Archive for September, 2013

Meet the Deadliest Venomous Animals in the World

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 26, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Meet the Deadliest Venomous Animals in the World

JOSEPH BENNINGTON-CASTRO 

Venom can turn a seemingly weak and tiny creature into a feared killer. But what, exactly, does it mean for an animal to be “venomous”? And which venomous species are the most deadly to humans? Here’s what we know.

Poisonous ≠ Venomous

Though the two terms are often used interchangeably, “venom” is not the same thing as “poison.” The difference between the two has to do with the mode of toxin delivery. Let’s start with poisonous animals.

Poisons are absorbed through the skin or ingested. That is, a poisonous animal can only deliver its toxic chemicals to you if you eat it or touch it.

The poison dart frog — which actually isn’t a single species, but a group of frogs in the family Dendrobatidae — is one of most poisonous animals in the world. One particularly deadly species is called the golden dart frog (Phyllobates terribilis). It has toxins so potent that as little as 2 micrograms of the stuff can supposedly kill an adult human. Interestingly, this group of amphibians isn’t innately poisonous. If you take them out of their natural habitat, they lose their toxicity, because they actually generate their poison from the insects they eat (those insects, in turn, get their poisons from plants).

Meet the Deadliest Venomous Animals in the World

Another notable poisonous animal is thepuffer fish (fugu). Considered a delicacy in Japan, this fish has organs laced with neurotoxins (chemicals that attack the nervous system) that can kill you. Of course, many other poisonous animals exist, including some birds, such as New Guinea’s Pitohui birds.

Venomous animals, by contrast, have ways of injecting their toxins directly into another animal, such as by biting, stinging or stabbing. A recent review on the evolution of venoms states:

Venom can be broadly defined as “a secretion, produced in a specialised gland in one animal and delivered to a target animal through the infliction of a wound ‘regardless of how tiny it could be,’ which contains molecules that disrupt normal physiological or biochemical processes so as to facilitate feeding or defense by the producing animal.”

The authors stress that venoms serve multiple functions in the animal kingdom, depending on the specific species. Venom is most often a foraging adaptation that helps animals — snakes, scorpions, spiders, centipedes, jellies and more —immobilize, digest or otherwise kill their prey. In other cases, venom is used for defense, as seen in some lizards, fish and insects.

The platypus, on the other hand, may have a unique use for its paralyzing venom: Toassert dominance over rival males during the breeding season (only males produce the venom).

How Does Venom Kill?

So what exactly is venom made of? Back to the review from above:

Most animal venoms are highly complex cocktails of bioactive compounds. Venoms typically comprise a mixture of protein and peptides (commonly referred to as toxins), salts and organic components, such as amino acids and neurotransmitters. The proteinaceous components are usually the most abundant.

Generally, defensive venoms are very “streamlined” and primarily function to immediately bring about intense pain in a localized area (think: bee stings). Predatory venoms are complex and have a wide range of effects on the body.

In any case, venoms are often discussed in terms of the type of toxins they contain. These toxins can generally be placed into a couple of broad categories: neurotoxins and hemotoxins.

As mentioned above, neurotoxins attack cells throughout the nervous system, causing a number of issues, including paralysis, muscle spasms and respiratory arrest. Hemotoxins — a misnomer, really — damage the blood cells and organs. They can destroy red blood cells (which deliver oxygen throughout the body), cause inflammation, disrupt normal blood clotting and even spark organ failure.

Toxins can be broken down further into categories based on their specific targets, or the animals that produce them.

Meet the Deadliest Venomous Animals in the World

Cobra venom, for example, contains a cardiotoxin (attacks the heart) that messes with heart contractions, leading to cardiac arrest. Some snakes, particularly rattlesnakes, producemyotoxins that cause muscular necrosis, resulting in pain, convulsions and other symptoms. The venom of widow spiders (Latrodectus) contains α-Latrotoxin, which, among other things, interferes with the nerve signals that control muscles — the neurotoxin may cause tremors, nausea and elevated blood pressure.

Importantly, venoms can contain a number of different toxins and each toxin may affect several different systems in the body. For these reasons, experts have long argued that people get away from the habit of labeling venom based on a specific type of toxin. In the U.S., for example, rattlesnakes are sometimes said to have “hemotoxic venom”; however, the venom of the Mojave rattlesnake (Crotalus scutulatus) also contains a potent neurotoxin, Mojave toxin.

What’s the Most Toxic Venom?

Determining which venomous species is the most deadly to humans isn’t easy.

Physiological ecologist Marshall McCue dissected this question in a recent letter in the Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins including Tropical Diseases. He notes that if you want to know which snake species is the most deadly to humans, you have to specify if you’re asking which snake causes the most deaths or which snake is most likely to have a lethal bite — both questions have their own issues.

Human population density and social habits will naturally affect how many people a certain venomous species will kill, as will an animal’s propensity to actually attack someone (some species are more aggressive than others). Additionally, the availability of emergency health care — and antivenom — will partially determine how likely a person will die from the venom.

To measure the toxicity of venom, scientists often rely on the Lethal Dose 50% (LD50) test, which specifies the dose necessary to kill half of a test population. The test is administered to laboratory animals, such as mice, rats and guinea pigs, and the results are sometimes extrapolated to humans. But there may be inherent problems with this methodology.

These laboratory animals, which likely have been inbred for generations, are not necessarily representative of wild animals. What’s more, there are physiological differences between the test animals and humans — what’s deadly to the animals may not be as deadly to humans (and vice versa). A prime example of this is chocolate, which is toxic to dogs, parrots and other animals (they cannot metabolize the chemical theobromine), but is fine — and delicious — for humans. McCue adds:

The mode of venom administration (i.e., intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular, or intraperitoneal) has a tremendous influence on the toxic action of venoms, and minimum lethal dosages may need to be several hundred times greater when delivered subcutaneously than those administered intravenously. Therefore, any extrapolations from contrived laboratory situations must be interpreted with caution.

The Species With the Deadliest Bites

Despite the difficulties in ranking how dangerous venomous animals are to humans, various studies, reports and organizations have identified certain species that may be a step above the rest of their kind.

