Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Former Elf CEO released in Togo for medical care

LOME, Togo (AP) ? A prosecutor says that Togolese authorities have ordered the provisionary release of the former chief executive officer of the French oil corporation Elf after six months of detention in the West African country.

Loik Le Floch-Prigent was arrested in Ivory Coast and extradited to Togo in September where he has been held since on charges of defrauding an Emirati businessman.

Prosecuting lawyer Essolissam Poyodi said Wednesday that Le Floch-Prigent was provisionally released for medical reasons and flew to France for treatment Tuesday. Poyodi said the Frenchman was still at the disposal of Togolese judiciary authorities.

The purported scam against Abass Al Youssef was for $48 million. Businessman Bertin Sow Agba and his cousin, former Togolese Interior Minister Pascal Bodjona, have also been implicated in the scam that has rocked Togo.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-elf-ceo-released-togo-medical-care-111921462.html

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Oscars 2013 Backstage: Private Meet-Ups Revealed

MTV News' eyes on the inside share best behind-the-scenes moments.
By Brett White


Bradley Cooper at the 2013 Oscars
Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702534/backstage-oscars-academy-awards-2013.jhtml

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Live from ASUS' press event at MWC 2013!

Live from ASUS' press event at MWC 2013!

So far, we don't know much about what ASUS will be announcing here at Mobile World Congress, but we do know it has something to do with a spaceship landing on top of Barcelona's La Sagrada Familia. And also, a statue of Columbus talking on the phone in Spanish. Obviously, dockable gadgets are key -- in fact, if you watch that second video, ASUS even uses the tagline "Pad and Phone come together." So we're gonna go out on a limb and say a new PadFone is in order. But what about the specs? And how about some new Transformer tablets? Only one way to find out: stay tuned as we report live from the company's MWC press event, happening right now.

February 25, 2013 7:00 AM EST

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/BI7LBjvTvDg/

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Oscars 2013 Red-Carpet Live Stream: Watch Now!

We've got you covered tonight from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. ET as we bring you the A-list stars, fashion and pre-show madness.
By MTV News staff


Jennifer Lawrence, Ben Affleck and Anne Hathaway
Photo: Getty Images / MTV

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702493/oscar-2013-red-carpet-live.jhtml

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Look out -- 'meteorological bomb' is coming!

Navy Research Lab, Monterey

The explosive winter storm Jolle on Jan. 26. Shortly before this image was captured, Jolle reached a central pressure of 930 millibars, on par with a Category 4 hurricane.

By Larry O'Hanlon
Discovery

Meteorologists have hit on a possible way to detect one of the worst kinds of storms before they take shape. Explosive cyclones, so called "meteorological bombs," pop into existence in a day or two and can wreak havoc on land as well as at sea. This makes them especially hard to forecast.

Hurricane Sandy was a monster, but not a bomb since it was forecast with extraordinary accuracy a week ahead. A meteorological bomb, on the other hand, develops at a frightening pace -- with the atmospheric pressure dropping a millibar or more per hour for at least 24 hours.

In late January there was a historic meteorological bomb in the North Atlantic, with the pressure dropping a startling 58 millibars in 24 hours. That storm, named Jolle, generated the mammoth waves that enabled surfer Garrett McNamara to break the world record on a 111-foot giant off the coast of Portugal.

"In a more typical storm you might see a pressure drop of one millibar per hour over less than that number of hours," said meteorologist Greg Carbin of the U.S. National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center. But when conditions conspire to deepen a low pressure area faster and longer, the result is a forecasting challenge and a danger to life and limb.

In the new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, two Australian researchers stepped back from the storms and looked at the large-scale energy budgets, called "Lorenz energetics," of the atmosphere from 1980 to 2011 (32 years). The study focused specifically on the parts of the world most prone to explosive cyclones: the Northwest Pacific, the North Atlantic, the Southwest Pacific and the South Atlantic.

They found a strong energy signature that was "virtually identical for all four geographical regions," wrote the paper's authors, Mitchell Black and Alexandre Pezza of the University of Melbourne.

