Podcasts about wide spectrum

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Best podcasts about wide spectrum

Latest podcast episodes about wide spectrum

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Hands-On Mac 144: Mac Mic Modes!

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 5:43 Transcription Available


On Hands-On Mac, Mikah demonstrates Mic Modes in macOS from his new recording room! These audio options are available during a user's video call (such as on Google Meet or FaceTime. The modes Mikah details include Standard, Voice Isolation, and Wide Spectrum. Host: Mikah Sargent Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Hands-On Mac (Video)
HOM 144: Mac Mic Modes!

Hands-On Mac (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 5:43


On Hands-On Mac, Mikah demonstrates Mic Modes in macOS from his new recording room! These audio options are available during a user's video call (such as on Google Meet or FaceTime. The modes Mikah details include Standard, Voice Isolation, and Wide Spectrum. Host: Mikah Sargent Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Total Mikah (Audio)
Hands-On Mac 144: Mac Mic Modes!

Total Mikah (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 5:43 Transcription Available


On Hands-On Mac, Mikah demonstrates Mic Modes in macOS from his new recording room! These audio options are available during a user's video call (such as on Google Meet or FaceTime. The modes Mikah details include Standard, Voice Isolation, and Wide Spectrum. Host: Mikah Sargent Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Wilson County News
Texas-wide Spectrum outage closes FELPS office

Wilson County News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 0:55


The Floresville Electric Light & Power System (FELPS) office on S.H. 97 in Floresville has closed for the day, due to a widespread Spectrum internet outage. FELPS is unable to process payments or complete any work that requires internet access, according to CEO Aaron Wagner, so the decision was made to close the office. “Our understanding is that it's not going to be back up until 5 p.m.” Wagner told the Wilson County News. Spectrum's outage, which began just after noon Tuesday, is affecting customers across Texas, including the greater San Antonio area. The internet provider advises it is working...Article Link

Goście Dwójki
"A Wide Spectrum" - stylistycznie różnorodny debiut Big Bandu Śląskiego

Goście Dwójki

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 15:15


- Muszę powiedzieć, że spektrum moich zainteresowań jest dość szerokie. W związku z tym może miałem trochę wpływ na repertuar, który pojawił się na płycie. Na pewno jest on zróżnicowany. Tytuł "A Wide Spectrum" dotyczy troszeczkę tej różnorodności stylistycznej - mówił w "Poranku Dwójki" Grzegorz Nagórski, szef artystyczny orkiestry Big Band Śląski.

big band musz debiut wide spectrum
On the Line
Predictions for Auburn Football are on a wide spectrum

On the Line

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2022 90:54


Jacob Goins begins the week by discussing why the season predictions for Auburn Football are on a wide spectrum, and what we should be really expecting. Jacob plays his interview with former Auburn CB and now NFL CB Roger McCreary from SEC Media Days as he officially signed his contract with the Tennessee Titans over the weekend. Jacob Hillman of the Auburn Sports Network joins the show to give his takes on the comments from Bryan Harsin and the players at SEC Media Days, Auburn Basketball's upcoming trip to Israel, and Auburn Baseball's success in the MLB Draft. All that and more on the Monday edition of On the Line.

BRAVE COMMERCE
Claudine Patel of Post Consumer Brands on connecting to the consumer, adjusting during inflation, and catering to a wide spectrum of customers

BRAVE COMMERCE

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 19:50


Claudine Patel, CMO of Post Consumer Brands joins hosts Rachel Tipograph & Sarah Hofstetter to discuss customer relationships in the CPG eCommerce space. Claudine speaks on how everything a brand does impacts how consumers see them. The three of them discuss inflation, and Claudine explains how to assess the value of your product, gauging the impact it has on the consumers' everyday lives. In efforts to appeal to a wide array of customers, Claudine shares ways she's adapted her brand to a premium consumer, experimenting with different options and marketing methods including Mucinex's “Sickwear” line of Mucinex themed streetwear.Subscribe to BRAVE COMMERCE on your favorite podcast platform!You can listen and subscribe to all of Adweek's podcasts by visiting adweek.com/podcasts.Stay updated on all things Adweek Podcast Network by following us on Twitter: @adweekpodcasts. And if you have a question or suggestions for the show, send us an email at podcast@adweek.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

