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Life Technology™ Medical News
Study Uncovers Health Care Disparities in IBD Care
Chinese Cancer Biologists Uncover Key Enzyme in Colorectal Tumor Formation
New Method Finds Personalized Cancer Treatments
Toxic Lead Stunts Growth of 12-Year-Old Bangladeshi
Study Reveals Hypertension Clues in Electronic Health Records
Tuberculosis Diagnoses Lower Than Expected During Pandemic
Enhanced Electronic Frailty Index Boosts Elderly Care
Study Reveals Gaps in Health Care Professionals' Awareness of Gender Diversity
Zero Coronary Artery Calcium Score: Age Impact on Cardiac Risk
Inga Rødahl Defends Thesis on Innate Lymphoid Cells
Global Challenge: Detecting Cardiac Arrhythmias in Spain
New Brain Scan Patterns Improve Depression Diagnosis
Study Reveals High Muscle Strength's Role in Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
Study Shows Increased Colonoscopy Rates with Patient Navigators
Study: Girls on Instagram & TikTok Report Negative Impact on Well-being
Buprenorphine Continuation in Opioid Use Disorder: Pain Evidence
New Study: Addressing Post-Traumatic Osteoarthritis Challenges
University of Ottawa Study Reveals Lower Human Heat Limits
China's First Dpp-1 Inhibitor Study: Key Findings
Tirzepatide Boosts Kidney & Heart Health in Obesity & HFpEF
Study Reveals Suboptimal Guideline Adherence for Chlamydia & Gonorrhea
Covid-19, Influenza, Measles Outbreaks Hit U.S.
Updated Evaluation of Bone Turnover Markers in Osteoporosis
Emergency Department Nurses in States with Abortion Bans Seek Guidance
Unveiling Brain Regions for Learning: Synaptic Plasticity
New Approach for Treating Aggressive Brain Tumors
Alzheimer's Study Reveals Brain Blood Vessel Clue
FDA Recalls Ground Coffee in 15 States for Mislabeling
New Drug Lowers Little-Known Blood Risk
Antibiotic-Resistant Superbug Circulating in Malaysian Hospital
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Lawmakers Unveil $5 Billion Bonds for Salmon Recovery
Wildlife Crossing Over 101 Freeway Reaches Soil Milestone
"Key Role of Magnesium in Human Physiology and Cosmos"
European Astronomers Study Radio Galaxy 3C 111 with VLBA
Groundbreaking 3D Imaging Innovation from Nanjing University
Radical Inequality in Teen Burial Practices in Early Bronze Age Anatolia
Global Temperatures: 4°C Rise Predicted to Slash GDP
The Role of Eye Tracking in VR and AR Headsets
Nanoplastics: Unveiling the Unknown Toxicity
Research Team Develops Flexible Nanofiber Felt with Low Thermal Conductivity
Town and Blue Lagoon Spa Evacuated in Iceland Amid Volcano Threat
Hate Crime Reports Dip in U.S. Cities, Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Incidents Surge
Cattle Herds Drown in Australian Outback Floods
Bitcoin Investor Takes SpaceX Flight Over North and South Poles
University of Washington Challenges Static View of East Asia's Paleolithic Period
Impact of Workaholics' Self-Images on Job Dedication
Challenges in Maintaining Finnish Lake Water Quality
Buzz Pollination: Bees Vibrating Flowers for Pollen
Quantum Breakthrough: Speeding Up Atom Superpositions
New Discovery: Proteins' Cellular Transformation Unveiled
Oldest Phosphatic Stromatoporoid Sponge Found in South China
Insight into Hafnium Oxide's Structural Phase Transition
Europe's Cern Lab Finds No Hurdles for World's Largest Collider
Yale-Led Study: Climate Change Threatens Butterflies
NASA Astronauts Wilmore and Williams Take Responsibility
Unprecedented Study Reveals Uranus' Atmospheric Secrets
Rare Primitive Meteorites Fall Near Aguas Zarcas, Costa Rica
Contaminated Air Exposure Linked to Disease Risks
Cutting-Edge AI 3D Food Printing with Infrared Cooking
Rice University Researchers Tackle PFAS Removal
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Cryptocurrency Backing by Trump & Milei Costs Billions
Chemists Discover Breakthrough in Battery Interface Analysis
Paris Prosecutors Seek Justice for French Consumers in Volkswagen Dieselgate Scandal
Openai Unveils Open Generative Ai Model Amid Rising Competition
FTC Warns 23andMe on Personal Data Protection
