Tag Archives: Emerges

Taylor Swift causes NFL tickets for New York Jets vs. Kansas City Chiefs to SPIKE 43% after it emerges she’ll – Daily Mail

  1. Taylor Swift causes NFL tickets for New York Jets vs. Kansas City Chiefs to SPIKE 43% after it emerges she’ll Daily Mail
  2. Taylor Swift Wouldn’t Give Fox Permission to Play Her Music at Travis Kelce’s Game Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Couple Went as Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce for Halloween in 2020 — and Their Caption Aged Perfectly PEOPLE
  4. Two NY Casinos offer ‘THE TAYLOR:’ a chicken special with a side of ketchup and ‘seemingly ranch’ WSYR
  5. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce: How is this threatening to anyone? The Washington Post
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Heartbreaking image of Calif. mom who had her limbs amputated after eating bad tilapia emerges as GoFundMe campaign raises over $110K – New York Post

  1. Heartbreaking image of Calif. mom who had her limbs amputated after eating bad tilapia emerges as GoFundMe campaign raises over $110K New York Post
  2. Public health officials dispel claims that San Jose woman caught a flesh-eating bacterial infection leading to quadruple amputation The Mercury News
  3. Bay Area woman has limbs amputated after bacterial infection possibly linked to fish The Santa Rosa Press Democrat
  4. Health officials unsure what caused Bay Area mom’s quadruple amputation KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  5. Woman loses limbs after eating infected tilapia Fish Farmer Magazine
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Heartbreaking image of Calif. mom who had her limbs amputated after eating bad tilapia emerges as GoFundMe campaign raises over $110K – New York Post

  1. Heartbreaking image of Calif. mom who had her limbs amputated after eating bad tilapia emerges as GoFundMe campaign raises over $110K New York Post
  2. Public health officials dispel claims that San Jose woman caught a flesh-eating bacterial infection leading to quadruple amputation The Mercury News
  3. San Jose woman has limbs amputated after bacterial infection possibly linked to tilapia The Santa Rosa Press Democrat
  4. Health officials unsure what caused Bay Area mom’s quadruple amputation KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  5. Did a Bay Area woman lose her limbs to flesh-eating bacteria? San Francisco Chronicle

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Custody battle emerges over children who survived plane crash and 40 days in Colombia’s Amazon rainforest – ABC News

  1. Custody battle emerges over children who survived plane crash and 40 days in Colombia’s Amazon rainforest ABC News
  2. Details emerge on how 4 Colombian children survived in Amazon jungle for 40 days after deadly plane crash Fox News
  3. New details about children rescued after 40 days in Amazon rainforest CBS News
  4. Amazon plane crash: Oldest sister praised for ‘heroic role’, search continues for missing rescue dog Wilson CNN
  5. Mother told kids to leave Colombia plane crash site for help, family says The Washington Post
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Georgetown coaching candidates: Penn State’s Micah Shrewsberry reportedly emerges while Rick Pitino not in mix – 247Sports

  1. Georgetown coaching candidates: Penn State’s Micah Shrewsberry reportedly emerges while Rick Pitino not in mix 247Sports
  2. Georgetown Targeting Micah Shrewsberry in Coaching Search, per Report Sports Illustrated
  3. LINKS: With Patrick Ewing Out, Georgetown Hoyas, Rick Pitino, Ed Cooley and more are in the News Nonstop Casual Hoya
  4. Georgetown targeting Ed Cooley on eve of NCAA’s: Is this the job the coach will take? Kevin McSports
  5. Roundup: Grace Van Dien Reveals Producer Misconduct; Georgetown Fires Patrick Ewing; UNC Out of March Madness The Big Lead
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Aaron Rodgers emerges from darkness retreat with latest on 2023 decision, vows it will come ‘soon enough’ – CBS Sports

  1. Aaron Rodgers emerges from darkness retreat with latest on 2023 decision, vows it will come ‘soon enough’ CBS Sports
  2. Out of darkness, Aaron Rodgers says decision on future coming soon ESPN
  3. NFL combine: Jets, Raiders, Packers stuck in holding pattern as league awaits Aaron Rodgers’ decision Yahoo Sports
  4. Aaron Rodgers Speaks Publicly For First Time Following Darkness Retreat, Gives Update On When He’ll Make A Decision BroBible
  5. Packers’ Aaron Rodgers finishes retreat, addresses future: ‘I don’t want to drag anybody around’ NFL.com
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Clarity on Vic Fangio Contract Delay Emerges. Will Join the Miami Dolphins’ Coaching Staff Tomorrow. – The Phinsider

