals. For Israel, the discovery marks a particularly dramatic development that could deeply affect the...
  • Cure for radiation sickness found?

    07/17/2009 7:19:24 AM PDT · by truthandlife · 53 replies · 1,834+ views
    Ynet News ^ | 7-17-09
    Medication that can protect humans against nuclear radiation has been developed by Jewish-American scientists in cooperation with a researcher and investors from Israel. The full story behind the dramatic discovery will be published in Yedioth Ahronoth's weekend edition. The ground-breaking medication, developed by Professor Andrei Gudkov – Chief Scientific Officer at Cleveland BioLabs - may have far-reaching implications on the balance of power in the world, as states capable of providing their citizens with protection against radiation will enjoy a significant strategic advantage vis-à-vis their rivals. For Israel, the discovery marks a particularly dramatic development that could deeply affect the...
  • How The Humble Hydrangea Shrub Could Hold The Key To Curing MS, Diabetes and Arthritis

    06/04/2009 10:36:17 PM PDT · by Steelfish · 53 replies · 2,467+ views
    June 04, 2009
    How the humble hydrangea shrub could hold the key to curing MS, diabetes and arthritis By FIONA MACRAE 05th June 2009 It's bright and beautiful flowers bring a splash of colour to gardens all over Britain. But it seems the hydrangea is more than just a pretty bloom. A drug made from its roots could be used to treat a raft of common diseases, researchers say. The colourful shrub - a staple of Chinese medicine - has the power to 'revolutionise' the treatment of multiple sclerosis, psoriasis and some forms of diabetes and arthritis, scientists claimed yesterday. Hydrangea: The common...
  • Hung over? Try eggs, fries, cocoa ...

    01/01/2009 4:38:09 PM PST · by buccaneer81 · 26 replies · 639+ views
    The Columbus Dispatch ^ | January 1, 2009 | Kevin Mayhood
    Hung over? Try eggs, fries, cocoa ... Thursday, January 1, 2009 3:24 AM By Kevin Mayhood THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH The cup of cures for your pounding head and queasy stomach runneth over. New Year's Day is a little late for a lecture on abstinence or moderation, and we won't go into the scientific intricacies of a hangover. Suffice it to say you're hurtin', so here are a few remedies that folks say work, at least for them. "Hot chocolate," said Laura Yazvac, a bartender at the Surly Girl Saloon in the Short North. "Chocolate milk is good for dehydration." Lactose-intolerant?...
  • France abuzz over alcoholic 'cure'[Baclofen]

    12/07/2008 1:39:36 PM PST · by BGHater · 9 replies · 733+ views
    BBC ^ | 06 Dec 2008 | Hugh Schofield
    An eminent French cardiologist has triggered an impassioned debate in the medical world over his claim to have discovered a cure for alcoholism. Dr Olivier Ameisen, 55, one of France's top heart specialists,says he overcame his own addiction to alcohol by self-administering doses of a muscle-relaxant called baclofen. He has now written a book about his experience - Le Dernier Verre (The Last Glass) - in which he calls for clinical trials to test his theory that baclofen suppresses the craving for drink. Widespread media coverage of his book in France has led to a rush of demands from alcoholics...
  • AIDS Patient Is Reported Cured

    11/13/2008 9:21:54 PM PST · by americanophile · 8 replies · 578+ views
    New York Times ^ | November 13, 2008 | DONALD G. MCNEIL JR
    Doctors in Berlin are reporting that they cured a man of AIDS by giving him transplanted blood stem cells from a person naturally resistant to the virus. But while the case has novel medical implications, experts say it will be of little immediate use in treating AIDS. Top American researchers called the treatment unthinkable for the millions infected in Africa and impractical even for insured patients in top research hospitals. “It’s very nice, and it’s not even surprising,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “But it’s just off the table of...
  • The Race for the Cure

