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Achieve Big Goals With Small Investments
When we’re children, it’s the big goals that scare us. So, our parents generally break everything down into smaller goals, making it far easier for us to achieve. Instead of telling a child to straight away achieve 90% marks in an exam, most parents will first ask the...
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Easy ways for NRIs to invest in Indian stock market
Ways for NRIs to invest in Indian stock market Non Resident Indians (NRIs) who wish to invest in the Indian securities markets wonder whether they will be able to manage the operational procedures and paperwork involved in carrying out such investments. However, there...
read moreHow I learnt resilience
When the small manufacturing business that I ran collapsed and it happened twice in quick succession, I was distraught and overwhelmed. I sought counsel yet it did not help. However, perhaps through some quirk of fate, I survived and in time, as a psychologist said, I...
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How to Take Care Of Your Messy Hair?
New Delhi: Messy hair is not the ideal hair situation you would want to be caught in. The major problem with such tresses is that it is really difficult to manage and style but one can get it right by following some easy methods. Blossom Kochhar, Founder & Chairperson...
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Making millets your own
Have you switched over to millets? A Food Festival in the city shows you how “Growing up, my family had millets as an alternative to wheat and rice. There is a need to make millets, the primary food again, because of its nutritional value and less resource-intensive...
read moreWhat To Keep in Mind While Selecting Travel Bags
New Delhi: Always opt for padded backs and check if the backpack has a lot of storage space, say experts. Sridhar Thirunakara, Founder and CEO, the bag brand Arctic Fox and Srikanth Thirunakara, Director of Outshiny, have suggested the following to keep in mind while...
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Brain Tumours May Occur In Children With Common Genetic Syndrome
New York: Parents, please take note. The frequency of brain tumours has been underestimated in children with the common genetic syndrome -- neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), a new study has found. According to the researchers, this disorder is characterised by...
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Heavy Rain Forecast In Pune For Next One Week
Day 1: Heavy to very heavy rain at isolated places very likely over Saurashtra & Kutch and coastal & south interior Karnataka. Heavy rain at isolated places very likely over Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Nagaland-Manipur-Mizoram-Tripura, Odisha, Uttarakhand, north...
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Obesity: The Trigger For Change Lies In The Mind
HOW TO OVERCOME OBESITY? Do we recall the movie, “Badhai ho Badhai”? The movie featured Anil Kapoor playing the role of a fat man in the film. It is to the credit of Anil Kapoor that he took the plunge to essay the character of an obese person on screen. However, off...
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Social media use may affect teenagers’ real life relationships
Even as effects of social media use on mental well-being is hotly debated, a new study says that spending too much time online can create problems in real life relationships of teenagers and vice versa. Results of a survey conducted by Professor Candice Odgers of...
read moreScientists explore anti-cancer properties of traditional Siddha medicine, Pattu Karuppu
The allopathic system of medicine that treats symptoms of diseases using drugs came into existence in the 19th century. Before that, traditional medicines were common in many Asian countries, including India. A common drawback of allopathic medications is their undesired side effects caused by the adverse reactions of specific drug compounds with parts of our body. This has now rekindled interests among scientists in many traditional forms of medicine which are known to have no side effects. In one such study, researchers from the Manipal Institute of Technology, Manipal, Karnataka, and Anna University, Chennai, have evaluated the anti-cancer properties of Pattu Karuppu, a traditional Siddha medicine.
The Siddha system of medicine has its origin in Tamil Nadu and is similar to Ayurveda where extracts of different plants are used to treat various diseases. Pattu Karuppu is a mercury-based Siddha medicine prepared by the combination of acidic and alkaline substances and is rich in mercuric sulphide (HgS). While mercury is well-known for its curative effects, sulphur neutralises the toxicity of the medicine and makes it more effective.
While Pattu Karuppu is used to treat pain during menstruation (dysmenorrhoea), the absence of menstrual cycle (amenorrhoea) and delirium, its anticancer properties have not yet been explored. In this study, for the first time, the researchers look into the physical and chemical properties of this formulation and evaluate its effects on healthy cells.
