Sunday, November 29, 2009

MS Caused By "Blood Blockage Theory"?


Here is an excerpt from BBC.com:

Multiple sclerosis 'blood blockage theory' tested

US scientists are testing a radical new theory that multiple sclerosis (MS) is caused by blockages in the veins that drain the brain. The University of Buffalo team were intrigued by the work of Italian researcher Dr Paolo Zamboni who claims 90% of MS is caused by narrowed veins. He says the restricted drainage, visible on scans, injures the brain leading to MS. He has already widened the blockages in a handful of patients. The US team want to replicate his earlier work before treating patients.


Experts welcomed the research saying it was important to confirm the basic science before evaluating any therapy. MS is a long-term inflammatory condition of the central nervous system which affects the transfer of messages from the nervous system to the rest of the body.

Monday, October 5, 2009

BB @ Bulldog 09

This was my weekend.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Cutest Acceptance Speech

Kristin Chenoweth (she is a big deal on Broadway) winning best supporting actress in a comedy for Pushing Daisies:

I approve!

The music video for the movie "FAME" remake:

EID MUBARIK WORLD!!!!


The Empire State Building goes green for Eid. :-)

Sunday, September 13, 2009

My new FAVORITE artist!

The art work of GERALDINE GEORGES.



Thursday, September 10, 2009

It's funny cuz it's true...

So my birthday is coming up soon...

Just thought I would throw that out there, with this:


Based on the classic 300SL “Gullwing”, the SLS packs an AMG standard front/mid-mounted version of MB’s visceral 6.3-liter V8, paired with a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission putting those 563 hp and 480 lb-ft of torque to work through the rear wheels. The SLS weighs in at 3,500 lbs and makes the sprint to 60 in 3.7 seconds. The new AMG is electronically limited at 197 mph. The optional carbon ceramic stoppies should be more than sufficient to bring your $258k Merc to a standstill. The SLS is absolutely gorgeous with its design cues paying homage to the iconic 300SL but with a modern MB twist. The rear end paired with the elongated hood, headlamps and exclusive ten-spoke forged AMG wheels make the SLS a modern day Mercedes-Benz.

Tall, dark, handsome, and happy...

Here is an excerpt from a BBC online article:

Taller people live better lives, according to US researchers.

More than 454,000 adults aged 18 and over were asked by phone for their height and evaluate their lives. Overall, taller individuals judged their lives more favourably and were more likely to report positive emotions such as enjoyment and happiness. Reporting to the journal Economics and Human Biology, they conclude that this is because the taller people also had higher incomes and education.

Meet Meredith Dittmar!

Dittmars human-animal-plant-energy amalgams contain threads of common elements and colors to express deep levels of union across themes of biology, technology, and consciousness . Her characters are frequently involved in quiet expressive moments, or lounge facing their audience so they can share their inner space. Dittmar believes it is this space we recognize in ourselves, and through convening in that space, the interconnectedness of all things is revealed. She sees the act of spontaneous artistic creation as part of a larger practice of being present, and a way to better understand herself and reality.

Squirrel Crasher?!


Melissa Brandts and her husband were hiking in Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada and decided to take a portrait of themselves with spectacular Lake Minnewanka in the background. Melissa set up the camera and went back to pose, and her husband held the remote shutter release. Meanwhile, attracted by the sounds of the autofocus, an inquisitive Columbian ground squirrel, common in the park, popped up to investigate. Click! "Self-Portrait With Ground Squirrel" was born.
(Source: National Geographic Online)

Loving Season 6 of X-Factor...

Pro: Amazingly attractive female judges!
Con: The sound and camera angle editing...including too much of the audience.
Check these out!




Now that I have some free time...

I am missing my baby pooch, Rajah/Raju/Rajjles/Fluffy, who is now 1.5 human years old!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Exams coming up...

Maybe this is why I went and splurged on some groceries consisting of mostly sweets.

Blog is going to be slow until the tuesday after Labor Day. First block exams for anatomy and biochem coming up. YIKES!

Friday, August 28, 2009

Watch this!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Amen.

Except the whole vegetarian part. (This is a PeTA Billboard that has since been removed and changed, in Jacksonville, Florida.)

