organization:university of colorado

  • The Smookes Speak at University of Colorado’s Disruptive #entrepreneurship Class
    https://hackernoon.com/the-smookes-speak-at-university-of-colorados-disruptive-entrepreneurship

    Hacker Noon Podcast: Live from BoulderPhoto Credit, StartEngine.com/HackerNoonUniversity of Boulder Live Edition: Linh & David Smooke Speak at Disruptive Entrepreneurship ClassHacker Noon CEO David Smooke & COO Linh Dao Smooke recently spoke at University of Colorado Boulder’s Disruptive Entrepreneurship class taught by Professor & Hacker Noon contributing writer Nathan Schneider.https://medium.com/media/7d62b7ed9608faba582ba082bfeb7538/hrefSome notable quotes:“On the internet right now, there is a massive battle going on between centralization and decentralization.” — David“It’s what drives us everyday: we know that people want to read more, write more and that people rally behind us when we are threatened by an external source.” — Linh“Know that the obstacles are only a day, and (...)

    #university-of-colorado #smookes-speak #live-tech-podcast #hackernoon-podcast

  • How can technology improve end-of-life and palliative care?
    https://hackernoon.com/how-can-technology-improve-end-of-life-and-palliative-care-c2828693f68f?

    Lessons from a Technology + Palliative Care Brainstorm with doctors, chaplains, and palliative #health experts at the University of Colorado Denver.Palliative care is a relatively new concept in the field of medicine. Historically, medicine has had a primarily curative goal. Yet, instead of focusing on curing a terminally diagnosed patient, palliative care provides relief from symptoms, pain, and associated mental stress.As with most trends in healthcare, including palliative medicine, we’re seeing an increase in the use of technology to augment patient care. We’ve seen incredible projects and ideas such as smart pill dispensers, virtual group therapy, and others. But what about the intersection of palliative care and technology?To explore this intersection further, I hosted a #tech + (...)

    #palliative-care #end-of-life-care #health-technology

  • #Sugarland

    Le sucre est partout ! Toute notre #industrie_agroalimentaire en est dépendante. Comment cet aliment a pu s’infiltrer, souvent à notre insu, au cœur de notre culture et de nos régimes ? #Damon_Gameau se lance dans une expérience unique : tester les effets d’une alimentation haute en sucre sur un corps en bonne santé, en consommant uniquement de la #nourriture considérée comme saine et équilibrée. A travers ce voyage ludique et informatif, Damon souligne des questions problématiques sur l’industrie du sucre et s’attaque à son omniprésence sur les étagères de nos #supermarchés !


    http://thatsugarfilm.com
    #film #documentaire #sucre #industrie_agro-alimentaire #fructose #cholestérol #alimentation #dépendance #humeur

    Intéressant les quelques jours que Damon Gameau passe auprès d’une communauté #aborigènes (#peuples_autochtones) qui ne vivent pratiquement que de sucres contenus dans les produits vendus dans le seul supermarché...

    Damon parcourt l’Australie pour constater les ravages des sucres cachés. Le voilà en territoire aborigène, dans un village qui depuis toujours a proscrit l’alcool et qui, quarante ans auparavant, se nourrissait encore des produits de la terre. Voici quelques années, les habitants, décimés par les maladies liées au sucre, obésité, pathologies cardio-vasculaires, diabète, ont décidé de faire la guerre aux sucres cachés. Le retour de bâton fut immédiat : le gouvernement leur a coupé les subventions. Plus de diététiciens, plus d’information, les gamins recommencent à manger n’importe quoi. On ne compte plus les patients sous dialyse. Dans le petit cimetière du village, cinq tombes récentes abritent la dépouille d’habitants de moins de quarante ans.

    https://le-quotidien-du-patient.fr/article/reportage/2018/01/29/sugarland-lenfer-du-sucre

    Deux choses que j’ai apprises dans ce documentaire :

    1.
    Que pas toutes les calories se valent... Damon Gameau a ingurgité la même quantité avant et durant son expérimentation, mais avant il était en bonne santé, après les 2 mois de test... plus trop...