The inland taipan (Oxyuranus microlepidotus) is often reported to have the most deadly snake venom — made up of neurotoxins, procoagulants (that disrupt blood clotting) and myotoxins — in the world. The LD50 (subcutaneous, mouse) of the Australian native is 0.025 mg/kg. This means that 0.025 milligrams of the venom for every kilogram body weight of a mouse causes the death of 50 percent of the test group (when administered subcutaneously). A single drop of the inland taipan’s venom can supposedly kill 250,000 mice or 100 adult men, though human bites are quite rare given the snake’s shyness (and, fortunately, an antivenom is available).

There are a few candidates for the title of the world’s deadliest venomous spider. A 2009 study claims that the Australian “funnel-web” spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche) are the “spiders most dangerous for humans” — their venom causes local and systemic effects, including hypertension, arrhythmia, coma and death. The venom of male spiders — containing a neurotoxin that only affects primates — can kill a small child within 15 minutes, though there have been no reported deaths since the development of the antivenom in 1981.

The Guinness Book of World Records instead recognizes the Brazilian wandering spider (Phoneutria) as the most venomous spider — just 0.006 mg of the venom can kill a mouse, according to the records. (A 2002 study notes that the LD50 of a female Phoneutria nigriventerwith an egg sac is 0.63 mg/kg).

The venoms of scorpions are often harmless to humans, but some can actually kill us. Some experts consider the Indian Red Scorpion to be the most lethal of all scorpions. While not likely to kill healthy adults, the scorpions can prove deadly to children and the elderly — their venom consists of a potent toxin that causes pulmonary edema (fluid accumulation in the lungs). But according to Guinness, the most venomous scorpion is the Tunisian fat-tailed scorpion(Androctonus australis), which is reportedly responsible for 90 percent of deaths from scorpion stings in North Africa.

Surprisingly, octopuses can also be venomous. In fact, a 2009 study suggests that all octopuses are venomous. The tiny blue-ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena maculosa) is widely considered to be the most deadly of all octopuses, as its bite injects venom that can kill an adult human in minutes (and there is no antivenom). The cephalopod’s tetrodotoxin, the same neurotoxin infugu and poison dart frogs, causes paralysis and the cessation of breathing. But don’t blame the octopus for its venom — blame the bacteria in its saliva.

Meet the Deadliest Venomous Animals in the World

Other animals of note: the stonefish (Synanceja horrida) is often regarded as themost dangerous venomous fish in the world, with spines that can cause various problems, including edema, respiratory distress and convulsions, which can ultimately kill a person within six hours. A number of cone snail species — Conus textile and C. geographus, in particular — shoot a venom-infused harpoon that can paralyze and kill people. And the Australian box jellyfish (Chironex fleckeri) is the most venomous marine animal, able to cause paralysis, cardiac arrest and even death within just a few minutes after stinging someone, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Be safe out there!

Top image via Angell Williams/Flickr. Inset images via Pam Fuller/USGS,INeedCoffee.com/Flickrwalknboston/Flickr.

 

7.7 magnitude quake in Pakistan just created a new island

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 26, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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7.7 magnitude quake in Pakistan just created a new island

ANNALEE NEWITZ  http://io9.com/7-7-magnitude-quake-in-pakistan-just-created-a-new-isla-1377964003


A massive, 7.7 magnitude quake struck south-central Pakistan on Tuesday afternoon local time. The USGS warns that there will high casualties and economic losses, requiring international response. Seismologists have also confirmed that the quake raised a new island, about 30-40 feet high, off the coast.

The island is about half a mile off the coast of Gwadar, in the Arabian Sea. Already,reports the International Herald Tribune, crowds have gathered to see the mountainous, rocky island. Some are claiming it is 100 feet long. [UPDATE: Geologists have confirmed the island wascreated by a mud volcano triggered by the earthquake.]

7.7 magnitude quake in Pakistan just created a new island

Image via @Senator_Baloch

It’s not unusual for earthquakes of this magnitude to change the coastline, or even deform the shape of the planet. In 2010, an 8.8 magnitude quake in Chile created new coastlines in that country and changed the shape of the Earth enough to shorten our days by a fraction of a second.

7.7 magnitude quake in Pakistan just created a new island

Today in Pakistan, estimates of damages are still coming in, and it may be days before we know the full extent of the losses because the quake struck in many regions that are remote.

The nearest city to the epicenter is Arawan, where damage is said to be extensive, with houses collapsing and people trapped inside. So far, death tolls hover around 40, but that number is expected to rise as emergency services reach more of the affected areas. The populations near the epicenter may be sparse, but according to the USGS, the problem is that they are extremely vulnerable. Most homes are made of materials like unreinforced brick masonry, which crumble quickly in quakes and can be deadly.

According to the BBC:

Many of the casualties were from Labach, on the northern outskirts of Awaran town. There are reports of some people trapped under the rubble of collapsed houses.

Abdul Qadoos, deputy speaker of the Balochistan assembly, told Reuters news agency that at least 30% of houses in Awaran district had collapsed.

Karachi is another nearby city, with millions of residents, whose homes may have also been affected. People as far away as New Delhi report feeling the quake.

The USGS also offers a quick scientific summary of the nature of the quake:

The September 24, 2013 M7.7 earthquake in south-central Pakistan occurred as the result of oblique-strike-slip type motion at shallow crustal depths. The location and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with rupture within the Eurasia plate above the Makran subduction zone. The event occurred within the transition zone between northward subduction of the Arabia plate beneath the Eurasia plate and northward collision of the India plate with the Eurasia plate. The epicenter of the event is 69km north of Awaran, Pakistan, and 270km north of Karachi, Pakistan (population 11.6 million).

Right now, as emergency groups gather more information, the best thing we can do is wait to find out more. But it’s very likely that humanitarian aid will be needed, and as soon as we know more we’ll offer an update.

You can get quick details on the quake on the USGS page.

