CIENCE TECHNOLOGY Tuesday, April 25, 2000 THE BATTALION Page 7 Tornado tout down in EastliWarm Blooded Dinosaurs? LINDEN (AP) ■ hopped across part ty Sunday, knocking power lines and deuu^ buildings, county officio!! There were no reports said Gary Stewart, Cat emergency management The tornado reported down several times afted r hambers of the heart arm-blooded animals have four chambers that separate oxygen- nriched blood from oxygen-depleted blood. Most cold-blooded animals ave three chambers that mix the blood and send less concentrated xygen to the body. Now, a dinosaur fossil with a four-chambered heart as found — suggesting it was warm-blooded. Warm-blooded animals ove faster and more easily resist temperature change. Here is a omparison of a human heart and a typical reptilian heart. Warm-blooded heart Oxygen- Oxygen-enriched ting the far East TexastOiH d h?'od d bl ° wd f ° r b ° dy enriched den. Hughes Springs -j ^ glassville. The area hit is about south of DeKalb, where caused major damagt year ago. That May 5 aged 150 houses, inji pie and obliterated ball’ town district. Laredo bridge! For inaugurate SAN ANTONIO (AP)-j Vorld Trade Bridge istl*! ernationalspantoconneJ o Nuevo Laredo, Met:: | Texas Gov. and GOP 7:4 opeful George W. Bus: i Nuevo Laredo with Mei.:| lent Ernesto Zedilloat:;| le bridge's inaugurationf te border. Political tensions d the scheduled event, 'otocol officials had xcluded local participi ructing the mayor tredo to be seen bui the event. Bush, who was abs aek's inauguration on de of the bridge, waste e ceremony viaoneof wntown bridges becffil : icials had declinedto xtorcade permissiontoi w cargo-only span. The border's largest^ idy moved the 10,icon I vehicles that crosstee m downtown sheets to ds designedforfte®^ traffic. Laredo,tokeef opening on with its event on then he span. blood Oxygen- ® depleted blood to lungs „ § Oxygen- AJij enriched 0 ^ blood from lungs % M Cold-blooded heart With only three chambers, the blood mixes and less oxygenated blood is circulated in the body. As a result, the animal typically has slower movement and metabolism. [The dinosaur [Scientists believe the lanimal died 66 million jyears ago. Here is an (illustration of what the plant-eating dinosaur may have looked like. ource: Science I % Size: 13 feet long Weight: 665 pounds, in s the flesh Emily Holmes/AP Science in Brief High winds ground Atlantis CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Dan- jgerously high wind forced NASA to call off space shuttle Atlantis’ launch Monday on : a mission to repair the international space station. The space agency tentatively aimed for a Tuesday afternoon liftoff, even ! though it is supposed to be windier. NASA flight rules say that the cross- winds can be no higher than 17 mph, in case the spacecraft has to make an emer gency return to the launch site. With only nine minutes left in Monday’s countdown, the wind was gusting to 23 mph and NASA called off the launch. ‘We'll get ’em next time,” shuttle com mander James Halsell Jr. said. Atlantis is loaded with more than a ton of supplies and replacement parts for the space station, which has been orbiting vir tually empty for the past 11/2 years. FDA OKs heartburn remedies New treatments focus on causes, not just blocking effects WASHINGTON (AP) — Aline Humphrey was losing a 10-year battle with worsening heartburn: Medications didn’t help, and she had resorted to eat ing only easy-to-digest baby food. Then doctors snaked a tiny tube down her throat to fix the faulty valve causing the problem. The California nurse celebrated several months later with an eight-course French meal and a bottle of Dom Perignon — no more antacids, no more heartburn. Now other sufferers can try it, too: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first non-drug treatments for acid reflux — two difier- ent medical devices that send a tube down the throat to fix the actual cause of chronic heartburn instead of just sup pressing painful stomach acid as med ications do. The hourlong, outpatient procedures could significantly change the way heartburn is treated. One device is like a tiny sewing ma chine that puts a few stitches in the faulty valve causing heartburn, creating little pleated gathers to strengthen it. The oth er device, which Humphrey tried, zaps the faulty valve with radioffequency en ergy, beams of heat. “ Both rely on the fact that we think fix ing the valve is a good long-term option rather than staying on medications for the rest of your life,” explained Dr. Neil Stoll- man of San Francisco General Hospital, who tested the radiofrequency device, Curon Medical Inc.’s Stretta system. “I still practice medicine, and 1 know a lot of patients who are going to bene fit,” said Dr. Brian E. Harvey, the FDA senior medical officer who reviewed Stretta and competitor C.R. Bard Incis