    Le réalisateur attire notre attention sur un autre point tout aussi inquiétant. Il a changé de régime, pas la quantité de calories qu’il absorbe : 2 300 calories par jour. Mais il a remplacé les bonnes graisses – un poulet rôti avec la peau, des avocats, des fruits à coque, même des œufs au bacon – par du mauvais sucre. Là encore, il blâme la désinformation globale qui voudrait que l’obésité découle de trop de calories et pas assez d’exercice. Son expérience démontre, sans appel, que toutes les calories ne sont pas égales entre elles.

    https://le-quotidien-du-patient.fr/article/reportage/2018/01/29/sugarland-lenfer-du-sucre

    2. Que l’industrie du sucre a gagné la bataille sur celle de la graisse en 1955, après la crise cardiaque du président Eisenhower (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKZldwXao7c

    ). Deux médecins ont bataillé pour décréter la cause de la crise cardiaque du président : graisse ou sucre... La graisse a gagné (ou perdu), alors que le sucre en est sorti blanchi...
    –-> ce qui me permet de faire un lien direct avec cet autre film documentaire, passé sur Arte :
    #Cholestérol le grand bluff
    http://seen.li/c75y

    #RAP2018-2019

    • Determined to give back to the APY communities and support them in their mission to take control of their own nutrition and improve their health status, Damon founded The Mai Wiru (good food) Sugar Challenge Foundation in 2014.It is time to empower people to improve their nutrition and we can do this by raising the much needed money to support community driven programs.
      #MAI_WIRU SUGAR CHALLENGE FOUNDATION

      The Mai Wiru Sugar Challenge Foundation recognises that the relationship of nutrition to health is a complex issue, especially in remote Aboriginal communities. By combining modern and local Traditional Knowledge of food preparation, the Foundation aims to reduce sugar intake by encouraging delicious healthy alternatives and supporting an innovative program of health promotion. Addressing behavioural change takes time and sustained support.The Mai Wiru Regional Stores Policy was developed in 2000-2001 and showed the dramatic changes over time in where people on the APY Lands are sourcing their foods, what was available and its cost to community members. As a result, the Mai Wiru project commenced work with the community owned stores and improve food security (the availability and affordability of healthy food and essential items every day in the local store).

      Having healthy food available does not mean people choose to eat that food all the time, or even most of the time. This is where the Foundation comes in. Our programs are developed and designed in an inclusive and sharing way – taking the best everyone has to offer to ensure the best outcomes for community members.


      http://www.maiwirufoundation.org
      #Amata

    • Et aux #Etats-Unis, Damon Gameau découvre les ravages de la #boisson #Mountain_Dew sur la santé, notamment des enfants :

      Le Mountain Dew, stylisé #Mtn_Dew, est un #soda au goût d’agrumes et caféiné commercialisé par le groupe PepsiCo.

      Il a été inventé dans la ville de Marion, en Virginie, et a été pour la première fois commercialisé dans la ville de Knoxville, dans le #Tennessee en 1948. Le Mountain Dew (rosée des montagnes) a par la suite été commercialisé à l’échelle des États-Unis à partir de 1964 et était en 2010 la quatrième boisson gazeuse la plus vendue aux États-Unis1. Il est commercialisé en France depuis 20142. Il est généralement emballé dans une bouteille verte, et sa couleur une fois sorti de son conteneur est d’un jaune-vert assez clair, et semi opaque.


      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_Dew_(marque_de_boisson)
      #pepsi #pepsi_cola

    • Pure, White and Deadly

      Pure, White and Deadly is a 1972 book by #John_Yudkin, a British nutritionist and former Chair of Nutrition at Queen Elizabeth College, London.[1] Published in New York, it was the first publication by a scientist to anticipate the adverse health effects, especially in relation to obesity and heart disease, of the public’s increased sugar consumption. At the time of publication, Yudkin sat on the advisory panel of the British Department of Health’s Committee on the Medical Aspects of Food and Nutrition Policy (COMA).[2] He stated his intention in writing the book in the last paragraph of the first chapter: “I hope that when you have read this book I shall have convinced you that sugar is really dangerous.”[3]

