Saturday, June 28, 2008

tagged

One controlled scientific experiment postulates that hypnosis may alter our perception of conscious experience in a way not possible when people are not "hypnotized", at least in "highly hypnotizable" people। In this experiment, color perception was changed by hypnosis in "highly hypnotizable" people as determined by (PET) scans (Kosslyn et al., 2000). http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de

Another research example, employing event-related functional MRI (fMRI) and EEG coherence measures, compared certain specific neural activity "...during Stroop task performance between participants of low and high hypnotic susceptibility, at baseline and after hypnotic induction"। According to its authors, "the fMRI data revealed that conflict-related ACC activity interacted with hypnosis and hypnotic susceptibility, in that highly susceptible participants displayed increased conflict-related neural activity in the hypnosis condition compared to baseline, as well as with respect to subjects with low susceptibility." (Egner et al., 2005) http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de

Michael Nash said in a Scientific American article: "In 1998 Henry Szechtman of McMaster University in Ontario and his co-workers used PET to image the brain activity of hypnotized subjects who were invited to imagine a scenario and who then experienced a hallucination ... By monitoring regional blood flow in areas activated during both hearing and auditory hallucination but not during simple imagining, the investigators sought to determine where in the brain a hallucinated sound is mistakenly "tagged" as authentic and originating in the outside world. Szechtman and his colleagues imaged the brain activity of eight very hypnotizable subjects who had been prescreened for their ability to hallucinate under hypnosis ... The tests showed that a region of the brain called the right anterior cingulate cortex was just as active while the volunteers were hallucinating as it was while they were actually hearing the stimulus. In contrast, that brain area was not active while the subjects were imagining that they heard the stimulus."

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

plebiscito

The most prominent forms of architecture in Naples are from the Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque periods.[39] The historic centre of Naples is typically the most fruitful for architecture and is in fact listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.[40] A striking feature of Naples is the fact that it has 448 historical churches, making it one of the most Catholic cities in the world.http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de
Piazza del Plebiscito.

The central and main open city square or piazza of the city is the Piazza del Plebiscito. It was started by Bonapartist king Joachim Murat and finished by Bourbon king Ferdinand IV. It is bounded on the east by the Royal Palace and on the west by the church of San Francesco di Paola with the colonnades extending to both sides. Nearby is the Teatro di San Carlo, which is the oldest and largest opera house on the Italian peninsula.[42] http://Louis-J-Sheehan.deDirectly across from San Carlo is Galleria Umberto, a shopping centre and active centre of Neapolitan social life in general.
Castel dell'Ovo.
Castel dell'Ovo.

Naples is famous for its historic castles: the ancient Castel Nuovo is one of the most notable architectural representatives on the city, also known as Maschio Angioino; it was built during the time of Charles I, the first ever king of Naples. Castel Nuovo has hosted some historical religious events: for example, in 1294, Pope Celestine V resigned as pope in a hall of the castle, and following this Pope Boniface VIII was elected pope here by the cardinal collegium, and immediately moved to Rome.

The castle which Nuovo replaced in importance was the Norman founded Castel dell'Ovo. Its name means Egg Castle and it is built on the tiny islet Megarides, where the Cumaean colonists founded the city. The third most noted castle is Sant'Elmo which was completed in 1329 and is built in the shape of a star. During the uprising of Masaniello, the Spanish took refuge in Sant'Elmo to escape revolutionaries.

[edit] Museums
Palazzo Capodimonte.
Palazzo Capodimonte.

Naples hosts a wealth of historical museums and some of the most important in the country. The Naples National Archaeological Museum is one of the main museums, considered one of the most important for artifacts of the Roman Empire in the world.[43] It also hosts many of the ruins unearthed at Pompeii and Herculaneum, as well as some artifacts from the Greek and Renaissance periods.[43]
The Flagellation of Christ by Caravaggio.
The Flagellation of Christ by Caravaggio.

Previously a Bourbon palace, now a museum and art gallery, the Museo di Capodimonte is probably the most important in Naples. The art gallery features paintings from the 13th to the 18th century including major works by Simone Martini, Raphael, Titian, Caravaggio, El Greco and many others, including Neapolitan School painters Jusepe de Ribera and Luca Giordano. The royal apartments are furnished with antique 18th century furniture and a collection of porcelain and majolica from the various royal residences: the famous Capodimonte Porcelain Factory was just adjacent to the palace.

