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inkintheinternet · 25 days
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The Dark Street of Psychosis and Schizophrenia
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
Recently I did extensive research on the Internet about one particular subject, it was because I could see its tsunami like effect rippling through the entire world. The subject is 'Mental Health or Psychology.'
The results of the search were most disheartening. Official statistics from the World Health Organization to every other scientific institute were saying the same thing: "worldwide rise in mental health crisis." What this translates into is that the world is collectively going crazy.
The questions that arise from such statistics, is what is causing this alarming mental decline or disturbance? How should we deal with sufferers or treat them? And what are the risks of us devoloping a mental disorder or our children, and how can we protect our sanity?
Now to have the best understanding about the human psyche, so that we can have acute awareness, and make informed beneficial decisions, should we have to deal with the mental health crisis in anyway.
We have to go back in the history of psychology.
We know this much that Neanderthals and Denisovans were innovative thinkers from the primitive tools they made to the cave paintings.
Discoveries have revealed that we are still learning about the cognitive abilities of pre-historic humans, for example a new book 'The Language Puzzle' by archealogist Dr. Steven Mithen, states that language may have been developed 8 times sooner than was previously thought. That is 1.6 million years ago, rather than 200,000 years ago.
The point of this is that we can be certain man was always cognitive and not an ape.
So now let's fastforward from pre-historic times to the time when philosophy was first recorded in ancient Greece.
Greek philosophy is said to be the very early prototype of mental wanderings that were not based on needs of the day.
In the 17th century the idea of dualism was introduced by French Philosopher Rene Descartes, it is significant as it separates the behavior and actions of a person based on stimulations from the body or environment, from the thinking of the mind that stems from consciousness.
These two aspects are the toughest challenge of psychology to this day. Because of how the effects of environment and society could influence a person's thinking as opposed to internal biological causes. Which is causing the mental disorder, and which has a greater affect on the patient's psyche at any given phase.
In the centuries that followed and even after psychology had emerged as a science apart from physiology and philosophy in the mid-1800s.
There was debate about what constituted a mental disorder, what was the pathogenesis (origin of the mental problem)
What form of treatment would be effective, and how to avoid causing the patient unnecessary suffering by trial and error.
It turns out and not surprisingly that the "pathogenesis - Greek: patho 'suffering' genesis 'origin'" of mental health disorders are one of the most elusive to trace, and hence, the proper treatment very difficult to define.
The first time that a mental condition was recorded to have a biological pathogenesis, was in the curious case of the "general paralysis of the insane." The 1897 discovery was made by the neurologist Richard von Kraftt-Ebing and his assistant Josef Adolf Hirschl.
The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal in 1885 had reported a great surge in the insane. It is said that so much as 1 in 5 patients entering asylums had "general paralysis of the insane."
What the neurologist and his assistant had discovered was that this was the later stages of syphilis. A biological ailment that could manifest in dementia and delusions as untreated syphilis can damage the brain.
While this was a formidable stamp on the connection of a mental disorder and a biological cause. It was generally misleading, as it solidified to a great extent the belief that a mental ailment would be the result of physical defects in the brain. Many scientists of the time would examine brains in autopsies and search for imprints of the mental problem the deceased had, but there were none in most of the cases.
As I explained from ancient times up to the mid-1800s scientists were still having so much difficulty in fully distinguishing consciousness from the physical brain. Needless to say this had delayed the progress in the field of psychology.
Sigmund Freud founded the theory of psychoanalysis. Freud and his colleague Pierre Janet were studying patients with hysteria, seizures, and other physical symptoms with mental disorders.
Psychoanalysis was considered the first major step towards the complex study of the human consciousness and as Freud pioneered the 'unconsciousness.' He theorised that the unconsciousness could manifest into dreams and mental disorders, and was the root cause of conscious psychological problems, the dilemmas in the unconscious mind would have to be brought to the conscious mind in order to treat the patient.
In 1904 Sigmund Freud published 'The Psychopathology of Everyday Life' exploring minuscule details of human behavior, which he thought were symptoms of the workings of the psyche.
While this may have been true, but not every detail could be the result of an unhealthy mental condition.
Sigmund Freud's theory had established the study of psychology as a whole new branch of science. We would think brain autopsies and procedures would be considered irrelevant after such dramatic progress in psychology.
It wasn't.
Unfortunately mental disorder patients were going to face their worst era of great torture and downright mutilation of the brain.
The lobotomy was introduced in the late 1800s and picked up pace in 1935 up to the start of the 1950s. It is a grotesque procedure were nerves in parts of the brain believed to be carrying the thoughts causing the mental disorder are severed.
The intention of the procedure was not to restore sanity, but to put patients in a state of calm. Patients that were violent or had symptoms of schizophrenia were the ones mostly subjected to lobotomy.
It had mixed results with some patients becoming calm, but losing interest in life or having any energy. To other patients dying or relapsing.
An invasive approach is still taken in the case of patients with severe mental disorders, and where other treatments failed. The procedure is called 'Psychosurgery'.
Electric Shock Therapy or Electric Convulsive Therapy (ECT) was first developed in the late 1930s, like the lobotomy it was a severe approach to vulnerable patients who had lost their sanity partially or completely. ECT causes an induced controlled seizure.
I read reports that there were cases where ECT was administered to patients without their consent because they were considered unable to give consent.
Prior to ECT induced seizures for treating mental disorders were caused by oral administration of medication.
Scientists don't know exactly how ECT works, but it is believed to give relief to patients suffering from psychosis, mania, catatonia, schizophrenia, and is still in practice.
A new study published on 27 March in the Nature journal, states that a very strong electrical current in the brain hits the cells and their DNA snaps, and is then repaired, this according to the study is observed when long term memories are made. It could be that when the DNA are repaired, the process encodes information about the electrical current and this forms the memory.
So perhaps the ECT causes relief by damaging DNA in the brain that stores the memory responsible for the mental disorder.
As researchers made discoveries scientists learned about brain chemistry, and then medications were developed to treat mental disorders by pharmaceuticals
There is talk therapy which is what psychologists are qualified for, and then there is psychiatry in which medication could be prescribed. Prevention is better than cure in either case.
We as adults that have had a good, cultured, ethical, and educational upbringing usually are mentally stable, even if we suffer emotional distress or anxiety.
The risks could be to adolescents and teenagers who are still developing and get exposed to negative influence or traumatic experiences at home, school, or social media. OCD (impulsive-compulsive disorder) and PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) along with intrusive thoughts could be the lethal triggers of psychosis, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder (maniac depression.)
Intrusive thoughts are common and happen almost to everyone. People who don't have mental disorders know to dismiss these thoughts and not focuse on them. Sufferers of OCD and PTSD or patients with dementia, Parkinson's disease, or Alzheimer's may not be able to avoid the Intrusive thoughts that could amplify their trauma, anxiety, fears, phobias, eventually leading to complete detachment from reality and the various severe manifestations of mental disorders. In cases like these talk therapy would probably fail, and medication, ECT, and invasive treatments like psychsurgery could be required.
So the influence the next generation gets could entirely define their mental health and their future. The news and statistics I'm reading are not encouraging as mental crisis is on the rise like never before.
I have a podcast Mind Supply, if you liked this article then you might like the podcasts as I talk about social issues.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2024
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent science researcher.
Twitter-X/Instagram: Spellrainia Email: [email protected]
Sources:
Verywellmind: The Origins of Psychology
From Philosophical Beginnings to the Modern Day
By 
Kendra Cherry, MSEd 
Updated on November 29, 2022
 Fact checked by 
Adah Chung
The New Yorker: The Troubled History of Psychiatry
Challenges to the legitimacy of the profession have forced it to examine itself, including the fundamental question of what constitutes a mental disorder.
By Jerome Groopman
Medical News Today: What is electroshock therapy?
Mass General Brigham McLean: ECT Treatment: A History of Helping Patients
Medically reviewed by Heidi Moawad, M.D. — By Lauren Martin on June 30, 2021
Nature.com - Memories are made by breaking DNA — and fixing it
Nerve cells form long-term memories with the help of an inflammatory response, study in mice finds.
By 
Max Kozlov
National Institute of Mental Health: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Healthline: Intrusive Thoughts: Why We Have Them and How to Stop Them
Medically reviewed by Bethany Juby, PsyD — By Kimberly Holland — Updated on May 20, 2022
NHS: Overview - Psychosis
Britannica: Sigmund Freud
Austrian psychoanalyst
Actions
Written by 
Martin Evan Jay
Fact-checked by the editors of encyclopaedia Britannica
Britannica: lobotomy
surgery
Actions
Also known as: frontal lobotomy, leucotomy, prefrontal leukotomy
Written and fact-checked by the editors of encyclopaedia Britannica
Ancient Origins: Language Developed 8 Times Earlier Than Previously Thought, Says New Book
National Institute of Mental Health: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
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artinsight · 5 years
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I made this painting after seeing a nightmare. In it this was close to what I saw. But the painting or any natural disaster movie I've seen so far doesn't do justice to the horror I experienced in my nightmare... I saw myself standing on a rock or some platform, before the ocean, and then in a split second the whole ocean turn up in a giant wave that covered the entire sky. The wind was loud like thunder, the sky was spread with this wave ready to crash down. The remaining ocean before me at the same time had a whale pinned to the ocean floor, with its huge tailfin smashing left and right making violent waves. At this awful moment I woke up. - Arjuwan Lakkdawala
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justthink27 · 7 years
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Answer to yesterday’s post
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
I received questions about my yesterday's post
http://inkintheinternet.tumblr.com/post/154874145279/my-experience-on-the-internet-so-far It was about when exactly did I start writing my stories. My love for storytelling goes back to when I was a kid as young as 8-9. In fact the very first story I made up, which I recorded on a cassette was about a group of crazy people, who accidentally take over a restaurant beside the psychiatric hospital they are in. And then trouble the unsuspecting customers who come to the restaurant, not knowing that the whole staff are really the crazy people from the hospital next door. They mess up all the orders and it gets very funny. One of the jokes I made up at that age is this: Customer says get me a glass of water. Waiter comes back one hour later with an empty glass. Customer is angry and frustrated by now because all the food orders were being messed up. Customer says: “At least you people could have gotten me water!”
Waiter says: “I went to get you water, but the glass was going into the ocean. So I was afraid the glass would drown and so I couldn't get the water.” These were my very early attempts at coming up with stories, though I couldn't write or read. I learned to read at 12-13 and then at 18-19 I started writing my stories. In my early 20s I had finished first drafts of several stories. But they weren't properly written. However I made the internet a means of learning everything I could that was not available to me due to financial restraints. Gradually I completed my stories and well here I am.
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inkintheinternet · 11 months
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The Tree of Unanswered Questions (Answered)
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala 
Ink in the Internet 
I have often been confused by the theory that we are primates, and that chimps and humans have 98% DNA similarity, and therefore it is "evidance" that we are primates. Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection is often cited by many as the backing for this claim, or that it is at the root of it.
I decided to investigate the claims regarding human evolution to the best of my ability. I wanted to get answers that would be clear for people who have not studied human evolution. It's one of the toughest research I have done.
Evolution in itself is such a sprawling subject, one would not know from where to begin.
I decided to make it as simple as possible, I would write the subject as a tree. My own version of the evolutionary tree, not the scientific one with its many intricate details and dead ends. Because to understand that most regular readers might lose their brain cells. I say this because anyone doing research on human evolution will find quotes like "it's complex" "not enough fossil evidance" "it's a tangled web." and so on.
So here I start, let us speak about the highest branch first.
Branch 1 - Hominins (ancient human  species)
Early humans are called hominins and there are according to evolutionary biologists many extinct species of humans from the genus Homo, but we the Homo Sapiens are the only living ones on earth.
In this branch there is Homo Erectus (upright human) this species is said to be the first "most human-like ancient hominin."
It is said that ancient hominins first appeared on earth six million years ago and they walked on four.
Bipedalism - the ability to walk on two legs evolved four million years ago in humans.
So Homo Erectus are the first to walk on two, they lived two million years ago, until at least 250,000 years ago.
I have seen online artificial imagineering of their faces, and you get a human face according to the artificial intelligence software.
But according to evolutionary biology they are not modern humans.
As with the example of Homo Erectus many hominin fossils have been found, and basically each has been classified as an extinct ancient human species.
There are hominins thought to be older ancrstors to Homo Erectus and those are called "super archiac."
Then in the branch after many hominins comes two of our most famous and closest cousins the Neanderthals and Denisovans.
Again not modern humans according to scientific classification.
Neanderthals went extinct about 40,000 years ago.
Denisovans are said to have gone extinct 40,000 to 30,000 years ago.
Denisovans are closer to Neanderthals than modern humans according to the science.
It is said Neanderthals and modern humans interbreeded.
There is no explanation as to why or how Neanderthals became extinct.
How does evolution take place? Answer: By mutations.
According to the science of evolution it happens in two types of periods.
1. The Microevolution (short period) in this period minor changes get made to species according to natural selection. The difference in anatomy is considered not to be significant.
2. The Macroevolution (long period) in this period great changes get made to a species, and even evolving it into a whole new species.
But there has to be the existence of an intermediate species in the chain or branch of evolutionary changes.