Even more promising is the fact that the energy signature of these bombs can be seen 48 hours before the actual storm takes shape. That suggests the method might be applied to lengthen forecast times.

"This finding opens a new avenue of exploration of explosive storm behavior based on the large-scale environment," write Black and Pezza.

A new tool for forecasting the bombs would be welcome since, despite significant events like Sandy being handled very well by the weather models, sudden storms can sometimes slip through the cracks, Carbin explained.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17088963-look-out-meteorological-bomb-is-on-the-way?lite

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Tabasco CEO Paul McIlhenny, Bayou bon vivant, dies

Paul McIlhenny, the chairman and chief executive of the Louisiana company that makes Tabasco brand pepper sauce, has died at age 68, the McIlhenny Co said on Sunday.

McIlhenny died on Saturday, the family-owned company said in a news release that described him as "a true bon vivant" whose passions included hunting, fishing, wine-tasting and game cooking.

He was a sixth-generation member of the McIlhenny family to live on Avery Island in the southern Louisiana bayou, and a fourth-generation member to produce pepper sauces sold worldwide under the Tabasco brand.

The McIlhenny company was founded in 1868 on Avery Island. It supplies hot sauce to the U.S. presidential plane Air Force One and to Britain's royal family, the Times-Picayune newspaper said on its website.

Paul McIlhenny joined the company in 1967 and directly oversaw the production of its sauces for 13 years, expanding both its line of spicy sauces and the array of aprons, neckties and other merchandise bearing the familiar red-and-green Tabasco logo.

He spent much of his time in New Orleans and in 2006 he reigned as Rex, the first King of Carnival during Mardi Gras celebrations after the city was devastated by Hurricane Katrina.

"All of McIlhenny Company and the McIlhenny and Avery families are deeply saddened by this news," said Tony Simmons, president of McIlhenny Co and fifth-generation McIlhenny family member. "We will clearly miss Paul's devoted leadership but will more sorely feel the loss of his acumen, his charm and his irrepressible sense of humor."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/tabasco-ceo-paul-mcilhenny-dies-age-68-1C8516292

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

AFCON 2013: Ghanaian Supporters Stranded In South Africa

Some Ghanaian supporters and journalists who were airlifted to South Africa to support the Black Stars at the just ended African Cup of Nations have been left stranded in Johannesburg.

Officials who are expected to process their return to Ghana have neglected them leaving them frustrated in South Africa.

According to Sports Journalist Russel Wiafe the CEO of Africa Origin Travel and Tour Sampson Deen who is expected to airlift the Journalists and the supporters back to Ghana has failed to honor his part of the deal.

Reports indicate that the supporters have been kicked out of their hotels and have been living on the streets for the last two days.

Russel in an interview with XYZ News said the situation could get worse if government fails to intervene. ?The supporters have been kicked out of their hotels and there is no food or water for them?.

Russel added ?they have been stranded for two days and if government is willing to support them, it has to be now?.

Source: http://sports.peacefmonline.com/news/201302/156238.php

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Do Bush?s Paintings Tell Us Anything About The Former President?

Hyperallergic:

Thanks to a hacker with the odd sounding handle of Guccifer (Lucifer of Gucci?) we have all been blessed with a glimpse of the artistic private life of former US President George W. Bush. Guccifer tapped into various Bush emails from the period of 2009--2012, which included private correspondence and family photos, but also his art, as The Smoking Gun reported:

Read the whole story: Hyperallergic

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/08/do-bushs-paintings-tell-u_n_2647614.html

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Video: Congressman asks Spielberg to correct ?Lincoln? film



>>> a connecticut congressman is asking steven spielberg for a correction in his movie "lincoln." he points out in the movie as congress voted to ratify the 13th amendment ending slavery, two of connecticut 's elected representatives vote no. he says he loved the movie, but that bothered him, and congressman joe courtney checked the record, and, in fact, all of connecticut 's representatives back then voted yes. no official reaction as of yet from the legendary director.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/50724818/

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Wealth 'Poisons' Kids, Says Aussie Finance Tycoon

Graham Tuckwell is not exactly a household name, even among his fellow tycoons.