  1. Clarity on Vic Fangio Contract Delay Emerges. Will Join the Miami Dolphins’ Coaching Staff Tomorrow. The Phinsider
  2. Super Bowl 2023: Eagles bring in defensive expert Vic Fangio on temporary deal to be secret weapon vs. Chiefs Yahoo Sports
  3. Sources – Vic Fangio helping Eagles’ Super Bowl prep on 2-week deal ESPN
  4. Why Vic Fangio waited to join Dolphins. And notes from Super Bowl Sunday Miami Herald
  5. Vic Fangio quietly signed contract with Eagles to help prepare them for Super Bowl; Fangio will join Dolphins after game NFL.com
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Subcutaneous Fat Emerges as a Protector of Females’ Brains

Summary: Subcutaneous fat has a neuroprotective effect against brain inflammation, but the effect may diminish following menopause.

Source: Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University

Females’ propensity to deposit more fat in places like their hips, buttocks and the backs of their arms, so-called subcutaneous fat, is protective against brain inflammation, which can result in problems like dementia and stroke, at least until menopause, scientists report.

Males of essentially any age have a greater propensity to deposit fat around the major organs in their abdominal cavity, called visceral adiposity, which is known to be far more inflammatory. And, before females reach menopause, males are considered at much higher risk for inflammation-related problems from heart attack to stroke.

“When people think about protection in women, their first thought is estrogen,” says Alexis M. Stranahan, PhD, neuroscientist in the Department of Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University.

“But we need to get beyond the kind of simplistic idea that every sex difference involves hormone differences and hormone exposure. We need to really think more deeply about the underlying mechanisms for sex differences so that we can treat them and acknowledge the role that sex plays in different clinical outcomes.”

Diet and genetics are other likely factors that explain the differences broadly assigned to estrogen, says Stranahan, corresponding author of a study in the American Diabetes Association journal Diabetes.

She acknowledges that the findings are potentially heretical and revolutionary and certainly surprising even to her. “We did these experiments to try and nail down, first of all, what happens first, the hormone perturbation, the inflammation or the brain changes.”

To learn more about how the brain becomes inflamed, they looked at increases in the amount and location of fat tissue as well as levels of sex hormones and brain inflammation in male and female mice at different time intervals as they grew fatter on a high-fat diet.

Since, much like with people, obese female mice tend to have more subcutaneous fat and less visceral fat than male mice, they reasoned that the distinctive fat patterns might be a key reason for the protection from inflammation the females enjoy before menopause.

They found again the distinctive patterns of fat distribution in males and females in response to a high-fat diet. They found no indicators of brain inflammation or insulin resistance, which also increase inflammation and can lead to diabetes, until after the female mice reached menopause.

At about 48 weeks, menstruation stops and fat positioning on the females starts to shift somewhat, to become more like males.

They then compared the impact of the high-fat diet, which is known to increase inflammation body wide, in mice of both sexes following surgery, similar to liposuction, to remove subcutaneous fat. They did nothing to directly interfere with normal estrogen levels, like removing the ovaries. 

The subcutaneous fat loss increased brain inflammation in females without moving the dial on levels of their estrogen and other sex hormones.

Bottom line: The females’ brain inflammation looked much more like the males’, including increased levels of classic inflammation promoters like the signaling proteins IL-1β and TNF alpha in the brain, Stranahan and her colleagues report. 

 “When we took subcutaneous fat out of the equation, all of a sudden the females’ brains start to exhibit inflammation the way that male brains do, and the females gained more visceral fat,” Stranahan says.

“It kind of shunted everything toward that other storage location.” The transition occurred over about three months, which translates to several years in human time.

By comparison, it was only after menopause, that the females who did not have subcutaneous fat removed but did eat a high-fat diet, showed brain inflammation levels similar to the males, Stranahan says.

When subcutaneous fat was removed from mice on a low-fat diet at an early age, they developed a little more visceral fat and a little more inflammation in the fat. But Stranahan and her colleagues saw no evidence of inflammation in the brain.