Amazing Cat’s Paw Nebula View Captured by New Space Camera (Photo)

Posted in THE UNIVERSE & SPACE SCIENCE with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Amazing Cat’s Paw Nebula View Captured by New Space Camera (Photo)

By Miriam Kramer, Staff Writer   |   September 25, 2013 06:00am ET
This image represents some of the first data collected by the ArTeMiS camera on the European Southern Observatory's APEX telescope. Image released Sept. 25, 2013.
This image represents some of the first data collected by the ArTeMiS camera on the European Southern Observatory’s APEX telescope. Image released Sept. 25, 2013.
Credit: ArTeMiS team/Ph. André, M. Hennemann, V. Revéret et al./ESO/J. Emerson/VISTA Acknowledgment: Cambridge Astronomical Survey Unit 

A new camera on a telescope in the Southern Hemisphere has captured a stunning image of the Cat’s Paw Nebula, offering a colorful and detailed view of a star-forming region of the Milky Way.

Released by the European Southern Observatory, the new photo of the Cat’s Paw Nebula located about 5,500 light-years from Earth is one of the first shots taken by ArTeMiS — a submillimeter-wavelength camera added to APEX, the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment in Chile. ESO officials also produced a video fly-through of the incredible Cat’s Paw Nebula view using the new camera observations.

The ArTeMiS cryostat installed in the APEX telescope on the Chajnantor Plateau in northern Chile. ArTeMiS is a new wide-field submillimetre-wavelength camera that will be a major addition to APEX’s suite of instruments and further increase the depth and detail that can be observed. Image released Sept. 25, 2013.
Credit: ArTeMiS team/ESO

The new instrument is expected to help scientists create more detailed wide-field maps of the sky in a shorter amount of time, ESO officials said in an image description. But the installation of the new hardware was no cakewalk. [Gallery: Strange Nebula Shapes, What Do You See?]

“The commissioning team that installed ArTeMiS had to battle against extreme weather conditions to complete the task,” ESO officials wrote. “Very heavy snow on the Chajnantor Plateau had almost buried the APEX control building.”

The staff had to use an improvised road in order to transport and install the instrument in its proper location.

The research team also battled the weather when it came time to observe using ArTeMiS. The light observed by the camera is absorbed by water vapor in Earth’s atmosphere, according to ESO officials. Because of this, the scientists had to wait for dry weather before testing out the instrument.

The ArTeMiS space camera team shovel snow to get into the APEX control building on the Chajnantor Plateau in northern Chile. In the foreground is Laurent Clerc, in the middle are Jérôme Martignac (left) and François Visticot (right), and in the background by the door to the building is Yannick Le Pennec.
Credit: ArTeMiS team/ESO 

Since its initial commissioning, researchers have used ArTeMiS for scientific projects including one that produced the new photo of the Cat’s Paw Nebula. “This new ArTeMiS image is significantly better than earlier APEX images of the same region,” according to ESO officials.

The Cat’s Paw Nebula plays host to tens of thousands of new stars and houses about 200,000 suns’ worth of material needed for star formation.

A study released earlier this year suggests that the nebula might be going through a stellar “baby boom.” Stars in the Cat’s Paw Nebula are forming at a more rapid pace than the Orion Nebula, making it one of the most productive star forming regions in the galaxy. The new research found that the nebula could be going through a period of rapid star formation.

“It might resemble a ‘mini-starburst,’ similar to a scaled-down version of the spectacular bursts sometimes seen in other galaxies,” the study’s lead author Sarah Willis of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and Iowa State University said in a statement released in June.

The European Southern Observatory is an intergovernmental astronomy organization supported by 15 different countries in Europe and South America.

Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramer and Google+. Follow us@SpacedotcomFacebook and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

 

Bizarre Sighting: Cane Toad Eating a Bat?

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Bizarre Sighting: Cane Toad Eating a Bat?

By Douglas Main, Staff Writer   |   September 24, 2013 05:52pm ET
A cane toad with a bat in its mouth in Peru's Cerros de Amotape National Park.
A cane toad with a bat in its mouth in Peru’s Cerros de Amotape National Park.
Credit: Yufani Olaya via Rainforest Expeditions

What’s the matter, bat got your tongue?

A park ranger in northwest Peru got a surprise when he encountered a toad with something in its mouth. This something happened to be a bat.

Ranger Yufani Olaya snapped a photograph of the bat-chomping toadin the Cerros de Amotape National Park, where he works. Olaya shared the photograph with biologist Phil Torres, who works at the Tambopata Research Center, a scientific outpost in the Peruvian Amazon. This is probably the first photographed record of a cane toad eating a bat, Torres said.

The bat in the photograph is likely a type of free-tailed bat, perhaps a velvety free-tailed bat (Molossus molossus), which is common throughout northern South America. In another instance, a different type of toad was observed eating a free-tailed bat in Brazil, Torres told LiveScience. [5 Strange Sightings in the Peruvian Amazon]

Cane toads are opportunistic feeders and well known for being voracious eaters — that trait has allowed them to be successful as an invasive species in places like Australia, Torres said. But it’s a rare occurrence to find one eating a bat, which usually flies far from the ground where the amphibians hop.

In this case, the bat appeared literally to fly into the toad’s mouth, Torres wrote on his blog. As Olaya told him, “out of nowhere the bat just flew directly into the mouth of the toad, which almost seemed to be sitting with its mouth wide open.” The bat was likely foraging for insects close to the ground, Torres said, and the toad got lucky. Sorta.

Toads have been known to eat bats, although usually only when they happen upon one opportunistically, said Rachel Page, a researcher at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama who wasn’t involved in the present finding. However, some toads and frogs will systematically wait outside of caves and catch bats as they emerge from the roost at night, Page wrote to LiveScience in an email. This has been seen in Australia, she said.

However, bats are not always the victims in this animal-eat-animal world — certain species, like fringe-lipped bats (Trachops cirrhosus), have been known to eat toads.

“My guess is that it is much more common the other way around – lots of bats will hunt frogs, going for the rustling sounds the frogs make as they move through the leaf litter, and some bats [like fringe-lipped bats] even go for the calls male frogs make to attract mates,” Page said.

The story has a happy ending, at least for the bat. After failing to swallow the bat whole, the toad gave up, and the bat — still alive — flew away, Torres said.

Email Douglas Main or follow him on Twitter or Google+Follow us@livescienceFacebook or Google+. Article originally on LiveScience.

 

Gallery: Sun Gods and Goddesses

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Gallery: Sun Gods and Goddesses

http://www.livescience.com/20404-gallery-sun-gods-goddesses.html

Ra the Sun God

Credit: public domain
The Egyptian sun god Ra was said to sail his boat across the sky by day and carry it back through the underworld by night. This depiction of Ra is from the tomb of Nefertari.

