Tag: rare

  • Hyderabad: Zambian woman suffering from rare tumour operated at KIMS

    Hyderabad: Zambian woman suffering from rare tumour operated at KIMS

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    Hyderabad: A middle-aged woman from Zambia, who was suffering from a very rare type of tumour called Paraganglioma, has been successfully operated upon at KIMS Hospital in Hyderabad.

    Dr. Ramya Valiveru, an endocrine surgeon from KIMS Kondapur, successfully treated the patient by performing a complex surgery.

    According to her, the occurrence rate of that Paraganglioma tumour is only two in one million population.

    The doctor said, the patient was referred with primary complaints of severe fluctuating hypertension and uncontrolled giddiness. The government of Zambia referred her to the Endocrine Surgery department of KIMS Hospital Kondapur.

    The patient had been suffering from severe recurrent headaches, episodes of anxiety, palpitations, and increased sweating for more than five years. She was evaluated in Zambia and was found to have a large 8.5×7.5 cm tumour in her abdomen.

    “The tumour is a very rare type that was found to produce very high amounts of a hormone called noradrenaline. Also, the location of the tumour was in a critical zone, behind the large important vessels like Inferior Vena Cava and Aorta.

    The blood vessels (veins) to both kidneys were travelling on the front of the tumour, the right kidney artery was travelling behind the tumour. All vessels were closely abutting the tumour,” explained Dr Ramya.

    When the patient came to KIMS, she was noticed to have uncontrolled hypertension. She underwent extensive evaluation and optimal preparation for surgery. “Pre-operative preparation in such cases is the key to successful surgery.

    Her endocrine control, hypertension control, and optimization were successfully done with alpha and beta blockade by Dr. Krishna Reddy, Consultant Endocrinology. Intra-operative fluctuations of BP and heart rate management is very challenging in this case.

    According to Dr Ramya, surgery for Paragangliomas is different from the removal of other tumours. “The tumour can release hormones in a large quantity when touched, and cause a heavy load on the heart.

    So, we had to perform the surgery so meticulously, and carefully handle the tumour, without damaging the kidneys and the great vessels.

    The experienced team of anesthetists headed by Dr. Veera Bhadra Rao managed the patient during the surgery and the Postoperative Intensive care stay,” she said.

    The patient had a smooth recovery in the post-operative period and has been discharged in stable condition.

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    #Hyderabad #Zambian #woman #suffering #rare #tumour #operated #KIMS

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rare Apple products released between 1977 and 2008 go up for auction

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    More than 500 classic products from apple will be auctioned online on March 30. The collection “The Hanspeter Luzi Vintage Apple Archive” belonged to the Swiss professor and collector Hanspeter Luzi. The list, which contains items dated from 1997 to 2008, includes computers, iPhones, digital cameras, joysticks, among others.

    It will be held at Julien’s Auctions Gallery in Beverly Hills (USA), and streamed online on the Julien’s website.

    Luzi was from St. Gallen, Switzerland, where she taught children with special needs. The educator developed educational games and teaching aids for his students, including the use of computers. He died in 2015 after having an accident on a mountain. The decision to auction the items rests with the Hanspeter family.

    The most expensive product to be auctioned is the Apple Lisa, a computer released in 1983. It was one of the first devices to have a mouse and a graphical interface, and is valued at between US$10,000 and US$20,000.

    Copyright
    Wikimedia Commons

    The Apple Lisa was released in 1983 and was one of the first devices to be used with a mouse and to have a graphical user interface.

    More than 500 classic products from apple<\/a> will be auctioned online on March 30. The collection \u201cThe Hanspeter Luzi Vintage Apple Archive\u201d<\/a> belonged to the Swiss professor and collector Hanspeter Luzi. The list, which contains items dated from 1997 to 2008, includes computers, iPhones, digital cameras, joysticks, among others.<\/p>\n

    It will be held at Julien's Auctions Gallery in Beverly Hills (USA), and streamed online<\/a> on the Julien's website.<\/p>\n\n

    Luzi was from St. Gallen, Switzerland, where she taught children with special needs. The educator developed educational games and teaching aids for his students, including the use of computers. He died in 2015 after having an accident on a mountain. The decision to auction the items rests with the Hanspeter family.<\/p>\n

    The most expensive product to be auctioned is the Apple Lisa, a computer released in 1983. It was one of the first devices to have a mouse and a graphical interface, and is valued at between US$10,000 and US$20,000.<\/p>\n

    read the list<\/a> complete of products.<\/p>\n

  • Fifa considers rare Cas appeal over lifting of Yves Jean-Bart’s lifetime ban

    Fifa considers rare Cas appeal over lifting of Yves Jean-Bart’s lifetime ban

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    Fifa is considering lodging a rare appeal against a ruling by the court of arbitration for sport (Cas) after its lifetime ban on Yves Jean-Bart, the former president of the Haitian Football Federation (FHF), was overturned.

    It is understood Fifa will hold a meeting on Friday to determine its response, with an appeal said to be a real possibility.