The Australian entrepreneur who built the multi-billion-dollar financial empire ETF Securities has long avoided the press, scandals and flashy spending. But he's making headlines recently with his announcement that he's giving $50 million to Australian National University for scholarships.

The big news was not so much the gift, but the reason for the donation. Wealth, he said, can ruin your children, so much better to give it away.

"Lots of money is poisonous to have," he said of his kids. "If they create things themselves, then it's a sense of achievement. Whereas if you just give them stuff, it almost destroys their desire to do things and you actually end up with kids that are a lot worse off."

He said that while many of today's rich are giving their fortunes to charity, "in some cases they pass the wealth down to later generations who have behaved badly. And I think that's a really bad example."

His gift to the university will go to scholarships for kids with "innate smartness" and who have a well-rounded life.

Of course, Tuckwell is generalizing about kids and wealth. Plenty of families manage to pass down wealth without ruining their kids. Donald Trump's kids often seem more polished and savvy than their billionaire dad, despite their Silver Spoon lives.

But the Tuckwell Principal is part of a sweeping change in the mindset of the wealthy when it comes to inheritance. Throughout the world, self-made millionaires and billionaires who didn't grow up with money are seeking to instill the same middle-class values, hunger and independence in their kids.

(Read more: Millionaires Want Kids to Share Their Values ... and Their Money)

Warren Buffett, of course, is the high priest of the anti-inheritance movement, saying that the wealthy should leave their kids "enough to do anything, but not so much that they can do nothing." (To be sure, Buffett's kids aren't exactly struggling: they've inherited hundreds of millions in their foundations).

Tuckwell may also be looking at the more egregious examples of rich-kids-gone-wild in Australia. Mining billionaire Gina Rinehart is engaged in a highly public lawsuit with her kids, whom she says are spoiled and unfit for work. The country has also become a playground for wealthy kids from China, Indonesia and other countries in Asia.

(Read more: Millionaire Parents Say Their Kids Aren't Fit to Inherit)

"Generally speaking, if you look at the people in Australia that have got huge amounts of wealth, without naming any, they generally have not put the majority of their wealth behind strong philanthropic causes," he said.

He told reporters that his four children will receive "a bit of money" and "a great education courtesy of their parents." Other than that, he said, they would have to have earn their own success.

We have yet to hear comment from his four kids.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100439059

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Nvidia demos Project SHIELD streaming Borderlands 2 from PC ...

We got a personal demonstration of Nvidia's Project SHIELD at the CES Las Vegas 2013 last month. The new Android handheld looked good, seemed to have plenty of power to play the latest Android games, and came equipped with a 5-inch HD ready touchscreen in a sleek portable form. However Nvidia's Project SHIELD had another trick up its sleeve; playing games streamed directly from your GeForce GTX 600 series equipped PC.

Now Nvidia has released the first in a series of videos showing off the Project SHIELD console in action. This first video shows the Project SHIELD portable Android games console streaming the PC game Borderlands 2.

Will from Nvidia demos Borderlands 2 using his Nvidia project SHIELD with almost no of observable lag between his handheld games console on-screen action and his Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 powered PC, which is shown in the background of the video. While he is playing Will repeatedly mentions the high frame rates and smoothness of the gaming experience on the Project SHIELD console. Will also boasted about the sound quality coming from the Project SHIELD, but of course we can't judge that from simply watching a YouTube video.

To follow up this initial video, Nvidia will be uploading examples of PC games running on the Project SHIELD every Monday. Also every Thursday the company promises to publish videos of the upcoming handheld games console running top Android titles. Please remember the time difference if you want to go and look at Nvidia?s YouTube channel for these new upcoming videos; Thursday in the USA may well mean Friday morning here in the UK, likewise next Monday?s PC streaming video may be uploaded late on Monday / early Tuesday in our time zone.

