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- Hope for multiple sclerosis sufferers in new study
-
- The Associated Press
- DETROIT (October 27, 1997 6:52 p.m. EST) -- In a development that could
- help lead to a treatment for multiple sclerosis, laboratory experiments
- have found that a certain hormone stimulates the growth of the
- protective sheath around nerves.
-
- In degenerative diseases like MS and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or
- Lou Gehrig's disease, damage around the sheath stops signals from being
- transmitted between the brain and nerves.
-
- An insulin-like growth hormone called IGF-I has been found to regrow
- these sheaths, University of Michigan scientists reported Monday.
-
- Though several growth factors currently are being studied, IGF-I appears
- to be most effective at inducing the growth of the sheath and preventing
- neural cell death, according to Michigan researcher Hsin-Lin Cheng.
-
- The Michigan scientists, who presented the first results from their
- experiments with IGF-I at a confererence in New Orleans on Monday,
- removed nerve cells called dorsal root neurons from newborn rats and
- grew them in a dish.
-
- They found that if they simulated the conditions of diabetes in the
- dish, then applied the IGF-I, it helped the nerves remain normal,
- Feldman said.
-
- "This may provide a new treatment for a whole group of diseases we
- couldn't treat before," said Eva Feldman, associate professor of
- neurology at the University of Michigan Medical School.
-
- Tests with the hormone, which is produced in the liver and is present in
- blood serum, are under way on about 40 people with neuropathy at the
- Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
-
- Dr. Stephen Reingold of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in New
- York, was cautious about the results.
-
- "They certainly are jumping the gun by saying that it could help with
- multiple sclerosis. IGF-I has never been studied with MS," he said.
-
- By RANDI GOLDBERG, The Associated Press
-
- ************************************************
-
- Surgical nerve injury is just as far from degenerative nerve disease as
- the human nervous system is from that of the laboratory rat.
-
- This kind of research has been going on for decades and hasn't
- benefitted a single sufferer from multiple sclerosis or other nerve
- disease.
-
- Such trifling details, of course, wouldn't dampen the enthusiasm of a
- researcher, shooting for the moon, whose main skill is knowing how to
- cut the spinal chords of little white rats.
-
- Funding is the name of the game and what better way to secure it than
- raising false hopes and feeding hype to the media?
-
- Andy
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 00:04:04
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: I'm back (Off topic)
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028000404.3de7537a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Actually, I haven't been anywhere, but my e-mail server took a vacation
- over the weekend.
-
- Although I think I've now receieved most of the news items posted since
- Friday - I just downloaded 100 + messages, would anyone who e-mailed me
- privately between Friday evening and Monday morning, and received an error
- message please try again.
-
- Thanks,
-
- David
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 01:31:38
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Burnaby council hears of raccoon torture
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028013138.0c3753b6@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Burnaby council hears of raccoon torture
- By David Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- BURNABY, B.C. - Councillors at Burnaby City Hall Monday night heard a
- presentation from resident Sharon Capadouca regarding the setting of
- leg-hold traps in her neighbourhood.
-
- Capadouca told councillors how the problem started last year, and then
- occured again this August.
-
- Capadouca pleaded for council to obtain the power to pass a bylaw banning
- these types of activities. She also pleaded for a facility to be built
- where such animals could be housed, instead of them being killed, and said
- she wishes the sick person doing this could be caught.
-
- She reported that posters placed by both herself and council workers ahd
- been torn in some areas, but that council would replace them as soon as
- they became aware. They had warned her not to replace the posters herself,
- as staff had concerns about her safety.
-
- Cllr. Doug Evans commended Capadouca for her work.
-
- Cllr. Celeste Redman expressed surprise that leg-hold traps were not
- banned. Capadouca replied that some 10 years ago, several municipalities
- were ready to ban traps and snares, but were told by the provincial
- Ministry of Environment's Wildlife Protection Branch that they could not do
- so, as this was their area. Since then, nothing has happened. "They must be
- very busy," Capasouca said.
-
- Asked if she was surprised that the SPCA became involved, when their
- mandate only covered domestic animals, Capadouca said she wasn't. "This was
- a situation they could not turn their back on," she said.