    On Thursday the international players’ union Fifpro raised concerns about “serious, explicit and extensively documented threats” that it says were made towards those asked to give evidence. That followed a similar intervention by Human Rights Watch (HRW).

    Jean-Bart – known as “Dadou” – was banned by Fifa in November 2020 for alleged harassment and sexual abuse against female footballers. He had his suspension overturned at Cas on Tuesday despite claims from HRW that some alleged victims were “threatened into silence” and that one witness was sent a message that told him his coffin “was prepared”.

    According to Cas’s statutes, it usually permits appeals only “on a very limited number of grounds” including the “violation of elementary procedural rules (eg violation of the right to a fair hearing)”. Fifa is also believed to be considering other potential legal action.

    The Cas panel, when announcing its verdict, “unanimously noted the lack of coherence and inaccuracies in the statements of victims and witnesses presented by Fifa” and criticised HRW and Fifpro for failing to “corroborate or confirm” evidence they had presented to Fifa, describing it as not “sufficiently evidentiary”.

    Fifpro on Thursday criticised the decision and said it would “await the full judgment of Cas and Fifa’s decision to appeal before commenting in detail”. It said: “In light of the serious, explicit and extensively documented threats received by those asked to give evidence, and Cas’s failure to offer basic anonymity protection such as voice distortion, how does it anticipate ever being able to procure adequate evidence to discipline powerful alleged perpetrators?”

    Fifpro also questioned why the decision had been announced the day before Cas was scheduled to hear an appeal from the FHF’s former head of referees Rosnick Grant, who was banned for life in May 2021 by Fifa after being found guilty of committing acts of sexual harassment and abuse. “Why did Cas decide to publicise the decision the day before another hearing in a related abuse case, where victims and whistleblowers have also received extensive threats, thus risking those witnesses withdrawing from the procedure?”

    Cas has not responded to the Guardian’s request for comment. It is understood that Grant’s appeal is scheduled to conclude on Thursday.

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    #Fifa #considers #rare #Cas #appeal #lifting #Yves #JeanBarts #lifetime #ban
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Wave rider watchers and rare polar clouds – readers’ best photos

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    Click here to submit a picture for publication in these online galleries and/or on the Guardian letters page

    Continue reading…

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    #Wave #rider #watchers #rare #polar #clouds #readers #photos
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • After quitting acting, Imran Khan makes rare appearance with gf

    After quitting acting, Imran Khan makes rare appearance with gf

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    Mumbai: Bollywood actor Imran Khan who was not seen on the big screen for years made a rare public appearance in Mumbai with his rumoured girlfriend Lekha Washington. The duo were spotted holding hands recently in the city. It is reported that Imran fell in love with South actress Lekha Washington in 2013. The two worked together in the film Matru Ki Bijlee Ka Mandola.

    It is rumoured that Imran Khan and his wife Avantika Malik live separately since 2019. The couple is co-parenting a baby girl Imara Malik Khan. The couple dated for eight years and tied the knot in  2011. Imran, who is Aamir Khan’s nephew, appeared in several Bollywood films.

    Imran;’s girlfriend Lekha’s ex-husband Pablo Chatterji and Imran were close friends but it is rumoured that all is not well between them as Imran and Lekha are dating each other now. Imran and his wife Avantika Malik have been separated because of the former’s alleged affair with Lekha.

    Imran made his acting debut with the 2008 film Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na and was last seen in the 2015 movie Katti Batti. Imran’s other movies include Mere Brother Ki Dulhan, Delhi Belly and I Hate Love Storys while Lekha predominantly appears in Tamil and Telugu films.

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    #quitting #acting #Imran #Khan #rare #appearance

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Mary Peltola did something a bit rare in modern politics: She hired a former political rival for a senior role on her staff. 

    Mary Peltola did something a bit rare in modern politics: She hired a former political rival for a senior role on her staff. 

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    election 2022 what to watch 84454
    Josh Revak, a Republican, will be state director for Rep. Mary Peltola.

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    #Mary #Peltola #bit #rare #modern #politics #hired #political #rival #senior #role #staff
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • A rare glimpse inside Britain’s secret vault of whale skeletons

    A rare glimpse inside Britain’s secret vault of whale skeletons

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    Behind a 10-foot tall door, in a secret location, lies a treasure trove of bones. Some of the biggest bones are laid out on storage units made of scaffolding, others are stacked against each other on racks – rows and rows of specimens. The smallest are tucked into drawers of faded-yellow metal cabinets. A selection of skulls lies on a low table; crudely stuffed animals hang from the painted breezeblock walls. Everything is carefully labelled.

    This vast room houses the Natural History Museum’s cetacean collection – a globally unique hoard of 6,000 whales, dolphins and porpoises. The artefacts are so enormous and irreplaceable, they’re housed at a secret location away from the main museum building.

    Whale skulls.
    Dolphin skeletons
    The skull of a sperm whale.
    Whale spines.

    It is the most complete collection of these creatures in the world, containing specimens of 90% of the world’s 90 cetacean species, including 24 from UK waters.

