How pollution could make you obese

74859 Researchers have discovered a link between the levels of certain environmental pollutants that a person accumulates in his or her body and their level of obesity.
«We found that people with higher levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were quantitatively more obese and also showed higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides,» said lead author Juan Pedro Arrebola from the University of Granada in Spain.
These factors are regarded as key risk factors for developing cardiovascular diseases.
The researchers analysed the levels of pollutants accumulated in adipose tissue (fat) in nearly 300 men and women, who were attended in the surgery services of two hospitals in the province of Granada.
The POPs can remain in the environment for years, even decades, without degrading.
«Humans are exposed to POPs mainly through diet. Besides, POPs accumulate gradually in body fat, and this is the reason why the median levels in our study give us an idea of an individual’s accumulated exposition over a number of years,» Arrebola added.
Using complex statistical methods, the scientists confirmed that the accumulated levels of several POPs were related to obesity and to serum levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.
The findings were true irrespective of the gender, age, place of residence or smoking habits of participants in the survey.
The study appeared in the journal Environmental Pollution.
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Granada Hoy

Pág. 3: Opinión: El Semáforo: José Ignacio Wert

Pág. 4: Opinión: EL DEBATE SOBRE LOS GRADOS UNIVERSITARIOS

Págs. 6-7: El inicio de la actividad en el PTS dispara el precio de la vivienda

Págs. 8-9: Los comercios, la avanzadilla de la nueva zona de expansión

Pág. 47: La nutrición es un factor clave para prevenir patologías crónicas

Sup. Deportes Pág. 21: El Universidad de Granada protagoniza una victoria inmaculada

El RACA UGR, fuera de la final

Sup. Deportes Pág. 22: Demasiado para el ‘Uni’

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Granada Hoy

Pág. 3: Opinión: El Semáforo: José Ignacio Wert

Pág. 4: Opinión: EL DEBATE SOBRE LOS GRADOS UNIVERSITARIOS

Págs. 6-7: El inicio de la actividad en el PTS dispara el precio de la vivienda

Págs. 8-9: Los comercios, la avanzadilla de la nueva zona de expansión

Pág. 47: La nutrición es un factor clave para prevenir patologías crónicas

Sup. Deportes Pág. 21: El Universidad de Granada protagoniza una victoria inmaculada

El RACA UGR, fuera de la final

Sup. Deportes Pág. 22: Demasiado para el ‘Uni’

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/07AG

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Granada Hoy

Pág. 3: Opinión: El Semáforo: José Ignacio Wert

Pág. 4: Opinión: EL DEBATE SOBRE LOS GRADOS UNIVERSITARIOS

Págs. 6-7: El inicio de la actividad en el PTS dispara el precio de la vivienda

Págs. 8-9: Los comercios, la avanzadilla de la nueva zona de expansión

Pág. 47: La nutrición es un factor clave para prevenir patologías crónicas

Sup. Deportes Pág. 21: El Universidad de Granada protagoniza una victoria inmaculada

El RACA UGR, fuera de la final

Sup. Deportes Pág. 22: Demasiado para el ‘Uni’

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/07AG

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Methane Gas Trace Detected on Mars: Evidence that there’s Life in the Red Planet

75302 The presence of methane gas in Mars was confirmed by Curiosity, NASAs hardy rover. Was there life in Mars or is it just about to emerge? The adjustable laser spectrometer in the Sample Analysis at Mars or SAM instrument of the Curiosity robot was able to recognize an occasional rise in the presence of methane in atmosphere of the Red Planet, reports the Business Insider.

 

This issue is at last settled whether methane is present in Mars or not. This has been going on for more than ten years since when Earth-based telescopes first detected the presence of this gas according to the authors from the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL).

Methane is a possible by product of an organic presence. It means a certain life form must have existed in the planet sometime before. Our planet’s methane is an offshoot of biological activity, most of it for that matter.

«It is a finding that puts paid to the question of the presence of methane in the Martian atmosphere but it does pose some other more complex and far-reaching questions, such as the nature of its sources,» said study co-author Francisco Javier Martin-Torres from the Andalusian Institute of Earth Sciences (CSIC-UGR) at the University of Granada, Spain.

«The sources, we believe, must lie in one or two additional sources that were not originally contemplated in the models used so far. Among these sources, we must not rule out biological methanogenesis,» he added.

SAM has been tracking down vital presence of methane gas – confirming an event of periodic rise of up to 10 times this value during a period of 60 Martian days.

Basing on the latest models, if Mars really has methane gas, the most probable scenario is that it has been in the planet for approximately 300 years while slowly spreading itself in the entire planet.