One take-home lesson from the work: Don’t get liposuction and then eat a high-fat diet, Stranahan says. Another is: BMI, which simply divides weight by height and is commonly used to indicate overweight, obesity and consequently increased risk of a myriad of diseases, is likely not a very meaningful tool, she says.

An also easy and more accurate indicator of both metabolic risk and potentially brain health, is the also easy-to-calculate waist to hip ratio, she adds.

“We can’t just say obesity. We have to start talking about where the fat is. That is the critical element here,” Stranahan says.

Diet and genetics are other likely factors that explain the differences broadly assigned to estrogen, says Stranahan. Image is in the public domain

She notes that the new study looked specifically in the hippocampus and hypothalamus of the brain. The hypothalamus controls metabolism and exhibits changes with inflammation from obesity that help control conditions that develop bodywide as a result.

The hippocampus, a center of learning and memory, is regulated by signals associated with those pathologies but doesn’t control them, Stranahan notes. While these are good places to start such explorations, other regions of the brain could respond very differently, so she is already looking at the impact of loss of subcutaneous fat in others.

Also, since her evidence indicates estrogen may not explain the protection females have, Stranahan wants to better define what does. One of her suspects is the clear chromosomal differences between the XX female and the XY male.

Stranahan has been studying the impact of obesity on the brain for several years and is among the first scientists to show that visceral fat promotes brain inflammation in obese male mice, and, conversely, transplanting subcutaneous fat reduces their brain inflammation.

See also

Females also have naturally higher levels of proteins that can tamp down inflammation. It’s been shown that in males, but not females, microglia, immune cells in the brain, are activated by a high-fat diet.

She notes that some consider the reason that females have higher stores of subcutaneous fat is to enable sufficient energy stores for reproduction, and she is not challenging the relationship. But many questions remain like how much fat is needed to maintain fertility versus the level that will affect your metabolism, Stranahan says.

Funding: The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health.

About this neuroscience research news 

Author: Toni Baker
Source: Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University
Contact: Toni Baker – Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
“Sex Differences in Adipose Tissue Distribution Determine Susceptibility to Neuroinflammation in Mice With Dietary Obesity” by Alexis M. Stranahan et al. Diabetes


Abstract

Sex Differences in Adipose Tissue Distribution Determine Susceptibility to Neuroinflammation in Mice With Dietary Obesity

Preferential energy storage in subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) confers protection against obesity-induced pathophysiology in females. Females also exhibit distinct immunological responses, relative to males. These differences are often attributed to sex hormones, but reciprocal interactions between metabolism, immunity, and gonadal steroids remain poorly understood.

Here, we systematically characterized adipose tissue hypertrophy, sex steroids, and inflammation in male and female mice after increasing durations of high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity.

After observing that sex differences in adipose tissue distribution before HFD were correlated with lasting protection against inflammation in females, we hypothesized that a priori differences in the ratio of subcutaneous to visceral fat might mediate this relationship.

To test this, male and female mice received SAT lipectomy (LPX) or sham surgery before HFD challenge, followed by analysis of glial reactivity, adipose tissue inflammation, and reproductive steroids.

Because LPX eliminated female resistance to the pro-inflammatory effects of HFD without changing circulating sex hormones, we conclude that sexually dimorphic organization of subcutaneous and visceral fat determines susceptibility to inflammation in obesity.

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Photographer Captures Magical Moment Mars Emerges from Behind the Moon

Astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captured Mars rising behind the full Moon which temporarily eclipsed the Red Planet in the night sky on Wednesday.

McCarthy tells PetaPixel that he had been monitoring the rare celestial event over the course of 2022 so he could get fantastic images of Mars peeking out behind the Moon.

“I had to start by learning more about planetary photography, so I spent the summer shooting planets every night to learn all the best tricks,” he says.

“I also needed a better telescope than what I had, so I found one in Los Angeles and picked it up a few weeks ago.”

Aside from a new telescope, McCarthy also needed a new camera.

“The reason for that is the moon moves so fast relative to mars that I only have a brief window to capture it in a specific spot, so traditional timeframes for capturing no longer apply,” he explains.

“In fact, I had to limit my capture to only 10 seconds otherwise the motion of Mars would blur the image. None of my equipment could handle doing that in a way that would produce the type of results I wanted.”

Known as a lunar occultation, Wednesday’s celestial event was particularly noteworthy because Earth was directly between Mars and the Sun, known as opposition, making the Red Planet appear particularly bright in the night sky.

