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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Syringe

Medical experts warn against DIY beauty procedures with ingredients bought online

botox injection
© Global Look Press / imageBROKER.com / Uwe Umstätter
Nerve damage, severe burns, asymmetry and other potentially permanent side-effects can be caused by DIY beauty procedures that are on the rise due to the influence of social media, experts told RT.

Wannabe beauticians need no longer rely on the black market, as botox kits, fillers, chemical peels and other ingredients for facials have made their way onto legitimate retail platforms. For example, there's a 'treatment' with hyaluronic acid and temporary dermal fillers for sale on Amazon for just $142, while Alibaba offers a similar kit for the bargain price of $38. Both come complete with syringes and are clearly intended to be used at home, RT America's Trinity Chavez reports.

"The availability of these fillers online and on the black market has really started this very dangerous trend of people purchasing these products illegally and not knowing anything about them: whether they're contaminated, what they're made up of" Dr Azadeh Sirazi, board-certified dermatologist, told RT.

Cow

Beyond weightloss: Low-carb diets could reduce diabetes, heart disease and stroke risk even if people don't lose weight

low carb foods

A low carb diet is one in which carbohydrate heavy foods such as potatoes, pasta, cereals and processed food may be replaced with more fruit, vegetables, meat and nuts.
Eating a low-carb diet could make you healthier even if you don't lose weight because of it, a study has found.

Researchers discovered people could reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease and stroke simply by cutting down on carbohydrates.

Metabolic syndrome, a combination of high blood pressure, obesity and high levels of fat and sugar in the blood, could be reversed by the diet change.

And people may reap the benefits of eating healthier even if they ate the same amount of calories and didn't shed any weight, the study added.

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Microscope 1

What in the world is going on in the Dominican Republic? (Updates)

Gran Bahia Principe Resort
© Franz Waldhausl/Imagebroker/Shutterstock
Gan Bahia Principe Resort, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic.
On Monday, the U.S. State Department confirmed that back in April, an American tourist named Robert Wallace died under mysterious circumstances at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Punta Cana. According to his niece, Wallace, 67, was last seen having a Scotch from the hotel mini bar before he fell ill.

"He started feeling very sick, he had blood in his urine and stool right afterward," Wallace's niece, Chloe Arnold, said. He died in a local hospital three days later.

Wallace's death, while strange, wouldn't be considered all that unusual, if not for the fact that it is the latest in a string of recent mysterious deaths of American tourists in the Dominican Republic. Most recently, an American couple was found dead at the Grand Bahía Principe La Romana in the Dominican Republic, with investigators saying that while no cause of death has yet been determined, no signs of violence were reported on the scene. Last month, a 41-year-old tourist from Pennsylvania was found dead in the same hotel, reportedly also after having a drink from the minibar.

The FBI is working with Dominican Republic officials to determine whether there's any link between the deaths, but toxicology report results aren't expected for at least a month. In the meantime, here's what's been going on in the Dominican Republic, and what we know about the tourist deaths so far.

Comment: Update 6/14/2019:

A seventh person, Leyla Cox, was reportedly found dead of a heart attack in an undisclosed hotel room. An autopsy was ordered, but according to her son, there was a problem with getting a toxicology report:
Following her death, an autopsy was ordered to be performed, but a toxicology report could not be guaranteed, the son told the Advance.

Despite acknowledging that a toxicology report could be ordered if a "red flag" was found during an autopsy under Dominican Republic law, William said that he was told that no toxicology report could be given to his mother in the Dominican Republic because "the toxicology machine is broken."

"That's what they told me," he said ...

William Cox knows that cremation will eliminate the opportunity to perform a toxicology report, something his family sorely wishes could be completed.

"They've put me against a wall where I don't have a choice," he said. "Our own toxicology report would cost copious amounts of money."
Another woman has reported that her brother, John Corcoran, died under "eerily similar" circumstances in a Dominican Republic hotel back in April of this year. It's unclear where he was staying:
Barbara Corcoran's brother was found dead in his hotel room in the Dominican Republic, and the circumstances sound eerily familiar to the 6 mysterious tourist deaths in the country over the past year ... TMZ has learned.

The "Shark Tank" star tells us her brother, John, was in the D.R. with a friend in April on his yearly vacation when he died of a heart attack. At least, that's what she was told. As far as she knows, there's been no autopsy.

