Showing posts with label amazing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazing. Show all posts

Monday, May 16, 2011

Newborn Baby With No Skull Video



Newborn with no skull. You can see the brain oozing out. The baby expired few minutes after delivery.

What is Anencephaly?
Anencephaly is a neural tube defect (a disorder involving incomplete development of the brain, spinal cord, and/or their protective coverings). The neural tube is a narrow sheath that folds and closes between the 3rd and 4th weeks of pregnancy to form the brain and spinal cord of the embryo. Anencephaly occurs when the "cephalic" or head end of the neural tube fails to close, resulting in the absence of a major portion of the brain, skull, and scalp. Infants with this disorder are born without both a forebrain (the front part of the brain) and a cerebrum (the thinking and coordinating area of the brain). The remaining brain tissue is often exposed--not covered by bone or skin. The infant is usually blind, deaf, unconscious, and unable to feel pain. Although some individuals with anencephaly may be born with a rudimentary brain stem, the lack of a functioning cerebrum permanently rules out the possibility of ever gaining consciousness. Reflex actions such as respiration (breathing) and responses to sound or touch may occur. The cause of anencephaly is unknown. Although it is believed that the mother's diet and vitamin intake may play a role, scientists believe that many other factors are also involved.
Is there any treatment?
There is no cure or standard treatment for anencephaly. Treatment is supportive.
What is the prognosis?
The prognosis for individuals with anencephaly is extremely poor. If the infant is not stillborn, then he or she will usually die within a few hours or days after birth. [Editor's Note: The unborn child may have been diagnosed as having anencephaly, but be born with a less severe form of the disease, allowing the infant to live for years or more]
What research is being done?
The The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke conducts and supports a wide range of studies that explore the complex mechanisms of normal brain development. The knowledge gained from these fundamental studies provides the foundation for understanding how this process can go awry and, thus, offers hope for new means to treat and prevent congenital brain disorders including neural tube defects such as anencephaly.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

See Deformed Oruntang Babies Video





It has a little MAN body!! Looks like a man mated with a monkey. Someone told me God didn't create ugly things...Now I have total proof he does. Rosie O' Donnel and this deformed thing..

Some genetic mutation in a ape baby, It isn't nature that this happens Its from chemicals that are used as weapons of war. Radiation can also cause crazy deformities



Monday, January 17, 2011

Magnificent Storytelling Illustrations


Israeli-born illustrator Tomer Hanuka creates incredibly interesting scenes. His stories are told not just by the expressions on his characters' faces but by the beautiful colors he chooses and the mysterious shadows he casts. His passion for drawing emerged at a young age, when he fell in love with American comic books. He found them "mysterious and majestic, an unreachable light in a faraway land, and more beautiful and exciting than anything around."

His client list includes prestigious newspapers and magazines like Time, The New Yorker, Spin, The New York Times, and Rolling Stone. He has won multiple gold medals from the Society of Illustrators and the Society of Publication designers, and was showcased in Print magazine and American Illustration. 

"This is about storytelling; it's creating drama, not unlike a movie director, but frozen in a single moment," Hanuka said.







"An illustrator might find it hard to get a gig in a magazine, but can design wallpapers, set up an e-shop, and print on-demand through another vendor. It's a crazy, huge thing that's starting to change the industry in a truly profound way," says Hanuka.

For those just starting out, what advice would Hanuka give?

He tells us, "if you draw purely for money, you'll discover soon enough you weren't paid enough. Illustration is a commercial field, but you have to be invested in the work on some personal level. Make sure this connection stays alive. it's the easy choice: you'll enjoy the work AND end up becoming better, i.e making more money in the long run."



Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Celebrities Now and Then

Beyonce Knowles

 Cameron Diaz

Mariah Carey

Paula Abdul

Fergie

 Gwen Stefani

Halle Berry

Jennifer Love Hewitt

Jessica Simpson

 Katie Holmes

Katy Perry

 Keri Russel

Mila Jovovich

Nicole Richie

Pamela Anderson

 Rene Zellweger


Thursday, October 21, 2010

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

The Invincible Jacket?


 Stem Cell made a big change to health. Just a few years ago, the big scientists in the world sure if there isn't a material that can't make human invincible. That was something impossible because it's something against the realm law that human knows. But they were all wrong.

Meta-material becomes a material that everybody talks about. This material can makes people invincible. An outfit that is using this kind of material can makes the person that is using it "disappear", yes, it's pretty much like Harry Potter's cloak.


A fighter jet can be made invincible with this meta-material. Not only stealth in radar, but literary invincible like the cloaking device in Star Trek.


This is made by creating an artificial material that can refracts electromagnetic radiation, the same thing goes to lights which has the electromagnetic radiation as the basic. The substance are usually tin and plastic in some quantify pattern.
Meta-material will refract lights, surrounds the object and converge at the end. It's much more like a river that surrounds a stone. In the last research at Perdue University, they're using some needles that refract the light over the object so it'll reflect the object behind it.


This material is being research around the world, such as in MIT, University of California Berkeley, Duke University, dan Caltech di LA.