Freyr

Credit: Johannes Gehrts, 1901
Freyr, the Norse god associated with sunlight, fertility and prosperity.

Aztec Sun God

Credit: public domain
The Aztec sun god Tonatiuh depicted in the 16th century Codex Telleriano-Remensis. The Aztec believed that human sacrifice was necessary to keep the sun moving through the sky.

Amaterasu in Her Cave

Credit: Utagawa Toyokuni III, Kunisada, 1857
In Japanese myth, the sun goddess Amaterasu hid in a cave after becoming angry with her brother. With Amaterasu hidden, the world plunged into darkness. The other gods hung a mirror outside her cave to lure her out, bringing light back again.

Surya

Credit: Tanjore School, 19th Century
The Hindu solar deity Surya. Yoga devotees will recognize Surya’s name from “Surya namaskara,” the “sun salutations” practiced as a way to worship the sun.

Apollo

Credit: Photo by Ricardo André Frantz, distributed under a Creative Commons License
In Greek mythology, the lyre-playing God Apollo became associated with the sun. This statue of Apollo is at the Musei Capitolini in Rome.

Shamash the Sun God

Credit: public domain
Shamash was the god of the sun in the Babylonian tradition of ancient Mesopotamia. Shamash was also associated with justice and was said to be the inspiration for the Babylonian king Hammurabi to codify laws into Hammurabi’s Code, one of the first written legal documents in history.

Head of Helios

Credit: public domain; Middle Hellenistic period
Helios, sometimes associated with Apollo in Greek myth, was the personification of the sun. This statue includes holes which would have once held a metal crown symbolizing the sun’s rays.

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

Posted in THE ART with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

VINCZE MIKLÓS

http://io9.com/strange-historic-photos-of-intelligent-animals-1356794171

Some of the best vintage LOL pictures from history feature animals acting as intelligent as humans. Which — you be the judge of just how intelligent that really is.

An elephant from the American vaudeville stage riding a specially constructed tricycle, 1918

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

A close-up of Mike, the world’s only canine aviator, wearing flying cap and goggles in Chicago, c. 1920

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)

A monkey doing the ‘Charleston’ alongside a couple of dancers, 1922

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images)

A monkey ‘playing’ a toy piano on which is perched a thoughtful looking parrot, 1927

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

An elephant from Earl’s Court Circus with a man in its mouth, 1928

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Two brown bears riding on a bicycle and side car, 1928

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

A dog listening to the radio with earphones, whilst smoking a pipe, 1929

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Dame Clara Butt (1872 – 1936) operating a communications radio with her dog, they are both wearing headphones, 1930

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Sasha/Getty Images)

A new breed of chauffeur takes the wheel, 1930

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

In New York an elephant from the circus claims the prize for the largest harmonica player in the Universe, c. 1935

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Peter the Great, the animal star who is said to have near human intelligence, presenting film director Chester Franklin with a new puppy, c. 1935

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images)

Comet, an elephant from Chessington Zoo spends the weekend as a waiter at the Trocadero Restaurant in Piccadilly Circus, London, December 1938

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Farmer Mrs Maud Lee and her daughter Pat enjoy elevenses at their farmhouse in Keynsham, near Bristol, with their pet lamb Betty, March 1949

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Burchell/Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Two seals play basketball at San Diego zoo, c. 1950

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images)

A budgerigar pecks out a tune on a miniature piano, March 1952

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Ron Gerelli/Express/Getty Images)

An elephant at the London Zoo, Regents Park, joining five African visitors for a rest on a bench, September 1954

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Two dodgem car passengers are surprised to see Susie the circus bear bumping into them at the fun fair attached to Bertram Mills Circus in Olympia, London, December 1954

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by William Vanderson/Getty Images)

Young chimpanzee Kokomo Jnr sits in a chair wearing glasses and holding a comic book at his owner’s apartment in New York City, 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Vecchio/Three Lions/Getty Images)

Zippy the chimpanzee polishes bootblack Tony Finizza’s shoes while Tony watches and laughs at the spectacle, 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images)

A hamster on a miniature trapeze, 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(via MOMATalks)

Fifi, the chimpanzee star of the famous Chimps Tea Party at London Zoo plays a mean game of chess but it needs a lot of thought, June 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

Young chimpanzee Kokomo Jnr quenches his thirst with a glass of orange juice, straight from the fridge at his owner’s apartment in New York City, 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Vecchio/Three Lions/Getty Images)

An ape paints a picture, c. 1955

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Chimpanzees Pepi and Janet try their hand at making espresso at the Hotel and Catering Exhibition at Olympia, London, 1956

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)

‘Kam’, an elephant from Bertram Mills circus ‘drives’ a Land Rover along a road during training for the Christmas Show, November 1959

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Ron Case/Keystone/Getty Images)

At the Space Research Laboratories in Boulevard Victor, Paris French cats are kept in boxes in order to train them in remaining still for long periods during rocket flights, December 1963

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)

Petra, the Alsatian dog from the B.B.C’s children’s programme, ‘Blue Peter’ answering her fan mail, 1964

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by John Pratt/Getty Images)

Judy, a two year old chimpanzee, feeding Tracey-Jane Clews in her grandparents’ home at Southam Farm Zoo, Warwickshire, July 1968

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Ian Tyas/Keystone Features/Getty Images)

Bongo, a west African lowland gorilla, watches the BBC test-card on a colour television in his new luxury enclosure at Twycross Zoo in Warwickshire, July 1971

Strange Historic Photos Of Intelligent Animals

(Photo by Ian Showell/Keystone/Getty Images)

 

The demons of mental illness illustrated as real monsters

Posted in THE ART with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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The demons of mental illness illustrated as real monsters

LAUREN DAVIS  http://io9.com/the-demons-of-mental-illness-illustrated-as-real-monste-1359485919

What if mental ailments were caused by supernatural beings that buzz around their victims and feed off their terrible feelings? Toby Allen’s illustration series Real Monsters creates a bestiary of creatures that inspire anxiety and gloom.

Allen explains that his intention with this series was not to make light of these sometimes debilitating conditions, but instead to give form to the intangible, portraying them not as abstract concepts, but as monsters to be slain.