Barbara says her brother's friend -- who was staying in the same suite -- discovered the body, but nobody knows exactly what happened.
The New York Post is reporting that cops are investigating whether the tourists were poisoned by counterfeit booze:
Others have reported falling ill, but surviving, after drinking from their minibars.

A Post reporter at one of the resorts noted the vodka in the room had a strange, potent smell resembling pure alcohol.

Lawrence Kobilinsky, a forensic science professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan, said the symptoms among some of the dead - including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea - were consistent with poisoning from methanol or pesticides.

Methanol is a type of alcohol not safe for humans. It is regularly used as antifreeze.

"Adulterated alcohol is usually methanol added to alcohol or just plain methanol, which is very, very toxic," Kobilinsky said.

"It looks to me, from what I've heard and read, is that something was added to the drinks or bottles in those little refrigerators."
Update 6/22/2109

Fox News is reporting that two more Americans died during their vacations in the Dominican Republic. Chris Palmer and Barbara Maser-Mitchell both died at resorts in Punta Cana. The two deaths would bring the number up to 9:
They have been identified as Chris Palmer, a 41-year-old Army veteran from Kansas who died April 18, 2018, and Barbara Diane Maser-Mitchell, a 69-year-old retired nurse from Pennsylvania who died on Sept. 17, 2016, after falling critically ill at a resort. ...

... In reports given to Palmer's family, Dominican authorities said that he had pulmonary edema and that the official cause of death was a heart attack. For Maser-Mitchell, authorities have said a heart attack was the official cause of death.

"As soon as he died, I wondered if he was poisoned, if he was drugged," said Bernadette Hiller, who dated Palmer for about 10 years and saw him the week before he died. "He was healthy as a horse."

... Prior to taking the trip, Mackey said, Maser-Mitchell had a medical exam and was cleared to go on vacation.
Representative, D-New Jersey, Adriano Espaillat will be travelling to the Dominican Republic next month to meet with government officials. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and FBI Director Christopher Wray, and Representative Frank Pallone, D-New Jersey, in a letter dated June 19 wrote:
"The circumstances surrounding the untimely deaths of nine Americans is heartbreaking, and I ask that you immediately take steps to update the bereaved families and ensure they are given all information on the cause of their loved one's death as the investigation continues ...

...at least nine American tourists without pre-existing illnesses experienced similar symptoms, including pulmonary edema, bleeding, and vomiting blood and death....I also urge you to expedite a reassessment of the Travel Advisory for the Dominican Republican to make sure American travelers have a full understanding of travel risks. I ask the Department of State and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to provide our offices with an update on the current investigations of these illnesses and deaths, and what possible steps can be taken to prevent any further loss of American lives ..."

"... There are no problems of contaminated or adulterated beverages as has been falsely said [by the media]," Garcia said. "We [Dominican officials] are the ones who have taken the samples, multiple samples, from kitchens, rooms, water, minibars, etc. This testing includes the Bahia Principe resorts, the Hard Rock resort, and others. The samples are being analyzed in laboratories and that results may be available Friday or Monday ..."



Microscope 1

Babies' temperament linked to their gut bacteria

microbiome
Scientists in the FinnBrain research project of the University of Turku, Finland, discovered that the gut microbes of a 2.5-month-old infant are associated with the temperament traits manifested at six months of age. Temperament describes individual differences in expressing and regulating emotions in infants, and the study provides new information on the association between behaviour and microbes. A corresponding study has never been conducted on infants so young or in the same scale.

Rodent studies have revealed that the composition of gut microbiota and its remodelling is connected to behaviour. In humans, gut microbes can be associated with different diseases, such as Parkinson's disease, depression and autism spectrum disorders, but little research has been conducted on infants.

Doctoral Candidate, Doctor Anna Aatsinki from the FinnBrain research project at the University of Turku, Finland, discovered in her study on 303 infants that different temperament traits are connected with individual microbe genera, microbial diversity and different microbe clusters.

Comment: While the study of the microbiome and its associated effects on the entire organism are still in the early days, the connections made are continually surprising. As the science continues to progress, the picture becomes more clear. At this point, one things seems certain - the status of our gut is of extreme importance to the regulation of our mood.

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Health

'Living drug' offers hope to terminal blood cancer patients

Yuvanv CAR-T therapy
© GOSH
Yuvan, 11, had CAR-T therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.
NHS patients with lymphoma have for the first time been given a pioneering treatment that genetically reprogrammes their immune system to fight cancer.

Mike Simpson, 62, from Durham, says his cancer is now "on the run".

