Sunday, March 22, 2015

saffron found to help vision loss in elderly

email from chellah pathmanathan

Researchers strike gold - 

5 February 2010
The golden herb saffron may hold the key to preventing the loss of sight in the elderly, a world first trial by researchers at the University of Sydney and in Italy has found.
Professor Silvia Bisti, a visiting scholar based at The VisionCentre at the University of Sydney, described the results as a breakthrough, with trial participants showing significant vision improvements after taking a saffron pill for three months.
"Measurements using objective eye sight tests showed patient's vision improved after taking the saffron pill. When they were tested with traditional eye charts, a number of patients could read one or two lines smaller than before, while others reported they could read newspapers and books again."
The trial, conducted at Italy's Policlinico Gemelli by Professor Benedetto Falsini, was double blind and randomly controlled, involving 25 subjects over six months. Half the group were given a saffron pill for the first three months followed by a placebo, while the other half were given the pills in the reverse order.
"All patients experienced improvements in their vision while taking the saffron pill," Professor Bisti said. "But when they stopped taking the pill the effect quickly disappeared."
Professor Bisti began studying the effects of saffron at L'Aquila, in Italy's mountainous Abruzzi country, because it was a widelygrown local crop which has been used in traditional medicine as a treatment for conditions such as cancerous tumours and depression.
"The chemistry of saffron is quite complex", she says. "It is wellknown as an antioxidant, but noone had explored its effects on eyesight before."
Professor Bisti says "saffron appears to affect genes which regulate the fatty acid content of the cell membrane, and this makes the vision cells tougher and more resilient".
Professor Bisti singled out "saffron's 'anti-apoptotic' properties - its ability to increase the availability of oxygen to the body and prevent cell death," as a key factor in its beneficial effects.
In collaboration with the Catholic University of Rome and the University of L'Aquila Professor Bisti is now conducting a twelve month trial, with the aim of finding out more information about optimal doses, and at what point patients might experience a peak effect.
Another potentially fruitful line of research will be investigating saffron's ability to treat genetic diseases of the eye, such as retinitis pigmentosa, which can cause lifelong blindness in young people.
Professor Bisti's work builds on many years of collaboration with Professor Jonathan Stone at the University of Sydney's The Vision Lab. The lab's extensive trials using animal models, which found that a saffron diet will protect the eye from the damaging effects of bright light, formed much of the basis for Professor Bisti's research with humans.

"After decades of lab research it is wonderful to now be able to help people," Professor Stone said.

Note:
Professor Bisti's laboratory at L'Aquila University was severely damaged in last year's earthquake in Italy and her experiments disrupted. The Vision Centre has supported two of her research staff to continue their work at the University of Sydney.

To interview Professor Bisti or Professor Stone contact Kath Kenny, University of Sydney Media Office (02) 9351 2261(02) 9351 2261 or 0434 606 1000434 606 100, k.kenny@sydney.edu.au

Need not a ‘National Health Service’ but a “National Well-being service’.




PS
The Ancient Chinese apparently had a system, where the family doctor was paid his annual retainer, only if there was no sickness in the family for the past year.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Trying to escape.


Anything is possible in India...

email from Kamalini Kanapathippillai













A story

Story


Inbox
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email from

Gallege De Silva

16:15 (14 hours ago)


 A teacher was telling her class a story...
 A cruise ship had  an incident at sea and on the ship was a couple.  After having made their way to the lifeboat, they realized that there was only space for one person left.
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> At this moment, the man pushed the woman behind him and jumped onto the lifeboat himself.
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> The lady stood on the sinking ship and shouted one sentence to her husband.
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> The teacher stopped and asked, "What do you think she shouted?"
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> Most of the students excitedly answered, "I hate you! I was blind!"
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> Now, the teacher noticed a boy who was silent throughout, she got him to answer and he replied, "Teacher, I believe she would have shouted - Take care of our child!"
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> The teacher was surprised, asking "Have you heard this story before?"
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> The boy shook his head, "Nope, but that was what my mum told my dad before she died to disease".
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> The teacher lamented, "The answer is right".
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> The cruise ship sunk, the man went home and brought up their daughter single-handedly.
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> Many years later after his death, their daughter found his diary while tidying his belongings.
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> It turns out that when parents went onto the cruise ship, the mother was already diagnosed with a terminal illness.
> At the critical moment, the father rushed to the only chance of survival.
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> He wrote in his diary, "How I wished to sink to the bottom of the ocean with you, but for the sake of our daughter, I can only let you lie forever below the sea alone".
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> The story is finished, the class was silent.
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> The teacher knows that the student has understood the moral of the story, that of the good and the evil in the world, there are many complications behind them which are hard to understand.
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> Which is why we should never only focus on the surface and judge others without understanding them first.
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> Those who like to pay the bill, do so not because they are loaded but because they value friendship above money.
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> Those who take the initiative at work, do so not because they are stupid but because they understand the concept of responsibility.
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> Those who apologizes first after a fight, do so not because they are wrong but because they value the people around them.
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> Those who are willing to help you, do so not because they owe you any thing but because they see you as a true friend.
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> Those who often text you, do so not because they have nothing better to do but because you are in their heart.
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> One day, all of us will get separated from each other; we will miss our conversations of everything and nothing; the dreams that we had. Days will pass by, months, years, until this contact becomes rare... One day our children will see our pictures and ask 'Who are these people?' And we will smile with invisible tears because a heart is touched with a strong word and you will say: 'IT WAS THEM THAT I HAD THE BEST DAYS OF MY LIFE WITH'.
> Thank you for making me smile for sometime in my life.
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