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Life Technology™ Medical News
Stress Link to Alzheimer's in Postmenopausal Women
Revolutionizing Health Care: Overcoming Design Limits
"Second-Highest Measles Cases in U.S. Since 2000"
Elusive HIV: Researchers Struggle to Find Vaccine
3,500 Sleep-Related Infant Deaths Annually in US
Study Finds OTC Hearing Aids Less Effective
Air Pollution Linked to Increased Bone Loss in Postmenopausal Women
Toxic Heavy Metals Found in U.S. Rice
Chronic Pain: Conditions and Complications
Iron Deficiency Anemia Linked to Higher Stroke Risk
Study: Over-the-Counter Supplements Affect Male Fertility
Machine Learning Used to Distinguish Movement Disorders
Collaboration in Science: D-BIOMARK Trial on Breast Cancer
Future Patient Monitoring: Biomarkers in Sweat & Saliva
Ph.D. Student to Defend Thesis on Physical Activity in Older Adults
Medical Technology Improves Diabetes Care, Workforce Participation Stagnates
Global Impact of Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Study Reveals Disparities in Stillbirth Rates Among Women
Global Impact: 15 Million Annual Stroke Cases
Study Reveals Varied Immune Responses in Infant COVID-19
Study Reveals Insights on Tylenol Usage
Study Reveals Long-Term Health Risks After Stroke Depression
Alzheimer's Disease Impact on Body Organs: New Findings
Researchers Create 3,800 Digital Hearts to Study Heart Health
Study Links Dietary Fiber and Carbohydrates to Healthy Aging
Global Population Affected by Metabolic-Associated Fatty Liver Disease: Vitamin B3 Treatment
New App Offers Reliable Anemia Screening
Thiamine Derivative TTFD Boosts Arousal
New Vaccine for MenB Meningococcus Shows Promising Results
Unlocking the Power of Stem Cells for Blood Cancer
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
British Poets Explore Childhood and Masculinity with Lawnmower Poetry
"Engineers Mimic Marine Shells for Enhanced Energy Absorption"
Belgian Researchers Find Low-Emission Zones Improve Air Quality
"Harmony of Corals and Microbes: Vital Ecosystem Indicators"
Melting Glaciers in Boulder Expose Sulfate Minerals
New Method Identifies Genetic Changes in Oxygen-Producing Microbes
Boosting Radiative Cooling Efficiency for Climate Control
From Hull to Grain: The Rice Milling Process Explained
New Research Reveals Widespread Animal Behavior Patterns
Ozone Hole's Reversible Impact on Southern Ocean Carbon
Ancient Sediment Cores Reveal Global Cooling Event
Evolution of Efficient Light-Emitting Materials
Uncovering Fundamental Mechanism of G Protein-Coupled Receptors
Researchers Uncover Antibiotic Resistance Mechanism
Unveiling EP1: Key GPCR Subtype in PGE2 Signaling
"Chinese Scientists Develop High-Performance Solar Cell Method"
Unveiling Photon Sources in Astrophysics
AI Study Enhances Mapping on Mars
New Computational Model Predicts Landslides and Enhances Production
University of Liège Develops Open-Access Antibacterial Drug Process
Speeding Up Probe Missions to Icy Giant Planets
Scientists Decode Ancient Cyanobacteria Nanodevice
New Method Uses Synthetic Molecules to Store Data
Corporate Boards Align CEO Pay, Risking Performance Decline
"Seti Project Ozma: Searching for Technosignatures"
Can Teachers Transform GenAI into Educational Tools for Students?