    10/01/2008 12:23:12 PM PDT · by Maelstorm · 12 replies · 373+ views
    http://www.komencharlotte.org ^ | Oct 1, 2008 | www.komencharlotte.org
    The Race for the Cure® One in eight women will be stricken with breast cancer in her lifetime. The KomenCharlotte Race for the Cure® raises money to fund education, screening and treatment programs for these women and thousands of others in our own community and supports the national search for a cure. The Komen Race for the Cure® Series is the largest series of 5K run/ walks in the world. Since its origination in Dallas in 1983, the Komen Race for the Cure® Series has grown from one local race with 800 participants to an international series of 115 races...
  • Accidental Fungus Leads to Promising Cancer Drug

    06/29/2008 8:14:27 PM PDT · by anymouse · 9 replies · 160+ views
    Reuters ^ | June 29, 2008 | Maggie Fox
    A drug developed using nanotechnology and a fungus that contaminated a lab experiment may be broadly effective against a range of cancers, U.S. researchers reported on Sunday. The drug, called lodamin, was improved in one of the last experiments overseen by Dr. Judah Folkman, a cancer researcher who died in January. Folkman pioneered the idea of angiogenesis therapy -- starving tumors by preventing them from growing blood supplies. (snip) "I had never expected such a strong effect on these aggressive tumor models," she said. The researchers believe lodamin may also be useful in other diseases marked by abnormal blood vessel...
  • Diabetes May Be Disorder Of Upper Intestine: (Obesity)Surgery May Correct It

    05/05/2008 10:41:51 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 59 replies · 445+ views
    Science Daily ^ | March 6, 2008
    Growing evidence shows that surgery may effectively cure Type 2 diabetes — an approach that not only may change the way the disease is treated, but that introduces a new way of thinking about diabetes. A new article — published in a special supplement to the February issue of Diabetes Care by a leading expert in the emerging field of diabetes surgery — points to the small bowel as the possible site of critical mechanisms for the development of diabetes. The study's author, Dr. Francesco Rubino of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, presents scientific evidence on the mechanisms of diabetes...
  • Discovery of the decade? Injection 'could cure Alzheimer's in minutes'

    04/12/2008 11:37:55 AM PDT · by Lathspell · 84 replies · 599+ views
    Belfast Telegraph ^ | April 12, 2008
    Scientists claim videos are proof of breakthrough An injection that dramatically relieved the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease within minutes would qualify as the discovery of the decade. That is exactly what was claimed yesterday for an experimental treatment being tested in America. Scientists at the Institute for Neurological Research at the University of California have treated around 50 patients at a private clinic by injecting an anti-arthritic drug, etanercept, into the spinal column in the neck and then tilting the patients to encourage the drug to flow to the brain. They claim 90 per cent respond to the treatment, usually...
  • Study Gives Hope For Pancreatic Cancer Patients

    01/11/2008 7:45:39 AM PST · by GRANGER · 10 replies · 140+ views
    CBS4 Denver ^ | January 9, 2008 | Kathy Walsh
    AURORA, Colo. (CBS4) ― There is new hope for patients diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer. There's a new treatment being studied in Colorado and it has already cured one patient. Most patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer die from it, but a national clinical trial has left Richard Jordan, from Fort Collins, cancer free. Jordan has defied the odds. Just over a year ago, he was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer -- the tumor was choking a major blood vessel. "You usually don't last more than six months," Jordan said. Doctors at the University of Colorado Cancer Center offered some hope....
  • Report Gives Hope To Fla. Man's Cancer Killing Machine

    11/04/2007 7:58:19 AM PST · by Zakeet · 54 replies · 319+ views
    WPBF-TV ^ | November 2, 2007
    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - New research reports posted on the American Cancer Society's Web site late Tuesday suggest that a Florida man with no medical training may have invented a machine that could lead to a cure for cancer. "It gives me goose bumps that there might be a better way to do this and it looks like it's happening," said John Kanzius, inventor of the machine. Kanzius, 63, is a former broadcast executive from Pennsylvania who wondered if his background in physics and radio could come in handy in treating the disease from which he suffers himself. Created...
  • Blood findings bring malaria hope

