Author: Serkadis

  • Genetic testing proving effective in wiping out diseases

    Some of mankind’s most devastating inherited diseases appear to be declining, and a few have nearly disappeared, because more people are using genetic testing to decide whether to have children.

    Births of babies with cystic fibrosis, Tay-Sachs and other less familiar disorders seem to have dropped since testing came into wider use, The Associated Press found from interviews with numerous geneticists and other experts and a review of the limited research available.

    Many of these diseases are little known and few statistics are kept. But their effects — ranging from blood disorders to muscle decline — can be disabling and often fatal during childhood.

    Now, more women are being tested as part of routine prenatal care, and many end pregnancies when diseases are found. One study in California found that prenatal screening reduced by half the number of babies born with the severest form of cystic fibrosis because many parents chose abortion.

    More couples with no family history of inherited diseases are getting tested before starting families to see if they carry mutations that put a baby at risk. And a growing number are screening embryos and using only those without problem genes.

    The cost of testing is falling, and the number of companies offering it is rising. A 2008 federal law banning gene-based discrimination by insurers and employers has eased fears.

    Genetic testing pushes hot-button issues: abortion, embryo destruction and worries about eugenics — selective breeding to rid a population of unwanted traits.

    Yet it is touching a growing number of people:

    • In suburban Cleveland, Beth and Thad Meese were stunned to learn during her second pregnancy that they carry genes that can cause cystic fibrosis. Tests show the baby won’t have the disease, but they have decided against having a third child or to screen embryos if they do. “I feel like we got lucky” and should not tempt fate again, she said.
    • In Boston, Harvard psychologist and author Steven Pinker and his wife, novelist Rebecca Goldstein, learned last year that they carry genes that cause a serious neurological disease, familial dysautonomia. Too old to have children, they shared the news with younger relatives, who are being tested to see if they, too, have the gene. “There’s a tendency psychologically to think these are very rare and what are the chances that two people could both have rare genes,” Pinker said. “Not only can it happen, but it happened to me.”
    • In the Canadian city of Vancouver, Jeff and Megan Carroll screened embryos to have two children free of the Huntington’s disease gene Jeff has. “I felt very strongly that I didn’t want to pass on this,” he said. Huntington’s “is done killing people in my family when I am gone.”

    Although genetic testing can raise moral dilemmas, at least one conservative religious group — Orthodox Jews — has found ethically acceptable ways to use it to lessen diseases that have plagued its populations.

    “I am a Holocaust survivor. I was born in the middle of the second World War. I hope that I am not a suspect for practicing eugenics. We are trying to have healthy children,” said Rabbi Josef Ekstein of New York, who founded a group that tests couples and discourages matches when both carry problem genes.

    Some diseases — sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, Tay-Sachs, thalassemia, spinal muscle atrophy — occur when people inherit two bad genes, one from each parent. The genes can pass quietly for generations until two carriers mate; then children have a one-in-four chance of getting the disease.

    (Down syndrome is the best known disorder for which prenatal testing has long been available, but it’s caused by an extra chromosome during abnormal cell division — not genes inherited from the parents.)

    Statistics for inherited diseases are hard to come by — birth certificates often don’t list them, and they sometimes aren’t diagnosed for months or years after birth. Yet, there’s little doubt that testing has put a dent in many.

    “We’re definitely seeing decreased rates of certain genetic disorders as a result of carrier screening,” said Dr. Wendy Chung, clinical genetics chief at Columbia University. In five years, she has seen only one case of Tay-Sachs, a neurological disease that used to be more common in Ashkenazi, or Eastern European Jews. Children with the disease lack a key enzyme; they lose mental and physical abilities and usually die by age 4.

    In the last decade, only about a dozen new cases of Tay-Sachs occurred each year in the United States, said Dr. Michael Kuback, a professor at the University of California at San Diego who tracks the disease.

    Ekstein, the rabbi, lost four children to it before founding Dor Yeshorim, a Brooklyn-based group that recruits Jews to be tested. Using confidential PIN numbers, they call a hotline to see if a prospective mate would be a risky match. The group has 300,000 members and tests for nine diseases, including cystic fibrosis.

    “In the Orthodox Ashkenazi community around the world, we virtually have wiped out the diseases we screen for,” said the group’s development director, Allan Binder.

    One is familial dysautonomia. Since 2004, only a few children worldwide have been born with it each year, and it soon may cease to exist because of genetic screening, said Dr. Barron Lerner, a Columbia University medical historian. The disease causes faulty nerve development, floppy muscles, digestive and other problems, and kills many by young adulthood.

    Fragile X syndrome, the leading cause of mental impairment in boys, may decline because carrier testing for parents and prenatal testing of fetuses is now available for it, said Barbara Biesecker, director of the genetic counseling program at the National Institutes of Health.

    Lots of eyes are on cystic fibrosis, a disease that causes sticky mucus buildup in the lungs, digestive problems and death in young adulthood. More than 10 million Americans — one in 25 to 29 whites, who are more at risk for it than blacks — carry a gene mutation for it.

    In 2001, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and other groups recommended that white pregnant women be offered testing for mutations. Tests on partners and fetuses often followed, and an unknown number of abortions.

    The impact showed up two years later in Massachusetts, one of the few states testing newborns for the disease at the time. Births of babies with cystic fibrosis dropped, from 29 in 2000 to only 10 in 2003, ticking up to 15 in 2006, said Dr. Richard Parad, a Brigham and Women’s Hospital physician who helped set up the screening program.

    In California, Kaiser Permanente, a large health maintenance organization, offered prenatal screening.

    From 2006 through 2008, 87 couples with cystic fibrosis mutations agreed to have fetuses tested, and 23 were found to have the disease. Sixteen of the 17 fetuses projected to have the severest type of disease were aborted, as were four of the six fetuses projected to have less severe disease.

    Comparisons to couples not given prenatal screening suggested that screening had cut births of babies with severe disease in half, researchers reported at a genetics conference in 2008. Studies in Canada, Italy, Australia and in Europe also found that cases dropped after screening began.

    The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation’s registry, which tracks voluntarily reported cases, shows a steady rise in recent years. But that is because more states have started testing all newborns, discovering cases that previously went unreported, some researchers believe.

    In December, Texas became the final state to add such testing; the first reliable national estimate of cases is expected in a couple of years.

    Beth Meese, the Cleveland nurse who discovered from prenatal tests that she and her husband are carriers, wishes they had been screened before pregnancy. By the time they learned of their risk, they had seen an ultrasound and decided to have the baby no matter what its tests showed.

    “We saw the baby, saw it moving,” she said. “It makes that decision that much more difficult to make.”

    Gene testing hasn’t led to declines in all diseases. Sickle cell, a blood disorder that causes anemia and pain and raises the risk of stroke, has not dropped. It mostly afflicts blacks; gene carriers are said to have sickle cell “trait,” which sounds harmless.

    “Now we’re actually learning that it’s not as benign as we thought it was,” and that carriers have higher risks for certain medical problems, said Dr. Lanetta Jordan, a Florida physician and chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America.

