Category Archives: Issues in science

New Glue Could Fix that Wounded Heart!

Ever watched the TV show Star Trek, where Captain Jean-Luc Picard is stabbed in the heart but yet survives due to a device that stitches wounds in the heart? Now, researchers have found an adhesive of similar function where rather than using stitches or staples, this glue repairs heart wounds which are as strong as the alternatives while avoiding complicated procedures.

A new glue could be used to seal tears in heart tissue or blood vessels.

Inventors, Jeffrey M. Karp, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, andDr. Pedro del Nido, a cardiac surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital explains how staples and stitches can cause problems. Each pass of a suture (stich) needle, the tissue needs to be realigned and staples can damage the tissue and moreover, it requires the process of removal. In order to solve these problems, the researchers aimed to design a water-repellent glue that could harden quickly and create a seal that could withstand the stress in a beating heart.

The liquid glue is applied either on a patch and then placed on to the hole in the tissue (shown below) or directly to the tear of the blood vessel or the intestinal wall until the glue is hardened.

The glue is used with a patch to repair a wound in the heart tissue.

The surgeon then shines ultraviolet light onto the glue which results in a rubbery substance that merges with the heart’s collagen due to the glue molecules binding with the collagen fibres creating strong chains.

This adhesive has been tested on rats and pigs and have successfully shown that it helps seal the wound quicker than other adhesives that exist. In addition, “some of those adhesives require that the tissue be dried for the adhesive to stick, while others aren’t compatible with certain types of tissue,” Karp says.

Human trials are still necessary in order for use in the clinic but the researchers are optimistic that they will be able to utilize this in Europe by the end of 2015.

– Yuri Tomura

Home Away From Home?

At the recent Search for Life Beyond the Solar System conference in Arizona, it was announced that an Earth-sized planet had been found orbiting a star’s habitable zone. Thomas Barclay, a NASA astronomer, looked at data collected by the Kepler telescope to determine the characteristics of this planet. However, he’s been quiet about the details, waiting until his research is published.

Area in Kepler Telescope’s Range of View (Source: NASA)

At least we know the important part: it orbits in the habitable zone. Many scientists believe that liquid water is necessary for life to exist and while this may an Earth-centric view to take, so far it seems like liquid water is most associated with life.  While we don’t know if there is water on this planet, we know that its distance from its host star means that it’s cool enough for water to condense yet warm enough for it to not freeze.

The second most important part is its size: its relatively small size (1.1 times the radius of Earth) among all the exo-planets detected means that it’s the first Earth-sized planet to be found orbiting a star’s habitable zone. While we are not exactly sure how dependent life is on gravity, it bodes well for the possibility of life if a planet has the similar characteristics as that of the only planet known to host life.

While a minimal amount of details are known to those outside of the conference, we do know that the star the planet orbits an M1 Dwarf, also known as a Red Dwarf.

Artist’s depiction of a Red Dwarf (Source: Wikipedia)

These stars are very small and their masses range from the bare minimum needed for star formation to half that of the Sun. They are also the most common star in the Milky Way.

We also know that there are at least five other planets that are in orbit around this dwarf.

However, it’s probably best to ease up on the speculation and wait until the research is published: when we know more about the planet, then we can continue to consider what this discovery means for the search for life on other planets.

– Nicholas MacDonald

A peice of history: the oldest known material on Earth

In Australia, on a sheep ranch just 600 Kilometers of Perth, a group of Scientists have just found the oldest known material on Earth.  The zircon crystal is extremely tiny, appearing as a single isolated grain. John Valley, a University of Wisconsin geoscience professor who led the research, used a dating technique called atom probe tomography to accurately date the crystal to an age of 4.4 billion years.

Zircon Crystal (Reuters)

Jack Hills, the region where the crystal was found (earthobservatory.nasa.gov)

In the past, the standard technique for dating materials  was a method called uranium-lead dating.  This method used the radioactive decay of uranium into lead, which one could then use to determine a materials age using half-lives. This would proved extremely useful for zircon dating as their crystalline formation tends to accumulate uranium.

However, some skeptics have argued against the accuracy of the method, as uranium and lead can be known to move around or even escape the zircon crystals through radiation damage. “If there’s a process by where lead can move from one part of the crystal to another place, then the place where lead is concentrated will have an older apparent age and the place from where it moves will have a younger apparent age” Valley said.

Timeline of the history of Earth. For perspective the formation of the earth was at 4.5 billion years while the Jack Hills Zircon was determined to be 4.4 billion years old. (Sydney Morning Herald)

In an attempt to end the debate, John Valley and his group determined the age of the zircon crystals through another technique. The technique, atom probe tomography, is a material analysis technique that gives extensive information about a material such as chemical composition with extreme accuracy.

By using atom probe tomography, the group of researchers managed to examine areas of the crystal with a length as small as 10 nm. At such distances, the effects of uranium-lead movement would be negligible.  As a result of their efforts, Valley and his group have confirmed that the zircon crystal was indeed 4.4 billion years old, hopefully quelling some of the argument.