Cern's Large Hadron Collider: Lead Atom Nuclei Collide at High Speeds
Wild Orangutans Show Complex Vocalization, Hinting at Evolutionary Origins
"Lamp: DNA Amplification Technique for Disease Diagnostics"
"University of Tsukuba Reveals Invisible Order in Glass"
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Establishing electromagnetic wave measurement standards to ensure the performance of Korea's Starlink
Korea Research Institute Sets Standards for 6G Satellite System
Expansion of Low Earth Orbit Satellite Networks Reshaping Communications
Algorithms aim to make real-time data processing possible anywhere on Earth
Elon Musk's AI Chatbot Grok Sparks Controversy
Elon Musk's AI company says Grok chatbot focus on South Africa's racial politics was 'unauthorized'
US Government Relinquishes Internet Control After 30 Years
How a decades-old tech battle remains as relevant today as ever
Metrology matters: The hidden science driving the green and digital transition
The Science of Measurement: Metrology in Daily Life
Surge in Interest for Encrypted Messaging Apps
Governments continue losing efforts to gain backdoor access to secure communications
NASA X-59's latest testing milestone: Simulating flight from the ground
Nasa's X-59 Supersonic Aircraft Tests Success
Alibaba's Tongyi Lab Introduces Cost-Effective LLM Training
Alibaba's ZeroSearch method uses simulated search results to slash LLM training costs
Saudi Arabia has big AI ambitions. They could come at the cost of human rights
Trump Reveals New Deals with Saudi Arabia
Australia's Search for Waste Disposal Alternatives
Waste-to-energy in Australia: How it works, where new incinerators could go, and how they stack up
Revolutionizing Lighting: White LEDs' Impact Since 1996
Study maps three decades of white LED progress and key innovation drivers
Air Taxis to Shuttle Fans and VIPs at 2028 Los Angeles Olympics
Air taxis to ferry fans and VIPs to venues at 2028 Los Angeles Olympics
US rests case in landmark Meta antitrust trial
US Government Rests Case Against Meta Over Instagram, WhatsApp Acquisition
Coinbase Reveals Cryptocurrency Theft and Blackmail
Coinbase expects data breach to cost it up to $400 mn
China Must Generate Over Half Power from Wind & Solar by 2035
Clean power surge needed: China's 2035 climate plan must aim high
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSWednesday, September 18, 2019
Indonesian haze closes schools, sparks fears for Singapore F1
Toxic haze from Indonesian forest fires closed thousands of schools across the country and in neighbouring Malaysia Wednesday, while air quality worsened in Singapore just days before the city's Formula One motor race.
Facebook auto-generating pages for Islamic State, al-Qaida
In the face of criticism that Facebook is not doing enough to combat extremist messaging, the company likes to say that its automated systems remove the vast majority of prohibited content glorifying the Islamic State group and al-Qaida before it's reported.
Number of abortions in US falls to lowest since 1973
The number and rate of abortions across the United States have plunged to their lowest levels since the procedure became legal nationwide in 1973, according to new figures released Wednesday.
The long road to clean energy
The vital transition to a zero-carbon economy is likely to be a long and rocky road. So-called green energy is booming, but not fast enough to curb climate change, which is accelerating at an alarming pace as oil, gas and coal consumption soar.
Health fears prompt Swiss 5G revolt
Switzerland was among the first countries to begin deploying 5G, but health fears over radiation from the antennas that carry the next-generation mobile technology have sparked a nationwide revolt.
Study finds manufacturing, driving and cleaning jobs linked to the highest risk of developing type 2 diabetes
Professional drivers, manufacturing workers and cleaners have a threefold increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D) compared with university teachers and physiotherapists, according to a new study presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) and published in Diabetologia (the journal of EASD).
Deprivation associated with increased risk of death following hospital admission with type 2 diabetes
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 where you live has an impact on how likely you are to die for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), and how likely you are to be readmitted to hospital for patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) following hospital discharge. The study is by Dr. Tim Robbins, Institute of Digital Healthcare, WMG, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK, and colleagues from both the University of Warwick and University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust, UK.
Early signs of adult diabetes are visible in children as young as 8 years old
Early signs of adulthood type 2 diabetes can be seen in children as young as 8 years old, decades before it is likely to be diagnosed, according to a new genetic study being presented at this year's European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) Annual Meeting in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September).
Study stresses the importance of staying physically active and the negative effects of even short-term inactivity
A new study presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) highlights the negative health effects of even short periods of physical inactivity and stresses the importance of staying physically active.
Fruit flies' microbiomes shape their evolution
The expression "you are what you eat" has taken on new meaning. In an experiment in fruit flies, or Drosophila melanogaster, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have found that adding different species of microbes to the flies' food caused populations to diverge genetically, racking up significant genomic changes in just five generations.
