Category Archives: health

Wow: Ebola Virus Cured (With Caveats)

I saw this yesterday on my daily StrategyPage mail:

U.S. Army Cures Ebola Killer Virus
June 7, 2010: A U.S. Army research lab has developed a cure for the Ebola virus. This disease, endemic to parts of Central Africa, kills up to 90 percent of those who catch it (because of internal bleeding from infected organs). The new vaccine has one catch, however, the victim must get the injection within 30 minutes of being infected. Despite that limitation, the cure will be produced and stocked to protect people working in labs that contain Ebola virus samples. Research on an Ebola cure is also underway in other nations, and occasionally a lab worker catches Ebola.

Neat.

Spores that Kill: New Infectious Fungus in the Pacific Northwest

I found this late last week, and thought it was important enough for a posting: Deadly Airborne Fungus Spreading in Northwest. Apparently a ultra rare disease has been getting a little less rare in the Pacific Northwest. The culprit is a fungus named cryptococcus gattii. From the FoxNews article:

“Between 2003 and 2006, the outbreak expanded into neighboring mainland British Columbia and then into Washington and Oregon from 2005 to 2009. Based on this historical trajectory of expansion, the outbreak may continue to expand into the neighboring region of Northern California, and possibly further.”

Reading about this on various web sites, it appears that you can get this anywhere, but urban areas are less likely to expose people to the spores. Of course, it’s still rare enough that losing sleep or gaining stress over this would be uncalled for. Still, it’s a good thing to be aware of it and the symptoms. Here’s the list from Wikipedia that you should become at least a little familiar with:

Most people who are exposed to the fungus do not become ill. In people who become ill, symptoms appear many weeks to months after exposure. Symptoms of cryptococcal disease include:

* Prolonged cough (lasting weeks or months)
* Sputum production
* Sharp chest pain
* Shortness of breath
* Sinusitis (cottony drainage, soreness, pressure)
* Severe headache (meningitis, encephalitis, meningoencephalitis)
* Stiff neck (prolonged and severe nuchal rigidity)
* Muscle soreness (mild to severe, local or diffuse)
* Photophobia (excessive sensitivity to light)
* Blurred or double vision
* Eye irritation ( soreness, redness)
* Focal neurological deficits
* Fever (delirium, hallucinations)
* Confusion (abnormal behavior changes, inappropriate mood swings)
* Seizures
* Dizziness
* Night sweats
* Weight loss
* Nausea (with or without vomiting)
* Skin lesions (rashes, scaling, plaques, papules, nodules, blisters, subcutaneous tumors or ulcers)
* Lethargy
* Apathy

Omega Males?

Seriously, what the frak is an omega male? Well, Jessica Grose over on Slate tells me they are males that are, well, failures. One of them is played by Ben Stiller in his new movie Greenberg, and after reading a little bit about the character, I really don’t have any desire to watch it. It sounds damned depressing, and I don’t think I’d have much to learn from it or for that matter, connect with, either.

In the Noah Baumbach movie Greenberg, out in limited release this Friday, the eponymous main character is having trouble being a man. The 41-year-old Greenberg, played by Ben Stiller, tells his 25-year-old love interest that when he was a kid he dreamed of being an astronaut. Now he can’t even drive, much less pilot a shuttle. He sabotaged his career as a musician, so he’s trying the old-fashioned, manly pursuit of carpentry. He pretends not to care about his new line of work—he tells his friends he’s doing “nothing for a while”—yet Greenberg is seriously wounded when an ex-girlfriend tells him she doesn’t remember the bed he built for her. All she recalls are his anxiety attacks.

Read the whole thing, of course. She goes on to break out the different stereotypes of the omega male. Quite frankly, the emotion I feel when reading them is mostly sadness, with a bit of disgust. Here’s a bit about the “mimbo”:

Despite his lack of steady employment or fulfilling relationships, Van Holt’s Cougar Town character, Bobby Cobb, is so secure in his alternative masculinity that in a recent episode he was not even embarrassed when he was beaten up and robbed by a woman.

These are the sort of people that don’t need any further excuses for their loserdom. If anything, these characters need to have more derision cast upon them, and not less. I’m not a huge fan of actively degrading or making fun of people like this, but the last thing people should do is portray their life as anything less than something with lots of room for improvement. The same line exists with people with major weight issues. They need love and encouragement, and certainly shouldn’t be made fun of or discriminated against, but for a whole bevy of reasons (health and quality of life being the two big ones), they shouldn’t be told not to worry about it.

So, what’s the line between love and cruelty? How do you love someone but let them know that you believe that they need to change? How do you encourage change, helping the subject feel more capable and worthy, and not less?

Pass the Salt, Please?

It seems every day the medical establishment is telling us something different about what we should or shouldn’t do regarding our health. Usually its just refinements, and not wholesale changes in the message. Once in a while, though, everything changes. How many times have you heard that a low salt diet is good for you? Have you ever chosen the low sodium option in the supermarket, because it’s “better”? I hate to break it to you, but the science is most emphatically not in:

That’s the beauty of the salt debate: there’s so little reliable evidence that you can imagine just about any outcome. For all the talk about the growing menace of sodium in packaged foods, experts aren’t even sure that Americans today are eating more salt than they used to.

The experts don’t have anything approaching a consensus regarding how much of the tasty stuff we’re supposed to take in. Pretty soon, they’ll be saying butter isn’t bad for you. (And bacon!) Good reporting from the New York Times, as they’re not pushing a particular view here. Read the whole thing.

The funny thing is back in the 90′s, there was as show called Crusade. It takes place a couple hundred years in the future. A character on the show is sitting down to eat a meal, and is putting a bunch of salt on their food, and says, “Do you realize that people in the 20th century used to think salt was bad for you?” That quote might go down as the most portentous line in the whole 13 episode series.

More Excuses to Eat Chocolate and Drink Wine

Boing Boing has a report from this year’s TED conference (Technology, Entertainment, Design), and the first thing highlighted is work on anti-angiogenic foods and their affect on cancers. Basically, these are foods that discourage the creation of new blood vessels, thereby starving some type of tumors before they can become problematic. Check out the list. While I’m sure most people will find a few of these things that they’re not excited about, generally, this is a great list for people wanting to mesh good for you with good tasting. Dark chocolate = good. Olive oil = good. Red wine = good. Those are the classics everyone knows are good for their anti-cancer properties. While a lot of Mediterranean food is on this list, so are foods that grow great around the Pacific Northwest. Strawberries, apples, blueberries, pumpkins, and cherries… all local and all kickin’ cancer while its down.

This makes me want to go and plant some of these berries and fruits this weekend. Something I’ve been planning on doing for the past week or two, but keep putting it off.