See the rest of the series on Allen’s Tumblr, and if you enjoy them, be sure to keep up with his Tumblr feed, where he promises to post his development work from this series and possibly some animations as well.

Real Monsters [Zesty Does Things via Only Fools and Vikings]

The demons of mental illness illustrated as real monsters

The demons of mental illness illustrated as real monsters

The demons of mental illness illustrated as real monsters

 

 

Image of the Day

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Image of the Day

LiveScience Staff   |   September 20, 2013 09:35am ET

A star is born?

Credit: NASA, ESA, the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA), and IPHAS
This massive knot of interstellar gas and dust looks like a caterpillar slinking across the cosmos. The structure is actually a protostar in a very early stage of evolution. This “wanna-be” star, located approximately 4,500 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus, is in the process of gathering materials from its surrounding envelope of gas, in an attempt to bulk up its mass.But, the protostar, officially known as IRAS 20324+4057, is facing adversity in the form of harsh winds from a group of extremely bright, relatively nearby stars. These luminous stars are blasting ultraviolet radiation at the protostar, sculpting the gas and dust into its long, caterpillar-like shape and eroding the very materials needed to transform IRAS 20324+4057 in to a star. 

Only time will tell how IRAS 20324+4057 fares in fulfilling its stellar destiny, but if radiation from nearby bright stars destroys the envelope of gas surrounding the protostar before it finishes collecting mass, the resulting star may end up being a “lightweight.” [Related: 101 Astronomy Images That Will Blow Your Mind]

Reading the clouds

Credit: NASA
These weird-looking cloud formations are created by a series of atmospheric vortexes, called eddies. Guadalupe Island, a volcanic island off the west coast of Mexico’s Baja California peninsula, can be seen slightly left of the photo’s center.An astronaut aboard the International Space Station captured this photo on an August day when the winds were blowing from the north (left) across the island, giving rise to the swirling eddies and strangely patterned clouds

At the top right of the image, a series of parallel cloud lines is also visible. These cloud formations are known colloquially as “gravity waves.” These ripples are at the boundary between atmospheric layers of slightly different density. [Related: Gallery of the Craziest Clouds]

It came from the ocean

Credit: Bob Cowen / University of Miami & Oregon State University
This spindly, web-like creature is a tiny, ocean-dwelling organism. These microscopic organisms, known as plankton, are an important source of food for larger marine animals, including whales and fish.A new online citizen science project, called “Plankton Portal,” was created by researchers at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, in collaboration with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Science Foundation, and the developers of Zooniverse.org. 

Plankton Portal enlists volunteers to classify millions of underwater images to study plankton diversity, distribution and their behavior and survival in the open ocean. The plankton photos were taken by the In Situ Ichthyoplankton Imaging System (ISIIS), an underwater robot equipped with an ocean-scanning digital sensor.

“A computer will probably be able to tell the difference between major classes of organisms, such as a shrimp versus a jellyfish, but to distinguish different species within an order or family, that is still best done by the human eye,” Jessica Luo, a graduate student involved with the project, said in a statement. [Related Gallery: Creatures from the Census of Marine Life]

Meet the public

Credit: Julie Larsen Maher/WCS
A snow leopard cub made his big debut at the Bronx Zoo in New York City last month. The precocious male cub also has a rather famous father: Leo, the orphaned snow leopard rescued in 2005 from the highmountains of northern Pakistan.Leo arrived in New York City in 2006, after a groundbreaking agreement was brokered between the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and the United States, according to zoo officials. Since then, Leo has been serving an important role as an ambassador for Pakistan at the Bronx Zoo

This is Leo’s first cub, and the birth was welcomed as a symbol of the positive influence wildlife and conservation can have on diplomacy between nations. Leo’s cub was born on April 9, but has not yet been named. [Related: Rare Photos of Snow Leopard Babies in Dens]

Northern Lights Shine Bright over Denali

Credit: Daniel A. Leifheit/US Department of the Interior
Visitors to Denali National Park saw quite the light show this week as the northern lights glowed in the night.Also called auroras, northern lights form when charged particles flow from the sun in a kind of “solar wind” and enter Earth’s magnetic field, revving up electrically charged particles trapped there. 

By the second week of August, the night sky above Denali is dark enough to see the northern lights. As Denali turns farther and farther away from the sun, the amount of darkness increases each night. Denali loses daylight rapidly in late August and September, so that by late September you don’t have to burn the midnight oil to enjoy the night sky.

The light show in the above photo was seen over Denali’s Toklat River. Denali spans 6 million acres of land in the Alaskan wilderness. The park is home to the tallest peak in North America, Mount McKinley, also known as Denali, which has a height of 20,237 feet (6,168 meters). “Denali,” or “High One,” was given its name by Athabascan native people. The mountain is part of the Alaskan Range, which covers some 600 miles (966 kilometers).

Photobomb!

Credit: NASA/Wallops Flight Facility/Chris Perry
An unsuspecting frog went for a bit of a wild ride last Friday (Sept. 6) when the launch of NASA’s moon-bound LADEE spacecraft sent it skyward amidst a plume of smoke. Look closely: The frog can be seen to the left of the rocket, against a background of reddish-orange smoke released from the Minotaur V rocket.A sound-triggered still camera set up near the launch pad captured this incredible photo of the airborne frog during the launch from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. The agency’s photo team confirmed the image is real, and was captured in a single frame by one of the remote cameras. But as for the poor frog? “The condition of the frog, however, is uncertain,” NASA officials said in a statement. [Related:Spectacular LADEE Night Launch Photos

Seeing double

Credit: Pete Bucktrout, British Antarctic Survey
This pristine glacier, called Sheldon Glacier, flows into Ryder Bay on the southeast coast of Adelaide Island in Antarctica. The calm, glassy waters reflect the immense glacier’s image, creating a striking and dramatic effect.In 1977, the glacier was named for Ernest B. Sheldon, a meteorological researcher for the British Antarctic Survey. Prior to that, the glacier was known as “Crumbles Glacier.” [Related: Stunning Photos of Antarctic Ice

A time for reflection

Credit: NASA/GSFC/MITI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team
Today marks the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York City. On Sept. 11, 2001, two hijacked commercial airplanes crashed into the World Trade Center towers, bringing the twin structures crumbling to the ground. That same day, a third plane slammed into the Pentagon near Washington, D.C., and a fourth crashed near Shanksville, Pa.In New York City today, a memorial service is being held at the site of Ground Zero, the National September 11 Memorial plaza, to honor the nearly 3,000 victims of the 9/11 attacks

This satellite photo of New York City was taken in September 2002 by NASA’s Terra satellite, which has been in orbit around Earth since 1999. [Related: 10 Ways Terrorist Attacks Rocked America]

Electricity In The Air At Glen Canyon Dam

Credit: David Bailey/US Department of the Interior
Electricity was literally in the air at the Glen Canyon Dam when this photo was snapped.The Glen Canyon Dam is a concrete arch dam on the Colorado River in northern Arizona that churns out hydroelectric power around the clock. 

