Friday, October 31, 2008

Computer makers recall 100,000 Sony batteries

Computer manufacturers are recalling 100,000 laptop batteries made by Sony Corp. after 40 incidents of overheating, the Japanese electronics giant said Friday.
Some users reported smoke or flames. Four of the incidents resulted in minor skin burns while 21 of the cases caused damage to property, Sony said.
Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba, Dell, Acer and Lenovo are involved in the global recall.
Sony said the defect appeared to have been caused by a problem with a production line during October 2004 and June 2005. Its own VAIO notebook computers are not affected by the recall.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission said that about 32,000 batteries were being recalled voluntarily in the United States, mostly by Hewlett-Packard.
It said consumers should stop using the recalled products immediately because they can overheat, posing a fire and burn hazard to consumers.
Toshiba spokeswoman Yuko Sugahara said that about 14,400 of its laptops worldwide would be affected by the recall.
In 2006 Sony was hit by recalls of almost 10 million of its batteries for laptop computers because of fears they could catch fire, burning a deep hole in the Japanese giant's profits.
Shares in Sony closed down 2.2 percent at 2,220 yen, while the benchmark Nikkei index lost 5.0 percent.

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Malaysia cuts fuel price by 6.5 percent

Malaysia cut petrol prices by 6.5 percent Friday, bringing pump prices down to 2.15 ringgit (0.60 dollars) per litre amid easing global crude oil prices.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said the 15 sen price cut would be effective Saturday. The price of diesel was also cut by 15 sen to 2.05 ringgit a litre.
"Global crude oil prices have fallen steadily recently. The government made this decision to help expedite a reduction in prices of food and other goods," he said in a statement.
It is the fourth fuel price cut the government has announced since June's steep price hike of 41 percent on the back of soaring crude costs which sparked angry street protests and calls for Abdullah to resign. The price of diesel was also raised by 63 percent in June.
The government last cut fuel prices by 15 sen two weeks ago.
The prime minister had said prices would be reviewed periodically based on the cost of oil.
June's hike saw inflation soar, with the August price index reaching a 26-year high of 8.5 percent, driven by the escalating cost of food and transportation.
In September, inflation eased to 8.2 percent as fuel prices dropped.

Hamilton F1 title bid clouded by racism row

Lewis Hamilton's bid to become Formula One champion has been soured by a Spanish website targeting the McLaren driver with vitriol and racist abuse.


Lewis Hamilton's bid to become Formula One champion has been soured by a Spanish website targeting the McLaren driver with vitriol and racist abuse.
The website, called Pincha la Rueda de Hamilton (Burst Hamilton's Tyre) invites visitors to place a virtual nail on the track at Interlagos, the setting for Sunday's title showdown with Felipe Massa in the Brazil Grand Prix.
The site carries a message board directing abuse at the 23-year-old Briton, who only needs to finish in the top five to claim the 2008 title.
The sport's governing body the FIA and McLaren jointly condemned those who had posted the comments.
An FIA spokesman told The Times: "The FIA's position is very clear - discrimination and prejudice can have no place in sport or in society.
"Everyone in our sport will join us in condemning these abusive and hateful comments."
In February Hamilton was subjected to racial abuse during testing in Barcelona, where a minority of Spanish fans turned up with their faces blackened.
That triggered the FIA's 'EveryRace' campaign aimed at driving out racial abuse from motor racing.
Commenting on this latest incident a spokesman for Hamilton's team said: "McLaren was one of the earliest supporters of the FIA's 'EveryRace' campaign, and we support that campaign still.
"We've seen the statement from an FIA spokesman, and we can only echo it."
The offending website, which has attracted over 20,000 visitors, was launched last year when Hamilton was battling with his McLaren teammate, Spanish idol Fernando Alonso, for the title.
If Hamilton succeds in claiming the title on Sunday he will become the youngest world champion in F1 history and the first driver of Afro-Caribbean descent to lift the title. He will also be Britain's ninth champion and first since Damon Hill in 1996.

Real Spooky & Cat Burglar

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Antarctica feeling the heat too, says study

Antarctica, which seemed to have largely escaped the global warming affecting the rest of the planet, is melting too, according to a study.
The new research, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, also provides the firmest proof to date that climate change at both poles is not the result of natural fluctuations.
"Our results demonstrate that human activities have already caused significant warming in both polar regions," said Alexey Karpechko, a professor at the University of East Anglia and a co-author of the study released Thursday.
Earlier investigations left no doubt that Earth's northern extremity has warmed at nearly twice the global average over the last century, causing a dramatic shrinking of sea ice and disrupting the region's ecosystems.
"However in Antarctica, such detection was so far precluded by insufficient data," said Karpechko.
The new study goes a long way toward filling that gap, and factoring out the causes.
Using new data on land surface temperatures and state-of-the-art computer models to simulate different climate scenarios, a team of scientists led by East Anglia's Nathan Gillet were able to tease apart the internal and external drivers of observed changes at both poles.
Rather than covering the entire Arctic and Antarctic regions, as previous studies have done, they focused only on the grid points where precise measurements have been taken.
This made their climate models more accurate, and showed that observed changes in temperatures over the 20th century could only have occurred if the impact of industrial greenhouse gas emissions, and upper atmosphere ozone depletion, are taken into account.
"Their work demonstrates convincingly what previous studies have suggested -- that humans have indeed contributed to warming in both the Arctic and Antarctic regions," said Andrew Monaghan of the US National Center for Atmospheric Research and David Bromwich, a researcher at Ohio State University, in a comment, also published in Nature Geoscience.
Knowing the cause "of polar climate variability is critical for understanding how the ice sheets will evolve in the 21st century," they said.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

INTERPOL elects new President and embarks on ambitious course with launch of Global Security Initiative

ST PETERSBURG, Russia – INTERPOL's 77th General Assembly closed today with delegates electing Singapore Police Commissioner KHOO Boon Hui to be the Organization’s new President.
Accepting the four-year Presidency, Commissioner Khoo said he looked forward to serving all of the 187 member countries.
'INTERPOL plays a critical role in international police co-operation by equipping police forces around the world with the necessary infrastructure, training and operational support to combat transnational crime and terrorism,' Mr Khoo said. 'As the Organization's new President I will build on the progress we have made thus far and ensure INTERPOL can better meet the demands of international policing in the 21st century.'
Also elected to the Executive Committee were Mostapha Mouzouni (Morocco) as Vice President for the Africa region, Eduardo Fernandes Cerqueira (Angola) and Magdy Elshafey (Egypt) as delegates for Africa. María del Pilar Hurtado Afanador (Colombia) was elected delegate for the Americas and Petter Dyhre (Norway) and Süleyman Isildar (Turkey) delegates for Europe.
During the four-day conference, delegates also endorsed a series of measures to build national police capacity within a modern framework for action for its collective membership, which grew to 187 after the Vatican City State was admitted to the world’s largest police organization.
In a significant development for modern-day global law enforcement, INTERPOL launched its Global Security Initiative (GSI) when delegates adopted it as the Organization’s platform for 21st century global policing.
In calling on governments and the private sector alike to endow the GSI fund with a billion Euros, Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said 'it will shape dialogue on how best to address regional and global security challenges by breaking down traditional barriers that have prevented meaningful and sustained partnerships between governments, international organizations and the private sector.'
More than 700 senior law enforcement representatives from around the world backed a number of resolutions at the conference, including the creation of an INTERPOL Computer Forensic Analysis Unit. Services provided for member countries by this unit will include training, impartial and independent assistance into computer forensics examination on missions, and the development of international standards for the search, seizure and investigation of electronic evidence.
Another resolution called on member countries to encourage and empower the Organization’s 187 National Central Bureaus (NCBs) to increase their use of public Yellow Notice alerts for missing adults and of Red Notice alerts for fugitives and prison escapees, in order to maximize public assistance for investigations.
Secretary General Noble said the conference had laid the groundwork for the INTERPOL of the future, saying that 'it will create and provide the tools and structures that frontline police worldwide need to carry out their work.'
He said the General Assembly’s forward-looking strategy 'marks a landmark for the Organization and an opportunity for all of us to embrace a vision for a stronger global law enforcement community, and a stronger INTERPOL: a vision that makes full use of partnerships and resources to ensure that law enforcement can fully meet new challenges to ensure the safety of our citizens.'

