Listen "TWiP 100: Driving past a milestone"
Episode Synopsis
Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Dickson Despommier, and Daniel Griffin
The TWiP trifecta solves the case of the Woman from Bolivia with Belly Pain, and discuss a method for population modification of malaria mosquitoes using a Cas9-mediated driver gene.
Links for this episode:
Cas9-mediated drive for population modification of malaria mosquito (PNAS)
FAQ: Gene drives (pdf)
Image credit
Letters read on TWiP 100
Case study for TWiP 100
This week's case is a 27 yo female, native NY, referred to outpatient at CU after seeing OBGYN, told had seen worms in stool and underwear. Inch or two in length, pale white, round, moving, 2-3 weeks of constant abdominal bloating. Sexually active. No particular diet. Travel: works for NGO, refugee camp in Ethiopian-Sudan border, southern Sudan. Last visit month ago. Noticed worms when she got back from last trip. Eats what local people eat. Raw food popular there: kitfo, raw steak tartare, with melted butter. Made from local beef. Did not take malaria prophylaxis, did not avoid local water, does wear sandals. College graduate. Nothing remarkable in family. CBC, liver, metabolic: all normal. Stool not normal: loose, no mucus or blood.
Send your diagnosis to [email protected]
Send your questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to [email protected]
The TWiP trifecta solves the case of the Woman from Bolivia with Belly Pain, and discuss a method for population modification of malaria mosquitoes using a Cas9-mediated driver gene.
Links for this episode:
Cas9-mediated drive for population modification of malaria mosquito (PNAS)
FAQ: Gene drives (pdf)
Image credit
Letters read on TWiP 100
Case study for TWiP 100
This week's case is a 27 yo female, native NY, referred to outpatient at CU after seeing OBGYN, told had seen worms in stool and underwear. Inch or two in length, pale white, round, moving, 2-3 weeks of constant abdominal bloating. Sexually active. No particular diet. Travel: works for NGO, refugee camp in Ethiopian-Sudan border, southern Sudan. Last visit month ago. Noticed worms when she got back from last trip. Eats what local people eat. Raw food popular there: kitfo, raw steak tartare, with melted butter. Made from local beef. Did not take malaria prophylaxis, did not avoid local water, does wear sandals. College graduate. Nothing remarkable in family. CBC, liver, metabolic: all normal. Stool not normal: loose, no mucus or blood.
Send your diagnosis to [email protected]
Send your questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to [email protected]
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