Swimming-Australian great Thorpe may not swim again – manager

April 8 (Reuters) – Five-times Olympic swimming champion Ian Thorpe is in a Sydney hospital fighting a “serious” infection and may not swim again, his manager told Australian media late on Tuesday. “It’s serious but it’s not life-threatening,” Thorpe’s agent James Erskine told Australian Associated Press. “From a competitive point of view – he will not be swimming competitively again I don’t think.” (Reporting by Ian Ransom; editing by Justin Palmer; Editing by …)

Guinea’s first Ebola survivors return to family, stigma remains

Ebola 6ZBy Misha Hussain GUECKEDOU Guinea (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Hiccups, say doctors in this remote corner of Guinea, are the final tell-tale sign of infection by the Ebola virus that has killed more than 100 people since an outbreak began this year. But for Rose Komano, the hiccups never came. On Saturday, the 18-year-old mother of three became the first victim to have beaten the disease in the region of Gueckedou, epicentre of the Ebola outbreak in this impoverished West African nation. In total, 98 people are thought to have died from the disease in Guinea and 10 more in neighbouring Liberia, according to aid workers and governments.

Scientists regenerate immune organ in mice

By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) – British scientists have for the first time used regenerative medicine to fully restore an organ in a living animal, a discovery they say may pave the way for similar techniques to be used in humans in future. The University of Edinburgh team rebuilt the thymus – an organ central to the immune system and found in front of the heart – of very old mice by reactivating a natural mechanism that gets shut down with age. The regenerated thymus was not only similar in structure and genetic detail to one in a young mouse, the scientists said, but was also able to function again, with the treated mice beginning to make more T-cells – a type of white blood cell key to fighting infections. The regenerated thymus was also more than twice the size of the aged organs in the untreated mice.

Analyst: Apple iWatch to sport UV light sensor

Reports are mounting that the Apple iWatch is going to be a health and fitness device.If all of the reports turn out to be true, the company's first wearable technology device could well be a wrist-worn virtual doctor rather than just a second screen for the iPhone. In a note to investors seen by Apple Insider, Barclays analyst Blayne Curtis says that the iWatch will be able to monitor the wearer's exposure to potentially harmful UV light and therefore know when it's time to reapply the sunscreen or cover up completely. In February, Silicon Labs, a Texas-based tech company, became the first to successfully build a single-chip digital UV index sensor, and Curtis believes that they could well be integrated into the Apple iWatch. "These chips measure UV exposure to aid those with elevated risk of sunburn or just a general concern about excessive sun exposure, and we believe they may be […] appealing to OEMs looking to differentiate in a crowded market," Curtis wrote.

Japan drugmaker Takeda to fight $6 billion damages imposed by U.S. jury

By Daniel Levine and Edmund Klamann SAN FRANCISCO/TOKYO (Reuters) – Takeda Pharmaceutical Co Ltd said it would contest $6 billion in punitive damages imposed by a U.S. federal jury in a case alleging that Japan’s largest drugmaker had concealed cancer risks associated with its Actos diabetes drug. Eli Lilly and Co, Takeda’s co-defendant in the case, was ordered to pay $3 billion in punitive damages. “We intend to vigorously challenge this outcome through all available legal means, including possible post-trial motions and an appeal,” Kenneth Greisman, general counsel of Takeda Pharmaceutical USA Inc, said in a statement. The massive award was met with “stunned silence” in the packed Lafayette, Louisiana, courtroom, plaintiffs’ lawyer Mark Lanier said.

Syrians face drought, wheat production seen at record low: WFP

By Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA (Reuters) – Syrians battered by years of war are facing a major drought that could cut wheat production in the country’s northwest breadbasket to a record low of 1.7 million to 2 million metric tonnes, the World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday. If rains fail to fall by the time of the harvest in mid-May, food prices would soar and Syria would need to import more than the estimated 5.1 million tonnes of wheat needed during the previous season, WFP added. “A drought could put the lives of millions more people at risk”, spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs told a news briefing in Geneva. “WFP is concerned about the impact of a looming drought hitting the northwest of the country – mainly Aleppo, Idlib, and Hama, with rainfall less than half of the long term average (since September) and potentially major impacts on the next cereal harvest,” she said, adding that barley output was also affected.

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