One key piece of information about the Nvidia Project SHIELD that is yet to be revealed is the price point. The question is; will its price and reliance upon a powerful GeForce GTX 600 series equipped PC in the household, for PC games streaming, limit its market appeal? This and the onset of cheap competition with the Android-TV-games-consoles like OUYA and GameStick utilising your big-screen living room TV, may well mean few sales for the Project SHIELD when it is released.

Source: http://hexus.net/gaming/news/pc/51445-nvidia-demos-project-shield-streaming-borderlands-2-pc/

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The deep roots of catastrophe: Partly molten, Florida-sized blob forms atop Earth's core

Feb. 6, 2013 ? A University of Utah seismologist analyzed seismic waves that bombarded Earth's core, and believes he got a look at the earliest roots of Earth's most cataclysmic kind of volcanic eruption. But don't worry. He says it won't happen for perhaps 200 million years.

"What we may be detecting is the start of one of these large eruptive events that -- if it ever happens -- could cause very massive destruction on Earth," says seismologist Michael Thorne, the study's principal author and an assistant professor of geology and geophysics at the University of Utah.

But disaster is "not imminent," he adds, "This is the type of mechanism that may generate massive plume eruptions, but on the timescale of 100 million to 200 million years from now. So don't cancel your cruises."

The new study, set for publication this week in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, indicates that two or more continent-sized "piles" of rock are colliding as they move at the bottom of Earth's thick mantle and atop the thicker core some 1,800 miles beneath the Pacific. That is creating a Florida-sized zone of partly molten rock that may be the root of either of two kinds of massive eruptions far in the future:

  1. ?Hotspot plume supervolcano eruptions like those during the past 2 million years at Wyoming's Yellowstone caldera, which covered North America with volcanic ash.
  2. ?Gargantuan flood basalt eruptions that created "large igneous provinces" like the Pacific Northwest's Columbia River basalts 17 million to 15 million years ago, India's Deccan Traps some 65 million years ago and the Pacific's huge Ontong Java Plateau basalts, which buried an Alaska-sized area 125 million to 199 million years ago.

"These very large, massive eruptions may be tied to some extinction events," Thorne says. The Ontong eruptions have been blamed for oxygen loss in the oceans and a mass die-off of sea life.

Since the early 1990s, scientists have known of the existence of two continent-sized "thermochemical piles" sitting atop Earth's core and beneath most of Earth's volcanic hotspots -- one under much of the South Pacific and extending up to 20 degrees north latitude, and the other under volcanically active Africa.

Using the highest-resolution method yet to make seismic images of the core-mantle boundary, Thorne and colleagues found evidence the pile under the Pacific actually is the result of an ongoing collision between two or more piles. Where they are merging is a spongy blob of partly molten rock the size of Florida, Wisconsin or Missouri beneath the volcanically active Samoan hotspot.

The study's computer simulations "show that when these piles merge together, they may trigger the earliest stages of a massive plume eruption," Thorne says.

Thorne conducted the new study with Allen McNamara and Edward Garnero of Arizona State University, and Gunnar Jahnke and Heiner Igel of the University of Munich. The National Science Foundation funded the research.

Probing the Deep Earth with Seismic Waves

Seismic imaging uses earthquake waves to make images of Earth's interior somewhat like X-rays make CT scan pictures of the inside of the human body.

The new study assembled the largest set of data ever used to map the lower mantle in the Pacific region by using 4,221seismograms from hundreds of seismometers around the world that detected 51 deep earthquakes originating more than 60 miles under the surface.

Thorne and colleagues looked for secondary earthquake shear waves known as S-waves that travel through much of Earth, hitting the core, and then convert to primary compressional waves or P-waves as they travel across the top of the core. Then they convert back to S-waves as they re-enter the mantle and then reach seismometers. Thorne says the short bursts of P-wave energy are very sensitive to detecting variations in the rock at the core-mantle boundary.

Thorne performed 200 days of supercomputer simulations at the University of Utah's Center for High Performance Computing. He simulated hundreds of possible shapes of the continent-sized piles and state-sized blobs until he found the shapes that could best explain the seismic wave patterns that were observed.

