Surreal Illustrations of Absurd Exaggerated Face Masks
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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roma★

Kiana Khansmith
Not today Justin
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Sweet Seals For You, Always
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RMH
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Claire Keane
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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Monterey Bay Aquarium

if i look back, i am lost
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hello vonnie
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Surreal Illustrations of Absurd Exaggerated Face Masks
Taylor Mathues - Metamorphosis
“Madness, mayhem, erotic vandalism, devastation of innumerable souls - while we scream and perish, History licks a finger and turns the page.”
— Thomas Ligotti (via star-eaters)
Paolo Monti - Chimigramma, ca. 1960
Study shows promise in repairing damaged myelin
A scientific breakthrough provides new hope for millions of people living with multiple sclerosis. Researchers at OHSU have developed a compound that stimulates repair of the protective sheath that covers nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
The discovery, involving mice genetically engineered to mimic multiple sclerosis, published today in the journal JCI Insight.
MS is a chronic condition that affects an estimated 2.3 million people worldwide. In MS, the sheath covering nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord becomes damaged, slowing or blocking electrical signals from reaching the eyes, muscles and other parts of the body. This sheath is called myelin. Although myelin can regrow through exposure to thyroid hormones, researchers have not pursued thyroid hormone therapies due to unacceptable side effects.
Although several treatments and medications alleviate the symptoms of MS, there is no cure.
“There are no drugs available today that will re-myelinate the de-myelinated axons and nerve fibers, and ours does that,” said senior author Tom Scanlan, Ph.D., professor of physiology and pharmacology in the OHSU School of Medicine.
Co-author Dennis Bourdette, M.D., chair of neurology in the OHSU School of Medicine and director of the OHSU Multiple Sclerosis Center, said he expects it will be a few years before the compound advances to the stage of a clinical trial involving people. Yet the discovery provides fresh hope for patients in Oregon and beyond.
“It could have a significant impact on patients debilitated by MS,” Bourdette said.
The discovery reported, if ultimately proven in clinical trials involving people, appears to accomplish two important goals:
Myelin repair with minimal side effects: The study demonstrated that the compound – known as sobetirome – promotes remylenation without the severe side effects of thyroid hormone therapy. Thyroid hormone therapy has not been tried in people because chronic elevated exposure known as hyperthyroidism harms the heart, bone, and skeletal muscle.
Efficient delivery: Researchers developed a new derivative of sobetirome (Sob-AM2) that penetrates the blood brain barrier, enabling a tenfold increase in infiltration to the central nervous system.
“We’re taking advantage of the endogenous ability of thyroid hormone to repair myelin without the side effects,” said lead author Meredith Hartley, Ph.D., an OHSU postdoctoral researcher in physiology and pharmacology.
Co-authors credited the breakthrough to a collaboration that involved scientists and physicians with expertise ranging across neurology, genetics, advanced imaging, physiology and pharmacology.
Potential as a ‘total game-changer’
One patient said the research could be a “total game-changer” for people with MS.
Laura Wieden, 48, has lived with multiple sclerosis since being diagnosed in 1995. The daughter of Portland advertising executive Dan Wieden, she is the namesake and board member of the Laura Fund for Innovation in Multiple Sclerosis, which funded much of the research involved in the study published today.
“I am really optimistic,” Wieden said. “I hope that this will be literally a missing link that could just change the lives of people with MS.”
Scanlan originally developed sobetirome as a synthetic molecule more than two decades ago, initially with an eye toward using it to lower cholesterol. In recent years, Scanlan’s lab adapted it as a promising treatment for a rare metabolic disease called adrenoleukodystrophy, or ALD.
Six years ago, Bourdette suggested trying the compound to repair myelin in MS.
Supported by funding provided through the Laura Fund and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the team turned to Ben Emery, Ph.D., an associate professor of neurology in the OHSU School of Medicine. Emery, an expert who previously established his own lab in Australia focused on the molecular basis of myelination, genetically engineered a mouse model to test the treatment.