The new information was gathered during the entire one Martian year, which is equivalent to almost two Earth years, during the time which Curiosity rover examined about 5 miles of the crater Gale.

The arrival of MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) from NASA will allow continuity for the research of this matter, the US space agency said in a statement.

A joint venture by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Space Agency (Ruscosmos) called race Gas Orbiter (TGO) will measure the amount of methane present on Mars on a bigger scale.

The paper was published in the journal Science.

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Methane Gas Trace Detected on Mars: Evidence that there’s Life in the Red Planet

75302 The presence of methane gas in Mars was confirmed by Curiosity, NASAs hardy rover. Was there life in Mars or is it just about to emerge? The adjustable laser spectrometer in the Sample Analysis at Mars or SAM instrument of the Curiosity robot was able to recognize an occasional rise in the presence of methane in atmosphere of the Red Planet, reports the Business Insider.

 

This issue is at last settled whether methane is present in Mars or not. This has been going on for more than ten years since when Earth-based telescopes first detected the presence of this gas according to the authors from the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL).

Methane is a possible by product of an organic presence. It means a certain life form must have existed in the planet sometime before. Our planet’s methane is an offshoot of biological activity, most of it for that matter.

«It is a finding that puts paid to the question of the presence of methane in the Martian atmosphere but it does pose some other more complex and far-reaching questions, such as the nature of its sources,» said study co-author Francisco Javier Martin-Torres from the Andalusian Institute of Earth Sciences (CSIC-UGR) at the University of Granada, Spain.

«The sources, we believe, must lie in one or two additional sources that were not originally contemplated in the models used so far. Among these sources, we must not rule out biological methanogenesis,» he added.

SAM has been tracking down vital presence of methane gas – confirming an event of periodic rise of up to 10 times this value during a period of 60 Martian days.

Basing on the latest models, if Mars really has methane gas, the most probable scenario is that it has been in the planet for approximately 300 years while slowly spreading itself in the entire planet.

The new information was gathered during the entire one Martian year, which is equivalent to almost two Earth years, during the time which Curiosity rover examined about 5 miles of the crater Gale.

The arrival of MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) from NASA will allow continuity for the research of this matter, the US space agency said in a statement.

A joint venture by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Space Agency (Ruscosmos) called race Gas Orbiter (TGO) will measure the amount of methane present on Mars on a bigger scale.

The paper was published in the journal Science.

Descargar


How pollution could make you obese, reveals study

74859 «We found that people with higher levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were quantitatively more obese and also showed higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides,» said lead author Juan Pedro Arrebola from the University of Granada in Spain.

 

These factors are regarded as key risk factors for developing cardiovascular diseases. The researchers analysed the levels of pollutants accumulated in adipose tissue (fat) in nearly 300 men and women, who were attended in the surgery services of two hospitals in the province of Granada.

The POPs can remain in the environment for years, even decades, without degrading.»Humans are exposed to POPs mainly through diet. Besides, POPs accumulate gradually in body fat, and this is the reason why the median levels in our study give us an idea of an individual’s accumulated exposition over a number of years,» Arrebola added.

Using complex statistical methods, the scientists confirmed that the accumulated levels of several POPs were related to obesity and to serum levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.

The findings were true irrespective of the gender, age, place of residence or smoking habits of participants in the survey.

The study appeared in the journal Environmental Pollution.

Descargar


How pollution could make you obese, reveals study

74859 «We found that people with higher levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were quantitatively more obese and also showed higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides,» said lead author Juan Pedro Arrebola from the University of Granada in Spain.

 

These factors are regarded as key risk factors for developing cardiovascular diseases. The researchers analysed the levels of pollutants accumulated in adipose tissue (fat) in nearly 300 men and women, who were attended in the surgery services of two hospitals in the province of Granada.

The POPs can remain in the environment for years, even decades, without degrading.»Humans are exposed to POPs mainly through diet. Besides, POPs accumulate gradually in body fat, and this is the reason why the median levels in our study give us an idea of an individual’s accumulated exposition over a number of years,» Arrebola added.

Using complex statistical methods, the scientists confirmed that the accumulated levels of several POPs were related to obesity and to serum levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.

The findings were true irrespective of the gender, age, place of residence or smoking habits of participants in the survey.

The study appeared in the journal Environmental Pollution.

