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Life Technology™ Medical News

Rising Unintentional Fall Deaths Among Older White Americans

Nutrition's Impact on Cancer Patients' Health

Patient Diagnosed with Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma Due to Fusion Gene

Study: Inflation Reduction Act Won't Impact R&D Investment

Histamine's Impact on Exercise Performance

Puberty Hormonal Changes Impacting Transgender Youth

Weight-Loss Behaviors Overlooked in Eating Disorder Diagnoses

Cannabis Use Doubles Cardiovascular Disease Risk

Virtual Ward Bed Lowers Carbon Emissions for NHS

Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes Benefit from Combination Therapy

Hospital Pharmacist Guidance Improves COPD Inhaler Use

UCLA Study: Cardiac Markers Link Cancer & Heart Disease

University of Twente Unveils First MDR-Compliant Open-Source Medical Device

Managing Age-Related Risks: Advances in Geroprotection

Novel Study: Anthropomorphizing Fitness Equipment Boosts Activity

Swedish Doctors' Antibiotic Prescribing Influenced by Peers

Chronic Artificial Light Exposure Linked to Depression

Stigma in Hospital Care for Mental Health: Research Findings

Digital Inhalers Aid in Predicting COPD Exacerbations

Arboviral Disease Cases Surge in 48 States

Abortion Providers Relocate Post-Dobbs Ruling

New Computational Model Predicts Lung Motion for Safer Biopsies

AI Innovations in Women's Health: Predicting Cancer & Detecting Endometriosis

Why Microwaving Fish Creates Lingering Smells

Study Finds Electronic Nudge Letters Ineffective for CKD Therapy

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine Researchers Uncover Tick Defense Against Deadly Virus

Critically Reviewed Trial on Adolescent Depression Medication

Study by University of Bath: Antimicrobial Resistance Spreading Despite Reduced Antibiotic Use

Diabetes in Pregnancy Linked to Fetal Heart Fat

Hopeful News for Families with History of Breast and Ovarian Cancer

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Life Technology™ Science News

Canada Seeks Top US Scientists Amid Trump Crackdown

Volcano Eruption: Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki Alert Raised

Amazonian Scorpion Venom: Potential Cancer Drug

Plant Cell Wall Components: Abundant Sources for Biofuels

Study Reveals UK's Changing Extreme Hot Episode Trends

4,000 Tree Species in Mexico & Central America Face Extinction

Newly Discovered Armored Monstersaurian in Southern Utah

The Manchurian Candidate and The IPCRESS File: Brainwashing Revisited

Rare Earth Metals: Key Assets in Trade War

Willow Leaves Reduce Ammonia Emissions in Cattle Farming

Cloud Fraction Diurnal Variation Impact on Earth's Climate

Global Environmental Crisis: Urgent Need for Real-Time Data

E. Coli: Antibiotic Resistance Testing in Agricultural Environments

Europe Faces Devastating Floods: 335 Lives Lost

Genetic Markers Boost Meat Quality in Nelore Cattle

Disposable Face Masks: Impact on Environment and Health

Study Reveals Strategic Market Withdrawal Boosts International Firm Growth

Danish Primary Schools Rely on Google Tech

WVU Researchers Develop Flood Resilience Toolkit

NASA Astronauts Conduct Simulated Moonwalk in Northern Arizona

NASA Prepares Astronauts for Artemis III Moonwalkers

Study Reveals Impact of Violence on São Paulo Teens

Study Reveals Native Plant Seeding Reduces Invasive Species

Female Researchers Unveil Systemic Sexism in Early Academic Careers

Gender Equality Impact on Girls' Science Choices

Researchers Show Magnetic Fields Regulate Laser Demagnetization

Asteroid 2024 YR4: Moon Impact Threat in 2032

Widespread Applications of Lasers in Various Fields

Impact of LGBTQ-Friendly Policies on US Firm Innovation

Soil Degradation in Southern Brazilian Amazon

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Repurposing Coal Mines for Solar Panels: Unlikely Green Energy Solution

Energy transition: How coal mines could go solar

Meta Attempts $100 Million Bonuses to Lure OpenAI Talent

Meta offered $100 mn bonuses to poach OpenAI employees: CEO Altman

A new tool predicts when users will reject a new technology

Paradoxical Relationship: High Hopes, Tech Skepticism

Singapore Engineers Develop Flying Drum Robot

Two-actuator robot combines efficient ground rolling and spinning flight in one design