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Tone Matrix

This is addicting!
Click HERE.

Not sure how I feel about this...

Looks promising...

Trailer for "AVATAR"

Thursday, August 20, 2009

This consistently makes me happy.

Bhangra Empire (first place) @ Bruin Bhangra 2009

The Holy Black Trinity

Jay- Z Featuring Rihanna & Kanye West "Run this town"

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Medical News

Usually I post one article at a time, but there is so much recently that I have to use this format to spare me some time...


Primary liver cancers 'soaring' (For Full Article, click HERE)
Cases of primary liver cancer, an often preventable disease, have trebled in the last 30 years, figures suggest. While it is not uncommon for cancer to spread to the liver, Cancer Research UK statistics show incidents where it starts in the organ have risen sharply. Cases of cancer overall have increased over recent decades as people live longer and detection methods improve. But experts say hepatitis C infections, as well as alcohol and obesity, have helped fuel the spike in liver cases.

'Magnetic' stem cells for hearts (For the full article, click HERE)
Heart attacks and other vascular injuries could eventually be treated using regular injections of magnetised stem cells, experts say. In animal trials, the cutting-edge treatment delivered the healing cells to the precise site of damage where their help was needed. Although human tests are needed, a similar magnetic approach has been used to guide cancer therapies. The expert US journal Cardiovascular Interventions reports the findings.

Child leukaemia 'genes' revealed (For the full article, click HERE)
The three variants each raise the risk by between 30% and 60%, said the Institute of Cancer Research team. But they stressed that other things, such as childhood infections, may also play a role. Leukaemia Research said the clues offered by the research, in the journal Nature Genetics, may improve care. Leukaemia is the most common childhood cancer, with approximately 500 new cases each year in the UK, and Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia (ALL) accounts for roughly 85% of these. Scientists believe that there is likely to be no single reason why a child develops the disease, but a combination of factors, perhaps including an inherited genetic ingredient in some cases.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

This looks good.

Then again I love Peter Jackson's work. Here is a featurette for The Lovely Bones.
Side note: He looks like a completely different man now that he has lost all that weight.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Perfect.

THIS is exactly what I wanted to read now that I have moved down here.

Loving this.

It's rare enough to find a well done cover song, but an epic music video to match...Wow.

Here is The Fray's cover of Kanye's "Heartless". One of the best music videos I've seen in a while.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Too soon?

Read their motto! Hilarity. "We don't hold anything back"


Thursday, August 13, 2009

This scares me...

The following is an excerpt from a CNN.com article:

World population projected to reach 7 billion in 2011

The world's population is forecast to hit 7 billion in 2011, the vast majority of its growth coming in developing and, in many cases, the poorest nations, a report released Wednesday said.

A staggering 97 percent of global growth over the next 40 years will happen in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, according to the Population Reference Bureau's 2009 World Population Data Sheet.

"The great bulk of today's 1.2 billion youth -- nearly 90 percent -- are in developing countries," said Carl Haub, a co-author of the report. Eight in 10 of those youth live in Africa and Asia.

"During the next few decades, these young people will most likely continue the current trend of moving from rural areas to cities in search of education and training opportunities, gainful employment, and adequate health care," Haub continued, calling it one of the major social questions of the next few decades.



Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

This looks trippy....

Monday, August 10, 2009

Eye Heart Tulane Medical!

This is embroidered on my scrubs!

Sunday, August 9, 2009

This is news worthy...

Speechless.


Taimurs Topics Reborn!!!

And everyone is super excited!!!

Let's so how long this lasts! ;-)

Sunday, March 8, 2009

"I got more in me!"

I actually laughed out loud when I saw this!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Epic biotechnology breakthrough!

Here is an excerpt from a BBC article:

A man who lost his sight 30 years ago says he can now see flashes of light after being fitted with a bionic eye.

Ron, 73, had the experimental surgery seven months ago at London's Moorfield's eye hospital.
He says he can now follow white lines on the road, and even sort socks, using the bionic eye, known as Argus II.