-
- Burnaby SPCA shelter superintendent Carson Wilson said the SPCA was
- officially involved because one of the animals involved was a cat. He
- added, however, that: "I run the shelter from the heart, not by only
- according to regulations."
-
- Capadouca, responding to articles which appeared in the local papers
- stating she had heard the cat howling for three days, said she had tried to
- locate the cat immediately, but was unable to locate it. She added that the
- cat cried out every morning between 8:00 and 9:00 AM, which she felt was
- the time that someone had approached the trap to check what had been caught.
-
- She felt that there were more animals caught in the trap, but was only
- aware of the seven raccoons and one cat which had ended up in her backyard.
-
- Council passed a motion asking staff to investigate what needed to be done
- to permit them to pass a bylaw banning the use of traps and snares in the
- city. (Currently, legislation only bans the setting of traps within 200
- metres of a dwelling.)
-
- [ Capadouca later showed me some photographs she had taken of the raccoons
- she had rescued. To say they were graphic is somewhat of an understatement.]
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 01:14:16
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Council expands spay rebate scheme
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028011416.0c37a0b2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Council expands spay rebate scheme
- By David Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- BURNABY, B.C. - City council passed a motion Monday night expanding their
- two-year-old spay rebate scheme.
-
- Originally introduced during a period when council was under pressure from
- a coalition of animal-rights and -welfare groups and individuals to pass a
- spay/neuter bylaw, the scheme gave a rebate of $10 for keepers of cats who
- reside in Burnaby and who had their animals spayed.
-
- The scheme is now open to both spays and neuters, and has increased to $15.
-
- Asked by Cllr. Doreen Lawson whether there were any plans to introduce any
- further measures such as registration, the city lawyer stated this was not
- being considered in the forseeable future.
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 01:28:40
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Local lake home to abundance of wildlife
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028012840.0c0f2d7a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Local lake home to abundance of wildlife
-
- By David Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- BURNABY, B.C. - Councillors heard Monday night that Burnaby Lake, located
- in the city's central valley area, was home to a wide variety of wildlife.
-
- There are 112 species of birds, according to a study by B.C. Wildlife
- Watch. The report also
- stated the lake was home to American beaver, muskrat, Douglas squirrel,
- Northern flying squirrel, bullfrogs, Pacific tree frogs and several
- butterflies including Milbert's toroiseshell, Western tiger swallowtail,
- mourning cloak cabbage white and woodland skipper.
-
- Council's Environmental and Waste Management Committee is currently
- studying the feasibilty of dredging the lake. A report on the environmental
- impact of such a scheme was presented to full council Monday night.
-
- The BC WIldlife Watch report was funded by the Greater Vancouver Regional
- District and the Burnaby Firefighters Charitable Society. Mayor Doug
- Drummond commented that it was unusual for the "Burns Fund" to be involved
- in environmental issues.
-
- Cllr. Doreen Lawson replied that it was, as far as she knew, the first time
- this had happened.
-
- Lawson told me later that she had approached the Firefighters and they had
- only been too glad to help. She hopes they will fund similar measures in
- the future.
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 01:49:55
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Brain transplant makes chicken think it is a quail
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028014955.0c0f5890@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, October 28th, 1997
-
- Brain transplant makes chicken think it is a quail
- By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
-
- A CHICKEN that thinks it is a quail has been created by a transplant of
- brain tissue from one species to the other, the world's largest
- neurosciences meeting was told yesterday.
-
- The creation of this mixed-species animal or "chimera" by transplanting an
- entire region of a quail's brain into a chicken embryo is seen as a
- milestone in efforts to understand the brain. Earlier experiments by the
- Neurosciences Unit in La Jolla, California, made a chicken sing and bob its
- head like a quail.
-
- "This is the first time a perceptual difference has been transplanted
- between any two organisms," Dr Kevin Long told the annual meeting of the
- Society for Neuroscience in New Orleans. He said the experiment could help
- scientists work out how minor differences in the physical structure of the
- brain of different species could lead to striking differences in behaviour.
