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Life Technology™ Medical News
Skin Conditions Linked to Food Allergies: Surprising Findings
Diabetes Drugs Show Promise in Protecting Brain Health
Exploring Neural Mechanisms of Obesity's Brain Impact
SIA Survey Reveals Risk in Australian Sports Supplements
New Drug in Trials Lowers Genetic Risk for Heart Attacks
Rare Infant-Onset Diabetes: Pancreatic Damage via UPR Pathway
Key Genetic Link Found Between Cancer Susceptibility and Tissue Regeneration
Study Reveals Americans Die Sooner Than Europeans
Historical Neglect of Menstrual Blood in Research
New Method Identifies Pancreatic Cancer Cell Subtypes
Anal Cancer: Low Awareness, Rare Incidence
Qut Study Reveals Decline in Young Adults' Physical Activity
Medical Breakthrough: Molecule Enhances Mitochondrial Function
"First Wearable Device for Skin Gas Measurement Unveiled"
Global Projection: Osteoarthritis Impact Surges
Stanford Medicine Replicates Human Pain Pathway
Tim-3: Key Link to Alzheimer's Revealed
Researchers Identify 300 Treatable Genetic Disorders
New Gene Editing Tool STITCHR Developed for Precise Gene Insertion
Preposterous Idea Challenges Perceptions
Study Reveals Travel Sleep Disruption Insights
Study Reveals Opioid Exposure Impacts Newborn Brain Size
Inflammation Marker in Sickle Cell Disease: Menstrual Cycle Impact
New Report in New York Challenges UN Infant Mortality Projections
South Korean Researchers Propose Novel Cancer Immunotherapy
Uncovering Minor Sex-Trafficking Victims in Healthcare
Study Reveals How Harnessing Stress Boosts Productivity
FDA Approvals of High-Risk Medical Devices Hit 10-Year Low
Revealing Health Care Prices: Trump's Executive Order
Senate Confirms Mehmet Oz as Head of Medicare & Medicaid Services
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Transformative Tools in Organic Chemistry: Sustainable Coupling Reactions
Kīlauea Volcano Ash Triggers Rare Phytoplankton Bloom
Study Links Dog Behavior to Medical Detection Performance
Decoding Cryptic Texts: Unraveling Modern Messaging Codes
University of Waterloo Researchers Transform Bacteria for Biomedical Innovation
Rare Helium Isotope 3He Found in Solar Orbiter Data
Devastating Storm System Causes Chaos
Colossal Unveils Three Dire Wolf DNA Pups
Americans Rethinking Parenthood: Nonparents' Desire Declines
Swedish Museum Preserves Historic Vasa Ship
Enhancing Flood Mitigation Amid Rising Climate Challenges
Billionaire Spacewalker Jared Isaacman's Mars Mission Vision
Insights on Wildfire Victims' Needs: UC Davis Study
Microbial Biotechnology: Farming Game-Changer
Discovering Molecules for New Medicines: Costly and Complex
Study on Iridium and Palladium Nanoparticles' Catalyst Properties
"Xi'an Scientists Develop PIST Model for Water Quality Sensing"
New Strategy for Manipulating 2D Materials' Properties
New Tool Uses Machine Learning to Identify Rare Microorganisms
Study Reveals Higher Economic Inequality in Han Dynasty
Study Reveals Impact of Lip Size on Facial Attractiveness
Breakthrough: Oregon State Study Finds New Method to Deliver Anti-Inflammatory Drugs
Photocatalytic Water Splitting: Green Hydrogen Production
Australian Capital Cities Face Extended Pollen Seasons
Teaching Science with Sharks' Sharp Teeth
Research Reveals Impact of Early Childhood Education Programs
Reference Genomes Assembled for Six Ape Species
First Direct Observation of Merging Star Clusters in Dwarf Galaxies
Parasitic Infections Impact Wildlife Generations
Practical Solutions for Small Farmers in Indonesia
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Korea Institute's Breakthrough: World's Highest Efficiency Flexible Solar Cells
Insect-Scale Robots: Search for Survivors in Collapsed Buildings
Measuring Tape Inspires Robotic Gripper Concept
Improving Apps: Listening to Customers
Delta Air Lines Withdraws Full-Year Profit Forecast, Adjusts Capacity Amid Economic Concerns
Less-Expensive Thin-Film Solar Cells: Efficiency Challenges
Breaking Communication Barriers: Smart Tech for Deaf & Hard-of-Hearing