The therapy, called CAR-T, is a "living drug" that is tailor-made for each patient using their body's own cells

Doctors at King's College Hospital, London, said some patients were being completely cured in a way that had "never been seen before".

Comment: Sounds like an encouraging therapy. Truly personalized care is, no doubt, the future of medicine as new therapies find ways to use the body's innate wisdom for healing.

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Info

Powerful agents for healing blood disorders

Beetroot and Hibiscus
© Fourfold Healing
When Goethe, the true founder of Anthroposphy and considered by many to be the greatest European philosopher, urged us to learn to "read the book of nature." He was not just giving impractical, philosophical advice. Rather, he was admonishing us to learn to think in a new way, a way he saw as crucial to our survival as an evolving species. But what does this new way of thinking entail, and how are we to learn it?

One aspect of this new thinking is to simply observe and experience the world with the consciousness of a young child rather than the hardened thinking patterns of overly schooled adults. When traditional sages, shamans, alchemists and philosophers described the world, they were not relying on chemical analysis or double-blind studies. Rather, they engaged with the world as a felt experience, one that evoked in them images, visions and dreams. From this awareness, they understood how nature's bounty could be used to heal the suffering or illness of the human being.

Microscope 1

This odd bacterium appears to protect its host from the damaging effects of stress

Mycobacterium vaccae
© Christopher Lowry
Mycobacterium vaccae.
Scientists have isolated a unique molecular pattern that might one day enable a 'stress vaccine' to exist for real - and they found it hidden inside a bacterium that thrives in dirt.

Mycobacterium vaccae is a non-pathogenic bacterium that lives in soil, and has shown considerable promise in health research; now, a new study may have finally figured out why.

The findings suggest that a specific kind of fat inside M. vaccae could be why exposure to this seemingly beneficial bacterium in ground soil may be good for us.

This work ties in with the idea of "old friends", a hypothesis that claims humans co-evolved with a bunch of useful microorganisms, and losing those ties in the modern environment has led to an increase in allergic and autoimmune diseases.

Comment: As the connection between the gut microbiome and mood and brain function continues to be studied, the findings become more and more surprising. Who would think a bacterium in the dirt would help us deal with stress?

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Attention

Cosmetics related products injure thousands of children every year

Girl using make-up
© Rulo
In the US, almost 65,000 children under five years old were admitted to hospital over a 15-year period as a result of injuries caused by cosmetic-related products.

The startling figures are revealed in a study conducted by researchers from the Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Ohio, and published in the journal Clinical Pediatrics.

Rebecca McAdams and colleagues found that there was no significant reduction over the years in the number of children rushed to emergency departments following harmful encounters with cosmetics and personal care products, with the rate remaining steady at 1.1 per 10,000.

The most common injury was poisoning, with nail-care items responsible for 28.3% of cases, followed by hair-care chemicals at 27%, and skincare at 25%. Fragrances accounted for most of the remainder.

X

Nanoparticle additives in your food

nanoparticles
Processed food is the antithesis of a healthy diet for a number of different reasons, the addition of unregulated and often undisclosed chemicals being a significant one. Besides preservatives, emulsifiers, colors and flavors, which are generally listed, there are any number of others that do not have to be disclosed, as they're considered "processing aids."

Additives are used in food processing to slow spoilage, prevent fats and oils from going rancid, prevent browning, and fortify or enrich the food with synthetic vitamins and minerals to replace the natural ones that were lost during processing.

They're also added to improve taste, texture and appearance, as many processed foods would be as dull and bland as cardboard without some artificial help. But despite widespread use, many food additives have questionable safety profiles, or none at all, since only a small percentage have ever been properly tested.

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Dollar

The corruption of evidence based medicine : Killing for profit

angioplasty
The idea of Evidence Based Medicine (EBM) is great. The reality, though, not so much. Human perception is often flawed, so the premise of EBM is to formally study medical treatments and there have certainly been some successes.

Consider the procedure of angioplasty. Doctors insert a catheter into the blood vessels of the heart and use a balloon like device to open up the artery and restore blood flow. In acute heart attacks studies confirm that this is an effective procedure. In chronic heart disease the COURAGE study and more recently the ORBITA study showed that angioplasty is largely useless. EBM helped distinguish the best use of an invasive procedure.

So, why do prominent physicians call EBM mostly useless? The 2 most prestigious journals of medicine in the world are The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine. Richard Horton, editor in chief of The Lancet said this in 2015
"The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue"

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