The Certosa di San Martino was formerly a monastery complex but is now a museum and remains one of the most visible landmarks of Naples. Displayed within the museum are Spanish and Bourbon-era artifacts, as well as displays of the nativity scene, considered to be among the finest in the world. Pietrarsa railway museum is located in the city: Naples has a proud railway history and the museum features, amongst many other things, the Bayard, the first locomotive in the Italian peninsula.[30] Other museums include the Villa Pignatelli and Palazzo Como, and one of Italy's national libaries (the Biblioteca Nazionale Vittorio Emanuele III) is also located in the city.

[edit] Churches, religious buildings and structures

See also, Churches in Naples and Archdiocese of Naples

Bust of Saint Januarius.
Bust of Saint Januarius.

Hosting the Archdiocese of Naples, the Catholic faith is highly important to the people of Naples and there are hundreds of churches in the city.[41] The Cathedral of Naples is the most important place of worship in the city, each year on September 19 it hosts the Miracle of Saint Januarius, the city's patron saint.[44] In the miracle which thousands of Neapolitans flock to witness, the dried blood of Januarius is said to turn to liquid when brought close to relics said to be of his body: this is one of the most important traditions for Neapolitans.[44] Below is a selective list of some of the most noted churches, chapels, monastary complexes and religious structures in Naples;


* Santa Chiara
* San Domenico Maggiore
* Gesù Nuovo
* Sansevero Chapel
* San Lorenzo Maggiore
* Santa Maria Donna Regina Vecchia
* Santa Maria Donna Regina Nuova
* Santa Maria del Carmine
* Girolamini



* San Ferdinando
* San Francesco di Paola
* San Giovanni a Carbonara
* San Gregorio Armeno
* Sant'Anna dei Lombardi
* Sant'Eligio Maggiore
* Santa Caterina a Chiaia
* Santa Maria La Nova
* Santa Restituta



* Spires of Naples
* San Pietro Martire
* San Pietro a Maiella
* San Gennaro extra Moenia
* Hermitage of Camaldoli
* Santissima Annunziata
* Santa Caterina a Formiello
* Archbishops Palace
* Madre del Buon Consiglio

[edit] Others
Nisida view from Parco Virgiliano.
Nisida view from Parco Virgiliano.

There are various other interesting features of note around Naples. Underneath Naples there is a series of caves and structures created by centuries of mining, which is in part of an underground geothermal zone. The general public are able to go on tours of the underground and there is even a museum. Aside from the main piazza there are two more in the form of Piazza Dante and Piazza dei Martiri. The latter is somewhat controversial: it originally just had a memorial to martyrs but in 1866, after the Italian unification, four lions were added, representing the four rebellions against the Bourbons.[45]

Founded in 1667 by the Spanish, the San Gennaro dei Poveri is a hospital for the poor which is still in existence today. It was a forerunner of a much more ambitious project, the gigantic Bourbon Hospice for the Poor started by Charles III. This was for the destitute and ill of the city; it also provided a self-sufficient community where the poor would live and work. Today it is no longer a hospital.[46]

Of the public parks in Naples, the most prominent is the Villa Comunale, previously known as the Royal Garden as its building was ordered by Bourbon king Ferdinand IV in the 1780s.[47] The second most important park is Parco Virgiliano which is very green and has views towards the tiny volcanic islet of Nisida; beyond that in the distance are Procida and Ischia.[48] It was named after Virgil the classical Roman poet who is thought to be entombed nearby.[48]

[edit] Geography

In the area surrounding Naples are the islands of Procida, Capri and Ischia, which are reached by hydrofoils and ferries. Sorrento and the Amalfi Coast are situated south of Naples. The Roman ruins of Pompeii, Herculaneum and Stabiae, which were destroyed in the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD, are also nearby. Naples is also near the volcanic area known as the Campi Flegrei and the port towns of Pozzuoli and Baia, which were part of the vast Roman naval facility, Portus Julius.http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

milky Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire http://louis1j1sheehan1.blogspot.com

Sela Miller was perplexed—and so was I. She had just emerged from our clinic rest­room, specimen in hand. But her urine was far from the bright yellow most people produce.

“So this is what it looks like,” she said, staring at the milky sample. “For weeks I thought something was wrong, but I couldn’t tell for sure.” Then Sela, a Polynesian woman with long, dark hair—the wife of a custom car builder and mother of several youngsters—gave a tiny shrug as if to say, Oh, well. http://louis1j1sheehan1.blogspot.com

For a moment I remained quiet. Like Sela, I had never seen anything quite like the opalescent urine now sitting in a sterile screw-top jar on my desk.

