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Life Technology™ Medical News
International Doctors Delayed, U.S. Hospitals Face Staff Shortage
Late-Night Dairy's Dream Impact: Scientific Backing
Understanding the Impact of Gut Bacteria on Health
Study Reveals Infants' Gut Bacteria Impact Disease Risk
Leipzig University Study: Reliable Brain Cell Communication
Government Webpages on Gender and Sexual Orientation Vanish Post-Trump Inauguration
Pregnant Women's Comprehensive Health Monitoring
Breast Cancer Relapse Risk: Dormant Tumor Cells Persist
Pioneer Fellow Develops Hydrogel for Chronic Wound Healing
Man in His 50s Dies from Lyssavirus in New South Wales
Structured Exercise Program Lowers Death Risk
Covid-19 Impact: Women's Health Hit Harder Than Men's
Planned C-Section Linked to Higher Leukemia Risk
Childhood Cancer Survivors Face Higher COVID-19 Risk
Physician Associates: Safe and Effective Care Under Supervision
Large Oncosomes in Blood: Key for Cancer Diagnosis
Measles Outbreak Hits Kentucky: 1,267 Cases Nationwide
Fireworks Safety: Experts Warn of Fourth of July Risks
National Health Spending Growth Outpaces GDP from 2024-2033
Variability in Commercial Pricing for General Surgery Services
Chinese Medicine Ingredient Boosts Autoimmune Treatment
Community-Based Pneumococcal Vaccination Program in Sera Town
Surgeons' Precise Techniques for Nerve Protection
Study Shows Introducing Peanut Butter and Eggs at Six Months Reduces Allergy Risk
Study Reveals Rising Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease
Study Reveals 15% Doxycycline Use in Dutch LGBTQ+ Community
First-Ever Map Reveals Chikungunya Virus T Cell Triggers
Nad+ Deficiency Accelerates Aging
Study: Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior Vary by Sex and Education
Predicting Friend's Response to Hurtful Comment
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Global Wildlife Loss Linked to Population Growth
Importance of Understanding Randomness in Various Fields
Rare Heavy Snow Blankets Northeastern Turkey
New Fire Near Greek Capital Sparks High Alert
Unusual Molecules in Glaciers and Mountains: Brain Cell Control
Debate Over Giant Arctic Ice Shelf Resolved
Climate Change's Impact on Livestock: Neglected Research Area
Sydney Researchers Harness Lightning for Ammonia Production
Trekking Through Bornean Rainforest: Searching for Jungle Frogs
Genetic Technique Reveals Insights on Mitochondria
Record Low Temperatures Hit Argentina, Chile, Uruguay
Firefighters Gain Control Over Major Wildfire in Izmir
Switzerland's Glaciers Witness Early Melting: Glacier Loss Day
Wildfire on Crete Forces Evacuation, New Blaze Near Athens
Scientists Collaborate to Restore Miami Reef
Astronomers Unveil Nearby Spiral Galaxy in Brilliant Colors
Study Reveals Tharsis Fish Choking on Belemnites
Water Scarcity Challenge in Country Townships
Astronomers Discover Quasi-Periodic Oscillations in XTE J0111.2−7317
NASA's New Horizons Achieves Deep Space Stellar Navigation
Study Explores Earth4All Scenarios for Human Well-Being
Early Humans' High-Calorie Diet: Balancing Protein, Carbs, and Fat
Alarming 92% Coral Mortality at Lizard Island Reef
Tin Catalysts: Unlocking Potential for Reactions
300,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools Unearthed in Gantangqing
Challenges in Understanding Life Science Statistics
Demise of Hong Kong's League of Social Democrats
NASA Captures Stunning Multicolored Stars in Unexplored Cluster
European Village Biodiversity: A Neglected Study Area
Beluga Whale Kimalu Recovers from Historic Surgery
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Pilot program integrates AI-generated notes with human community notes on X platform
"X Introduces Community Notes to Combat Misinformation"
Scientists Pursue New Semiconductor Materials for Enhanced Solar Cell Efficiency
Robotic probe quickly measures semiconductor properties to accelerate solar panel development
Open-source engine enables high-performance data processing for Internet of Things devices
Playing games with robots makes people see them as more humanlike
Interacting with Robots Shapes Human Perception
Berlin Institute Releases NebulaStream: Next-Gen IoT Processing
3D-printed magnetoelastic smart pen may help diagnose Parkinson's
Thousands Overlooked: Parkinson's Disease Progression Unnoticed
Spoken Language Models: Next-Gen Tech Learning Human Speech
Researcher develops 'SpeechSSM,' opening up possibilities for a 24-hour AI voice assistant
Luna v1.0 & FlexQAOA bring constraint-aware quantum optimization to real-world problems