Example: 
Charles Darwin was hoping to get palaeontological evidance of an intermediate species. Two years after the publication of his book 'On the Origin of Species' the fossil 'archaepteryx' was found. The fossil link between birds and dinasaurs.
"This extraordinary fossil—bearing feathers as well as teeth, claws, a bony tail and other reptilian traits—was just the sort of creature that Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection predicted should exist. The feathers left no question that the Jurassic Archaeopteryx was a bird, but the creature also had a suite of saurian traits that pointed to a reptilian ancestry." - Smithsonian Megazine
However, anthropologist Briana Pobinar, says that the term "Missing Link" is not accurate because it depicts a linear chain in evolution, which is not the pattern they see.
Pobinar says evolution “produces a tree-like branching pattern with multiple descendants of an ancestor species existing at the same time, and sometimes even alongside that ancestor species.” - Smithsonian Megazine.
The human that is supposed to connect modern humans with primative ancestors has never been found.
So much so that it appears that it's a "ghost" species. What it means is that there is no fossil or DNA evidance to make a scientific connection. 
In fact a new study published in Nature Journal challenges previous notions about hominin contribution to modern Homo Sapiens.
"New model for human evolution suggests Homo sapiens arose from multiple closely related populations.
A new study in Nature challenges prevailing theories, suggesting that Homo sapiens evolved from multiple diverse populations across Africa, with the earliest detectable split occurring 120,000-135,000 years ago, after prolonged periods of genetic intermixing." - Scitech Daily
This means that modern humans evolved from similar other modern humans. There is no genetic evolutionary notable impact from primate like hominins.
(Study is very new released in May 2023) 
So what really makes modern humans different to so called other species of humans. I would say it's the brain and cognitive ability, and this brings me to the second branch of the tree.
Branch 2. (Human Brain Development)
The fossils so far found of "extinct human species" help scientists determine bone structure and facial features of those individuals, but brain tissue is not preserved well, so scientist know little about the cognitive abilities of these species.
So archealogy is the best option for researchers to try and understand the thinking abilities of more recent species like Neanderthals and Denisovans.
As I have read in an article, this too is extremely complicated, as it raises the question are the primitive tools found in excavations and cave paintings really a sign of limited intelligence or underdeveloped environment. Can we really assume that Neanderthals and Denisovans if in a modern world would not be able to think like a modern human?
Researchers have observed differences in brain case size of extinct humans. But does this imply higher or lower cognitive abilities.
To answer to this question or shed some light on it as I was so curious, I decided to take my research from evolutionary biology, history, and archaeology to neuroscience and investigate the development of the human brain.
The confusion of brain development and cultural effect is because of neuro plasticity. In a study done chimps it appeared had rigid neuro plasticity compared to humans. So what is brain plasticity? It is the brain's ability to rewire itself structurally and functionally according to experience and injury. There are even ongoing studies about if plasticity itself can evolve. The more plasticity the stronger cognitive abilities.
Neuroscience is one of the hardest and active field of research. So I'll not get into other aspects of the brain. Here I'll examine the aspect of brain development in regard to neuro plasticity.
"The neocortex—the outermost layer of the brain characterized by the squiggly sulci, or brain folds—is the region that gives all primates their exceptional intelligence. In both chimps and humans, this brain region continues to grow and organize for years after birth, allowing us to learn and develop socially. The brain's ability to reorganize in response to environmental cues is known as plasticity, and it is this flexibility that allows us to learn things we never knew at birth." - Science.org
There lingers the question of brain size regarding the hominins or Neanderthals, Denisovans, if brain tissue of their fossils cannot be examined, we can instead try to find out if a larger brain (large brain cases of fossils) mean higher intelligence or the ability for modern human cognition.
"Having an unusually large brain doesn't necessarily make someone a genius, and large-scale research suggests only a slight and tenuous relationship between brain size and intelligence." - Psychology Today.
With this I conclude the second branch, and start the third branch which is about intelligence in apes and other animals.
Branch 3. (Intelligence in the animal kingdom)
Animals that have shown high Intelligence in comparison to most animals are apes, parrots, crows, ravens, mice, elephants, dogs, and new research suggests octopuses.
"The more that researchers examine octopus genetics, brains and sensory capabilities, the more they find startling similarities to our own minds, hand in hand (or sucker-covered arm in sucker-covered arm) with bizarre differences between how our species experience the world." - Discover.
However, there is nothing close to the level of human intelligence.
Charles Darwin had based his theory on physical changes, he did not know about genetics. 
The Theory of Evolution incorporated with the study of genetics is called 'Modern Evolution Synthesis."
What I have done in this tree is summarise the theory of human evolution based on physical and biological research. 
What I have found is so far scientifically there is no fossil or genetic evidance that says Homo Sapiens evolved directly from apes.
We are in the 21st century with sophisticated technologies and molecular biology. There is nothing stopping scientists from searching for fossil or genetic evidence except that it can't be found. 
Neanderthals and Denisovans have said to have existed in the Ice Age, and there were hominins in the Stone Age.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Twitter: @Spellrainia Email: [email protected]
Sources:
Metode Science Studies Journal, 7 (2017)
Human Brain Evolution - How increase in brain plasticity made us a cultural species - Aida Gomez Robles and Chet C. Sherwood
What Is Neural Plasticity?
Rommy von Bernhardi et al. Adv Exp Med Biol. 2017.
Smithsonian Megazine - Riley Black, Natural History Museum- Katie Pavid
Natural History Museum- Josh Davis
National Geogrphic - Tim Vernimmen
YourGenome.org - Society and Behaviour
Australian Museum - A Timeline of Gissil Discoveries - Fran Dorey
Britannica - Homo Sapiens
Smithsonian: National Museum of Natural History - Introduction to Human Evolution
Live Science: What is Darwin's Theory of Evolution - By Ker Than, Ashley P. Taylor, Tom Garner
Discover Megazine
Psychology Today
Daniel Graham, Ph.D.
A Bigger Brain is Not Necessarily Better
Science.org - David Shultz
New DNA Research Changes Origin of Human Species -
Scitech Daily - University of California - Davis
National Library of Medicine - National Center for Biotechnology Information -
Front Hum Neurosci. 2013; 7: 707. 
Published online 2013 Oct 30. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00707
PMCID: PMC3812990
PMID: 24194709
Evolution, development, and plasticity of the human brain: from molecules to bones
Branka Hrvoj-Mihic,1,2 Thibault Bienvenu,1 Lisa Stefanacci,1,2 Alysson R. Muotri,2,3 and Katerina Semendeferi1,3,*
What may have given modern humans an edge over Neanderthals, according to new research
By Katie Hunt, CNN
Study.com - People and Society in the Stone Age
Jessica Holmes, Joanna Harris
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inkintheinternet · 1 year
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Humanity vs Bacteria and Viruses - We are Losing
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala 
Ink in the Internet 
Humans are on top of the food chain, but we are not apex predators, I used to be relieved at the thought that giant dinasaurs went extinct, because I can't imagine how humanity would have survived if those giants still walked the earth. So are we safe now. The answer is no.
Apparently the giants were never our predators, our species has been hunted for thousands of years by microscopic entities. It's the war on humans by Bacteria and Viruses.
We have some of them which are good for us, and many that are harmless in our environment and nature. But the so called "few" that cause mild to severe disease keep emerging.
When we are born and in the first years of our lives we aquire a number of good germs, which are a mixture of viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, collectively they are called microbiota. 
They stay with us throughout our lives forming a symbiotic relationship with the health of our bodies. 
We have no need to worry from them as long as our immune system is healthy, however, if it is compromised and interacts with any of these germs in a way which is inappropriate then any of these can turn into a disease causing pathogen.
So if we take care of our immune system we'll be okay? Yes, but unfortunately immunosuppression can happen in many ways, due to internal or external factors.
Some examples are surgery, antibiotics, antiviral drugs, genetics, and infections, all can result in compromise of the immune system.
1. Antibiotics can kill the germs of the microbiota when administered to kill infection causing germs.
2. During surgery germs of the microbiota may get removed.
3. Genetics could have defects that cause immune system compromise.
4. Antiviral drugs have shown in laboratory culture tests to cause inhibition of the immune system.
5. Infections like HIV and many others can cause weakening of the immune system.
Our only true defense against germs is the health of our immune system, therefore compromise of it is a possibly life threatening condition.
What about medical and technological advancement, and the assistance of artificial intelligence. What about the many methods of sterilisation, after all this is the 21st century.
Why does it feel like we are still in the middle ages when it comes to the fight against bacteria and viruses? Why haven't we eliminated the "few" disease causing germs. Why did we have a 3 year pandemic? Covid-19 is still causing thousands of deaths.
It's an extremely complex story to simplify but let us take the Streptococcus Pyogene, the bacteria that causes Strep A as a case study. 
Descriptions of it's symptoms can be found far back in 4th century writings. The bacteria's name is derived from Greek words meaning 'A Chain.' 
Outbreaks of Scarlet Fever, one of the diseases that Strep A can cause occurred throughout Europe and North America during the 17th and 18th centuries.
Another setback for humans is that there are thousands of strains of bacteria. 
Scientists have identified 8,000 strains of bacteria with information about their genetics and metabolism. 
However, there are few molecular studies about the age of bacterial pathogens that affected humans before the start of medical bacteriology.
Genetic studies of human skeletons and mummies have found Tuberculosis and Plagues dating back 5,000 and 6,000 years.
So why haven't modern science been able to eliminate these pathogens? And can it be predicted which bacteria or strain will turn pathogenic? 
The answer is yes and no. 
Mutations and evolution have been studied in laboratories, but these models cannot replicate natural settings with the limitless interactions of these microorganisms with nature. 
Therefore scientists have always been several steps behind. Our intelligence is the only weapon we have to keep ourselves on top of the food chain, because if nature keeps outsmarting us at this pace, as far as bacteria and viruses go that is serious bad news for mankind.
So is nature bad for us? No. We have tilted the balance of nature, and are suffering it's consequences.
According to an article in Nature.com that cites various studies, Climate Change has made many diseases worse, bringing people and disease causing microorganisms closer together.
Everything we have learned has been by observing it in nature first. If we can ever get ahead of viruses and bacteria or find stronger antibiotics or other methods of treatment it will only be found in nature. So we need to protect naturel habitats of all species from destruction, and not just the species themselves. The ecology holds the secrets of behaviors of microorganisms.
Scientists of the world and media need to talk sense into people that have projects damaging nature, and there needs to be trust between the public and health officials. 
Unfortunately after the many conspiracy theories about the Covid-19 vaccines, much of the trust in the World Health Organisation was severely damaged in a section of the public. 
The rise in global stroke levels didn't help either as it cast suspicion on the vaccines which were known to cause blood clots in people susceptible to it.
In the Twitter WHO comments many tweets are there blaming vaccines for the recent surge in the deaths of children by iGAS, however in the UK 89.1% children under 12 were less likely to be vaccinated according to the UK Health Security Agency website.
Scientists are debating if lockdowns caused the children to not develope better immunity against the bacteria due to lack of exposure.
Matt Koci, virologist and immunologist warns in a NC State University article by Matt Shipman that humans are not apex predators and viruses and bacteria are around to show us whose boss. 
He explained how the genome of the 1918 virus that killed soldiers with pneumonia like symptoms was restored by extracting its RNA in the 1990s by Jeffrey K. Taubenbergen and a team from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology to study it.
It was done in hope of learning how to deal with an outbreak of the pathogen should it happen.
We must stay vigilant in the fight against Bacteria and Viruses because we are precariously close to losing.
Many articles on the web suggest having a pet can boost children's immune system. Parents who choose to get a pet please keep in mind to teach your children to be kind to pets, and they are a lifelong responsibility and should not be discarded like toys. Adopt pets don't buy.
Foods that boost immune system should also be a priority and avoidance as much as possible of foods that weaken the immune system.
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Her Twitter is @Spellrainia
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2022
Sources:
The Royal Society Publishing - Mark Achtman
Nature.com - Heidi Ledford
National Library of Medicine - W Heagy et al, J Clin Invest 1991 Jun
BMC Biology - Liise-anne Pirofski, Arturo Casadevall
PMC - Immunity and immunopathology to viruses: what decides the outcome?
Barry T. Rouse and Sharvan Sehrawat
Wikipedia- Pathogenic Bacteria
NIH - History of Streptococcal Research
Ferretti J, Köhler W.
Nature.com - McKenzie Prillaman
Wikipedia - Strain (Biology)
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inkintheinternet · 1 year
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Superbugs Catastrophe
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are expected to claim more human lives than cancer by 2050.
Situation is only short of being declared a health emergency.
Almost 10 million people die each year in the world from cancer according to www.ourworldindata.org 
The factors contributing to the rise in superbugs are many by which mutations and ARGs occur resulting in antibiotic-resistant bacteria. 
Antibiotics overuse and misuse are among the factors and so is hospital hygiene.
ARGs (antibiotic-resistant genes) through Horizontal Gene Transfer can occur in three main ways: Transformation - in which the bacteria picks up genetic material from the environment.
Transduction - in which bacteriophages transfer genes between bacteria when bacteria DNA gets incorporated in the genomes of the virus. This can happen during the Lytic or Lysogenic Cycles which are reproduction processes of bacteriophages.
