Friday, January 11, 2013

Recovery in Cambodia continues - Property Report

Cambodia saw its recovery continue in 2012.

Land prices in Cambodia continued to recover during the last half of 2012, following a collapse of the market in 2008, with urban areas seeing the biggest gains, VOA Cambodia reported.

The largest price increases are in Phnom Penh, with rentals leading the way and low interest rates offered for homebuyers, but investments in tourism outside the city have also helped raise land values, according to the news outlet.

Keuk Narin, vice president of Asia Real Estate Cambodia, told VOA Cambodia that commercial land prices along Phnom Penh?s main boulevards have gone from US$3,000 to US$4,000 per square meter and in some cases as high as US$5,000 per square meter.

In the last half of 2012, the number of business transactions in real estate increased, and prices rose about 13 percent for residential areas and 16 percent for commercial areas, Narin said.

?Apartments are currently the highest selling real estate, and condominiums are in demand by South Korean clientele,? Narin said. ?The stable growth of the sector has helped improve the housing market, too by allowing the banks to offer loans at low interest rates.?

Noun Rithy, managing director for the Bonna Realty Group, said construction is on the rise in commercial buildings, factories, hotels and houses, raising land prices. That includes sites in the provinces of Battambang, Preah Sihanouk and Siem Reap, where tourism investment is high.

?The movement of buying and selling real estate in those provinces has increased,? Rithy said. ?We could see more investors from Japan investing money to build hotels or condos.?

Source: http://www.property-report.com/recovery-in-cambodia-continues-27003

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Human hearts generate new cells after birth; Findings could lead to novel approaches for treating heart failure in children

Jan. 10, 2013 ? Researchers at Boston Children's Hospital have found, for the first time that young humans (infants, children and adolescents) are capable of generating new heart muscle cells. These findings refute the long-held belief that the human heart grows after birth exclusively by enlargement of existing cells, and raise the possibility that scientists could stimulate production of new cells to repair injured hearts.

Findings of the study, "Cardiomyocyte proliferation contributes to post-natal heart growth in young humans," were published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Online Early Edition, the week of Jan 7-Jan 11, 2013. The study was led by Bernhard Kuhn, MD, of the Department of Cardiologyat Boston Children's.

Beginning in 2009, Dr. Kuhn and his team looked at specimens from healthy human hearts, ranging in age from 0 to 59 years. Using several laboratory assays, they documented that cells in these hearts were still dividing after birth, significantly expanding the heart cell population. The cells regenerated at their highest rates during infancy. Regeneration declined after infancy, rose during the adolescent growth spurt, and continued up until around age 20.

The findings offer the strongest evidence to date that proliferation of cardiomyocytes (the cells making up heart muscle) contributes to growth in healthy young human hearts.

"For more than 100 years," Kuhn says, "people have been debating whether human heart muscle cells are generated after birth or whether they simply grow larger." Kuhn points out that research in the 1930s and 1940s suggested that cardiomyocyte division may continue after birth, and recent reports about myocardial regeneration in zebrafish and neonatal mice suggest that some young animals regenerate heart muscle by using mechanisms of muscle cell division. Still, for many years, the accepted belief in the scientific community was that human hearts grow after birth only because cells grow larger.

Kuhn's work challenges the accepted wisdom and offers hope for new treatments for heart failure. Babies and children may be able to increase heart muscle cell proliferation and regenerate damaged parts of their heart muscle. In addition, the study points to new research directions by suggesting that abnormal cardiomyocyte proliferation may be involved in diseases of the heart muscle (cardiomyopathy) that affect young humans, and that cardiomyocyte proliferation could be stimulated in young humans for the treatment of heart failure.

The findings, according to Kuhn, help to create a "cellular blueprint for how the human heart grows after birth." Using this blueprint, treatment strategies could be developed to treat heart failure in children

The study received institutional funding from the Department of Cardiology and the Translational Investigator Program (Boston Children's Hospital) and outside funding from the Children's Cardiomyopathy and Geneen Foundations, the Biomedical Research Exchange Program and the Helmut-Drexler Foundation and the American Heart Association.

Mariya Mollova, MD, and Kevin Bersell were first co-authors on the paper.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Boston Children's Hospital.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. M. Mollova, K. Bersell, S. Walsh, J. Savla, L. T. Das, S.-Y. Park, L. E. Silberstein, C. G. dos Remedios, D. Graham, S. Colan, B. Kuhn. Cardiomyocyte proliferation contributes to heart growth in young humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1214608110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/heart_disease/~3/fwrlg7ZAOqw/130110094800.htm

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