Aqarios Unveils Luna V1.0: Quantum Optimization Milestone
AI designs new underwater gliders with shapes inspired by marine animals
Efficient Aquatic Navigation: Secrets of Fish and Seals
Researchers develop a quality design method for real-time videos from uncrewed aerial vehicles
University of Tsukuba Unveils SPADE Method for UAV Video Quality
Hydrogen Infrastructure Rollout in EU Reveals Regulatory Gaps
Study finds EU hydrogen station rollout may cause millions in annual losses
Congress Passes Bill Ending Federal Tax Incentives for Electric Vehicles
What to know about buying electric vehicles after the federal tax incentives end
Interdisciplinary Team Studies Cooling Methods on Satellite
Space-based experiments show wax-filled heat sinks keep electronics cooler for longer
Nostalgic Paint-By-Number Sets: Colorful Creations
NASA advances pressure-sensitive paint research capability
Architects Enhancing Society Through New Building Approach
Importance of Clean Water for Health and Industry
ReSURF: Stretchable, self-healing water quality sensor enables ultrafast surveillance
New book explores 'socially sustainable' architecture
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSMonday, 30 September 2019
Restoring forests 1 tree at a time, to help repair climate
Destruction of the forests can be swift. Regrowth is much, much slower.
New combination therapy offers bowel cancer patients extra treatment option
Based on scientific findings of the Netherlands Cancer Institute, a new combination treatment has been developed for patients with metastatic bowel cancer and a mutation in the BRAF gene. After a clinical trial in over 600 participants, those treated with this smart combination therapy survived longer than those who received standard treatment. The study is published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Toward safer, more effective cancer radiation therapy using X-rays and nanoparticles
An element called gadolinium delivered into cancer cells releases killer electrons when hit by specially tuned X-rays. The approach, published in the journal Scientific Reports, could pave the way towards a new cancer radiation therapy.
Statins could increase or decrease osteoporosis risk—the dosage makes the difference
A study by the Medical University of Vienna and the Complexity Science Hub Vienna shows for the first time a connection between the dosage of cholesterol-lowering drugs—statins—and the diagnosis of osteoporosis.
Lipid produced by organism helps control blood sugar
Researchers based in Brazil, the United States and Germany have discovered that 12-HEPE, a lipid produced in response to cold by brown adipose tissue in the human body, helps reduce blood sugar. The results of their experiments with mice pave the way for new treatments for diabetes.
New AI method may boost Crohn's disease insight and improve treatment
Scientists have developed a computer method that may help improve understanding and treatment of Crohn's disease, which causes inflammation of the digestive tract.
Study shows how urban agriculture can push the sustainability of Phoenix
A community garden occupies a diminutive dirt lot in Phoenix. Rows of raised garden beds offer up basil, watermelons and corn, making this patch of land an agricultural oasis in a desert city of 1.5 million people. In fact, this little garden is contributing in various ways to the city's environmental sustainability goals set by the city council in 2016. The goals consider matters such as transportation, water stewardship, air quality and food.
How a tension sensor plays integral role in aligned chromosome partitioning
A Waseda University-led research uncovered the molecular mechanism of how a particular cancer-causing oncogene could trigger an onset of acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
A new concept could make more environmentally friendly batteries possible
A new concept for an aluminum battery has twice the energy density as previous versions, is made of abundant materials, and could lead to reduced production costs and environmental impact. The idea has potential for large-scale applications, including storage of solar and wind energy. Researchers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and the National Institute of Chemistry, Slovenia, are behind the idea.
'Good' cholesterol counters atherosclerosis in mice with diabetes
Increasing levels of a simplified version of "good" cholesterol reversed disease in the blood vessels of mice with diabetes, a new study finds.