Conjugation - in which genes are transfered between bacteria from a donor bacterium to a recipient bacterium on direct contact.
In laboratory tests transduction was observed more frequent to occur than in nature. This may or may not be a reassuring indication. Because of the abundance of phages and bacteria generally in hospitals. More studies and observation is required in this matter to have a better understanding or estimate.
Bacteriophages or phages for short, are viruses that have specifically evolved to attack bacteria and are harmless to humans. They were in fact used to treat bacterial infections before the discovery of antibiotics.
Microbiologist Felix d'Herelle in 1917 at the Institute Pasteur in Paris, published a paper in which the lysing of bacteria was described "by an invisible microbe he named Bacteriophage." 
The first recorded therapeutic use of phages was in 1919.
Phage Therapy is being explored by scientists again because of the superbug catastrophe. The increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria is so severe that if no solution is found humanity will go back to the days of dying from the simplest of infections.
Phages have two studied functions of reproduction. One is highly in favour of elimination of bacteria which is used in phage therapy. It is the lytic cycle: the phage attaches to any of its specific target range of bacteriam and injects its DNA into it, eventually the phages multiply in the bacterium killing it.
To use this process as phage therapy it is required to identify the phages that can attack the specific bacterial infection. Since each type of phage can only attack a range of bacteria but not all bacteria.
The sides effects are not known of this treatment if there are any. What is known so far is that the phages used in the therapy should be eliminated from the human body when there is no bacterial infection host cells anymore. 
However, phages can also be a factor that contribute to bacteria getting ARGs by the lytic or the lysogenic cycle in which the phage injects its DNA into the bacterium but instead of multiplying immediately the phages are reproduced in the cell devision process of the bacterium. However, here too the phages eventually kill the bacteria cell and burst from it to infect more bacteria cells.
Bacteria can also become superbugs due to natural mutations during cell division.
Phages are the most abundant entities on earth, outnumbering all living organisms including bacteria. And have been actively evolving for billions of years.
It is suspected they might be the workers that drive evolution in species.
I interviewed some nurses who said another problem with the treatment of bacterial infections is the practise of prescribing strong antibiotics from the start. The problem with this is that if the bacteria becomes resistant there is no higher antibiotic to administer said the nurses.
Adam Hersh, M.D, Ph.D. an expert in infectious diseases writes in an article on the University of Utah website.
"When US doctors prescribe antibiotics, 60% of the time it is strong antibiotics (broad spectrum) which can kill multiple kinds of bacteria. According to a study by University of Utah researchers. But more than 25% in such cases it is useless because the infection is from a virus." He says the downside of this can be that the antibiotics kill the "good" bacteria in the body which can lead to more side effects and also contribute to antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2022
Sources:
Websites
Kurzgesagt video link
youtube
Hashem Al Ghaili video link
youtube
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inkintheinternet · 2 months
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Science and Society in the New World
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
I'm tirelessly fascinated by science and the world we live in. I have been observing the changes happening. As I have noted in my previous article a New World has sprung around us, with swiftly progressing science and a changing society due to the influence of social media for better or worse (depends on your perspective.)
We have the positive aspect of this new evolving world and the negative one. I will focus first on the negatives in this article since they are concerning.
For example obesity has increased with 1 in 8 people in the world living with obesity in 2022 according to the World Health Organization 2024 study, with confirming reports about world wide increase in the International Journal of Obesity - 2024.
And cancer is striking young adults, mostly women and people in their 30s that has "doctors alarmed and baffled." - Wall Street Journal.
Studies found the increase to be of 14 types of cancer. "Many of which affect the digestive system." - CNN Health.
There could be a link between these two rising phenomena and a particular change in society that came about forcefully in 2020 ‐ that is the Covid19 lockdown, because of which not only did many people not get enough exercise, but had moved to eating conveniently from takeaways. A habit that maybe didn't go away after the lockdown.
In our present day, food delivery apps offer any food we could think of in less than an hour, delivered straight to our doorstep. This includes many sugary foods and drinks. If I was to make a magical comparison, think of our mobile phones like magic wands...wave it and the food you want magically appears within an hour, you don't have to cook or make a trip just wish for your meal.
How many young adults do you think would thoughtfully order their food based on health criteria rather than whatever looks the most delicious on the app advertisement. In addition to the ease with which any food is available, the fact that there is so much variety means you never get bored and so are likely to eat a large amount in every meal.
Food you haven't cooked means you don't know the ingredients, especially most takeaway foods unlike packaged foods don't have label of ingredients.
The question of ingredients is most concerning in any food.
The average person is rarely familiar with the side effects or potentially harmful ingredients, some people don't have any awareness at all about preservatives, food colouring, artificial flavours, or additives. At best they check the expiration date of canned goods.
For example the food colouring Titanium dioxide (E171 on labels) was banned in France in 2020 followed by the European Union in 2022. It is a mineral that naturally occurs and has many crystallised forms. It is used as a white pigment in foods and other non-edible products. Studies have linked it to genotoxicity and cytotoxicity.
Genotoxicity is where it can cause DNA damage which can cause cancer, and cytotoxicity means a substance that is harmful to cells. The intensive analysis of Titanium dioxide particularly came into focus when science progressed enough to study nanoparticles. Titanium dioxide produces nanoparticles that can enter the bloodstream.
To get a clear picture nanoparticles are 1 to 100 nanometers, a human hair is 80,000 nanometers in width.
Titanium dioxide though banned in Europe and Saudi Arabia, is still used in food products in America and Canada (2023 June report).
I did not find 2024 report regarding this issue.
The reason why different countries have different health regulations is that researchers have varying criteria of what makes a product toxic for human consumption, when it comes to substances that won't immediately kill you like straight out poisons.
How many consumers would have awareness about possible ingredients like these in their takeaway meal or dessert. The answer is probably a very small percentage, especially among adolescents and young adults.
Titanium dioxide could be in your white chocolate mocha coffee or velvet cake white chocolate icing, if it is not banned in your country.
When it comes to food the subject is very large, which is impossible to be summarised in one article. But I came upon some interesting facts and history about chocolate. I found it interesting as I get to explore the Mesoamerican civilization of the Aztecs (present day Mexico) and study if we can learn somethings from it.
Cocoa beans were said to be first used as food by the Olmecs, a tribe in the region of Mesoamerica, then by other pre-Columbian civilizations basically in the same region. The tribes include the Aztecs, Mayans, Inca (Peru) etc.
The Olmecs didn’t have written records but pots found in archealogical sites have traces of cocoa substance.
The Aztecs called cocoa Xocolatl and it was considered more valuable than gold, and even used as currency, throughout these civilizations chocolate was consumed as a bitter drink, and maybe spiced with chilli, which was a common crop in the region.
No one knows the exact origin of these tribes but possible they were nomadic hunter-gatherers who started to build settlements.
It ended very badly for the Aztecs when the Spanish conquistador Hernàn Cortès arrived in Mesoamerica and had trained about 400 soldiers and marched into Tenochtitlan, the capital city of the Aztec empire.
The leader Montezuma unaware of the intentions of the Spaniard greeted him and his men as honored guests (talk about a Trojan Horse) but was captured and many Aztecs slaughtered by the invaders. European diseases like small pox had also reached the Aztecs and due to no immunity they died in heaps. The report I read does not state whether small pox was intentionally used as a biological weapon. But over a course of some years the Aztecs had been conquered by the Spaniards. Though the Aztecs outnumbered the invaders, their weapons and perhaps their knowledge was much infurior, giving the invaders an edge over them.
Soon after the Inca (modern day Peru) were also conquered, and it was roads that they had made that helped facilitate the attack on them.
All of these pre-Columbian civilizations had human sacrifice rituals and chocolate drinks could have been part of the ceremony.
Dark chocolate has proven to prevent the start and progress of cancer. Flavanoids in cocoa beans have cancer fighting properties. It is not a substitute for professional medical treatment, but can be part of a healthy diet. Dark chocolate is defined as 60 to 70 percent cocoa.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2024
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent science researcher.
X/Instagram: Spellrainia
Sources:
Oncology Nursing News, chocolate: to eat or not to eat? Karen Harris
History, Aztecs, history . com editors
History of chocolate, history . com editors
National post, approved for use in Canada, advocates are urging us to ban this common food additive, Sam riches
National Geogrphic, who were the msya? Decoding the ancient civilization's secrets, Erin blakemore
Britannica, titanium dioxide, chemical compound, debasmita patra, fact-checked by the editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Cnn health, Cancer diagnosis rates are gong up in younger adults, study finds, driven largely by rises in women and people in their 30s, Brenda goodman
Wall Street Journal, Cancer is striking more young people, and doctors are alarmed and baffled, brianna abbott
International Journal of Obesity, obesogens: a unifying theory for the global rise in obesity, jerryold j. Heindel, Robert h. lustig, Barbara e. Corkey
Regask, titanium dioxide banned as a food additive in Ksa, Yemen, and Qatar
U.s. right to know, titanium dioxide, banned in Europe, is one of the most common food additive in u.s., mikaela conley
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inkintheinternet · 3 months
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A Vault of New Science in Complex Natural Systems
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
The 21st century and especially the last 24 years has seen rapid and giant leaps in scientific progress. I think we have truly reached a completely new era for the civilizations of the world.
As was the industrial revolution in the past, in those 24 years there has been a social and scientific revolution. The Internet, social media, handheld multimedia communication devices, electric vehicles, drones, video instant connection, space exploration, artificial intelligence, bioengineering, nanotechnology, etc.
Earlier things like these were pretty much in the realm of science fiction. Now it's a reality and there is much enthusiasm from entrepreneurs like Elon Musk whose company SpaceX is manufacturing the Starship, a rocket model that will eventually become advanced enough to take people to the Moon and Mars as Elon claims.
NASA also started its Artimis ll space programme to explore the Moon and beyond.
All this in the span of 24 years. It's a lot too fast and definitely a turning point for our world as our parents knew it.
When explorer Christopher Columbus discovered the Americas in 1492, and then later in 1504 a letter by Amerigo Vespucci reffered to South America as 'Mundus Novus,' (New World.) I think in those 24 years we have a New World that has suddenly assembled itself around us. We did not go out exploring, but the collective innovation and technological advancements, with the worldwide social exposure of far away people and cultures has turned our Old World into a New World. It's the best way to describe such a dramatic change in just 24 years.
And while geographically Earth has been completely mapped, I think everything on Earth itself is changing and our new maps are expanding into space.
Recently I read a news story about lichens surviving outside the International Space Station with 35% of their cells intact. For me this was beyond astonishing considering how harsh and different the vaccumm of space is to the atmosphere of Earth.
Curious that any living organism can survive in space, I researched this remarkable species of fungi.
(Note: fungi were previously classified in the plant kingdom, but as science progressed researchers discovered fungi are not plants but have a closer relationship to animals, and have eversince gotten their own kingdom of classfication that is apart from plants and animals.)
The lichens have a symbiotic relationship with algae and/or cynobacteria which provide the energy through photosynthesis that the lichen uses. The lichen in turn produces "sunscreen" that provides protection from UV radiation. This could explain how it managed to survive at all in space.
Could there be living organisms on Mars or the Moon that have somehow adapted to survive in their particular environments? The thought reminded me of the beautiful sad story of The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupèry about a boy who has a red earthly rose that grows on an un-earth-like planet in space. 
If humans are to really live on and terraform Mars or the Moon they will have to find ways of growing vegetation on them to make living there sustainable. Astronauts have grown a veriaty of vegetables inside the International Space Station with soil from earth, in 1995 a potato became the first vegetable to be harvested on the ISS. But radiation is still perhaps the most concerning obstacle about living in space, because it can penetrate even metal but not concrete.
Studies by NASA for astronaut safety have many different countermeasures against radiation. Which includes limiting their time in space, to monitoring which location on the ISS gets most effected by radiation. There are many different types of radiation, the most dangerous is ionising radiation like gamma rays and galactic cosmic radiation and radiation from solar particle events. Fortunately so far it is possible to live in lower earth orbit for months or up to a year because the radiation in it is not as strong as in complete outer space away from earth. 
Radiation on Mars or the Moon is one of the most difficult challenges hindering space dreams. So for a living organism that has closer relationships with animals like the lichens to survive at all in space is truly astonishing.
It made me wonder how far do the abilities of plants/fungi go and how much do we have in common with them on the cellular level.
Plants/animals/fungi are eukaryotic organisms. While scientists do not make direct comparison between plants and animals for obvious reasons there are still things they are studying on the cellular level in plants to understand how similar things might work in humans. 
A recent study on plants by the University of California - Riverside, published in the journal Nature Plants. Scientists made an unexpected discovery of the critical life saving function of the organelle Golgi Body and the COG protein that maintains it. Plants that were modified to be unable to produce the protein and deprived of light started to have signs of dying and when they were injected with the COG protein they made a full recovery as though coming back to life from death. This is extremely astonishing. The scientists behind the discovery say that all eukaryotic organisms have the golgi organelle - known in humans as the Golgi Apparatus, and that what was learnt in plants could help better understand the aging process and age related diseases in humans.