Sometimes doctors are secretly grateful when patients underreact. Over my years of practice, specializing in tropical medicine, I had certainly seen patients at the other end of the spectrum. Creative people with fertile imaginations seemed especially prone to panic. Sela—her sci-fi urine notwithstanding—was different.

And so I focused on the job ahead. “I’ll walk this to the lab,” I said, holding the jar in one hand while reaching for a requisition slip with my other.

Examined under a microscope lens, the fluid teemed with microorganisms and both white and red blood cells. That gave me one diagnosis, anyway: In addition to strange, milky-white urine, my new patient had a routine bacterial infection. Back in the exam room, where she stood ready to leave, I quickly wrote a prescription for antibiotics.

A day later, Sela’s urine culture had grown a garden-variety strain of E. coli, the single most common cause of urinary tract infections the world over. Good, I thought. The sulfa drug would make quick work of that.

However, I had asked the lab to perform additional urine assays, including protein, cholesterol, and triglycerides.

“Wow!” the tech exclaimed. “Now here’s something we almost never see. Her sample is loaded with fat.”

That gave me a second diagnosis—of sorts. The finding suggested that my patient’s milky urine was not just infected but also laced with lipid-rich lymphatic fluid. In medical-ese, the condition is called chyluria. From a purely anatomic standpoint, chyluria represents a fistula, or microscopic leak, between lymphatic vessels and the kidney.

The fancy name still left unanswered the most important question: What under­lying process had led to the breach in the first place? My patient was not likely to have kidney cancer or tuberculosis, two diseases that occasionally cause chy­luria. Had some toxic chemical in her husband’s car barn silently damaged her kidneys? Or, as her primary-care doctor had casually asked when he referred her to me, was a parasite involved? If so, the likely culprit was Wuchereria bancrofti, a slender nematode transmitted by tropical mosquitoes. Adult worms of Wuchereria bancrofti are famous for damming up lymphatic vessels. If they settle near the kidneys, obstruction and backflow within the delicate lymph vessels nearby can, over time, cause ruptures and spills of lymphatic fluid into adjacent drainage structures of the human urinary tract.

Wuchereria bancrofti can inflict still more harm upon its human hosts. In some cases, the threadlike worms—which measure several inches in length when fully grown—damage even larger lymphatic channels. When this happens victims may eventually develop elephantiasis—grotesquely swollen limbs and genitalia encased in thick, pebbly skin.

Picture yourself in a mosquito-ridden enclave with an early case of elephantiasis in, say, a lower extremity. Over years, periodic nicks and cuts leading to superficial skin infections—the everyday stuff of tropical poverty—compound the internal lymphatic damage caused by the adult worms. Meanwhile, tiny bloodborne larval offspring transmit the infection to new mosquitoes.

“Hey, aren’t you getting ahead of yourself?” I suddenly wondered. My patient was a middle-class housewife, not a tropical villager, and aside from chyluria she had no sign of damaged lymphatics. I wasn’t even sure if Wuchereria bancrofti existed in her Polynesian birthplace.

At her next appointment, Sela patiently answered my questions one by one. Yes, her husband used many paints and chemicals in his custom car business, but she was rarely at his shop. No, to her knowledge she had never been exposed to tuber­culosis. As for encountering a tropical parasite, who knew? Until age 10, she had lived in the South Pacific, returning for periodic visits until she married.

When I pressed her for details about ailments where she grew up, she nodded. From her childhood she vaguely remembered stories of people with disfigured body parts. A woman with a leg as thick as a palm tree. A man whose massive, warty foot had required a homemade rubber sandal. An aged neighbor whose flapping cotton shorts were rumored to hide an unusually large scrotum.
+++

Picture yourself in a mosquito-ridden enclave with an early case of elephantiasis.

Finally, she dropped the clue that cracked her case. A few years earlier, after Sela gave birth, a lab tech in another hospital had spied tiny larval worms in her blood. Sela then took a special drug whose name she could no longer recall. But that was long before the weird pee began, she quickly added.

I was dumbfounded. Had this bright, capable woman—juggling family, work, and other demands—simply forgotten her prior diagnosis? Failed to connect the dots between her earlier treatment and her new milky urine? Or, I wondered, briefly playing amateur psychologist, had she deliberately avoided the thought that she, too, might one day develop elephantiasis?