Endoscopic Suturing System. The FDA approved both earlier this month. Some 14 million Americans suffer the Honors curriculiH lable for undergrade ent researcher invited to make ford uate Research idents pursuing researd fifth floor of ano the casT of droreui.corn's □Rive me cRazv tour Rudder 501 inxeracT with dr. Drew & amarviDa peex Time ©lOORfH Venue Name s RUDD6R THeaxRe School Name : XCXRS R & m UNIVERSITY immeDiaxeuY Foi_i_oiuino xne free advance screening □f “whipped" Sponsoring Organization msc Ficrn socierv Passes available at Rudder Theatre Box Office or lobby. > will he held intlieli't dents, and othermeifl iposium sessionstoiG' id motivated iindei?i 3 ' Donald Dickson. V' dd@aphonors.tmA drDreW Akamai STREAMING VIDEO BRCJUQHT TO YOU BY DRDREW.COM - YOUR PLACE FDR CHATS, RELATIONSHIPS, CELEBRITIES, MUSIC AND MORE. •com chronic heartburn, called “gastroe sophageal reflux disease,” or GERD. A valve where the esophagus meets the stomach, called the lower esophageal sphincter, relaxes at the wrong times, al lowing acidic stomach contents to back up into the delicate esophagus causing a burning sensation. Spicy foods or overeating could give anyone occasional heartburn. But GERD causes serious, repeated heart- bum. The stomach acid can actually cor rode the. esophagus, causing inflamma tion or scarring that makes it hard to swallow. One recent study found people with severe reflux are eight times more likely to develop esophageal cancer. Acid-blocking medicines — such as Prilosec, the world’s best-selling drug — are highly effective at relieving symptoms. Some people don’t like taking daily medicine. Others don’t have insurance to cover the drugs. Curon cites one esti mate that patients and insurers world wide spend $14 billion a year on anti- heartburn drugs. Still other patients get no relief from drugs, or suffer side effects. When acid blockers fail, patients have tried Propul- sid, a drug that pushes food through the stomach faster so there’s less to reflux — but one drug the manufacturer is about to quit selling because it also can cause lethal irregular heartbeats. Until now, the only non-drug alter native was surgery to tighten the valve. The two new systems don’t require cutting patients: Curon’s Stretta has elec trodes on an endoscope threaded down the throat. The electrodes bum spots on the muscle controlling the faulty valve. A flexible scar-like tissue forms. Doctors aren’t sure if that tightens the valve, or if the heat zaps overactive nerves that made the valve malfunction. Regardless, in a study of 47 patients followed for six months after the procedure, 70 percent had quit taking all heartburn medicines. Bard’s suturing device, developed by a physician at the Royal College of Lon don, is like a miniature sewing machine on an endoscope. Tiny stitches tighten the valve. In a study of 64 patients, 67 percent had ei ther no heartburn or only occasional, brief episodes six months later. No one knows how long the effects will last — patients may need retreat ment every few years, FDA’s Harvey cautioned. Both procedures can cause mild chest or stomach pain that day, but studies fgund no serious side effects. However, physicians do need training to perform the procedures, something both compa nies are beginning. The procedures will cost $2,000 to $2,500. “If it turns out that this works as well as we think, it’s going to be very appeal ing to physicians and our patients,” said Emory University’s Dr. Patrick Waring, who tested Bard’s suturing system. “I think there’s a lot of people... who don’t want to have an operation, who don’t want medicine on a daily basis but still want relief from their heartburn.” New treatments for heartburn Millions of Americana suffer chronic heartburn caused by acid reflux, where a faulty valve lets stomach acid back up into the esophagus. The FDA has approved two competing non-drug treatments illustrated below. In both treatments, a small tube called an endoscope is passed through the mouth and placed at the valve between the stomach and esophagus. Stretta system The tube contains electrodes that use radiofrequency energy to burn spots on muscles controlling the faulty valve, thus tightening it. Endoscopic suturing system A miniature sewing machine. is on the end of the tube, allowing doctors to place tiny stitches along the valve’s edge that are gathered to tighten it. -^Esophagus Endoscope Sources: Curon Medical Inc.; C.R. Bard Inc. Emily Holmes/AP NEED A JOB? THE KIDS KLUB IS SEEKING STAFF FOR THE 2000 FALL SEMESTER College Station * Are you a fun person? 1 Do you enjoy working with kids? » Looking for valuable work experience? » Are you available Mon.-FrL, 2:45 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.? • If you answered yes to any of these questions, we may have a job for you. 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