« January 2008 | Main | March 2008 »

February 2008

February 26, 2008

Virgin flight fuels aviation and energy debates

The first flight by a commercial airline to be powered partly by biofuel has taken place. No passengers were on board, and just one of the aircraft's four engines ran on fuel comprising a 20% biofuel mix together with 80% normal aviation fuel. But with both aviation and biofuels arousing strong emotions among environmentalists, the flight has sparked debate on both these issues. Richard Branson, head of the Virgin Atlantic airline which conducted the flight, hailed it as a 'vital breakthrough,' while environmental groups dismissed it as a gimmick.

Continue reading "Virgin flight fuels aviation and energy debates" »

February 25, 2008

Watch out - there's a snakehead about!

A giant snakehead (Channa micropeltes) has been caught it British waterways causing alarm amongst anglers. Branded as "Sid Fishious" by the press, the catch featured in this week's Angler's Mail article "Killer Frankenfish caught in UK river!"

The predatory piscean (all 3lbs of it!) was caught from the River Witham in Lincolnshire. Staff at the Angler's Mail passed on pictures of the voracious feeder to snakehead experts for verification.

Continue reading "Watch out - there's a snakehead about!" »

February 22, 2008

National Invasive Weed Awareness Week in USA

Sunday marks the beginning of the 9th annual "National Invasive Weeds Awareness Week" over in Washington D.C., USA. Looking at the packed agenda, the week looks to be well supported by all the players in US invasive species research, control and policy sectors.   

If you can not make any of the meetings and are interested in NIWAW 9 or invasive species in general, then check the blogsphere and the NIWAW website for updates.

Thanks to Jennifer of the Invasive Species Weblog for this heads-up.

February 14, 2008

Haemodynamically yours

Planning to woo your beloved with a romantic tête-à-tête this evening? Looking forward to the incomparable moment when your eyes meet in the flickering candlelight over that bottle of expensive red wine you ordered to get you both in the mood for love?

At this point if you can tear your eyes away from the object of your affections, scan the room for Canadian cardiologists. They are about to pour cold water on your little soirée. While one measure* of the wine you so carefully chose may have the desired effect, if your lover reaches to pour you a second one, you may as well put that Céline Dion CD on pause and get your coat.

Continue reading "Haemodynamically yours" »

From Kenya with love...

International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander is urging UK consumers to buy Kenyan flowers today. Given the unrest in the country, flower producers have had to work extra hard to ensure flowers reached the market in time for Valentine’s Day.

Kenya is a leading exporter of cut flowers, roses in particular, and the UK is one of the world’s largest importers. Douglas Alexander goes on to say that the “flowers flown in from Kenya aren’t grown in heated greenhouses so they use less energy than most of those produced in Europe”. You can read more about a comparison of emissions from floriculture industries in a 2007 report by Adrian Williams (Cranfield University) entitled a Comparative Study of Cut Roses for the British Market Produced in Kenya and the Netherlands.

Continue reading "From Kenya with love..." »

February 06, 2008

Beetroot with everything

I heard today that drinking a pint of beetroot juice (500ml) lowers your blood pressure, effects are seen within one hour. Good news for the EU (all those sugarbeet fields: what a quandary do they make sugar, use it for reaching their 10% biofuel goal OR change the type of beet so they can juice it for general consumption!).

Personally I want to know how many intact beetroot do I have to eat? I love cooked red beetroot as is or pickled but I’d rather eat it intact than drink it. Is the effect dependant on the colour of the beetroot: there’s red, white or yellow? The researchers believe it to be the nitrate levels in the beetroot and its dependent on your saliva converting the nitrates into nitrite and you swallowing the saliva (which you would do unless you took it through a straw!). Nitrates are high in leafy green vegetables and previously their blood-pressure lowering action was ascribed to the action of potassium.

My father the most indolent man you could meet always planted three things in his garden: shallots, radishes and beetroot. My maternal grandfather brought up his family on a very low wage by growing fruit and vegetables in his garden. The only thing they ever bought was meat or fish once a week, and the daily loaf and milk. If the council would have let him keep a cow he would have! Visitors were always offered sherry and wine……but the sherry was made from beetroot and the wine had never seen a grape. Tasted delicious even so and it shows how versatile this vegetable is.

Happy days.