      The book and author suffered a barrage of criticism at the time, particularly from the sugar industry, processed-food manufacturers, and Ancel Keys, an American physiologist who argued in favour of restricting dietary fat, not sugar, and who sought to ridicule Yudkin’s work.[2] In later years, Yudkin’s observations came to be accepted.[a][2][4][5][6] A 2002 cover story about sugar by Gary Taubes in The New York Times Magazine, “What if It’s All Been a Big Fat Lie?”, attracted attention,[7] and the following year a World Health Organization report recommended that added sugars provide no more than 6–10% of total dietary intake.[8] In 2009 a lecture on the health effects of sugar by Robert Lustig, an American pediatric endocrinologist, went viral.[9] The subsequent interest led to the rediscovery of Yudkin’s book and the rehabilitation of his reputation.[2][10]

      Two further editions of the book were published, the second after Yudkin’s death in 1995. An expanded version appeared in 1986, revised by Yudkin himself, to include much additional research evidence. In 2012 the book was re-published by Penguin Books with a new introduction by Robert Lustig to reflect the changed nutritional context that the book had helped to create.


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure,_White_and_Deadly
      #livre

    • Sugar politics

      #Cristin_Kearns is a Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of California San Francisco with a joint appointment at the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies in the School of Medicine, and the Department of Oral and Craniofacial Sciences at the School of Dentistry. Additionally, she is an Acting Instructor at the University of Washington School of Dentistry. Her degrees include a B.A. in Neuroscience from Trinity College, a D.D.S. from The University of North Carolina School of Dentistry, and an M.B.A. in Health Administration from the University of Colorado, Denver.


      https://sugarpolitics.com

    • Sucre, le doux mensonge

      Comment, depuis les années 1970, l’industrie agroalimentaire a oeuvré pour augmenter les doses de sucre dans nos assiettes, avec à la clé un problème majeur de santé publique : obésité, diabète et maladies cardiaques se répandent à travers le monde, notamment chez les enfants. Cette enquête dévoile les mensonges de l’industrie sucrière et les recours possibles pour enrayer l’épidémie.

      C’est en épluchant les archives internes de la Great Western Sugar Company, l’un des fleurons de l’industrie sucrière américaine, que la dentiste Cristin Kearns a fait une découverte de taille, exposée fin 2012 dans le magazine américain Mother Jones : dans les années 1970, l’industrie mondiale du sucre a mis au point une stratégie délibérée de conquête, visant à inclure toujours plus de saccharose dans l’alimentation quotidienne mondiale et à en dissimuler sciemment les risques sanitaires. Quarante ans durant, l’Association américaine du sucre et ses homologues d’autres continents ont réussi à faire prospérer un empire lourd de plusieurs milliards et à transformer les habitudes alimentaires à l’échelle planétaire. Conséquence de la nouvelle addiction qu’ils ont su généraliser, l’obésité, le diabète et les maladies cardiaques se répandent à travers le monde, notamment chez les enfants.

      Sucre et tabac, même combat ?
      Le lobby du sucre est désormais au banc des accusés. Sa ligne de défense, jusqu’ici, ne bouge pas d’un iota : il exige de ses détracteurs toujours davantage de preuves de la nocivité du sucre. Ces manœuvres rappellent celles de l’industrie du tabac pour retarder coûte que coûte l’application des décisions politiques. Alors que l’industrie, la recherche et les pouvoirs publics se mènent une lutte de plus en plus dure, la bombe à retardement sanitaire approche de l’explosion… Cette enquête dévoile les mensonges de l’industrie sucrière et les recours possibles pour enrayer l’épidémie.


      https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/054774-000-A/sucre-le-doux-mensonge

  • New Study Finds Sea Level Rise Has Accelerated – gCaptain
    http://gcaptain.com/new-study-finds-sea-level-rise-has-accelerated
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYnReLNLAZ0

    Global sea level rise has been accelerating in recent decades, rather than increasing steadily, according to a new study based on 25 years of NASA and European satellite data.

    This acceleration, driven mainly by increased melting in Greenland and Antarctica, has the potential to double the total sea level rise projected by 2100 when compared to projections that assume a constant rate of sea level rise, according to lead author Steve Nerem. Nerem is a professor of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder, a fellow at Colorado’s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), and a member of NASA’s Sea Level Change team.

