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Life Technology™ Medical News
Bausch + Lomb Recalls Intraocular Lenses: Inflammatory Risk
New Study: Percutaneous Hepatic Perfusion for Uveal Melanoma
Impact of Snacks on Blood Sugar: Personalized Nutritional Challenges
The Marvel of Shoulder Anatomy: Versatile Joints
US Authorities Conducting Study on Autism Epidemic
Study Links Vivid Imagery to PTSD Risk
Measles Outbreak in Knox County, Ohio: Cases Reach 14
Measuring Quality in Healthcare: Key Factors Examined
CDC Official Urges Staff to Plan for Agency's Splintering
Probiotics Reduce Negative Feelings: New Research Findings
Covid-19 Impact on Hearing Impairments: University Study Findings
Holy Water Consumption Linked to Cholera Outbreaks
Michigan Research Team Utilizes AI for Autism Exercise Snacks
Scientists Plan Strategies to Prevent Future Viral Outbreaks
New Phase of Immune Response Discovered: Implications for Vaccines
Monitoring Bio-Signals with Wearable Devices: Key Health Insights
Key Discovery: Protein Modification in MDA5 Enhances Virus Detection
1 in 10 U.S. Adults with Substance Use Disorder Hospitalized
American Society of Clinical Oncology Updates Fertility Preservation Recommendations
Cancer Patients' End-of-Life Fatigue Linked to Brain Neurons
Study Reveals How Brain Cells Control Tongue Movements
Study Links Poor Hearing to Higher Heart Failure Risk
WHO Urges Action Against Measles Outbreak
Shared Risk Factors for Stroke, Dementia, and Depression
Eye-Tracking Study: Boosting Social Skills in Disabled Individuals
Oklahoma City Bombing Survivors Show Trauma Traces
Biological Basis of Addiction: HDAC5 Limits Scn4b Gene
Study: Young Adults Using Alcohol and Cannabis Together for Stress Relief
AI Predicts Patients Needing Immediate Care
Tuberculosis Mortality Surges Amid COVID-19 Lockdowns
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"440 National Parks and 7,400 Urban Parks Across the US"
Importance of Scientific Ocean Monitoring for Understanding Global Systems
Academic Performance: Lecture Attendance vs. Streaming Choice
Humans' Bipedalism Linked to Musical and Linguistic Skills
Scientists Unveil New Limit on Neutrino Mass
Successful Transplantation of Posidonia Oceanica Seagrass in Monaco
Preventing Cytochrome P450 from Reducing Drug Effectiveness
Study Reveals Genes in Bacterial Genomes Organized by Function
Exploring Dissolved Organic Matter in Deep Sea
The Role of Proteins in Life: Functions and Diversity
Gas Boilers Identified as Primary Source of NOx Pollution in Central London
Japanese Researchers Develop Clear Biodegradable Material
Oldest Hominin Fossil Found in Taiwan's Penghu Channel
Role of Cysteinyl Leukotrienes in Inflammatory Diseases
Global Fisheries Deplete 560 Million Tons of Marine Nutrients
Explosive Combustion: Ensuring U.S. Stockpile Safety
Study Reveals Resource Use Efficiency Gap in Native vs. Non-Native Species
Life Beyond Earth: Complex Realities of Alien Existence
Study: Lengthy Prison Sentences Effective in Deterring Homicides
Rock Outcrops Influence Soil Function in Mountain Ecosystems
Trump Warns Against Distorted Race Narrative
Finnish Farmers Embrace Intuition for Better Decisions
Exploring Martian Cornucopia: Perseverance Rover Studies Rocky Outcrops
Max Planck Institute Unveils MetaFlowTrain for Microbial Study
Library Indexing Challenges: Uncovering Mislabeling & Authorship Issues
Hantavirus: Betsy Arakawa's Death Linked to Rodents
AI Accelerates Discovery of Quantum Phases: Study
Brown Bears Census Using DNA Reveals 13,000 in Romania
Pharmaceutical Pollution Impacts Atlantic Salmon Migration
Breakthrough Discovery: Mechanism of Citrus Resistance Unveiled
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Role of Solar and Wind Power in 24/7 Electricity Storage
Google Accused of Tracking Students for Profit
Data Breach at Morocco's Social Security Agency
Research Shows Slow Progress in Holding Tech Companies Accountable
Challenges of Connecting Sea Structures to Power Grid
Digital Twins in Healthcare: Risks of Adversarial Attacks
Institute of Visual Computing Removes Objects in Live 3D Recordings
Balancing Data Privacy and Model Accuracy
TikTok's International Revenue Surges Amid US Ban Deadline
Openai Counters Elon Musk: AI Giant's Legal Action
Trump Administration Expects Apple to Make iPhones in US
Chinese Researchers Unveil Deep-Sea Tool for Cutting Cables
AI Revolution: From ChatGPT to Medical Diagnosis
World's First Tech Prevents Temperature Rise in Hydrogen Charging
Advancing AI Development with Efficient Infrastructure