You can read the paper by Webb et al (Acute Blood Pressure Lowering, Vasoprotective, and Antiplatelet Properties of Dietary Nitrate via Bioconversion to Nitrite) and more information on beetroot (all aspects, from field to fork) can be found on our internet resource Nutrition and Food Sciences (a subscription is required). Another paper in the same issue of Hypertension by Knecht et al points out that high blood pressure reduces your cognitive performance…..

What else can beetroot do for you, and what can CABIs Global Health do for its subscribers today? Just look at the Reference list below.

References: 

  1. Historical developments in food science and technology - Indian perspective. Bawa, A. S. Journal of Food Science and Technology (Mysore), 2007, 44, 6, 553-564
  2. Evaluation of the antioxidant capacity of betalainic fruits and vegetables. Kugler, F. et al. Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality, 2007, 81, 1, 69-76.
  3. In vitro effects of beet root juice on stimulated and unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Winkler, C et al. American Journal of Biochemistry and Biotechnology, 2005, 1, 4, 180-185
  4. Awareness and usage of functional foods among health professionals and adult subjects. Arthi, N.  and Anuradha, K., Indian Journal of Nutrition and Dietetics  , 2004, 41, 11, 494-499
  5. Betalains in beetroot and prickly pear fruit. Schmandke, H., Ernährungs-Umschau, 2005, 52, 2 , 56-58 
  6. Antioxidative properties of some vegetable products traditional for diets in Central Europe - short report. Bartoszek, A. et al. Polish Journal of Food and Nutrition Sciences, 2002, 11, 4, 67-70
  7. Betalains from red beetroot pigments (Beta vulgaris L.) Drunkler, D. A. et al, Boletim da Sociedade Brasileira de Ciência e Tecnologia de Alimentos  , 2003, 37, 1, 14-21 
  8. Chemoprevention of DMBA-induced UV-B promoted, NOR-1-induced TPA promoted skin carcinogenesis, and DEN-induced phenobarbital promoted liver tumors in mice by extract of beetroot. Kapadia, G. J. et al., Pharmacological Research, 2003, 47, 2, 141-148 

Feed me. Feed me...

Like many over 50’s I have aged parents: the health of mine is falling apart and finally they are facing up to moving from the only house they have ever owned after nearly 50 years. It’s a worry for me but at least their minds are intact. Unfortunately this is not the case for everyone.

A paper published early online (Changes in folate, vitamin B12, and homocysteine associated with incident dementia, Kim et al, J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2008; doi 10.1136/jnnp.2007.131482) reports that folate deficiency is associated with a tripling of dementia risk amongst the elderly.

The researchers conducted a prospective community survey which followed the development of dementia in 518 people over a 2 year period from 2001 to 2003. All participants were over the age of 65, showed no signs of dementia at the start, and lived in one rural and one urban area in Kwangju, South Korea. Their blood levels were monitored at the start and at follow-up 2 years later (average was 2.4 years) for levels of folate, vitamin B12, and the protein homocysteine. (High levels of homocysteine have been associated with cardiovascular disease: earlier cross-sectional studies have found links between low folate/high homocysteine with dementia or cognitive impairment but prospective findings were inconsistent). Baseline assessment also included other variables: sociodemographic data, disability, depression, smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity.

At the start nearly one in five people (19.7%) had high levels of homocysteine, while 17.4% had low vitamin B12 levels and 3.5% were folate deficient. The higher the levels of folate to begin with, the higher were vitamin B12 levels, and the lower those of homocysteine.By the end of the study, 45 people had developed dementia. Of these, 34 had Alzheimer’s disease, seven had vascular dementia, and four had “other” types of dementia.

The results showed that people who were folate deficient to begin with, were 3.4 times more likely to develop dementia. Over the 2.4 years, the onset of dementia was significantly more likely in those whose folate levels fell whilst their homocysteine levels rose (it’s the change rather than the baseline concentration). All measurements were adjusted for weight change occurring in the same period. Changes seen in folate and vitamin B12 levels (declines) were entirely responsible for the link between high homocysteine and dementia. This led the authors to suggest that the rise in homocysteine in dementia might have a nutritional basis.

Dementia was also more likely in those who were older, relatively poorly educated, inactive, showing poor cognition and had deposits of the protein ApoE4. (ApoE is essential for the normal catabolism of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins: the ApoE4 genotype is a risk factor for Alzheimers disease).