    If the rate of ocean rise continues to change at this pace, sea level will rise 26 inches (65 centimeters) by 2100 — enough to cause significant problems for coastal cities, according to the new assessment by Nerem and colleagues from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland; CU Boulder; the University of South Florida in Tampa; and Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. The team, driven to understand and better predict Earth’s response to a warming world, published their work Feb. 12 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    This is almost certainly a conservative estimate,” Nerem said. “Our extrapolation assumes that sea level continues to change in the future as it has over the last 25 years. Given the large changes we are seeing in the ice sheets today, that’s not likely.

  • Après le #Co2 et le #méthane

    Melting #Permafrost Could Release Massive Amounts of Dangerous Mercury, Study Says | The Weather Channel
    https://weather.com/science/environment/news/2018-02-07-permafrost-mercury-stores-climate-change

    “Prior to the start of the study, people assumed permafrost contained little to no mercury,” study co-author Kevin Schaefer of the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado said in a press release. “But it turns out that not only is there mercury in permafrost, it’s also the biggest pool of mercury on the planet.”

    #pergélisol #mercure

  • Climate Change is Turning Dehydration into a Deadly Epidemic | JSTOR Daily
    https://daily.jstor.org/climate-change-dehydration-deadly-epidemic

    Richard J Johnson, a kidney specialist at the University of Colorado, helped organise the World Congress of Nephrology in Canada in 2011. There, he learned about the strange new form of chronic kidney disease spreading through Central America. Researchers from various countries were beginning to get together and discuss the evidence. Like others, Johnson began to think about possible causes.

    His own research was focused on the sugar #fructose – identifying its role in obesity, high blood pressure and heart disease. When a person eats fructose, the liver bears most of the brunt, but some of the sugar eventually ends up in the kidney. With each meal, fructose enters the kidney tubules, where it is metabolised into uric acid and causes oxidative stress, both of which can damage the kidney.

    At first, Johnson thought people in the sugarcane fields could be eating so much of the plant itself that they were generating high levels of uric acid and oxidative stress in their kidneys. But, he calculated, even sucking on sugarcane all day wouldn’t produce enough fructose to cause disease. Then he discovered that, under certain conditions, the body processes regular carbohydrates to make its own fructose. And one of the triggers of this deadly alchemy is simple dehydration.

    Until that point, nephrologists had thought that dehydration could only cause acute kidney injury, but Johnson’s findings put a new spin on the role of insufficient water intake. Could dehydration day in, day out be causing continuous fructose overproduction that, in turn, could be leading to long-term kidney damage?

    Johnson took his theory to the lab, where his team put mice in chambers and exposed them to hours of heat at a stretch. One group of mice was allowed to drink unlimited water throughout the experience, while a second group had water only in the evenings. Within five weeks the mice with a restricted water intake developed chronic kidney disease. During the day, loss of salt and water caused the mice to produce high levels of fructose, and crystals of uric acid would sometimes form as water levels dropped in their urine. When the scientists disabled the gene that metabolises fructose and repeated the experiment, neither group developed chronic kidney disease.

    Johnson took these results to a meeting of the Program on Health and Work in Central America, or SALTRA, in Costa Rica in 2012, where they caught the attention of García-Trabanino: “I was astonished. His animal models were absolutely in line with our findings.”

    The two collaborated to investigate the biochemical effects of dehydration on workers in the fields of El Salvador. Levels of uric acid started high in the morning and increased throughout the day. “Some patients just had sheets of uric acid crystals in their urine,” Johnson says.

    From these studies, Johnson believes that heat stress and dehydration drive the production of fructose and vasopressin, which also damages the kidney. However, he believes that another mechanism may also play a part in the epidemic: rehydration with sugary drinks. Frequently, not trusting the quality of local drinking water, workers drink sodas and soft drinks, and experimental evidence suggests that doing so can lead to even more kidney damage.

    “At this stage, that heat stress and dehydration might be causing this problem is still a hypothesis,” Johnson admits. “Although it is a strong one.”