    10/30/2007 6:00:23 PM PDT · by CutePuppy · 19 replies · 255+ views
    BBC ^ | October 30, 2007 | BBC
    Tuesday, 30 October 2007, 11:55 GMT Blood findings bring malaria hope Researchers could be a step closer to a cure for malaria after discovering people with blood group O are naturally protected from its most severe forms. Edinburgh University has found blood type O people are significantly less likely to experience the most life-threatening effects of malaria. It is hoped the discovery will help develop drugs which mimic the properties of red cells. Red cells in O group blood prevent malaria worsening. "We may be able to reduce the number of children dying from severe malaria in sub-Saharan Africa"Dr...
  • Cancer cure 'may be available in two years'

    09/19/2007 4:59:40 PM PDT · by Stoat · 43 replies · 142+ views
    The Telegraph (U.K.) ^ | September 20, 2007 | Nic Fleming
    Cancer cure 'may be available in two years' By Nic Fleming Science Correspondent  Last Updated: 8:26pm BST 19/09/2007   Cancer sufferers could be cured with injections of immune cells from other people within two years, scientists say. Red tape hinders cancer research, says reportUS researchers have been given the go-ahead to give patients transfusions of “super strength” cancer-killing cells from donors.Dr Zheng Cui, of the Wake Forest University School of Medicine, has shown in laboratory experiments that immune cells from some people can be almost 50 times more effective in fighting cancer than in others.Dr Cui, whose work is highlighted...
  • Dutchman offers 'cure' for nail biting

    09/07/2007 9:26:46 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 27 replies · 821+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 9/7/07 | Arthur Max - ap
    VENLO, Netherlands - Do you find your fingers drifting into your mouth when you're nervous, anxious or just bored? Are your nails chewed to splinters or your cuticles gnawed to bleeding pulp? Nail biting is more than a bad habit. Doctors say it is one of the most common symptoms of stress or of an obsessive-compulsive disorder, especially for teenagers or younger children, and can lead to disfigurement and serious infection. Alain-Raymond van Abbe, a former health industry and cosmetics promoter, estimates the world's pathological nail biters number 600 million or more. He saw that onychophagy was so widespread that...
  • Inventor May Have Breakthrough in Killing Cancer Cells

    08/20/2007 8:23:48 PM PDT · by Paved Paradise · 138 replies · 4,585+ views
    WKYC.com ^ | August 20, 2007 | Michael O'Mara
    Inventor from Erie, P.A. teams up with leading cancer center. The work has been quietly been going on for the last three years in a no-frills laboratory in Erie, Pennsylvania. Inventor, John Kanzius, working with Jim and Charlie Rutkowski, have been perfecting a device that will kill cancer cells with a radio frequency. This humble workspace could soon become the epicenter of one of the most stunning scientific breakthroughs in cancer treatment in years. Using the Kanzius RF machine and special nanoparticles, it appears that cancer cells can be targeted and killed without harming the rest of the body. This...
  • "Those who cure you will kill you..."

    07/04/2007 2:14:12 PM PDT · by Keli Kilohana · 1 replies · 170+ views
    Zarr Chasm Chronical[sic] ^ | 7/4/07 | Keli Kilohana
    "Those who cure you will kill you..." So, what's new?
  • Could grazing the scalp be a cure for baldness?

    05/16/2007 11:05:20 AM PDT · by bedolido · 5 replies · 292+ views
    newscientist.com ^ | 05-16-2007 | Staff Writer
    Could a graze on the head help cure baldness? Biologists had thought that once mammals lose their hair follicles, they are gone forever. Now George Cotsarelis at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and his colleagues have shown that adult mice can regenerate follicles when their skin is wounded.
  • Gene cure for blindness [proved successful at restoring the sight of dogs]

    05/02/2007 6:27:44 AM PDT · by bedolido · 5 replies · 463+ views
    theaustralian.news.com.au ^ | 05-02-2007 | David Rose
    A BRITISH hospital has made the world's first attempt to treat blindness with a revolutionary gene therapy. Surgeons at the Moorfields Eye Hospital in London operated on Robert Johnson, who was born with a rare sight disorder known as Leber’s congenital amaurosis (LCA), which deteriorates with age. Mr Johnson, 23, who had genes inserted into one eye, could see only outlines during the day and very little at night before having the procedure yesterday. He is one of a dozen young patients selected for the first clinical trial to test the new therapy, which has already proved successful at restoring...
  • New Cure for Cancer: Truth or Dare?