Construction began in 1956 for the purpose of providing power and water flow regulation from the upper Colorado River Basin to the lower. The dam is a 710-foot-tall (216 meter) structure with a crest length of 1,560 feet (475 m). (The crest length is the length across the dam from one abutment to another, with the abutment being the part of the dam that sits against the riverbank.) The dam is 25 feet (7.6 m) thick at the crest and up to 300 feet (91 m) thick at the base.

The Glen Canyon Dam reservoir is Lake Powell, the second largest artificial lake in the country, which stretches upriver into Utah. The lake is one of the most popular houseboating and water-skiing areas in the United States. Surrounding the reservoir is the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, which draws more than 1.9 million visitors annually.

Glen Canyon Dam’s namesake is a colorful series of gorges, most of which are now under Lake Powell.

Sleep tight, baby Baako

Credit: Belfast Zoological Gardens
The Belfast Zoological Gardens announced the name of its new baby gorilla this week: say hello to baby Baako. The little boy was born on Aug. 3, marking the first western lowland gorilla born at the Belfast Zoo in 16 years.The zoo held a naming campaign following the baby gorilla’s arrival. More than 600 votes were cast, and the name Baako, which means “first born child,” emerged as the winner. Zoo officials are excited about their newest gorilla addition, which is the first child for father, Gugas, and mother, Kwanza. 

“Due to Gugas’ background, he is genetically very important to the European breeding programme as he is not represented in the zoo population,” zoo manager Mark Challis said in a statement. “[A]fter fertility tests last year, it was believed that Gugas would never father any young so we are delighted with Baako’s arrival but we also have high hopes that he will be the first of many more!” [Related: Gallery – Monkey Mug Shots]

Before Armstrong and Aldrin

Credit: UCL Faculty of Mathematical and Physical Sciences
This grainy, black-and-white photo is one of the first pictures of Earthtaken from lunar orbit. The poignant image was captured by the unmanned Lunar Orbiter 1 in 1966, as it swung around the moon on a mission to map the lunar surface from space.The Lunar Orbiter missions, which spanned from 1966 to 1967, laid the foundations for the manned Apollo moon missions, which reached a frenzied height with the successful Apollo 11 moon landing on July 20, 1969. The Lunar Orbiter program was designed to map the surface of the moon in order to narrow down potential landing sites for theApollo missions

This photo taken by the Lunar Orbiter 1 is part of a collection of historic space pictures that have never been published online before (or only previously published in low resolution). The photos, part of the NASA Regional Planetary Image Facility, are hosted by the University College London in the United Kingdom. The images were released as part of the Festival of the Planets, which is being held from Sept. 8 to Sept. 13 in London. [Related: Top 5 Mysteries of the Moon]

Back to school

Credit: J. R. Shute, Conservation Fisheries, Inc/U.S. Geological Survey
A school of Blackside Dace swim by in this crowded photo. Blackside Dace are a type of minnow found only in parts of Tennessee, Kentucky and western Virginia. These small, olive green-colored fish typically have red underbellies and a black stripe that runs down their sides.Blackside Dace populations are very small, and these fish are a federally listed threatened species, due to the loss and degradation of their natural habitat. The riverbeds where Blackside Dace spawn are being eroded by human developments, such as runoff pipes from septic tanks and spilled fracturing fluids from hydraulic fracturing in the region. [Related: Photos – The Freakiest-Looking Fish

Yellowstone Hot Spring’s Colorful Beauty

Credit: Curtis Akin/US Department of the Interior.
Yellowstone National Park is hot spring heaven. Old Faithful and the majority of the world’s geysers are here, at America’s first national park, established in 1872.Grand Prismatic Spring is the largest of all the hot springs in both Yellowstone and in the United States. The spring is also one of Yellowstone’s most colorful. It earned its name because its colors match the rainbow dispersion of white light by an optical prism: red, orange, yellow, green and blue. 

The colors tend to form rings around the spring and are due to the pigmented bacteria in the microbial mats that grow around the edges of the mineral-rich water. The color varies with the seasons, but in the summer, the mats tend to be orange and red, as the above image shows. The blue center of the pool is sterile due to extreme heat.

The spring is about 300 feet (90 meters) across and about 160 feet (50 m) deep. The water is up to 160 degrees Fahrenheit (70 degrees Celsius).

Yellowstone is home to more than hot springs, of course. This true wilderness is home to grizzly bears, wolves and herds of bison and elk.

9 Uncommon Conditions That Pregnancy May Bring

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Post 2447

9 Uncommon Conditions That Pregnancy May Bring

Lauren Cahoon Roberts, LiveScience Contributor   |   May 31, 2013 11:16am ET

Introduction

Credit: Pregnancy photo via ShutterstockPregnancy causes the body to go through some astounding changes — a woman’s blood doubles in volume, her rib cage expands, ligaments throughout her body loosen and abdominal organs are shoved aside to make room for an expanding uterus and baby.

Given these dramatic physical transformations, it’s not surprising that pregnancy increases women’s risk for some unpleasant, and sometimes dangerous, conditions.

“It would be unusual for a woman to not have at least one of those symptoms, if not several,” said Dr. Christopher Glantz, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, N.Y.  “It’s very uncommon that they portend something more serious.”

However,doctors keep a sharp eye out for the warning signs that something serious may be occurring. With regular prenatal visits, a woman should be able to safely navigate the various issues and illnesses that occasionally pop up as her baby bump grows.