A Look at the Core-Mantle Boundary

The new study provided an unusual look at one of the most remote parts of Earth, located about 1,800 miles beneath the surface: the boundary between the planet's molten outer core and its warm mantle rock, which has convection movement that has been compared with a conveyor belt or slowly boiling tomato soup. (Tectonic plates of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle drift atop the warmer, convecting lower mantle.)

"We did hundreds of simulations for lots of different variations of what Earth might look like at the core-mantle boundary -- the most simulations anybody has ever done to look at the core-mantle boundary structure," Thorne says

At some places where oceanic and continental tectonic plates collide -- such as offshore from the Pacific Northwest to Alaska -- the seafloor plate dives or "subducts" beneath the continent and plunges slowly into the mantle. Thorne suspects subducting plates ultimately fall deep enough to help push the piles around on Earth's core.

Whether hotspots originate at the core-mantle boundary or at shallower depths has been debated for decades.

But in the 1990s, geophysicists found evidence for the continent-size thermochemical piles beneath Africa and the Pacific. These are known technically as LLSVPs, or "large low shear velocity provinces," because seismic shear waves passing through them move 5 percent slower that through surrounding mantle rock. That suggests they have a different composition and-or temperature than the surrounding mantle.

Previous studies also have observed smaller blobs of rock, measuring perhaps 60-by-60 miles on the edges of the continent-sized masses. Seismic shear waves move as much as 45 percent slower through these blobs -- known technically as ULVZs or "ultra low velocity zones" -- indicating they may be spongy and partly molten.

Thorne says his analysis of seismic waves passing through the core-mantle boundary reveals the Pacific pile really represents two or more continent-sized piles slowly sliding atop the core and colliding so that partly molten blobs on their edges are merging into the largest such blob or ULVZ ever observed -- roughly the size of Florida.

"My study might be the first to show actual seismic evidence that the piles are moving," he says. "People who have done previous simulations have suggested this. They are sitting atop the core and getting pushed around by overlying mantle forces like subduction. They move around on the core somewhat like continental plates drift at Earth's surface."

Thorne says the merging LLSVP piles are each about 1,800 miles diameter, forming a single pile some 3,600 miles wide from east to west and stretching across Earth's core beneath an area from Australia almost to South America. Two blobs, or ULVZs, on the piles' edges merged to form a new blob that is perhaps 6 to 10 miles thick and covers an area about 500 miles long and 150 miles wide, about the area of Florida or "eight to 10 times larger than any ULVZs we observed before," Thorne says.

Because the larger piles haven't fully merged, seismic imaging shows there is a depression or "hole" between them, and the Florida-sized blob is forming there as smaller UVLZs merge in the hole.

"We are actually seeing that these piles are being shoved around," Thorne says. "If hotspots actually are generated near the core-mantle boundary, where they are being generated seems related to where these piles and ULVZs are. So if we are pushing these piles around, we also are pushing around where hotspot volcanism may occur."

Warmer rock is less dense than cooler rock. Thorne says that where the ULVZ blobs form seems to be related to where the hot rock starts convecting upward to begin the long, slow process of forming a plume that eventually causes massive eruptions.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/TYQ24Y0-xeQ/130207002002.htm

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Iran's space monkey business: A plausible explanation?

Iran admits that one of two official photos of Iran's first monkey in space depicted the wrong monkey. It showed an archive photo of one of the alternate monkeys. But one expert says Iran's still lying about one of the monkeys.

By Ali Akbar Dareini,?Associated Press / February 4, 2013

This combination of two photos obtained from the Iranian Students News Agency, ISNA, shows, left, a monkey that Iran claims rode an Iranian rocket into space, in Tehran, Iran, on Jan. 30, 2013 and right, an undated image of a monkey which had been prepared to ride an Iranian rocket into space. Confusion over which monkey rode into space raised credibility questions.

(AP Photo/ ISNA, Borna Ghasemi, Mohammad Agah)

Enlarge

One of two official packages of photos of Iran's famed simian space traveler depicted the wrong monkey, but a primate really did fly into space and return safely to Earth, a senior Iranian space official confirmed Saturday.