It uses a camera and video processor mounted on sunglasses to send captured images wirelessly to a tiny receiver on the outside of the eye. In turn, the receiver passes on the data via a tiny cable to an array of electrodes which sit on the retina - the layer of specialised cells that normally respond to light found at the back of the eye.

When these electrodes are stimulated they send messages along the optic nerve to the brain, which is able to perceive patterns of light and dark spots corresponding to which electrodes have been stimulated. The hope is that patients will learn to interpret the visual patterns produced into meaningful images. The bionic eye has been developed by US company Second Sight. So far 18 patients across the world, including three at Moorfields, have been fitted with the device.

It is designed to help people, like Ron, who have been made blind through retinitis pigmentosa, a group of inherited eye diseases that cause degeneration of the retina. The disease progresses over a number of years, normally after people have been diagnosed when they are children.
It is estimated between 20,000 to 25,000 are affected in the UK.

This just in....


In The Know: Are Reality Shows Setting Unrealistic Standards For Skanks?

WATCHMEN: Out this weekend!

Pumped to see this movie! 

Read the graphic novel!
I highly recommend it!

PUKAR 2009 Pictures!

Here are some AMAZING photographs taken from my event, PUKAR 2009, on February 7th, 2009. The pictures were taken by Mamoon Chowdry. For more pictures, click here.








I am going to be filthy rich!!!


Here is an e-mail I received today that somehow avoided going into my Gmail spam folder, and BOY am I glad it did!

from
Sgt Joey Jones 
reply-tosgt.joeyjonesusarmy09@windowslive.com
toundisclosed-recipients
dateWed, Mar 4, 2009 at 4:45 PM
subjectRE.

Hello,

I hope my e-mail find you well.  I need your assistance. My
name is Sgt Joey Jones, I am an American soldier with the
3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment in IRAQ for the United States,
we have $25,000,000.00, that is in our Possession and we
are ready to move it out of the country.

The Money is part of the one we seized from late Saddam
Hussein, but was not declared. My colleague and I need a
good partner someone we can trust to actualize this Venture,
but we are moving it through Diplomatic way to your house
directly. Your share is 40% while 60% is for me and my
colleague.

Sincerely,
Sgt Joey Jones.
sgt.joeyjonesusarmy09@windowslive.com

Islamic Dominoes!

A good laugh courtesy of my aunt!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Isn't this obvious.

Here is an excerpt from a BBC.com article: 

Unhappy children 'end up unwell'

Unhappy children are more likely to grow up to become adults who are permanently sick or disabled, a UK study has suggested.

The King's College London-led research looked at over 7,100 people born between 1950 and 1955. Researchers found those described as "miserable" or "unhappy" by teachers were five times more likely to be off work through ill-health in middle age. They said these children were also likely to be more prone to depression. The study, published in the British Journal of Psychiatry, involved thousands of children who grew up in Aberdeen in the 1950s. Teachers were asked about their temperament and school attendance.

Researchers recently tracked down many of the participants - now in middle age - to ask them about their employment status. Some 392 reported they were unable to work because of permanent disability or ill-health - 5.5% of the total questioned. This could have included those retired through illness and those on incapacity benefit. A quarter of those whose teachers had reported them as "often appearing miserable, unhappy, tearful or distressed" were permanently sick or disabled.

A quarter of those who complained of aches and pain were also off sick through ill-health.
But those who were off school because of poor physical health were no more likely to end up as adults off work sick.

It's all about delivery...

A funny segment from Dane Cook's "Vicious Circle". 

Friday, February 27, 2009

So sad, yet so interesting.

I came across this story in the Metro Newspaper. Here is an excerpt from telegraph.co.uk:

Girl Raised By Dogs

Madina, now aged three, was reportedy raised by animals like Rudyard Kipling's Mowgli character after her alcoholic mother Anna was incapable of caring for her.

Now taken into care by authorities in Ufa, in central Russia, she is recovering from her unusual upbringing. She was discovered by social workers at her mother's home on all fours and gnawing on bones with dogs.


Police said that her mother had ignored her for most of her life, allowing her to eat on the floor while she ate at the kitchen table. A social worker alleged: "The child is angelic but she has been deprived of love and care, except from the dogs."