Better understanding sensory perception could help people with autism and dyslexia
Deciphering how the brain processes sight and hearing could have implications for how we understand and treat conditions such as dyslexia, autism and schizophrenia.
How to dismantle a nuclear bomb: Team successfully tests new method for verification of weapons reduction
How do weapons inspectors verify that a nuclear bomb has been dismantled? An unsettling answer is: They don't, for the most part. When countries sign arms reduction pacts, they do not typically grant inspectors complete access to their nuclear technologies, for fear of giving away military secrets.
Basic research to world-changing applications can take 6 months – or 50 years
All technology and innovation have a science base but to get there requires patience, as the journey from curiosity-driven basic research to a world-changing technology can take six months or 50 years, a panel of Nobel and Kavli prize laureates has said.
Mesothelioma trial suggests immunotherapy as an alternative to chemotherapy
Patients with mesothelioma may gain similar benefit from immunotherapy as chemotherapy, and good responders may provide important clues to novel treatment for the thousands of new cases each year. Data from the PROMISE-meso trial presented at the ESMO Congress 2019 highlight the need to understand the biological mechanisms whereby mesothelioma, which is incurable, adapts to immunotherapy in some patients but not in others, resulting in variations in treatment response.
Type 2 diabetes remission possible with 'achievable' weight loss, say researchers
People who achieve weight loss of 10% or more in the first five years following diagnosis with type 2 diabetes have the greatest chance of seeing their disease go into remission, according to a study led by the University of Cambridge.
Blood test can replace invasive biopsy for more patients with lung cancer
A growing number of patients with advanced lung cancer could soon be offered a blood test to help to decide the best treatment for them instead of having to get a tumour sample for analysis. New data from the BFAST trial presented at the ESMO Congress 2019 have shown that the test can be used successfully to identify complex DNA mutations in the cells of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) suitable for the latest targeted medicines. The technique detects tiny pieces of tumour DNA that are shed from cancer cells into the blood.
Heart, kidney disease risk factors for adverse effects from gout medication
Heart disease is an independent risk factor for severe adverse skin reactions in patients taking allopurinol, found a study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Novel strategy using microRNA biomarkers can distinguish melanomas from nevi
Melanoma is the least common but one of the most deadly skin cancers. It accounts for only about one percent of all cases globally, but the majority of skin cancer deaths. Accurate, timely and reliable diagnosis of cutaneous melanoma remains a significant challenge in dermatopathology. Investigators report in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology, published by Elsevier, on a novel strategy for using microRNA (miRNA) biomarkers to detect melanoma cells in skin tumors even when the tumor contains predominantly benign cells.
Sleeping pills reduce suicidal thoughts in patients with severe insomnia
Insomnia is a driver of suicide, and particularly people with severe insomnia may safely benefit from taking a sedative to help address their sleep problems as it reduces their suicidal thoughts, investigators report.
Poorly reported placebos could lead to mistaken estimates of benefits and harms
Researchers at the University of Oxford have found that placebo controls are almost never described according to standard reporting guidelines.
'Smart shirt' can accurately measure breathing and could be used to monitor lung disease
A smart shirt that measures lung function by sensing movements in the chest and abdomen has proved to be accurate when compared to traditional testing equipment, according to research presented at the European Respiratory Society International Congress.
Survey of truck drivers finds many suffer from sleep-related breathing disorders
A survey of 905 Italian truck drivers has shown that approximately half suffer from at least one sleep-related breathing problem that potentially can cause drivers to fall asleep at the wheel.
Nintedanib slows progression for broad range of scarring lung diseases
Nintedanib, a medication approved for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, slows the decline in lung function among patients with a broad range of scarring lung diseases. The findings, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that many more people may benefit from nintedanib than are currently approved for treatment. They also suggest that the dozens of different forms of fibrosing interstitial lung disease may share similar scarring mechanisms in spite of different causes and patterns.
Japan lists Fukushima radiation levels on S. Korea embassy site
Japan's embassy in South Korea has begun posting the daily radiation levels of Fukushima and Seoul after new questions about the lingering effects of the 2011 nuclear disaster.
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