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Study Reveals How Cocaine Affects The Brain

- Friday, November 27, 2015 No Comments

A new study into the effects of cocaine has revealed that the drug induces long-lasting remodeling of brain cell connections which alters the brain’s sensitivity to future doses. The findings provide a new insight into how persistent cocaine use leads to increased tolerance and desensitization, and may help to generate new therapies to enable recovering addicts to “erase” their drug-seeking tendencies.
Conducted by a team of researchers at Bordeaux University, the study – which appears in the journal Cell Reports – indicates how the stimulation of a part of the brain's hippocampus called the ventral subiculum (vSUB) sends the dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) into a hyperactive state. This, in turn, increases the brain’s sensitivity to subsequent low doses of cocaine for a period of at least five days afterwards.
The vSUB has previously been associated with the generation of drug-seeking impulses in response to external cues, and for that reason has been labeled the “addiction centre” of the brain. However, until now, the mechanisms by which it drives this behavior had remained unknown. Speaking to IFLScience, study coauthor Francois Georges explained that the results of the experiment are significant since they have helped to finally identify “a neuronal circuit that for sure is changed during cocaine administration.”
To conduct the tests, the team activated the vSUB of a number of rats using a method called high frequency stimulation, which involves stimulating the synapses – connections between neurons – with bipolar electrical currents. This is known to produce the same effect as taking a high dose of cocaine. By then monitoring the neuronal activity produced by this stimulation, the researchers noticed that the vSUB increased the excitability, or responsiveness, of the VTA dopamine neurons by relaying messages via a region called the bed nucleus of the stria termilanil (BNST). Subsequently, rats displayed increased behavioral responses to “sub-threshold” doses of cocaine – meaning quantities of the drug which wouldn’t normally generate a reaction.
“By synaptic stimulation we were able to change the plasticity of the dopaminergic neurons,” explains Georges. “Through this stimulation we put the brain into a phase where it becomes more receptive to low doses of cocaine. It’s like we prepared the brain to be more responsive to the drug.”
The research therefore sheds light on the neural circuits by which single doses of cocaine alter sensitivity to future doses of the drug, and could lead to a new understanding of how prolonged cocaine use ultimately causes desensitization – although more research is needed in order to determine precisely how this occurs. Further work is also required if these findings are to be put to therapeutic use, since, as Georges explains, “what we found is a way to make cocaine more potent, which is not what you want if you want to treat addiction.”
However, the fact that the neuronal pathways involved in altering sensitivity to cocaine have now been identified provides a useful starting point for researchers seeking to reverse this effect. “The idea now would be to manipulate this circuit to see if we can reduce the effect of cocaine, which could be a lead to decrease cocaine intake in drug addicts,” says Georges.

Florida court convicts Derek Medina over Facebook photo murder

- Wednesday, November 25, 2015 No Comments

A Florida man who killed his wife and posted a photo of the body on Facebook has been found guilty of murder.
Derek Medina admitted taking the picture on his phone and uploading it onto the social media site.
He failed to convince the jury that he had shot Jennifer Alfonso eight times in self-defence after years of abuse.
He said his wife was threatening him with a knife when he shot her in their home in Miami, but prosecutors said she was cowering on the floor.
When he posted the picture, he wrote on Facebook that he expected to go to prison or be sentenced to death for the killing.
Prosecutors successfully argued that the 27-year-old wife in fear of her life when she was shot in August 2013.
He had vowed to kill her if she left him and she had told friends she intended to do that, the court heard.
Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Rundle said: "No family should ever have to see their daughter killed and then exhibited worldwide on the internet like some macabre trophy to a husband's anger."
Medina, 33, could face a life imprisonment over the murder.

Source:BBCnews

One Internet Meme Changed This Woman's Life And Ruined Her Dreams

- Sunday, November 22, 2015 No Comments
The Internet is full of urban legends dating back to the first chain email you were forced to forward to 10 other people or suffer dire, maybe even deadly consequences. Other rumors can be less disturbing, unless of course you find yourself as the butt of the joke.
It's just so easy to forget that on the other side of our screens, real people are being subjected to the ridicule of a meme. As early as 2004, this image began circulating the web with a story of a man divorcing his wife for having "ugly" children and lying to him about having plastic surgery before their wedding. It even claimed he sued the woman and courts granted him thousands of dollars for her deceiving looks.