Study Reveals Language Models Overemphasize Start and End

Lost in the middle: How LLM architecture and training data shape AI's position bias

AI Video Reconstruction of Christopher Pelkey's Impact Statement Leads to Maximum Sentence

AI 'reanimations': Making facsimiles of the dead raises ethical quandaries

Global Fossil Fuel Phase-Out by 2050: G20's Renewable Energy Potential

G20 countries could produce enough renewable energy for the whole world: What needs to happen

Dutch Government Urges Parents to Limit Social Media for Kids

Dutch suggest social media ban for under-15s

Global oil demand to dip in 2030, first drop since COVID: IEA

Why stablecoins are gaining popularity

Global Oil Demand to Dip in 2030: International Energy Agency

US Senate to Vote on Regulating Stablecoins

Rising Popularity of AI Chatbots for Daily News

London Workshop Develops Prototype for Capturing Ship Emissions

UK startup looks to cut shipping's carbon emissions

Poll finds public turning to AI bots for news updates

Iberian Peninsula Power Outage Linked to Overvoltage

Spain says 'overvoltage' caused huge April blackout

Middle East: Beauty and Ancient Kingdoms Amid Instability

The Middle East is a major flight hub. How do airlines keep passengers safe during conflict?

Superconducting circuit could one day replace semiconductor components in quantum computing systems

Data Centers in US: Energy Consumption Trends

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Monday, 28 October 2019

Anti-inflammatory agents can effectively and safely curb major depressive symptoms

Anti-inflammatory agents, such as aspirin/paracetamol, statins, and antibiotics, can safely and effectively curb the symptoms of major depression, finds a pooled analysis of the available evidence, published online in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.

UK vets need special training to report suspected animal abuse

UK vets need special training to report cases of suspected animal abuse and neglect, finds research published online in Vet Record.

Multiple factors aligned to establish sustained transmission of XDR-TB in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

A study published today in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) examines the evolutionary and epidemiologic history of an epidemic strain of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) - called LAM4/KZN- in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. This strain was first reported in a 2005 outbreak in Tugela Ferry, KwaZulu-Natal, where it was associated with 90 percent mortality among predominantly HIV infected individuals, and has since become widespread throughout the province. A new study identifies key host, pathogen and environmental factors that facilitated the success of this XDR-TB strain and steps that can be taken for early identification and containment of future epidemics.

To rid electric grid of carbon, shore up green energy support

Cornell and Northwestern University engineers, along with a federal economist, have created an energy model that helps to remove carbon-generated power from the U.S. electric grid—replacing it with a greener, financially feasible wind, solar and hydro energy system.

Crimped or straight? Lung fiber shape influences elasticity

Take a deep breath. Now exhale. Congratulations! You've just done something completely ordinary, yet so mysterious that scientists still don't know everything about it.

Researchers: Abolish marriage consummation as requirement for citizenship

Two political scientists at the University of Alberta argue consummation of marriage as a requirement for Canadian citizenship should be abolished.

Argonaute proteins help fine-tune gene expression

A nuclear protein bound to RNA molecules affects chromatin structure and gene expression.

5 milestones that created the internet, 50 years after the first network message

Fifty years ago, a UCLA computer science professor and his student sent the first message over the predecessor to the internet, a network called ARPANET.

Could cannabis be a pain relief alternative to opioids?

According to the Illinois Department of Public Health, deaths related to opioids in the state rose 13 percent between 2016 and 2017. In response to rising opioid use and associated deaths, the Alternative to Opioids Act of 2018 created the Opioid Alternative Pilot Program. The IDPH commissioned Dr. Julie Bobitt, the director of the Interdisciplinary Health Sciences program at the University of Illinois, to evaluate the program. She discussed the preliminary data and the feasibility of cannabis as an opioid alternative in an interview with News Bureau biomedical sciences editor Liz Ahlberg Touchstone.

New photo-responsive hydrogels developed with eye on biomedical applications

3-D printed, transplantable organs may sound like science fiction, but, thanks to advances in polymer chemistry, they could become a reality. Stimuli-responsive hydrogels represent a broad class of soft materials that change their mechanical properties when certain external triggers are applied. Last year researchers from the lab of Jonathan Barnes, assistant professor of chemistry, created a new kind of artificial molecular muscle from a polymer that changes color and contracts when exposed to blue light. Similar materials promise a wide range of applications, particularly in medicine.

