Off Tangent Comix

 
Leave a comment.
 
See continuing updates on the APA, DSM, and the upcoming DSM Fifth Edition (DSM-V).
 
See our Annotated List of DSM-related news, research reports, analyses, and opinion pieces.
 
Visit the TS-Si Article Archive for reports on science, medicine, government, society, and other topics.
Chad A. Mirkin, Northwestern University, George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. Photo by Bill Arsenault. 

DNA Blueprints Guide The Construction Of Specific Human Structures

Chad Mirkin discusses using DNA to build a three-dimensional structure out of gold, likening the process to building a house. Starting with basic materials such as bricks, wood, siding, stone and shingles, a construction team can build many different types of houses out of the same building blocks.
 
The article includes an audio recording of the full interview. Photo courtesy of the UCSD School of Medicine.
Bladder Cancer Deadlier for Women and Afro-Americans
TS-Si News Service
Thursday, 08 January 2009
Rochester, NY, USA. Bladder cancer is much more likely to be deadly for women and African-Americans, but the reasons long believed to explain the phenomenon account for only part of the differences for such patients compared to their white and male counterparts, according to results published in the journal Cancer.
 
The results present a stark question for doctors and patients: If age, tumor type, and stage of the disease upon diagnosis don't account for all the increased lethality of the disease in women and African-Americans, then what does?
 
It's a gaping question facing researchers who have long confronted an irony of bladder cancer, the fifth-most-common type of cancer in America. The disease is more lethal in those patients who are less likely to get it.
Opinion
Powerful Nanomotor Packs DNA In Virus
Administrator
Thursday, 08 January 2009
Washington, DC, USA. Research biologists have discovered the atomic structure of the powerful nanomotor that packages DNA into the head segment of some viruses during their assembly.
 
The findings have implications for developing a new weapon is in the fight against dangerous microbes, medical inteventions for repairs to head off potentially deleterious birth conditions, and expedited delivery of needed medications.
 
Peering at structures only atoms across, the work is an essential step in understanding how viruses multiply and infect new host organisms. Because a number of virus types may possess a similar motor, including viruses that cause common infections, the results may also provide new methods to sabotage virus machinery, leading to advanced cell embyo therapies and pharmaceuticals. 
 
Previous research had determined that the T4 molecular motor is the strongest yet discovered in viruses and, proportionately, twice as powerful as an automotive engine. The motors generate 20 times the force produced by the protein myosin, one of two proteins re
The Bad, Worse & Worst US VPs
G. Terry Madonna & Michael L. Young
Thursday, 08 January 2009
Short List of Vice Presidents Who Probably Shouldn't Have Been
 
Lancaster, PA, USA. Tis the season for lists--all kinds of lists — including the best movies, top celebrities, most successful sports figures, even the dumbest utterances of the year.
 
In the political world, Time Magazine jumped the gun in August with its list of the 15 worst vice presidents. Not to be out done, Vice President-elect Joe Biden recently leaped into the fray with his provocative, but typical Biden-like assessment that Dick Cheney was the worst vice president in American history. Subsequently a CNN poll, notwithstanding the spirit of this holiday season, found that almost one quarter of Americans agreed with Biden.
 
We are content to let historians debate Cheney’s tenure, but not so willing to leave unchallenged some of the earlier lists. What lands a particular vice president on our short worst list is less what they did in office than what they did to the office.

Culture of Medicine in Critical Condition
Administrator
Wednesday, 07 January 2009
Waltham, MA, USA. The stereotypes of medical education from the student perspective is by now very familiar: grueling hours, little recognition, and even less glory. Now a new study that appears in Academic Medicine docu
Religious and Cultural Reactions to Nanotech
TS-Si News Service
Tuesday, 06 January 2009
Washington, DC, USA. Nanotechnology is one of the most important developments to emerge from science and engineering in recent years. Exploiting discoveries from studies at the atomic and molecular scale, nanotechnology has produced very strong
The Journey of the Magi
T. S. Eliot
Tuesday, 06 January 2009
London, UK. This poem, The Journey of the Magi by T. S. Eliot, is an enduring meditation on the intersection of uncertainty and resolve during a time of change. [N1] 
 
The poem was the first in a series that
Inbox: Transgender Fundamentalism
Lisa Jain Thompson
Sunday, 04 January 2009
Fairfax, VA, USA. Whenever someone at TS-Si makes a distinction between men and women born with Harry Benjamin Syndrome (HBS or True Transsexuality) and the transgendered, we always anticipate that a male transgender or a male cross-dresser w
Get On With It