    #sucre #reins #climat #déshydratation

  • The Problem with the Mutation-Centric View of Cancer - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/the-problem-with-the-mutation_centric-view-of-cancer

    Smoking is doing to the lung what the dinosaur-killing meteor did to Earth. It’s stimulating evolution—somatic cell evolution—that can lead to cancer.Photograph by NIH Image Gallery / FlickrTo better understand and treat cancer, physicians need to stop oversimplifying its causes. Cancer results not solely from genetic mutations but by adapting to and thriving in micro-environments in the body. That’s the point of view of James DeGregori, a professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. In a recent Cancer Research paper, DeGregori took a trio of researchers—Cristian Tomasetti, Lu Li, and Bert Vogelstein—to task for their assessment of cancer risk. “Cancers,” they wrote in Science, “are caused by mutations that may be (...)

  • Beyond Voyager - Issue 51: Limits
    http://nautil.us/issue/51/limits/beyond-voyager

    Forty years ago this coming Tuesday, a car-sized piece of equipment launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Thirty five years later, it became the first and only man-made object to enter interstellar space. Along the way, the Voyager probes (there were two) made headlines for flybys of Jupiter, Saturn and Titan. Fran Bagenal was a student when the Voyager probes launched, and wrote her doctoral thesis on data the probes collected around Jupiter. The professor of astrophysical and planetary science at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and former chair of NASA’s Outer Planet Assessment Group, has also worked on the Galileo, Deep Space 1, New Horizons and Juno missions. Nautilus caught up with Bagenal to discuss the legacy of Voyager and the future of manned and unmanned exploration (...)

  • DDoSCoin : Researchers create crypto coin with DDoS puzzle for miners

    http://www.itnews.com.au/news/researchers-create-cryptocoin-with-ddos-puzzle-for-miners-433500

    University of Colorado assistant professor Eric Wustrow and University of Michigan phD student Benjamin VanderSloot have created a cryptocurrency that uses a malicious alternative to bitcoin’s double-SHA256 hash-based proof-of-work, the computational effort required to mine new coins.

    Called DDoSCoin, the alternative cryptocurrency’s “Proof-of-DDoS” allows miners to prove that they have participated in distributed denial of service attacks against preselected targets in order to create more virtual money.

    DDoSCoin operates by miners opening a large number of Transport Layer Security (TLS) connections to target webservers. It would then use the signed responses as proof a connection has occurred.

    Miners with DDoSCoin blocks could then trade these for other currencies, including bitcoin and ethereum.

    This malicious “proof-of-DDoS” model used by DDoSCoin miners works only with sites that support TLS 1.2, but the researchers said over half of the top million websites as measured by metrics firm Alexa support that version of the protocol.

    Bitcoin’s proof-of-work, a mathematical puzzle that miners have to collectively solve before more units of the currency can be created, has been criticised as a waste of resources.

    The paper presented at the Usenix 2016 security conference:

    https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/woot16/woot16-paper-wustrow.pdf

    #DDoSCoin #bitcoin #cryptocurrency

  • “The largest trench identified by the team is 40 centimetres deep, and oval-shaped with a diameter of 2 metres. [...] According to team member Martin Lockley of the University of Colorado Denver, the trenches could have enabled [dinosaur] females to select their mates depending on who had the physical strength to dig most impressively – an important skill for building nests.”

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn28736-dinosaurs-took-part-in-building-competitions-to-attract-female

    #dinosaur #palaeontology #seduction

  • People more likely to choose a spouse with similar DNA, finds CU-Boulder study | University of Colorado Boulder
    http://www.colorado.edu/news/releases/2014/05/19/people-more-likely-choose-spouse-similar-dna-finds-cu-boulder-study

    Individuals are more genetically similar to their spouses than they are to randomly selected individuals from the same population, according to a new study from the University of Colorado Boulder.

    #étude_récente qui risque d’avoir un petit succès médiatique, ça va dans le sens du poil dominant…

    Même le communiqué de l’Université y va de son interprétation en introduisant le mot preference comme substitut à genetic associative mating nettement moins sexy

    The researchers compared the magnitude of the genetic similarity between married people to the magnitude of the better-studied phenomenon of people with similar educations marrying, known as educational assortative mating. They found that the preference for a genetically similar spouse, known as genetic assortative mating, is about a third of the strength of educational assortative mating.