    02/08/2007 10:33:04 AM PST · by SirLinksalot · 23 replies · 1,355+ views
    KTRE-TV ^ | 02/08/2007 | Dr. Len Lichtenfeld
    New Cure for Cancer: Truth or Dare? by Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, American Cancer Society, for ABC News There is the medical equivalent of a tsunami wave building out there, only we don't know where this one is going to land. It is called DCA, and we at the American Cancer Society are suddenly receiving requests for information about something few if any of us had heard about as a cancer treatment until this past week. I suspect some of this rapid explosion is fueled in part by the Internet and the rapid exchange of information, and some by advocates who...
  • Cheap, safe drug kills most cancers

    02/02/2007 7:33:20 PM PST · by alnick · 50 replies · 2,254+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 23 January 2007 | Andy Coghlan
    New Scientist has received an unprecedented amount of interest in this story from readers. If you would like up-to-date information on any plans for clinical trials of DCA in patients with cancer, or would like to donate towards a fund for such trials, please visit the site set up by the University of Alberta and the Alberta Cancer Board. We will also follow events closely and will report any progress as it happens. It sounds almost too good to be true: a cheap and simple drug that kills almost all cancers by switching off their “immortality”. The drug, dichloroacetate (DCA),...
  • Colon cancer stem cells identified (Outstanding news)

    11/20/2006 9:46:50 AM PST · by Zakeet · 4 replies · 629+ views
    The Scientist ^ | November 20, 2006 | Jeffrey M. Perkel
    Scientists have identified a population of human colon cancer stem cells that can initiate tumor growth and differentiate into mature tumors, according to two reports in Nature. Two groups, working independently, showed that a subpopulation of CD133+ cells within the tumor, representing just a small fraction of the overall cancer mass, behave as cancer-initiating cells, with the ability to maintain themselves in culture in an undifferentiated state, initiate tumor growth after xenotransplantation in mice, and differentiate into cancers that are phenotypically indistinguishable from the original human tumor. "This is for me a really exciting set of reports," said Jeremy Rich,...
  • Stem cells core of more cancers

    11/20/2006 5:09:45 AM PST · by Zakeet · 3 replies · 846+ views
    Globe & Mail ^ | November 20, 2006 | Carolyn Abraham
    New discoveries that pinpoint bad seeds leading to a major redirection of research A spate of new discoveries about the basic biology of cancer is pushing researchers toward an astonishing conclusion: For decades, efforts to cure the disease may have targeted the wrong cells. Current therapies treat all cancer cells the same. They're aimed at shrinking tumours on the basis that the various cells within them all have similar powers to spawn new cancers and spread destruction. But mounting evidence suggests that cancer's real culprits -- the roots of perhaps every tumour -- are actually a small subset of bad...
  • Britons Freed From Chains In Mullah's 'Drug Cure' Prison

    10/05/2006 6:02:45 PM PDT · by blam · 3 replies · 394+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 10-6-2006 | Isambard Wilkinson
    Britons freed from chains in mullah's 'drug cure' prison By Isambard Wilkinson in Haripur (Filed: 06/10/2006) A Pakistani cleric has been arrested for running a private jail to which he lured dozens of drug addicts from Britain by offering a spiritual cure in return for money. Treatment: Maulana Ilyas Qadri In a raid this week, police found 113 people, aged between 12 and 50, bound in chains and shackled together at a madrassa, or religious school, in a remote village in northern Pakistan. At least seven were British nationals of Pakistani origin. Many prisoners, whose relatives consigned them to the...
  • America Supports You: Chips Cure Munchies, Help Troops