Openai Raises $40 Billion, Valued at $300 Billion
Carmakers Face Tough Decisions Amid US Tariffs
Efficient Spare Parts Delivery Model Cuts Costs by Half
Researchers Develop Novel Organic Solar Cells
Satellite Captures Mandalay After 7.7 Magnitude Earthquake
New Degradation Mechanism in Lithium-Ion Batteries
Ict's Role in Augmenting CO2 Emissions in the United States
Dynamic Light Control Enhances Autonomous Vehicles & Medical Tech
"Fraunhofer CyberGuard Project: Standardized Playbooks for Online Security"
Germany's Plastic Packaging Waste Transformed into 3D-Printed Products
World's Smallest Wireless Flying Robot Hits Targets
Researchers Develop Infomorphic Neurons for Accurate Learning
Renault and Nissan Revise Partnership for Financial Stability
Brain Implant Translates Paralyzed Woman's Thoughts to Speech
Challenges Faced by African Data Workers
"23andMe Files for Bankruptcy After Selling 12 Million DNA Kits"
Myanmar Earthquake Exposes Regional Building Code Gaps
AI Chatbots' Truthfulness Enhanced with Chain of Thought Windows
Apple Inc. Progresses on New Office Complex in Culver City
Hackers Breach Oracle Systems, Steal Patient Data
Nokia Settles Patent Dispute with Amazon
Trump Confident in TikTok Deal Before April 5 Deadline
France Fines Apple 150 Million Euros for Privacy Feature
Microsoft: Tech Titan Founded by Gates & Allen
Microsoft's Ubiquitous Desktop Software: Decades of Impact
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSMonday, 16 September 2019
Scientists identify previously unknown 'hybrid zone' between hummingbird species
We usually think of a species as being reproductively isolated—that is, not mating with other species in the wild. Occasionally, however, closely related species do interbreed. New research just published in The Auk: Ornithological Advances documents the existence of a previously undiscovered hybrid zone along the coast of northern California and southern Oregon, where two closely related bird hummingbirds, Allen's Hummingbird and Rufous Hummingbird, are blurring species boundaries. Researchers hope that studying cases such as this one could improve their understanding of how biodiversity is created and maintained.
To address hunger, many countries may have to increase carbon footprint
Achieving an adequate, healthy diet in most low- and middle-income countries will require a substantial increase in greenhouse gas emissions and water use due to food production, according to new research from the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
New species of giant salamander is world's biggest amphibian
Using DNA from museum specimens collected in the early 20th century, researchers from ZSL (Zoological Society of London) and London's Natural History Museum identified two new species of giant salamander—one of which they suspect is the world's biggest amphibian.
Scientists prove low cost arthritis drug can effectively treat blood cancer sufferers
A simple arthritis drug could be an effective, low cost solution to treat patients with blood cancers such as polycythemia vera (PV) and essential thrombocythemia (ET), a breakthrough study by the University of Sheffield has shown.
Only a third of women take up all offered cancer screenings, new research finds
In a paper published today in the Journal of Medical Screening, researchers from King's College London and Queen Mary University of London have found that despite free cancer screening programmes, only 35% take part in all offered programmes.
Eco-friendly method for the synthesis of iron oxide nanoparticles
A team of scientists from Ural Federal University (Yekaterinburg), Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology and other collaborator have published an article about a new method for the synthesis of magnetic nanoparticles. Today nanoparticles are used in various fields, from biomedicine to magnetic resonance imaging, data storage systems, environmental reclamation technologies, magnetically controlled liquids, various sensors, and immunoassay systems.