“This event happened while Mars was relatively low on the horizon, which means I’d be seeing through more atmosphere,” adds McCarthy.

“To help combat local ground-based air currents ‘fuzzing’ the image, I set up my telescope next to my pool (there’s a picture on my Twitter if you want to see) which stabilized the air when pointing over it.”

McCarthy was operating four telescopes as a backup in case anything went wrong but his main one was a 14-inch Dobsonian that was tracking the spot on the Moon where Mars would appear from.

“The final image is a mosaic, as the field of view was quite small [see above video]. After the event, I panned my telescope around to fill in the areas of the moon I wanted to include in the final photo.”

More of McCarthy’s work can be found on his Instagram, Twitter, and website.


Image credits: All photos by Andrew McCarthy.



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‘Peekaboo’ Galaxy Emerges From Hiding, And It’s A Time Capsule of The Universe : ScienceAlert

A galaxy that has taunted astronomers since they first detected a hint of its presence more than 20 years ago has finally emerged from hiding.

It’s called HIPASS J1131-31, or Peekaboo, and it is located just 22 million light-years away. And it was so hard to see because it’s teeny tiny and obscured by a bright star in the Milky Way that sits almost directly in front of it.

Through a collaborative effort that involved space- and ground-based telescopes, scientists have learned that the extremely small Peekaboo is also extremely young and close – offering a snapshot of galactic infancy.

“Uncovering the Peekaboo Galaxy is like discovering a direct window into the past, allowing us to study its extreme environment and stars at a level of detail that is inaccessible in the distant, early Universe,” says astronomer Gagandeep Anand of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

Given the absolute preponderance of stuff out there in the Universe, it’s pretty common for foreground objects to sit in front of more distant ones. So when the HI Parkes All Sky Survey caught the galaxy peeking out from behind the bright star TYC 7215-199- 1in the early 2000s, it wasn’t a huge surprise.

Ultraviolet observations revealed that Peekaboo is what is known as a compact blue dwarf galaxy: a small galaxy bursting with the formation of young stars, the brightest of which appear to be blue.

But the light of star TYC 7215-199-1 and its diffraction artifacts obscured the galaxy from clear view.

That might have been that – except it turned out that the star was a fast-moving one, and the direction it moves is away from the galaxy. If we had looked 100 years ago, we might not have seen the galaxy at all. Over the last couple of decades, this gap has continued to widen. And our space-watching technology has grown more and more powerful.

So an international team led by astronomer Igor Karachentsev of the Russian Academy of Sciences revisited Peekaboo for a closer look. They used the Hubble Space Telescope for optical observations, the Southern African Large Telescope for optical spectra, and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) for radio observations.

These observations not only resolved around 60 individual stars in Peekaboo but helped the researchers determine what the stars are made of.

“At first, we did not realize how special this little galaxy is,” says astronomer Bärbel Koribalski of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia and the researcher who first detected HIPASS J1131-31’s presence.

“Now, with combined data from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Southern African Large Telescope, and others, we know that the Peekaboo Galaxy is one of the most metal-poor galaxies ever detected.”

All the stars resolved by Hubble seem to be less than a few billion years old, at most, meaning that Peekaboo appears to be very young in the scheme of the Universe.

And Peekaboo has a strikingly low abundance of metals. Generally, low metallicity indicates that an object formed in the early Universe; more recent objects have a higher heavy element content.

This is because there wasn’t much metal going around in the very early Universe. In the epoch following the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, the Universe was predominantly made up of hydrogen and helium. It was from these elements that the first stars formed, fusing hydrogen and helium into heavier elements, all the way up to iron.

Metals heavier than iron were forged in the violent supernova explosions when stars died, scattering out into the Universe where they could be incorporated into the formation of new stars.

In addition to its young star population, the researchers made only tenuous detections of the signatures of old stars, suggesting that star formation in Peekaboo only started a few billion years ago.

This means that it could be an example of what the earliest generation of galaxies looked like and the star populations within.

It’s essentially a time capsule and practically right next door, cosmically speaking. Because the Hubble observations were not particularly detailed, the researchers hope to revisit the galaxy with JWST to make a more detailed catalog of its chemistry.

“Due to Peekaboo’s proximity to us, we can conduct detailed observations, opening up possibilities of seeing an environment resembling the early Universe in unprecedented detail,” Anand says.

The research has been accepted into the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

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