    09/14/2006 4:59:10 PM PDT · by SandRat · 4 replies · 264+ views
    America Supports You ^ | Samantha L. Quigley
    WASHINGTON, Sept. 14, 2006 -- Next time the munchies hit, Americans in some parts of the United States only need to look for the red, white and blue bag asking shoppers to “Support Our Troops.” Lowes Foods stores in North and South Carolina and Virginia have recently started carrying Support Our Troops tortilla chips. The chips are packaged in red, white and blue bags and percentage of the proceeds from the sales benefits local Operation Homefront chapters. The chips run $1.99 to $2.59 a bag. Courtesy photo  '(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. The bags of Support Our Troops...
  • Food allergy cures 'less than a decade away'

    09/09/2006 2:04:33 PM PDT · by Zakeet · 7 replies · 420+ views
    The Guardian (UK Newspaper) ^ | September 9, 2006 | Alok Jha
    Cures for a wide range of food allergies are less than a decade away, scientists said yesterday. By modifying the proteins in foods that cause the reactions, researchers have created treatments that can safely desensitise the body's immune system. "Therapies for food allergy will be on the market within seven to 10 years," said Ronald van Ree, of the University of Amsterdam, who is leading work on the development of treatments. (Snip) Because the allergens are well known, he was able to artificially produce them, but with a difference. "We can change the molecules so that IgE antibodies do not...
  • Using Stem Cells to Cure Blindness

    08/16/2006 9:15:06 AM PDT · by Ben Mugged · 17 replies · 619+ views
    Technology Review ^ | August 15, 2006 | Emily Singer
    Scientists are taking the first major step in using stem cells to replace retinal cells lost to degenerative eye diseases such as macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa. According to findings published today, researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle can reliably make retinal cells from embryonic stem cells. The researchers are now implanting the cells into blind animals to see if the cells can restore vision. "This work is the first step toward retinal reconstitution," says Stephen Rose, chief research officer at the Foundation Fighting Blindness, a nonprofit funding agency based in Owings Mills, MD. ~snip~ According to a...
  • Scientists urge deep-sea cure for climate change (bury greenhouse gases under sea floor sediment)

    08/15/2006 3:12:37 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 70 replies · 656+ views
    Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 8/15/06 | Jason Szep
    BOSTON (Reuters) - Climate change could be slowed by burying greenhouse gases blamed for global warming deep below the ocean floor under thick, cold sediment that would trap it for thousands of years, said a team of Harvard-led scientists. The seafloor along the U.S. east and west coast is vast enough to store almost unlimited carbon dioxide emissions from U.S. coal-fired plants, said Daniel Schrag, director of Harvard's Center for the Environment. "It would make coal a green fuel," he said in a telephone interview with Reuters. Carbon dioxide released by burning fossil fuels is the main gas blamed for...
  • Pill promises to stop Alzheimer's

    07/23/2006 4:20:02 AM PDT · by Aussie Dasher · 80 replies · 1,907+ views
    Sunday Herald Sun ^ | 23 July 2006
    MELBOURNE scientists believe they may have found a cure for Alzheimer's disease if tests on mice prove successful in humans. In a world first, a Melbourne research team has developed a once-a-day pill that could stop the debilitating disease in its tracks. Human trials of the drug PBT2 will begin next month. Professor George Fink, director of the Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria, which developed the drug in partnership with Prana Biotechnology, said it was a major breakthrough. "I'm getting great excitement out of it, it's certainly another Eureka," he said on Channel 10. "If we can replicate in...
  • Alzheimer's cure getting closer

    07/22/2006 2:43:50 PM PDT · by RWR8189 · 35 replies · 1,194+ views
    The Australian ^ | July 24, 2006
    AUSTRALIAN scientists may have found a cure for Alzheimer's disease. In a world first, a Melbourne research team has developed the once-a-day pill to combat the brain disease. Human trials of the drug start next month. The drug, known as PBT2, was developed by the Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria in partnership with Prana Biotechnology in Melbourne. "It is a major breakthrough and very much a Melbourne discovery,'' said Professor George Fink, the director of the Mental Health Research Institute. "Though much depends on the next phase of human clinical trials ... early results indicate this drug offers hope...
  • Electricity kills cancer cells