    L’abstract
    Genetic and educational assortative mating among US adults
    http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/05/14/1321426111.abstract

    Understanding the social and biological mechanisms that lead to homogamy (similar individuals marrying one another) has been a long-standing issue across many fields of scientific inquiry. Using a nationally representative sample of non-Hispanic white US adults from the Health and Retirement Study and information from 1.7 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms, we compare genetic similarity among married couples to noncoupled pairs in the population. We provide evidence for genetic assortative mating in this population but the strength of this association is substantially smaller than the strength of educational assortative mating in the same sample. Furthermore, genetic similarity explains at most 10% of the assortative mating by education levels. Results are replicated using comparable data from the Framingham Heart Study.

    et la significance

    It is well established that individuals are more similar to their spouses than other individuals on important traits, such as education level. The genetic similarity, or lack thereof, between spouses is less well understood. We estimate the genome-wide genetic similarity of spouses and compare the magnitude of this value to a comparable measure of educational similarity. We find that spouses are more genetically similar than two individuals chosen at random but this similarity is at most one-third the magnitude of educational similarity. Furthermore, social sorting processes in the marriage market are largely independent of genetic dynamics of sexual selection.

    Le reste derrière #paywall

  • Study Points to New Culprit in Heart Disease - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/08/health/study-points-to-new-culprit-in-heart-disease.html?src=me

    Chez les mangeurs de viande rouge les graisses saturées et le cholestérol ne contribueraient que de façon mineure au risque accru de maladie cardiaque, le vrai coupable étant un produit chimique qui est produit par des bactéries dans le tube digestif à partir de la carnitine de la viande (l’ingestion de pilules contenant de la carnitine a le même effet) puis est transformé par le foie en un autre produit chimique appelé TMAO qui pénètre dans le sang et augmente le risque de maladie cardiaque.

    Ces bactéries, qui restent à découvrir, seraient en quantité bien moindre chez les végétariens et végétaliens.

    ...the investigators’ extensive experiments in both humans and animals, published Sunday in Nature Medicine, have persuaded scientists not connected with the study to seriously consider this new theory of why red meat eaten too often might be bad for people.

    (...)

    ... the study’s findings indicated that the often-noticed association between red meat consumption and heart disease risk might be related to more than just the saturated fat and cholesterol in red meats like beef and pork.

    Dr. Hazen began his research five years ago with a scientific fishing expedition. He directs a study of patients who come to the Cleveland Clinic for evaluations. Over the years, there have been 10,000. All were at risk for heart disease and agreed to provide blood samples and to be followed so the researchers would know if any patient had a heart attack or died of heart disease in the three years after the first visit. Those samples enabled him to look for small molecules in the blood to see whether any were associated with heart attacks or deaths.

    That study and a series of additional experiments led to the discovery that a red meat substance no one had suspected — carnitine — seemed to be a culprit. Carnitine is found in red meat and gets its name from the Latin word carnis, the root of carnivore, Dr. Hazen said. It is also found in other foods, he noted, including fish and chicken and even dairy products, but in smaller amounts. Red meat, he said, is the major source, and for many people who eat a lot of red meat, it may be a concern.

    The researchers found that carnitine was not dangerous by itself. Instead, the problem arose when it was metabolized by bacteria in the intestines and ended up as TMAO in the blood.

    That led to [a] steak-eating study. It turned out that within a couple of hours of a regular meat-eater having a steak, TMAO levels in the blood soared.

    But the outcome was quite different when a vegan ate a steak. Researchers had hypothesized that vegans would not have as many of the gut bacteria needed to make TMAO, and indeed virtually no TMAO appeared in the vegan’s blood after he consumed a steak.

    “We did not expect to see such a dramatic difference,” Dr. Hazen said.

    Then researchers gave meat eaters doses of antibiotics to wipe out almost all of their gut bacteria. After that, they no longer had TMAO in their blood either after consuming red meat or carnitine pills. That meant, he said, that the effect really was because of gut bacteria.