Singapore Police Commissioner elected new President of INTERPOL

ST PETERSBURG, Russia – Singapore police force Commissioner KHOO Boon Hui has been elected the new President of INTERPOL by delegates at the 77th General Assembly. As President of the Organization, Mr Khoo’s role during his four-year term will include chairing meetings of the Executive Committee which supervises the implementation of decisions taken at the General Assembly. In taking up his post as INTERPOL President, Commissioner Khoo said that he was ‘truly honoured to be entrusted with the role’. 'INTERPOL plays a critical role in international police co-operation,' said Mr Khoo. 'As the new President, I will help the Organization form strategic alliances and build on its existing programmes which will allow INTERPOL to better meet the demands of international policing.' Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said that Mr Khoo’s election came at a pivotal time for the Organization. 'INTERPOL has now launched its Global Security Initiative which will provide the blueprint for international law enforcement in the 21st century,' said Mr Noble. 'I am sure that under the Presidency of Mr Khoo, the GSI and our other key initiatives will help all our 187 member countries to fully meet the policing challenges they face. 'I am looking forward to working closely with him in ensuring that INTERPOL remains at the forefront of international law enforcement.' Mr Mostapha Mouzouni was elected as Vice-President for the Africa region. A former delegate for Africa, Mr Mouzouni will serve a three-year term, joining Vice-President for the Americas, Arturo Herrera Verdugo and Vice-President for Europe, Juergen Stock. Also elected to the Executive Committee were the Director of CID in Angola, Eduardo Fernandes Cerqueira, and the Head of INTERPOL’s National Central Bureau in Cairo Magdy Elshafey as delegates for Africa. Maria del Pilar Hurtado Afanador, Director of Colombia’s Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad (DAS) was elected delegate for the Americas. Petter Dyhre, Assistant Chief of Police for Norway, and 1st degree Chief Superintendent Süleyman Isildar from Turkey both elected as delegates for Europe.

Arab police, security leaders and INTERPOL in Beirut meeting

INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K. Noble (standing second from right in the front row), attended the 32nd Conference for Arab police and security leaders, held in Beirut from 28-29 October. He discussed strengthening operational police co-operation between INTERPOL and Arabic-speaking countries and called for the creation of an INTERPOL Sub-Regional Bureau with the permanent structure to enhance co-operation between the region and the rest of the world.

INTERPOL hosts first Crisis and Major Events international conference as platform for global police co-operation

LYON, France – With ever-increasing demand from member countries to have all INTERPOL services in the field during a crisis and / or major event with public security implications, INTERPOL’s First International Conference on Crisis and Major Events (C&ME) opened at the General Secretariat in Lyon today.
The two-day conference (28-29 October) – involving more than 130 senior officials from 54 countries and 11 international organizations – aims to develop a global police platform for information sharing, best practices, training, and the development of both global programmes and tailored regional programmes in the field of crisis and major events assistance and management.
INTERPOL’s experience from recent and ongoing major events, as well as from the aftermath of major terrorist incidents and natural disasters, has identified the vital need for developing a global police platform for international co-ordination, an interface and common debrief point for the international community, an early and expert assessment of a crisis situation and efficient communication channels.
The international meeting will focus on security and preparation for major sporting events, conferences and summits, as well as emergency co-ordination and communications responses to natural and manmade disasters, and providing C&ME assistance in developing the capacity of member countries to co-ordinate and host major events.
With crises and major events management an increasingly important field of law enforcement, INTERPOL Executive Director of Police Services Jean-Michel Louboutin said that “INTERPOL will continually strive to support the improvement of the capacity of its member countries in the preparation for, and co-ordination of, security arrangements pertaining to major international events which inherently require an internationally co-ordinated security effort.”
But he told the conference in his opening address that “the development of this law enforcement priority can only be achieved through sustained co-operation between INTERPOL, its 187 National Central Bureaus and international partners.”
Since the creation of its Crisis and Major Events Unit in 2006, INTERPOL has gained extensive experience in deploying Incident Response Teams (IRTs) and INTERPOL Major Events Support Teams (IMESTs).
IRTs support member countries in dealing with the aftermath of manmade or natural disasters such as a terrorist attack or an earthquake. INTERPOL currently has an IRT in the Philippines to assist local authorities in operations to identify the bodies of up to 800 victims who perished in the June ferry tragedy. An IRT can also be deployed to assist and support a member country faced with a major or sensitive police issue such as a large drug seizure or sensitive investigation.
IMESTs also assist member countries in preparing security arrangements for major events such as the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, where INTERPOL deployed such a team.
A total of 74 IMESTs and IRTs have been deployed worldwide since October 2002.

9 Mind-Boggling Medical Technologies

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Sunday, October 26, 2008

Singapore finds 20 more melamine-tainted products

Singapore has discovered toxic chemical melamine in 20 more products from China and Malaysia, taking its total to 33, authorities said.
Three Chinese products and 17 biscuit items from Malaysia were found to contain melamine, the industrial chemical at the centre of a toxic milk scandal which has rocked China's dairy sector.
The affected items include popular products such as Lotte Koala biscuits and Julie's crackers, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA) said in a statement seen on its website on Saturday.
It was the first time Singapore had found melamine in non-Chinese products, the Straits Times said.
In China, four children have died after drinking baby formula tainted with melamine, which is commonly used in plastics but had been added to watered-down milk to make it appear richer in protein.
Authorities in China say 53,000 children have fallen ill in the scandal, which has spread worldwide with dozens of products found to contain the contaminated milk.

2008 Yemen floods

The 2008 Yemen floods took place on October 23, 2008 left 58 dead and 20,000 without shelter.[1] The Yemeni governorates of Hadhramaut, Lahij, Al Mahrah and Ta'izz were affected the worst by the floods, and most of the fatalities were in Hadhramaut.[2]

The flooding was preceded by several days of rain starting on October 23,[4] as the remnants of a tropical cyclone moved over the area. Rain continued, with weather systems coming in from neighbouring Saudi Arabia and northern Somalia, resulting in severe flooding in some areas of Yemen.[1] Better conditions are expected by Sunday.[1]
Thousands of families fled Hadhramaut alone; many schools were used as evacuee shelter, but these could only accommodate 10% of the affected. According to search and rescue teams, the number of fatalities may increase due to the likelihood of people trapped in flooded houses. Electricity and telephone lines were disrupted, and many homes were damaged.[2]

Along with fatalities, approximately 730 homes were destroyed, along with businesses and other infrastructure projects. The severe thunder of the preceding thunderstorms resulted in at least nine deaths from lightning in the Al Mahrah, Ta'izz and Lahij governorates.[5] The rain also destroyed large amounts of farmland and killed large numbers of livestock.[1]

The Yemeni government promised to supply tents as a means of emergency shelter, along with other emergency supplies, with six transport aircraft loaded with supplies taking off from Sanaa on Saturday and more scheduled for later. President Ali Abdullah Saleh ordered the creation of a committee to provide aid to affected civilians. Also, the United Arab Emirates declared their intent to provide relief. However, several residents in the city of Shibam say that government assistance and support, if any, is low.[6]
The Organisation of the Islamic Conference declared the situation a "national catastrophe" and started a drive on Saturday to collect funds for the relief of flood victims.[5]
Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh said, "The damages... are great and the catastrophe is also great."[2]

Friday, October 24, 2008

Malaysian FM urges university to lift Ebadi speech ban: report

Malaysia's foreign minister has urged a top university to reconsider its decision to scrap a speech by Iranian Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, according to reports Friday.
Ebadi, an outspoken critic of the human rights situation in her home country, had been due to speak at University of Malaya on November 3, but her invitation was withdrawn following pressure from Iranian students.
"We would like Dr. Ebadi to be invited to the forum," Foreign Minister Rais Yatim told the Star daily.
"Malaysia should allow the freedom of expression and criticisms at the highest level. I will go and investigate this matter," he added.
The university's vice-chancellor Rafiah Salim said on Wednesday the decision to withdraw the invitation was made "out of respect for our Iranian students who were not very happy."
However, the Star reported that a letter from the Malaysian foreign ministry had been sent to the university saying it was not wise to invite Ebadi as the Iranian government viewed her as a critic supporting a "Western agenda."
Rais said the ministry's advice was "not official," describing the decision not to invite Ebadi as "unfortunate."
"This is definitely done without my involvement. If I had known of it, I would have informed my office against it," he added.
Ebadi, an Iranian human rights lawyer who in 2003 became the first Muslim woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, had been due to speak on "Islam and Cultural Diversity."
She previously said she has faced death threats, as well as hostility from the Iranian state media and government, for defending the rights of followers of the minority Baha'i religion, which is banned in Iran.
Her daughter has also been accused of apostasy, a serious crime in Iran which carries the death penalty.

Sea of Galilee

The Sea of Galilee, also Sea of Genneseret, Lake Kinneret or Lake Tiberias (Hebrew ים כנרת), (Arabic بحيرة طبريا), is Israel's largest freshwater lake, being approximately 53 km (33 miles) in circumference, about 21 km (13 miles) long, and 13 km (8 miles) wide. The lake has a total area of 166 km², and a maximum depth of approximately 43 m.[3] At 209 meters below sea level, it is the lowest freshwater lake on Earth and the second-lowest lake in the world after the Dead Sea, a saltwater lake.[4]
The Kinneret is situated deep in the Jordan Great Rift Valley, the valley caused by the separation of the African and Arabian Plates and is fed partly by underground springs although its main source is the Jordan River which flows through it from north to south. Consequently the area is subject to earthquakes and, in the past, volcanic activity. This is evidenced by the abundant basalt and other igneous rocks that define the geology of the Galilee region.
The lake often appears on maps as Lake Galilee or Lake Tiberias while in the Bible, it is called the "Sea of Kinneret" (Numbers 34:11; Joshua 13:27).
The name may originate from the Hebrew word kinnor ("harp" or "lyre") in view of the shape of the lake. Christian religious texts call it Lake of Gennesaret (Luke 5:1) or Sea of Gennesaret[5], after a small fertile plain that lies on its western side. The Arabic name for the lake is Buhairet Tabariyya (help·info) (بحيرة طبريا) meaning Lake Tiberias. Other names for the Sea of Galilee are Ginnosar, Lake of Gennesar, Sea of Chinneroth and Sea of Tiberias (Roman).