-
- Dr Long said there may be parallels in the human brain to the mechanisms
- being studied through the creation of the bird chimera. "These mechanisms
- in humans may enable the foetus to differentially attend to a human voice
- (presumably the mother's, although it doesn't have to be) which can be
- heard during late foetal development," said Dr Long. The work may also
- yield ideas on how to treat human nervous disorders, but Dr Long stressed
- that, for technical and ethical reasons, "chimeric work on humans would
- never be done".
-
- Most species are born with some behaviours that need no learning. For
- example, young birds, which are able to walk and feed themselves within
- hours of hatching, are especially responsive to sounds from their own species.
-
- "We wanted to determine the underlying developmental difference which
- allows a chick to prefer a mother hen call over a mother quail call," said
- Dr Long, who conducted the work with Dr Evan Balaban. By transplanting the
- anterior midbrain from quail to chick, the resulting "chimeric" chick
- responded preferentially to the quail mother. "Transplants of other,
- neighbouring regions from quail into chick did not produce this effect," he
- said.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 02:00:21
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Food bugs blamed on EU laws
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028020021.0c37912c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, October 28th, 1997
-
- Food bugs blamed on EU laws
- By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent
-
- TOUGHER EU hygiene regulations that have forced the closure of hundreds of
- abattoirs may inadvertently have led to rising levels of food poisoning.
-
- A report by the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology says that
- the number of abattoirs fell from 1,385 in 1975 to 384 last year. Due to
- this reduction, animals have to travel further from farm to slaughterhouse.
- The extra travelling leads to increased stress on the animals and to more
- animals having soiled themselves by the time they arrive at the abattoir.
-
- The report says that meat from a soiled animal can have up to 1,000 times
- more bacteria than meat from a clean animal. It also says food poisoning
- rose five-fold in the last 15 years with nearly 100,000 people affected and
- up to 200 deaths last year. It blames three main bacteria:
-
- - Campylobacter, the most common cause of individual cases of food
- poisoning, which affected 47,000 people last year.
-
- - Salmonella, with up to 35,000 cases a year. Poultry, eggs, red meat and
- meat products are most commonly implicated. Between 33-41 per cent of
- chickens on retail sale are said to be contaminated.
-
- - E coli, virtually unknown before the 1980s, affected 1,100 people last
- year and causes more serious illness than the other two bacteria.
-
- An analysis of the source of food poisoning shows that 44 per cent of
- incidents arise from meals in restaurants, hotels or other catering
- establishments, 17 per cent from home catering and 6 per cent from shops.
- Prisons, schools and other sources accounted for the remaining cases.
-
- Factors to blame for the increase include the move towards once-a-week
- shopping, which causes food to be stored for longer, more eating out and
- one meal being "stretched" over several days by people living alone.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 01:59:46
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [EU] Online debate on consumer policy
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028015946.0c0fc020@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, October 28th, 1997
-
- The European Commission is hosting an online debate on Consumer Policy in
- the European Union on November 5 1997 from 1700h to 1900h (GMT +1). Emma
- Bonino, Commissioner of the European Union will discuss the following issues:
-
- i/BSE - the facts
- ii/Salmonella, E coli and other viral diseases - what is Europe doing about
- food controls?
- iii/What consequences will the Euro have for the consumer and how can the
- consumer make use of the single market?
- iv/Are consumers over or under-informed?
-
- Ms Bonino will converse in Italian, French, English, German and Spanish.
- All questions and answers will then be translated into English.
-
- Questions can be put to Ms Bonino from 27 October at the following e-mail
- address: emma.bonino@dg24.cec.be. The online debate can be located at
- irc://chat.europa.eu.int.
-
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 02:10:44
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Butcher cleared over party meat
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028021044.0c0f8210@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, October 28th, 1997
-
- Butcher cleared over party meat
- By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent
-
- THE Scottish butcher whose shop was linked to the world's worst E coli food
- poisoning epidemic, which killed 20 people, was found not guilty yesterday
- of supplying contaminated meat to a birthday party.
-
- John Barr, 52, was cleared on the sixth day of his trial at Hamilton
- Sheriff Court when the case against him collapsed at the end of the
- prosecution evidence. He denied culpably, wilfully and recklessly supplying
- 300 slices of cooked meat for an 18th birthday party, the day after he had
- been ordered by environmental health officers to stop trading.