    03/14/2006 1:04:59 PM PST · by Ben Mugged · 48 replies · 1,410+ views
    The Virginian Pilot ^ | 13 March, 2006 | PHILIP WALZER
    A team of scientists from Old Dominion University and Eastern Virginia Medical School has reported killing melanoma s in mice using lightning-fast, high-powered jolts of electricity. The researchers expect their paper to be placed online Wednesday in the journal Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications . It's the culmination of at least eight years of work seeking possible health benefits from short, high-voltage doses of electricity. The results, the researchers think , eventually could translate into an effective cancer treatment that carries no side effects. "We've never had a tumor that didn't respond," said the lead researcher, Richard Nuccitelli , an...
  • Drug Found to Reverse the Ravages of Alzheimer's in Mice

    03/06/2006 8:57:56 AM PST · by S0122017 · 8 replies · 271+ views
    american scientist ^ | March 01, 2006 | Kate Wong
    March 01, 2006 Drug Found to Reverse the Ravages of Alzheimer's in Mice Researchers have identified a compound that could significantly improve treatment of Alzheimer's disease. When administered to mice engineered to develop hallmarks of the disease, the drug reversed cognitive decline and reduced the two types of brain lesions--plaques and tangles--that occur in Alzheimer's patients. Frank M. LaFerla of the University of California at Irvine and his colleagues gave Alzheimer's mice and normal mice daily doses of the drug, known as AF267B, for eight weeks and then tested their ability to learn to locate a hidden platform in a...
  • Charles Socarides, Gay 'Cure' Doctor, Dies

    12/31/2005 5:08:42 PM PST · by SmithL · 180 replies · 2,259+ views
    AP ^ | 12/31/5
    New York -- Charles Socarides, the psychiatrist famous for insisting that homosexuality was a treatable illness and who claimed to have "cured" hundreds, has died. He was 83. Socarides, died Dec. 25 of heart failure at a hospital near his Manhattan home, his family announced. A funeral Mass was held Friday. He waged an unsuccessful battle to reverse the American Psychiatric Association's 1973 decision to remove homosexuality from its list of mental disorders, and brushed off frequent condemnations by colleagues who considered his views hurtful.
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project Update (Top 1,000! - WooHoo!!)

    12/29/2005 8:34:56 PM PST · by systematic · 420 replies · 5,293+ views
    systematic ^ | 12-29-2005 | systematic
    OK, new thread to celebrate reaching a major milestone! Within a few hours Team FreeRepublic will be in the Top1000!!!! We should pass Dean for America, around noon tommorrow. Other liberal teams want to challenge us (DUmmies and Kos) but we're humiliating them beyond description.
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project Update (We're in the Top 1,200!)

    12/25/2005 7:13:22 PM PST · by texas booster · 377 replies · 4,784+ views
    OK, new thread for the next week. First, a big shout out to the SETI members who have added CPUs to the effort. Remember, its Team 36120, NOT Team 0. Next, congrats to all for bumping our team up to 104 processors and 76 users. We have a number of new users in the team, with Clara Lou, fzx12345, SamfromLivingston, brityank, manwiththehands and Tami all popping onto the hit list this week. Malsua, uriah and Ken in Texas are solidly in the top 10. Malsua is continuing to add systems and now accounts for 10% of the FR total. Great...
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project Update (We're in the Top 1,450)

    12/18/2005 10:03:55 AM PST · by texas booster · 132 replies · 2,530+ views
    OK, new thread for the next week. First, a big shout out to the SETI members who have added CPUs to the effort. Remember, its Team 36120, NOT Team 0. Next, congrats to all for bumping our team up to 65 processors. ArgentCent is the latest to have joined our happy band of folders and jumps in at # 36 with his first completed WU. We now have 51 members in the team, and about 45 active participants. Malsua, uriah and Ken in Texas are solidly in the top 10. One of these will probably be the new Numero Uno...
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project Update (We're in the Top 1,550)