Trout habitat improvements also benefit nongame native fish

Habitat improvements in the Laramie River intended to boost the brown trout fishery also have benefited native nongame fish, according to newly published research by University of Wyoming scientists.

Study shows ability to detect light from UV to the IR optical regimes using spin currents

A University of Wyoming researcher and his team have shown that the spin Seebeck effect (SSE) can be used to detect light across a broad optical range—ultraviolet through visible to near-infrared. This work has future implications on novel spin current-based technologies.

US-born residents more than five times likely to use prescription opioids than new immigrants

The longer immigrants live in the United States, the more likely they are to use prescription opioids—a fact that contradicts popular views linking wealth and health, and suggests that American culture is uniquely favorable toward prescribing opioids.

Alert system for failing nuclear plant pipes uses thin films and sound vibrations

A failing pipe can be tough to spot. It may cause a puddle, produce another sign of damage, or simply burst before detection. A flooded kitchen or laundry room is messy and inconvenient, but the stakes are much, much higher in nuclear power plants—which on average contain many miles of pipeline.

Another way to detect lymphedema

Bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) is a noninvasive technology that measures the amount of fluid in a limb. It works by sending low level electrical current through the arm or leg and measuring the resistance to current (impedance).

Completing DNA synthesis

The final stage of DNA replication—"termination"—occurs when two DNA copy machines advance upon each other and unwind the final stretch of DNA. This process occurs about 60,000 times per human cell cycle and is crucial to prevent mutations.

Biomarker for schizophrenia can be detected in human hair

Working with model mice, postmortem human brains, and people with schizophrenia, researchers at the RIKEN Center for Brain Science in Japan have discovered that a subtype of schizophrenia is related to abnormally high levels hydrogen sulfide in the brain. Experiments showed that this abnormality likely results from a DNA-modifying reaction during development that lasts throughout life. In addition to providing a new direction for research into drug therapies, higher-than-normal levels of the hydrogen sulfide-producing enzyme can act as biomarker for this type of schizophrenia.

Streaming TV gears up for ad targeting

In the new world of streaming television, advertising is not going away, but is evolving to become more like marketing on the internet—targeted to specific groups or individuals.

Delhi fights hazardous pollution after Diwali party

After India's biggest firework party of the year, Delhi awoke to a pollution hangover Monday with the capital forced to breathe hazardous levels of toxic particles.

State of emergency declared as California wildfires rage

California's governor declared a statewide emergency on Sunday as a huge blaze, fanned by strong winds, forced mass evacuations and power blackouts as it bore down on towns in the famed Sonoma wine region.

Chill your Netflix habit, climate experts say

Movie nights once required driving to the local video store to rent, rewind and return the latest blockbuster. Now on-demand video content providers offer countless binge-worthy options at the touch of a finger.

New species found in whale shark mouth

A whale shark's mouth might not seem like the most hospitable environment for a home, but Japanese researchers have found there's no place like it for a newly-discovered shrimp-like creature.

American Academy of Pediatrics looks at use of nonnutritive sweeteners by children

Nonnutritive or artificial sweeteners are a growing part of U.S. diets, now consumed by at least one in four children. A new American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) policy statement offers a summary of the existing data around nonnutritive sweeteners and recommends future research into how they affect children's weight, taste preferences, the risk for diabetes, and long-term safety.

AAP recommends greater access to surgical treatments for severe obesity

Recognizing that severe obesity is a serious and worsening public health crisis in children and adolescents, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is calling for greater access to metabolic and bariatric surgery, one of the few strategies that has been shown to be effective in treating the most severe forms of the chronic disease.

Soft drinks found to be the crucial link between obesity and tooth wear

A new study published today in the journal Clinical Oral Investigations, has found that sugar-sweetened acidic drinks, such as soft drinks, is the common factor between obesity and tooth wear among adults.

Maternal and newborn health improves in rural Nigeria, Ethiopia and India but inequities still exist

Community-based health programs in parts of rural Nigeria, Ethiopia and India were successful in improving health care for mothers and newborns, but inequities still exist, according to a new study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

Study implicates flavored e-cigs in the teen vaping epidemic

A USC study has found that teens who vape candy- or fruit-flavored e-cigarettes are more likely to stick with the habit and vape more heavily, implicating flavors in the teen vaping epidemic.