(Note: The Golgi Apparatus is a biological device that sorts, modifies and packages proteins to be sent into vesicles for delivery to particular cells. To learn more about proteins, genes, and gene reprogramming you can read my article: Understanding Regenerative Medicine posted to Ink in the Internet.)
In another recent discovery published in Ecology, a fern tree species found in Western Panama and its lineage dates back to the Jurassic era, is found to be able to reanimated its dead leaves, turning the structures in leaves that used to carry water to the plant into roots that dig deep into the soil to feed the mother plant nutrients. As this happens the leaves look like decaying plant matter but they are turning into newly living roots.
Nature keeps getting more complex and perplexing as we learn about it. 
Another very astonishing living organism though not a plant is the lungfish, a creature that has gills and lungs, scientists believe when the freshwater it naturally occurs in is not well oxygenated it switches to getting oxygen from its lungs, and the lungfish are sometimes called living fossils because the species has stayed unchanged for nearly 4 million years. Lungfish (Subclass Dipnoi) first appeared in the Early Devonian Epoch.
Incredible creatures subhan Allah.
"During the spawning season, the pelvic fins of the male develop numerous tuft-shaped growths filled with small blood vessels (capillaries). These growths are believed to release oxygen from the blood, thereby oxygenating the water around the young." - Britannica 
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2024
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent science researcher.
Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia 
Sources:
Britannica - Lungfish - Karl Heinz Luling, fact-checked by The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 
National Geogrphic - West Africa Lungfish
National Library of Medicine - UV - Protectant Metabokites from Lichens and their Symbiotic Partners - Khanh Nguyan etc al. Nat Prod Rep. 2013 Dec.
Britannica - Eukaryotes  - The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 
Britannica - Golgi Apparatus - Kara Rogers - fact-checked by The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 
The British Lichen Society - What is a Lichen?
ExplorersWeb - Lichen Survives on Outside of International Space Station  - Sam Anderson 
Scitech Daily - New Discovery  Brings Nearly Dead Plant Back to Life - University of California - Riverside
IFLSCIENCE - One-of-A-Kind "Zombie" Fern can Reanimate Dead Leaves to Feed the Rest of the Plant - Eleanor Higgs - edited by Maddy Chapman
Ustate - Herbarium - What are Fungi?
Radiation Educator Guide - Module 3 - Jon Rask, M.S. ARC Education Specialist - Wenonah Vercoutere, Ph.D, Nasa ARC Subject Mater Expert - Al Krause, MSFC Education Specialist - BJ Navarro, Nasa ARC Project Manager
Nasa - Why Space Radiation Matters
www. gvisser . ca - What was the First Vegetable to be Grown in Space?
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inkintheinternet · 3 months
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Climate Change - What You Didn't Know
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
Those who don't believe in Climate Change or Global Warming, claim that the fluctuations and variation, and even the extreme weather events are normal, simply part of the natural processes of Earth's Climate.
It was those claims and the extreme weather that I read about around the world, and the consequences of the unfolding disaster that is "Climate Change" is what got me curious and concerned enough to investigate this matter and find the correct answers once and for all.
The first thing to do was to differentiate between the truly normal Climate of Earth and the anthropogenic (human caused) Climate effect.
I thought of going back in time before the industrial revolution, when the air was pure and clean, no one knew what pollution was or air contamination. However, this does not answer the question about the Climate but it does confirm that pollution is a result of the industrial era and with it comes many diseases and contamination of Earth's air and other things.
So I decided to go back in 'geological time' it is a term used by geologists who investigate Earth's past Climate and environment.
Geologists study rocks, boulders, sediments on land and the ocean, sea, etc. These sediments contain fossils and microfossils of plants, animals, microorganisms, and chemical compounds of different minerals, etc. Based on these geologists can ascertain what was the environment in the past Climates when these things were living or formed.
Even this though is not enough to have an in depth comprehensive understanding of the naturally induced Climate Change, it turns out scientists monitor and study the Climate from the ground up to space. It's all relative to Climate Change.
To understand the first chapter of Climate Change, we have to learn about the Milankovitch Cycles, the theory is by the Serbian mathematician, geophysicist, and climatologist Milutin Milankovitch (1879 - 1958.)
His ideas that appeared in papers over the years, were collectively published in his 1941 book: Canon of Insolation and the Ice-Age Problem.
Milankovitch calculated the temperature on different points on Earth at different times of the year, and his calculations were close enough to the early 20th century empirical data to attract the attention of meteorologists.
"In 1924, in collaboration with German meteorologist Vladimir Köppen and German geophysicist Alfred Wegener, who were then working on the causes of Ice Ages."
Milankovitch calculated hundreds of thousands of years back in time to study three known astronomical parameters:
Eccentricity, Earth's orbit around the Sun is an ellipse, and it changes into different elliptical orbits over time, where sometimes the Earth is closer to the Sun and at other times very far away from the Sun - a major contributing factor to Ice Ages.
Earth's Axial Tilt, the Earth rotates on an axis which is tilted, this too changes over time, its changes can be detected at the North Pole as it points to different parts of the sky.
Precession, is caused by the gravitational pull of the Sun and the Moon upon the Earth, and so the Earth wobbles like a "spinning top that is slowing down." 
The Milankovitch Cycle consists of these three and they affect the Earth's Climate from an astronomical angle by how much solar radiation hits Earth.
According to geologists there have been 5 Ice Ages in Earth's Climate, and the last one which we are experiencing: "Cainozoic - Quarternary Ice Age, began around 34 million years ago with the glaciation of Antarctica" - Outlook Planet.
So if we are in an Ice Age how can there be Global Warming? It can be and I'll explain how.
Humans are practically living all over Earth, and there are greenhouse gas emissions from factories to cars, planes, rockets, barbecues, wildfires, etc, all of it is releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) filling up into the atmosphere - trapping heat. 
Now if we are to find similarity with this anthropogenic CO2 pollution with natural processes in the past Climates, we could take volcanoes as a good example or when meteorites hit Earth, in the first there is great levels of the release of carbon dioxide, and in the second the debris and sediments unearthed by the impact of the meteorite can block the sunlight. These can cause change in climate, but the big difference is that when major events like these happened humans were not around and didn't have to endure the long process of Earth healing itself. Unfortunately it was animal species like dinasaurs and others that suffered extinction and troubles due to severe Climate Change.
(Note: The material that is expelled from volcanoes known as tephra/Ash can either warm or cool the Earth's surface "depending on how the sunlight interacts with it." - British Geological Survey.)
If we plunge Earth into severe Climate Change by human activities of burning fossil fuels endlessly, the healing process of Earth could take decades and humans could suffer greatly.
Global Warming is melting glaciers, which in turn is causing sea levels to rise.
(Note: sea levels do not rise when icebergs melt, because they are already part of the water body, and displaces equivalent mass to its weight.)
Sea levels also rise due to thermal energy, water expands as it heats up, which is what is happening now, the high temperature of oceans and seas are causing them to expand, with the rise due to melting glaciers.
Pacific Island Nations are on the forefront of this crisis - UN. Because they are already low-laying Islands. Not only this but some regions in the Pacific are experiencing annual rise of 4 mm of sea level while around the world it is 3.4 mm.
Island Nations most vulnerable include Kiribati, Tuvalu, and Marshall Islands. They have limited land area and are expected to be partially or completely submerged by the end of the 21st century.
On land floods are causing havoc in a different way. The increasing floods is due to ice melting from mountain caps and the extra greenhouse gas - water vapour in the air, which turns to more rain than is part of the natural season. 
Floods are expanding the geographical areas of disease spreading insects. For example, there is an increase in Lyme disease, which has many factors including Climate Change. The nonprofit Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) has warned in its 2023 forecast that the risk of Lym disease is higher than ever.
Floods and out of the normal rain also increase stagnant water that can be breeding grounds for diseases like Malaria and Dengue Fever.
According to the latest World Malaria report there were 249 million cases of Malaria in 2022 compared to 244 in 2021
In very disappointing news recently, Norway, became the first nation to approve deep sea minning.
I can only imagine that the purpose of this is to get resources for manufacturing products, and search for fossil fuels. I think world governments and scientist should instead concentrate on renewable energy and recycling, especially of mobile phones and batteries, and the components of other electronics. Used cars, planes, etc, also have components that ought to be recycled.
The Norwegian government says it will be very careful before giving licences for the actual deep sea minning.
This subject brings me to the matter of what's in the sea, especially regarding threats to its ecosystem and Climate Change. 
The matter of extreme concern according to my observations is Methane hydrates also called fire-ice. It belongs to the chemical compound named 'clathrates' after the Latin 'clathratus' meaning encaged.
The name is fitting as the molecules of Methane hydrates are enclosed in a larger cluster of water molecules.
Methane hydrates are a component of the cryosphere, anywhere that water is in solid state, including snow and ice.
The fire-ice is highly flammable and contains four times more hydrogen than carbon dioxide. It is a greenhouse gas with the potential to completely devasted Earth's  Climate.
Methane hydrate is almost exclusively only found in the permafrost in the Arctic and below the sea floor in sediments, where the pressure is very high and the temperature low, which are the conditions required to keep it stable.
It has crystallised structure, and Methane molecules in a solid state are more densely packed than as a gas. It means the solid reservoir of Methane hydrates have a lot of Methane that can be turned into gas.
A 2023 study by a team of international researchers from the Newcastle University made a very disturbing discovery. The warming of the sea due to Climate Change is causing Methane hydrates to dissociate from continental sediment slopes and move out from the deep ocean. They found a pocket that had travelled 25 miles. The research is published in the journal Nature Geoscience.
Scientists don't know how much of Methane hydrates could get effected but as it dissolves in the water it will be released in the atmosphere. 
If Methane hydrates is minnned for fossil fuel it could be very dangerous, its extraction is difficult and it can be severe for the Climate, being worse than carbon dioxide and highly flammable.
Speaking of sea pollution an important note about coral reefs in the Red Sea, as someone who spent a lot of my time by it, since I live in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in my research I found that coral reefs are very sensitive to any change and will not live if any of its environmental requirements change, so I hope Saudi government take care that the Red Sea is not effected by pollution or anthropogenic Climate Change, the coral reefs provide life to countless species and are a very important part of the sea ecosystem.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2024
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent researcher in science. Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia Email: [email protected]
Sources:
Methane - wisconsin department of health services
Nasa - Milankovitch (orbital) cycles and their role in Earth's Climate
Nasa - what is climate change
British Geological Survey - impacts of climate change - discovering geology - climate change
Lym disease causes, signs, and treatment - lifespan
CDC - signs and symptoms of untreated Lyme disease
Benar news - Pacific Island countries facing faster sea level rise, says UN - Subel Rai Bhandari for RFA
Climate portal - how do greenhouse gases trap heat in the atmosphere
My Climate - shaping the future
Methane Hydrate - Science Direct
Outlook Planet - Climate explained: what is an Ice Age and how often do they happen? - Outlook Planet - desk
BBC - why 'flammable ice' could be the future of energy - Martha Henriques
BBC news - Deep-sea minning: Norway approves controversial practice - Esme Stallard
Nature chemistry - flammable ice of profit and doom - Brett F. Thornton and Christian Stranne
News wise - Climate change shown to cause methane to be released from the deep ocean - Newcastle University
Methane hydrates - an overview - Science Direct
Methane hydrates - NOAA ocean exploration
General hazards of carbon dioxide - HSE
Britannica - Milutin Milankovitch - Doug Macdougall - fact-checked by the Editors of Britannica Encyclopedia
Methane - www . inchem . org
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inkintheinternet · 4 months
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Understanding Regenerative Medicine
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
It started in the 50s with the first bone marrow transplant, and stem cell research has taken off with promising results and astonishing insights into cells and genes, and the remarkable way in which human and animal bodies function on the cellular level. 
Regenerative medicine is being tested and explored in the treatment of several diseases including cancer and heart disease, two of the leading causes of deaths world wide, researchers also have hopes of finding treatments through it and learning about how Alzheimer's diseases can be treated and its degenerative effects. This is of significance considering the rise of Alzheimer's disease in the past twenty years. (I suspect mobile phones maybe the culprit, read my previous article.)
So what are stem cells exactly and how are they being used in regenerative medicine?
There are many types of function specific cells in the body, the stem cells being tested and used are basically of two main types. One is the embryonic stem cells that are taken from an human embryo which is 3 to 5 days old and has 150 cells, and is from an egg fertilised in vitro fertilisation clinic and has not been implanted in the uterus. It is without a doubt controversial as it raises questions of the ethics of this particular research.
Stem cells can also be found in umbilical cord blood, and the amniotic fluid, which fills the sac surrounding the fetus in the womb.
Women giving birth in hospitals should be notified if the umbilical cord blood is taken for stem cell collection.
These stem cells have the capability to differentiate (turn into) almost any function specific cell in the human body, making them highly favourable for testing and studying how they mature, they can also be frozen to be stored without getting damaged, and they are stable and durable.
Stem cells with the capability to differentiate are called pluripotent cells.
The other type are adult stem cells that have already differentiated into function specific cells, these are found in the bone marrow and fat in the body. While at first it was thought that their capabilities were limited in treatment or testing, scientists are discovering that adult stem cells are useful in many ways and are easier to match to a patient than embryonic stem cells. Because the body's immune system is most likely to attack embryonic stem cells from a donor than its own adult stem cells that have been reprogrammed for treatment.
