This Blog Is Powered By Life Technology™. Visit Life Technology™ At www.lifetechnology.com Subscribe To This Blog Via Feedburner / Atom 1.0 / RSS 2.0.
News
Life Technology™ Medical News
Researchers Unveil Insights Into Learning Speed Phenomenon
Researchers at UCL and UCLH Uncover Brain Regions for Logical Thinking
Brisk Walking Reduces Heart Rhythm Risks
Mid-Afternoon Dose of Beclomethasone for Asthma Control
Genetic Changes Impacting Epilepsy Medication Response
Study Reveals DNA Monitoring Predicts Skin Cancer Recurrence
Medicaid Expansion Boosts Access to Lung Cancer Care
Researchers Develop Highly Effective Antibothropic Serum
Research at Faculty of Education and Sport–Álava Enhances Goalkeeper Training
Human Brain Learns to Filter Distractions: EEG Study
Study Reveals Muscle Proteins' Role in Memory
New Strategy to Boost Multiple Myeloma Treatment Efficiency
Artificial Intelligence Revolutionizing Cancer Treatment
Key Vaccine Advisory Committee Convenes Under Health Secretary Kennedy
Hybrid Music Therapy Benefits Heart Failure and COPD
Gut Bacteria Boost Anti-Cancer Immunity
Wild Animals' Reproductive Adaptations: Insights for Human Health
Study Links Mental Disorders to Lower Parenthood Odds
AI Tool Reveals Disease Proteins Misfolding
Novel Compound ML233 Inhibits Melanin Production
Autism Rate Among U.S. Children Rises
New Immunotherapy Strategy Reduces Cancer Recurrence
Measles Outbreak Spreads: Texas, New Mexico, Ohio Cases
Porcupine Inhibition: Promising Treatment for Sclerosteosis
Smartphones Revolutionize Health Management in India
Bra Fitting and Body Armor Testing: Andrea Porter's Unique Journey
Study Reveals Impact of Female Genital Mutilation on Women's Health
Researchers Uncover Natural Heart Protection Mechanism
Challenges of Harm Reduction in Rural America
Supreme Court Upholds Affordable Care Act Benefits
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Evolutionary History of Crocodilians Unveiled
Endangered Species Act: 50 Years of Bipartisan Unity
Researchers at University of Oxford Uncover Origin of Earth's Water
New Food Source Sustains Honey Bee Colonies Without Pollen
Bird Feeder Dispute Reveals Resource Competition Among Species
International Study Enhances Earthquake Rupture Predictions
Potato Growers Battle Aerial Stem Rot Challenge
Chinese Community Translates Hispanic Songs on NECM
University of Barcelona Study Challenges Traditional Work Foundations
Tropical Seagrass Resilience Amid Climate Threats
Machine-Learning Workflow Boosts Organic Crystal Output
"Titan: Saturn's Largest Moon with Unique Atmosphere"
Rise in Heat Wave Exposure Across Central Asia's Croplands
Research Team Makes Breakthrough in Satellite-Based Air Quality Monitoring
"Exploring Peatlands: UC Santa Cruz Professor Studies Tropical Wetlands"
Inactive Ingredients in Agricultural and Pharmaceutical Products: Potential Water Contaminants
Resilient Entrepreneurs Navigate Emotional Rollercoaster
Solar Storm Expected to Create Stunning Aurora Across More US States
Global Warming Triples Ocean Heat Waves
Global Health Threat: Urgent Need for Novel Antibiotic Drugs
Bumble Bee Study Reveals Impact of Air Pollution on Gut Microbes
How Prescribed Burns Combat Wildfires
New Handheld Radiation Detector Developed in Finland
Research Reveals Circadian Clock's Noise-Filtering Power
Cornell Study: Smell Influences Friendship Potential
Bizarre Weather Phenomenon: Ammonia-Water "Mushballs" Storm
Efficient Water Splitting for Clean Hydrogen
Study Reveals How Age and Brain Shape Impact Dogs' Olfactory Connectivity
Devastating 7.7 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Myanmar
Quebec Researchers Target Cancer-Causing Protein
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Drone Outperforms Pilots in International Racing Event
Penn Engineers Develop First Light-Powered Neural Network Chip
Mark Zuckerberg Defends Meta in Antitrust Trial
Lithium Salt Unveils Potential for Affordable Battery Innovation
Virtual Worlds in Video Games: Architectural Environments Influence Gameplay
Innovative Desalination Tech Cuts Waste
Online Opinions Split: A Divided Conversation