    12/15/2005 9:44:48 PM PST · by systematic · 40 replies · 910+ views
    FreeRepublic Team Ranked #1,550 (of 41,708 teams)
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project Update

    FR Team ranking up to number 1782 of 41608
  • (Vanity) FreeRepublic Folding@Home Project (Rank 15,162 of 41,347)

    11/25/2005 6:48:15 PM PST · by systematic · 33 replies · 766+ views
    Folding@Home update: 3 Work Units completed, 2 computers, 138 points, overall team rank #15,162
  • Folding@Home

    11/23/2005 11:04:07 PM PST · by systematic · 17 replies · 635+ views
    Any Freepers "folding@home"???? For those not familiar with F@H -> some diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer and even "mad cow" disease are believed to be linked to protein (mis)folding. A scientist team from Stanford University studies this phenomenon to try and find a cure to these diseases. To do this, they have designed a software (folding@home) which enables people to donate unused power from their computer to speed up medical research!
  • British man 'recovered from HIV' (spontaneously cured?)

    11/13/2005 1:42:36 AM PST · by TigerLikesRooster · 47 replies · 1,971+ views
    BBC News ^ | 13 November 2005
    British man 'recovered from HIV'   Andrew Stimpson said he was one of the luckiest people alive   Doctors are planning further tests on a 25-year-old British man whose body has reportedly cured itself of HIV.Two Sunday newspapers report that Andrew Stimpson, who lives in London, was diagnosed as HIV-positive in 2002 but found to be clear in October 2003. Chelsea and Westminster Healthcare NHS Trust, which carried out the tests, has asked him to undergo more. Mr Stimpson did not take any medication for HIV. HIV experts say his case could help to reveal more about the disease....
  • Shot to cure flu for life

    08/04/2005 6:27:04 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 6 replies · 529+ views
    BRITISH scientists are developing a revolutionary vaccine that works against all types of flu, the UK DAILY MAIL fronts on Friday. It would protect people against flu and a single jab could give lifelong immunity. Currently, new vaccines have to be developed each year. The major breakthrough has been made by the Cambridge biotech firm Acambis. When it announced the news yesterday the value of its shares jumped by 9p. Such a vaccine would be massively lucrative for its manufacturer. Each year, flu kills up to 12,000 people in the UK, many of them elderly. But experts have been warning...
  • Scientists discover ultimate ‘cure-all’ (Cures baldness, gum disease, stretch marks...)

    05/04/2005 10:36:21 PM PDT · by FairOpinion · 25 replies · 2,443+ views
    UK Times ^ | May 2, 2005 | Correspondent
    A TREATMENT for balding men, women with stretchmarks and anyone who has gum disease may have been discovered by scientists. As cure-alls go, an injection of fibroblasts may be the ultimate. The new technology is being developing by Isolagen, a Texas-based biotech company, and 50 patients are to undergo clincial trials in London. Fibroblasts are tiny cells that control levels of the proteins collagen and elastin, which are found in skin, bones and other tissue. To treat burns, the scientists take cells from an undamaged area, extract the fibroblasts and multiply them in the laboratory before injecting them back into...
  • Vitamin Cure? (Can common nutrients curb violent tendencies and dispel clinical depression?)