Fastest Wireless Data Transmission: TU/e Achieves 5.7 Terabits/sec
Alpine Craft Inspires Innovative Wood-Based Materials
Evolution of Personal Computing: From Programming to Accessibility
Apple Introduces New Clean Up Feature for Photo Editing
New Method for Predicting Lost Wilderness Individuals' Locations
Exploring Ocean Depths: Virtual Trip Inspires Ecosystem Connection
Rmit University Tech Boosts Sustainable Bio-Oil Production
Mother Turns Tragedy into Advocacy Against AI Chatbots
Texas Power Grid Operator Expects Surge in Energy Demand
California Nonprofits, Foundations, Labor Groups Raise Concerns Over OpenAI's Restructuring
Google Lifts Gag Order in Anti-Monopoly Case
Semiconductor Chip Demand Fuels Electricity Surge
Samsung Factory Worker in Vietnam Unfazed by Trump's Tariffs
Data Centers' Electricity Consumption to Double by 2030
Tsmc Reports Strong Q1 Revenue Amid Global Uncertainty
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSThursday, 19 September 2019
Staying at elementary school for longer associated with higher student attainment
A new study has discovered that U.S. students achieve better results in reading and mathematics tests when they stay in elementary school for grades six (age 11–12) and seven (age 12–13), rather than transfer to middle school. In contrast, students in grade eight (age 13–14) achieve better results in middle school than high school.
Tumor resistance is promoted by anti-cancer protein
Lack of oxygen, or hypoxia, is a biological stressor that occurs under various conditions such as wound healing and stroke. To rescue the tissue, the body has innate mechanisms that "kick in" to make the cells of the hypoxic tissue more resistant and assist in tissue repair. One such mechanism is the expression of a protein called Hypoxia Induction Factor (HIF), which controls several processes such as glucose uptake, growth of blood vessels and cell proliferation. Despite its beneficial role in some diseases, HIF has also been found to be an important contributor towards cancer progression.
For the first time walking patterns identify specific types of dementia
Walking may be a key clinical tool in helping medics accurately identify the specific type of dementia a patient has, pioneering research has revealed.
Antidepressants may reduce anxiety more than depressive symptoms
One of the most common antidepressants, sertraline, leads to an early reduction in anxiety symptoms, commonly found in depression, several weeks before any improvement in depressive symptoms, a UCL-led clinical trial has found.
Discovery of tanycytic TSPO inhibition as a potential therapeutic target for obesity treatment
Professor Eun-Kyoung Kim (director of Neurometabolomic Research Center) has discovered new targets to prevent and treat high-fat diet-induced obesity. This research achievement is expected to propose a new direction for developing obesity treatment.
Youth climate movement puts ethics at the center of the global debate
Even if you've never heard of Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old Swedish environmentalist who crossed the Atlantic on a sailboat to attend a Sept. 23 United Nations summit on the climate, you may have heard about the student-led Global Climate Strike she helped inspire, planned for Friday, Sept. 20.
Researchers identify new target regulating mitochondria during stress
Like an emergency response team that is called into action to save lives, stress response proteins in the heart are activated during a heart attack to help prevent cell death. As part of this process, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University researchers show for the first time that one of these specialized emergency responder proteins, known as MCUB, temporarily decreases harmful levels of calcium transport into mitochondria, the energy-generating batteries of cells.
Protective effect of breastfeeding on childhood obesity risk linked to leptin gene modification
Breastfed children have a lower risk of obesity, which may be linked to reduced expression of the hormone, leptin; according to research presented today at the 58th Annual European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology Meeting. The study reported that genetic modifications known to suppress leptin levels were more common in breastfed babies than formula-fed, and that these differences may play a role in the development of obesity. Understanding the link between genetic modification of leptin and obesity risk could advance strategies to prevent and treat childhood obesity and, its complications, in the future; as prevention is better than cure.