We Own This Town: Music
302: The Wide Spectrum of Delights

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 70:20


Felix Tandem, Los Colognes, Sean Thompson's Weird Ears, The BlackSon, Ron Obasi, blaxhippie, Kyle Etges, WhoIsJordan, LUNAR, B. Stokes, Joey Kneiser, Highland Kites, Babe, local spells, NGC 4414, No Milk

Off-Farm Income
OFI 1355: A Wide Spectrum Of Agricultural Interests And Legacy | FFA SAE Edition | Kate Rogers | South Harrison High School FFA

Off-Farm Income

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 28:44


I am definitely the type of person who is interested in my family history and feels some sense of obligation to honor that legacy.  So, I am always fascinated when I get to interview somebody with a deep family legacy who is honoring it in the same way.  For our guest today, Kate Rogers, that is a theme that repeats itself throughout the interview. One of Kate's strongest influences in her love agriculture is her great grandmother, who was raised during the Great Depression, and found many ways to produce good to help generate income during that time.  One of the talents that she had, that Kate also has, is in creating artistic items that have value to other people.  This is something that Kate has carried forward, with many of the supplies that belonged to her great grandmother, in her business, Kate Rogers Art.

AppleVis Podcast
Exploring 50 Notable New Features and Changes in iOS 15

AppleVis Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021


In this podcast, Thomas Domville gives us short looks at some of what's new and notable in iOS 15. Topics covered include: Live Text Exploring images with VoiceOver Voice image descriptions with markup New navigation method for VoiceOver - Grouped VoiceOver Quick Settings Sound Actions for Switch Control Background Sounds Per-app settings Audiograms Standalone Magnifier app Accessibility Memoji New Voice Control languages Siri on-device speech processing Neural text-to-speech voice in more languages for Siri Maintaining context with Siri Refer to contacts onscreen with Siri Siri Offline support Sharing with Siri Home screen page management Focus modes Add Recovery Account for iCloud Legacy Contacts (coming in a later release) iCloud Private Relay and Hide My Email Redesigned start page for Safari Safari tab bar Safari tab groups Support for extensions in Safari New pull to refresh VoiceOver gesture Secure browsing for Safari Temporary iCloud storage Notification summary Notification options New and improved Weather details Rain and snow alerts Live Locations Find My separation alerts Find My network Request a refund for in-app purchases Improvements to AirPrint New widgets Health sharing Walking steadiness Photo stacks, collages, and pinned content in Messages 'Spatialize Stereo built-in password authenticator Skip gaps in Voice Memos FaceTime links and Join FaceTime calls from the web on Android and Windows Portrait mode for videos in FaceTime Mute alerts in FaceTime Voice Isolation and Wide Spectrum modes in FaceTime

After Hours: Conversations for Music Educators
Directing Band Across a Wide Spectrum of Socio-Economic Groups. What's Different? What's the Same?

After Hours: Conversations for Music Educators

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2021 34:53


In this episode of the After Hours Director Spotlight, Nick Averwater continues his conversation with Randy Box, the Director of Bands at West Memphis High School in West Memphis, Arkansas. Randy talks about the differences, and similarities, between being a band director in an affluent school district versus one with it's share of economic challenges. He also talks about what advice he would give himself if he could go back to 1978 when he started his career in rural Pocahontas, Arkansas. Our conversation with Randy is broken up in to two episodes, and this is part two.Join Amro Music for our first-ever Young Director's Bootcamp. Whether you're entering your first year of teaching or you're simply wanting a refresher on some important fundamentals, we hope you'll join us at this year's Bootcamp. We want to help you start the 2021-2022 school year with your best foot forward!Our Bootcamp will include both a virtual and in-person option. You can learn more at www.amromusic.com/bootcamp.