The Sea of Galilee lies on the ancient Via Maris which linked Egypt with the northern empires. The Greeks, Hasmoneans, and Romans founded flourishing towns and settlements on the lake including Gadara, Hippos and Tiberias. The first-century historian Flavius Josephus was so impressed by the area that he wrote, "One may call this place the ambition of Nature." Josephus also reported a thriving fishing industry at this time, with 230 boats regularly working in the lake. Much of the ministry of Jesus occurred on the shores of Lake Galilee. In those days, there was a continuous ribbon development of settlements and villages around the lake and plenty of trade and ferrying by boat. The Synoptic gospels of Mark (1:14-20), Matthew (4:18-22), and Luke (5:1-11) describe how Jesus recruited four of his apostles from the shores of Lake Galilee: the fishermen Simon and his brother Andrew and the brothers John and James. One of Jesus' famous teaching episodes, the Sermon on the Mount, was given on a hill overlooking the lake while many of his miracles were also recorded to occur here including his walking on water, calming a storm, and his feeding five thousand people (in Tabgha).
In 135 CE the second Jewish revolt against the Romans was put down. The Romans responded by banning all Jews from Jerusalem. The center of Jewish culture and learning shifted to the region of the Kinneret, particularly the city of Tiberias. It was in this region that the so-called "Jerusalem Talmud" is thought to have been compiled.
In the time of the Byzantine Empire, the lake's significance in Jesus' life made it a major destination for Christian pilgrims. This led to the growth of a full-fledged tourist industry, complete with package tours and plenty of comfortable inns.

The lake's importance declined when the Byzantines lost control and area came under the control of the Umayyad Caliphate and subsequent Islamic empires. Apart from Tiberias, the major towns and cities in the area were gradually abandoned. In 1187, Saladin defeated the armies of the Crusades at the Battle of Hattin, largely because he was able to cut the Crusaders off from the valuable fresh water of the Sea of Galilee.

In 1909 Jewish pioneers built their first cooperative farming village (kibbutz), Kvutzat Kinneret which trained Jewish immigrants in farming and agriculture. Later, Kinneret pioneers established Kibbutz Degania. It was fitting, therefore, that the Kinneret was the cradle of the Kibbutz culture of early Zionism and the birthplace of Naomi Shemer and the burial site of Rachel - two of the most prominent Israeli poets.
The Preamble of the League of Nations Mandate required the Principal Allied Powers to fix the boundaries. In 1923 an agreement between the United Kingdom and France established the border between the British Mandate of Palestine and the French Mandate of Syria. The British handed over the southern Golan Heights to the French in return for the northern Jordan Valley. The border was re-drawn so that both sides of the Jordan River and the whole of the Sea of Galilee, including a 10-metre wide strip along the northeastern shore, were made a part of Palestine [6] with the following provisoes:
Any existing rights over the use of the waters of the Jordan by the inhabitants of Syria shall be maintained unimpaired.
The Government of Syria shall have the right to erect a new pier at Semakh on Lake Tiberias or to have joint use of the existing pier
Persons or goods passing between the existing landing-stage or any future landing-stages on the Lake of Tiberias and Semakh Station shall not by reason of the mere fact that they must cross the territory of Palestine be deemed persons or goods entering Palestine for the purpose of Customs or other regulations, and the right of the Syrian Government and their agents to access to the said landing-stages is recognised.
The inhabitants of Syria and of the Lebanon shall have the same fishing and navigation rights on Lakes Huleh and Tiberias and on the River Jordan between the said lakes as the inhabitants of Palestine, but the Government of Palestine shall be responsible for the policing of the lakes.[7] Israel's National Water Carrier, built in 1964, transports water from the lake to the population centers of Israel, and is the source of much of the country's drinking water. Israel also supplies water from the lake to Jordan (under the terms of the Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace). Increasing water demand and some dry winters have resulted in stress on the lake and a decreasing water line, at times to dangerously low levels.
Today, tourism is again the Kinneret's most important economic activity with the entire region being a popular holiday destination. The many historical and spiritual sites around the lake, especially its main town Tiberias, are visited by millions of local and foreign tourists annually. Other economic activities include fishing in the lake and agriculture, particularly bananas, in the fertile belt of land surrounding it.
A key attraction is the site where the Kinneret's water flows into the Jordan River to which thousands of pilgrims from all over the world come to be (re-)baptized every year.

The warm waters of the Sea of Galilee allow a variety of flora and fauna to thrive, which have supported a significant commercial fishery for over two millennia. Local flora includes a variety of reeds along most of the shoreline as well as Phytoplankton. Fauna includes Zooplankton and Benthos, as well as a fish population which notably includes Tilapia (locally known as St. Peter’s Fish).[8]

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Tech Addicts

In February, John Blanchard took to his blog and declared, "My name is John and I am a technology addict."
The 27-year-old California musician was logging so many hours on Google Reader, Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and video-sharing site Vimeo that he was neglecting family and friends."I love being able to connect with people around the world from so many different places," he wrote. "My problem is I can go overboard with new technology I find and let it take over my life."It's a quandary that's snaring more people as technology pervades society. In 2002, 63 percent of Americans said it would be "very hard" to give up their landline telephones and 47 percent said giving up their televisions would be tough. By 2007, they had switched their allegiance to cell phones and the Internet, according to a survey from the Pew Internet & American Life Project. The shift to mobile and Web-based technology has increased addictive behavior, say experts. Kimberly Young, director of the Center for Internet Addiction Recovery, has studied technology addiction for 14 years. Her early studies focused on Internet gambling, chat rooms and pornography. These days, she has plenty of clients obsessed with Facebook and immersive, multiuser Web games like "World of Warcraft.""In the 1990s, one thing or game would be addictive," she says. "Now it's multiple things; people go from one to the next and never leave the Internet."Technology applications can qualify as addictive if they consume users' time to the point of damaging their relationships, says Young. "The problem is when technology replaces other forms of contact," she explains. "If a young person isn't on the baseball team or in the school band because he has isolated himself in this way, that's a concern."
Ninety-six percent of compulsive Internet users struggle with time management problems, according to Young's research. Other common problems are issues involving relationships (85 percent), sex (75 percent), work (71 percent), finances (42 percent), physical well-being (29 percent) and academic performance (15 percent). Psychologists who treat Internet addiction typically categorize it as an impulse control disorder.The list of potential culprits is growing. "World of Warcraft" is the game that crops up most frequently in Young's sessions. ("EverQuest," a 3-D, fantasy-themed, multiplayer game first released in 1999, was the old favorite.)
Online poker continues to lure users, something Young attributes partly to the rise of celebrity poker games. EBay, with its millions of items and anxiety-inducing timed auctions, has produced its fair share of addicts, too. Young had a client who spent hundreds of thousands of dollars a year on a military memorabilia collection that eventually took over his apartment.Even solitaire and "Freecell," those favorites of bored office workers worldwide, can be addictive. "It's an easy distraction," says Young. "The problem is, it's so solitary; we don't know how many people are impacted by that behavior." Casual games like "Tetris" and "Peggle" similarly lull users into "just a few more minutes" stupors.Virtual worlds like Second Life inspire other fixations. "A lot of Second Life's appeal is to older people who are playing out fantasies," says Young. That can lead to online affairs and overspending on virtual goods -- topics Young plans to tackle in an upcoming book.Data point to similar conclusions. PokerStars, which bills itself as the world's largest online poker room, attracted longer and more frequent user visits than any other Internet application in August, according to Nielsen Online. About 1.4 million people visited the site that month. That's a fraction of the mob that dropped by Apple's iTunes (36 million) or Windows Live Messenger (25 million). What makes PokerStars exceptional is its "stickiness" -- users logged close to 12 hours that month on the site, compared with an hour or so at iTunes and Live Messenger.Reinforcing the trend: The third stickiest Internet application for U.S. users is Full Tilt Poker, which has dubbed itself the "fastest-growing online poker room." The second is "Pirates of the Caribbean Online," a multiplayer Web game based on Disney's hit films.
Poker's allure stems, of course, from the tantalizing prospect of winning. "People think, 'I'm getting something out of this,'" even when no money actually changes hands, says Young. That's the hook for most video games, too. Microsoft's launch of "achievement points" several years ago prodded Xbox users to up their time on games like "Grand Theft Auto" and "Halo." More points translate into higher "gamerscores" and bragging rights in the gaming community.The next frontier for technology addiction is mobile, says John Horrigan, Pew's associate director of research. Mobile addicts primarily talk and text, of course, but music and news updates are increasingly compelling. Song Identity, which uses software to ID songs, and sports news app ESPN MVP are two of the most-downloaded mobile applications besides instant messaging and navigation programs, according to data from Nielsen Mobile.While Young supports the classification of Internet addiction as a specific disorder in the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (due in 2013), others prefer the terms "dependence" and "heavy reliance" upon technology. "People with addictive predilections may simply glom onto tech," says Pew's Horrigan. "The jury's still out regarding cause and effect."Blanchard, the self-confessed technology addict, crafted his own solution. He has deleted work e-mail and Twitter alerts from his iPhone and ceased scanning blog posts on Google Reader while at home or out with friends. But he hasn't let go altogether. When Forbes.com contacted him for comment, he Twittered out a message: "Just got an e-mail from Forbes.com wanting to mention one of my blog posts. Pretty cool!"