Sparks fly as Germany's climate plan hits rural landscapes
German farmer Edgar Thomas already has two towering pylons spoiling the view of the picturesque rolling hills around his land, and he's exasperated that his area is being asked to find room for more.
Large meta-analysis links IVF to higher gestational diabetes risk
Women who give birth to singleton babies following assisted reproductive technologies including vitro fertilisation (IVF) are at greater risk of developing gestational diabetes than those who conceive naturally, according to a meta-analysis involving over almost 2 million singleton pregnancies.
Melting snowcaps spell water trouble for world's highest capital
Water resources are running dry in the world's highest-elevation capital due to the combined effect of the Andean glaciers melting, drought and mismanagement.
Patients with high blood sugar variability much more likely to die than those with stable visit-to-visit readings
New research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept) shows that patients with the highest variability in their blood sugar control are more than twice as likely to die as those with the most stable blood sugar measurements. The study is by Professor Ewan Pearson, University of Dundee, UK and Dr. Sheyu Li, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, and University of Dundee, UK, and colleagues.
Underweight babies more likely to develop type 2 diabetes more than a year earlier
Previous research has shown that people born weighing 2.7 kg (6 lbs) or less face an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D) as adults. New research being presented at this year's European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) Annual Meeting in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) is the first study to show that babies born underweight are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes at a younger age (by more than one year) and have less severe obesity at the time of diabetes diagnosis with higher concentrations of HDL cholesterol (known as good cholesterol).
Poor diabetes control costs the NHS in England 3 billion a year in potentially avoidable hospital treatment
Poor diabetes control was responsible for £3 billion in potentially avoidable hospital treatment in England in the operational year 2017-2018, according to new research comparing the costs of hospital care for 58 million people with and without diabetes.
Indonesia returning hundreds of containers of waste to West
Indonesia is sending back hundreds of containers of contaminated waste to the West after shipments supposedly containing plastic meant for recycling were found to hide hazardous substances, customs officials said.
Malaysia, Indonesia shut thousands of schools over forest fires haze
Thousands of schools were shuttered across Malaysia and Indonesia Thursday, affecting at least 1.7 million pupils, officials said, as toxic haze from rampant forest fires sent air quality plummeting.
Solar panels, vegan diets, no flights: meet America's climate revolutionaries
The last time Californian climate scientist Peter Kalmus was on an airplane was in 2012: He says it made him feel physically sick and like he was "stealing" from his children's future, and vowed never to fly again.
Huawei in public test as it unveils sanction-hit phone
Chinese tech giant Huawei launches its latest high-end smartphone in Munich on Thursday, the first that could be void of popular Google apps because of US sanctions.
Reduce waste, save money: France's poorest city goes green
At her home in Roubaix, a former industrial centre in northern France that is now the country's poorest city, Magdalene Deleporte is making her own deodorant.
Apple Arcade could boost ranks of video game players
Apple's entry into online games with a low-cost subscription plan is expected to bring a fresh set of consumers into gaming and potentially reshape the multibillion-dollar market.
California looks for ways to preserve environmental clout
In eliminating California's authority to set its own emission standards for cars and trucks, the Trump administration would take away leverage the state needs to convince the world's largest automakers to make more environmentally friendly vehicles.
Medical education does not equip students to provide high quality nutritional care to patients
Worldwide, nutrition is insufficiently incorporated into medical education, meaning that medical students lack the confidence, skills and knowledge to provide nutritional care to patients, according to a systematic review of 24 studies published in The Lancet Planetary Health journal.
For people with pre-existing liver disease, toxic algae may be more dangerous
Toxins produced during harmful algal blooms may be more harmful to people than previously known.
Study estimates more than 100,000 cancer cases could stem from contaminants in tap water
A toxic cocktail of chemical pollutants in U.S. drinking water could result in more than 100,000 cancer cases, according to a peer-reviewed study from Environmental Working Group—the first study to conduct a cumulative assessment of cancer risks due to 22 carcinogenic contaminants found in drinking water nationwide.
Teen e-cigarette use doubles since 2017
Data from the 2019 Monitoring the Future Survey of eighth, 10th and 12th graders show alarmingly high rates of e-cigarette use compared to just a year ago, with rates doubling in the past two years. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, scientists who coordinate and evaluate the survey released the data early to The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) to notify public health officials working to reduce vaping by teens. The survey is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health.
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