The researchers examined a sample of Pattu Karuppu under an electron microscope and found that it contains nanoparticles with an average size of 20-80 nanometers. These come together and form a ‘broccoli-like’ structure. A chemical analysis of the compound showed that it mainly contains carbon and oxygen, with traces of mercury, arsenic and sulphur. “The sample was found to have stable and spherical (porous) particles with size ranges between 20-80 nanometres. The negatively charged, nanosize and relatively high surface area of the particles were used to evaluate its biological action”, say the authors.
The researchers then tested different concentrations of the formulation on cell lines in labs. They observed that the formulation could inhibit the growth of cancerous cells. To determine the ‘safe’ concentrations of Pattu Karuppu, they tested it on zebrafish. They observed that at high concentrations, the zebrafish developed problems with the rate of heartbeat (arrhythmias) and clotting of the blood cells in the heart. The results confirmed that a concentration of 100μg/ml was the safest, a finding that differentiates Pattu Karuppu from other toxic mercurials.
The study promises new hope for cancer patients whose life is bogged down by the side effects of radiation therapy and chemotherapy. As a next step, the authors plan to conduct similar studies on mouse models that could pave the way for effective anticancer drugs.
Asteroid 2010 WC9 to fly by Earth on May 15: Report
Space rock “Asteroid 2010 WC9” will have a near-Earth encounter, about half the lunar distance, on Tuesday, media reports said.The asteroid measures from 60 to 130 meters and moves at a speed of more than 28,000 miles per hour, WeekFacts.com reported late on Saturday.
Asteroid 2010 WC9 was “lost” and then found. The Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona first detected it on November 30, 2010, and astronomers watched it until December 1, when it became too faint to see.
The rock has completed its orbit and now returns to Earth eight years later.
At 11.05 p.m. on Tuesday, Asteroid 2010 WC9 will make its closest approach only 0.53 lunar distances (126.419 miles) from Earth.According to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, this is the closest it will come in 300 years, the report said.
People can watch the spectacle on the Internet and the observatories of Northolt Branch in London will broadcast it live.
“We plan to broadcast this asteroid to our Facebook page if the weather forecast remains positive,” Guy Wells of the observatory was quoted as saying.
“The broadcast will last less than 25 minutes, since the asteroid will cross our field of view during this time period. The asteroid will move pretty fast (30 seconds of arc per minute).
“Our display will be updated every five seconds. We, of course, collect astrometric data while this happens, but the movement of the asteroid will occur every five seconds,” said Wells.
Jurassic fossil shows missing link in crocodile family tree
Researchers have found a “missing link” from a 180 million-year-old fossil that sheds light on how some ancient crocodiles evolved into dolphin-like animals.The fossil named Magyarosuchus fitosi in honour of the amateur collector who discovered it, Attila Fitos, was unearthed on a mountain range in north-west Hungary in 1996 and stored in a museum in Budapest.
The species featuring a large portion of backbone is nearly five metres long and had large, pointed teeth for grasping prey. It was one of the largest coastal predators of the Jurassic Period.
It also shares key body features seen in two distinct families of prehistoric crocodiles.
Besides being heavily armoured, the species also had a tail fin, suggesting it is a missing link in the family tree of crocodiles, the researchers noted, in the paper published in the journal PeerJ.
“This fossil provides a unique insight into how crocodiles began evolving into dolphin and killer whale-like forms more than 180 million years ago,” said Mark Young, of the University of Edinburgh’s School of GeoSciences in Britain.
“The presence of both bony armour and a tail fin highlights the remarkable diversity of Jurassic-era crocodiles.”The specimen was identified as a new species based on the discovery of an odd-looking vertebra that formed part of its tail fin.
Some Jurassic-era crocodiles had bony armour on their backs and bellies and limbs adapted for walking on land. Another group had tail fins and flippers but did not have armour, the researchers said.