Life According To A Middle Schooler
Social Media: The Wide Spectrum of Advantages and Disadvantages

Life According To A Middle Schooler

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2020 19:26


This episode is all about social media, and its positive and negative impacts, as well as the wide spectrum of advantages and disadvantages. Thank you guys so much for getting us to 750 listens. We are 75% of the way to our special 1000 listener episode so please help us get there! Also please share the podcast with your friends and family and subscribe so you never miss an episode. Episode 9 will come out at 850 listens. We also hope that you guys send us an email or send us a voice recorded message, whether it may be a request for an episode topic or just an experience that you want to share with us or our listeners. We will be happy to feature your email in the next episode if it is relevant to the podcast. Lastly, please check out our most recent episode. Not many people did and we would hate to see you guys miss out on this episode as it has lots of great information. Websites: https://anchor.fm/cute-doggo https://sites.google.com/view/life-according-to-a-ms/home Enjoy! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The Higher Practice Podcast for Optimal Mental Health
Defining Optimal Mental Health and How to Achieve It - Keith Kurlander & Dr. Will Van Derveer - HPP 67

The Higher Practice Podcast for Optimal Mental Health

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 62:09


There is still a lot to learn about the mind and how it works. It’s the core of how we process things in our surroundings, experiences, relationships and gives us specific instructions on how we conduct and behave ourselves in certain situations both physically and emotionally. Needless to say, the mind is such an awesome engine that has helped us to survive and evolve as a species for over thousands of years. Knowing how to sustain our mental well-being is such an important task that we must all carry out and possibly improve upon. But how does one go about achieving an optimally healthy mental state? And what exactly incorporates a healthy mind? Are there any factors that affect the mind significantly in terms of an existing pathology, lifestyle and diet? These are merely some of the many questions that we bring up and try to answer. Today, we discuss these topics with our co-hosts Keith Kurlander, MA, LPC and Dr. Will Van Derveer, and together dive deep into this interesting conversation on how to achieve an optimal mental health. Shownotes: Symptom-based Model: Limitations - 02:41 Mental Health: Behavioral Indications - 06:33 A Wide Spectrum - 09:47 Nutrition - 13:12 Understanding the Significance of Sleep - 15:32 Mindfulness in the Integrative Path - 24:10 Optimal Psychology and Meditation - 30:02 An Interesting Paradox on Resiliency - 35:30 To Learn More about Keith Kurlander & Dr. Will Van Derveer visit:  https://psychiatryinstitute.com/ https://psychiatryinstitute.com/podcast/ *** How you can help others in a big way... If you enjoy the Higher Practice Podcast, please leave a quick review on the Apple Podcast app. It makes a big difference in getting the word out to other people who will benefit from this podcast. Simply, click on the show on your podcast app>scroll down to the bottom of all the episodes>in the ratings and reviews section tap stars to rate>click write a review. Want more? For show notes and more information, visit https://psychiatryinstitute.com/podcast/ Sign up for our newsletter and to receive ongoing information for optimal mental health: email.psychiatryinstitute.com If you’re a provider visit https://psychiatryinstitute.com/ If you’re interested in patient care visit: www.psychiatrycenters.com For provider education reach out to:  info@psychiatryinstitute.com For patient care reach out to: info@psychiatrycenters.com

Michal and Silvia Podcast
On Creative Process, Connecting with the Body and Intuition

Michal and Silvia Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2020 35:02


This time Michal talks with a good friend João Moreira—a music producer and composer performing under a stage name “Instil”. We're diving into the creative process, emotion-based feedback, taking breaks, connecting with the body, and intuition. Here's João's new EP called “Wide Spectrum of Beautiful Chaos”: https://instil.bandcamp.com/album/wide-spectrum-of-beautiful-chaos

Industrial.DJ
Wide Spectrum Industrial

Industrial.DJ

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2020 81:59


Here's another big swath ripped out of the field of music that hopefully most of us riverheads enjoy. From gothy to synthy like the Depeche Mode starter, with lots of electronics, and harsh to wtf and extra dark, like the Velvet Acid Christ finisher.