"When her mother was angry she used to run away, but no child played with her in the playground. She hardly knew a single word, and fought with everyone. So dogs became her best friends. She played with them, and slept with them when it was cold in winter.'

When police took Madina into care, her mother is reported to have said: "I do look after my daughter." Doctors are reported to have said that the Madina is mentally and physically healthy despite her experiences, although her vocabulary is limited to "yes" and "no".

Madina's father walked out on the family shortly after she was born.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Hahaha....WHAT!?!?!

My sensitive side.

I think this is a great song and an even better music video.
Katy Perry's "Thinking Of You"

I want one. Oh..right....please.

The Z-One's styling comes from Italy via coachbuilder Zagato, South Africa based Perana Performance will be building the car, and the heart of the car is pure American muscle, a 6.2 liter LS3 V8.

H2OH MY GOD!

Here is astonishing article from ScienceNOW Daily News called "Drink Up, Energy Hogs" By Jackie Grom. [Feb. 26th, 2009]

Talk about an energy drink. The first comprehensive and peer-reviewed energy analysis of a bottle of water confirms what many environmentalists have charged. From start to finish, bottled water consumes between 1100 and 2000 times more energy on average than does tap water.

Bottled water consumption has skyrocketed over the past several years. In 2007, some 200 billion liters of bottled water were sold worldwide, and Americans took the biggest gulp: 33 billion liters a year, an average of 110 liters per person. That amount has grown 70% since 2001, and bottled water has now surpassed milk and beer in sales. Many environmental groups have been concerned with this surge because they suspected that making and delivering a bottle of water used much more energy than did getting water from the tap. But until now, no one really knew bottled water’s energy price tag.

Environmental scientist Peter Gleick of the Pacific Institute, a nonprofit research organization in Oakland, California, and his colleague Heather Cooley have added up the energy used in each stage of bottled-water production and consumption. Their tally includes how much energy goes into making a plastic bottle; processing the water; labeling, filling, and sealing a bottle; transporting it for sale; and cooling the water prior to consumption.

The two most energy-intensive categories, the researchers reveal in the current issue of Environmental Research Letters, are manufacturing the bottle and transportation. The team estimates that the global demand for bottle production alone uses 50 million barrels of oil a year--that's 2 1/2 days of U.S. oil consumption. Determining the energy required to transport a bottle isn't as straightforward. Some bottles of water travel short distances, but others are imported from far-off countries, which increases their energy footprint. Gleick and Cooley found that drinking an imported bottle of water is about two-and-a-half to four times more energy intensive than getting it locally, often outweighing the energy required to make the bottle.

All told, Gleick estimates that U.S. bottled-water consumption in 2007 required an energy input equivalent to 32 million to 54 million barrels of oil. Global energy demand for bottled water is three times that amount. To put that energy use into perspective, Gleick says to imagine that each bottle is up to one-quarter full of oil.

"They've done a pretty good job of modeling the bottled-water side," says environmental engineer H. Scott Matthews of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. But he also says they didn't do enough modeling of tap water to make an adequate comparison between the two. Gleick says that, although the energy for purifying and delivering tap water varies, even in the most expensive cases it is hundreds of times less than for bottled water.

Hyung-Chul Kim, an industrial ecologist at Columbia University, noted that the analysis didn't include the energy recovered from recycling bottles. Gleick says they didn’t include that value in their calculations because almost all recycled water bottles end up as carpet, clothing, or toys, not new bottles.

Creepy.

Made by Israeli artist Ronit Baranga.

Whoa whoa whoa.....!!!! We are back in action!

Hey all, 

Sorry for the delay. As of my last post here is what happened:
Dec. 9th- Jan. 9th: I was in Pakistan (A+)
Jan. 9th- Feb. 7th: I was working on Pukar2009 (B)
Feb. 8th- Feb. 22nd: Rehearsing with Boston Bhangra for the Vancouver Internation Bhangra Celebration Coast to Coast Competition (A++)

Anyways....I will keep updating this blog now. Sorry for the absence. 
(Pic on the left at VIBC last week, pic on the right at wedding in Pakistan.)

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