However, adult stem cells could have defects due to environmental hazards or toxicity.
In both main stem cell types it is tools of reprogramming that is being developed. 
In 2006, the Nobel Prize-winning scientist Shinya Yamanaka and his team, at Kyoto University in Japan, discovered how to revert adult stem cells into embryonic stem cell like state. 
This is called Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells or iPSC.
The genes that define an embryonic stem cell are there in every cell in the body but they are turned off. Yamanaka pioneered the technique to turn on those genes in adult stem cells. He did it by injecting molecules in the adult stem cells with the instructions to turn on the embryonic stem cell genes, and by this changing the identity of the adult function specific stem cell into an embryonic like stem cell. 
The instructions for gene reprogramming are in proteins or chemicals that mimic proteins that have been selected to alter the identity of the stem cells into the function specific cells required for potential treatment or testing.
For example, if a patient suffering from heart disease is injected with healthy stem cells that have been turned into heart cells, they could help treat the heart. 
Or in the case of testing,  new drugs can be tested on stem cells that have been differentiated into the cell type in the body targeted by the drugs. Scientists can study if the drug is effective at treating the cells or causes adverse affects. This is of course much better than testing the drugs on living humans or even animals. Animals have suffered so much because of lab testing. I hope stem cells would be a sufficient alternative to animal testing.
The other way in which stem cell research is very useful is that through it researchers and scientists can study cells otherwise inaccessible. Like for example neurons in the brain. 
Stem cells can be differented into neuron like cells, they won't be exactly the same but very close proxies.
Studying stem cells that have been successfully turned into different types of cells of the body in a culture petri dish allows scientists to much easily observe the onset of diseases and test possible treatments. Stem cells are also being considered as alternatives to organ transplant, and tests are ongoing in this context.
The human body has regenerative abilities like the skin healing after wounds or hair growing back. But it is the liver that is most astonishing as it has cells that can regenerate while other organs in the body don't. Scientist are studying why this is.
However, regeneration in humans is nothing compared to some species in the animal kingdom. Like for example worms, lizards, salamanders, jellyfish.
Researchers at Whitehead Institute are studying regeneration, and Professor Peter Reddien, is especially focused on a type of flat worm that has remarkable regeneration capabilities. The worm planarian can regrow its whole body even when it has been cut into pieces. Each piece will grow into a whole new worm.
Another worm was introduced for studying and testing by Professor Mansi Srivastav, the model worm suitable for testing and experiments is the three-banded panther worm. Both worm species have regenerative capabilities and studies have shown that neoblasts (worm stem cells) in the muscles of the worms are guided by Position Control Genes PCGs into regenerating the whole worm from each piece. 
Scientists are developing new techniques of the process of actually introducing proteins or chemicals acting like proteins into the cell membrane of the stem cells or adult stem cells to be reprogrammed.
The percentage of successful reprogramming so far is not high. Previously a virus was used to inject transcription instruction factors into stem cells. But this method was imperfect.
Newer methods include using a plasmid, a circular DNA construct to enter the stem cell membrane with the transcription instructions, after the cell has been zapped with an electric current that makes a temporary hole in it.
While this method of using electricity to change genes is used in labs, a recent study from the University of Nagoya in Japan, studied electric eels that were used to zap zebra fish, using an electric field, they found that the genes of the fish had changed.
The study was published in the journal PeerJ-Life Environment.
"Electric eels and other organism that generate electricity. Could affect genetic modification in nature," said Atsuo Lida, professor and author on the study.
We don't know if the 860 volts discharged from eels in the amazon river has contributed to gene transfer between species but it's a possibility.
The human genome has ca. 20,000 genes that construct proteins. Genes and proteins are the building blocks of life.
Therefore stem cell reprogramming is wholly based on using proteins or chemicals mimicking proteins to alter cells into function specific cell types.
However, the creation of new genes is just as much a mystery as the start of biological life.
A recent discovery by the University of Helsinki in Finland, has a possible answer to the mystery of the mechanism behind the making of new genes. The classical genes that make proteins have regulatory genes, and as the university was studying errors in DNA replication they found that a mutation event can give rise to the very tiny sort of sub-genes from which perhaps other larger genes are made.
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent science researcher.
X/Instagram: Spellrainia Email: [email protected]
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2024
Sources:
SciTech Daily - Palindromic Puzzles Solved: the Hidden Mechanism of Gene Creation, University of Helsinki
National Library of Medicine - Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells: Reprogramming Platforms and Applications in Cell Replacement Therapy, Akram Al Abbar, Stewart Ching Ngai, Nadine Nograles, Suleiman Yusuf Alhaji, Syahril Abdullah
Electric Eel Zaps can Change Fish DNA - Popular Mechanics, Tim NewComb
ISCRM - What is Cell Reprogramming
The Science of Self-Repair: Regeneration Research at Whitehead Institute by Greta Friar
Mayo Clinic Staff - Stem Cells: What are they and what do they do
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inkintheinternet · 5 months
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Invisible Forces
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala 
Ink in the Internet
When we see something happen before our eyes it is easy to think about it intuitively or to deduce what is happening by using basic logic.
These are superficial observations but when we want to understand the root cause or the science and dynamics of what is happening our brains could encounter the challenge of counterintuitive thinking and here is where we might discover the unthinkable.
One of the things I find very interesting is the history and developing story of the interactions of electricity with biological living entities such as ourselves, and to add to this subject the effect of electromagnetic fields. As I began my research on these I was very surprised by what I found. Starting from the history to present day discoveries.
Why it is not only fascinating but important to have an understanding of this particular branches of science, is because modern age science is expanding in those fields. Especially when it comes to bioengineering in its many subcategories. And I stress its significance in the field of biomedical engineering, specifically to tackle the antibiotics resistance crises. In fact it could be that it is in physics we will find the components to improve the effectiveness of the medicine we have today or the treatments that are no longer effective against microorganisms or autoimmune diseases. We should also study these to find out if there are hidden adverse effects on our health.
The Electromagnetic Force is one of the four fundamental forces in nature as classified by scientists.
Gravitational 
Electromagnetic
Weak Force
Strong Force
Moreover there is the Weakelectro Force that is theorised to unify the Weak and Electromagnetic forces by them being different faucets of the WeakElectro Force.
Excluding gravity the other forces have been traced back to quantum particles. Making them all quantum forces. Gravity however, still continues to baffle scientists.
Unlike the other forces scientists have not been able to progress in their understanding of gravity beyond the theory of General Reletivity that was established by Albert Einstein in 1915.
While atmospheric pressure is not considered a fundamental force, I have written about how it effects us from earth up to space, where there is lack of it and the effect of that. 
The Strong Force
The atom was split for the first time in 1932.
By John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge in the UK. Also in Cambridge earlier James Chadwick discovered the neutron.
"After the discovery of the neutron it was clear that the atomic nucleus is made up from protons and neutrons. In such a system, electromagnetic forces cannot be the reason why the constituents of the nucleus are sticking together. Indeed, the repulsive electrical Coulomb force between the protons should blow the nucleus apart. Therefore, the concept of a new strong nuclear force was introduced." 
It is interesting to note that while the protons and neutrons are held together by the Strong Force, the electrons that spin around the nucleus in the atom, do not experience the Strong Force, and the SF gets stronger with distance instead of weaker. This is a bit counterintuitive when we think about it in comparison to gravity or magnetism.
(Side note; to be accurate electrons do not "spin" they have angular momentum).
While electrons do not feel the Strong Force, they are effected by the Weak Force.
An example of the WF is in beta decay. It has a combination of theories as to what is the source of the Weak Force, but its fundamental process is to turn neutrons into protons. 
In an atom the nucleus that is made of neutrons and protons, in each of them are three elementary particles (particles so small scientists have not been able to split them) these are called quarks. A proton has 2 'up quarks' and 1 'down quark.'
While the neutrons have 1 up quark and 2 down quarks. The up and down is according to their spin. What the Weak Force does is that it changes the spin of the quarks which turn the neutron into a proton and an electron gets emitted. In this context the electron is called a "beta particle."
The Electromagnetic Force is very interesting. The simplest example of its occurance is when there is a live wire the motion of the electricity generates around the wire an Electromagnetic Field. 
You can think of the field itself as quantum waves. Mechanical waves such as sound waves and water waves need a medium to transport them. But quantum waves can travel even through the vaccumme of space.
The study of field theories is one of the most difficult in physics, and is still in its infancy.
Powerlines, mobile phones, and any electrical device generates electromagnetic fields. 
Our mobile phones are perhaps the device by which we get the most exposure to EMFs and the brain is most sensitive to these signals. I did research on brain diseases and I found statistics that suggest there might be a correlation between the rise of Alzheimer's disease in the past 20 years and the increase in dependency on mobile phone usage.
"Deaths from Alzheimer’s have more than doubled between 2000 and 2019, while those from heart disease — the leading cause of death — have decreased," according to the Alzheimer Association.
What is Alzheimer’s Disease and how is it dangerous?
"Alzheimer's disease is a brain disorder that gets worse over time. It's characterized by changes in the brain that lead to deposits of certain proteins. Alzheimer's disease causes the brain to shrink and brain cells to eventually die. Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia — a gradual decline in memory, thinking, behavior and social skills. These changes affect a person's ability to function." - Mayo Clinic.
In the advanced stages it can cause dehydration, malnutrition, and infections, these can result in death.
We are generally aware of how neurons in the brain function by electrical signals. This apparent electricity in the body has an interesting history.
It is said that in ancient Rome and Egypt eels were the first living things to be acknowledged having this mysterious source of energy.
In the 1770s Italian Physicist and Physician Luigi Galvani believed and investigated what he thought was "animal electricity." He had made a dead frog's muscles move using metals and an Electrostatic Machine and a Leyden Jar - a glass jar to store static electricity. 
Galvani's experiment was at the time a step towards discovering how living tissue uses electricity. He was of course wrong about the frog being the source of the electricity, it was a conductor.
Using first the Leyden Jar and then the first primitive battery - Voltaic Pile scientists were able to store electricity and use it for experiments.
"The Italian physicist Alessandro Volta is generally credited with having developed the first operable battery. Following up on the earlier work of his compatriot Luigi Galvani, Volta performed a series of experiments on electrochemical phenomena during the 1790s." Britannica.
Alessandro Volta had presented his invention in Napoleon's Court and impressed the French leader so much that Volta was appointed his science adviser.
Humanity had however just scratched the surface of what was to come in the study of electricity.
In a potential hypothesis it is said that brain-to-brain communication maybe possible in humans and animals. This sounds funny as I don't believe we can talk to animals other than our pets. But the hypothesis has an interesting aspect regarding how the cryptochrome in the retina can perceive magnetic fields.
"The validation of DBBC (Direct Brain-toBrain Communication) has been documented via recording similar pattern of action potentials occurring in the brain cortex of two animals. With regard to action potentials in brain neurons, the magnetic field resulting from the action potentials created in neurons is one of the tools where the brain of one animal can affect the brain of another. It has been shown that different animals, even humans, have the power to understand the magnetic field. Cryptochrome, which exists in the retina and in different regions of the brain, has been confirmed to be able to perceive magnetic fields and convert magnetic fields to action potentials." - National Library of Medicine.
Birds have in their retinas magnetic field receptors.
"Birds can use two kinds of information from the geomagnetic field for navigation: the direction of the field lines as a compass and probably magnetic intensity as a component of the navigational ‘map’. The direction of the magnetic field appears to be sensed via radical pair processes in the eyes, with the crucial radical pairs formed by cryptochrome. It is transmitted by the optic nerve to the brain, where parts of the visual system seem to process the respective information." - Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
Bacteria surprisingly communicate via brainlike bursts of electricity.
"Scientists are now finding that bacteria in biofilms can also talk to one another electrically. Biofilms appear to use electrically charged particles to organize and synchronize activities across large expanses. This electrical exchange has proved so powerful that biofilms even use it to recruit new bacteria from their surroundings, and to negotiate with neighboring biofilms for their mutual well-being." - Scientific American.
Fascinating aspect of biological use of electric fields.
"Electrotaxis is the property of cells to sense electric fields and use them to orient their displacement. This property has been widely investigated with eukaryotic cells but it remains unclear whether or not bacterial cells can sense an electric field." Science Direct.
Electric fields play a significant part in the healing of wounds.
"Weak electric fields applied to the wound or in the wound dressing can also improve wound healing.59–63
Finally, electric charge and biological electrodynamic field permeate several phases of wound healing, driving cells and molecules and maintaining the flow of oxygen and nutrients, necessary to heal the wound. The knowledge of the electric physiology of wound healing can also help develop new and more efficient treatments." National Library of Medicine.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent researcher in science. Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia 
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Published online 2021 Jun 17. doi: 10.1089/wound.2019.1114
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PMID: 32870772
Electric Factors in Wound Healing
Paulo Luiz Farber,1,* Felipe Contoli Isoldi,2 and Lydia Masako Ferreira2
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Author links open overlay panelPoehere Chong, Benjamin Erable, Alain BergelLaboratoire de Génie Chimique, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, INP, UPS, Toulouse, France
Received 24 December 2020, Revised 15 March 2021, Accepted 28 March 2021, Available online 8 April 2021, Version of Record 20 April 2021.