G Money
This is Talk Back what We Understand as Humans , Wide spectrum, Anything rides, anything is Possibe

G Money

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2019 3:46


This is my introduction ,,I'm Scientific Wired ,Murphy Law is Real,. Being True and Honest, to all or do we just fuck people over. I later topping off music styles, what we love,hate. Why. Is why .I will have guests of honor. Lords of Hate ,,Ghost Riders , USA will be great, The waste of a human lifestyle, Drugs why how. Politics adds . News ,from over a day of pie. /×# Were do u see young adults 20 move the future 20years. Physic, lessons , why is there a confusion on 30 to 45 why we love drugs,. Why do we shame the good between the rich. Sex sexuality, Americans b et or not to be . High what wages, interesting stuff. God , different religions , is there as nothing to end of times , Did we go to space .. last we cuz, we cry. We fgaf , prisons jail. Love sadness

Loud And Clear
Gen Z and their wide spectrum of Sexual Self-Identification by Carlos Rodriguez

Loud And Clear

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2019 22:37


Episode 5 of #LoudAndClear presents a conversation with Carlos Rodriguez, Director of Brand Planning about how Gen Z is reshaping society’s understanding of gender identity and sexual orientation. This conversation of sexual range and spectrum comes in a time where brands and advertising professionals have myriad opportunities to cater to Gen Z’s desire for individual recognition in their marketing efforts, especially through the lens of diversity and inclusion. Although this concept resonates best in the marketing world in June to correspond with Pride month, advertisers should expect this trend to endure beyond the month of June and for years to come with Generation Z. Your Hosts: Emily Puig and Ovidio Hinojosa Producer: Joel Villarini & Francisco Cardenas --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lerma-agency/message

Wide Spectrum
Criticism and Micronation

Wide Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 34:07


In this episode of Wide Spectrum, we touch upon the idea of criticism towards any form of artistic expression. We specifically take a look at visual media. In the section we call "What the crap did I just hear", we talk about a micronation that many of you might not have heard of. I have been obsessed with this micronation since I heard about it and wanted to share it with all you fine people listening. Enjoy!

Wide Spectrum
People, Pyramid and Gaspar Noe

Wide Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 53:20


In this episode, we talk about more without making much sense. The topic of this episode is dear to our host Chris (aka Chrissy Boiye) and it deals with people. We also visit our beloved "Old Bastard" section and introduce two more sections. One is  "Christians Corner", where Chrissy Boiye takes us through Gaspar Noe's new movie "Climax". The second is "Sundeep's Corner" where Sundeep (aka Shivalry) talks about an interesting article he found last year which has to do with the pyramids. At the end, we will give you guys a sneak peek of one of our jam sessions. Please don't forget to follow us on Podbean. You can also find us on itunes and YouTube under the name "Wide Spectrum"  and on spotify under the name "widespectrum". Thank you.

Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart

Jane Ferguson:                Hello, welcome to Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart, Episode 22. This is a podcast from Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine, and the AHA Council on Genomic and Precision Medicine. I am Jane Ferguson and it's November 2018.                                            Our first article comes from Carlos Vanoye, Alfred George and colleagues from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and is entitled, High Throughput Functional Evaluation of KCNQ1 Decrypts Variance of Unknown Significance.                                            So a major growing problem in clinical genomics is that following the identification of a variant that is potentially linked to a disease phenotype, without further interrogation, it's really hard to make sense of the functional significance of that variant. Right now, the large number of variants of unknown significance lead to confusion for patients and clinicians alike. To allow for accurate diagnoses and the best treatment plans, we need a way to be able to screen variants to assess their function in a fast and cost-effective manner.                                            In this paper, the authors decided to focus in the KCNQ1 gene, a cardiac ion channel, which can affect arrhythmias. They aim to assess whether a novel high-throughput functional evaluation strategy could identify functional mutations, as well as an in vitro electrophysiological approach. Which is effective, but expensive and time-consuming. Their approach capitalized on an existing automated electrophysiological recording platform that had originally had been developed for drug discovery essays.                                            They selected 78 variants in KCNQ1 and assessed their function using the High-Throughput platform, which coupled high efficiency, cell electroporation with automated plain or patch clamp recording. They compared the results to traditional electrophysiological essays and find a high rate of concordance between the two methods. Overall, they were able to reclassify over 65% of the variants tested, with far greater efficiency than traditional methods.                                            While this method will not work for all genes and phenotypes, the authors have demonstrated an efficient method for functional interrogation of variants. Which may greatly accelerate discovery and conditions such as Long QT or other congenital arrhythmias.                                            The next paper, Nocturnal Atrial Fibrillation Caused by Mutations in KCND2 Encoding Poor Forming Alpha Subunit of the Cardiac KV 4.2 Potassium Channel, comes from Max Drabkin, Ohad Birk, and colleagues at Soroka University Medical Center in Israel. This paper also focuses on cardiac ion channels and the role of mutations in atrial fibrillation.                                            In a family with early-onset peroxisomal AF across three generations, whole XM sequencing revealed a variant in KCND2 encoding the KV 4.2 Potassium Channel, which segregated consistent with autosomal dominant heredity. This variant resulted in a replacement of a conserved [inaudible] residue with an arginine. To investigate functional consequences of this novel variant, they conducted experiments in xenopos laevis oocytes and found that there is decreased voltage depended channel and activation and impaired formation of the KV 4.2 Homotetramer and the KV 4.2, KV 4.3 Heterotetramer.                                            Overall, this study shows that a novel mutation in a conserved Protein kinase C Phosphorylation site within the KV 4.2 Potassium Channel underlies the phenotypes observed in a family of peroxisomal atrial fibrillation. The targeting Atrial KV 4.2 might be an effective therapeutic avenue.                                            Next up, Michael Levin and Scott Damrauer and colleagues from the University of Pennsylvania published an article entitled, Genomic Risks Stratification Predicts All-Cause Mortality After Cardiac Catheterization.                                            They were interested in understanding the utility of polygenic risk scores for disease prediction. They constructed a genome Y genetic risk score for CAD and applied it to individuals from the Penn Medicine Bio-bank who had undergone Coronary angiography and genotyping.                                            They included over 139,000 variants for the 1,500 ancestry subjects who were included and classified them as high or low polygenic risk. Individuals who were classified as high polygenic risk were shown to have higher risk of All-Cause mortality than low polygenic risk individuals despite no differences in traditional risk factor profiles. This was particularly evident in individuals with high genetic risk but no evidence of angiographic CAD.                                            Adding the polygenic risk score to a traditional risk assessment model was able to improve prediction of five year All-Cause mortality. Highlighting the utility of a polygenic score and underscoring traditional risk factors do not yet fully capture mortality risk.                                            The next article entitled, "Bio-marker Glycoprotein Acetyls is Associated with the Risk of A Wide Spectrum of Incident Diseases and Stratifies Mortality Risk in Angiography Patients" comes from Johannes Kettunen, Scott Ritchie, Peter Würtz and colleagues from the University of Oulu Finland.                                            GlycA is a circulating biomarker that reflects the amount of Glycated proteins in the circulation. It has been associated with cardiovascular disease, Type 2 Diabetes, and all-cause mortality. In this paper, the authors used electronic health record data from over 11,000 adults from the finish general population previously included in the "FINRISK" and "Dilgom" studies and they tested for a associations between GlycA and 468 different health outcomes over an 8-12 year follow up. They report new associations between GlycA and multiple conditions including incident alcoholic liver disease, chronic renal failure, glomerular diseases, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, inflammatory polyarthric disease and hypertension.                                            