2014, ജൂലൈ 28, തിങ്കളാഴ്‌ച

Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

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London: A research has found that drugs widely used to treat lung diseases like asthma or pneumonia work better with the body clock.

Once the ancient rhythm of our body clock is disturbed owing to artificial light, shift work and jet lag, medication to treat asthma and pneumonia can become ineffective, scientists said.

The research led by professors David Ray and Andrew Loudon from University of Manchester found that cells lining the lung airways have their own body clock which is the time-keeper for lung inflammation -- both conditions cause swelling in the lungs.

Researchers further discovered that more severe lung inflammation happens as a result of the loss of the body clock working in these cells.

'We found a key molecule known as CXCL5 that facilitates lung inflammation which is a key regulator of how immune cells get into tissues. The loss of CXCL5 completely prevents the time of day regulation of lung inflammation which opens up new ways to treat lung diseases,' Loudon said.

During the research, the team uncovered how glucocorticoid hormones from the adrenal gland are vital in controlling the level of inflammation in the cells lining the airway.

'This hormone works through the glucocorticoid receptor, a major regulator of gene expression. We wanted to find out, therefore, if glucocorticoid medicines would also show a time of day effect. Our research shows they do,' Ray added.

The team concluded that the rhythm of the clock in the lining of the cells in the lungs is important for lung diseases like asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Our bodies anticipate the change from day to night by having an internal, or circadian clock.

This explains why it is hard to adjust to shift work.

The body clock regulates sleep but now has been discovered to also regulate our immune system.

The findings were published in the journal Nature Medicine.

IANS

Debutant lifter Sivalingam strikes gold, Ravi fetches silver

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Glasgow: Indian weightlifter Satish Sivalingam scripted history in just his debut Commonwealth Games, breaking the Games record en route to a gold medal, while compatriot Ravi Katulu took the silver in the men's 77kg event here.

The 22-year-old Satish, the 2013 Commonwealth Championships gold medallist, lifted a total of 328kg (149+179) to pip the 2010 CWG gold medallist Ravi, who had to be content with a silver medal following an effort of 317kg (142+175).

Australia's Francois Etoundi bagged the bronze with a lift of 314kg (137+177) at the Clyde Auditorium here.

Satish's 149kg lift in Sntch lift erased the earlier record of 148kg in the name of of Yuko Peter of Nauru while winning gold in 2010 Delhi.

India ran away with the day's honours in weightlifting as Punam Yadav had won a bronze in women's 63kg earlier in the day with a total lift of 202kg (88+114).

India have now bettered their 2010 CWG performance in weightlifting. India have won nine medals (3-2-4) in weightlifting, one more than the eight (2-2-4) in Delhi.

Both Ravi and Satish performed tactically and began their snatch after most of the other competitors had made their three attempts by keeping the starting weight at 142kg.

Sex blackmail scandal: Probe against Sarathchandra Prasad

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Thiruvananthapuram: The police have launched a probe against Congress leader Sarathchandra Prasad to establish whether he maintained any direct association with the sex blackmailing scandal accused Jayachandran.

Jayachandran was staying in a room taken in Sarathchandra Prasad name at the MLA Hostel. However, Sarathchandra Prasad had stated that he knew Jayachandran only as an event manager and had handed over the keys of the room to his friend Sunil Kottarakkara.

Talking to Mathrubhumi News on Monday, Sunil's father said Jayachandran had been staying in the room with the consent of Sarathchandra Prasad. Now the police have launched a probe based on this statement.

Earlier, police had said that they trapped Jayachandran from Parasalaby trackinghis mobile phone signals.

Investigations revealed that he had stayed for several weeks in room no 47 of the MLA Hostel. 

International arbitration court orders Russia to pay $50 billion to former Yukos shareholders

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The ruling adds to tensions between Russia and the international community at a time when relations are at their lowest ebb since the end of the Cold War.