Malaysian university scraps invite to Iran's Ebadi

A top Malaysian university said Wednesday it has withdrawn an invitation to Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi to give a speech on Islam, because of objections from Iranian students.
Ebadi, an outspoken critic of the human rights situation in Iran, had been due to deliver a speech titled "Islam and Cultural Diversity" at University Malaya on November 3.
The university's vice-chancellor Rafiah Salim denied there was pressure from the government to scrap the event and said the decision was made "out of respect for our Iranian students who were not very happy."
"We wrote to the foreign ministry and sought their advice. We did not want to cancel the programme ... but the ministry said we should decide in the best interests of the university," she told AFP.
"We have a lot of Iranian students here and we have good relations with Iranian universities. We did not want to create any negative consequences to those ties as well as with our students here."
Ebadi, an Iranian human rights lawyer who in 2003 became the first Muslim woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, was invited as part of a series in Malaysia and neighbouring Thailand organised by the Austrian-based International Peace Foundation (IPF).
Other speakers include fellow Nobel peace laureate President Jose-Ramos Horta of East Timor, and American civil rights activist Jesse Jackson.
Rafiah said the decision was not politically motivated and that the organisers had to "weigh the pros and cons and take into consideration the big number of Iranian students" in the country.
Ebadi heads a group of human rights lawyers who have defended many clients accused of political and security crimes.
She has said that she has faced death threats, as well as hostility from the Iranian state media and government for defending the rights of followers of the minority Baha'i religion, which is banned in Iran.
Her daughter has also been accused of apostasy, a serious crime in Iran which carries the death penalty.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Israeli doctors treat Iranian boy with brain tumor

Iran may be an enemy state of Israel, and relations between the two countries tense, to say the least, but this hasn't stopped an Israeli hospital from agreeing to treat a 12-year-old Iranian boy with an aggressive brain tumor - glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). There was nothing more that Iranian or Turkish doctors could do for him, says David Weinberg, a spokesperson for the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Aviv, where the boy identified only as "Guy" is being treated. His real name is being kept secret so that his family will not be put in harm's way after returning to Iran. He arrived Friday at Sheba's Safra Children's Hospital, one of the top 10 children's hospitals in the world - with his father and grandmother - after flying into Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, from Turkey. Sheba's CEO Prof. Zeev Rotstein agreed to take the patient from Tehran on as a charity case. "The father of the young patient called Prof. Rotstein - doctors in Iran told him there is nothing more they can do for them in Iran and to try the Safra Children's Hospital at Sheba because they do outstanding pediatric work in brain cancer," Weinberg tells ISRAEL21c. Weinberg believes that doctors in Iran probably read about Dr. Amos Toren - head of Sheba's Pediatric Hemato-Oncology Department - in scientific literature, and recommended him as the best person to treat the boy. Israeli doctors just doing their job "Today we're repeating tests - conducting genetic typing tests to better match the treatment," says Weinberg, optimistic but only too aware of the gravity of the boy's condition. "He's got a very tough battle," Weinberg notes. As Toren assesses and administers treatment, he will also make sure the boy feels no pain in the process. This is one of the specialties of the Safra Hospital, which employs a small team of doctors to prescribe special anti-pain medications to children, even to the smallest charges who cannot yet speak for themselves. This is not the first time Israeli doctors have treated children from adversarial states. The Israeli charity, Save a Child's Heart, helps bring Iraqi children to Israel for life-saving heart treatment. Palestinians from Gaza and the Palestinian Authority are also regularly treated at Israeli hospitals. While citizens from enemy states are usually banned from entering Israel, in unusual cases - like this one - special permission is granted to allow them to enter. In this case, Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit gave a personal ex-gratia authorization to allow the child and family members into the country. "We are the light upon the nations, and when a child's life is at stake religion and origin play no part," said Minister Sheetrit. "If we can help, we are more than willing to do so." "We hope that with the love and affection we give these kids we are paving the way for at least some understanding between people," Rotstein added in an article in the International Herald Tribune. "We can't change the politics. We are not politicians. We do this because we feel it is our job," he continued. Limited chances, but special hope in Israel It is no secret in the medical community that Israel is home to some of the world's best doctors and facilities. All too aware of the complicated reality in the Middle East, Israeli doctors hope that by treating patients from countries hostile to Israel, they can break down barriers and create better prospects for peace. As for the boy's progress, he is conscious and can smile, although it's difficult for him. He has had operations in the past, and may need another one in Israel. "There are very limited things you can do," said Rotstein, "But if this kid has any chance, it is here."

Iraq cabinet wants changes in pact despite US warning

Iraq's cabinet on Tuesday called for changes to a planned security pact with Washington despite a warning from the US military chief that time is running out for Baghdad to approve the deal.
But officials in Washington defended the draft agreement, with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates warning of "pretty dramatic" consequences of not having an accord governing the presence of US troops in Iraq.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's cabinet met Tuesday to discuss the deal that will provide the basis for a US military presence in Iraq beyond this year and decided to seek modifications.
"The cabinet unanimously sought amendments to the text of the pact so it can be acceptable nationally," government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said after the meeting, which was also attended by US representatives.
"The cabinet called on the ministers to submit their suggestions to be included in the negotiations with the US," he added.
The demand for changes, which were not specified, is expected to significantly delay the agreement, which still must be approved by the Iraqi parliament after endorsement by the cabinet.
Iraq's Al-Sharqiya television reported that ministers from both the largest Sunni block -- the National Concord Front -- and the ruling Shiite grouping, the United Iraqi Alliance, wanted amendments.
The cabinet decision came just hours after the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen, bluntly warned that Iraq risked security losses of "significant consequence" unless it approved the deal.
Mullen also charged that US archfoe Iran was working hard to scuttle the Status of Forces Agreement, or SOFA, after months of fraught negotiations.
"We are clearly running out of time," said Mullen, warning that when the current UN mandate governing the presence of foreign forces expires on December 31, the Iraqi military "will not be ready to provide for their security".
"And in that regard there is great potential for losses of significant consequence."
The White House later sought to play down the dispute, saying it was not surprising the pact had encountered difficulties.
"We knew it was going to take a little while to get this done," spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters in Washington.
But Defense Secretary Gates warned that there was little room for changes to the draft.
"The consequences of not having a SOFA and of not having a renewed UN authorization are pretty dramatic in terms of consequences for our actions," Gates told news wire reporters, including AFP.
He said there is "great reluctance" to entertain new changes as the US government consults with Congress on the current draft.
"If they (Baghdad or Congress) were to come up with something we haven't thought of, or identify problems we missed some way, we would have to take that seriously," Gates added.
"So I don't think you slam the door shut. But I would say it's pretty far closed."
Despite a series of US concessions, the pact remains hugely controversial in Iraq, with fierce opposition in some quarters, particularly the Shiite radical movement of anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
Even before the cabinet decision, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari sought to dampen expectations of a swift approval.
"It is unlikely that the Iraqi parliament will approve the SOFA before the American presidential election on November 4," Dubai-based Al-Arabiya News Channel reported Zebari as saying on its website.
"Because of the differences among the political groups, we don't believe the deal will be approved now. Iraq still hopes to sign this deal before the end of this year," he said.
Iraq's Political Council for National Security examined the agreement on Sunday and Monday and then forwarded it to the cabinet.
Under the latest draft, the United States will withdraw its combat forces from Iraqi towns by June 2009, with a complete pullout in 2011 -- eight years after the invasion that toppled now executed dictator Saddam Hussein.
In a US concession to assuage Baghdad's concerns over sovereignty, Iraqi courts would have the authority to try US soldiers and civilians for crimes committed outside their bases and when off-duty.
The US concessions fall far short of the demands by Sadr and his followers for an immediate and full withdrawal of US troops.
Sunni political groups, a minority in mainly Shiite Iraq, are concerned about an early US departure. But they too have expressed reservations about the pact by stressing the importance of respecting the nation's sovereignty.

Best-Sellers . . . So Far: Sales of new cars continue their downward trend, but there are still a few bright spots.

The first nine months of U.S. auto sales in 2008 ended with a whimper as the industry endured one of the worst months on record. In September automotive strongholds such as Toyota and Honda had sales decreases of 32 and 24 percent, respectively, as Americans seemed to make every effort to avoid new-car showrooms.
The news is not much better for the year overall. The big domestic companies — General Motors, Ford and Chrysler — are all down close to 20 percent compared to last year. Of the top 10 selling companies, Honda and Volkswagen have had the most success, down just 1.1 percent and 1.3 percent, respectively.
The story becomes clearer when examining the numbers for individual vehicle sales. The Ford F-Series remains the top-selling vehicle in America, but the figure of 392,698 units sold is almost 27 percent less than last year during the same time period.
The Chevrolet Silverado, which actually outsold the F-Series during the month of September, holds on to second position overall, with sales dropping 23 percent. The Dodge Ram — the only other truck in the top 10 best-sellers — saw sales drop almost 30 percent.
Sales of trucks in America are down 20 percent compared to 2007, and while this trend is unlikely to reverse entirely, the Dodge Ram and Ford F-Series are both all new this fall. The new product could provide a bump in sales, but it's unlikely to dramatically change the downward trend.
View Pictures: Top 10 Best-Sellers
So where is the good news? It's in passenger cars — specifically small, fuel-efficient models. Of the top 10 vehicles, the car with the highest increase in sales over the last nine months is the Ford Focus, up 24 percent over last year. The Honda Civic has also had success — it is the fifth-best-selling vehicle in America so far this year, and sales of this small car have increased by 12 percent.
The Toyota Camry continues to be the best-selling passenger car, with the Japanese automaker moving about 40,000 more units than the next passenger car on the list, the Honda Accord. These are followed by the Civic, Toyota Corolla, Nissan Altima and Chevrolet Impala.
The list of top 10 best-sellers includes no minivans or SUVs. The Honda Odyssey is the best-selling minivan, while the Honda CR-V is the best-selling SUV, in 12th place overall.
Here are the top 10 best-sellers in America over the first nine months of 2008, based on data published by Automotive News.

Vehicle
Total Sales
% Change vs. 2007
Ford F-Series
392,698
-26.9%
Chevrolet Silverado
370,502
-22.5%
Toyota Camry
355,562
-2.6%
Honda Accord
313,228
3.8%
Honda Civic
285,715
12.1%
Toyota Corolla/Matrix
279,685
-4.2%
Nissan Altima
223,776
2.6%
Chevrolet Impala
209,734
-16.0%
Dodge Ram
196,058
-29.2%
Ford Focus
165,382
24.3%

Malaysian food street's name change sparks uproar

Malaysia's best-known destination for street food has been renamed, in a surprise re-branding that has created an uproar among the dozens of traders who sell local delicacies there.
Jalan Alor, which comes alive at night with more than 100 stalls selling everything from chicken satay to frog porridge, has been renamed Jalan Kejora by city authorities.
Critics say the change is pointless and will only confuse tourists, who nightly flock to the crowded street in the capital's Bukit Bintang district.
In the Malay language, jalan means "street" and alor means "stream".
Kuala Lumpur mayor Abdul Hakim Borhan said the plan to change the name to Kejora -- Malay for the planet Venus -- was made three years ago as part of a re-branding exercise for Bukit Bintang, which translates as "Star Hill".
"Other roads in the area will soon have new names, and they will all be named after the stars to create a new image," he was quoted as saying by the Star daily.
But Bukit Bintang parliamentarian Fong Kui Lun, from the opposition Democratic Action Party, said the move has created an outcry among Jalan Alor's traders.
"No notice, no explanations. They just replaced the street signboard and the only explanation we got from the mayor was in the newspapers," he told AFP Tuesday.
"For 50 years this street has established itself as a very famous hawker centre, it is almost a heritage to city folk and to just remove the name is a very uncalled for and irresponsible act by city hall."
Many of the traders have named their stalls after the street, which has existed for more than half a century, and yields more than a million results on the Yahoo! Internet search engine.
Fong said he would organise a protest petition to pressure Kuala Lumpur authorities to reconsider the decision.
"It is not easy to build up a name, a brand for tourists to remember. We hope City Hall will revert to its original name," he said.

Saudi to try almost 1,000 Qaeda suspects

Saudi Arabia said it plans to put in the dock almost 1,000 defendants in the first trials of Al-Qaeda suspects after more than five years of deadly Islamist violence.
"We have started to bring before the judiciary 991 people implicated in various incidents," Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz told the official SPA news agency late on Monday.
"Each case will be examined in stages," the minister said, without giving a date for the start of the trials being held in the Saudi capital Riyadh.
US-based Human Rights Watch said it was seeking authorisation from the Saudi authorities to send observers to the trials, saying justice must be seen to be done.
OPEC powerhouse Saudi Arabia has faced a string of attacks against Western targets and oil facilities since May 2003 and hundreds of suspected Islamist sympathisers have been arrested.
Prince Nayef said the wave of attacks in the ultra-conservative Muslim kingdom had killed a total of 90 civilians -- both foreigners and Saudis, and 74 members of the security forces.
He said 657 members of the security forces and 439 civilians had been wounded in the attacks, adding that security forces had foiled more than 160 "terrorist operations."
Three tonnes of explosives and more than 25 tonnes of possible bomb-making materials had been seized.
HRW said it was seeking permission from Riyadh to attend the trials of 70 defendants who were in court on Monday for the first time "to face charges of acts of domestic rebellion."
"Neutral observers should monitor trials of such national and international importance," Kenneth Roth, executive director of the New York-based group, said in a statement.
"For justice to be done, it has to be fair, and to be seen as fair."
HRW said it has written to Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal seeking authorisation to enter the country for the trials.
The Saudi-owned daily Asharq Al-Awsat said tight security measures have been put in place around the Riyadh courthouse. Six judges have started work and another six are to be appointed for the trials, expected to last several months.
Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia although he has since been stripped of his nationality. Fifteen of the 19 plotters of the September 2001 attacks in the United States were Saudis.
Saudi interior ministry spokesman General Mansur al-Turki said last month the security situation in the kingdom was "under control" but that Al-Qaeda remained a threat.
Riyadh has mounted a three-pronged offensive against the network: a security crackdown, clerics preaching moderation and efforts to curb financing.
Al-Qaeda, in statements issued on Islamist websites, repeatedly threatens the "apostate" Saudi government for its pro-Western policies and urges members of its security forces to switch allegiances.
HRW said Saudi Arabia, which has no written penal code, had held about 3,000 suspected militants in its intelligence detention facilities for years without charge or access to legal counsel.
In November 2007, it freed 1,500 suspects after a re-education programme, it said. "Hundreds of new suspects, possibly more than 1,000, have been arrested since, however, leaving between 2,000 and 3,000 suspects in detention."

Monday, October 20, 2008

Malaysia will not review tough internal security law: PM

Malaysia's government appeared at the weekend to back off from expected reforms of tough internal security laws, saying no changes to the legislation were currently on the table.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said he was not reviewing the Internal Security Act (ISA), which allows for indefinite detention without trial and that it was not one of his priorities before leaving office next year.
"At the moment, I'm not... reviewing the ISA," he told reporters on Saturday. "The government is using the ISA now and we have not discussed any changes to it."
The government says the act is a vital tool to fight terrorism, but rights groups say the law has been used to silence government critics.
On Friday, police detained human rights activist Cheng Lee Whee under the act after she participated in a demonstration opposing a squatter-colony demolition in southern Johor state. She was released over the weekend.
The government also last week declared Indian rights group Hindraf an illegal organisation after detaining five of its leaders under the act following anti-discrimination protests in the capital last year.
Many had expected Abdullah to reform the laws after the appointment of Zaid Ibrahim, a human rights lawyer, as the de facto law minister.
However, Zaid resigned last month after proposing an overhaul of the security law following the arrest of two journalists and a politician.
Abdullah has been forced to announce he will quit in March next year after dismal results in this year's national elections that handed the opposition unprecedented gains including a third of parliamentary seats.
The ISA, parts of which are a relic of the British colonial era when it was used to fight a communist insurgency, allows for renewable two-year periods of detention without trial.

Islamic banking escapes fallout of global financial crunch

Islamic banking has largely escaped the fallout from the global financial crisis, thanks to rules that forbid the sort of risky business that is felling mainstream institutions.
But experts say that because of its heavy reliance on property investments and private equity, the booming 1.0 trillion dollar global industry could be hit if the turmoil worsens and real assets start to crumble.
"In the current financial turmoil, it is interesting to note that Islamic financing may have prevented a majority of the mess created by the conventional banking and financial institutions," Kuwait Finance House said in a report.
"The outlook for Islamic financing is bright and will likely take the lead in terms of providing funding for major projects as the conventional banking system reevaluates its business model."
The rules of Islamic banking and finance -- which incorporate principles of sharia or Islamic law -- read like a how-to guide on avoiding the kind of disaster that is currently gripping world markets.
Islamic law prohibits the payment and collection of interest, which is seen as a form of gambling, so highly complex instruments such as derivatives and other creative accounting practices are banned.
Transactions must be backed by real assets -- not shady repackaged subprime mortgages -- and because risk is shared between the bank and the depositor there is an incentive for the institutions to ensure the deal is sound.
Investors have a right to know how their funds are being used, and the sector is overseen by dedicated supervisory boards as well as the usual national regulatory authorities.
"Islamic banking has, thus far, remained positive, despite the current challenging global financial environment," said Zeti Akhtar Aziz, the central bank governor of Malaysia, which is Southeast Asia's leader in Islamic banking.
Zeti said this month that because of the slowing global economy, plans for Islamic "sukuk" bonds had been postponed or scrapped by companies including Kuwait's Abyaar Real Estate Development Co. and Malaysia's Perisai Petroleum.
And Jennifer Chang, a partner at Pricewaterhouse Coopers in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, said that given the extent of the global crisis, Islamic banks may suffer damage despite their strong position.
"Islamic banks, especially in the Middle East, got heavily into private equity and real estate investments, and a lot of loans may be backed by properties. So if the property market goes down, there will be an impact," she said.
"If a borrower is not able to pay then the bank will foreclose and the question is -- can you sell the property in the market and at what value? These are issues which all banks can face."
There have been calls for the conventional banking industry to take a leaf out of the book of Islamic finance, which also shuns investments in gaming, alcohol and pornography in favour of ethical investments.
Influential Sunni cleric Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi earlier this month called on Muslims to take advantage of the turmoil to build an economic system compatible with Islamic principles.
"The collapse of the capitalist system based on usury and paper and not on goods traded on the market is proof that it is in crisis and shows that Islamic economic philosophy is holding up," said the Egyptian-born, Qatar-based cleric.
In recent years the sector has broken out of its niche and been embraced by mainstream banks. As well as basic bank deposits and investment accounts, it has expanded into areas including equity funds, bonds and Islamic hedge funds.
Abhishek Kumar, a senior research analyst at Financial Insights, a company under market research and analysis firm International Data Corp (IDC), said recent events may further boost the sector.
"More and more institutions will be interested in providing Islamic services to diversify their risk portfolio," he said, while warning that in the current financial storm there were no absolutely safe harbours.
"We're not really sure what the real extent of the impact is, and whether we've passed the worst of it or not, But the extent is not going to be as bad as in the mainstream sector," he said.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Teenage hacker admits Scientology cyber-attack

A teenager hacker has admitted carrying out a cyber attack that crashed Church of Scientology websites as part of a campaign by a mysterious underground group, justice officials said Friday.
Dmitriy Guzner, 18, of New Jersey will plead guilty to computer hacking for his role in launching a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack against Scientology websites in January this year, the Justice Department said.
DDOS attacks occur when websites are overwhelmed by a large volume of malicious Internet traffic, making the sites unavailable to legitimate users.
According to information filed in federal court in Los Angeles, Guzner described himself as a member of a shadowy Internet-based group known as "Anonymous" that has carried out a series of protests against Scientology.
A statement released by the Justice Department in Los Angeles said Guzner would formally plead guilty in "coming weeks" at a court in New Jersey. He faces up to 10 years in federal prison.
Founded in the United States in 1954 by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, the Church of Scientology, which has attracted Hollywood stars such as Tom Cruise, was recognized as a religion there 20 years later.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Subarachnoid hemorrhage




A subarachnoid hemorrhage (or subarachnoid haemorrhage in British English) is bleeding into the subarachnoid space—the area between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater surrounding the brain. This may occur spontaneously, usually from a ruptured cerebral aneurysm, or may result from head injury.

Symptoms of SAH include a severe headache with a rapid onset ("thunderclap headache"), vomiting, confusion or a lowered level of consciousness, and sometimes seizures.[1] The diagnosis is generally confirmed with a CT scan of the head, or occasionally by lumbar puncture. Treatment is by prompt neurosurgery or radiologically guided intervetions with medications and other treatments to help prevent recurrence of the bleeding and complications. Surgery for aneurysms was introduced in the 1930s, but since the 1990s many aneurysms are treated by a less invasive procedure called "coiling", which is carried out by instrumentation through large blood vessels.[1]

SAH is a form of stroke and comprises 1-7% of all strokes.[2] It is a medical emergency and can lead to death or severe disability—even when recognized and treated at an early stage. Up to half of all cases of SAH are fatal and 10–15% die before reaching a hospital,[1] and those who survive often have neurological or cognitive impairment.

SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

The classic symptom of subarachnoid hemorrhage is thunderclap headache (a headache described as "like being kicked in the head",[4] or the "worst ever", developing over seconds to minutes). This headache often pulsates towards the occiput (the back of the head).[5] About one-third of sufferers have no symptoms apart from the characteristic headache, and about one in ten people who seek medical care with this symptom are later diagnosed with a subarachnoid hemorrhage.[1] Vomiting may be present, and 1 in 14 have seizures.[1] Confusion, decreased level of consciousness or coma may be present, as may neck stiffness and other signs of meningism.[1] Neck stiffness usually presents six hours after initial onset of SAH.[6] Isolated dilation of a pupil and loss of the pupillary light reflex may reflect brain herniation as a result of rising intracranial pressure (pressure inside the skull).[1] Intraocular hemorrhage (bleeding into the eyeball) may occur in response to the raised pressure: subhyaloid hemorrhage (bleeding under the hyaloid membrane, which envelops the vitreous body of the eye) and vitreous hemorrhage may be visible on fundoscopy. This is known as Terson syndrome (occurring in 3–13% of cases) and is more common in more severe SAH.[7]

Oculomotor nerve abnormalities (affected eye looking downward and outward and inability to lift the eyelid on the same side) or palsy (loss of feeling) may indicate bleeding from the posterior communicating artery.[1][5] Seizures are more common if the hemorrhage is from an aneurysm; it is otherwise difficult to predict the site and origin of the hemorrhage from the symptoms.[1] SAH in a person known to have fits is often diagnostic of an arteriovenous malformation.[5]

As a result of the bleeding, the body releases large amounts of adrenaline and similar hormones. This leads to a sharp increase in the blood pressure; the heart comes under substantial strain, and neurogenic pulmonary edema (accumulation of fluid in the lungs), cardiac arrhythmias (irregularities in the heart rate and rhythm), electrocardiographic changes (in 27% of cases)[8] and cardiac arrest (in 3% of cases) may occur rapidly after the onset of hemorrhage.[1][9]

Subarachnoid hemorrhage may also occur in people who have suffered a head injury. Symptoms may include headache, decreased level of consciousness and hemiparesis (weakness of one side of the body). SAH is a frequent occurrence in traumatic brain injury, and carries a poor prognosis if it is associated with deterioration in the level of consciousness.

DIAGNOSIS

The initial steps for evaluating a person with a suspected subarachnoid hemorrhage are obtaining a medical history and performing a physical examination; these are aimed at determining whether the symptoms are due to SAH or to another cause. The diagnosis cannot, however, be made on clinical grounds alone; therefore medical imaging is generally required to confirm or exclude bleeding. The modality of choice is computed tomography (CT scan) of the brain. This has a high sensitivity and will correctly identify over 95% of cases—especially on the first day after the onset of bleeding. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be more sensitive than CT after several days.[1]

Lumbar puncture, in which cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is removed with a needle from the lumbar sac, will show evidence of hemorrhage in 3% of people in whom CT was found normal; lumbar puncture is therefore regarded as mandatory in people with suspected SAH if imaging is negative.[1] At least three tubes of CSF are collected.[6] If an elevated number of red blood cells is present equally in all bottles, this indicates a subarachnoid hemorrhage. If the number of cells decreases per bottle, it is more likely that it is due to damage to a small blood vessel during the procedure (known as a "traumatic tap").[3] The CSF sample is also examined for xanthochromia—the yellow appearance of centrifugated fluid. More sensitive is spectrophotometry (measuring the absorption of particular wavelengths of light) for detection of bilirubin, a breakdown product of hemoglobin from red blood cells.[1][11] Xanthochromia and spectrophotometry remain reliable ways to detect SAH several days after the onset of headache.[11] An interval of at least 12 hours between the onset of the headache and lumbar puncture is required, as it takes several hours for the hemoglobin from the red blood cells to be metabolized into bilirubin.[1][11]

As only 10% of people admitted to the emergency department with a thunderclap headache are suffering from an SAH, other possible causes are usually considered simultaneously, such as meningitis, migraine, and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis.[4] Intracerebral hemorrhage, in which bleeding occurs within the brain itself, is twice as common as SAH and is often misdiagnosed as the latter.[12] It is not unusual for SAH to be initially misdiagnosed as a migraine or tension headache, which can lead to a delay in obtaining a CT scan. In a 2004 study, this occurred in 12% of all cases and was more likely in people who had smaller hemorrhages and no impairment in their mental status. The delay in diagnosis led to a worse outcome.[13] In some people, the headache resolves by itself, and no other symptoms are present. This type of headache is referred to as "sentinel headache", because it is presumed to result from a small leak (a "warning leak") from an aneurysm. A sentinel headache still warrants investigations with CT scan and lumbar puncture, as further bleeding may occur in the subsequent three weeks.[3]

After a subarachnoid hemorrhage is confirmed, its origin needs to be determined. If the bleeding is likely to have originated from an aneurysm (as determined by the CT scan appearance), the choice is between cerebral angiography (injecting radiocontrast through a catheter to the brain arteries) and CT angiography (visualizing blood vessels with radiocontrast on a CT scan) to identify aneurysms. Catheter angiography also offers the possibility of coiling an aneurysm.

CAUSES

In 85% of cases of spontaneous SAH, the cause is rupture of a cerebral aneurysm—a weakness in the wall of one of the arteries in the brain that becomes enlarged. They tend to be located in the circle of Willis and its branches. While most cases of SAH are due to bleeding from small aneurysms, larger aneurysms (which are less common) are more likely to rupture.[1]

In 15–20% of cases of spontaneous SAH, no aneurysm is detected on the first angiogram.[14] About half of these are attributed to non-aneurysmal perimesencephalic hemorrhage, in which the blood is limited to the subarachnoid spaces around the midbrain (i.e. mesencephalon). In these, the origin of the blood is uncertain.[1] The remainder are due to other disorders affecting the blood vessels (such as arteriovenous malformations), disorders of the blood vessels in the spinal cord, and bleeding into various tumors.[1] Cocaine abuse and sickle cell anemia (usually in children) and, rarely, anticoagulant therapy, problems with blood clotting and pituitary apoplexy can also result in SAH.[6][14]

Subarachnoid blood can be detected on CT scanning in as many as 60% of people with traumatic brain injury.[15] Traumatic SAH (tSAH) usually occurs near the site of a skull fracture or intracerebral contusion.[14] It usually happens in the setting of other forms of traumatic brain injury and has been linked with a poorer prognosis. It is unclear, however, if this is a direct result of the SAH or whether the presence of subarachnoid blood is simply an indicator of severity of the head injury and the prognosis is determined by other associated mechanisms.

CLASSIFICATION

There are several grading scales available for SAH. The Glasgow Coma Scale is ubiquitously used for assessing consciousness. Three specialized scores are used to evaluate SAH; in each, a higher number is associated with a worse outcome.[16] These scales have been derived by retrospectively matching characteristics of patients with their outcomes.

The first scale of severity was described by Hunt and Hess in 1968:

Grade Signs and symptoms Survival
1 Asymptomatic or minimal headache and slight neck stiffness 70%
2 Moderate to severe headache; neck stiffness; no neurologic deficit except cranial nerve palsy 60%
3 Drowsy; minimal neurologic deficit 50%
4 Stuporous; moderate to severe hemiparesis; possibly early decerebrate rigidity and vegetative disturbances 20%
5 Deep coma; decerebrate rigidity; moribund 10%

The Fisher Grade classifies the appearance of subarachnoid hemorrhage on CT scan.[18] This scale has been modified by Claassen and coworkers, reflecting the additive risk from SAH size and accompanying intraventricular hemorrhage.[19]

Grade Appearance of hemorrhage
1 None evident
2 Less than 1 mm thick
3 More than 1 mm thick
4 Any thickness with intraventricular hemorrhage or parenchymal extension

The World Federation of Neurosurgeons classification uses Glasgow coma score (GCS) and focal neurological deficit to gauge severity of symptoms.[20]

Grade GCS Focal neurological deficit
1 15 Absent
2 13–14 Absent
3 13–14 Present
4 7–12 Present or absent
5 <7 Present or absent
A comprehensive classification scheme has been suggested by Ogilvy and Carter to predict outcome and gauge therapy.[21] The system consists of five grades and it assigns one point for the presence or absence of each of five factors: age greater than 50; Hunt and Hess grade 4 or 5; Fisher scale 3 or 4; aneurysm size greater than 10 mm; and posterior circulation aneurysm 25 mm or more.

TREATMENT

Management involves general measures to stabilize the patient while also using specific investigations and treatments. These include the prevention of rebleeding by obliterating the bleeding source, prevention of a phenomenon known as vasospasm, and prevention and treatment of complications.[1]

[edit] General measures

Stabilizing the patient is the first priority. Those with a depressed level of consciousness may need to be intubated and mechanically ventilated. Blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate and Glasgow Coma Scale are monitored frequently. Once the diagnosis is confirmed, admission to an intensive care unit may be preferable, especially since 15% may have further bleeding soon after admission. Nutrition is an early priority, with oral or nasogastric tube feeding being preferable over parenteral routes. Analgesia (pain control) is generally restricted to less sedating agents such as codeine, as sedation may impact on the mental status and thus interfere with the ability to monitor the level of consciousness. Deep vein thrombosis is prevented with compression stockings, intermittent pneumatic compression of the calves or both.[1] A bladder catheter is usually inserted to monitor fluid balance. Benzodiazepines may be administered to help relieve distress.[6] Antiemetic drugs should be given to awake persons.

Prevention of rebleeding

People whose CT scan shows a large hematoma, depressed level of consciousness or focal neurological symptoms may benefit from urgent surgical removal of the blood or occlusion of the bleeding site. The remainder are stabilized more extensively and undergo an transfemoral angiogram or CT angiogram later. It is hard to predict who will suffer a rebleed, yet it may happen at any time and carries a dismal prognosis. After the first 24 hours have passed, rebleeding risk remains around 40% over the subsequent four weeks, suggesting that interventions should be aimed at reducing this risk as soon as possible.[1]

If a cerebral aneurysm is identified on angiography, two measures are available to reduce the risk of further bleeding from the same aneurysm: clipping[22] and coiling.[23] Clipping requires a craniotomy (opening of the skull) to locate the aneurysm, followed by the placement of clips around the neck of the aneurysm. Coiling is performed through the large blood vessels (endovascularly): a catheter is inserted into the femoral artery in the groin and advanced through the aorta to the arteries (both carotid arteries and both vertebral arteries) that supply the brain. When the aneurysm has been located, platinum coils are deployed that cause a blood clot to form in the aneurysm, obliterating it. The decision as to which treatment is undertaken is typically made by a multidisciplinary team consisting of a neurosurgeon, neuroradiologist and often other health professionals.[1]

Generally, the decision between clipping and coiling is made on the basis of the location of the aneurysm, its size and the condition of the patient. Aneurysms of the middle cerebral artery and its related vessels are hard to reach with angiography and tend to be amenable to clipping. Those of the basilar artery and posterior cerebral artery are hard to reach surgically and are more accessible for endovascular management.[24] These approaches are based on general experience, and the only randomized controlled trial directly comparing the different modalities was performed in relatively well patients with small (less than 10 mm) aneurysms of the anterior cerebral artery and anterior communicating artery (together the "anterior circulation"), who constitute about 20% of all patients with aneurysmal SAH.[24][25] This trial, the International Subarachnoid Aneurysm Trial (ISAT), showed that in this group the likelihood of death or being dependent on others for activities of daily living was reduced (7.4% absolute risk reduction, 23.5% relative risk reduction) if endovascular coiling was used as opposed to surgery.[24] The main drawback of coiling is the possibility that the aneurysm will recur; this risk is extremely small in the surgical approach. In ISAT, 8.3% needed further treatment in the longer term. Hence, people who have undergone coiling are typically followed up for many years afterwards with angiography or other measures to ensure recurrence of aneurysms is identified early.[26] Other trials have also found a higher rate of recurrence necessitating further treatments.