    04/13/2005 5:33:59 PM PDT · by blam · 43 replies · 2,456+ views
    Discover Magazine ^ | 4-13-2005 | Susan Freinkel
    Vitamin CureCan common nutrients curb violent tendencies and dispel clinical depression? By Susan Freinkel DISCOVER Vol. 26 No. 05 | May 2005 | Biology & Medicine Mental Machinery The brain and other complex mechanisms of the human nervous system rely on 40 or so basic nutrients to run smoothly. The lack of any one—be it zinc or magnesium, chromium or folic acid—can cause a malfunction, leading to depression, irritability, or worse. When pigs are penned in close quarters, some become so irritable they savage their pen mates’ ears and tails, a problem farmers call ear-and-tail-biting syndrome. David Hardy, a Canadian...
  • Cardinal Marchisano Says Pope Healed Him

    04/11/2005 5:58:51 AM PDT · by NYer · 22 replies · 1,255+ views
    Zenit News Agency ^ | April 10, 2005
    VATICAN CITY, APRIL 10, 2005 (Zenit.org).- A cardinal who worked closely with John Paul II says that he was once cured of a serious throat condition after the Pope prayed for him and touched the affected area. Cardinal Francesco Marchisano, archpriest of St. Peter's Basilica, revealed details of the incident on Saturday, the second day of the nine days of Masses celebrated for the Holy Father's eternal rest. The Italian cardinal, a friend of Karol Wojtyla's since 1962, spoke of his previously unpublicized healing during the Mass he celebrated in the basilica with Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, the Pope's personal secretary....
  • Diabetes in Mice Cured Using Non-Embryonic Sources

    03/10/2005 6:18:32 PM PST · by Coleus · 15 replies · 909+ views
    National Right to Life ^ | February 2005 | Dave Andrusko
    Foundation Seeks $11 Million to Fund Promising Research in HumansDiabetes in Mice Cured Using Non-Embryonic SourcesBy Dave AndruskoEditor's note. For more information on Dr. Denise Faustman's research and the effort of the Iacocca Foundation to raise money to support it, please go to http://www.joinleenow.org. To most Americans, the enduring image of Lee Iacocca is of the charismatic head of the Chrysler Corporation during the 1980s. His role as philanthropist is much less well known.Iacocca's wife, Mary, died of complications from Type I diabetes 21 years ago. Following her death, as Iacocca has said many times, "my family and I began...
  • Gene therapy is first deafness 'cure'

    02/15/2005 6:07:04 AM PST · by truthandlife · 1 replies · 285+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 2-15-05 | Andy Coghlan
    A pioneering form of gene therapy has apparently cured deafness in guinea pigs, raising hopes that the same procedure might work in people. "It's the first time anyone has biologically repaired the hearing of animals," says Yehoash Raphael at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and head of the US-Japanese team that developed the technique. The therapy promotes the regrowth of crucial hair cells in the cochlea, the part of the inner ear which registers sound. After treatment, the researchers used sensory electrodes around the animals' heads to show that the auditory nerves of treated - but not...
  • Researchers Find Possible Trigger, Possible Fix

    01/31/2005 1:30:06 PM PST · by auggy · 21 replies · 936+ views
    The Boston Globe ^ | January 31, 2005 | Raja Mishra
    Researchers in Boston have pinpointed a primary trigger for the most common form of diabetes and have uncovered evidence that simple, inexpensive aspirin-like drugs could keep the disease that affects millions in check. The researchers, from Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, discovered a genetic ''master switch" in the liver that is turned on when people become obese. Obesity has long been linked to diabetes, but the reason, until now, has been unknown. Joslin researchers found that once on, this switch produces low-level inflammation, which disrupts the body's ability to process insulin, causing type 2 diabetes.
  • CA: Truck toll routes pitched as traffic cure

    01/20/2005 10:30:16 AM PST · by NormsRevenge · 22 replies · 1,349+ views
    Oakland Tribune ^ | 1/20/05 | Sean Holstege
    California's transportation system is in such free fall that the only way to ease East Bay freeway gridlock is to build a privately funded toll way just for trucks, the Reason Foundation concludes in a report released today. The libertarian-leaning Los Angeles think tank said private investors could build truck routes from the Port of Oakland to Milpitas and Tracy for $9.1 billion. Researchers said trucking companies would pay the $1.15-per-mile toll in return for driving goods to market at speed limit in triple-trailers. Currently, triple trailers are illegal on California highways because of safety concerns. Bay Area traffic data...