Link to the Paper:

http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v7/n3/full/ngeo2075.html

 

Felix Tang

The sweet solution to antibiotic resistant bacteria

It has been known for some time now that honey has several antibacterial properties, having been employed by many ancient civilizations as a topical treatment for wounds. Honey is an effective treatment against antibiotic resistant bacteria because it effectively attacks bacteria on multiple levels having hydrogen peroxide, acidity, osmotic effect, high sugar concentrations and polyphenols in its arsenal to kill bacterial cells. This makes it very difficult for bacteria to develop resistance to all of the effects of honey simultaneously.

Honey (Image Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Dr. Rowena Jenkins and her team from the University of Wales Institute – Cardiff looked at the antibacterial properties of honey on bacteria that infect wounds. They determined that it wasn’t only the sugar present in honey but other factors that helped kill the bacteria. In their experiment they noticed that one particular protein, called FabI, was entirely missing after the honey treatment. This protein was particularly responsible for fatty acid biosynthesis and without it bacteria couldn’t produce the lipopolysaccharides that are essential to build bacterial cell walls. However they could not isolate which particular element of the honey was responsible for completely destroying the protein.

Another research paper, published the year following Dr. Jenkins work, in the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB), isolated the protein which was responsible for most of the antibacterial properties  of honey as defensin-1. This protein, the researchers proposed, is added to the honey by the bees that make it and is part of their immune system. Further research into this protein could pave the way to finding treatments that bacteria cannot develop resistance to and even kill antibiotic resistant bacteria.

Honey Bee (Image Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Additionally, Professor Rose Cooper from the University of Wales Institute Cardiff has experimented on the interactions between three types of bacteria and honey, concluding that honey could even have an effect that reverses antibiotic resistance. One of the bacteria she was studying, Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), was shown to become more sensitive to the antibiotic oxacillin when used together with honey. This brings about the proposition that antibiotics should be coupled with honey in treatments to increase their potency and also decrease the chances of bacterial resistance developing.

The research invested into the antibacterial properties of honey show that it is a very effective treatment that should be included into modern medicine in a larger scale. Currently certain medical grade honeys are used in the treatment of infectious wounds. These honeys are handled very differently to conventional honey to avoid contamination as they come in contact with exposed body tissue.

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Further research should be carried out to determine ways in which to administer antibiotic-honey coupled treatments for a greater, less risky effect that has the potential to eradicate antibiotic resistant bacteria.

~Adil Cader.

Can Exercise Help to Prevent Cancer?

Many people have believed cancer is found in people’s genes and therefore cannot be prevented. It is a good thing to see that simple exercise is proving people wrong. However in as much as it is true that certain types of cancers run in the family; most cancers are not linked to genes we inherit from our parents. In fact, only a small portion of all cancers is inherited. Cancer is highly preventable and not just cancer, many other diseases too; such as heart attacks and chronic illnesses. These killer diseases can be prevented by a simple general change in a person’s lifestyle.

A large study in 2008 found out that a combination of four healthy behaviors could automatically improve your health or even help prevent killer diseases. These behaviors were: not smoking, moderating how much alcohol you drink, keeping active and eating five daily portions of fruit and vegetables everyday. The people who ticked all the four healthy boxes are more likely to gain fourteen years of life compared to those who do not follow what the healthy boxes require. At the end of the study, health doctors said that they were less likely to die from cancer or heart disease.

(image from: wikimedia)

Exercise is a good take to battle cancer with. Exercise even prevents people from being overweight, which is another cause for diseases like diabetes, heart failure and cancer. Exercise is simple to do and a God sent healer. Why don’t people just embrace it and do it wholeheartedly and eventually save lives. Furthermore, it is inexpensive; you do not need to have a gym instructor to discipline yourself in exercise. It is a matter of a decision – to wake up early in the morning and go jogging for a couple of hours. This will increase your blood circulation and make sure your body is fit and healthy.

This is a call for everyone who values their health, no matter what your weight is. A list of that can be prevented by exercising is: Being active boosts high density lipoprotein or cholesterol which in turn decreases unhealthy triglycerides. It prevents cancer, heart attacks, stroke, type 2 diabetes, arthritis, depression, metabolic syndrome, falls and basically almost every single disease. So, worry no more about your health and embrace exercise.

Anti-cancer food (image from: wikimedia)

Eating right is the next big thing that anyone can engage in to save their lives. A study has shown that being overweight after completing cancer treatment was the cause of shorter survival times and a higher risk of cancer recurrence. People talk of eating a balanced diet but which foods really prevent cancer? Anti-cancer foods really work, yes; it’s being tried and tested. While you exercise your way to a healthy living, you can try these foods too to help prevent occurrence and recurrence of cancer: blueberries, green tea, garlic, broccoli, onions, cooked tomatoes, red wine, soybeans, turmeric and watercress. The delicious foods have also, in addition to exercise, been on the front line in battling prostrate, breast, lung, and colon cancers.