Thursday, March 5, 2009

Russian Teens Porn Videos

Ordinary porn without the slightest hint of high art. Young girls, pretty nice for the most part. They pose, masturbate, make lesbiyan love and are being fucked in every hole. But do not get wrong: all quite nice. In short, I liked it. Original videos are too big (400 - 1000 Mbytes), so I compressed files. Quality became worse a little.

Full link list you can download here (click on the red link).

Individual videos are below:

Tarika.avi 56.78 MB

Susanna, Mike.avi 56.39 MB

Nastya, Sasha.avi 94.25 MB

Naomy, Penelopa 02.avi 59.48 MB

Naomy, Penelopa 01.avi 60.19 MB

Lera.avi 61.46 MB

Lavinia.avi 61.60 MB

Kirill, Ulya.avi 65.92 MB

Kirill, Nancy.avi 70.66 MB

Kirill, Ksusha.avi 66.27 MB

Kirill, Gera.avi 132.17 MB

Irina, Saria.avi 66.24 MB

Gessy.avi 66.30 MB

Helga.avi 66.37 MB

Felicita.avi 66.10 MB

Evgrafia.avi 66.34 MB

Eric, Zarina.avi 114.80 MB

Eric, Rosmary.avi 89.41 MB

Eric, Fyokla.avi 94.67 MB

Eric, Aziza.avi 94.21 MB

Dashenka.avi 65.68 MB

Dara.avi 65.64 MB

Aron, Yanka.avi 94.78 MB

Andrey, Varvara.avi 47.17 MB

Mirror for all files

Celiac Disease Versus Gluten Sensitivity: New Role for Genetic Testing and Fecal Antibody Testing?

 


<p>Celiac disease (CD) has a prevalence of 1/100. Between 90-99% of Celiacs are HLA  DQ2 and/or DQ8 positive. Every individual has two DQ serotypes. Because the  molecular HLA nomenclature can be confusing DQ serotyping is a method for  simplifying the results. There are four major types and 5 subtypes: HLA DQ1, DQ2,  DQ3 and DQ4; DQ1 has two subtypes; DQ5 and DQ6 whereas DQ3 has three  subtypes; DQ7, DQ8 and DQ9. Each individual has two copies of HLA DQ. One DQ  type is inherited from each parent.</p><p>Though 35-45% of individuals of Northern European ancestry are DQ2 &/or DQ8  positive only 1% have classic CD as defined by abnormal blood tests and small  intestine biopsies. Several autoimmune conditions also occur more frequently in  DQ2 and DQ8 positive individuals.</p><p>There is accumulating scientific evidence that many individuals are gluten sensitive  and respond to a gluten free diet though they have normal blood tests and/or  normal intestinal biopsies (fail to meet strict criteria for CD). This is more commonly  being referred to as non-Celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS).  Many individuals who  have NCGS are relatives of confirmed Celiacs and were previously referred to as  latent Celiacs.  Electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry studies of  individuals with normal biopsies but suspected of or at risk (1st degree relatives of  Celiacs) have revealed ultrastructural abnormalities of the intestine and those who  chose a gluten free diet usually responded and many who did not ultimately  developed abnormal biopsies on long term follow-up.  Seronegative Celiac has also  been recognized, that is blood tests are negative, but the biopsy reveals classic  abnormalities of Celiac and the individual responds to gluten free diet.</p><p>Fecal antibody testing for gliadin (AG) and tissue transglutaminase (tTG) by  Enterolab in Dallas has revealed elevations in 100% of Celiacs tested and up to 60%  of symptomatic individuals without Celiac disease (NCGS) even if not DQ2 or DQ8  positive.The only DQ pattern he  found not associated with gluten sensitivity is DQ4/DQ4, a pattern typically found in  non-Caucasians who are known to have a low prevalence of Celiac disease.</p><p>Testing for DQ2/DQ8 has been suggested as a way to exclude CD. That is, if you are  negative for DQ2 and DQ8, then you are very unlikely to have CD.  However, well  documented cases of CD and Dermatitis Herpetiformis (DH) have been confirmed in  DQ2 and DQ8 negative individuals. Moreover, we now have the clinical experience  that other DQ patterns predispose a person to gluten sensitivity because these individuals  frequently have elevated fecal antibodies to AG or tTG and respond to a gluten free  diet.</p><p>Why some people develop Celiac Disease or become gluten sensitive is not well  understood.  Risk factors include onset of puberty, pregnancy, stress, trauma or  injury, surgery, viral or bacterial infections including those of the gut, medication  induced gut injury or toxicity (e.g. NSAIDs), immune suppression or autoimmune  diseases, and antibiotic use resulting in altered gut flora (dysbiosis).  The severity of  the sensitivity is related to the DQ type, pre-existing intestinal injury, degree of  exposure to gluten (how frequent and large a gluten load an individual is exposed  to), and immune status.  Once initiated, gluten sensitivity tends to be lifelong.  True CD  requires lifelong complete gluten avoidance to prevent serious complications,  cancers, and early death.</p><p>Serotypes can be determined from blood or buccal mucosal cells (obtained by oral  swab) from several commercial labs including Prometheus, Labcorp, Quest, The  Laboratories at Bonfils, and Enterolabs. Fecal IgA anti-gliadin and IgA tissue  transglutaminase antibody testing is only available in the U.S. commercially through  Enterolabs. The fecal AG and tTG testing may be helpful in those with normal blood  tests for Celiac and/or a normal small bowel biopsy but suspected of being gluten  sensitive. Though the fecal antibody results are not widely accepted by many "Celiac  experts" numerous testimonials of individuals testing positive only on fecal tests  who have responded to gluten free diet can be found in support groups, web  postings, personal communication from Dr. Fine and this physician's clinical  experience.</p><p>Bibliography</p><p>Abrams et.al. Seronegative celiac disease:increased prevalence with lesser degrees  of villous atrophy. Dig Dis Sci 2004;49:546-550.</p><p>Alaedini A. and Green P.H.R. Narrative Review: Celiac Disease: Understanding a  Complex Autoimmune Disorder. Ann Intern Med. 2005;142:289-298.</p><p>Arranz et. al. Jejunal fluid antibodies and mucosal gamma/delta IEL in latent and  potential coeliac disease. Adv Exp Med Biol. 1995; 371B:1345-1348.</p><p>Dewar D. and Ciclitira P. Clinical Features and Diagnosis of Celiac Disease.  Gastroenterology 2005;128:S19</p><p>Kappler et.al. Detection of secretory IgA antibodies against gliadin and human  tissue transglutaminase in stool to screen for coeliac disease in children:validation  study. BMJ 2006; 332:213-214</p><p>Kaukinen et.al. HLA-DQ Typing in the Diagnosis of Celiac Disease. Am J  Gastroenterol. 2002;97(3):695-699.</p><p>Fine KD and Rostami K. Don’t throw the baby out with the bath water. BMJ February  13, 2006 rapid response editorial</p><

