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Whether she was seeking love or vengeance, or just an escape from her dreary, small-town existence, Colleen LaRose searched the Internet and found Muslim extremists eager to engage the unhappy American.LaRose, 46, spent long days chained to her Pennsburg, Pa., apartment caring for an elderly parent. Now, Jihad Jane may now spend her life in prison - unless she persuades a U.S. judge she is not a security threat.On Thursday, LaRose makes her first court appearance since a stunning indictment last week that charged that she plotted with terror suspects abroad to kill a Swedish artist who had offended Muslims.LaRose s appearance may offer clues to her mental state after six months in a Philadelphia prison.The Council on American-Islamic Relations has questioned the religious devotion of alleged converts like LaRose, given her live-in boyfriend and apparent failure to ever pledge her faith at a mosque. Maybe it s not the Islamic faith that is making them do this; maybe it s just their personal demons, said Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director for CAIR.LaRose spent most of her life in Texas, where she dropped out of high school, married at 16 and again at 24, and racked up a few minor arrests. After a second divorce, she followed a boyfriend to Pennsylvania in about 2004 and began caring for his father while he worked long hours, sometimes on the road. In 2005, she swallowed a handful of pills in a failed
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Scientists have developed a new blood test that can predict who will develop Alzheimer disease a year after havi
stanley taza ng mild memory problems鈥攁nd it could be in clinical use within two years. Researchers from King College London have developed a test which identifies 10 proteins in blood that can predict who will develop Alzheimer . It around 90 percent accurate, and is set to enter large-scale clinical trials soon. The research is published in Alzheimer 038; Dementia. Th
stanley cup ere have been other blood tests for Alzheimer in the past, but despite their promise, they were difficult to translate into medical practice because they identified lipids. This new test, however, relies on the presence of proteins in the blood鈥攎aking for much easier, lower cost testing. New Blood Test Could Definitively Diagnose Alzheimer Disease The team of scientists analyzed 26 proteins known to be associated with cognitive decline in blood from 1,148 people, including 476 people with Alzhei
stanley shop mer . They found that 10 of these proteins could predict if individuals with mild cognitive impairment would go on to develop Alzheimer within a year with an accuracy of 90 percent. While there currently no cure for Alzheimer , early diagnosis could enable patients to take drugs which can slow the progression of the disease; late diagnosis reduces the effectiveness of such drugs. The next step for the research is a larg