An international court on Monday ordered Russia to pay more than $50 billion to the former majority shareholders of now defunct oil company Yukos, ruling that the state engaged in a ruthless campaign to destroy what was once the country’s biggest oil producer.
In one of the biggest such cases ever, the Permanent Court for Arbitration in the Hague, Netherlands, determined Russia was not acting in good faith to collect taxes when it levelled massive claims against Yukos in 2003, even though some of the company’s tax arrangements might have been questionable. The tax case led to the imprisonment of Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky and has been widely seen as retaliation for his support of opposition political parties.
The state took advantage of the tax claims “by launching a full assault on Yukos and its beneficial owners in order to bankrupt Yukos and appropriate its assets while, at the same time, removing Mr. Khodorkovsky from the political arena,” the court said.
The ruling adds to tensions between Russia and the international community at a time when relations are at their lowest ebb since the end of the Cold War. Following the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine, the U.S. and European Union are debating further economic sanctions against Moscow because of its support for rebels suspected of launching the attack.
The amount of damages, although half as much as originally claimed, is still colossal, even for a nation with the vast oil and mineral wealth like Russia. It is nearly as much as Russia spent on the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, the most expensive Olympics in history.
The Yukos takeover was the beginning of a process under which Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, retook control of the country’s energy industry. Yukos’ main assets were sold at auction to a shell company. Just days later, that company was bought up by state-owned Rosneft, making it the largest oil producer in Russia.
In the ruling, which was dated July 18 and announced on Monday, the court described the seizure of the assets as “devious and calculated.”
Russia was ordered to pay the judgment within 180 days or begin paying interest. If Russia declines to pay, shareholders can attempt to seize Russian assets abroad such as commercial properties, travelling art collections or airplanes.
“It’s the end of the beginning,” said Tim Osborne, the executive director of GML, formerly Group Menetap Ltd. whose subsidiaries brought the suit. “We’re over the first and most important hurdle. It’s now a question of enforcing it.”
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, commenting on unconfirmed reports about the ruling earlier on Monday, said that Russia would keep fighting.
“Authorities who are representing Russia in this trial will use all possible legal means to defend their position,” Mr. Lavrov said.
Rosneft said in a statement on Monday that it is not party to the litigation and that it did not expect to be affected by it.
“Rosneft believes that all the deals to purchase former assets of Yukos as well as all its actions regarding Yukos were fully legitimate and were done in line to the legislation at the time,” the company said.
Shares in Rosneft, which is worth $65.7 billion, were down 3.6 per cent on Monday trading in London and 2.7 per cent in Moscow.
GML sought relief from under the Energy Charter Treaty, which creates the legal basis for an open international energy market. The holding company claimed that Russia violated the treaty, which requires swift and fair compensation if assets are expropriated.
Mr. Khodorkovsky, who spent ten years in prison before he was pardoned by Putin in December last year, said Monday that the decision was “fantastic” for shareholders, though he underscored he was not a party to the case and would get nothing personally.
“It is sad that the recompense will have to come from the State’s coffers, not from the pockets of Mafiosi linked to the powers that be and those of Putin’s oligarchs,” he said in a statement.
The Yukos matter has raised questions about whether investors can expect any safeguards in Russia. Analysts suggest that many will be watching how the Russians react.
“The Yukos affair is likely to come back to haunt the Russians,” said Anders Aslund, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute in Washington and a long-time Russia watcher. “You don’t steal companies.”

Woman jumps from flyover, critical in Delhi

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New Delhi  : A 38-year-old woman was in critical condition Sunday after she jumped from a flyover here in an attempt to commit suicide, police said.Basanti fractured her legs after plunging from the Peera Garhi flyover in west Delhi, apparently because of family issues.
She was rushed to the Maharaja Agrasen hospital where she is in critical condition,”a police official said.
“Initial inquiry reveals she was depressed over the behaviour of her family members,” said the official. Basanti lived in Najafgarh, also in west Delhi.

2014, ജൂലൈ 20, ഞായറാഴ്‌ച

AL-FATHIHA [ 8]

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AL-FATHIHA [ 7]

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AL-FATHIHA [6]

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AL-FATHIHA [5

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ആബുലൻസ മറിഞ്ഞ് രോഗി തീ പിടിച്ചു മരിച്ചു.

[ The ambulance overturned and caught fire and the patient was burnt Pay caculans fell into the Kalad hospital and caught fire. Nadapur...