These associations held true even after adjusting for CRP suggesting that GlycA represents an independent biological contributor to inflammation and disease. Their findings highlight potential utility for GlycA as a biomarker of many diseases and underscore the importance future functional and mechanistic studies to understand how GlycA is linked to disease risk.                                            Our last original research article entitled, "Tissue Specific Differential Expression of Novel Jeans and Long Intergenic Non-coding RNAs in Humans with Extreme Response to Endotoxic glycemia comes from Jane Ferguson, Murdock Riley, and colleagues from Vanderbilt University, Columbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania. That first author is none other than me, so I'm not unbiased reader of this particular manuscript, but I'd like to tell you a little bit about it anyway.                                            We were interested in understanding the transcriptional changes that occur in tissues during acute inflammation. As part of the genetics of evoked responses to Niacin and Endotoxemia, or gene study, we recruited healthy individuals and performed an inpatient endotoxin challenge where we administered a low dose of LPS and looked at the systemic inflammatory response. Individuals vary greatly in the degree of their inflammatory response to LPS and we identified high and low responders, men and women, of African and European ancestry, who had responses in the top or bottom 10% for cytokines and fever.                                            We conducted RNA seek and adipose tissue in 25 individuals and CD-14 positive monosites for 15 individuals in pre and two or four hours post LPS samples. We found that the differences in transcriptional response between high or low responders are mostly explained by magnitude rather than discrete sets of genes.                                            So some core genes were altered similarly, in both groups, but overall the high responders mounted a large transcription of response to LPS or low responders rather than mounting an anti-inflammatory response actually just barely responded on the transcription level. We saw clear tissue specificity between manosites and adipose tissue we identified several long non-coding RNAs that were up or down regulated in response to LPS and validated these independent samples one of these link RNAs which we have now named Monosite LPs induced link RNA regulator vile six or Mahler Isle six, with highly regulated by LPs and monosites but not in adipose tissue.                                            We [inaudible] THP-1 monosites and find a significant effect on iOS six expression suggesting that this is a novel link RNA that regulates Isle six expression in manosites potentially through a cd-86 dependent pathway. Overall our data revealed tissue specific transcriptional of changes that correlate with clinical inflammatory responses and highlight the role of specifically incarnate and inflammatory response.                                            Next up is a research letter entitled "Reduced Sodium Current in Native Cardiomyocytes of a Regatta Syndrome Patient Associated with Beta Two Central Mutation" published by Constance Schmidt, Felix Wiedmann, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Dierk Thomas, and co-authors from University Hospital Heidelberg. They obtained cardiomyocytes from a patient with Regatta Syndrome previous whole XM sequencing had implicated a variant in the Beta Two Syntrophin or "SNTB2" gene as potentially causal in this individual. Expression analysis showed lower SNTB2 expression and atrial tissue of the affected individual compared with controls.                                            They performed electrophysiology on the Microcytes and found reduced peak sodium density and reduced late sodium current. They co-express wild type or mutant SNTB2 in heck 293 T cells and [inaudible] with the cardiac sodium channel NAV-1.5 and found a significant effect on binding which adversely affected sodium currents. This study nicely demonstrates the functional effect of this SNTB2 mutation underlying Regatta Syndrome in this patient.                                            A second research letter comes from A.T. van den Hoven and Jolien Roos- Hesselink and colleagues from Erasmus University Medical Center in the Netherlands and is entitled "Aortic Dimensions and Clinical Outcome in Patients with SMAD three mutations, they were interested in understanding how the Aortic dilation comment individuals with SMAD three mutations compared to individuals with other syndrome and causes of Aortic dilation.                                            In 28 patients with SMAD three mutations, there were significant growth in the Sinotubular Junction the ascending Aorta on the diaphragm over an average of 10 years of follow up at reads far higher population averages but lower than might be seen in other syndromes, such as [inaudible]. Intensive management and preventive surgery and many of the patients prevented any mortality in this group.                                            Rounding out this issue is a clinical letter entitled "Concealed Arrhythmogenic  Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy in Sudden unexplained Cardiac Death events from Jodie Ingles, Chris Semsarian, and colleagues from the University of Sydney, Australia. They report on for clinical cases where individuals presented in early adulthood with unexplained cardiac arrest, which was later found to be attributable to mutations in the PKP2 gene. PKP2 or, Plakophilin 2, encodes an integral component of the Desmosome, which is important and Cell-Cell adhesion. Further PKP2 is involved in transcriptional activation of genes controlling intracellular calcium cycling. This gene has been implicated arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy in individuals with cardiac structural abnormalities. These four cases where unrelated individuals were all fans to have loss of function variants and PKP2 underlying sudden cardiac death or events, despite structurally normal hearts. This prompts questions on the clinical management of such cases of concealed ARVC.                                            That's all from us for November, thanks to all of you out there listening. We'll be back in December for the final episode of 2018.                                            This podcast was brought to you by Circulation Genomic and Precision Medicine and the American Heart Association Council on Genomic and Precision Medicine. This program is copyright American Heart Association 2018.                                             