-
- Several people at the party were said to have become ill with E coli food
- poisoning after eating cold ham, turkey and beef from his shop in Wishaw,
- Lanarkshire. The court's decision was greeted by cheers of delight from
- members of Mr Barr's family.
-
- However, Frank Roy, the Labour MP for Wishaw, claimed that the handling of
- the case by North Lanarkshire Council and the procurator fiscal's office
- had been "shambolic".
-
- Fay MacFarlane, 50, who organised the party for the birthday of her
- daughter Lauren, said her family had been through a long ordeal and she was
- shocked by the outcome.
-
- She said: "We always expected justice to be done so we have got to stand by
- the law. But I honestly feel very let down by all the agencies involved."
-
- Menzies Campbell, the legal affairs spokesman for the Scottish Liberal
- Democrats, called for an inquiry into the outcome of the trial. After
- hearing an hour of legal argument, Sheriff Alexander Macpherson told the
- jury that he supported a submission from defence solicitor George Moore
- that there was no case to answer.
-
- He said the Crown had failed to corroborate its case by not providing a
- second strand of evidence. The first strand centred on a phone call in
- which Mr Barr allegedly assured the family that the meat was safe.
-
- The court was told last week that the butcher had supplied three bags of
- cold meat to a member of the MacFarlane family on November 23 last year,
- the day after he had given an undertaking to environmental health officials
- not to sell cooked meat. The master butcher, whose shop was closed for
- three months after the outbreak, was hugged by members of his
- family as the left the court but refused to comment.
-
- The E coli outbreak began after pensioners became ill at a church lunch,
- and affected more than 400 people in central Scotland. Mr Barr, from
- Overtown, Wishaw, together with his wife Elaine and their son Martin, will
- face charges over alleged contraventions of food safety laws in a second
- court case early in the New Year. A fatal accident inquiry into the
- epidemic is also expected in January.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- [For those not familiar with the Scotish legal system, the Sherrif's court
- is the equivalent of a District Court in the U.S., a Crown Court in the UK
- or a Provincial Court in Canada. The Procurator Fiscal is a combination of
- a DA or Public Prosecutor and a Coroner.]
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 02:17:17
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Anti-hunt MP offers concession to farmers
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028021717.207f46ae@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, October 27th, 1997
-
- Anti-hunt MP offers concession to farmers
- By Joy Copley, Political Staff
-
- THE Bill to outlaw hunting is to be watered down to allow dogs to be used
- to "flush out" foxes in a surprise concession to farmers.
-
- Mike Foster, Labour MP for Worcester, is preparing to give ground to the
- country lobby in a move designed to put critics of his private member's
- Bill on the spot. He is examining ways of re-writing the Wild Mammal
- (Hunting with Dogs) Bill whose main purpose is to outlaw hunting with hounds.
-
- Mr Foster argues that it is the brutal tearing apart of the fox after a
- chase, which is classified as sport, that he wants to end. He has been
- undertaking a consultation process on his Bill which included accepting an
- invitation to watch the Worcestershire Hunt last week. Farmers have said
- that in some cases where foxes are a persistent pest, dogs are the best way
- of locating the animal and forcing it into the open so that it can be shot.
-
- Mr Foster said: "This is a major difference between the pursuit of the fox
- and the kill being a sporting activity and it would be a working, practical
- exercise. I recognise that some farmers have concerns about foxes preying
- on, for example, lambs." The numbers of dogs used in such an exercise is
- likely to be cut from 40 to 12.
-
- Mr Foster's private member's Bill is expected to receive a huge majority
- when it comes up for second reading on Nov 28. But the Government is still
- looking for ways to kill off the Bill because it fears that persistent
- objections and amendments in the Lords will cause chaos and threaten
- implementation of key pieces of legislation in Labour's manifesto.
-
- Janet George, of the British Field Sports Society, said a decision to allow
- "gun packs", which operate mostly in Scotland and Wales, was "a nonsense".
- She said: "He is basically saying it is OK to kill foxes so long as you are
- not wearing a red coat. It is hardly less cruel to have a fox shot."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997 02:26:26
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] There's new life in Old Father Thames
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971028022626.207f468a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, October 27th, 1997
-
- There's new life in Old Father Thames
- By Charles Clover
-
- COMMERCIALLY viable quantities of edible fish, including whitebait, shrimp,
- prawn and smelt, are being found in the Thames at the heart of London for
- the first time since the 17th Century, according to the Environment Agency.
