(Posts tagged Blood)

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
augmentedhuman
augmentedhuman

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Some results of the Expressions Challenge on the Murderbot Discord! (Also where I experiment with lighting.)

First Image:

[ID: Murderbot staggers with several holes blown into it. It's missing the flesh from its left arm, revealing a metal skeleton and snarls of exposed wire. Blood pours down its face and stains its clothes. In the upper left is a bloodied emoji signifying the expression that was to be replicated. /end ID]

Second Image:

[ID: Fanart of Gurathin (wearing a black turtleneck) who glares accusingly (with a sneer) at one of Murderbot's drones. On Gurathin's back is a piece of white paper with "KICK ME" scrawled on it. /end ID]

Third Image:

[ID: Fanart of Pin-Lee in a runner's starting crouch position on top of some weird ambient glowing green floor. She's in a green suit, has her dark hair pulled back, and looks at the camera with a confident smirk. In the left corner is the emoji meant to be captured. /end ID]

blood murderbot
notasecunit
notasecunit

hahah remember that one time when your friend, who was way cooler and smarter than you, convinced you that if you changed your hair and cut 2cm off of your limbs then other people would like you more, or at least stop using motion analysis software to profile and shoot at you?

That friend was definitely an asshole.


I spent a bunch of the day in an MRI so this horrible ¾ down view into ART’s MedSystem is dedicated to that. I would say drawing the complex portions of spaceships is more fun if you’re actively thinking of the entire room as a character, but honestly it’s not. It’s not fun. I had to redraw everything 5 times. (And “9a8b617ab7ee7247ab” is pretty rude but you’ll have to convert it back to binary and then to ascii.) I added the original tiny ballpoint pen sketch so you can see the drift of composition over those 5 re-draws; like all idiots my concept of where ART is slowly drifts up to the ceiling, even though that makes no sense when ART is actually the floor and the walls and the drones. There’s also apparently a lot more shit in ART’s Medical bay but we have reached diminishing returns on my architectural attention span.

In my mind’s eye Murderbot flexes and primes it’s energy weapons whenever it’s scared, pissed off, or even just really annoyed. Which it only sometimes realizes is extremely intimidating.

blood

Why Humans Hate the Scent of Blood (But Wolves Love It)

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Your daily selection of the latest science news!

According to Live Science

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A single molecule could explain why predators are drawn to blood. Credit: donfiore/Shutterstock
The coppery scent of fresh blood is known to attract predators. And now, scientists have pinpointed a molecule in mammal blood that plays a pivotal role in luring some types of animals and actively repelling others, including humans.
Researchers recently took a closer look at a single compound from mammal blood’s complex chemical cocktail, and they discovered that certain blood-seeking predators responded to it with the same eagerness that they would demonstrate for blood itself.
At the same time, the researchers found that the presence of the compound strongly repelled prey animals. Further tests showed that humans also showed aversion to the blood molecule, making this the first known chemical signal to affect people as well as nonhuman animals. [Is It Safe to Drink Blood?]
The human nose can identify more than 1 trillion scents, though it doesn’t come close to some of the supersniffers in the animal kingdom. Elephants have about five times as many genes that are associated with smell as humans do, while dogs’ noses are so sensitive that they can detect odors associated with certain human cancers. And seabirds navigate from on high using “odor maps” of the landscape below, researchers discovered in 2015.
But regardless of animals’ olfactory prowess, something about the blood chemical known as trans‐4,5‐epoxy‐(E)‐2‐decenal — or E2D — sparked similar responses of attraction and repulsion across a selection of different species, according to a new study.
Urine, feces and body odors all produce scents that attract or repel predators and prey. But there are hundreds of molecules that make up these smells, and the responses they elicit are often species-specific, the scientists wrote in the study. This means that a predator would likely react strongly to these smells if they came from an animal that it typically hunted, while a predator that fed on different prey might not respond at all. 