Scientific American - Bacteria Use Brainlike Bursts of Electricity to Communicate
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physics
Actions
Written and fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Nov 17, 2023 • Article History
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Written by 
Christine Sutton
Fact-checked by 
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Article History
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physics
Actions
Also known as: nuclear force, strong interaction, strong nuclear force
Written by 
Christine Sutton
Fact-checked by 
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Nov 23, 2023 • Article History
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electrical instrument
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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Article History
Britannica - Luigi Galvani
Italian physician and physicist
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Bern Dibner
Fact-checked by 
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Article History
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Author links open overlay panelNaixin JIA 1 #, Jinrui YANG 1 #, Jie LIU 1, Jiaping ZHANG 1
Britannica - magnetic dipole
physics
Actions
Also known as: electrostatic dipole
Written and fact-checked by 
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: Article History
The Spin of an Up Quark
San José State University applet-magic.com
Thayer Watkins
Silicon Valley,
Tornado Alley
& the Gateway
to the Rockies
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Britannica - Coulomb's Law
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inkintheinternet · 6 months
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The Fairytale of Light
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
I'm a writer and an ardent reader, I have authored two fiction stories. Spellrainia, and The Chains. I've read a lot of fiction, science fiction, and fantasy books throughout my life, played videos games in the genre of fantasy as well. I'm now 42 years old, what I've learned at this point is that reality is way more stranger than fiction can ever be. And science is way more magical than any fantasy.
I often hear fans of the genre of fantasy claim that it's so magical, that the authors' imaginations are incredible. I have myself sang praises of C.S. Lewis (The Chronicles of Narnia). And Lewis Carroll (Alice in Wonderland) to name a few of the luminaries of the classics.
And they are deserving of the praise. However, I was not prepared for what I was going to discover as I made my transition from fantasy fiction to mainly science reading. Before I get into that I must praise science fiction writer Jules Verne (Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, and many other fantastic books) who really drew a line that connected the magic of science with fantasy in a way I don't think any writer has been able to accomplish after him.
With that said when it comes to fantasy I think I can sum up the premise of it in mentioning a few characters and things. Boy/Girl on quest/adventure, dragons, griffins, unicorns, invisibility cloaks, wands, fairies, wizards/witches, school of magic, and I think we are basically done.
What we truly see in these types of stories is not the unthinkable or a challenge to the intellect. They are aesthetic to the mind and are hopes of what we cannot do but would be so wonderful if we could.
After my two books my interest had completely turned towards becoming a scholar of the sciences. I'm an aspiring scientist. I may never get the title but I will my entire life pursue independent research to educate myself and teach whatever I learn by writing articles.
Having an inquisitive mind that is inclined towards healthy curiosity like the universe is a sophisticated trait to have instead of gossip.
Science has stunned me because I have never read anything in fantasy or fiction that goes beyond what would be considered unthinkable. In science I have truly found the unthinkable and the unimaginable, and it took years for many scientists to each pick up where the other had left off, after no less than a lifetime of research and study.
So I cannot state enough how valuable is the information and knowledge that has accumulated in our scientific database. We are so fortunate that the Internet gives us access to so much of these treasures.
Please excuse my mini intro I just had to express how amazed I am and how fortunate I feel and grateful to be able to learn and write.
When I think about the world needless to say there is so much to think about, and one cannot think of everything at once. We have to breakdown the pictures and study the marvels of science one subject at a time.
In this article I want to focus on light. This simple bright thing is infinitely complex and has many forms. Even in this era scientists don't fully understand it.
So let us start with some simple questions: What is light? What was the first light in our observable universe?
In basic quantum theory light is electromagnetism or we can say packets of energy called photons.
There is light we can see and light we cannot see. The visibility region of light depends on its wavelength. Typically the human eye can see light between the wavelengths of 388 to 700 nanometers. We cannot see light which is in the longer wavelength region known as infrared region, and we cannot see light in the shorter wavelength region known as ultraviolet region.
We might think that the first light in our universe started with the Big Bang (a leading theory). Because we intuitively think of the Big Bang as an explosion when it's a sudden expansion of the universe at speeds faster than light.
Albert Einstein had said that nothing in the universe can travel faster than light, that however does not include the universe itself.
I'll explain why the Big Bang could not have been bright according to the science. An example that is usually given is that it was foggy like a cloud. When we see a cloud we can only see the surface where the light was last scattered, the water molecules in the cloud disperse light.
The Big Bang had a temperature that was so high that light couldn't travel from it into the universe. It took 300,000 years for it to cool down enough for the first light - the afterglow to spread in the universe. This light is known as the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation. It is everywhere and if you turn on the TV without cable the static that you see is the signal of the CMB.
We cannot see this light glowing because as light travels vast distances it gets stretched and this reduces its brightness. However the CMB is a very valuable phenomena as it carries with it information from the birth of our universe.
Regarding the Big Bang theory there is another fascinating theory attached to it, and that is the Multiverse. Scientists agree that the model of the Big Bang could allow for the possibility of Multiverses. 
What is the theory of the Multiverse?
That when the cosmic inflation happened many universes were formed as bubbles, and our universe is in one of these bubbles and there are other universes in other bubbles, and each universe might have its own laws of physics.
Light is also known to be a colourful thing. Take the rainbow for example after the rain or when we see it through a prism. From a fantasy point of view the rainbow will always remind me of the animated series Rainbow Brite.
The rainbow scientifically is equally fascinating. As I saw on an episode of Be Smart recently (Youtube), the rainbow has streaks of dark lines, the missing light is due to the interactions of the photons with elements on the surface of the sun and in Earth's atmosphere. As the photons travel the electrons they bump into absorb bits of light changing the energy of the electrons. 
In fact scientists can know which elements light has interacted with by the missing light on an Absorbtion Spectrum, when light passes through a prism. This is so useful since we cannot take samples from the sun to know what's in it, but the light coming from it can reveal the elements in it. Even the Mars Curiosity Rover uses it to discover elements on Mars. There are prints of elements from on the sun that haven't been identified, it could be because they don't exist on Earth.
I'm speaking in brief terms about light in this article, because I'm myself still learning about it.
So what does light do apart from making things visible?
A question that has deeply intrigued me is does light have the ability to move things? Can it bring physical change?
I think the first thought that would come to mind is photosynthesis. The dominant source of metabolism on Earth. But before I get into how light effects Earth let us think about it in the universe. It is said that Earth was seeded with the building blocks of life by many supernovae that exploded, they unlike the Big Bang where bright.
The first stars formed probably from hydrogen and helium, and little amounts of lithium, and then heavy elements that life on Earth depends on were formed from these.
Example of heavy elements: 
Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorous. Heavy elements are supposed to have an atomic number that is greater than 92.
Now let us think about how light effects Earth.
What is photosynthesis?
It is a process in which most plants absorb sunlight and with water make oxygen, and chemical energy stored in glucose. Herbivores need plants to get their energy, and carnivores eat herbivores and this sustains the circle of life on Earth.
Plants, algea, and some types of bacteria can do photosynthesis.
Then there is chemosynthesis which doesn't need sunlight.
It occurs in bacteria and other microorganisms in oceanic or inland waters. 
It is basically a process in which organic matter (energy for the microorganism) is made from inorganic matter like hydrogen or hygrogen sulfide.
Speaking of microorganisms I think at this point much like speculation about the start of our universe, we can speculate about the start of life on Earth.
First I would need here to explain that inorganic matter and organic matter is the different assortment of atoms. Chemically many types of organic matter can be made from inorganic matter with the right type of natural environment.
So in speculation perhaps the start of life on Earth was from inorganic matter that joined to make H2O (water), heat cycles warmed and cooled that water and radiation one of the forms of light introduced elements and maybe even helped in the configuration of atoms and molecules in the water that become the appropriate environment for the first life form to appear. I say speculation because like the Big Bang no one knows how life started on Earth and why we haven't detected any form of it elsewhere in our Solar System, despite there being frozen water on other planets and moons.
Scientists have still not figured out consciousness or animal instincts or what is a soul.
Astrobiologist look for extraterrestrial life by studying matter in simulation of different environments that could be in space or other planets. While in the past it was mainly considered impossible for life to exist in space, recent studies have shown that there are microorganisms that can survive the journey through space. It is speculated that maybe microorganisms were introduced to Earth via comets or meteorites.
In an article on Neuroscience news.com posted on 16, Oct 2023.
It says: "Scientists from top Institutions describe a groundbreaking Discovery: The Missing Law of Nature."
The study has been titled: 'Law of Increasing Functional Information.'
It says that evolution is not something that can only happen in living systems, but can extend to atoms, stars, and minerals.
The study says that when configuration happens in these inorganic systems that increases functionality it is evolution. But what are the forces behind the  configuration? The article states many physics phenomena like electromagnetism among other things.
Another discovery that I found interesting is posted on 12, October 2023 on Physics.org from the Minnesota University. The article is titled: "Surprising Discovery Shows that Electron Beam Radiation can Repair Nanostructures." The article says the discovery was made by accident when crystals were being studied for cracks in them, but the beam repaired the cracks when the atoms by themselves under the affect of the beam filled the cracks.
So this discovery with what we learned about the missing light in rainbows tells us that photons interact with electrons, and it is scientifically an established fact. I know in this study it was a beam of electrons but as radiation. Now photons and electrons are known to behave like waves and particles under specific conditions. This nature of photons is called wave-particle duality.
As I said there is so much to study about any scientific subject. I'll end this article here with the mention of Solar Sails, which is the idea to use the momentum of light to propel spacecrafts through space at 10% the speed of light.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia 
Sources: Photosynthesis - National Geogrphic
Extreme Tech - The Sun's rainbow why are there so many colours missing
By Sebastian Anthony October 2, 2013
NASA - A foggy universe...origin of the microwave background
NOAA Oceanic Explorations - What is the difference between photosynthesis and chemosynthesis?
Biology Online - Chemosynthesis
ESA - Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation
Space.com - Our Universe May Exist in a Multiverse, Cosmic Inflation Discovery Suggests
By Miriam Kramer
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Space.com - What is the cosmic microwave background?
By Elizabeth Howell, Daisy Dobrijevic
 published January 28, 2022
Space.com - What is the Big Bang Theory?
By Andrew May, Elizabeth Howell
 last updated July 26, 2023
Planck Satellite - UK Outreach Site - Cosmic Microwave Background
Webb Space Telescope - What Were the First Stars Like?
Short answer: We don’t really know.
Stanford University - Interactions of Photons With Matter
Nagwa - Question Video: Describing the Electron According to Modern Atomic Theory Chemistry
ESA - Energy=light=radiation=temperature
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - Discovery of Elements 113 and 115
Konica Minolta - Precise Colour Communication
Physics.org - When was the first light in the universe?
by Fraser Cain , Universe Today
Neuroscience news.com - Unveiling Nature’s Missing Law: Evolution Beyond Biology
Featured Neuroscience
·October 16, 2023
Britannica - Matter Rays
Science Direct - Water Worlds in the Solar System
Planetary.org - What is Solar Sailing
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inkintheinternet · 8 months
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Understanding Bioengineering
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
Bioengineering is a massive field where engineering knowledge is converted to assist biological means.
This is done in many different ways and is currently a developing branch of science that incorporates many other scientific disciplines in chemistry, biology, botanics, and of course sophisticated cutting-edge technology.
The conversion of engineering methods to biological assistance, and the conversion of natural mechanisms into mechanical engineering feats is the frontier of the new age of science.
Thousands of scientists are learning, experimenting and improving this special method of scientific advancement.
To understand bioengineering conversion let us take the simplest of examples:
Chemical reaction of electrolytes.
Salt is made of sodium and chlorine atoms. When dissolved in water they break apart from each other. Sodium atoms have a positive charge (cations) and chlorine atoms negative charge (anions).
That they are flowing freely in the water makes them a good conductor of electricity. 
If you take an electric resistance measuring meter (ohmmeter - electrical resistance is measured in ohms) and put it in a glass of water that doesn't have salt in it, you will find the resistance to be 900,000 ohms as was reported in Britannica Encyclopedia.
When salt was added the resistance read less than 80,000 ohms.
Water does conduct electricity, but if you add salt the electrical flow will be even stronger.
So this is a basic chemical reaction in chemistry and physics.
Our body is 60% water and we need electrolytes to generate electrical signals for the movement of our muscles  and electrolytes are also needed to maintain the balance of fluids in  our body.
So in the above example we can see how an electrical test to conduct electricity (do not try to touch electricity - you could get electrocuted and die. It will be painful.
In the biological conversion of the same phenomena we see electricity generated in the body to power muscles movement. The electricity in our body doesn't kill us because it is sufficient for its task in the body but not strong enough to electrocute us.
Another example of the many fields of bioengineering is using plants and animals biological/botanic. A team from WPI in 2017 used spinach leaves to grow human heart tissue. 