    Researchers then tried to determine whether people with high blood carnitine or TMAO levels were at higher heart disease risk. They analyzed blood from more than 2,500 people, asking if carnitine or TMAO levels predicted heart attacks independently of traditional risk factors like smoking, high cholesterol and blood pressure. Both carnitine and TMAO did. But upon further analysis, they discovered that the effect was solely because of TMAO.

    The researchers’ theory, based on their laboratory studies, is that TMAO enables cholesterol to get into artery walls and also prevents the body from excreting excess cholesterol.

    But what is it about carnitine that bacteria like? The answer, Dr. Hazen said, is that bacteria use it as a fuel.

    He said he worries about carnitine-containing energy drinks. Carnitine often is added to the drinks on the assumption that is will speed fat metabolism and increase a person’s energy level, Dr. Hazen said.

    Dr. Robert H. Eckel, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado and a past president of the American Heart Association, worried about how carnitine might be affecting body builders and athletes who often take it because they believe it builds muscle.

    Those supplements, Dr. Hazen said, “are scary, especially for our kids.”

    • Gut Microbial Metabolite TMAO Enhances Platelet Hyperreactivity and Thrombosis Risk
      http://moscow.sci-hub.io/9e72efd9e2e76f12a3942c9e9310e87b/zhu2016.pdf?download=true

      The influence of gut microbes on thrombosis risk via TMAO production requires the presence of an appropriate dietary input capable of producing TMA (e.g., foods rich in #choline or #phosphatidylcholine), the precursor for TMAO generation.

      [...]

      ... a diet rich in choline alters microbial composition and function. Specifically, with choline supplementation, total cecal microbial choline TMA lyase activity was shown to increase, with parallel increases in both plasma TMAO levels and proportions of specific taxa associated with TMAO.

    • What’s in you gut could determine risk for heart attack or stroke
      http://www.wjhg.com/news/newschannel7today/headlines/Whats-in-Your-Gut-Can-Determine-Heart-Attack-and-Stroke-Risk-374721451.html

      Dr. Hazen said that TMAO, a compound that occurs in the gut after eating animal products such as red meat and egg yolks, is a cardiovascular risk factor that can occur even if a person has low cholesterol and a healthy blood pressure.

      “What we have found is that TMAO identifies people at risk independent of their traditional risk factors and in particular it seems to help identify people at increased thrombotic event risk,” said Dr. Hazen.

      The study looked at 4,000 patients and found that blood TMAO levels were a strong predictor of heart attack and stroke, independent of other risk factors.

      Dr. Hazen said TMAO is dangerous because it heightens platelet activity, which can contribute to the formation of blood clots.

      Because TMAO is diet-induced, the study results open the door to new therapeutic targets and possible nutritional interventions as a way to prevent cardiac events.

      One of the known ways to lower the production rate of TMAO involves adhering to a diet that is more vegetarian or plant-based.

      “A way of lowering your TMAO is to change your diet,” said Dr. Hazen. “It has been shown, and reported by others, that a Mediterranean diet will lower TMAO production overall.”

    • https://www.statnews.com/2016/03/10/red-meat-heart-disease

      The microbes involved may sound like “bad” bacteria, but you can’t oust them from your gut by gobbling down supplements filled with “good” bacteria. “I don’t think people need to go to the store and just take anything that says ‘probiotics,’” said Dr. Stanley Hazen, a molecular biologist at the Cleveland Clinic who led the study. “Even if you are the most ardent vegan eating a cucumber, you’ll still have these bacteria. They’re just suppressed until you feed them choline.”

      [...]

      This research opens up the possibility for new heart disease treatments. “If we can develop a drug that blocks the bacteria’s ability to use choline to make TMAO,” said Hazen, “we might be able to use a drug like this for heart disease.”

  • Smart Meter, Big Brother
    http://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=11-P13-00031&segmentID=4

    The goal of smart meter technology is to improve energy efficiency, cut greenhouse gases and save consumers money. But Kevin Doran, a Senior Research Professor at the University of Colorado, tells host Bruce Gellerman that these smart meters raise privacy concerns because they can potentially reveal personal details about customers’ at-home behaviors.

    #énergie #surveillance #privacy