Breakthrough: 3D Graphics Manipulated in Mid-Air
Essential Energy and CSIRO Showcase V2G Technology
Electric Vehicle Transition Hinges on Clean Energy Grids
Cornell Researchers Create Innovative Smart Clothing
AI Chatbot Passes Turing Test Successfully
University of Oregon Chemists Develop Greener Iron Metal Production
"Advanced Angiography: Imaging Vascular Network with Contrast Agents"
Study Reveals Breakthrough in Streaming for Virtual Reality
Ex-Facebook Employee Testifies Before US Senators on China Collaboration
Meta Faces Trial Over Alleged Market Power Abuse
Tuk Tuk Companies in Lisbon Struggle with Digital Transformation
Researchers Develop Open-Source Robotic System "FLUID"
"Gigaflow: Innovative Memory Storage Eases Cloud Traffic Surge"
"University Study: Dig Once Approach 40% More Cost-Effective for Infrastructure Upgrades"
Keri and Kims Develop High-Performance Dry Electrode Technology
Innovative Urinal Reduces Splashback for Improved Sanitation
Rise of Fake News: AI Makes Detection Harder
AI's Rogue Rampage: Movies Reflecting Humanity's Fear
How to Safely Prepare Devices for Recycling
Conservative Video of Pierre Poilievre Sparks Speculation
"Uganda's Boda Bodas: Going Electric for Cleaner Air"
Australia's Growing Reliance on Imported Oil
Congress Bans TikTok Over National Security Concerns
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSMonday, 7 October 2019
Regular exercise is good for your heart, no matter how old you are: study
Regular exercise is highly beneficial for all patients with cardiovascular disease regardless of age, report investigators in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology. Their results showed that the patients who benefited most from cardiac rehabilitation were those who started out with the greatest physical impairment.
Oobleck's weird behavior is now predictable
It's a phenomenon many preschoolers know well: When you mix cornstarch and water, weird things happen. Swish it gently in a bowl, and the mixture sloshes around like a liquid. Squeeze it, and it starts to feel like paste. Roll it between your hands, and it solidifies into a rubbery ball. Try to hold that ball in the palm of your hand, and it will dribble away as a liquid.
Blocking a hormone's action in immune cells may reduce heart disease risk
Blocking the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR)—a protein that helps maintain normal levels of salt and water in the body—in immune cells may help reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke by improving blood vessel health. The study will be presented today at the American Physiological Society (APS) Aldosterone and ENaC in Health and Disease: The Kidney and Beyond Conference in Estes Park, Colo.
Research uncovers new sex-specific factor in CV disease
A common receptor may serve differentiated roles related to aging-associated cardiovascular disease (CV) in males and females. Jennifer DuPont, Ph.D., will present the findings of this first-of-its-kind study today at the American Physiological Society (APS) Aldosterone and ENaC in Health and Disease: The Kidney and Beyond Conference in Estes Park, Colo.
Pairing new medications could offer hope to heart disease patients
Cardiologist Bertram Pitt, MD, sees promise in combining two new classes of medication into a treatment regimen for patients with cardiovascular disease. Pitt will discuss the advantages of this treatment plan in his clinical plenary lecture at the American Physiological Society (APS) Aldosterone and ENaC in Health and Disease: The Kidney and Beyond Conference in Estes Park, Colo.
Deafness-causing protein deficiency makes brain rewire itself, research suggests
The brains of people with congenital deafness may be rewiring themselves in ways that affect how those people learn, suggesting a need to develop new teaching techniques tailored toward those who have never been able to hear.
Green roofs improve the urban environment – so why don't all buildings have them?
