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Updated Sat, February 4, 2012.
301.www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk37300
302.www.btplc.com37100
303.www.opodo.co.uk36300
304.www.britishembassy.gov.uk36300
305.www.plus.net35900
306.www.plumbworld.co.uk35900
307.www.tda.gov.uk35500
308.www.parliament.uk34900
309.www.cartridgesave.co.uk34900
310.www.vegsoc.org34100
311.www.itv-f1.com34000
312.www.sportengland.org33600
313.www.iee.org33400
314.www.simplyscuba.com33200
315.www.appliedlanguage.com32700
316.www.fasthosts.co.uk32600
317.www.flybmi.com32400
318.www.saga.co.uk32300
319.www.odeon.co.uk31300
320.www.wimbledon.org31300
321.www.uwe.ac.uk31200
322.www.digital-cameras.com30600
323.www.cambridgeincolour.com30400
324.www.premierleague.com30200
325.www.patent.gov.uk29800
326.www.rhul.ac.uk29800
327.www.northumberland.gov.uk29600
328.www.plymouth.ac.uk29600
329.www.mailonsunday.co.uk29600
330.www.five.tv28400
331.www.devon.gov.uk28300
332.www.foxtons.co.uk28200
333.adactio.com27500
334.shop.o2.co.uk27400
335.www.londonpass.com26100
336.www.webcredible.co.uk26000
337.icnewcastle.icnetwork.co.uk25800
338.www.adslguide.org.uk25700
339.www.watches.co.uk25500
340.www.kiddicare.com25100
341.www.urbanpath.com24600
342.www.pilkington.com24400
343.www.abbey.com23900
344.www.iwm.org.uk23300
345.www.designmuseum.org22800
346.www.ecmwf.int22800
347.www.mirc.co.uk22700
348.www.radiosargam.com22200
349.www.thisisthenortheast.co.uk21900
350.www.cadburyschweppes.com21900
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317. www.flybmi.com

Rating: 32400 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.flybmi.com' on the other websites

www.flybmi.com

bmi . flights from the US to the UK & throughout Europe

Description: Major UK scheduled carrier. Details of its UK flights and services to Europe and the USA. Destination information, ticketing details, frequent flyer

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Scientists find cause of pre-eclampsia
Discovery could lead to treatment for life-threatening condition that can kill pregnant women and their babiesThe root cause of a medical problem that endangers the lives of thousands of pregnant women and their babies in Britain each year has been discovered.Researchers at Cambridge University have worked out what leads to pre-eclampsia, a condition that causes dangerously high blood pressure in women, often in the later stages of pregnancy.The findings raise hope for treatments that can prevent the complication found in 2-7% of all pregnancies, which typically kills several hundred babies and six women in the UK each year. Milder forms of pre-eclampsia affect about one in 10 first-time pregnancies.A team led by Aiwu Zhou at the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research used intense x-ray beams at the Diamond Light Source facility in Oxfordshire to study the structure of angiotensinogen, a protein linked to high blood pressure.Scientists knew the protein triggered the release of hormones called angiotensins that cause blood vessels to constrict, but how this happened was not clear. When veins and arteries constrict, blood pressure rises in the same way that squeezing a garden hose increases the pressure of water running through it.Zhou's team found that angiotensinogen changes shape when it is oxidised by reactive molecules in the blood. The oxidised protein bends in such a way that a common enzyme can cut it in two, releasing angiotensin. The study appears in the journal, Nature. In a follow up experiment, the researchers analysed blood samples taken from volunteers. They showed that in healthy people, a steady 60% of angiotensinogen was oxidised, but in women with pre-eclampsia the level was much higher. "When we looked at the blood samples, we were immediately able to identify eight of 12 women with pre-eclampsia," said Robin Carrell, a co-author of the study.Professor Carrell said changes in the placenta during pregnancy alter how much oxygen the growing baby receives, but this can trigger the release of free radicals that oxidise angiotensinogen and cause blood pressure to rise.Drugs used to treat high blood pressure, including a family of medicines called ACE inhibitors, block the later stages of the biological pathway that leads to high blood pressure. The discovery gives doctors a fresh way to target the condition. Peter Weissberg, medical director of the British Heart Foundation, which co-funded the study, said the work "offers real hope for developing strategies to prevent or treat this dangerous condition"."Although the researchers only looked at pre-eclampsia in this study, similar strategies may be useful for those people with high blood pressure that is not effectively controlled by current medicines," Weissberg added.Previous studies in animals support the suspicion that oxidation plays a role in pre-eclampsia. In 2006, a team led by Robin Davisson at Iowa University gave an antioxidant called tempol to pregnant mice. The drug appeared to prevent high blood pressure and halved the number of mouse pups that died before being born.Medical researchReproductionBiologyPregnancyParents and parentingHealth & wellbeingFamilyIan Sampleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Cable unveils Mail privatisation
Business Secretary Vince Cable says private buyers can own up to 90% of Royal Mail, while the Post Office may be mutualised.
bbc.co.uk
Coalition to scrap specialist schools funding
Labour's specialist schools programme is effectively being axed as part of sweeping public sector cuts.
telegraph.co.uk
R.I.P. Walkman
Farewell, hissing, clunking, un-spooling friend.
bbc.co.uk
Q Awards: reunited Take That make first public appearance since Robbie Williams rejoined the group
A reunited Take That have made their first public appearance since Robbie Williams rejoined as the group collected a prize for their years of success at the Q Awards.
telegraph.co.uk