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Breast surgeons targeted by taxman in Argentina
Reported April 4, 2011
Summary of story from Reuters, 12.01.2011, and The Guardian, 14.01.2011
Financial authorities in Argentina are targeting the country’s
“booming” plastic surgery trade in an attempt to recover 40 million
pesos ($10 million) in undeclared contributions from breast augmentation
procedures carried out by surgeons.
The Guardian says that the “insatiable” appetite for plastic surgery
amongst Argentineans means that women spend more than £10 million on
breast surgery every year, mostly in cash.
Reuters reports that 125,000 breast implants worth £9 million were
imported to the country in 2008 and 2009.
It is common practice in Argentina to pay for expensive items such as
elective surgery in cash.
Scientists find gene linked to alcohol consumption
(Buenos Aires Herald)
Scientists have identified a gene that appears to play a role in
regulating how much alcohol people drink and say their finding could
help the search for more effective treatments for alcoholism and binge
drinking.
In a study of more than 47,000 people, an international team of
scientists found that people who have a rarer version of a gene called
AUTS2 drink on average 5 percent less alcohol than people with the more
common version.
The AUTS2 gene, also known as called "autism susceptibility candidate 2"
has previously been linked to autism and attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), but its actual function is not clear, the researchers
said.
"Of course there are a lot of factors that affect how much alcohol a
person drinks, but we know...that genes play an important role," said
Paul Elliott of Imperial College London, who was part of the team
conducting the study.
"The difference this particular gene makes is only small, but by finding
it we've opened up a new area of research."
According to the World Health Organization, harmful use of alcohol
results in 2.5 million deaths a year globally.
It is the world's third largest risk factor for causing diseases such as
neuropsychiatric disorders like alcoholism and epilepsy, as well as
cardiovascular disease, cirrhosis of the liver and various forms of
cancer.
Gunter Schumann from the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College
London said combining genetic studies and behavioral data should help
scientists better understand the biological basis of why people drink,
some of them to excess.
"This is an important first step toward the development of individually
targeted prevention and treatments for alcohol abuse and addiction," he
said.
In their study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences (PNAS) journal, the team analyzed DNA samples from over 26,000
volunteers to search for genes that appeared to affect alcohol
consumption, and then checked their findings in another 21,000 people.
The volunteers answered questionnaires to report how much alcohol they
drank.
After identifying AUTS2, the scientists analyzed how active the gene was
in samples of donated brain tissue. They found that people with the
version of the gene linked to lower alcohol consumption had higher
activity of the gene.
The researchers also looked at strains of mice that had been selectively
bred according to how much alcohol they drink voluntarily, and found
there were differences in the AUTS2 gene activity levels among different
breeds.
In another part of the study using flies, the researchers found that
blocking the effect of a fruit fly version of the same gene made the
flies less sensitive to alcohol. This suggests AUTS2 seems to be
involved in regulation of alcohol intake in a number of different
species, they said.
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