Rooftops covered with grass, vegetable gardens and lush foliage are now a common sight in many cities around the world. More and more private companies and city authorities are investing in green roofs, drawn to their wide-ranging benefits which include savings on energy costs, mitigating the risk from floods, creating habitats for urban wildlife, tackling air pollution and urban heat and even producing food.
Online data mining adds to the picture of vaping-related lung disease
Severe lung disease related to vaping has been surging across the U.S., with the eighth death confirmed last week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A brief report in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests that online data-mining tools can supplement traditional public health surveillance and help officials stay ahead of this sudden epidemic.
Scientists observe a single quantum vibration under ordinary conditions
When a guitar string is plucked, it vibrates as any vibrating object would, rising and falling like a wave, as the laws of classical physics predict. But under the laws of quantum mechanics, which describe the way physics works at the atomic scale, vibrations should behave not only as waves, but also as particles. The same guitar string, when observed at a quantum level, should vibrate as individual units of energy known as phonons.
Shapeshifting receptors may explain mysterious drug failures
For sugar to taste sweet and for coffee to be stimulating, or even for light to be seen, first they all need to land on a G protein-coupled receptor. Ubiquitous and diverse, these receptors are a cell's chemical detection system: they sense substances in the surroundings and initiate intracellular pathways that underlie virtually all physiological processes—from taste and vision to hormonal regulation and neuronal communication. Nearly a third of all therapeutic drugs act by binding to these cell-surface receptors.
Successful ocean-monitoring satellite mission ends
The Jason-2/Ocean Surface Topography Mission (OSTM), the third in a U.S.-European series of satellite missions designed to measure sea surface height, successfully ended its science mission on Oct. 1. NASA and its mission partners made the decision to end the mission after detecting deterioration in the spacecraft's power system.
Health disparities, strong social support among state's LGBTQ community
LGBTQ individuals in Washington state have higher rates of disability and poorer mental health than their heterosexual counterparts, according to a study released Oct. 4 by the University of Washington.
Trio win Nobel Medicine Prize for work on cells, oxygen
US researchers William Kaelin and Gregg Semenza and Britain's Peter Ratcliffe on Monday shared the Nobel Medicine Prize for discoveries on how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability, the Nobel Assembly said.
More energy means more effects—in proton collisions
The higher the collision energy of particles, the more interesting the physics. Scientists from the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Cracow have found further confirmation of this assumption, this time, in the high energy collision of protons with protons or lead nuclei.
GM strike negotiations take 'turn for the worse': union
Negotiations to resolve a three-week-old strike at General Motors for better pay, benefits and job security have taken "a turn for the worse," a top negotiator with the United Autoworkers Union said Sunday.
In Brazil, Amazon fires threaten millenary rock paintings
Ancient rock paintings in Brazil's Monte Alegre park are being threatened by some of the fires burning in the Amazon region.
Nobel season opens with Medicine Prize
The announcement of the Nobel Medicine Prize on Monday opens an unusual 2019 Nobel season in which two literature laureates will be crowned after a scandal postponed last year's award, amid speculation Greta Thunberg could nab the prestigious Peace Prize.
Cancer patients who exercise have less heart damage from chemotherapy
Patients with cancer should receive a tailored exercise prescription to protect their heart, reports a paper published today in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).
Study provides insights on treatment and prognosis of male breast cancer
A recent analysis reveals that treatment of male breast cancer has evolved over the years. In addition, certain patient-, tumor-, and treatment-related factors are linked with better survival. The findings are published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.
OTC medications commonly used in cases of attempted suicide by self-poisoning in youth
A new study from Nationwide Children's Hospital and the Central Ohio Poison Center found rates of suicide attempts by self-poisoning among youth and adolescents are higher in rural communities, higher during the academic school year and involve common medications found in many households.
A Canadian essential medicines list must be evidence-based
An essential medicines list in Canada should be evidence-based and independent of conflicting interests, found a study of decision-makers and policy-makers that is published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Computer kidney sheds light on proper hydration
A new computer kidney developed at the University of Waterloo could tell researchers more about the impacts of medicines taken by people who don't drink enough water.
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