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Pornomation

Video: XVID 512x384 29.97fps 1088Kbps [Video 0]
Audio: MPEG Audio Layer 3 48000Hz stereo 117Kbps [Audio 1]

Language: English

Victorious in one sexual competition after another, Zuma proves to be a sexual champion – until she has to compete against an Earth man! This high-tech animated sci-fi sexual adventure chronicles Earth girl Zuma –– taken to a planet where she competes as a sexual gladiator! You’ll be dazzled and turned on by gorgeous, lush imagery and intriguing sex between humans, robots and aliens. A must-see! 126 minutes.


Total size 749 Mbyte, splitted in 10 archive parts


Mirrors


Total size 749 Mbyte, splitted in 10 archive parts

Pornomation2.part10.rar

Pornomation2.part09.rar

Pornomation2.part08.rar

Pornomation2.part07.rar

Pornomation2.part06.rar

Pornomation2.part05.rar

Pornomation2.part04.rar

Pornomation2.part03.rar

Pornomation2.part02.rar

Pornomation2.part01.rar


Mirror for all parts

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Windows XP Multilingual User Interface Pack CD 4 and 5

Win XP MUI Pack, CD 4 from the set of 5 CDs

On the 4th CD there are following languages: Polish, Hungarian, Portuguese, Turkish and Greek.

Total size of the disk is 348 Mbyte

Windows MUI CD 4


Win XP MUI Pack, CD 5 from the set of 5 CDs

On the 5th CD there are following languages: Bulgarian, Estonian, Croatian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Romanian, Slovak, Slovenian and Thai

Total size of the disk is 157 Mbyte

Windows MUI CD 5

Other CDs

Win XP MUI Pack CD 1-3