The authors suggest that changes in micronutrients could be linked with the other typical signs that precede dementia, including weight loss and low blood pressure. With smaller appetites and tight budgets, dietary changes in the elderly could be responsible for both weight loss and folate deficiency.

One thing that occurred to me is that the demented tend to have poor disorganised diets: did the authors know what diets these people were truly eating? They did point out that vitamin supplementation data was only assessed at followup and no details of the vitamin preparations used was collected. Most supplements in Korea contain vitamin B12, not folate, so the fact that overall folate levels declined in the study sample whilst vitamin B12 levels rose, they felt, could reflect this.

Its obviously a complex story. Whether nutritional status is a cause or an effect of dementia, elderly people need to be eating a proper diet.

The press alert from the BMJ did not actually mention the country in which this study originated: I was delighted to discover it was Korea. Why? Because it truly is an example of “Global solutions for local problems”, the concept behind our public health database Global Health.

Which leads me back to Global Health. The problem of dementia and possible nutrient prevention has been examined before, although not with such compelling results. Under References, I have listed examples in this database which basically cover the role of fish in the diet (especially unprocessed or fatty fish, PUFAs in fish).

And the moral: Feed your parents well, little and often, heavy on the spinach, oily fish & pumpkin seeds and the odd glass of red wine….

References:

  1. Cognitive performance among the elderly and dietary fish intake: the Hordaland Health Study, Nurk et al. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2007) 86: 5, 1470-1478.
  2. Low plasma N-3 fatty acids and dementia in older persons: the InCHIANTI study. Cherubini et al. The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences (2007) 62:1120-1126.
  3. Intake of flavonoids and risk of dementia. Commenges, D. et al European Journal of Epidemiology (2000) 16: 4, 357-36.
  4. Advances on the effects of grassleaf sweetflag (Acorus gramineus) on central nerve system. Tian Rong  et al. Chinese Journal of Information on Traditional Chinese Medicine (2006)13: 3, 101-103.
  5. Curry consumption and cognitive function in the elderly. Ng TzePin et al American Journal of Epidemiology (2006) 164: 9, 898-906.
  6. PUFAs and risk of cognitive decline or dementia: epidemiological data. Barberger-Gateau, P. OCL - Oléagineux, Corps Gras, Lipides (2007) 14: 3/4, 198-201.
  7. Poor nutrient intakes during 1-year follow-up with community-dwelling older adults with early-stage Alzheimer dementia compared to cognitively intact matched controls. Shatenstein, B. and Reid, I. Journal of the American Dietetic Association (2007) 107: 12, 2091-2099.

A useful searchstring for Global Health, if you have a subscription, is: ...dementia!

You could of course use dementia and diet or dementia and elderly.

 

February 04, 2008

Year of the Ratte

As editor of Potato Abstracts I thought it only fitting to let you know that the UN has designated 2008 as International Year of the Potato. It’s also Chinese Year of the Rat - hence my hilarious pun on Ratte - a small potato with a nutty flavour!

For some really interesting potato factoids then visit the UN site and also that of the International Potato Centre (Centro Internacional de la Papa (CIP)) which maintains collections of 100 wild relatives and 3800 cultivated potato varieties. The British Potato Council has some great recipes to celebrate the Year of the Potato, and I almost forgot to mention it will soon be National Chip Week!

As 2007 was not exactly the best of years for potato growing in the UK, with floods causing huge amounts of damage and the general furore surrounding GM field trials, let’s hope 2008 brings a little more promise for the humble spud. Why not try a few more varieties and experience a little more of what the potato has to offer or even better grow a few of your own!

Want to know more about potatoes? Visit CAB Abstracts where more than 1800 records are added each year on potatoes alone

Want to know more about the history of the potato? Read John Reader’s Propitious Esculent: The Potato in World History out on 20 February

February 01, 2008

Virus infections-it’s a zoo in there!

Take a look at Nature this week: the article ‘The battle within’ by Melinda Wenner gives an intriguing insight into the interactions taking place between viruses in the body. She highlights the interaction between HIV and two other viruses, human herpesvirus-6 and GB-virus-C. Infection with the first hastens HIV disease and infection with the second prolongs life in HIV patients. And that’s not the half of it when you get down to what’s going on in cells.

Continue reading "Virus infections-it’s a zoo in there!" »

Search hand picked...

  • Add to Google

May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Google Ads