041 - Doctor Dog, AI Mind-Reading, and Smelling Virtual Roses - HealthHippieMD Week In Review

Long Telomeres

"Short telomeres were thought to be bad — people with premature aging syndromes had short telomeres — so, by analogy, long telomeres were thought to be good..." A paper published last week, Familial Clonal Hematopoiesis in a Long Telomere Syndrome | NEJM, challenged current assumptions about telomere length. Link Between Long Telomeres and Long Life Is a Tall Tale, Study Finds - The New York Times

Rapamycin

"Rapamycin is a paradoxical drug. It improves anti-cancer immunity, but it may also cause cancer. It protects against bacterial infection, halts viral replication, and suppresses the immune system. It reverses symptoms of Alzheimer's disease but also increases plaque deposits in the brain. It improves metabolic function, but it also causes type 2 diabetes. This list of contradictions goes on and on; however, there is one thing about Rapamycin that scientists tend to agree on: it is potentially the most powerful anti-aging drug ever discovered." I learned quite a bit from the article: Rapamycin: Unlucky history of the most powerful anti-aging drug.

ChatGPT's Empathetic Bedside Manner

In a recent study, healthcare professionals preferred the responses from A.I. over those from flesh-and-blood doctors. Could generative A.I. have a place in the future of healthcare-patient interaction? ChatGPT Has a Better 'Bedside Manner' Than Doctors.

+Quartz has some suggestions on how to get more out of your ChatGPT queries: How to use ChatGPT at work.

Futile Care

The Atlantic had an interesting opinion piece on the importance of end-of-life planning: An ICU nurse reflects on futile care. _"But what I think and feel doesn't matter. What matters is what the patient would think and whether the people who make choices about their care both know what the patient would think and understand the likelihood that their choices will have this result. This is often not the case."

Inside the Upcoming $1.5 Trillion Farm Bill

The Conversation published a peek behind the curtain as the government ramps its efforts to bring forth the next farm bill. These four challenges will shape the next farm bill – and how the U.S. eats.

The Association Between Season Allergies and Mood Disorders

"Not only are the physical symptoms draining, but a growing body of research also shows an association between allergic rhinitis — commonly known as hay fever — and mood disorders like anxiety and depression." How Seasonal Allergies Can Affect Mental Health.

Childhood Obesity

Obesity in U.S. children was already high and was exacerbated by the pandemic.Obesity in children is rising dramatically, and it comes with major – and sometimes lifelong – health consequences talks about the trend and its implications.

Mindfulness and Meditation

The benefits of mindfulness and meditation practice are numerous. The article Mindfulness, meditation, and self-compassion discusses benefits and gives practical steps to begin your practice.

Noggin Reading

Scientists have developed a mind-reading technology powered by A.I. that can decode a person's thoughts into speech. The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a large language model to analyze brain recordings and translate them into sentences. Although the technology's potential to help those who have lost their ability to speak, like stroke victims, is promising, it raises ethical privacy concerns. Mind-reading technology, powered by A.I., sparks ethical concerns.

Oh, Look At All the Lonely People

A recent study suggests that the brains of lonely people respond to visual stimuli in unique ways, unlike non-lonely people, implying that lonely people may view the world differently. The findings also suggest that being surrounded predominantly by people who view the world differently from oneself may be a risk factor for loneliness. The brains of lonely people process the world differently

Ode to the Human Genome Project

The Economist had an excellent article on the Human Genome Project, How the Human Genome Project revolutionized biology, although I was disappointed not to see the microbiome mentioned. As Julien Davies pointed out, the HGP is incomplete until we understand the role of microbial DNA: In a Map for Human Life, Count the Microbes, Too | Science.

Tweaking Vegetable Genes for Taste

Scientific American published an article on how CRISPR gene editing technology is being used to improve the taste of food: Tweaking Vegetables' Genes Could Make Them Tastier--And You'll Get to Try Them Soon - Scientific American (Thanks Dave Pell - NextDraft)

Doctor Dog

The article How My Dog Knows When I'm Sick is about how dogs can sense when their owners are sick and the signals they use to detect it. According to researchers, dogs can smell changes in their owners, including a virus or bacteria infection. They can also pick up on emotional changes, such as depression or lethargy, through the owner's voice changes. While it's unclear what dogs make of these changes, they may be more curious or suspicious than concerned. Nonetheless, dogs' empathy has significant benefits for human health.

Smell the (Virtual) Roses

Olfaction is tightly coupled with the parts of the brain responsible for emotions and memory. The evocative nature of the sense of smell is why companies are interested in deploying smell in the Metaverse: How to bring scents to the Metaverse and Smelling in V.R. environment possible with new gaming technology.