Internal Bra
It may not sound kosher but Israeli researchers are using pigs to test an innovative technology they say will replace cosmetic breast surgery. But we’ll get back to that later.
The MIM technique (Minimally Invasive Mastopexy), developed by the startup of the same name, promises to reshape, support and lift breast soft tissue in a much more minimally invasive manner than today’s cosmetic breast surgery. They’re calling their breast support kit the ‘Cup&Up’.
“What we’ve done is build a silicon bra, insert it into the body and attach it to the ribs and to the fascia. It’s like a normal external bra,” he continues, “where a strip lies on the shoulder and attaches around the body. We attach it to the ribs instead of to the shoulder, and to the fascia in the lower part of the body.”
Poor Kid
A 11-year-old boy has hair growing all over his face and body, a rare medical anomaly. And doctors say that laser treatment or plastic surgery is the only way out.
Prithviraj Patil, son of a well-to-do farmer in Sangalwadi near Sangli, suffers from a rare medical anomaly though he is otherwise like any normal child.
Prithiviraj has no problem with his hair that is up to three-inches long except that it looks awful – there is no itch or rash on the skin or any bad odour accompanying the dermatological problem.

Dying trend: Burials are out, so cemetery hopes it can cash in
Consumers are choosing cremation over burial. That slow, steady change in the market — in the works for several decades — has cemeteries scrambling for new ways to turn a profit or ensure they can pay for future maintenance.
In River View’s case, the cemetery’s board of trustees wants to turn 120 acres of vacant graveyard land into houses, apartments or perhaps an annex to Lewis & Clark College. They’ve filed a Measure 37 claim with the city to do it and, in the documents, state the case plainly: At the current rate, it would take 400 years to use up all the potential grave sites at one of the city’s premier historic burial grounds.
“This is a very traditional business,” says David Noble, the Southwest Portland cemetery’s executive director. “But it’s like anything else: Markets change and you adjust.”
Forty years ago, fewer than 5 percent of Americans who died opted for cremation. In 1987, it was 15 percent. This year, more than 32 percent of U.S. deaths will end in cremation, and the experts at the Cremation Association of North America expect the national total to pass 50 percent within 25 years.
Cremations are generally cheaper, starting at about $1,500 compared with the $6,000 or so you’ll shell out for a basic burial. Many people also consider them more environmentally friendly. And they provide a dead person’s loved ones more flexibility about how and when to memorialize.
The procedure — which can be boiled down to this stark reality: four hours at 1,600 degrees — is even more popular in Oregon than it is nationwide. Sixty-five percent of Oregonians who die will choose cremation this year.