-
- The river, now the cleanest metropolitan waterway in Europe and possibly
- the world, has supported annual migrations of Atlantic salmon since the
- Seventies.
-
- According to the agency, the tidal reaches have now, become an important
- nursery for bass, flounder and smelt, a relation of the salmon which
- supported the biggest commercial fishery on the Thames in the late 1600s.
-
- Whitebait is back at Greenwich, though not yet in the quantities present in
- the 18th Century when Thames whitebait became a fashionable food.
-
- The lower reaches of the Thames estuary now support the most important
- nursery for Dover sole in the country, replenishing fish stocks across the
- North Sea.
-
- Steve Colclough, the agency's Thames area fisheries officer, said
- yesterday: "The focus has always been on the salmon, but other recoveries
- have gone on without a widespread perception that they have happened, even
- within my own agency."
-
- There are now 115 recorded species of fish in the river, two more than five
- years ago, and in much greater numbers, according to the agency's routine
- monitoring which nets the river throughout the year at seven sites between
- Richmond and Gravesend.
-
- Mr Colclough also says the river might be seeing the first stages of a
- recovery of the twaite shad, an extremely rare migrating herring which gave
- its name to parts of the Port of London where it was once fished. Adult
- shad are caught in the lower estuary each year.
-
- The presence of the shad, found only in the cleanest rivers such as the Usk
- in Wales, would allow the river to be designated as one of the most
- important wildlife reserves in Europe under the EU habitats directive. Mr
- Colclough said that the polluted image of the Thames
- was extraordinarily persistent though the river had been cleaned up
- steadily since the Fifties, when a major programme of building sewage works
- began.
-
- He said: "When members of the public gaze from Westminster Bridge, the
- water looks muddy and the perception is that there is still a lot of
- pollution there. In fact the muddy nature of the river is a natural
- estuarial process. It was doing that 3,000 years ago. It's a major
- educational challenge for us. If the public doesn't know about what's going
- on in the river, it does not value it and it makes it harder for us to
- protect it."
-
- The naturally murky waters below Westminster Bridge hide huge, dynamic
- movements of fish and fry all year round. Some 30 fish species, as well as
- commercially viable quantities of shrimp and prawn, now migrate up and down
- the Thames, within feet of the Palace of Westminster.
-
- The year begins with the smelt, a cousin of the salmon notable for its
- needle-like teeth and cucumber smell when it is fresh from the water, which
- runs up the river in March to spawn below the tide mark at Wandsworth. Dace
- move down the river to spawn there too and the
- fry of both species migrate up to Teddington.
-
- After spawning, smelts drop back to where they live for most of the year,
- below Gravesend. Because the fish spends its entire life cycle in the
- river, and shares with salmon and trout an extreme sensitivity to
- pollution, the agency now monitors it explicitly as a pollution indicator.
-
- In May, billions of flounder fry move up to the fresher water to mature,
- passing though the shallows at Putney in such numbers that they change the
- colour of the tideway grey.
-
- The tiny flounder fry use the tides to ascend the river, allowing
- themselves to be carried on the flood tide and sticking to the stones on
- the bottom on the ebb. Around the same time, the first elvers ascend the
- river. By late June and early July, juvenile sea bass ascend the river in
- waves, as high as fresh water at Putney. Dover sole come up as far as
- Gravesend from the outer estuary. In June and July, too, common gobies run
- the river. In summer months, with low freshwater flows, prawns and brown
- shrimps can be found as high up the river as
- Isleworth.
-
- In September and August, month-old grey mullet come up as far as Chiswick.
- All the fry move back past the Commons in late autumn, when they have grown
- into juvenile fish.
-
- Though many of the fish species are commercially viable and entirely
- palatable, the agency has taken the radical approach of banning commercial
- exploitation of the tidal Thames to protect it as a nursery area and a
- wildlife resource since it took control of freshwater and
- sea fisheries in 1995.
-
- Though pollution has cleared up significantly, the agency says that the
- recovery may still have some years to go. And it is constantly under threat
-