    Newborn screening is finding more sickle cell carriers and cases, but this doesn’t seem to affect parents’ future family plans, Jordan said.

    Gene testing also has had little impact on Huntington’s disease, a progressive, fatal neurological disorder.

    Unlike many other inherited diseases, only one bad copy of a gene is needed to cause Hungtington’s, and symptoms don’t usually appear until middle age, after many have already had children.

    Fewer than 15 percent of people in families with a history of it agree to be tested, said Kimberly Quaid, an Indiana University genetics researcher.

    “They just prefer to live their life and hope for the best,” she said.

    Jeff Carroll, the Canadian who, with his wife, screened embryos because he carries the Huntington’s gene, said it is “unconscionable” to procreate without taking steps to prevent passing on the disease.

    “Having my test result has immensely improved my life. I was able to make reproduction decisions that ended HD in my family,” and to launch a career as a biologist researching the disease, he said.

    The number of fertility treatments that include embryo screening has been on the rise in recent years, with nearly 5,200 screenings in 2006, according to the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology. Carrier testing also is rising.

    A California company, Counsyl, sells a $349 saliva test for genes for more than 100 inherited disorders. Several thousand people used it over the last year, the company reports.

    Eliminating disease is a noble goal but also “should give us pause,” Lerner, the Columbia historian, wrote recently in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    “If a society is so willing to screen aggressively to find these genes and then to potentially to have to abort the fetuses, what does that say about the value of the lives of those people living with the diseases?” he asked.

    It’s a touchy issue. The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation points out that the disease varies greatly in severity, and life expectancy with it is now 37 years.

    Diseases like familial dysautonomia and Tay-Sachs, which kill before school age, are easier cases. If one of those vanishes, “thank God,” said Rabbi Ekstein of the Jewish testing group.

    “It gives me a very good feeling that we are a part of such life-saving efforts.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • As April 30 deadline looms, money to save Arlington teen center elusive

    Supporters of the Arlington Heights Teen Center are inviting residents to bring ideas for saving the center to two upcoming events, but admit the money to save the center has not been found.

    The Village Board has made it clear the center will close April 30 unless funding can be found outside village government, Village Manager Bill Dixon said Tuesday.

    The Teen Center budget is $379,000, and the village board voted last fall to close the center to help fill a budget gap of $3 million. But when supporters crowded into a December board meeting in protest, trustees decided to delay the closing a few months, to see if money could be found.

    This all happened before the village learned the Sheraton Chicago Northwest Hotel was closing, cutting an additional $400,000 from municipal revenue and further discouraging teen center supporters.

    “At this moment a funding source of the magnitude needed has not been located,” said Dixon.

    “I think the good news is that the program is well respected, much appreciated and the source of some support from the community, although the support is not financial,” he added.

    The Arlington Heights Youth Commission welcomes anyone with ideas for saving the center to a meeting at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 18, in village hall.

    Also, from 4-8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26, the youth commission will host an open house at the center, 112 N. Belmont Ave. The hope is people can “see what a great place it is and what we’re in danger of losing,” said Kathy Scortino, co-chair of the youth commission.

    “I refuse to give up hope,” said Scortino. “We are working hard. We’re looking for a new model, perhaps, that will allow us to maintain the center and the high quality of people that are working there.”

    She is also on a committee of interested citizens that is meeting every week. That panel might put different options on the table when the village board tackles the budget early next month, said James McCalister, director of health services and the village department head who oversees the Teen Center.

    Scortino favors cutting back on programs during the hard economic times, “knowing that we can build them back up again.

    “Don’t get rid of it completely and (have to) start from scratch at some future point,” she urged.

    Ideas being floated include charging youngsters membership fees and reinvigorating Teen Center Inc., a not-for-profit foundation, she said.

    “I just believe that kids need to know that they’re cared about, that their community has a place for them that’s safe and supervised by caring and knowledgeable adults,” said Scortino, a counselor.

    The Arlington Heights Park District cannot react to what its role with the Teen Center might be until after the committee working with McCalister reports a plan, said Steve Scholten, executive director.

    The Arlington Heights Memorial Library, like all governmental entities, is in tight economic circumstances itself, and must put its resources toward its own, long-standing teen programs, said Paula Moore, executive director.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Last push to turn former Libertyville High into community center

    An all out push to convert the vacant former Libertyville High School to a community center is under way.

    But if a series of events to raise money and awareness for the project doesn’t work, it could be the end of the line for the ambitious but expensive project.

    “This is our make or break year,” said Jim Moran, a member of the Brainerd Community Center Inc., board.

    “Making Brainerd Real” is the theme of a fundraising and marketing plan to get the building on Route 176 and Brainerd Avenue, just southwest of downtown, off the wish list and into public use.

    The first target is identifying what needs to be done, then following through to make regular use of the Jackson Gym. Built in 1929, it was an addition to the original Libertyville Township High School, which opened in 1917.

    “To make the Brainerd Community Center concept real to the community, we have to start using the building,” Moran said.

    A fundraiser at Austin’s Saloon and Eatery is scheduled for April, with the objective as much to build public awareness as to raise money.

    “So many people in the community see this building sitting there and think, `They’re not doing anything,’” Moran said.

    Efforts are under way to arrange work days and tours, apply for grants and solicit donations, host events, create a video, distribute brochures and generally ingrain the idea in the community conscience.

    The grounds will be a venue for the annual Libertyville Days festival, for example, and a New Year’s Eve bash would cap a year of activity – if the gym can be made usable by then.

    “Bottom line, getting people in the building is the single best way to make it ‘real’ and the gym is a large space with many possible uses,” according to the not-for-profit group’s synopsis of the campaign.

    Closed in 2003 and 2004 respectively, the school and gym are owned by Libertyville-Vernon Hills Area High School District 128. The village has a long-term lease and subleases it to the Brainerd group. An initial payment of $250,000 is due Dec. 1, 2011.

    Without a solid plan and verified source of funds for the lease and some improvements, supporters of what eventually could be a $15 million makeover may call it quits.

    “Is there public interest in it or do we say, `It was a nice try’ and move on?” said Walt Oakley, another community center group member.

    Many behind the scenes actions have occurred, including the merger last fall of the Brainerd group with the Libertyville Civic Center Foundation to provide expertise and assets.

    More recently, the roof has been patched, some windows replaced and exterior lights are being updated. Renovation costs are being updated.

    “There are a lot of sources available but we have to set the vision we have for the building,” said Todd McDermott, who is pursuing grants for the group.

    The buildings are on the National Register of Historic Places and were included on Landmarks Illinois’ 2009-10 watch list.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Video: MT pits GT-R against Bentley Continental Supersports

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    GT-R vs. Continental Supersports – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Motor Trend’s infatuation with the Nissan GT-R (who can blame ’em?) continues, this team manifesting itself in a quarter-mile shoot out comparison between Godzilla and the Bentley Continental Supersports. Sound like a strange pairing? Well it is and it isn’t. Though the Bentley does weigh over 1,000 lbs more than the Nissan (4,993 lb vs 3,885 lb), its twin-turbo W12 engine puts out a lot more horsepower (621 vs 485). Combine those two stats and you get the same power-to-weight ratio of 8 lb/hp for both vehicles. At that point, it’s up to traction, transmissions and the god given nature of each engine to claim a winner. We won’t spoil it for you, though. Check out the vid in full after the jump.