Descargar


Beware! Pollution could be making you fat

74859 Obesity is defined as a 20% excess of calculated ideal weight for age, sex and height of a n individual. A person is said to be obese when there is an excess of accumulated fat in the subcutaneous tissue. Researchers have discovered a link between the levels of certain environmental pollutants that a person accumulates in his or her body and their level of obesity.
‘We found that people with higher levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were quantitatively more obese and also showed higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides,’ said lead author Juan Pedro Arrebola from the University of Granada in Spain. These factors are regarded as key risk factors for developing cardiovascular diseases. Read: how obesity causes heart disease.
The researchers analysed the levels of pollutants accumulated in adipose tissue (fat) in nearly 300 men and women, who were attended in the surgery services of two hospitals in the province of Granada.The POPs can remain in the environment for years, even decades, without degrading.’Humans are exposed to POPs mainly through diet. Besides, POPs accumulate gradually in body fat, and this is the reason why the median levels in our study give us an idea of an individual’s accumulated exposition over a number of years,’ Arrebola added. Also, read why childhood obesity is on the rise.
Using complex statistical methods, the scientists confirmed that the accumulated levels of several POPs were related to obesity and to serum levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.The findings were true irrespective of the gender, age, place of residence or smoking habits of participants in the survey.
The study appeared in the journal Environmental Pollution.
Source: IANS
Descargar


Beware! Pollution could be making you fat

74859 Obesity is defined as a 20% excess of calculated ideal weight for age, sex and height of a n individual. A person is said to be obese when there is an excess of accumulated fat in the subcutaneous tissue. Researchers have discovered a link between the levels of certain environmental pollutants that a person accumulates in his or her body and their level of obesity.
‘We found that people with higher levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were quantitatively more obese and also showed higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides,’ said lead author Juan Pedro Arrebola from the University of Granada in Spain. These factors are regarded as key risk factors for developing cardiovascular diseases. Read: how obesity causes heart disease.
The researchers analysed the levels of pollutants accumulated in adipose tissue (fat) in nearly 300 men and women, who were attended in the surgery services of two hospitals in the province of Granada.The POPs can remain in the environment for years, even decades, without degrading.’Humans are exposed to POPs mainly through diet. Besides, POPs accumulate gradually in body fat, and this is the reason why the median levels in our study give us an idea of an individual’s accumulated exposition over a number of years,’ Arrebola added. Also, read why childhood obesity is on the rise.
Using complex statistical methods, the scientists confirmed that the accumulated levels of several POPs were related to obesity and to serum levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.The findings were true irrespective of the gender, age, place of residence or smoking habits of participants in the survey.
The study appeared in the journal Environmental Pollution.
Source: IANS
Descargar


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Pág. 10: LA CIENTÍFICA QUE SE DESPERTÓ TARDE

Genyo investiga una cura para dos enfermedades raras

Pág. 11: Una ‘spin off’ de la Universidad se encargará de controlar y supervisar el alumbrado de Palma de Mallorca durante cuatro año

Pág. 26: Opinión: SUBE. Investigación en enfermedades raras

Pág. 54: El Universidad retorna a la acción en el feudo del líder

Pág. 55: El ‘Uni’ viaja a Alicante con tal de asaltar la quinta plaza

Sup. GRX Pág. 2: Diputación y Universidad retoman los trabajos para declarar la Alpujarra Patrimonio Mundial

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Granada Hoy

Pág. 3: Lapidario. Soluciones a la Ciencia
Pág. 21: Los limpiadores de la UGR harán paros parciales por el impago de las nóminas
Medicina supera el último trámite para abrir sus puertas el próximo curso
Pág. 25: La Alpujarra vuelve a intentarlo
Pág. 33: Una puerta abierta a la esperanza
Pág.s. 56-57: Tumba 33. El túnel del tiempo
Pág. 59: De las nubes al ruedo
Sup. Deportes Pág. 10:  El Santo Domingo Petrer se cruza en el camino del Universidad
Sup. Deportes Pág. 11: El «Uni» busca sorprender al líder
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Pág. 3: Lapidario. Soluciones a la Ciencia

Pág. 21: Los limpiadores de la UGR harán paros parciales por el impago de las nóminas

Medicina supera el último trámite para abrir sus puertas el próximo curso

Pág. 25: La Alpujarra vuelve a intentarlo

Pág. 33: Una puerta abierta a la esperanza

Pág.s. 56-57: Tumba 33. El túnel del tiempo

Pág. 59: De las nubes al ruedo

Sup. Deportes Pág. 10:  El Santo Domingo Petrer se cruza en el camino del Universidad

Sup. Deportes Pág. 11: El «Uni» busca sorprender al líder

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