Researchers develop thermo-responsive protein hydrogel
Imagine a perfectly biocompatible, protein-based drug delivery system durable enough to survive in the body for more than two weeks and capable of providing sustained medication release. An interdisciplinary research team led by Jin Kim Montclare, a professor of biomolecular and chemical engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, has created the first protein-engineered hydrogel that meets those criteria, advancing an area of biochemistry critical to not only to the future of drug delivery, but tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.
Brain imaging shows how nonverbal children with autism have slower response to sounds
Even though nonverbal or minimally verbal people who have autism spectrum disorder (ASD) make up between 25 and 30 percent of the total autistic population, almost no studies have been done focusing on this group and their particular needs.
Stabilizing neuronal branching for healthy brain circuitry
Neurons form circuits in our brain by creating tree-like branches to connect with each other. Newly forming branches rely on the stability of microtubules, a railway-like system important for the transport of materials in cells. The mechanisms that regulate the stability of microtubules in branches are largely unknown. New research from the Vickie & Jack Farber Institute for Neuroscience—Jefferson Health has identified a key molecule that stabilizes microtubules and reinforces new neuronal branches.
NASA's Terra Satellite sees the birth of Tropical Storm Imelda
NASA's Terra satellite passed over the western Gulf of Mexico during the early afternoon of Sept. 17 and captured a visible image of the newly formed Tropical Depression 11.
Immigrants who committed felonies less likely than nonimmigrants to commit another felony
Prior research has shown that immigrants have lower rates of offending, arrest, and incarceration than nonimmigrants. However, that work hasn't examined whether this holds true for recidivism. A new study compared recidivism rates of foreign-born and native-born individuals formerly incarcerated for felonies and released from prisons in Florida. It found that immigrants are significantly less likely to reoffend by committing another felony than their nonimmigrant peers.
March of the multiple penguin genomes
The Penguin Genome Consortium sequences all living penguin species genomes to understand the evolution of life on the ice
Quarter of teachers in England report 60-hour working week
One in four teachers work more than 60 hours a week and many work in the evenings, despite successive government promises to reduce their hours, according to a new UCL-led study.
Microbiome may be involved in mechanisms related to muscle strength in older adults
A novel new study suggests that the gut microbiome has a role in mechanisms related to muscle strength in older adults. The work, led by researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts, is available as a pre-proof in advance of print in Experimental Gerontology.
Electronic nose can sniff out which lung cancer patients will respond to immunotherapy
An electronic nose that detects chemicals in the breath of lung cancer patients can identify with 85% accuracy those who will or will not respond to immunotherapy, according to new research published in the leading cancer journal Annals of Oncology today.
Radiation may lower potential for side effects of CAR T therapy in non-hodgkin's lymphoma
Treating non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients with radiation therapy as an additional treatment while they wait for their CAR T cells to be manufactured may reduce the risk of CAR T therapy side effects once it is administered, according to a new study from researchers in the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania. The study found patients who received radiation 30 days or fewer before their CAR T infusion did not experience serious cytokine release syndrome (CRS) or neurotoxicity, the two most common side effects of the gene therapy. Michael LaRiviere, MD, a resident in Radiation Oncology in Penn's Perelman School of Medicine, will present the findings today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology Annual Meeting in Chicago (Abstract #135).
Fast MRIs offer alternative to CT scans for pediatric head injuries: study
Researchers from the University of Colorado School of Medicine have released a study that shows that a new imaging method "fast MRI" is effective in identifying traumatic brain injuries in children, and can avoid exposure to ionizing radiation and anesthesia.
Study questions routine sleep studies to evaluate snoring in children
Pediatricians routinely advise parents of children who snore regularly and have sleepiness, fatigue or other symptoms consistent with sleep disordered breathing, to get a sleep study; this can help determine whether their child has obstructive sleep apnea, which is often treated with surgery to remove the tonsils and adenoids (adenotonsillectomy). Often pediatricians make surgery recommendations based on the results of this sleep study.
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