Blood, however, appears to trigger a more universal response in animals: It attracts predators and repels prey. The researchers wondered if they could determine which chemical in blood was driving this reaction, so they tested E2D on a range of species for the first time.
They studied the stable fly (Stomoxys calcitrans) — a pest insect that feeds on livestock blood — and found that it was as attracted to E2D as it was to actual blood. The Eurasian wolf (Canis lupus) responded avidly to logs scented with E2D — again, responding just as it did to logs rubbed with blood, the researchers reported.
But E2D was a switch-hitter, sending a come-hither signal to predators while signaling prey to steer clear. The scientists found that mice (Mus musculus) avoided scented compartments treated with E2D, just as they avoided compartments treated with blood.
Interestingly, E2D triggered a similar repulsion in humans. Study participants stood on a force plate, which measured their responses to 2-second puffs of odors delivered through a nozzle. When E2D was present, the subjects recoiled, and sensors detected increased perspiration in their palms — both of these responses demonstrate aversion, according to the study.
“E2D seems to activate our entire general defense system,” lead study author Artin Arshamian, a postdoctoral researcher with the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, said in a statement.
But why would people respond to the smell of blood as though they were prey? The researchers suspected that this reaction stemmed from the molecule’s evolutionary origins. The E2D compound may have emerged so early in the human lineage that it dates back to our earliest primate relatives: insect eaters that were preyed upon by other animals, Arshamian explained.
“Modern humans are without doubt predators, but we probably evolved from a prey species, and some aspects of this characteristic remain,” he said.
The findings were published online Oct. 20 in the journal Nature: Scientific Reports.
Original article on Live Science.

Read more…

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This article and images were originally posted on [Live Science] November 1, 2017 at 06:53AM

Credit to Author and Live Science |ESIST.T>G>S Recommended Articles Of The Day

 

 


Filed under: Science
blood
regionstraumapro

The “Double-Barrel” IO: Can It Work?

regionstraumapro

Intraosseous lines (IO) make life easy. They are quicker to insert, have a higher success rate, and require less experience than a standard IV. And they can be used for pretty much any solution or drug that can be given through an IV.

But there are some limitations. They can’t be inserted into a fractured bone. The manufacturer cautions against multiple insertions into the same bone. A second insertion should not be performed in the same bone within 48 hours.

But, as with so many things in medicine, there is little in the way of proof for these assertions. They seem like good ideas for precautions, but that does not mean they are correct. No real research has been done in this area. Until now.

The concept of using two IO needles in one bone was explored in an animal model by researchers in Canada. They used a swine model (using the foreleg/humerus, to be exact), and tested several infusion setups.

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Here are the factoids:

  • Infusing crystalloid using an infusion pump set to 999ml/hr took 30 minutes with a single IO, and 15 minutes with a “double-barrel” setup
  • Giving crystalloid using a pressure bag set at 300 mm/Hg took 24 minutes with a single IO, and 23 minutes with double the fun
  • The double-barrel setup also worked for a blood/drug combo. 250cc of blood and 1 gm of TXA in 100ml of saline infused via pump in 13 minutes.
  • Simultaneous anesthesia drugs (ketamine infusion in IO #1, fentanyl and rocuronium bolus in IO #2) without problems
  • Multiple fluid + drug infusion combinations were tested without incident
  • There were no needle dislodgements, soft tissue injuries, fractures, or macrohistologic damage to the bone or periosteum

Bottom line: Remember, these are pigs. Don’t do this in humans yet. However, this is pretty compelling evidence that the double-barrel IO concept will work in people. And it appears that infusion pumps must be used for effective, fast infusions. I recommend that prehospital agencies with inquiring minds set up a study in people to prove that this works in us, too.

Related posts:

Reference: Double-barrelled resuscitation: A feasibility and simulation study of dual-intraosseous needles into a single humerus. Injury 46(11):2239-42, 2015.

Source: http://thetraumapro.com/2017/05/26/the-double-barrel-io-can-it-work-2/
Source: thetraumapro.com
blood gore needles cool!

Absolutely fascinating and well-explained list of reasons one might see immature white or red blood cells in the blood. Poor things, kicked out of their nice marrow home!

Source: pathologystudent.com
blood pathophysiology biology left shift