Private Parts Unknown (FKA Reality Bytes)
Emma Koenig on Female Orgasm & the Wide Spectrum of What Gets Us Off

Private Parts Unknown (FKA Reality Bytes)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 64:38


For the 14th episode of season 4, your fearless triad – Courtney Kocak, Sofiya Alexandra & Dave Rankin – is thrilled to welcome Emma Koenig to fill us in on her latest book, Moan: Anonymous Essays on Female Orgasm (foreword by Rachel Bloom!). We dig into the anthology's origin story as a popular blog entitled How to Make Me Come, the blog-to-book publishing strategy, her approach as a "fan of sex" vs. an expert, contradictions among the spectrum of sexuality, childhood shame surrounding public masturbation (fair enough), meeting her boyfriend as soon as she finished the book & tips for anyone who wants to better communicate with their partner(s) about how to get them off – plus Emma issues a listener challenge. Also, DFR shares an update on his depression journey & the squad raves about the benefits of journaling. This episode is brought to you by Ritual vitamins. Check out ritual.com/reality to try Ritual – happiness guaranteed, or your 1st month's on them! For more Emma Koenig: Order Moan: Anonymous Essays on Female Orgasm Follow her on Twitter @emjuko Follow her on Instagram @emjuko  If you love this episode, please leave us a 5-star rating & sexy review! xo

Death's Door Prods
Comics 147 - A Wide Spectrum of Bullshit

Death's Door Prods

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2017 159:32


We get some shilling out of the way early this week as we talk about the Brian Michael Bendis thing, some failed Marvel books, Dead finally reading Green Lanterns, and more. The song you heard was Hinkik - "Skystrike." If you like the song you can find it on: SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/hinkik/skystrike Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/5cMbXhVwQxJUwUZVY11pdd You can find more from Hinkik on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hinkik Twitter: https://twitter.com/HinkikEDM YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/HinkikProductions Spotify: https://play.spotify.com/artist/6AelNJV2eBg9B3gxfvBNFF Ask.fm: https://ask.fm/hinkik SoundCloud: @hinkik Song released under CC BY 3.0 license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Help supporter Death's Door Prods on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/deathsdoorprods Website: http://www.deathsdoorprods.com/ iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/deathsdoorprods/id688055687 Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/deaths-door-prods-anythingcast Google Play Music: https://play.google.com/music/m/Iiwamy2w2f5f63vkcvgv2ubj7ge Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/DeathsDoorProds Dead Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/DeadMan_DDProds Birdy Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/bbirdwhistel Niko Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/neeks99 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeathsDoorProds MediaWhorz Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/MediaWhorz YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/DeathsDoorProdsVids MediaWhorz YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/MediaWhorz

Gillett & Brims Podcast
Episode 29 - Wide Spectrum

Gillett & Brims Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2016 15:17


Episode 29 - Wide Spectrum by Gillett & Brims Podcast

gillett wide spectrum