"In a series of experiments, the team cultured beating human heart cells on spinach leaves that were stripped of plant cells. They flowed fluids and microbeads similar in size to human blood cells through the spinach vasculature, and they seeded the spinach veins with human cells that line blood vessels. These proof-of-concept studies open the door to using multiple spinach leaves to grow layers of healthy heart muscle to treat heart attack patients. " - WPI Beyond These Towers
One more example of the types of bioengineering is the progress being made in using 3D printers to mimic organ functions that can be used to test medicine safety and efficacy. And in the future bioengineers hope to be able to print functioning replica organs that can be planted in patients with defective organs.
"In a paper published in Nature Materials, researchers from Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University report the development of a new hydrogel ink infused with gelatin fibers that enables 3D printing of a functional heart ventricle that mimics beating like a human heart. They discovered the fiber-infused gel (FIG) ink allows heart muscle cells printed in the shape of a ventricle to align and beat in coordination like a human heart chamber." - WYSS Institute|By Kat J. McAlpine / SEAS 
The methods being developed to use metal based nanoparticles as an alternative to antibiotics against microbial resistance is another form of bioengineering.
A simple example of how metals destroy viruses on the surface when in direct contact is copper for example, it has electrically charged atoms (ions) these blast through the membrane of bacteria and viruses when they come into contact. In fact there are medical devices made with coating of metals that destroy viruses and bacteria to stop their spreading.
But on the cellular level it is not possible to use this form of treatment, so it is where bioengineering comes in.
There are many ways to perform synthesis of metals from inorganic materials to extract metal based nanoparticles. Green synthesis is the most preferred.
A metal nanoparticle when administered as treatment for an infection can attract the bacteria to it (Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria both have negative electrical charges) the nanoparticle can destroy or disrupt the function of the bacteria, in addition it will be effective against all types of bacteria, giving no chance for bacterial resistance as this metal based mechanism is completely unknown to the bacteria.
These experiments and studies are in development, as deaths from anti bacterial resistance has reached pre-antibiotic era rates. 
Biophotonics also comes under the umbrella of bioengineering. It is very fascinating as it incorporates the science of photonics which deals with light energy and information.
In the treatment of cancer tumors lasers are used to damage the tumors. And there are many other delicate surgeries in which laser can be used.
Many different sciences are applied and mixed in bioengineering. Perhaps I'll write about them in future articles.
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist.
Contact [email protected] Twitter/Instagram @Spellrainia
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Sources:
www.indeed.com - What Is Photonics Engineering? Definition and Requirements
National Library of Medicine - Ann Transl Med. 2016 Dec; 4(23): 452. 
 doi: 10.21037/atm.2016.11.51
PMCID: PMC5220034
PMID: 28090508
Laser applications in surgery
Beina Azadgoli and Regina Y. Baker
Author information Article notes Copyright and License information PMC Disclaimer
Springer Link - Applications of Green Synthesized Metal Nanoparticles — a Review
Seerengaraj Vijayaram, 
Hary Razafindralambo, 
Mahdieh Raeeszadeh 
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Biological Trace Element Research (2023)Cite this article
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National Library of Medicine - Nanomaterials (Basel). 2020 Feb; 10(2): 292. 
Published online 2020 Feb 9. doi: 10.3390/nano10020292
PMCID: PMC7075170
PMID: 32050443
Metal-Based Nanoparticles as Antimicrobial Agents: An Overview
Elena Sánchez-López,1,2,3,* Daniela Gomes,4 Gerard Esteruelas,1 Lorena Bonilla,1 Ana Laura Lopez-Machado,1,3 Ruth Galindo,1,2 Amanda Cano,1,2,3 Marta Espina,1,2 Miren Ettcheto,3,5 Antoni Camins,3,5 Amélia M. Silva,6,7 Alessandra Durazzo,8 Antonello Santini,9 Maria L. Garcia,1,2,3 and Eliana B. Souto4,10,*
Author information Article notes Copyright and License information PMC Disclaimer
Science Direct - Current Opinion in Microbiology - Recent advances in the development of metal complexes as antibacterial agents with metal-specific modes of action
Author links open overlay panelJessica E Waters 1 2, Lars Stevens-Cullinane 1 2, Lukas Siebenmann 1 2, Jeannine Hess 1 2
Manhattan Gold and Silver - How metals like silver and copper kill germs
The University of Queenland - Australia - Metals could be the new link to antibiotics
Britannica - The ionic bases of electrical signals
Cleveland Clinic - Electrolytes
Britannica - Bioengineering
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inkintheinternet · 9 months
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Climate Change is getting Real
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
Climate Change, Global Warming, have long been debated in the scientific community as the world's next possible disaster. However, there have been those who deny it's even happening.
Not anymore.
That is about to change for the worst. Especially because of diseases. For instance death by heatstrokes have increased under the blazing unprecedented temperatures. Natural disasters like floods, hurricanes, also release an aftermath of diseases.
In many articles we can read doctors complaining about how climate change is impacting the medical field.
These are not the only concerning factors to the impending climate disaster.
The months of July, August, September, usually when people travel for the summer, have now something very concerning. A stark warning. That is the "Brain-Eating Amoebae." These are the months in which risk of infection is highest due to the high temperatures.
It's a free-living single cell organism that thrives in warm freshwater.
It can only be seen through a microscope. The American CDC (Centers for Disease Control) have a page with extensive description about the bug, and it says that there is no warning regarding the bug in any body of water, and one must assume it is present in any warm freshwater because it occurs naturally. 
So what does the bug do exactly? Infections are almost always fatal, the scientific name for this species of amoeba is Naegleria Fowleri.
It enters the body through the nose, when a person dives while swimming, or in anyway if the contaminated water gets into the nose. From there the bug travels to the brain where is tunnels deep into brain tissue, causing necroptosis and hemorrhage, followed by edema (swelling of the brain) a person can slip into a coma and die within days.
It is very difficult to treat this highly fatal infection that is called Primary Amobic Meningoencephalitis (PAM).
Because the drugs that we presently have are not very effective at targeting the big when it is submerged in brain tissue.
According to the CDC most cases of these infections were reported in the South but recently there appears to be a pattern moving to the north, which suggest climate change could be the culprit as temperatures rise in water everywhere.
Where Naegleria Fowleri could be found:
Warm lakes, rivers, waters in pools or water park that has little chlorine, and anywhere where there is warm water.
Tap water contamination is possible, the bug can grow in water heaters and pipes as well.
There is no evidence of it spreading through the air, or by water droplets or vapor. The bug does not thrive in salt water. 
The CDC says putting up warning boards is not accurate because the connection between infections happening or not is not clear, and neither do they know the amount of the amoeba in the water, so one must always assume it is present and the risk is there.
However, it is said that maybe large quantities of the bug resides in the sediment so swimmers should especially avoid stirring up the mud.
Naegleria Fowleri in warm water thrives and eats bacteria and organic debri.
 "N. fowleri feeds on bacteria and organic debris in freshwater and exists in three life forms, the environmentally stable cyst form, the motile amoeboid-form referred to as the trophozoite form, and a flagellate form." - Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis: An Old Enemy Presenting New Challenges.
This is not the only threat of climate change that is getting very real. A man in India has become one the first to be infected by a fungal infection that is known to only infect plants. The infection causes Silver Leaf in plants and then they die.
The man when he went to the doctors in India they couldn't at first diagnose the infection because they had never seen it before, so a sample was sent to the World Health Organization that identified it as the plant fungus. It had infected the man's throat and caused a fungal growth in his throat. The man recovered with antibiotic treatment. However, the point is this had never happened before. How did the fungus jump the species barrier from plant to human? Doctors suspect Climate Change has something to do with it.
Air contamination is a very serious threat that can be amplified by Climate Change.
Boiling temperatures causing heatstrokes is not the only threat of Climate Change. Glaciers melting and the permafrost could unleash "time travelling pathogens that have been trapped for a millennia," says Dr. Giovvani Strona in an article on SciTech Daily.
"We found that invading pathogens could often survive, evolve and, in a few cases, become exceptionally persistent and dominant in the community, causing either substantial losses or changes in the number of living species. Our findings, therefore, suggest that unpredictable threats so far confined to science fiction could, in reality, pose serious risk as powerful drivers of ecological damage.”
Scientists and researchers are constantly working on being prepared for the consequences of Climate Change, there are computer simulations and new ways to investigate the environment like tracking of eDNA.
eDNA is organic genetic material that can be found everywhere an animal, human, or plant has been. Scientists say the approach of sampling eDNA in the environment can be easier to know what species live their whether animal, plants, or insects. Aircraft tracking of eDNA is also being improved. 
Air contamination is one of the highest concerns, and this study reveals that eDNA was found in the atmosphere thousands of feet above surface level. 
"The findings of the study are extraordinary. Through the use of their sampling probe and high throughput metagenomic sequencing, the researchers discovered the widespread presence of prokaryotic and eukaryotic eDNA in the atmosphere, reaching thousands of meters into the planetary boundary layer in the southeastern US. Notably, the study detected chicken, cow, and human eDNA at all altitudes flown, including an astonishing 8,500 feet above the ground." - News Medical and Life Sciences.
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia 
Sources:
SciTech Daily -
Permafrost Pandora’s Box: Unleashing “Time-Traveling” Pathogens From the Icy Past
India Today - Plant fungus infects Kolkata man in first-ever human case: All you need to know about this pathogen
Curr Biol. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2019 May 21.
Published in final edited form as:
Curr Biol. 2018 May 21; 28(10): R619–R634. 
 doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.03.054
PMCID: PMC5967643
NIHMSID: NIHMS957150
PMID: 29787730
National Library of Medicine - PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Aug; 8(8): e3017. 
Published online 2014 Aug 14. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003017
PMCID: PMC4133175
PMID: 25121759
Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis Caused by Naegleria fowleri: An Old Enemy Presenting New Challenges
Ruqaiyyah Siddiqui and Naveed Ahmed Khan *
Steven M. Singer, Editor
Biology Online - Amoeba
Art is Micropia - Unicellular
From algae to amoebas
Natural History Museum - Environmental DNA: what is it and how can it help us protect wildlife?
By Josh Davis
News Medical and Life Science - New study reveals a revolutionary approach to studying airborne genetic material
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inkintheinternet · 10 months
Text
Understanding the Dynamics of Aging
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala
Ink in the Internet
When does aging begin? When we are born we start to grow and most scientists agree that growth stops at 20.
"Most people stop growing sometime around the age of 20. By this time, our skeletons have reached their final size, and the growth plates between bones have fused closed. Once that happens, there is no way for the bones to grow anymore. 
The only bones that continue to get larger are the skull and the pelvis. The growth of these two body parts isn’t dramatic, however. Your pelvis might gain an inch in diameter between the ages of 20 and 79, and your skull may get slightly more prominent around the forehead." - Compass: Healthy Aging Guide.
So what happens after we stop growing? In our body we have trillions of cells that work around the clock to try and maintain our health in the best way and keep themselves alive while doing so. How we live, what we eat, exercise, sleep, mental health, and whether we get sick or how many times we get ill, all this and more effects how well our cells can function. 
No two people age the same way, so anti-aging intervention cannot be one size fits all.
There is a field of study called Epigenetics, which says that our behaviour and our environment effect which of our genes get expressed and which get suppressed, and that these changes if negative can lead to poor mental and physical health. 
"Your genes play an important role in your health, but so do your behaviors and environment, such as what you eat and how physically active you are. Epigenetics is the study of how your behaviors and environment can cause changes that affect the way your genes work. Unlike genetic changes, epigenetic changes are reversible and do not change your DNA sequence, but they can change how your body reads a DNA sequence.
Gene expression refers to how often or when proteins are created from the instructions within your genes. While genetic changes can alter which protein is made, epigenetic changes affect gene expression to turn genes “on” and “off.” Since your environment and behaviors, such as diet and exercise, can result in epigenetic changes, it is easy to see the connection between your genes and your behaviors and environment." - CDC
Trillions of cells in our body are interconnected.
"Your body is comprised of trillions of cells, and each one is not only responsible for one or more functions specific to the tissue it resides in, but must also do all the work of keeping itself alive. This includes metabolizing nutrients, getting rid of waste, exchanging signals with other cells and adapting to stress.
The trouble is that every single process and component in each of your cells can be interrupted or damaged. So your cells spend a lot of energy each day preventing, recognizing and fixing those problems." - Ellen Quarles and the Conversation.
What about pregnancy and childbirth, does it accelerate aging?
There are ongoing studies and a study has shown women who got pregnant had shorter telomeres than women who didn't, but another study showed that women in a community in Africa who got pregnant had longer telomeres than other women in their community who hadn't gotten pregnant. So perhaps it is the emotional state and not the pregnancy that effected the telomeres, some women might get stress from society because of the pregnancy, while other women might get supported.
What are telomeres? As we age our telomeres keep getting shorter.
"A telomere is a region of repetitive DNA sequences at the end of a chromosome. Telomeres protect the ends of chromosomes from becoming frayed or tangled. Each time a cell divides, the telomeres become slightly shorter. Eventually, they become so short that the cell can no longer divide successfully, and the cell dies."
There is another point here that scientists are investigating that is cells known as senescent.
"Senescent cells are unique in that they eventually stop multiplying but don’t die off when they should. They instead remain and continue to release chemicals that can trigger inflammation. Like the one moldy piece of fruit that corrupts the entire bowl, a relatively small number of senescent cells can persist and spread inflammation that can damage neighboring cells.