The Power and Perils of AI Models
"Stretchable Self-Healing Lithium Battery Innovation"
Chinese Scientists Develop iDust Tool for Improved Dust Storm Predictions
Texas Engineers Uncover Breakthrough in Battery Technology
Scientists Uncover Peculiar Term: Vegetative Electron Microscopy
Ukraine War Impact: Geothermal Solution for UK Energy Crisis
Revolutionizing Audio: 3D Surround Sound Speaker
Study Reveals 10% of Websites Breach Ad Standards
Mark Zuckerberg Testifies in US Antitrust Trial
Biofilm Breakdown: Seawater Threatens Tunnel Concrete
Rising Technology-Driven Fraud: US Losses Exceed $10B
Corn Protein Enhances Lithium-Sulfur Battery Performance
Evolution of Vocabulary: Impact on Values and Interactions
Titanic Sinking: AI Systems Preventing Ship Disasters
Chinese Firm Catl Reports 32.9% Profit Surge
Canada's Election: Social Media Filters Campaign News
Japanese Authorities Issue Cease-and-Desist to Google
Virtual New Colleagues at Denmark's Royal Unibrew
Eco-Friendly Method Boosts Perovskite Solar Cell Efficiency
High-Stakes NFL Draft Negotiations: Competitive Advantage and Cooperation
Meta Chief Mark Zuckerberg Testifies in US Antitrust Trial
New AI Model Generates High-Quality Images Safely
Understanding Neural Networks: Key Ingredients for AI
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSFriday, 4 October 2019
New evolution-busting drug overcomes resistance in aggressive breast cancers
A new type of drug that blocks one of cancer's key evolutionary escape routes from chemotherapy could be used to treat aggressive breast cancers, a new study has shown.
Study pinpoints Alzheimer's plaque emergence early and deep in the brain
Long before symptoms like memory loss even emerge, the underlying pathology of Alzheimer's disease, such as an accumulation of amyloid protein plaques, is well underway in the brain. A longtime goal of the field has been to understand where it starts so that future interventions could begin there. A new study by MIT neuroscientists at The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory could help those efforts by pinpointing the regions with the earliest emergence of amyloid in the brain of a prominent mouse model of the disease. Notably, the study also shows that the degree of amyloid accumulation in one of those same regions of the human brain correlates strongly with the progression of the disease.
Scientists ID new targets to treat fibrosis—a feature of many chronic diseases
When it comes to repairing injured tissue, specialized cells in the body known as fibroblasts are called into action. Fibroblasts give rise to healing cells called myofibroblasts, which generally is good in the short term—but bad when myofibroblast activation gets out of hand. In new work, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University (LKSOM) researchers show how fibroblast activation and myofibroblast formation occurs, providing clues as to how to target fibrosis—which impacts several chronic diseases. Kickstarting the process are stress-induced changes in mitochondrial calcium uptake.
Scientists create brain-mimicking environment to grow 3-D tissue models of brain tumors
A team of Tufts University-led researchers has developed three-dimensional (3-D) human tissue culture models of pediatric and adult brain cancers in a brain-mimicking microenvironment, a significant advancement for the study of brain tumor biology and pharmacological response. The study was published today in Nature Communications.
Were hot, humid summers the key to life's origins?
Uncovering how the first biological molecules (like proteins and DNA) arose is a major goal for researchers attempting to solve the origin of life. Today, chemists at Saint Louis University, in collaboration with scientists at the College of Charleston and the NSF/NASA Center for Chemical Evolution, published a study in the journal Nature Communications that suggests deliquescent minerals—which dissolve in water they absorb from humid air—can assist the construction of proteins from simpler building blocks during cycles timed to mimic day and night on the early Earth.