    “It’s visually stunning, yes, but also incredibly scientifically and culturally significant,” says Richard Sabin, the Natural History Museum’s principal curator of mammals. “You’re looking at one of the best research collections of its kind in the world – what makes it unique is the species representation.”

    The room’s cool temperature and low humidity have been designed to preserve its precious contents, from bones to baleen. As well as specialist biology and evolutionary history, the collection enables scientists to look at how everything from DNA to hormones vary across time and space.

    Fused vertebrae seen in the Greenwich whale, found in 2010, which shows the animal was elderly

    Crucially, collections such as this (one of only five of its kind in the world), may provide clues about how whales, dolphins and porpoises might respond to future stresses such as the climate crisis. “These institutions are like reservoirs of scientific information,” Sabin says. “[Not only can we] look back in time and see how things have changed, we can plan for the future. That’s one of the greatest uses for this collection.”

    The Natural History Museum has been officially recording whale and dolphin strandings since 1913, and many remains end up here after postmortem. In addition to 800 strandings, there are remnants from whaling expeditions and archaeological finds, some stretching as far back as 500 years.

    One of the largest occupies a big glass cabinet, which dominates the main gangway. Here, the Thames whale lies in state: the northern bottlenose whale that became something of a celebrity in 2006 when it swam upriver, stranded on the sand in front of crowds of Londoners, and despite efforts to save it, died.

    The bottlenose whale that swam up the Thames in 2006

    Another was uncovered in 2010 as builders dug new jetty foundations at Greenwich, in London. Huge bones sticking up out of the muddy Thames foreshore were identified by Sabin as a headless North Atlantic right whale. “The skeleton was at right angles to the flow of the river, with the tail facing up the slope of the beach … that’s not a natural stranding position,” he says. It had likely been pulled up by the tail, then beheaded for its precious baleen, once used to make corsetry and other garments.

    Carbon dating pinpointed the Greenwich whale’s death to between 1580 and 1660, while cut marks on the bone surfaces indicated “defleshing”. “Everyone took what they could from it before the skeleton collapsed under its own weight,” says Sabin. “This animal is now the largest, oldest dated specimen of this species anywhere in the world – this skeleton can tell us a lot.” For example, its DNA could reveal whether limited genetic diversity, climate or competition contributed to right whales’ vulnerability before commercial whaling.

    Elsewhere, dozens of jaw bones are stacked up. One lower jaw of a male sperm whale is abnormally twisted into a corkscrew shape: this unusual specimen came from an Antarctic whaling ship in 1959. At first glance, the jaw seems to make feeding an impossibility. But the back teeth, worn down to “stumpy pegs”, indicate that this whale was successfully eating giant squid, thanks to its highly specialised echolocation and efficient suction feeding.

    Deformed/contorted sperm whale jaw.

    Sabin, still fascinated by each revelation after 30 years as curator, is particularly proud of the insight garnered from crates containing 800 baleen plates from a blue whale stranded in 1891. Nicknamed Hope, the young female died on a sandbank near Wexford, Ireland. Now, her 25m-long skeleton is on display in the museum’s Hintze Hall.

    By analysing her baleen – layers of keratin that are used to trap krill – scientists at Southampton University learned, using a technique known as stable isotope analysis, that in summer she fed near Norway, Iceland and Greenland to accumulate her fatty blubber layer, then in winter migrated south to the Azores and west Africa for the breeding season.

    Hope the blue whale’s baleen plate
    Hope the blue whale’s baleen plate

    What’s more, visible ridges on this hard, black baleen represent the annual peaks and troughs of her feeding cycle, and scientists found that about 18 months before she died she remained in the south for 10 months – probably to have a calf. In the Wexford archives, Sabin found that violent storms were recorded in the days before she beached, storms that could have steered her off course.

    In addition, researchers at Baylor University in Texas analysed her earwax and found her pregnancy hormone progesterone levels were elevated during the last 18 months of her life for 10 months – the blue whale gestation period. “Suddenly we have this rich information about the life of an individual whale that was living in 1890,” Sabin says.

    Whale earwax plugs

    With Sabin’s help, the same Texas team studied persistent chemical pollutants and the stress hormone cortisol in plugs of whale earwax to reveal how, between 1870 and 2016, human activities from commercial whaling, war, industrial pollution and shipping noise, have caused physical stress responses in whales.

    “This information is written into the tissues of these animals,” Sabin says. “Suddenly, in the past 20 years, we’ve developed technologies that mean we can liberate information from this kind of material. We can take single hairs and do genome DNA testing or stable isotope analysis, which gives info about diet, distribution, movement, indicators.”

    Richard Sabin

    The museum is entering an era of digitisation, uploading 3D surface scans or CT scans of specimens to a free online database. It allows researchers anywhere in the world to collaborate. “This collection gives these specimens a life after death,” says Sabin. “What are we going to learn in the future?”

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    #rare #glimpse #Britains #secret #vault #whale #skeletons
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )