Posts made in August 2020

Carly Rae Jepsen – Me And The Boys In The Band

Carly Rae Jepsen releases a tribute to her love of travel with the boys in the band!

“On the road. That was the life. I miss travel and performing and my band mates who over the years have become my adopted brothers,” says Carly Rae Jepsen. “Through romantic relationships good and bad I have always found myself again in the late-night conversations with my band. Here’s to all the shows we have played and have yet to play. The late-night dancers we turn into on the long bus drives and the tourists we become in the early mornings. Here’s to nostalgia city and keeping close the ones that know you best. Can’t wait for more. Till then a from home “pick me up” song from all of us to you. Me and the boys and the band! Big thanks to Jack Antonoff, Tavish Crowe, Jared Manerika and Nik Pesut for making this jam come together from a distance.”

Watch the video clip for “Me And The Boys In The Band” HERE.

Later this month Jepsen will throw a karaoke party to celebrate the 5th Anniversary of her critically acclaimed album E*MO*TION.  Jepsen asked her fans to send in videos of themselves singing and dancing to their favorite E*MO*TION track. Tune in to YouTube on August 27th at 6pm ET to join Carly for a special celebration!

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Covid Mental Health illustration by Mina Tocalini

The Coma Plan – New Treatment for Comatose Patients

Leading coma experts have created an ambitious plan to help doctors better care for comatose patients and answer that most awful question: “Will my loved one wake up?”

To clarify, the three-part plan outlines key steps physicians and researchers should take in the coming years to improve patient care and deepen our understanding of coma and other conditions that reduce consciousness. The plan was developed by a blue-ribbon scientific advisory council as part of the Neurocritical Care Society’s Curing Coma Campaign, a major effort launched in 2019.

“We now have the tools to understand comatose patients in a way we haven’t in the past. This opens the door to ask the question, ‘Can we improve consciousness in patients in a coma?’” said advisory council member and lead author J. Javier Provencio, MD, director of UVA Health’s Nerancy Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit. “This research endeavor aims to help patients and families dealing with the consequences of brain damage gain clarity about the current chances for improvement and maintain hope that, in the future, there will be treatments to help recover consciousness.”

The Coma Plan’s Three Pillars

The plan’s first recommendation is to better classify and understand different types of coma and their causes. Currently, treatments are limited in part because it is difficult for physicians to distinguish between different underlying mechanisms of impaired consciousness, the researchers say. This makes it challenging to predict whether patients will recover.

Therefore, they suggest several different classifications. For example, coma without underlying physical damage, such as those caused by drug overdoses or seizures, are often reversible using available treatments. Another category is particularly tricky – coma with hidden physical causes. Better categorization of common coma “endotypes” will help physicians with their diagnoses and treatment decisions, the council says.

The council also urges the development of better indicators of patient prognosis. These indicators, known as biomarkers, already play important roles in guiding treatment. But more sophisticated ones are needed to understand the complex interactions occurring inside the brain. This will help doctors guide patients to better outcomes and advise families on how well their loved one will recover.

Finally, the council urges clinical trials of new therapies to promote recovery of consciousness for intensive-care patients who are in comas or suffering from other forms of reduced consciousness.

“We envision that a principled, mechanistic approach to predicting and measuring responses to new therapies in the ICU could allow clinicians to provide targeted treatments that are personalized to each patient, ensuring that each patient is given the best possible chance to recover consciousness in the ICU and beyond,” the council members write in a new paper outlining their recommendations.

“Coma is the most severe manifestation of brain injury,” Provencio said. “With this initiative, we hope to be able to treat patients in a coma the way we treat patients with strokes and heart attacks. In the future, having impaired consciousness from brain injury won’t be the lifelong medical condition it is now.”

About the Coma Plan

The advisory council has published its recommendations in the scientific journal Neurocritical Care. The council consisted of Provencio, J. Claude Hemphill, Jan Claassen, Brian L. Edlow, Raimund Helbok, Paul M. Vespa, Michael N. Diringer, Len Polizzotto, Lori Shutter, Jose I. Suarez, Robert D. Stevens, Daniel F. Hanley, Yama Akbari, Thomas P. Bleck, Melanie Boly, Brandon Foreman, Joseph T. Giacino, Jed A. Hartings, Theresa Human, Daniel Kondziella, Geoffrey S.F. Ling, Stephan A. Mayer, Molly McNett, David K. Menon, Geert Meyfroidt, Martin M. Monti, Soojin Park, Nader Pouratian, Louis Puybasset, Benjamin Rohaut, Eric S. Rosenthal, Nicholas D. Schiff, Tarek Sharshar, Amy Wagner, John Whyte and DaiWai M. Olson writing on behalf of the Neurocritical Care Society Curing Coma Campaign.

Provencio disclosed that he has received grants and personal fees from Minnetronix Inc., a medical technology company. A full list of the other authors’ disclosures is included in the paper.

Keep up with the latest medical research news from UVA

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Caldera + Lab’s – The Good

For your men’s gifting ideas this holiday season, consider featuring award-winning Caldera + Lab’s The Good, a clinically-proven multi-functional luxurious face serum and moisturizer duo. Self-care and spa-at-home routines are vital to wellness and this one-step high performance men’s skincare product combines pharmaceutical-grade science, nature’s purest and most potent ingredients and sustainable business practices, while delivering results for all ethnicities and ages.

Founded by Jared Pobre & Stacy Keibler featuring wild-harvested by hand ingredients from the Teton Mountain Range and a blend of hand-selected premium nourishing natural oils. Also, its formulation has multi-functional benefits including diminishing the appearance of dark spots and fine lines, improving skin’s tightness and elasticity, and boosting overall skin health, moisturization and radiance.

This luxurious, one-step regimen is the perfect gift for men. It is proven to nourish and protect skin at the microbiome level and fits into their evening routine (can be used for daytime application, as well, with an SPF). In addition, the lightweight serum applies quickly, leaving skin moisturized and restored.

Key high-altitude survivalist and organic farming ingredients include: Fireweed, Elderflower, Dandelion, Astralagus Root, Prickly Pear Seed Oil, Sunflower Seed Oil, Apricot Kernel Oil, Raspberry Seed Extract, and more. Perfect for the holidays, The Good, also features frankincense.

Product Description:

The Good is a clinically-proven, multi-functional, non-toxic formula of 27 active botanicals. These are meticulously infused over 4 weeks in an ECOCERT COSMOS-certified facility. Formulated with wild-harvested, non-GMO and organic ingredients, this lightweight all in one treatment is designed to restore, nourish and protect a man’s skin. Caldera + Lab is the first men’s skincare in the USA to be certified by both ECOCERT and MADE SAFE®.

Product Features & Benefits:

  • Lightweight and fast-absorbing.
  • Safe and non-irritating for all skin types.
  • Hypoallergenic.
  • Non-comedogenic.
  • 100% free of parabens, phthalates, sulfates, PEG compounds, petrochemicals and mineral oils, ethoxylated ingredients, as well as synthetic fragrances, colors, and preservatives.
  • The first men’s skincare product in the US to be certified by MADE SAFE® and Ecocert COSMOS Natural.
  • Certified by PETA and Leaping Bunny.
  • Named by GQ as the Best Natural-Powered Face Serum, by LuxLife as the Best Men’s Botanical Skincare Product, and by CertClean as the Best Face Serum.

Price: $97 for 1 ounce; $25 for .16 ounce (Note: Subscribe and savings offered)

Retailers: CalderaLab.com, The Well in NYC, goop.com, bespokepost.com, Atterton in Los Angeles.

About the Founders Jared Pobre & Stacy Keibler:

Jared Pobre is the Co-Founder of Caldera + Lab, the first clean and clinically-proven prestige skincare for men. Prior, Jared was the CEO and Founder of Future Ads, Inc., now Propel Media. Under his leadership, Jared scaled the company to over a billion dollars in sales. Therefore, achieving Ernst and Young’s Entrepreneur of the Year. He has been the recipient of entrepreneurship and technology innovation awards, including Inc. 500 awards and an American Business Award for Fastest Growing Company of the Year.

Stacy Keibler is the Co-Founder of Caldera + Lab. Previously, she was an internationally celebrated actress, host and model for over 20 years. She is best known as a professional wrestler with WWE and a beloved contestant on Dancing With The Stars. In recent years, she has focused on her tireless passion for health and wellness. As well as, identifying a silence in the marketplace and creating long-awaited non-toxic luxury skincare for men.

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Wallie the Sensei – Scandalous (feat. MAR, Yaahl)

Today, rising rapper Wallie the Sensei dropped his video for breakout record “Scandalous” (feat. MAR, Yaahl. Watch it here via Capitol Records.

The video was directed by Brian Alan and finds Wallie, MAR, and Yaahl, all Compton natives, paying homage to their neighborhood. The camraderie, hustle and the rawness of Compton are felt thoughout the video with drinks pouring, dice rolling, and friends dancing in the streets under the California sun. On the track, Wallie narrates tales of mischief from his experiences. Wallie embodies the essence of Los Angeles’s hip-hop scene as one of its rising stars. The “Scandalous” video follows the release of “Bitch Please” and “Tarzan,” which are all off his debut EP No Love. Listen to the tracks here.

On Sunday, August 16, Wallie hosted a Back To School event, where he gave back to his Compton community by providing backpacks, school supplies, an d food for kids adhering to social distancing guidelines. LA’s own radio maven DJ Carisma was a special guest. all attendees were required to wear masks.

“It’s my duty to give back. That’s my hood and those kids are the future,” said Wallie on the event.

There’s no surprise that Wallie was thriving in L.A.’s hip-hop underground with “Scandalous.” The record produced by Drum Drummie (YoungBoy Never Broke Again, OMB Peezy, Kodak Black) spread organically throughout the city with nods from radio including the L.A. Leakers, Nick Cannon Mornings, and Power 106.1’s rotation. He also picked up praise from fellow rappers Rucci and AD, as well as Sacramento’s Mozzy. Wallie hoped music could change his life- he just didn’t know how quickly it would happen.

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Billy Raffoul – What Makes a Man

Singer/songwriter Billy Raffoul shares a live performance video of his powerful new song “What Makes a Man” today. “What Makes a Man” is the first single from Raffoul’s upcoming album International Hotel. This is due out via Interscope Records on August 28.

Watch the live video for “What Makes a Man” by Billy Raffoul HERE

Raffoul announced the forthcoming release of International Hotel during the first show of his International Hotel IG Live Tour, treating fans to a surprise performance of “What Makes a Man.” Launched on August 5th, the International Hotel IG Live Tour continues through the end of August, with shows taking place every Wednesday at 3 p.m. EST on Raffoul’s IG account.

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Tiana Major9 – Think About You

Today, Motown Records rising star Tiana Major9 dropped a new music video for Think About You off her new EP AT SIXES AND SEVENS. Watch it HERE!
Last month Tiana Major9 also gave her fans a unique look into the making of the EP. She shared her autobiographical 4-part miniseries, BEHIND AT THE SIXES AND SEVENS. The series explores the evolution of Tiana and each episode melodically chronicles the expansion of her sound, artistry, perspective and journey to her signing with Motown Records through her lyrics. Watch the first episode of Behind At The Sixes and Sevens here, second episode here, and third episode here!
When asked about her EP, Tiana states, “To be at Sixes and Sevens means to be at a state of total confusion…Love is confusing.”

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Heart Attack Damage Reduced by Shielded Stem Cells

Bioengineers and surgeons from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) have shown that shielding stem cells with a novel biomaterial improves the cells’ ability to heal heart injuries caused by heart attacks.

In a study using rodents, a team led by Rice’s Omid Veiseh and Baylor’s Ravi Ghanta showed it could make capsules of wound-healing mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and implant them next to wounded hearts using minimally invasive techniques. Within four weeks, heart healing was 2.5 times greater in animals treated with shielded stem cells than those treated with nonshielded stem cells.

The study is available online in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Biomaterials Science.

Someone has a heart attack every 40 seconds in the United States. In each case, an artery that supplies blood to the heart becomes blocked and heart muscle tissue dies due to lack of blood. Hearts damaged by heart attacks pump less efficiently, and scar tissue from heart attack wounds can further reduce heart function.

“What we’re trying to do is produce enough wound-healing chemicals called reparative factors at these sites so that damaged tissue is repaired and restored, as healthy tissue, and dead tissue scars don’t form,” said Veiseh, an assistant professor of bioengineering and CPRIT Scholar in Cancer Research at Rice.

Ghanta, associate professor of surgery at Baylor, a cardiothoracic surgeon at Harris Health’s Ben Taub Hospital and co-lead author of the study, said prior studies have shown that MSCs, a type of adult stem cell produced in blood marrow, can promote tissue repair after a heart attack. But in clinical trials of MSCs, “cell viability has been a consistent challenge,” Ghanta said.

“Many of the cells die after transplantation,” he said. “Initially, researchers had hoped that stem cells would become heart cells, but that has not appeared to be the case. Rather, the cells release healing factors that enable repair and reduce the extent of the injury. By utilizing this shielded therapy approach, we aimed to improve this benefit by keeping them alive longer and in greater numbers.”

A few MSC lines have been approved for human use, but Veiseh said transplant rejection has contributed to their lack of viability in trials.

“They’re allogenic, meaning that they’re not from the same recipient,” he said. “The immune system perceives them as foreign. And so very rapidly, the immune system starts chewing at them and clearing them out.”

Veiseh has spent years developing encapsulation technologies that are specifically designed not to activate the body’s immune system. He co-founded Sigilon Therapeutics, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotech company that is developing encapsulated cell therapeutics for chronic diseases. Trials of Sigilon’s treatment for hemophilia A are expected to enter the clinic later this year.

“The immune system doesn’t recognize our hydrogels as foreign, and doesn’t initiate a reaction against the hydrogel,” Veiseh said. “So we can load MSCs within these hydrogels, and the MSCs live well in the hydrogels. They also secrete the same reparative factors that they normally do, and because the hydrogels are porous, the wound-healing factors just diffuse out.”

In previous studies, Veiseh and colleagues have shown that similar capsules can keep insulin-producing islet cells alive and thriving in rodents for more than six months. In the heart study, study co-lead author Samira Aghlara-Fotovat, a Rice bioengineering graduate student in Veiseh’s lab, created 1.5-millimeter capsules that each contained about 30,000 MSCs. Several of the capsules were placed alongside wounded sections of heart muscle in animals that had experienced a heart attack. The study compared rates of heart healing in animals treated with shielded and unshielded stem cells, as well as an untreated control group.

“We can deliver the capsules through a catheter port system, and that’s how we imagine they would be administered in a human patient,” Veiseh said. “You could insert a catheter to the area outside of the heart and inject through the catheter using minimally invasive, image-guided techniques.”

Veiseh said capsules in the study were held in place by the pericardium, a membrane that sheaths the heart. Tests at two weeks showed that MSCs were alive and thriving inside the implanted spheres.

More than 800,000 Americans have hearts attacks each year, and Ghanta is hopeful that encapsulated MSCs can one day be used to treat some of them.

“With further development, this combination of biomaterials and stem cells could be useful in delivering reparative therapy to heart attack patients,” he said.

“The pathway to regulatory approval could be streamlined as well,” said Veiseh.

“Clinical grade, allogenic MSCs are commercially available and are actively being used in patients for a range of applications,” he said.

Veiseh credited Aghlara-Fotovat with doing much of the work on the project.

“She basically executed the vision,” he said. “She developed the hydrogel formulation, the concept of how to package the MSCs within the hydrogel, and she did all the in vitro validation work to show that MSCs remained viable in the capsules.”

Aghlara-Fotovat is co-mentored by Ghanta and worked in his lab at Baylor alongside research assistant Aarthi Pugazenthi, including assisting in rodent surgeries and experiments.

“What attracted me to the project was the unmet clinical need in (heart attack) recovery,” Aghlara-Fotovat said. “Using hydrogels to deliver therapeutics was an exciting approach that aimed to overcome many challenges in the field of drug delivery. I also saw a clear path to translation into the clinic, which is the ultimate goal of my Ph.D.”

“I think one of the things that attracts students to my lab in particular is the opportunity to do translational work,” Veiseh said. “We work closely with physicians like Dr. Ghanta to address relevant problems to human health.”

Authors

Study co-authors include Maria Jarvis, Sudip Mukherjee and Andrea Hernandez, all of Rice; and Pugazenthi, Christopher Ryan, Vivek Singh and Megumi Mathison, all of Baylor. The research was supported by an American Association of Thoracic Surgery Research Award, the Baylor College of Medicine Cardiovascular Research Institute, the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas (RR160047), the National Institutes of Health (1R01DK120459), a Rice University Academy Fellowship, the Emerson Collective and the National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Research Training Program in Cardiovascular Surgery (T32 HL139430).

 

The DOI of the Biomaterials Science paper is: 10.1039/D0BM00855A

A copy of the paper is available at: https://doi.org/10.1039/D0BM00855A

 

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Allison Christensen illustrates a sports article for 360 MAGAZINE

Orlando Sports & Entertainment Smart District

Downtown Orlando is about to get a major overhaul.

The hotspot will undergo a $500 million renovation in the form of the ambitious Orlando Sports & Entertainment Smart District.

Situated right across from the Amway Center, which houses the Magic and the Solar Bears, it will include a 300-room hotel, over 400,000 square feet of offices, 80,000 square feet of event space, more than 100,000 square feet of retail and an open-air plaza.

SISCO, who will provide the technology for the project, agreed to terms with the project owners, Cityzenith, and will use Cityzenith’s SmartWorldPro2™ Digital Twin platform. The platform integrates all software and services for large scale projects such as the Orlando Sports & Entertainment Smart District.

Michael Jansen, CEO of Cityzenith, said he is delighted to work with SISCO, and called the project “the most-advanced and feature-rich 3D Digital Twin model of a city in the United States.”

Jansen also said he aims to boost Cityzenith’s “Clean Cities – Clean Future” mission.

“Currently, 10,000 cities produce 70% of global greenhouse emissions and just 100 – megalopolises like New York, Tokyo, London and Paris – produce 25% of that total. It must change, and SmartWorldPro2™’s ability to create digitally-twinned cities to inventory GHG emissions and streamline sustainable urban redevelopment initiatives makes it the platform of choice for executing energy transition projects on any scale, whether a district, a campus, a city, or an entire country.”

Rita Azar illustrates elephants for 360 MAGAZINE

Celebrate World Elephant Day

August 12th was World Elephant Day, and there are many ways you can get involved to help bring funds and awareness to protect these gentle giants.

International Conservation Charity, Space For Giants, and Enasoit Game Sanctuary are committed to securing the ecological and economic value that nature conservation offers- especially in this time of crisis, when travel and tourism are impacted, wildlife and natural habitat are more vulnerable to exploitation than ever before.

Here’s why elephants need our help:

  • Poachers have killed roughly one-quarter of Africa’s elephants in just 10 years- that’s a loss of over 110,000 elephants.
  • Only 415,000 elephants remain in Africa, down from 600,000 in 1989, and 1.3m in 1979.
  • Elephant range in Africa has dropped 42% since 1995, from 2.1m sq miles to 1.2m sq miles.
  • Elephant range ‘heavily affected’ by human activity now is 29%. By 2050, it will be 63%.

Space for Giants was integral in combating the illegal ivory trade in central Kenya which ultimately led to the elimination of elephant poaching in 2018. Today, Space for Giants operates in over 10 countries on 3 continents and works with National Geographic, African Wildlife Foundation, The Nature Conservancy, and more to protect Africa’s elephants, and their landscapes.

How you can get involved:

Space For Giants has unveiled Walk For Giants, a fundraising and awareness campaign releasing alongside two exclusive capsule collections with proceeds from all sales going back to Space For Giant’s integral work in conservation and the crucial protection of this endangered species. Additional information on the campaign and capsule collections are below- a great way to treat yourself and lend your support to an important cause is the perfect way to contribute to World Elephant Day, everyday.

A Stay at Enasoit is not just a luxury, eco-centric getaway – the dues for your stay go directly to helping preserve, conserve, and protect the landscapes and wildlife you’re surrounded by.

These are a few ways that you can help Elephants year-round, not just on World Elephant Day- these creatures need your help in protecting their precious environment- and it’s as easy as buying yourself a new piece of clothing or booking a trip to see these creatures up close for yourself.

If you’re looking for additional ways to get involved, Space for Giants also has a large support network with a wide range of individuals including academics, journalists, celebrities (such as Megan Markle, Prince William, Elizabeth Hurley, Courteney Cox, Nicky Hilton to name a few), philanthropists, and sports people, to bring new advocates to its cause and educate communities around the world on the importance of these conservation efforts and corresponding fundraising efforts.

About The Walk For Giants campaign:

The Walk For Giants campaign will kick-off with the release of two exclusive capsule collections; a 44-piece collection from Gemfields, a world-leading supplier of responsibly sourced colored gemstones, and a series of 15 sustainable collections from NET-A-PORTER, the world’s leading online luxury fashion retailer. All proceeds from these capsule collections will bring critical support to protect Africa’s elephants and their natural habitat.

A series of stunning images featuring both capsule collections highlight Africa’s gentle giants and breathtaking landscapes that Space For Giants works to protect.

  • Shot by Francesco Carrozzini
  • Creative Direction by Riccardo Ruini
  • Models: Selena Forrest and Arizona Muse
  • Location: Enasoit Game Sanctuary in Laikipia, Kenya.
Travel illustration by Rita Azar for 360 MAGAZINE.

Virginia’s Blue Ridge Vacation At Home

While traveling regulations and personal comfort levels vary, Virginia’s Blue Ridge, VBR, has devised a plan to allow you to travel from the safety of your home. With a new digital campaign, VBR remains a top-of-mind destination through Six Imperfect Substitutions. With Six Imperfect Substitutions, VBR turns some of the region’s popular attractions into easy and fun DIY experience with common household items.  

Shannon Terry, marketing manager at Visit VBR created the campaign. “With my favorite local establishments temporarily closed, I personally started to feel the effects of cabin fever and began brainstorming ways to entertain myself,” said Terry. “What started as a personal joke turned into a light-hearted way to showcase the cool spots in the region that people are missing.” 

The  Six Imperfect Substitutions to experience Virginia’s Blue Ridge from home include: 

  1. Cyclocross Substitute – a fast-paced, off-road bike race including various obstacles and barriers. 
  1. DIY Dixie Caverns – Living rock formation in Salem, VA. 
  1. Makeshift McAfee  – most photographed spot along the Appalachian Trail, a bucket list hike. 
  1. Not Quite Texas Tavern– a 24/7 classic lunch counter and late night eatery that seats 1,000…10 at a time. 
  1. Roaring Run Replacement – waterfall hike near a historic 19th century iron ore furnace. 
  1. Simulated Stiles Falls – stunning 40-ft waterfall hike in Shawsville, VA. 

Check out Six Imperfect Substituations yourself at VisitVBR.com so you and your loved ones can travel and craft without even stepping outside of your home.