Despite being reported on by several news outlets, the strange story is 100% false.


In reality, she is a model from Taiwan named Heidi Yeh. She had a promising career ahead of her, as she landed great gigs one after the other.


A photoshoot for a plastic surgery office happened to be one of them, but she had no idea just how much the simple image would negatively impact her life.


The children were photoshopped into their "ugly" versions and it didn't take long for the distorted backstory to gain traction.

Everyone from her family to her hopeful employers are now under the impression that she's had work done.


Though there is a prevalence of eyelid surgery in East Asia to create a more doe-like expression, she denies having had the procedure done. Yeh has lost several job opportunities and even had a boyfriend break up with her thanks to the embarrassing meme's popularity.

Source:ViralNova

An HIV-Positive Man Suddenly Died From Cancer...That Wasn't Even His

- Friday, November 6, 2015 No Comments

An HIV-positive Colombian man has died of cancer that began inside his tapeworm. His tumors were not made up of his own cells, but those of the parasitic worm that invaded his gut. This rare and unique situation is thought to be the first known to medicine whereby tumors have developed as a result of parasite-derived cancerous cells having spread and taken hold throughout a human host.
Described in the New England Journal of Medicine, the patient was a 41-year-old man who, back in early 2013, had been suffering fatigue, a fever, cough and weight loss for several months. He was diagnosed with HIV seven years earlier but did not take his medication. Consequently, his white blood cell (CD4) count was dangerously low and blood samples were loaded with virus particles. Fecal analysis revealed that he was also infected with the dwarf tapeworm Hymenolepis nana.
The patient was then given a CT scan which revealed that his lungs were riddled with tumors, ranging in size from 0.4 to 4.4 centimeters (0.16 to 1.7 inches) in size. His liver and adrenal glands were also infected. He was given biopsies at the time and sent home with both anti-HIV and anti-tapeworm drugs, but his condition worsened so further samples were taken and sent off to the CDC for analysis.
This is where things got a little bit weird. The cells were clearly cancerous – they were invasive, grew rapidly and in a crowded, disordered manner, and all looked the same. But they were tiny, roughly ten times smaller than would have been expected; far too small to be considered a human cell. Baffled, scientists subjected them to a bounty of tests, which eventually revealed the tumor cells contained H. nana DNA. Unfortunately, it was too late for the patient, who died just 72 hours after the discovery was made.
Analysis of the tumor cells' worm DNA when compared with a reference genome of an otherwise normal worm also revealed something quite striking. "Three of the identified genes that were 'broken,' or mutated, have already been implicated in other forms of human cancer," study author Dr Peter Olson told IFLScience. "If they mutate in humans, they can lead to a cell becoming cancerous. That's never really been shown, that sort of commonality between becoming malignant in a human cell line and an invertebrate cell line."

This case has completely gob-smacked scientists and doctors alike. H. nana is the most common human tapeworm, infecting around 75 million people worldwide, yet nothing like this has ever been described before. Although cancerous cells naturally circulate in certain animals, like dogs, cancer isn’t really transmissible between humans – although agents that can cause cancer, like human papillomavirus and the trematode worm Schistosoma haematobium can be transmitted between people.
Normally, people infected with this worm are symptomless and their immune system gets rid of the worm over time. But this man was immunocompromised by HIV, allowing the parasitic cells to grow uncontrollably, thus presenting the opportunity for cancer-causing mutations to arise from mistakes in cell division.
While this case seems to be unique, given the abundance of H. nana worldwide, and HIV, it seems plausible that there have been other cases that have gone undrecognized. "But the report is not that there is a new health risk that people should be worried about," said Olson. "The importance is awareness. It's a conundrum for clinicians when they look at these tumors. There's nothing anatomically to suggest they could be from a worm. But now this report is published, doctors should hopefully look out for this possibility."

Source:IFLScience