    [Source: Motor Trend]

    Continue reading Video: MT pits GT-R against Bentley Continental Supersports

    Video: MT pits GT-R against Bentley Continental Supersports originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 12:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Fisker to debut Karma’s advanced aluminum space frame in Geneva

    Fisker Automotive announced today that it will come to the 2010 Geneva Motor Show with an advanced aluminum space frame that will underpin the Karma plug-in hybrid electric sedan, giving it “world-class ride and handling characteristics.”

    “Our top priorities when we designed the Karma’s aluminum space frame were that it have extremely high torsional rigidity and could be easily modified to accept Karma model variants,” explained Henrik Fisker, CEO, Fisker Automotive. “We benchmarked some of the world’s best cars to create an all-new space frame that will deliver an exhilarating experience behind the wheel.

    Fisker said that its engineering team designed the Karma’s space frame around the vehicle’s Q-DRIVE series-hybrid powertrain, which consists of a 2.0L turbocharged ECOTEC engine, a lithium-ion battery pack from A123 Systems and a rear-mounted 403-hp motor.

    Click here for more news on the Fisker Karma.

    Make the jump for the press release to learn more.

    2010 Fisker Karma:

    Press Release:

    FISKER AUTOMOTIVE TO DEBUT KARMA ADVANCED ALUMINUM SPACE FRAME AT GENEVA MOTOR SHOW

    IRVINE, CA – February 17, 2010: The advanced aluminum space frame underpinning the Fisker Karma incorporates new levels of rigidity and strength that will give the world’s first premium plug-in hybrid electric vehicle world-class ride and handling characteristics. It will debut at the Geneva Motor Show March 2-14, 2010.

    Fisker Automotive’s talented and experienced engineering team designed the Karma’s space frame around the car’s unique Q-DRIVE® series-hybrid powertrain, filing for multiple patents in the process. Q-DRIVE® consists of a 2.0-liter turbocharged ECOTEC® engine/generator set, a lithium-ion battery pack from A123 Systems, and a rear-mounted 403hp traction motor assembly.

    Though it forms the foundation of a large sedan the Karma space frame’s rigidity is exceptional even when compared to today’s sports cars. By utilizing 5,000- and 6,000- series aluminum alloys and a unique extrusion-intensive architecture, the Fisker engineering team achieved the best balance between weight and size.

    A super-structural tunnel running down the car’s centerline acts as the Karma’s backbone. It not only houses the battery pack but acts as a torque tube connecting front and rear sections. For optimal strength the Karma’s space frame is joined with 79 meters of precision CMT MIG welds and 1,058 self-piercing rivets. Each technique is used independently only where necessary to ensure top quality and durability.

    The result is an industry-leading space frame that provides a solid foundation for the Karma. Few cars match its statistics: Static torsional rigidity – the amount the space frame resists twisting forces when entering a ramp at an angle, for example – measures more than 33,000 Newton-meters per degree (Nm/deg). Static bending rigidity – the amount the space frame resists flexing forces as the car enters a ramp straight on, for example – measures more than 23,000 N/mm. Dynamic stiffness – the space frame’s resistance to resonant vibrations like those felt when driving over a sharp bump or rough road surfaces — is also world class.

    Thanks to intelligent engineering solutions the Karma’s space frame also provides the utmost in occupant safety and exceeds global crash protection standards.

    Front impact protection starts with a patent-pending, multi-cell tempered aluminum crush box that displaces high-impact energy away from passengers. Its unique design allows it to be easily replaced, reducing repair costs that could lower insurance premiums. Dual Phase 600-Series steel reinforced components in the doors and B- pillars provide substantial side impact protection. And the lithium-ion battery’s location in the center of the car puts it farthest from impact areas.

    Valmet Automotive will assemble the space frames at its state-of-the-art facility in Uusikaupunki, Finland.

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Suburban councils debate tax proposals

    Tax proposals in Naperville and St. Charles are drawing backlash from businesses and citizens.

    Gas station owners in Naperville say a proposed fuel tax will end up coming out of their pockets.

    They went to a city council meeting Tuesday night where members are debating an additional 3 cent tax on gas.

    Some independent gas station owners said they would ultimately end up covering the costs themselves in order to compete with gas stations in other towns.

    The city council is also talking about charging homeowners and businesses an extra $3.50 monthly fee for garbage collection.

    Naperville is trying to fill a $14 million budget deficit. They’ll vote on the measures March 2.

    Business owners in St. Charles are fighting two new taxes that could cause major economic hardship.

    The city wants to expand an admissions tax normally charged on major fairs and expos to include movie tickets, theatres and sporting events.

    That would add 40 cents to the average $8 movie ticket.

    The city also wants to increase the liquor tax by 2 percent.

    St. Charles claims the new taxes would bring in more than $1 million in new revenue.

    Business owners say the estimate is overly optimistic because the new taxes would drive customers to other communities.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Eat. Rejoice. Repeat.

    Happy EatingAlthough I haven’t read the book (Eat. Repent. Repeat.), it’s a concept we’re all familiar with. People eat something they know they shouldn’t, self-flagellate and run themselves ragged on the treadmill in penance, only to find themselves in the same boat a few days (or hours) later. Not much of a surprise on that one, is it? I’ll admit I’ve never understood this game, but I see it for the self-perpetuating cycle that it is: an endless rotation of escapism, guilt and punishment. Why do so many people insist upon this transgressive model of eating? And, why, for Pete’s sake, do they think raining retribution on themselves is any way to get back in the saddle?

    We all know the drill. The unassuming soul is lured, tempted, flagrantly ensnared into eating complete crap by the siren song of whatever commercial, billboard, lunch buffet, coworker birthday, happy hour, grocery store end cap he/she encounters that day. How can free will possibly defend against such forces? “It’s not my fault,” he/she might say. “No one was there to tie me to the mast.”

    What’s disturbing about this narrative isn’t the object of consumption itself but the cascade of misguided attitudes emanating from it. Eating isn’t rooted anymore in common sense but in a dualistic dogma of good and evil – complete with displaced culpability instead of personal responsibility. Progress isn’t measured by steady development of perspective but by histrionic bouts of self-submission. Hit the gym the day after a holiday, and too often the whole place reeks of self-reproach.

    How is it that people don’t see the inanity of trying to “run off” a donut or whatever junk food they’ve succumbed to? In a spectacle of twisted rationalization, they isolate the “indiscretion,” tabulate its caloric damage (as if it’s only the calories that matter) and then impose the appropriate punishment/correction for the lapse. First, was the “treat” worth that sweaty hour on the stair climber? Second, is this punitive, self-destructive behavior any way to address the tendency to stray from one’s eating goals?