I never explored those questions. She’s just plain lucky that this is the only problem I found, I finally told myself, and decided to leave it at that.

My patient remained lucky. On the suspicion that she might still harbor live worms, I prescribed for her an old-fashioned medicine called diethylcarbamazine. Within a week or two, her abnormal urine abruptly stopped: Her hidden fistula had healed. Whether diethylcarbamazine or the earlier course of antibiotics was responsible, I’ll never know for sure. Chyluria resulting from progressive lymphatic damage can crop up well after an active filarial infection has burned out. In any event, I was relieved. If Sela had come to me with a more ominous harbinger of elephantiasis—say, a mildly swollen leg—it is doubtful that any drug would have reversed the problem. http://louis1j1sheehan1.blogspot.com

Fast-forward five years. Once again Sela battled Los Angeles traffic and met me in the room where we had first stared at her milky urine. She couldn’t remember the last time she had seen a doctor. As we talked, she admitted that her calves sometimes hurt and her skin felt flaky and dry. These were normal complaints, it seemed to me, for a busy homemaker with little time to prop up her feet at the end of the day or pamper herself with lotion. Of course, just to make sure, I asked Sela if there had been any problems with her urine. Still yellow, she replied.

Again I wondered if Sela truly grasped the physical horror that might have befallen her. Then I thought: “Oh, heck, why add one more worry? Life already has more than enough.”

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Technorati Profile

Technorati Profile



Patrick Henry



Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

dys louis j. sheehan, esquire

# Certified Markers: 26 | # Pending Markers: 18
STR Marker Value
DYS19 / 394 ?
DYS393 / 395 13
DYS443 ?
DYS446 12
DYS449 ?
DYS454 ?
DYS455 ?
DYS456 16
DYS458 ?
DYS463 ?
DYS481 ?
DYS522 10
DYS531 11
DYS570 ?
DYS614 ?
DYS711 ?
STR Marker Value
DYS388 12
DYS389i 14
DYS389ii 31
DYS391 11
DYS434 ?
DYS435 ?
DYS436 ?
DYS437 / 457 ?
DYS438 ?
DYS439 / GATA A4 ?
DYS441 ?
DYS442 12
DYS447 ?
DYS612 ?
DYS635 ?
GATA C4 23
STR Marker Value
DYS448 ?
DYS459a ?
DYS464a ?
DYS464b ?
DYS464c ?
DYS464d ?
DYS464e ?
DYS464f ?
DYS464g ?
DYS527a 19
DYS527b 21
DYS557 15
Y-Chromosome
STR Marker Value
DYS453 12
STR Marker Value
DYS390 ?
DYS426 12
DYS444 ?
DYS484 ?
DYS518 ?
DYS588 18
DYS607 ?
DYS644 ?
DYS710 ?
GATA A10 16
GATA H4 ?
STR Marker Value
DYS385a 11
DYS385b 15
DYS392 11
DYS425 ?
DYS445 12
DYS452 ?
DYS460 / GATA A7 1 11
DYS461 / GATA A7 2 11
DYS462 11
DYS468 29
YCA IIa ?
YCA IIb ?
STR Marker Value
DYS459b ?
The Human Y-Chromosome contains hundreds of Y-STR markers. The most informative Y-STR markers are listed in this diagram. For the Y-STR 20 Marker Test, 20 of the markers will be uncovered. For the Y-STR 44 Marker Test, 44 markers will be uncovered.

Mueller 81175 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire 334

Fritz Mueller Engineer. Born 27 October 1907. Died 15 May 2001. Member of the German Rocket Team in the United States after World War II.http://Louis-J-sheehan.info

Personal: Male. Born in Schalkau, Germany.http://Louis2J2Sheehan2Esquire.US




Member of the German rocket team, specializing in guidance systems. Mueller was hired by Kreiselgeraete in 1933, and worked at first on development of gyroscopes for the German Navy. He then became involved in development of the guidance and control system for Von Braun's A3 test rocket. This was followed successively by the Sg 64 system for the A5, and the Sg 66 and Sg 70 systems for the A4 (V-2). Mueller arrived in America under Project Paperclip on 16 November 1945 aboard the Argentina from La Havre. He was involved in developing guidance platforms for the Redstone, Jupiter, Pershing, and the Saturn I rocket. He left NASA for private industry in 1960. Died at Huntsville, Alabama. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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