However, not all senescent cells are bad. The molecules and compounds expressed by senescent cells (known as the senescent secretome) play important roles across the lifespan, including in embryonic development, childbirth, and wound healing." - NIH: National Institute on Aging.
Senescent cells can build up in the body as we age and our immune system becomes less sufficient to expel them by a process known as apoptosis. These cells can cause cognitive decline in the brain and a multitude of age-related diseases and complications.
"Investigations are underway to see if senescent skin cells may contribute to sagging and wrinkling, and if senescent cells might also be connected to the cytokine storm of inflammation that makes COVID-19 so deadly for older adults." NIH: National Institute on Aging
When we age our bodies gradually lose the ability to maintain homeostasis.
"Homeostasis reflects the aggregate effect of varied mechanisms that maintain normal physiologic constancy in the face of different extrinsic challenges. Aging is associated with impaired homeostasis, or homeostenosis, in the form of diminished capacity to respond to varied challenges," - McGraw Hill Medical: Access Medicine 
What we eat is one of the best ways to maintain good health, and scientists say which fruits and vegetables are most effective.
"Aging is a complex, multi-factorial process that starts in our cells, resulting in a gradual decline of the larger systems in the body. Scientists have proposed various theories for the reason we age, including mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation, DNA damage, cell senescence, and telomere reduction." - Inside Tracker: Diana Licalzi, MS, RD, CDCES
Strawberries are said to be very effect against senescent cells.
"Researchers have been studying fisetin, a plant compound, for years for its capacity to act as an antioxidant and reduce inflammation in the body. However, in more recent years, scientists have discovered it also works by killing senescent cells—one of the hallmarks of aging."
The Jellyfish is being studied to understand how it can revert back to larval state and reverse its aging.
"The analysis revealed that T. dohrnii (species of jellyfish) had twice as many copies of the genes associated with DNA repair and protection, which helps producing greater amounts of protective and repairing proteins. Moreover, this jellyfish also had unique mutations which stunted cell division and prevented telomeres (chromosomes’ protective “caps”) from deteriorating,"- Earth.com: Andrei Ionescu
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Twitter/Instagram: Spellrainia 
Sources:
SciTechDaily.com - 8 Anti-Aging Vitamins and Nutrients That Actually Work, Ranked
University at Buffalo - To reverse aging in stem cells, NANOG gene ‘rewires’ metabolic networks - Cory Nealon
NIH - National Human Genome
Research Institute
Center on the Developing Child - Harvard University
NIH - National Library of Medicine - Bilian Jin, Yajun Li, Keith D. Robertson
NIH - National Library of Medicine
JAMA Network Open
JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Jul; 5(7): e2223285. 
Published online 2022 Jul 27. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.23285
PMCID: PMC9331104
PMID: 35895062
Analysis of Epigenetic Age Acceleration and Healthy Longevity Among Older US Women
Purva Jain, PhD, MPH, 1 Alexandra M. Binder, ScD, ScM, 2 , 3 Brian Chen, PhD, 1 Humberto Parada, Jr, PhD, MPH, 4 , 5 Linda C. Gallo, PhD, 4 John Alcaraz, PhD, 5 Steve Horvath, PhD, ScD, 6 , 7 Parveen Bhatti, PhD, 8 Eric A. Whitsel, MD, MPH, 9 , 10 Kristina Jordahl, PhD, 11 Andrea A. Baccarelli, MD, PhD, 12 Lifang Hou, MD, PhD, 13 James D. Stewart, PhD, 9 , 10 Yun Li, PhD, 14 , 15 , 16 Jamie N. Justice, PhD, MS, 17 and Andrea Z. LaCroix, PhD 1
University of Nebraska System - Aging starts right after growing ends - Sabine Zempleni and Sydney Christensen
Compass by WebMd - What to Know About Nose and Ear Growth as You Age
 Written by WebMD Editorial Contributors
Reviewed by Dan Brennan, MD on November 01, 2021
The Washington Post- Do pregnancy and childbirth accelerate aging in women? Maybe.
By Sindya Bhanoo
NIH - National Institute on Aging - 10 myths about aging
NIH - National Institute on Aging- understanding the dynamics of the aging process
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inkintheinternet · 1 year
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Food Poisoning -How Food can get Contaminated
By Arjuwan Lakkdawala 
Ink in the Internet 
Each year thousands around the world die from food poisoning, and others get their immune system compromised.
It is of particular concern when travelling, because food is the one thing we need daily, and while we may have a good idea about the types of foods and restaurants to avoid in our hometown, it may not be the case when travelling.
Food safety isn't just about avoiding restaurants that don't appear to be clean. It is about knowing how food can get contaminated even when cooked at home. Preservatives could prevent spoilage from appearing on foods that have gotten contaminated.
In 2020 nine members of a family died in their home after eating noodles that had been left in the freezer for over a year, and in another case seven members of a family died after having soup.
In 2019 a student died in his sleep after eating pasta that had been left out at room temperature for 5 days, he put sauce on it and couldn't tell it had gone rotten.
The noodles had gotten contaminated with
Bongkrekic acid which is produced by the bacterium Burkholderia gladioli, it's a toxin which most people are unaware of and because it is odorless and tasteless can go undetected in the food, and is not destroyed by cooking. Bongkrekic acid is a source of food poisoning in fermented foods and corn starch, etc. Most cases of this poisoning are fatal.
There is no antidote for the toxin, it effects the mitochondria which are organelles that generate energy for our bodies.
Bongkrekic acid causes death of the cells, severe cases may result in kidney damage, liver failure, and coma.
Even the slightest dose can be fatal, and because it is a foodborne toxin, it cannot be estimated how much of it there may be in contaminated food. The death rate is from 40 to 100%.
Symptoms include dizziness, vomiting, fatigue, stomachache, hyperglycemia, (high blood sugar) and hypoglycemia (low blood sugar).
 "In 2018, a family of seven in China became ill after eating wet rice noodles that were later found to be contaminated with bongkrekic acid. The noodles, which had been treated with preservatives, did not exhibit any signs of spoilage; two family members and the family dog (which was fed some of the leftover noodles) died."
Bird Flu is another reemerging threat to food contamination. Usually this virus only infects birds, but through direct contact or consumption can get humans infected.
Sadly poultry are often culled inhumanely when there is an outbreak of the virus in the bird population.
Phylogenetic analyses and phylogeographical studies have shown that bird trade more than bird migration is often behind the infection spreading. 
It is a virus that speads amongst waterfowls like ducks, geese, swans, and then can infect chickens and turkeys. 
Bird Flu also known as Avian flu,  its current alarming strain is H5N1, which is highly pathogenic -classiefied as such because of its ability to cause disease and death in chickens, its first sequenced strain (H1N1) goes back to the 1918 Spanish Influenza that killed 50 million people. 
Other IAV pandemics that followed were H2N2 in 1957 (Asian Flu)  Deaths worldwide estimate 2 million
H3N2 in 1968 (Hong Kong Flu) Deaths worldwide estimate 4 million (reports vary)
H1N1 in 2009 (Swine Flu) Deaths worldwide estimate 575,400
Although the pandemic is not wholly blamed on Avian Flu but it is considered to be of avian influenza origin.
The emergence of new strains of H5N1 has been studied to be by reassortment events between genes of domestic and wild birds.
Why it is so important to monitor the phylogenetic tree of Avian Flu is its mortality rate of close to 60% according to the CFR (Case Fatality Rate) documented in a study. The CFR of Covid-19 is difficult to estimate because not every case with COVID-19 gets reported, the virus has so far killed close to 7 million people and infected close to 700 million.
If the Spanish Influenza could have a Avian Flu origin that means so can future pandemics and the mortality rate could go higher with mutations.
Recently a report from China that was uploaded to the Internet and then removed for unknown reasons, some data in it made headlines like the presence of the genes of racoon dogs in samples taken from the wet market where the outbreak happened.
Why this is a matter of debate is because Covid-19 origin is still a mystery. Since no infected animals were found in the market.
Dr. Edward Holmes, a biologist at Sydney University, says in 2014 he had visited the wet market in Wuhan, China, and observed caged racoon dogs, with cages of birds sitting on top, exactly the environment conducive for the transmission of new viruses.
Beef that is consumed worldwide also has safety hazards like the outbreak of Mad Cow Disease that can spillover the species barrier with a human version of the disease called Creutzfeld-Jakob disease ( vCJD).
There is currently no way to test livestock for Mad Cow Disease, only after the animal dies swabs from the brain are taken to test for the abnormal prion protein. There are many products that have beef derivatives including pet food. Beef derivative contaminated with the diseases was found in pet food and there was the 2003 UK outbreak. Health officials have not been able to eliminate the disease.
Pet foods unfortunately do not go health screening like food for human consumption, and there have been pet food recalls because the food was contaminated and pets died with renal failure. I personally don't recommend pet food for pets in a long term diet, instead feed them food meant for human consumption as a safer and healthier option. 
The inhumane culling of birds should also not be overlooked and I hope authorities will make the effort to find painless procedures of culling birds.
Bird trade to keep as pets should also be stopped, birds don't belong in cages and the trade could help the spread of viruses.
Another food contamination source is lead and mercury. As well as salmonella. In the news often food products get recalled due to these.
According to the World Health Organization
An estimated 600 million that is practically 1 in 10 people in the world fall ill after eating contaminated food and 420,000 die each year.
Foodborn illnesses are usually infectious or toxic in nature.
"Chemical poisoning which is also a food poisoning hazard can cause acute poisoning or long term diseases such as cancer, or cause long-lasting disability or death."
Other dangers include food that is deadly in itself.
Pufferfish in Japaness is called Fugu, the highly poisonous fish is consumed in Japan after being prepared by experienced chefs who have to obtain a licence to prepare it. Yet annually there are deaths from eating the fish.
The mortality rate is 60% 
After consuming the toxin in the fish you have only sixty minutes to get medical help.
Fugu ovaries, intestines, and liver contain the neurotoxin tetrodotoxin, it is 1,200 times more deadly than cyanide.
A lethal dose of tetrodotoxin is smaller than the head of a needle.
One fish has enough poison to kill 30 people.
So be careful what you order next time you are in a foreign restaurant
"Sannakji, a Korean dish, is live baby octopus tentacles that are cut into pieces, seasoned and served immediately.
Culinary daredevils eat the tentacles while they are still writhing on the plate, which is a very dangerous game.
Suction pads on the tentacles maintain suction even after the tentacles are severed, so diners must chew the tentacles before they stick to the roof of the mouth.
If they don’t, the tentacles can stick to the mouth and throat and cause the customer to choke to death."
Copyright ©️ Arjuwan Lakkdawala 2023
Arjuwan Lakkdawala is an author and independent journalist. Twitter/Instagram @Spellrainia
Sources:
American Society for Microbiology- Microbiology Resource Announcements -
Complete Genomic Sequences of Highly Pathogenic H5N1 Avian Influenza Viruses Obtained Directly from Human Autopsy Specimens
Kantima Sangsiriwut, Mongkol Uiprasertkul, [...], and Pilaipan Puthavathana
Center for food safety - timeline of Mad Cow disease
PRB - Resource Library Avian Flu and Influenza Pandemics- Sandra Yin, former associate editor
Avian Flu and Influenza Pandemics
Royal Society Publishing - Philosophical Transactions B - A brief history of bird flu
Samantha J. Lycett, Florian Duchatel, and Paul Digard
Our World in Data - Mortality Risk of Covid-19
Poison Control - National Capital for Poison Center - Bongkrekic acid poisoning from fermented foods
Canadian Institute of Food Safety- 8 of the most dangerous foods
World Health Organisation- Food Safety
The Street - China Has a History of Selling Dangerous Products to U.S. Consumers
EMILY STEWART
U.S. Department of Agriculture - BSE Surveillance Information Center
Horizon Megazine - The EU Resesrch and Innovation Megazine -The Mad Cow Disease crisis - how Europe’s health research came of age - Garry Finnegan
Toronto Star - They analyzed Chinese data on the origins of COVID. Now, these researchers have been cut off from a global database, and accused of ‘scooping’
By Steve Mckinley, staff reporter.
The New York Times -
New Data Links Pandemic’s Origins to Raccoon Dogs at Wuhan Market by Benjamin Mueller
CBS News - Bird flu's grisly question: How to kill millions of poultry
India Today - China: 9 of a family die after having noodles kept in freezer for a year
Insider - A student died in his sleep after eating 5-day-old pasta that had been left out by James Felton IFL Science
Scitable - Nature Education - Reading a Phylogenetic Tree: The Meaning of Monophyletic Groups
By: David Baum, Ph.D. (Dept. of Botany, University of Wisconsin, 430 Lincoln Ave., Madison, WI) © 2008 Nature Education 
Citation: Baum, D. (2008) Reading a Phylogenetic Tree: The Meaning of Monophyletic Groups. Nature Education 1(1):190
Mayo Clinic - Salmonella Infection
CDC - Bird Flu in People
FDA - All About BSE (Mad Cow Disease)
Delishably - Puffer Fish Sushi: How Fugu Kills You
INDIA ARNOLD
Daily News - Family in China dies after eating spoiled frozen noodles
By David Matthews
New York Daily News
CDC - Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), or Mad Cow Disease
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