A gluten-free vegan diet may improve the health of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, according to new research from the Swedish medical universit Karolinska Institutet. The diet also has a beneficial effect on several risk factors for cardiovascular disease.

Rheumatoid arthritis is associated with an increased risk of atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and cardiovascular diseases. The underlying causes are unknown, but researchers suspect that the disturbed balance of blood fats seen in patients with rheumatoid arthritis may be part of the explanation.

A research team at Karolinska Institutet has shown in a new study that a gluten-free vegan diet has a beneficial effect on cardiovascular risk factors in people with rheumatoid arthritis. The effect was seen when a group of patients who kept to a gluten-free vegan diet for a year were compared with a control group which had followed ordinary dietary advice.

After nearly ten years of research and development, scientists at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn and Peking University in Beijing were awarded a United States patent for their virtual telemicroscope. This patented software permits off-site pathologists to diagnose cancer or other diseases in patients living in remote locations around the world.

Virginia M. Anderson, MD, associate professor of pathology at SUNY Downstate, and Jiang Gu, MD, PhD, dean and chairman of pathology at Peking University, developed the virtual microscope system, the only one of its kind capable of emailing electronic slides. Using their patent, the Chinese company Motic – a global leader in microscope manufacturing -- created a microscope with a robotic stage that scans whole slides at various magnifications and then creates compressed images that can be emailed all over the world.

GAITHERSBURG, Maryland and BERN, Switzerland, March 17 /PRNewswire/ --

- As UC Magazine recognizes SmartNode(TM) 4650 for outstanding innovation, SmartNode(TM) claims its fifth major award in three years

Patton -- the leader in business and carrier-class network access, connectivity, and VoIP equipment -- together with Patton-Inalp Networks AG -- creator of SmartNode(TM) industry-leading VoIP technology -- announced today that UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS magazine (http://www.uc-mag.com) has named the SmartNode(TM) 4650 Multiport ISDN VoIP IAD with G.SHDSL.bis Interface as recipient of the 2007 Product of the Year Award.

BUFFALO GROVE, Ilinois and LA CHAUX-DE-FONDS, Switzerland, March 17 /PRNewswire/ --

Today Eagle Test Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq: EGLT) & Ismeca Europe Semiconductor SA announced their plans to partner together to provide integrated Final Test solutions for Index Parallel Testing of Discrete Devices. The partnership pairs Eagle Test's 200T(R)/FT Discrete Final Test Solution with Ismeca's NX-Series Index Parallel Handlers in a powerful combination to provide superior technical capability & service excellence to the Discrete Device Manufacturing Industry.

If one didn’t wish to do something productive with one’s life, creationists would be a perennial source of amusement. Florida creationists, in this particular case. A new set of science standards has just been approved by the Board of Education of the orange juice and hanging chads State, and both sides are claiming victory, according to an article in Science dated 4 March 2008. How can that be?

Botulinum toxin - Botox - is one of the most poisonous naturally occurring substances but it has become best known as one of the most commonly used molecules to reduce wrinkles. Now it will be known for something else; saving infants.

Dr. Sam Daniel, Associate Director of Research of the Otorhinolaryngology Division at the Montreal Children’s Hospital of the McGill University Health Centre, has used this protein as an effective method to save newborns suffering from CHARGE Syndrome from having to undergo devastating tracheotomies.

Dr. Daniel describes the case of the first infant patient treated with the toxin in an article from the Archives of Otolaryngology.

You can tell a lot about the concerns of society regarding science by the kinds of topics that bring people to sites like ours. Not a day goes by that people don't arrive using Google searches looking for answers about organic food. The top query is something like 'what is organic food?' and it seems odd that after hundreds of millions of dollars in advertising and $20 billion in sales, no one is sure what organic food is.

There are two sides to the organic food issue to most people; genetics and chemicals. I don't worry too much about organic food from a genetics standpoint, for example, but I am not a fan of most chemicals. I am not even a fan of other people touching my food.

LONDON, March 17 /PRNewswire/ --

Column Technologies has partnered with several global IT companies to share their IT expertise during an exclusive IT Executive Briefing event on Tuesday, April 22 at the Imperial War Museum London on Lambeth Road.

The executive briefing runs from 1 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. and features Column customer presentations from Motorola and ComputaCenter executives, who will share their experiences with achieving Business Service Management (BSM) and IT service management goals. In addition, presenters from Column and Entuity will address IT business management topics, which include global implementations and how to achieve IT service management with third-party tools.

Jet engines operate at temperatures of thousands of degrees Fahrenheit and blades in the most advanced aircraft engines are coated with a thin layer of temperature-resistant, thermally-insulating ceramic to protect the metal. The coating -- referred to as a thermal-barrier coating -- is designed like an accordion to expand and contract with the metal.

The problem: When sand hits the hot engine blade it melts -- and becomes glass. “Molten glass is one of the nastiest substances around. It will dissolve anything,” says Nitin Padture, professor of materials science and engineering at Ohio State.


Conventional ceramic coating destroyed by molten glass. The field of view is about half a millimeter. Credit: Image by Aysegul Aygun and Nitin Padture, courtesy of Ohio State University.

Writing in PNAS, a group of researchers says they have determined the first pervasive 'rule' of evolution - that animals become increasingly more complex.

Examining the last 550 million years of the fossil catalog, the team investigated the different evolutionary branches of the crustacean family tree. They were seeking examples along the tree where animals evolved that were simpler than their ancestors.

Instead they found organisms with increasingly more complex structures and features, suggesting that there is some mechanism driving change in this direction.