Extinction Rebellion plans fortnight of worldwide climate action
Extinction Rebellion climate protesters are planning to bring disruption to 60 cities around the world from Monday in a fortnight of civil disobedience, warning of an environmental "apocalypse".
In northwest Spain, conservation efforts pay off as bears thrive
Daylight is only just breaking over Spain's Cantabrian Mountains and already a dozen enthusiasts are up and about in the hope of spotting a brown bear.
Scientists fight to save unique Guiana coral reef
Off the coast of Guiana, a French overseas department perched on the north coast of South America, scientists scour the choppy waters for signs of life.
Vietnamese roll out Transformers-inspired robot with green message
There is more than meets the eye to the towering robot resembling a character from the "Transformers" movie franchise—it speaks Vietnamese and is made from spare motorbike parts.
Netflix cooperating with Italy tax evasion probe
Netflix on Thursday said it was cooperating with a probe into whether it evaded taxes in Italy, even though it has no office or employees in that country.
'Incredibly rare' monkey born at Australian zoo
One of the world's rarest monkeys has been born at an Australian zoo.
Black year for European beekeepers
This year has been a black one for many European beekeepers, particularly in France and Italy, where unpredictable weather has produced what are being termed the worst honey harvests ever.
Officials push Facebook for way to peek at encrypted messages
Officials are calling on Facebook not to use encryption in its messaging services that does not provide authorities a way to see what is being sent.
Climate change pushes Italy beekeepers to the brink
Unusual weather driven by climate change is wreaking havoc on bee populations, including in northern Italy where the pollinating insects crucial to food production are struggling to survive.
How much are you polluting your office air just by existing?
Just by breathing or wearing deodorant, you have more influence over your office space than you might think, a growing body of evidence shows. But could these basic acts of existence also be polluting the air in the office room where you work?
Paralysed man walks again with brain-controlled exoskeleton
A French man paralysed in a night club accident can walk again thanks to a brain-controlled exoskeleton in what scientists said Wednesday was a breakthrough providing hope to tetraplegics seeking to regain movement.
Vaping-linked lung injury kills 18, sickens 1,080 in US outbreak
Eighteen people have died from illnesses associated with e-cigarette use since March, US health authorities said Thursday, while more than a thousand others have suffered probable lung injuries linked to vaping.
Identifying a gene for canine night blindness
Creating an effective gene therapy for inherited diseases requires three key steps. First, scientists must identify and characterize the disease. Second, they must find the gene responsible. And finally, they must find a way to correct the impairment.
Dealing a therapeutic counterblow to traumatic brain injury
A blow to the head or powerful shock wave on the battlefield can cause immediate, significant damage to a person's skull and the tissue beneath it. But the trauma does not stop there. The impact sets off a chemical reaction in the brain that ravages neurons and the networks that supply them with nutrients and oxygen.
How effective is body cooling in patients that experience cardiac arrest?
While body temperature cooling is not a new treatment tactic for patients who experience cardiac arrest, a new clinical trial hopes to better understand the optimal amount of time for targeted temperature management.
Pioneering study suggests that an exoskeleton for tetraplegia could be feasible
A four-limb robotic system controlled by brain signals helped a tetraplegic man to move his arms and walk using a ceiling-mounted harness for balance. While the early results are promising, the authors note that the system is a long way from clinical application and will require improvements before it becomes widely available.
Placenta pathology may clarify racial disparities in preemie health outcomes
African-American infants are twice as likely to die in the first year of life than white infants, for reasons that are complex and not well understood. Results from a recent study suggest that specific abnormalities in the placenta from African-American preterm births may hold clues to the physical mechanisms behind racial disparities in preemie health outcomes.
Some ICU admissions may be preventable, saving money and improving care
Many admissions to the intensive care unit may be preventable, potentially decreasing health care costs and improving care, according to new research published online in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society.
Long-term mental health benefits of gender-affirming surgery for transgender individuals
For transgender individuals, gender-affirming surgery can lead to long-term mental health benefits, according to new research published online today in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The study found that among transgender individuals with gender incongruence, undergoing gender-affirming surgery was significantly associated with a decrease in mental health treatment over time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)