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The two different monkeys shown in the photos released by Iran's state media caused some international observers to wonder whether the monkey had died in space or that the launch didn't go well.

One set of pictures showed a relatively dark-haired monkey. Another showed a different monkey ? strapped in a pod ? that had light gray hair and a distinctive red mole over its right eye (image on right).

Mohammad Ebrahimi told the The Associated Press that the monkey who traveled in space was named "Pishgam," the Farsi word for pioneer. Initially, the Iranian media said "Pishgam" was the rocket that took him on a 20-minute journey into space on Monday.

Ebrahimi said one set of pictures showed an archive photo of one of the alternate monkeys. He said three to five monkeys are simultaneously tested for such a flight and two or three are chosen for the launch. Finally, the one that is best suited for the mission and isn't stressed is chosen for the voyage.

State TV pictures seen by AP show the dark-haired monkey before and after the space flight, but a package of still pictures released by authorities showed the other monkey with the mole.

"I say this with certainty that the monkey is in good health and the space flight didn't have any physical effect on Pishgam," Ebrahimi said. "Some of the photos released by one of news agencies were not related to the time of flight. They were archive photos of the monkeys being prepared for the launch."

Jonathan McDowell, a Harvard astronomer who tracks rocket launchings and space activity, also said this week's monkey space flight was real, but he had a slightly different explanation for the photo mix-up. He claimed the light gray monkey with the mole died during a failed space mission in 2011.

"The monkey with the mole was the one launched in 2011 that died. The rocket failed. It did not get into space," McDowell said. "They just mixed that footage with the footage of the 2013 successful launch."

Iran has never confirmed that a monkey died in 2011, or that there was a failed mission that year.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/er7w8Zcy_P0/Iran-s-space-monkey-business-A-plausible-explanation

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Saturday, February 2, 2013

New stroke gene discovery could lead to tailored treatments

Jan. 31, 2013 ? A study led by King's College London has identified a new genetic variant associated with stroke. By exploring the genetic variants linked with blood clotting -- a process that can lead to a stroke -- scientists have discovered a gene which is associated with large vessel and cardioembolic stroke but has no connection to small vessel stroke.

Published in the journal Annals of Neurology, the study provides a potential new target for treatment and highlights genetic differences between different types of stroke, demonstrating the need for tailored treatments.

Approximately 152,000 people in Britain have a stroke each year, costing the UK over ?8.2 billion. While there are thought to be 1.2 million stroke survivors in the UK, more than half have been left with disabilities that affect their daily lives.

A stroke occurs when the blood supply to the brain is cut off, often due to a blood clot blocking an artery that carries blood to the brain, which then leads to brain cell damage. Coagulation (blood clotting) abnormalities, particularly easy clotting of the blood, are therefore common contributing factors in the development of stroke.

Dr Frances Williams, Senior Lecturer from the Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology at King's and lead author of the paper, said: 'Previous studies have demonstrated the influence of genetic factors on the components of coagulation. The goal of this study was to extend these observations to determine if they were further associated with different types of stroke.'

The research was carried out in three stages. The first consisted of a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 2100 healthy volunteers which identified 23 independent genetic variants that were involved in coagulation. The second stage examined the 23 variants in 4200 stroke and non-stroke cases from centres across Europe (Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 2 and MORGAM collections) and found that a particular mutation on the ABO gene was significantly associated with stroke.

Stage three of the study used the MetaStroke cohort, a project of the International Stroke Genetics Consortium which comprises 8900 stroke cases recruited from centres in the Europe, USA and Australia, whose DNA has been collected and undergone GWA scan. It was confirmed that a variant in the ABO blood type gene was associated with stroke, a finding specific to large vessel and cardioembolic stroke.

Dr Williams said: 'The discovery of the association between this genetic variant and stroke identifies a new target for potential treatments, which could help to reduce the risk of stroke in the future. It is also significant that no association was found with small vessel disease, as this suggests that stroke subtypes involve different genetic mechanisms which emphasises the need for individualised treatment.'

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/CUVQUtsy4uE/130201090853.htm

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