Here’s a look at nine conditions for which women’s risk increases during pregnancy.

  

Preeclampsia

Credit: Exercise photo via ShutterstockPreeclampsia is defined by a sudden, elevated blood pressure after the 20th week of pregnancy, along with protein in the urine. In serious cases, the condition can lead to kidney failure, seizures, liver injury, respiratory problems and even death.

Preeclampsia affects 5 to 7 percent of pregnant women, and the risk generally increases with a woman’s age, according to a 2012 study from Finland. In that study, 6.4 percent of women under age 35 had a preeclampsia, while 9.4 percent of those over 35 had the condition. A higher BMI, and gestational diabetes can also predispose a woman to the condition.

Researchers still aren’t sure what causes preeclampsia, although several ideas exist, including abnormal formation of the placenta, or malfunctions in the mother’s immune response.

“You’d think we would know why this condition occurs — it’s been around for so many years,” Glantz said, “but we still don’t understand why it happens to some women.”

The only “cure” for the condition is delivering the baby; however, early detection and regular monitoring can help avoid worst-case scenarios, and can lead to a healthy pregnancy.

Gestational diabetes

Credit: Pregnancy photo via Shutterstock

Gestational diabetesoccurs when a pregnant woman’s placenta produces insulin-blocking hormones, Glantz said. Normally, these hormones lower the amount of sugar being taken up by a woman’s body cells, so instead that sugar remains in the bloodstream, and is available to the baby, he said.

But this system can go haywire if a woman is already slightly insensitive to glucose, or her hormones go overboard. Such conditions, combined with demand for sugar from a rapidly growing baby, can overload her pancreas to the point where it cannot produce enough insulin to deal with her blood sugar levels.

Gestational diabetes occurs in 2 to 14 percent of pregnant women. Those with a high body-mass index (BMI), excessive weight gain and low physical activity during pregnancy and a family history of diabetes are especially vulnerable to developing the condition.

“The rate has been going up over the years,” Glanz said.  ”One reason is because women who are pregnant are getting heavier.”

In most cases, women can manage the condition by eating an appropriate diet and exercising. If this doesn’t work, oral medication, or, as a last result, insulin shots, can be used to manage blood glucose levels.

Heart disease or heart attack

Credit: Heart rate via Shutterstock

A woman’s cardiovascular system transforms during pregnancy: her blood volume doubles, her heart rate increases and her blood pressure can drop due to increased blood flow to the uterus.

Typically, these changes are relatively harmless, and healthy women with no history of heart disease are at no increased risk forcardiovascular problems when pregnant. However, women with a history of heart conditions face higher rates of heart-related problems.

In about 1 to 3 percent of pregnancies, women develop heart-related problems, and cardiac disease is responsible for 10 to 15 percent of pregnancy-related deaths.

Despite these risks, women with pre-existing heart conditions can have safe and healthy pregnancies, but should consult with their doctors and be closely monitored, according to a 2012 paper on the topic by UK researchers.

Anemia

Credit: Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science FoundationAnother common condition a pregnant woman may have to deal with is anemia, or a low red blood cell count. Iron is a key ingredient for creating red blood cells, but many women don’t have adequate stores of iron to keep up with the demands of the huge increase in blood volume, and growing placenta and fetus.

While the condition isn’t immediately serious, it can lead to other problems such as premature labor, low birth-weight, preeclampsia, and later developmental problems in children.

Researchers estimate that about 56 million pregnant women suffer from the condition globally, with the majority of these occurring in developing countries, where up to 80 percent of pregnant women can have anemia.  Fortunately, the condition is easily treated by taking iron and folic acid supplements. (Folic acid helps promote the production of new red blood cells.)

“The best thing would be to tank up on iron before you get pregnant,” Glantz said. “Eat red meat, take an iron supplement.”

Back pain

Credit: Pregnancy photo via ShutterstockThis issue plagues so many pregnant women that “the women who don’t have it, would be the exception,” Glanz said.

Researchers estimate1 in 2 of every pregnant women suffers from back pain, and this prevalence increases up to 75 percent by the third trimester. For a quarter of pregnant women, the back pain is a serious problem, and in 8 percent it is disabling.

This pain, which typically centers in the lower area of the back where the spine meets the pelvis, is thought to be caused by numerous factors, including natural changes in posture, loosening ligaments, as well as changes in the muscular and vascular systems.

Traditional treatments are typically limited to bed rest and acetaminophen, which sometimes do little to ease the pain. Aquatic exercises have been shown to help some patients.

  

Pica

Credit: Clay photo via ShutterstockPica, a condition in which people eat nonfood substances, may be one of the more unusual conditions to accompany pregnancy. Those that have it often snack on dirt (known as “geophagia”), uncooked starch (“amylophagia”) or ice (“pagophagia”), but pica can also cause women to eat paint chips, charcoal paper, baby powder, chalk and ash.

The practice was first described in the 4th century BC by Hippocrates, and it has remained an enigma, with scientists still guessing at why pica happens and what, if any, are its consequences.

Researchers are even unclear on how many pregnant women have the condition, with estimates ranging from 8 to 65 percent.

According to a 2010 study from the University of California, Davis, the most likely explanation for the condition is the idea that most of the favorite pica “foods” can absorb potentially harmful toxins that could affect the fetus, thus certain pregnant women may have evolved a drive to eat these substances, for a protective effect.

  

Blood clots

Credit: Dr. Anne WestonHaving blood clots, properly called thrombosis, is a potentially dangerous condition that women are six times more likely to contract when they are pregnant, thanks to hormonal shifts that increase coagulating factors in the blood.

“If you just have a simple clot, that’s relatively easy to treat,” Glantz said. “But if you don’t treat it, it can break off and potentially travel into heart and the lungs, and this can be life-threatening.”

In fact, the problem isthe most common cause of death in pregnant women in Western countries. Fortunately, women who are diagnosed with blood clots can be effectively treated with heparins, an anticoagulant that does not cross into the placenta, and thus is safe for both mother and baby.

  

Headache

Credit: Pregnancy photo via ShutterstockHeadaches are a common complaint for women going through the first half of their pregnancy, and tend to clear up as the third trimester begins.