    Instead, imagine a cycle that encourages owning your choices and always enjoying the fruits of those decisions. You’re rewarded at every turn with physical benefits, personal authority and intact self-respect. Visualize a positive feedback loop: eat well, rejoice in the effects, and then do it again (and again and again because you love what it does for you). That’s the beauty of the living Primally.

    People too often get caught up in a mentality of deprivation. They think the power of “dieting” is denying yourself. Funny how the self gets in the way. (And, seriously, who hasn’t felt deprived on one of those low fat, low calorie regimens?) Living Primally, on the other hand, means bringing thoughtful and healthful intention to each choice. It means choosing fulfillment in a more comprehensive, connected sense. What foods give you the life you want? What foods leave you feeling good, fulfilled, healthy? What effects leaves you rejoicing (losing the extra weight, gaining strength, finding new energy, simply enjoying the taste and richness of your food)? All the while, the Primal Blueprint’s 80/20 principle underscores the seamless power of your Primal lens and common sense perspective. Your Primal eating practices construct a healthy life (inside and out), leaving destructive attitudes in the past. You make the choices you do because they enhance your life, and the rewards are nothing short of inspiring. Check any guilt at the door. No penitence required here.

    What’s your take on the invitation to “eat, rejoice and repeat”? Thanks for reading.

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. GERD Sufferers Rejoice!
    2. Why Skipping Meals and Workouts is Healthy

  • Illinois Republicans see unique chance for victory

    CHICAGO — The last decade was lousy for Illinois Republicans. They lost a Senate seat, their party’s last governor went to prison and they were shut out of every statewide office.

    But the recent surprise win by Scott Brown in the Massachusetts Senate race and a string of setbacks for Illinois Democrats have Republicans giddy about their chances to claim the next big election prizes: President Barack Obama’s former Senate seat and ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s old job.

    Republicans have reason to feel confident.

    This year’s races are likely to be fought against the backdrop of Blagojevich’s corruption trial – a point Republicans are sure to belabor – and Illinois’ finances are in shambles, with the state deficit likely to reach $13 billion this year.

    “This year the stars seem to be lining up for us,” Illinois Republican Party chairman Pat Brady said.

    If Republicans can’t win in Illinois this year, it’s hard to imagine when they could be victorious in the state, where Democrats control the governor’s mansion, every statewide office and the Legislature.

    “If the Republicans don’t win in November, we’re in for a long, long decade,” said state Sen. Kirk Dillard, of Hinsdale, who is hoping to be the Republican candidate for governor.

    The GOP is counting on five-term U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, a moderate on issues like gun control and abortion, to win Obama’s old Senate seat.

    Kirk, 50, is up against 33-year-old Democrat Alexi Giannoulias, Illinois’ first-term state treasurer whose last job was at his family’s bank that is now in financial trouble. Sen. Roland Burris, who was appointed to Obama’s seat by the scandal-tainted Blagojevich, opted not to run for a full term.

    In the Illinois governor’s race, the Republicans still haven’t settled on a nominee – the Feb. 2 primary ended in a virtual tie with state Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington just a few hundred votes ahead of Dillard.
    But Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn is vulnerable for several reasons, not least of which because he wants to raise
    income taxes to help close the whopping budget deficit.

    Quinn’s decision to release some inmates early from prison also turned into a public relations disaster that his Democratic challenger used to nearly win the party’s nomination this month.

    And the party suffered yet another black eye when its nominee for lieutenant governor, Scott Lee Cohen, dropped out after it became widely known that he was accused of abusing his ex-wife and arrested for holding a knife to the throat of an ex-girlfriend.

    Cohen has denied the allegations, and charges stemming from his arrest were dropped when the girlfriend did not show up in court.

    “Every Democrat I know, every politically knowledgable and interested Democrat is worried. The combination of factors is potentially pretty lethal,” said John Schmidt, a Chicago attorney who ran unsuccessfully in 1998 for the Democratic nomination for governor.

    Schmidt supported Quinn’s opponent in the primary.

    But the Republican outlook isn’t entirely rosy. The party is no stranger to scandal – voters will remember that the last Republican governor, George Ryan, was sent to prison for racketeering and fraud. And Quinn got lucky when Cohen resigned and will be allowed to choose his own running mate.

    Furthermore, if Brady emerges as the GOP nominee, the party will have to sell a conservative downstate lawmaker to Chicago-area voters he barely courted during his primary campaign. Brady received only 5 percent of the GOP vote in Cook County, where Chicago is located.

    Illinois Democrats have echoed their national party’s claim that for all the Republican Party’s criticism, it hasn’t offered real solutions for fixing the economy and getting people back to work.

    Democrats point out they got rid of Blagojevich when he was arrested, they passed a major public-works program after years of gridlock and they approved significant ethics legislation.

    “What are their solutions beyond being the party of no?” said Rep. David Miller, the Democratic nominee for Illinois comptroller. “I think people don’t want to see partisan bickering right now. People are looking for solutions.”

    Quinn, like several other Democrats, said voters must be reminded that the Republicans’ no-tax-increase pledge would require devastating budget cuts to health care and human services.

    “We can’t allow them to win,” Quinn said.

    Read the original article from Herald & Review.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Why Peak Oil Is The Only Thing That Can Stop The Chinese Export Deluge

    china oil pipeThis article was written by Paul Larson, an equities strategist at Morningstar.

    Last month, I explained in an article how and why the world is approaching a worldwide peak in oil production sometime in the next decade. Although there are large implications throughout the economy, I want to say upfront that I do not think this will bring on Armageddon. Oil prices that are significantly higher than earlier in our lifetimes will bring about great change, yet I firmly believe that our economy has the ability to successfully adapt. Despite the strong headwind oil scarcity will create, I am still an optimist.

    I have structured this article by segmenting the “winners” and the “losers.” These monikers may be a bit strong, and it is worth noting that even a company that might have a slower growth rate than before because of peak oil can still be a good investment. In other words, I’m not running out to buy the peak-oil benefactors, nor am I dumping the peak-oil losers. Rather, increased oil scarcity is but one of many factors Morningstar’s analysts and I consider when projecting future cash flows and business positions. With that, let’s jump right to it.

    Loser: Existing Petro Infrastructure
    With lower production of oil, there will be less of a need for the energy infrastructure needed to support the processing and transportation of liquid petroleum. All else equal, this will mean low-to-negative growth, slack capacity utilization, and lower profitability for refineries as well as certain pipelines and energy storage assets. In terms of companies held in StockInvestor’s model portfolios,  ExxonMobil (XOM), Kinder Morgan (KMR), and  Magellan Midstream (MMP) have a significant portion of their assets that are in the bull’s-eye here.

    The good news is that all these companies are hedged to this trend. Concerning the refined products pipelines that are at the core at Kinder and Magellan, these operations have a hedge built into their regulatory structure; these companies have been given by Federal regulators the ability to raise their tariffs at the producer price index plus 1.5%. It’s this extra 1.5 percentage points in pricing power that should offset any volume declines created by peak oil.

