Healthy Lungs Make Healthy Blood

Healthy Lungs Make Healthy Blood

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

Venezuela, Mercies in Disguise, Football and Brain Disease

Episode: Venezuela, Mercies in Disguise, Football and Brain Disease

  • Aug 10, 2017 11:00 pm
  • 13:40 mins

(originally aired May 1, 2017) Guest: Mark Looney, Pulmonologist, Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco The heart pumps blood, the stomach digests food and the lungs bring oxygen into the body. Turns out these basic organ functions we learned in grade school are much too simplified. The body is a complex and finely tuned collection of processes. But researchers have recently discovered something that surprised even them – the lungs are also a major blood-making factory in the body, churning out at least half of the platelet cells that are critical for blood clotting. This discovery was made in mice, but it could provide important clues about human lungs, too.

Other Segments

Context is Everything with BYU's Famous Corpora

14m

Guest: Mark Davies, PhD, Professor of Linguistics, BYU Ever had this problem? Try to type in “sorry I missed you” and your phone insists on autocorrecting it to “sorry I kissed you”? Why does autocorrect insist that “sorry I” should be followed by “kissed” instead of “missed” or any number of less embarrassing alternatives?  How do our phones and computers come up with words to suggest as we type? Through giant databases, or corpora of words, which catalogue how words most frequently appear in context. BYU linguistics professor Mark Davies has designed 21 such word databases, commonly used by tech companies, people learning English and even judges looking to see how past courts have interpreted certain phrases over time.

Guest: Mark Davies, PhD, Professor of Linguistics, BYU Ever had this problem? Try to type in “sorry I missed you” and your phone insists on autocorrecting it to “sorry I kissed you”? Why does autocorrect insist that “sorry I” should be followed by “kissed” instead of “missed” or any number of less embarrassing alternatives?  How do our phones and computers come up with words to suggest as we type? Through giant databases, or corpora of words, which catalogue how words most frequently appear in context. BYU linguistics professor Mark Davies has designed 21 such word databases, commonly used by tech companies, people learning English and even judges looking to see how past courts have interpreted certain phrases over time.

Football Linked to Brain Disease

15m

Guest:  Michael Alosco, PhD, Clinical Neuropsychology Fellow, Boston University Back-to-school also means back to the gridiron. Football players from high school to the pros are suiting up to make the hard tackles that thrill fans. But, mounting evidence points to a risk of long-term brain damage football athletes might be sustaining as they slam into each other. The NFL has agreed to a one billion dollar settlement for retired players diagnosed with brain injuries. At least 18,000 former players are part of that settlement.  In recent weeks, researchers at Boston University School of Medicine published the largest study, to-date, showing a degenerative brain disease called CTE in former football players of all levels.

Guest:  Michael Alosco, PhD, Clinical Neuropsychology Fellow, Boston University Back-to-school also means back to the gridiron. Football players from high school to the pros are suiting up to make the hard tackles that thrill fans. But, mounting evidence points to a risk of long-term brain damage football athletes might be sustaining as they slam into each other. The NFL has agreed to a one billion dollar settlement for retired players diagnosed with brain injuries. At least 18,000 former players are part of that settlement.  In recent weeks, researchers at Boston University School of Medicine published the largest study, to-date, showing a degenerative brain disease called CTE in former football players of all levels.

Mercies in Disguise: When You Know How You'll Likely Die

38m

(originally aired March 21, 2017) Guest: Gina Kolata, Author and Science Reporter, New York Times, Author of “Mercies in Disguise: A Story of Hope, A Family’s Genetic Destiny, and the Science that Rescued Them” If a blood test could tell you that you would probably die of an incurable disease, would you get the test? Amanda Baxley faced that dilemma after watching her father, uncle, and grandfather succumb to a rare and fatal condition known as Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker (GSS), which has symptoms similar to Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases.  As Amanda pondered getting the blood test to see if she, too, had the gene for GSS, some in her family begged her not to. Just think of the Pandora’s box such knowledge could unlock for a family with deep religious beliefs. .

(originally aired March 21, 2017) Guest: Gina Kolata, Author and Science Reporter, New York Times, Author of “Mercies in Disguise: A Story of Hope, A Family’s Genetic Destiny, and the Science that Rescued Them” If a blood test could tell you that you would probably die of an incurable disease, would you get the test? Amanda Baxley faced that dilemma after watching her father, uncle, and grandfather succumb to a rare and fatal condition known as Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker (GSS), which has symptoms similar to Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases.  As Amanda pondered getting the blood test to see if she, too, had the gene for GSS, some in her family begged her not to. Just think of the Pandora’s box such knowledge could unlock for a family with deep religious beliefs. .