The reason for the waxing and waning headaches is unknown, Glantz said, although it’s likely that hormones are the culprit. “There are medications you can take for headaches, and usually we can nurse a mother along until the second half of her pregnancy” when the problem usually subsides, he said.

While garden-variety headaches are harmless, they can be symptoms of more serious problems, such as brain hemorrhaging or tumors, or they can also occasionally precede seizures that are caused by eclampsia (the serious condition that follows preeclampsia).

Pregnant women should not be alarmed by headaches, because in most serious cases, the headache is accompanied by other neurological symptoms such as weakness on one side of the body. Doctors are on the lookout for women that display this combination of symptoms, Glantz said.

Swelling in feet

Credit: Pregnancy photo via ShutterstockThis complaint seems to be experienced by almost every woman who’s gone through pregnancy. Thanks to the fact that a pregnant woman’s body water increases by 1.5 to 2 gallons, her feet and ankles are often puffy and swollen at the end of a long day.

“Physiologically, every pregnant woman retains fluid,” Glantz said, “and we walk upright, so that’s where the fluid collects.”

The treatment is pretty basic — put your feet up. Doctors recommend women get their feet propped up higher than the heart to help the swelling subside. Special compression stockings can also help improve circulation for women who want extra support for the problem.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Symptoms & Treatment

Posted in SCIENCE, GEOLOGY,HEALTH, INVIRONMENT, TECHNOLOGY,ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, with tags on September 25, 2013 by 2eyeswatching

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Post 2446

Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Symptoms & Treatment

By Elaine J. Hom, LiveScience Contributor   |   September 23, 2013 07:37pm ET
colon, colonoscopy, colon cancer risk

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a condition that involves chronic inflammation in all or part of the digestive tract. Often painful and debilitating, IBD includes ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, and can lead to life-threatening complications as well as increasing the risk for colon cancer.

IBD is not the same as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), which does not cause inflammation or damage in the intestines. It is estimated that as many as 1 million Americans suffer from IBD, and most sufferers begin to feel symptoms between the ages of 15 and 30.

Symptoms of IBD

With IBD, the intestines (small, large, and bowels) become inflamed, including redness and swelling. Related symptoms, which can range from mild or severe, include:

  • Severe or chronic abdominal pain
  • Diarrhea, often bloody
  • Sudden weight loss
  • Lack of appetite
  • Rectal bleeding
  • Joint pain
  • Skin problems
  • Fever

Symptoms can come on suddenly and flare up at random times, often going away for months or even years at a time. These are known as “relapses” or “flare-ups.” When symptoms are gone (though never permanently, as IBD is chronic), the patient is known as being in remission.

The two most common forms of IBD are ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease. The two offer such similar symptoms that doctors have a hard time diagnosing what kind of IBD a patient might have and require testing to rule out other gastrointestinal problems, like celiac disease. The most easily understood difference between the diseases is the parts of the digestive tract that they affect.

Crohn’s disease causes patchy inflammation on all layers of the intestinal wall, whereas ulcerative colitis affects only the top layer of the large intestine. Ulcerative colitis causes swelling and ulcers to form on the surface of the lining, which bleed and produce pus. In severe cases, the ulcers can weaken the intestine and cause a hole, spilling the bacteria-laden contents of the large intestine into the abdominal cavity or the patient’s bloodstream.

Though Crohn’s can affect any of the digestive tract, it most commonly affects the end of the small bowel (the ileum) and the beginning of the colon. With Crohn’s disease, the inflammation causes swelling and scar tissue to thicken the intestinal wall. The passageway for food becomes more narrow (known as a stricture) and deep ulceration can cause tunnels (known as fistulas). These fistulas can connect the intestines to organs that they shouldn’t connect to, like the bladder or the skin.

In addition to the damage caused to the digestive tract, IBD can create many other health problems for those afflicted. The loss of blood from the intestines can cause anemia, or below-normal levels of healthy red blood cells. Other problems include arthritis and joint pain, weak bones, eye problems, gallstones, skin issues, kidney stones, and delayed puberty and growth issues in children. Many of these problems are caused by the malabsorption of nutrients, since the digestive tract is not working properly. IBD flareups can also cause inflammation in other parts of the body. Some of these symptoms will improve when the IBD is properly treated.

No one is sure what causes IBD. It is classified as an autoimmune problem, as patients with IBD seem to have an overreacting immune system that attacks normal bacteria in the digestive tract, causing inflammation and digestive tract damage. IBD has been linked to certain genes and often is passed down through families. Though stress and diet can worsen IBD symptoms, they do not cause IBD.

There are a number of ways to diagnose IBD. Blood tests can find signs of inflammation and anemia, while stool tests can test for blood and signs of infection. Doctors may also use a long thin tube with a lighted camera to look into a person’s intestine, either a sigmoidoscopy, which goes as far as the lower part of the large intestine, or a colonoscopy, which goes through the entire large intestine and the last part of the small intestines, and take a biopsy of tissue. A less invasive way to look for intestinal problems is an X-ray after the patient has consumed liquid barium to coat the digestive tract lining. CAT scans and capsule endoscopies also provide insight into any damage that might be occurring to the digestive tract.

Treatment for IBD

Treatment for IBD varies per patient. Some may require medication, which can range from corticosteroids to biologic therapies and antibiotics. For the most part, changes in diet, reducing stress, and getting enough rest are universal ways of treating symptoms. Some patients avoid greasy foods, cream sauces, processed meat products, spicy foods, and high fiber foods.

Other patients with more serious prognoses may require surgery. With ulcerative colitis, 25 to 40 percent of patients will need surgery, which can include complete removal of the large intestine. Patients who undergo this type of surgery will need to have pouches attached either internally or externally, for waste removal. With Crohn’s disease, 65 to 75 percent of patients will need surgery to correct strictures, fistulae, or bleeding in the intestines. A strictureplasty widens the strictures without removing any part of the small intestine, and a bowel resection removes parts of the intestine and the surgeon sews the healthy ends together. Crohn’s patients can also have their large intestine removed, but require an external pouch.

Living with IBD can be stressful and taxing. There are hundreds of support groups for people with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. In these support groups, patients and their loved ones gather to share their stories, seek emotional support, and connect with a community with similar challenges. There are also online communities where patients can chat in a forum and share tips on managing the condition 24/7.