A ‘Trojan horse’
With promising early results, researchers wanted to see if they could increase the amount of sobetirome that penetrated into the central nervous system.
They did so through a clever trick of chemistry known as a prodrug strategy.
Scientists added a chemical tag to the original sobetirome molecule, creating an inert compound called Sob-AM2. The tag’s main purpose is to eliminate a negative charge that prevents sobetirome from efficiently penetrating the blood-brain barrier. Once Sob-AM2 slips past the barrier and reaches the brain, it encounters a particular type of brain enzyme that cleaves the tag and converts Sob-AM2 back into sobetirome.
“It’s a Trojan horse type of thing,” Scanlan said.
Researchers found that the treatment in mice not only triggered myelin repair, but they also measured substantial motor improvements in mice treated with the compound.
“The mouse showed close to a full recovery,” Scanlan said.
Scientists say they are confident that the compound will translate from mice to people. To that end, OHSU has licensed the technology to Llama Therapeutics Inc., a biotechnology company in San Carlos, California. Llama is working to advance these molecules toward human clinical trials in MS and other diseases.
Bourdette said even though it may not help his patients today, he’s optimistic the discovery eventually will move from the lab into the clinic.
“Right now, what it means is hope,” he said.
March, Alex Colville
Kyle Kinane - Loose In Chicago (2016)
This is my issue with people who are like “but she gave up important military secrets and put soldiers at risk!!”
And it’s like, that’s a really nice propaganda-y way to say she exposed the military committing crimes and cruel acts that should not be allowed, but that active members literally aren’t given the choice to say anything against, because “it compromises our safety everyoen″. That’s a really fucking convenient excuse imo.
Attention 17-year-olds! If you are going to be 18 by election day you are entitled to vote on super Tuesday to choose the Democratic nominee! Call up your town clerk to get registered! Please signal boost!
Cuba is the most sustainably developed country in the world, according to a new report launched on November 29. The socialist island outperf
Accomplished despite an embargo too...sïmply ëpïc folks.
it’s not despite the embargo, in large part it’s due to the embargo:
To comprehend the magnitude of that achievement, and its significance for our world today, we need to go back to 1990. Cuba then was the very model of industrial agriculture, turning most of its land over to vast monocultures of sugar cane, applying oceans of imported oil to till it, spray it (Cuba at the time used more pesticides than the United States), harvest it and ship it to the Soviet Union in return for oil and food. Most of what was grown in Cuba was exported; most of what was eaten in Cuba was imported. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Cuba, under embargo by the United States, had no market for its agricultural products and no way to pay for imported oil or food.
An industrial country wakes up one morning to no more oil. Just like that.
Motivated now by survival, not by profit, Cubans did what smart people have been telling us all to do for decades now. They stopped wresting cash from their punished land and started to heal it in order to have enough food to live. It was tough, starting from scratch, with the crisis already upon them. In the decade that followed the average Cuban adult lost 20 pounds.
They brought in experts in Permaculture from Australia and launched a national drive toward diversified, organic, polycultural, restorative agriculture. They did not do this because they wanted to save “the environment,” they did it because they wanted to save themselves. And that is why they succeeded. By the end of that first decade the average Cuban was getting 2600 calories and more than 68 grams of protein, an amount considered “sufficient” by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. By 2006 average caloric intake was up to 3356 calories.
A lot of this food was produced not in the countryside (requiring transport to the cities) but in urban gardens, where food was grown and consumed in the same neighborhood. By 2002, 35,000 acres of urban gardens produced 3.4 million tons of food. In Havana, 90% of the city’s fresh produce came from local urban farms and gardens, all organic. In 2003, more than 200,000 Cubans were employed in urban agriculture. In 2003, Cuba had reduced its use of Diesel fuel by more than 50%, synthetic fertilizers by 90%, and chemical insecticides by 83%.
- The World’s Most Sustainable Country: What? Cuba?
SLC Punk! (1998)
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Dmitry Ligay
The Umbrella Academy. 1.5 “Number Five”