Vasospasm

Vasospasm, in which the blood vessels constrict and thus restrict blood flow, is a serious complication of SAH. It can cause ischemic brain injury (referred to as "delayed ischemia") and permanent brain damage due to lack of oxygen in parts of the brain. It can be fatal if severe. Delayed ischemia is characterized by new neurological symptoms, and can be confirmed by transcranial doppler or cerebral angiography. About one third of all people admitted with subarachnoid hemorrhage will have delayed ischemia, and half of those suffer permanent damage as a result.[29] It is possible to screen for the development of vasospasm with transcranial doppler every 24–48 hours. A blood flow velocity of more than 120 centimeters per second is suggestive of vasospasm.[3]

The use of calcium channel blockers, thought to be able to prevent the spasm of blood vessels by preventing calcium from entering smooth muscle cells, has been proposed for the prevention of vasospasm.[15] The oral calcium channel blocker nimodipine improves outcome if administered between the fourth and twenty-first day after the hemorrhage, even if it does not significantly reduce the amount of vasospasm detected on angiography.[30] In traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, nimodipine does not affect long-term outcome, and is not recommended.[31] Other calcium channel blockers and magnesium sulfate have been studied, but are not presently recommended; neither is there any evidence that shows benefit if nimodipine is given intravenously.[29]

A protocol referred to as "triple H" is often used as a measure to treat vasospasm when it causes symptoms; this is the use of intravenous fluids to achieve a state of hypertension (high blood pressure), hypervolemia (excess fluid in the circulation) and hemodilution (mild dilution of the blood).[32] Evidence for this approach is inconclusive; no randomized controlled trials have been undertaken to demonstrate its benefits.[33]

If the symptoms of delayed ischemia do not improve with medical treatment, angiography may be attempted to identify the sites of vasospasms and administer vasodilator medication (drugs that relax the blood vessel wall) directly into the artery. Angioplasty (opening the constricted area with a balloon) may also be performed.[3]

[edit] Other complications


Hydrocephalus (obstruction of the flow of cerebrospinal fluid) may complicate SAH in both the short- and long term. It is detected on CT scanning, on which there is enlargement of the lateral ventricles. If the level of consciousness is decreased, drainage of the excess fluid is performed by therapeutic lumbar puncture, extraventricular drain (a temporary device inserted into the one of the ventricles) or occasionally a permanent shunt.[1][3] Relief of hydrocephalus can lead to an enormous improvement in a person's condition.[5] Fluctuations in blood pressure and electrolyte disturbances, as well as pneumonia and cardiac decompensation occur in about half the hospitalized persons with SAH and may worsen prognosis.[1] Seizures occur during the hospital stay in about a third of cases.[3] Many believe that patients might benefit from prevention with antiepileptic drugs.[3] Although this is widely practiced,[34] it is controversial and not based on good evidence.[35][36] In some studies, use of these drugs was associated with a worse prognosis; this might be because they actually cause harm, or because they are used more often in persons with a poorer prognosis.

PROGNOSIS

Early morbidity and mortality

SAH is often associated with a poor outcome.[2] The death rate (mortality) for SAH is between 40 and 50%,[12] but trends for survival are improving.[1] Of those who survive hospitalization, more than a quarter have significant restrictions in their lifestyle, and less than a fifth have no residual symptoms whatsoever.[24] Delay in diagnosis of minor SAH (mistaking the sudden headache for migraine) contributes to poor outcome.[13] Factors found on admission that are associated with poorer outcome include poorer neurological grade; systolic hypertension; a previous diagnosis of heart attack or SAH; liver disease; more blood and larger aneurysm on the initial CT scan; location of an aneurysm in the posterior circulation; and higher age.[37] Factors that carry a worse prognosis during the hospital stay include occurrence of delayed ischemia resulting from vasospasm, development of intracerebral hematoma or intraventricular hemorrhage (bleeding into the ventricles of the brain) and presence of fever on the eighth day of admission.[37]

So-called "angiogram-negative subarachnoid hemorrhage", SAH that does not show an aneurysm with four-vessel angiography, carries a better prognosis than SAH with aneurysm; however, it is still associated with a risk of ischemia, rebleeding and hydrocephalus.[14] Perimesencephalic SAH (bleeding around the mesencephalon in the brain), however, has a very low rate of rebleeding or delayed ischemia, and the prognosis of this subtype is excellent.[39]

The prognosis of head trauma is thought to be influenced in part by the location and amount of subarachnoid bleeding.[15] It is difficult to isolate the effects of SAH from those of other aspects of traumatic brain injury; it is unknown whether the presence of subarachnoid blood actually worsens the prognosis or whether it is merely a sign that a significant trauma has occurred.[15] People with moderate and severe traumatic brain injury who have SAH when admitted to a hospital have as much as twice the risk of dying as those who do not.[15] They also have a higher risk of severe disability and persistent vegetative state, and traumatic SAH has been correlated with other markers of poor outcome such as post traumatic epilepsy, hydrocephalus, and longer stays in the intensive care unit.[15] However, more than 90% of people with traumatic subarachnoid bleeding and a Glasgow Coma Score over 12 have a good outcome.[15]

There is also modest evidence that genetic factors influence the prognosis in SAH. For example, having two copies of ApoE4 (a variant of the gene encoding apolipoprotein E that also plays a role in Alzheimer's disease) seems to increase risk for delayed ischemia and a worse outcome.[40]

[edit] Long-term outcomes


Neurocognitive symptoms, such as fatigue, mood disturbances, and other related symptoms are common sequelae. Even in those who have made good neurological recovery, anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder and cognitive impairment are common; 46% of people who have suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage have cognitive impairment that affects their quality of life.[3] Over 60% report frequent headaches.[41] Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage may lead to damage of the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland, two areas of the brain that play a central role in hormonal regulation and production. More than a quarter of people with a previous SAH may develop hypopituitarism (deficiencies in one or more of the hypothalamic-pituitary hormones such as growth hormone, luteinizing hormone or follicle-stimulating hormone).

EPIDEMIOLOGY

According to a review of 51 studies from 21 countries, the average incidence of subarachnoid hemorrhage is 9.1 per 100,000 annually. Studies from Japan and Finland show higher rates in those countries (22.7 and 19.7, respectively), for reasons that are not entirely understood. South and Central America, in contrast, have a rate of 4.2 per 100,000 on average.[43]

Although the group of people at risk for SAH is younger than the population usually affected by stroke,[2] the risk still increases with age. Young people are much much less likely than middle-aged people (risk ratio 0.1, or 10%) to suffer a subarachnoid hemorrhage.[43] The risk continues to rise with age and is 60% higher in the very elderly (over 85) than in those between 45 and 55.[43] Risk of SAH is about 25% higher in women over 55 compared to men the same age, probably reflecting the hormonal changes that result from the menopause, such as a decrease in estrogen levels.[43]

Genetics may play a role in a person's disposition to SAH; risk is increased three- to fivefold in first-degree relatives of people who have suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage.[4] However, lifestyle factors are more important in determining overall risk.[2] These risk factors are smoking, hypertension (high blood pressure) and excessive alcohol intake.[12] Having smoked in the past confers a doubled risk of SAH compared to those who have never smoked.[2] Some protection of uncertain significance is conferred by Caucasian ethnicity, hormone replacement therapy, diabetes mellitus and higher than normal levels of cholesterol.[2] Approximately 4% of aneurysmal bleeds occur after sexual intercourse and 10% of people with SAH are bending over or lifting heavy objects at the onset of their symptoms.[5]

Overall, about 1% of all people have one or more cerebral aneurysms. Most of these, however, are small and unlikely to rupture.

SCREENING AND PREVENTION

Screening for aneurysms is not performed on a population level; because they are relatively rare, it would not be cost-effective. If someone has two or more first-degree relatives who have suffered an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, screening may be worthwhile.[1][45]

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), a hereditary kidney condition, is known to be associated with cerebral aneurysms in 8% of cases, but most such aneurysms are small and therefore unlikely to rupture. As a result, screening is only recommended in families with ADPKD where one family member has suffered a ruptured aneurysm.[46]

An aneurysm may be detected incidentally on brain imaging; this presents a conundrum, as all treatments for cerebral aneurysms are associated with potential complications. The International Study of Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms (ISUIA) provided prognostic data both in people who had previously suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage and people who had aneurysms detected by other means. Those who had previously suffered SAH were more likely to bleed from other aneurysms. In contrast, those who had never bled and had small aneurysms (smaller than 10 mm) were very unlikely to suffer SAH and were likely to sustain harm from attempts to repair these aneurysms.[44] On the basis of the ISUIA and other studies, it is now recommended that people are only considered for preventative treatment if they have a reasonable life expectancy and have aneurysms that are highly likely to rupture.

HISTORY

While the clinical picture of subarachnoid hemorrhage may have been recognized by Hippocrates, the existence of cerebral aneurysms and the fact that they could rupture was not established until the 18th century.[47] The associated symptoms were described in more detail in 1886 by Edinburgh physician Dr Byrom Bramwell.[48] In 1924, London neurologist Sir Dr Charles P. Symonds (1890–1978) gave a complete account of all major symptoms of subarachnoid hemorrhage, and he coined the term "spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage".[47][49][50] Symonds also described the use of lumbar puncture and xanthochromia in diagnosis.[51]

The first surgical intervention was performed by Mr Norman Dott, who was a pupil of Dr Harvey Cushing then working in Edinburgh. He introduced the wrapping of aneurysms in the 1930s, and was an early pioneer in the use of angiograms.[50] American neurosurgeon Dr Walter Dandy, working in Baltimore, was the first to introduce clips in 1938.[22] Microsurgery was applied to aneurysm treatment in 1972 in order to further improve outcomes.[52] The 1980s saw the introduction of triple H therapy[32] as a treatment for delayed ischemia due to vasospasm, and trials with nimodipine[30] in an attempt to prevent this complication. The Italian neurosurgeon Dr Guido Guiglielmi introduced his endovascular coil treatment in 1991.