Kaizen Media Blog

Innovation through creativity and passion

Entries for January, 2008

Hay Field Desktop Wallpaper

Hay

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Kanye West – Stronger

Guy’s Ski Centre

Kaizen Web Design Logo SampleBonnyville, AB

Guy’s Ski Centre sells premium recreational waterfront products such as aluminum docks, boat lifts, recreational water toys and more to boaters, cottagers and people with access to waterfront property.

We also designed a website for Guy’s Ski Centre.

Click here to enlarge logo.

Guy’s Ski Centre

Kaizen Web Design Website SampleBonnyville, AB

Guy’s Ski Centre sells premium recreational waterfront products such as aluminum docks, boat lifts, recreational water toys and more to boaters, cottagers and people with access to waterfront property.

We designed a logo with an aluminum dock meeting a speedboat to form a G and developed a small site from the ground up with a fun and recreational feel to provide information about Guy’s Ski Centre.

Click here to visit www.guyski.com.

Business Zen Quote

“There are three kinds of people. Those who make things happen, those who watch things happen, and those who wonder what happened.”
- Anonymous

Lonely Planet: Travel Guide

Lonely Planet is a travel guide website.

Heart beats post mortem

PARIS (AFP) – In experiments that would make Dr. Frankenstein jealous, US scientists have coaxed recycled hearts taken from animal cadavers into beating in the laboratory after reseeding them with live cells, according to a study released Sunday.If extended to humans, the procedure could provide an almost limitless supply of hearts, and possibly other organs, to millions of terminally ill people waiting helplessly for a new lease on life.

Approximately 50,000 patients in the United States alone die every year for lack of a donor heart, and some 22 million people worldwide are living with the threat of heart failure.

“The idea would be to develop transplantable blood vessels or whole organs that are made from your own cells,” said lead researcher Doris Taylor, director of the Center or Cardiovascular Repair at the University of Minnesota.

While there have been advances in generating living heart tissue in the lab, this is the first time an entire, three-dimension bio-artificial heart has been brought to life.

The core procedure making this possible is called decellularisation.

In this process, all the cells from an organ — in this case the heart of a dead rat — are stripped away using powerful detergents, leaving only a bleached-white scaffolding composed of proteins secreted by the cells.

In the experiments, this matrix was then injected with a mixture of cells taken from newborn rat hearts and placed in a sterile lab setting, where the scientists hoped it would grow.

After only four days, contractions started, and on the eighth day, the hearts were pumping, according to the study, published in the British journal Nature Medicine.

The researchers were stunned.

“When we saw the first contractions, we were speechless,” said Harald Ott, a surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital.

“We certainly were surprised that it worked so well and so quickly,” Taylor told AFP. “There are so many places this could have gone wrong.”

In humans the objective would be to inject stemcells drawn directly from the recipient of the donated organ, thus eliminating the danger that the new heart would be rejected by the immune system.

Recent breakthroughs in stemcell research from non-embryo sources mean that new tissues should be easy to generate, according to the authors.

Many patients who might one day benefit from a transplanted bioartificial organ are currently not even listed as potential recipients, said Ott.

“If organs derived from a patient’s own cells would become available on a large scale — maybe even as an off-the-shelf product — millions of patients suffering from organ failure would benefit,” he said in an e-mail.

In these “proof of concept” experiments, the bioartificial rat hearts grown in the lab pumped, after eight days, with a force equivalent to about two percent of an adult rodent heart.

Taylor and her team are now working on making the recycled organs more efficient, and have even transplanted some of these hearts into the abdomens of rats and connected them to the animals’ aortas, a standard way of testing whether a donor organ can keep an animal alive.

Decellularisation could change the way scientists thinks about engineering organs, according to the study.

“It opens a door to this notion that you can make any organ: kidney, liver, lung, pancreas — you name it and we hope we can make it,” Taylor said.

Though not reported in this study, the Minnesota researchers have also successfully applied the technique to pig hearts, which are closer to human hearts in size and complexity.

Dockspider Desktop Wallpaper

Dock Spider

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The 5 Pimpingest Historical Figures

Leave it to the nutters at Cracked.com to come up with this sensational & educational article about the 5 pimpingest historical figures of all time:

Philosopher of rap Ice-T once reflected that “Pimpin’ ain’t easy.” We here at Cracked are inclined to agree. That’s why these historical men deserve special commendation for bringing the bling, bitches and beatdowns to their reigns, while laying a stiff backhand across the face of convention and scoring major amounts of tang in the process.

They were, quite simply, the pimpingest men of all time.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CRACKED.COM!Â