Keeping dry

Well, that was a rough welcome.

It has only been a week since I got back and already I survived a storm.

Tropical storm Mario (Fung-Wong) made landfall on Friday, September 19.  We were already at work when they cancelled work.  Hahaha.  Because of that, we ended up stuck in the office, waiting for the rain to calm down.

According to authorities, Mario dumped at least half a month’s worth of rainfall during the day.  It is expected to exit the Philippine area of responsibility by Monday morning.

Oh H2O

It’s been years since I last waded in ankle deep flood.  Then again, I don’t want to ever get used to this again.  No way dude.

The rain has stopped and water has subsided.  We did get to work into bringing down the furniture again because my mother insisted on putting them on higher ground.

We soooo need to move.

Stay dry, everyone!

Trivial and Not So

We continuously brave the rain and the temperamental weather here in the Philippines.  When Typhoon Glenda (International Name:  Rammasun) hit last week, it left my neighborhood almost 6 days with no power.  Although I am a big fan of rains and storms, I am not a fan of power outage.

Twitter Rampage

I do admit however, that I could have been more graceful.  Looking back now, I can’t even imagine how trivial my concerns are when planes are either being shot down or crashing left and right.

I woke up to the news of MH017 shot down, and already I felt awful for Malaysian Airlines.  I tried to follow the news as much as I can, but yeah, it does not get better.  Nations point fingers left and right, so when Newsweek publishes this article about Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his quiet move to gain access and retrieve the bodies, I am then filled with envy as our own nation leaders lack the silence and humility required when faced with such challenging circumstance.

How Malaysia Brokered the Deal With Rebels for Crash Site Access

This is the part that I really loved in this article:

Sometimes, we must work quietly in the service of a better outcome.

I wish most people think this way.

 

To the families of MH370, MH17, and AH5017, my sincerest condolences.  May you find peace amid these chaos.

Hope for Alzheimer’s

I don’t very often feature news in this blog, but this one is feature-worthy.

I woke up to the best news this week:  Scientists reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s.

As someone who has a family background of this illness, this is probably one of the better news ever.  I am now itching to look up and read what they did with their gene therapy experiment.  I am just overjoyed.

I hope this paves the way for the development of a drug or a cure to Alzheimer’s.  As much as I agree that pictures last longer, memories mean more.  And this is just… amazing.

Thank you for the good news, AFP and Rappler!

—-

Scientists reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s

The gene therapy study is hoped to lead to the development of new drugs to treat the incurable disease
Agence France-Presse
Published 11:11 AM, Apr 24, 2014 | Updated 11:11 AM, Apr 24, 2014

GENE THERAPY. Spanish scientists injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s, into the hippocampus in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

GENE THERAPY. Spanish scientists injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s, into the hippocampus in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

MADRID, Spain – Spanish scientists have for the first time used gene therapy to reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s, an advance that could lead to new drugs to treat the disease, they said Wednesday, April 23.

The Autonomous University of Barcelona team injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s into the hippocampus – a region of the brian essential to memory processing – in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

“The protein that was reinstated by the gene therapy triggers the signals needed to activate the genes involved in long-term memory consolidation,” the university said in a statement.

Gene therapy involves transplanting genes into a patient’s cells to correct an otherwise incurable disease caused by a failure of one or another gene.

The finding was published in The Journal of Neuroscience and it follows 4 years of research.

“The hope is that this study could lead to the development of pharmaceutical drugs that can activate these genes in humans and allow for the recovery of memory,” the head of the research team, Carlos Saura, told Agence France-Presse.

Alzheimer’s, caused by toxic proteins that destroy brain cells, is the most common form of dementia.

Worldwide, 35.6 million people suffer from the fatal degenerative disease, which is currently incurable, and there are 7.7 million new cases every year, according to a 2012 report from the World Health Organization.

In 2010 the total global societal cost of dementia was estimated to be $604 billion, according to Alzheimer’s Disease International, a federation of Alzheimer associations around the world. – Rappler.com

Mouse image from Shutterstock