    Winner: E&P Companies
    If oil is becoming more scarce, it makes sense that those who own rights to the resource will benefit. This is Exxon’s hedge, though it is worth noting that Exxon is much more heavily weighted toward refining (where it has 6.2 million barrels per day in distillation capacity) than it is toward oil production, where it currently produces about 2.4 million barrels per day.

    It’s also worth noting that Kinder Morgan also receives roughly one-fourth of its operating profits from its carbon dioxide business unit. This unit is involved in advanced oil production and would benefit from higher oil prices.

    Losers: Coca-Cola and Pepsi
    The recent recession has significantly dented the popularity of bottled water, while there has been a corresponding increase in the use of tap water for drinking. Bottled water was once a major source of growth for both  Coke (KO) and  Pepsi (PEP), but this is a product line that is relatively costly and energy-intense. The attractiveness of a free and “green” alternative is only going to get stronger. Thankfully, Coke and Pepsi still have exceptionally attractive businesses, even without any contribution from water products.

    Loser: Inefficient Transportation
    Unfortunately, our entire economy is currently based upon relatively inexpensive point-to-point transportation of people and goods. Consider that little more than half of any given barrel will find its end-use in transportation (with the rest being used for everything from heating to plastics to detergents), and the United States consumes roughly 23% of the world’s petroleum. With our primary transportation fuel becoming more dear, relatively inefficient forms of transportation will find themselves no longer economical. Trucking companies and airlines are likely to continue suffering. Even traditional newspapers and the postal service–which at the end of the day revolve around moving information via dead trees–should continue their downward spirals.

    Though rising transportation costs will have the largest effect on the entire economy, I struggle to find any direct connection to the portfolio companies. Perhaps  Expedia (EXPE) and  International Speedway (ISCA) get hurt greater than average from the higher cost of travel, though again, few companies will be totally immune to higher transportation costs.

    Winner: Efficient Transportation
    The corollary to above is that companies that enable the efficient transportation of people, goods, and information are likely to see higher growth and/or wider moats because of peak oil. Heavy SUVs are likely to never regain their former popularity, while we will continue to see more and more hybrid and electric cars on the road. (This is probably a wash for  CarMax (KMX).) Railroads already have a major cost advantage over trucks in terms of fuel efficiency, and this advantage will only get stronger as fuel prices rise. I have no doubt this is one of the primary reasons  Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) and Warren Buffett was attracted to Burlington Northern Santa Fe.

    Telecommunications firms also stand to benefit. For one, we will continue to get more and more of our information electronically instead of corporeally. Also, telecommuting will continue to gain in popularity as the cost of getting to and from work rises. I do not have any telecommunications firms in the portfolios, as I have a difficult time seeing the technological path several years out. Will we be primarily using wireless devices? Or will it be fiber-optic systems from resurgent telecom firms? Perhaps cable will still have the fattest pipes for information? It’s not a question I have an answer for at this point.

    Winner: Electric Utilities
    The primary alternative to oil as a transport fuel is electricity. In a world with declining oil production, electric cars and plug-in hybrids are only going to continue to replace gasoline-fired vehicles. This will require major investments in our electricity infrastructure to be able to handle the extra load. The networking company  Cisco (CSCO) recently said as much as $100 billion will need to be invested in the coming few years to upgrade the transmission and distribution systems just to be able to handle higher loads of currently planned projects and enable the “smart” grid. Other estimates vary widely, but whatever the precise number is, it will be big. Suffice it to say that there will be no shortage of investment opportunities for the regulated utilities to increase their rate bases (the assets on which they are allowed by regulators to earn a return). This includes the utilities owned by Tortoise holdings Berkshire and  Exelon (EXC).

    Winner: Natural Gas
    While oil production is in the process of peaking, numerous new sources of natural gas are popping up all over the country. Due to new technology and discoveries, shale is now a major source of natural gas, including significant new production areas in the northern Appalachians. In 2008, natural gas production in the U.S. was up an astonishing 7.5%, which is in stark contrast to oil, which continued its slow and steady decline in 2008 by falling 1.8% in the U.S., according to BP (BP).

    Combine the abundance of new supply, a weak economy, and an unusually cool summer, and natural gas prices tanked to near $4.50 per thousand cubic feet (mcf) last fall. A cold winter has brought the price close to $5.50, but on an energy-equivalent basis, this is quite cheap. One barrel of oil has about the same amount of energy as six mcf. Meaning, at a recent $75-per-barrel price, gas should be trading near $12.50 per mcf at energy equivalence, or more than double the current price. Although there are reasons that liquid hydrocarbons should trade at a premium to natural gas–namely the portability of the liquid–the premium currently in the market seems a bit extreme. If prices between oil and gas stay at such disparities, it starts to make economic sense to use compressed natural gas as a transportation fuel. This is already quite common in Argentina and Brazil.

    Winner: Electricity Generators
    Not only will the regulated utilities need to be beefed up to handle a shift from oil to electricity in terms of transportation, but a scarcity of oil will cause a rise in electricity prices. This will happen directly, as electric vehicles are substituted for gasoline vehicles, increasing overall electricity consumption. It will also happen indirectly, as natural gas is diverted for use in transportation, and natural gas is the marginal fuel for power generation at the moment. Exelon, with its large fleet of low-cost nuclear plants, is sitting in an exceptionally good position to benefit from higher electricity volumes and prices.

    Winner: Alternative Energy
    There will be no shortage of alternative energy technologies and companies vying for a piece of the energy market pie that is being vacated by liquid petroleum. Wind, solar, biofuels, geothermal, tide capturing, and so on, these are all areas that will become increasingly economical, and especially so if governments around the world continue or increase existing subsidies.

    Unfortunately for us as investors, companies that make products for alternative energy are primarily small parts of large conglomerates, like  General Electric (GE) and  Siemens (SI). Moreover, the vast majority of firms in the alternative energy industry do not have any sort of economic moat, much less a wide one. For instance, there are several large solar panel companies at the moment– First Solar (FSLR), Suntech (STP), and  SunPower (SPWRA), just to name a few. Yet solar panels are a commodity product where these and other companies are fighting tooth and nail for a finite market. Although there will undoubtedly be a high amount of growth in this area, the investment attractiveness is poor at the moment. Rest assured, if a company in this area is successful in digging an economic moat for itself, we will let you know.

    Winner: Labor
    Although higher oil scarcity will act as a drag on the entire economy through raising shipping costs, there is one silver lining. During the past few decades, relatively low energy prices and shipping costs, combined with the Internet, helped to “flatten” the world. Companies were no longer constrained by geographical limitations; they could source and produce their products from the areas with the lowest costs, no matter where in the world that might be. This has been a boon to areas with a surplus of low-cost laborers, such as China, but murder for workers in high-wage areas, such as the U.S. This labor arbitrage is, from my view, the primary reason why inflation-adjusted wages have been flat in this country for a decade.

    But if transport costs rise as a result of higher energy prices, this frictional cost will reduce the opportunities for companies to take advantage of this labor arbitrage. As I mentioned in my previous article, it all boils down to high oil prices taxing transport and causing us to act more locally. This means goods being produced much closer to where they are actually consumed, which would benefit local laborers. Perhaps this would be a mild–very mild–tailwind for Cintas (CTAS), ADP (ADP), and Paychex (PAYX) here.

    As you can see, there are actually quite a few companies that will benefit as oil production peaks and our economy moves from a heavy dependence on liquid petroleum to the alternatives. Overall economic growth will be constrained, and it will not be an easy transition. Yet peak oil will certainly not destroy the investment landscape.

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  • S&P: The Alt-A Market Is Freaking Out About Default Again, As The Reset D-Day Approaches

    Chart

    Remember the Alt-A time bomb?

    It’s the wave of Alt-A mortgages that were sold to home buyers with a teaser rate they could barely afford.

    Well, a wave of these mortgages is still set to reset to higher, even less affordable interest rates that could push even more homeowners into default.

    Markets have begun to freak out about it again, as D-Day approaches:

    Research Recap: Investors’ default rate forecasts for collateral in nearly all classes and vintages of U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities have risen dramatically in Standard & Poor’s Fixed Income Risk Management Services’ latest quarterly survey.

    [S&P:] “Twelve-month default rate expectations on certain U.S. RMBS collateral have doubled since the previous quarterly survey, with U.S. 2007 Alt-A pay option ARM RMBS collateral default rate predictions rising to 25% from 12% polled in Q3.”

    Read more here >

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  • Bankrupt General Growth Positions Itself For A Dramatic Bidding War

    Chart

    Yesterday we reported on Simon Property Group’s offer for bankrupt mall REIT General Growth Properties.

    Already, the offer represents a win for the likes of Bill Ackman and Whiteny Tilson.

    Well, as expected, General Growth is playing hard-to-get, and would really, really like to see a bidding war.

    Via TrafficCourt, here’s the letter General Growth sent to Simon. The short version: here comes a bidding war.:

    February 16, 2010

    Simon Property Group, Inc. 225 West Washington Street Indianapolis, IN 46204

    Attention: Mr. David Simon, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

    Dear David:

    Thank you for your letters dated February 8 and 16, 2010 in which you indicated Simon’s interest in acquiring General Growth Properties, Inc. (the “Company”). We appreciate that you took the time to meet in person with management, UBS and Miller Buckfire to explain your indication of interest, as well as provide your view on the timing and diligence process you require in order to convert your indication of interest into a fully documented definitive proposal. We have been discussing your letter with your financial advisors during this past week. Our advisors have also discussed our position with you as recently as yesterday. We and our board of directors have given considerable thought to your indication of interest and have concluded based on discussions with other interested parties that it is not sufficient to preempt the process we are undertaking to explore all avenues to emerge from Chapter 11 and maximize value for all the Company’s stakeholders.

    As we indicated during our meeting, we are about to commence a process to explore several potential options for the Company’s emergence from Chapter 11, including a sale of the entire Company as you have proposed as well as a capital raise. The Company and its advisors have been working over the past several months to prepare the Company to launch this process. We will be providing detailed information on the Company, including a confidential information memorandum, financial projections, and asset level information to participants. We will also provide access to an electronic data room. As we are committed to fully exploring all potential options available to the Company, we would like to include Simon as part of this process. We believe the information we would provide to you as part of this process will enable you to better understand the Company, get to a higher valuation, and provide a fully documented offer.

    We understand from our meeting with you and the press release you issued this morning that time is of the essence. We feel the same, and intend to run our process in an efficient and expeditious manner. We are currently finalizing the information memorandum and plan to send materials to participants in the process by the beginning of March. We would expect to receive indications of interest within 4 weeks of the launch of the process. In order to expedite your participation and evaluation of due diligence information, we will be sending to you shortly a markup of the NDA you provided to us during our meeting in Chicago.

    Again, we appreciate your interest and we recognize the potential value that Simon could bring as an option for the Company to emerge from Chapter 11. The Company intends to pursue the process described above and we look forward to your participation. However, we reserve the right to pursue any proposals that we receive prior to or after formally launching the process so that we can maximize value for all stakeholders of the Company, and we reserve the right to change the process at any time we determine appropriate and without notice.

    We would be happy to discuss this response further. To that end, you should feel free to contact either UBS or Miller Buckfire.

    Sincerely,

    Adam Metz

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  • Details of ‘86 shooting emerge after Alabama rampage

    HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) – When police finally tracked down Amy Bishop on the day she shot and killed her teenage brother in 1986, she was crouching behind a parked car, carrying a shotgun at waist level with one round in the chamber and a second in her pocket.

    The details come from police reports released Tuesday, as law enforcement officials said there was probable cause to file weapons and assault charges against her at the time of the shooting at the family’s home in Braintree, Mass.

    Details of the 1986 death and its investigation have surfaced since Bishop, a biology professor at the University of Alabama at Huntsville, was arrested and charged in a university shooting rampage at a faculty meeting Friday that left three people dead and three injured.

    Relatives of victims in last week’s shooting have questioned whether much of the violence could have been prevented if the earlier case had been handled properly.

    Bishop’s past encounters with the law have also included 2002 charges for a fight over a child’s booster seat at an International House of Pancakes and her questioning in an attempted pipe bombing in 1993.

    The newly released police reports from the 1986 shooting had been sought since the Alabama shooting. After reviewing them, Norfolk, Mass., District Attorney William Keating said Bishop could have been arrested on charges of assault with a dangerous weapon, carrying a dangerous weapon and unlawful possession of ammunition.

    Even so, Keating said, the police reports don’t necessarily contradict Bishop’s mother’s claim that the shooting of 18-year-old Seth Bishop was an accident. Also, the statute of limitations has expired.

    U.S. Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., who was the district attorney at the time, said Wednesday he has limited memory of the shooting. He spoke with The Associated Press in Tel Aviv, Israel, where he is traveling and said his former first assistant was in charge of the case and has responded to questions about it.

    “I understand I haven’t had a real opportunity to get into the details of the case but I suspect when I return I’ll have an opportunity to become debriefed and I know there have been statements but I’m not really in a position to see any records,” Delahunt said.

    The reports say Bishop told officers she came downstairs from her bedroom at their home in suburban Braintree, Mass., to get help unloading a shotgun.

    As she walked into the kitchen, she said, her mother told her not to point the gun at anyone and she turned and the gun went off, striking her brother in the chest.

    They also detail for the first time how she was detained. Bishop had fled with the gun, and two officers tracked her down outside a car dealership near her home.

    As one officer asked Bishop to put the gun down, a second officer, using a truck as cover, moved within about 5 feet of Bishop.

    “I drew my service revolver and yelled three times drop the rifle,” Officer Timothy Murphy wrote. “After the third time she did.”

    Police examined the shotgun and found it loaded with a 12-gauge round. A second round was discovered in her pocket.

    Bishop, a 44-year-old, Harvard-educated neurobiologist, was under extra guard at an Alabama jail, charged with capital murder and attempted murder. She could face the death penalty, although the local prosecutor said he has not yet decided whether to pursue capital punishment.

    Killed were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and professors Adriel Johnson and Maria Ragland Davis.

    Two were wounded – professor Joseph Leahy remained in critical condition and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo was in serious condition Tuesday. The third, Luis Cruz-Vera, was released from the hospital.

    The shootings erupted in the middle of a regular monthly faculty meeting. Assistant professor Joseph Ng, one of a dozen people at the meeting, said Bishop drew a gun and opened fire.

    Bishop was targeting faculty members sitting closest to her, Ng said. As his injured colleagues went down, he and other survivors dived under the conference room table.

    Then, within seconds, the shooting stopped, because her weapon had apparently jammed.

    The lull gave the survivors an opportunity. Debra Moriarity, a biochemistry professor, scrambled toward Bishop and urged her to stop shooting, Ng said. Bishop aimed the gun directly at her and pulled the trigger, but it failed to shoot, he said.

    Moriarity then led the charge that forced Bishop out the door.

    “Moriarity was probably the one that saved our lives. She was the one that initiated the rush,” Ng said. “It took a lot of guts to just go up to her.”

    Moriarity said Bishop pointed the gun at her and tried to shoot several times. “I know I yelled at her, ‘Amy, think about my grandson, think about my daughter,”‘ she told ABC’s “Good Morning America” in an interview aired Wednesday.

    “She looked like she was intent on doing this, and she was angry,” Moriarity said.

    After Bishop was pushed out of the room, the faculty members propped the conference room table against the door and called 911. Then they braced for her to return, but Bishop never came back – and Ng still isn’t quite sure why.

    “She could have killed everyone in the room,” said Ng. “It could have been much worse.”

    Bishop and her husband, James Anderson, were also questioned in 1993 by investigators looking into a pipe bomb sent to one of Bishop’s colleagues, Dr. Paul Rosenberg, at Children’s Hospital Boston. The bomb did not go off, and nobody was ever charged.

    Then in 2002, Bishop was charged with assault, battery and disorderly conduct after a tirade at the International House of Pancakes in Peabody, Mass.

    Peabody police Capt. Dennis Bonaiuto said that Bishop became incensed when she found out another woman had received the restaurant’s last booster seat.

    Bishop hit the woman while shouting, “I am Dr. Amy Bishop,” according to the police report.

    Bonaiuto said Bishop admitted to the assault in court, and the case was adjudicated – meaning the charges were eventually dismissed.

    Some victims’ relatives have questioned how Bishop was hired in 2003 after she was involved in previous criminal investigations, but University President David B. Williams and others defended the decision to hire her. He said a review of her personnel file and her hiring file raised no red flags.

    Police ran a criminal background check Monday, he said, after she was charged with one count of capital murder and three counts of attempted murder.

    “Even now, nothing came up,” Williams said.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Deere reports 19% jump in 1st-quarter profit

    Heavy equipment maker Deere & Co. says lower raw material costs and favorable exchange rates helped drive its first-quarter profit up 19 percent despite a 6 percent drop in revenue.

    The company said Wednesday it earned $243.2 million, or 57 cents per share, during the quarter. That’s up from $203.9 million, or 48 cents per share a year ago.

    Profits are way ahead of the expectations of analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters, who expected on average about 19 cents.

    Even though President and CEO Samuel Allen says the economy is “stubbornly weak” so far this year, Deere boosted its annual outlook. The company expects sales to grow 6 percent to 8 percent with $1.3 billion in profit.

    On the Web

    Deere & Co.: http://www.deere.com

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Jesse White Tumblers turn 50

    CHICAGO (WBBM) –– Next Tuesday, there will be a gala at the United Center, celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Jesse White Tumbling Team.

    Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White founded the tumblers in 1959, as a way of keeping kids off the streets and out of trouble. But, why did he choose gymnastics? White says he was trained as a gymnast as a child.

    White would later become a paratrooper in the military…and a minor league baseball player in the Cubs organization. But he wanted to work with kids.

    He says he came back to Chicago to teach part-time and to coach.

    The Chicago Park District had asked him to mount a gymnastics demonstration. That–he says–was the start of the team, but did not think it would last 50 years.

    He thought that first night would be the last, but the parents of the kids would not hear of it, White says.

    He has now worked with more than 11,000 young people over that half Century.

    More information at jessewhitetumblingteam.com

    Craig Dellimore, Political Editor, reporting

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Cicero fire investigation: a possible odor of gasoline

    CHICAGO – Investigators looking into the Cicero fire that killed seven on Sunday are taking their time before deciding what caused that fire.

    They are examining every possibility – and sources tell Newsradio 780 that one worker detected a possible telltale odor of gasoline as the bodies were being transported.

    Linking a possible odor of gasoline to arson is a big leap.  And investigators have not made that leap yet.

    Cicero Town Spokesman Ray Hanania says he has not heard about the possible odor of gasoline.

    “I don’t want to say it’s not true but I don’t know that myself for a fact.  However I do know that the investigators, the state fire marshal and the fire department here are determined to get to whatever the truth is.”

    Hanania he says he understands why this investigation is entering its fourth day.

    “They want to ensure with complete certainty that this was an accident, and they don’t want to let go of any other possibilities until that certainty is completely confirmed.

    “There may be things they’re finding that suggest that they keep investigating.”

    Steve Miller reporting

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Man cited in crash that killed 6-yr-old

    CHICAGO (STMW)  — An Englewood man was cited for DUI and issued five other tickets for allegedly driving a van that fatally struck a 6-year-old girl and critically wounded her aunt Tuesday night on the South Side.

    Eddie Lumpkin, 48, was allegedly driving a vehicle that struck a girl and her aunt at 7340 S. Ashland Ave. about 6:35 p.m. Tuesday, police said.

    Jade Washington, 6, of 1426 W. 73rd St., was pronounced dead at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Comer Children’s Hospital, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s office.

    Jade’s 21-year-old aunt was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn in critical condition, police said. Fire Media Affairs Director Larry Langford said the woman suffered multiple fractures.

    Lumpkin, of the 7300 block of South Damen Avenue, was cited for DUI, not having insurance, failing to carry a driver’s license, failing to reduce speed, negligent driving and striking a pedestrian in the road, police News Affairs Officer Laura Kubiak said.

    Langford said the full-sized white van appeared to strike Washington and her aunt as the two crossed the street. When emergency crews arrived, the driver and van were still on the scene in the middle of the block.

    The police Major Accident Investigation Unit is conducting an ongoing investigation and further charges are possible, Kubiak said.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Ten Tips to Relieve HCV-Related Itching

    Itching is a common symptom of Hepatitis C that goes underreported and undertreated. Instead of letting it drive you crazy, learn how home remedies and a physician’s prescription pad can help ease your itching.

    by Nicole Cutler, L.Ac.

    An estimated 15 to 20 percent of people with chronic Hepatitis C experience the symptom of itching. Known clinically as pruritus, itching refers to the unpleasant sensation that causes the need to scratch. Whether localized to a specific region of the body, spread all over or relegated to the internal organs, pruritus is often guilty of plaguing those whose Hepatitis C has advanced to cirrhosis. Fortunately, there are many ways to reduce this potentially maddening symptom.

    More About Pruritus
    Pruritus and pain are closely related sensations, since the same nerves transmit the signals of discomfort to the brain. Known as the itch-scratch cycle, an area of skin that is scratched often becomes even itchier, leading to more scratching.

    Experts believe pruritus in people with liver disease is due to the accumulation of poisons that have not been effectively filtered by a damaged liver. When liver damage impedes the flow of bile through the liver, bile acids and bilirubin get backed up in the blood. Besides causing jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eyes), high bilirubin levels often cause pruritus.

    In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), pruritus from an unknown cause is also considered to be due to toxins built up in the bloodstream. This accumulation of toxic substances generates heat. According to TCM, the sensation of itching is the body’s interpretation of excessive heat.

    Pruritus can take on many different characteristics. Two of pruritus’ more troublesome complications include:

    · Itching that is worse at night and thus interferes with restful sleep.

    · Since simple scratching typically does not relieve it, some people risk skin infection and injury by scratching themselves with sharp objects.

    Help for Pruritus
    Because itching is such a nonspecific, seemingly innocuous event, many with Hepatitis C don’t bother discussing it with their physician. However, there are many interventions to help incessant itching. Since pruritus can be severe enough to interfere with daily activities, those with a severe case are encouraged to report their discomfort to a doctor.

    If necessary, a physician can prescribe an appropriate medication to relieve the itching. Some of the drugs used for pruritus include:

    · Analgesics (pain-relievers) for neuropathic pain (gabapentin)
    · Antihistamines (Benadryl, Atarax)
    · Cholesterol lowering agents (Questran, Colestid)
    · Opiod antagonists (Narcan, Revia, Revex)
    · Antidepressants (Zoloft)

    In addition, ten tips are listed below to reduce itching before you get in to see a doctor:

    1. Don’t Smoke – Not only does smoking reduce the effectiveness of Hepatitis C therapy, but it can also lead to Smoker’s Syndrome – characterized by episodes of facial flushing, warm palms and soles, throbbing headache, dizziness, lethargy, prickling sensation, joint pain and pruritus.

    2. Apply Cold Packs – Cold packs wrapped in a towel and placed over the skin cools heat and seems to relieve intense itching.

    3. Stay Hydrated – Drink sufficient amounts of water to keep the entire body hydrated. For more on water and liver disease, read How Much Water Does Your Liver Need?

    4. Avoid Soap – Use a non-soap cleanser such as Cetaphil or a similar substitute to prevent excessive drying of the skin.

    5. Take Milk Thistle – Since milk thistle protects liver cells from damage and aids in detoxification, this herb can help prevent the backup of toxins in the bloodstream.

    6. A Warm Shower – Because heat aggravates itching, make sure your bathing water’s temperature is not too hot.

    7. Dress Carefully – Whenever possible, wear loose fitting clothes made from natural fabrics that breathe. This prevents excess heat from being trapped against your skin.

    8. Moisturize – Apply moisturizing creams at least twice a day. For best results, use only non-perfumed, mild moisturizers.

    9. Don’t Scratch – So that you don’t engage the itch-scratch cycle and don’t cause damage to your skin, experiment with rubbing, vibration or applying pressure instead of scratching. Some people report good results from rubbing itchy areas with an ice cube.

    10. Oatmeal – Many get pruritus relief from taking a colloidal oatmeal bath. Colloidal oatmeal is still made from oats, but compared to breakfast oatmeal, colloidal oatmeal is ground very finely or even pulverized.

    Those with Hepatitis C should be aware that feeling itchy could be a manifestation of the virus. Because it can be so disruptive, this symptom deserves attention. Besides discussing severe pruritus with your doctor, take advantage of the ten tips listed above to gain some respite from incessant itching.

    References:

    http://allergies.about.com/od/skinallergies/a/pruritus.htm, Itching, Daniel More, MD, Retrieved January 9, 2010, about.com, 2010.

    http://www.hcvadvocate.org/hepatitis/factsheets_pdf/pruritus.pdf, Extrahepatic Manifestations: Pruritis (Itching), CD Mazoff, PhD, Retrieved January 9, 2010, Hepatitis C Support Project, 2010.

    http://www.liverhealthtoday.org/viewarticle.cfm?aid=164, Pruritus in its most severe form can be debilitating, Geoff Drushel, Retrieved January 9, 2010, Liver Health Today, 2010.

  • Geek Review: V-Moda Vibe In-Ear BlackBerry Headphones

    Historically BlackBerry users have not been overly concerned with the multimedia functionality of their “work” devices. Over the last couple of years however, there has been a major push by RIM to target the casual consumer. This new focus has brought with it a brand new customer demographic that realizes the devices potential to address not only their email and networking needs but also their video and music as well.
    (more…)

  • A ninja, a boxer, and a Karate master confirmed for Super Street Fighter IV

    Keeping an eye on the new characters in Super Street Fighter IV? Capcom has announced three new fighters in the pages of the latest Famitsu issue.

  • Review: 2010 Jaguar XF Supercharged is the Goldilocks of Q-ships

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    2010 Jaguar XF Supercharged – Click above for high-res image gallery

    There have been very few cars like the 2010 Jaguar XF Supercharged, and that’s a shame. Yet it’s difficult to explain why this car is so special, so let’s just start by describing what it is. You can order Jaguar’s S-Type replacement in four flavors (more if you live in a diesel-friendly part of the world). The first and least expensive comes with Jag’s tried-and-true 4.2-liter V8 for $52,000, although we’re told that the 4.2-liter is now out of production, so get ’em while they’re hot. For $5,000 more, you can get the company’s new direct-injected 5.0-liter V8 with 385 horsepower, which is most assuredly worth every penny.

    Skipping ahead one, the fourth and final flavor is the top cat XFR, equipped with a 510-hp supercharged and monsterized version of the 5.0-liter V8 for $80,000. Put another way, that’s $23,000 for an extra 125 horsepower. Worth the stretch? Honestly, when are we not going to tell you to buy a 510-hp vehicle? However, there is a third flavor and it’s called the XF Supercharged. Starting at $68,000, the XF Supercharged comes with the same 5.0-liter supercharged V8 as the XFR, albeit “detuned” down to 470 hp and 424 lb-ft of torque.

    We know we shouldn’t be shocked, but come on. We are living in seriously miraculous times if 470 hp and 424 lb-ft of torque is the detuned version of anything. That’s quite nearly Nissan GT-R power, and Godzilla is a supercar killer. Oddly, Jaguar has decided not to make a big deal out of the release of this car (i.e. no launch) and that’s a shame, because as you’ve probably surmised by now, the engine alone makes the XF Supercharged pretty special. Keep reading to learn why this is the Goldilocks of the XF range. In other words, just right.

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading Review: 2010 Jaguar XF Supercharged is the Goldilocks of Q-ships

    Review: 2010 Jaguar XF Supercharged is the Goldilocks of Q-ships originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 11:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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