Subterranean blaze: Indonesia struggles to douse undergound fires
Thousands of Indonesian firefighters are locked in an around-the-clock game of Whack-a-Mole as they battle to extinguish an invisible enemy—underground fires that aggravate global warming.
Dozens of tigers dead after confiscation from Thai temple
More than half of the 147 tigers confiscated from a controversial Thai temple have died, park officials said Monday, blaming genetic problems linked to in-breeding at the once money-spinning tourist attraction.
Hope for coral recovery may depend on good parenting
The fate of the world's coral reefs could depend on how well the sea creatures equip their offspring to cope with global warming.
Researchers advance noise cancelling for quantum computers
A team from Dartmouth College and MIT has designed and conducted the first lab test to successfully detect and characterize a class of complex, "non-Gaussian" noise processes that are routinely encountered in superconducting quantum computing systems.
Amid settlement talks, opioids keep taking a grim toll
As the nation's attorneys general debate a legal settlement with Purdue Pharma, the opioid epidemic associated with its blockbuster painkiller OxyContin rages on in state after state, community after community, killing tens of thousands of people each year with no end in sight.
VW settles Australia emissions cheating scandal
Volkswagen has agreed to pay up to Aus$127 million ($87.3 million) to settle multiple class action suits brought by Australian motorists over a diesel emissions cheating scandal, the parties' lawyers said Monday.
Storm Humberto strengthens but moves away from Bahamas and US
Tropical storm Humberto gained strength Sunday and was expected to return to hurricane force by evening, but its track now puts it far from the Bahamas and the US coast, the US National Hurricane Center said.
Vapes spiked with illegal drugs show dark side of CBD craze
Jay Jenkins says he hesitated when a buddy suggested they vape CBD.
No Deal: Auto workers strike against GM in contract dispute
More than 49,000 members of the United Auto Workers walked off General Motors factory floors or set up picket lines early Monday as contract talks with the company deteriorated into a strike.
Purdue files for bankruptcy in bid to settle opioid crisis cases
Purdue Pharma has filed for bankruptcy in a settlement agreement that it hopes will provide more than $10 billion to address the opioid crisis, the company said in a statement on Sunday.
Reduce, reuse, recycle: The future of phosphorus
When Hennig Brandt discovered the element phosphorus in 1669, it was a mistake. He was really looking for gold. But his mistake was a very important scientific discovery. What Brandt couldn't have realized was the importance of phosphorus to the future of farming.
More predictive genetic risk score sought for type 1 diabetes
Paul Tran is working to develop a highly predictive genetic risk score that will tell parents whether their baby is at significant risk for type 1 diabetes.
Off-label medication orders on the rise for children, study finds
U.S. physicians are increasingly ordering medications for children for conditions that are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration, according to a Rutgers study.
Commonly used drug for Alzheimer's disease doubles risk of hospitalization
A drug commonly used to manage symptoms of Alzheimer disease and other dementias—donepezil—is associated with a two-fold higher risk of hospital admission for rhabdomyolysis, a painful condition of muscle breakdown, compared with several other cholinesterase inhibitors, found a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Heart-healthy forager-farmers in lowland Bolivia are changing diets and gaining weight
A group of forager-farmers in Bolivia's tropical forests—known for having remarkable cardiovascular health and low blood pressure—experienced changes in body mass and diet over a nine-year period, with increased use of cooking oil the most notable dietary change.
Physicians report high refusal rates for the HPV vaccine and need for improvement
Despite its proven success at preventing cancer, many adolescents are still not getting the HPV vaccine. A new study from the University of Colorado School of Medicine at the Anschutz Medical Campus shows that physicians' delivery and communication practices must improve to boost vaccination completion rates.
Three in five parents say their teen has been in a car with a distracted teen driver
It's a highly anticipated rite of passage for many high schoolers—finally getting to drive your friends around.
Childhood behavior linked to taking paracetamol in pregnancy
The research published today in Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology examined whether there were any effects of taking paracetamol in mid-pregnancy and the behaviour of the offspring between the ages of 6 month and 11 years, with memory and IQ tested up until the age of 17. Paracetamol is commonly used to relieve pain during pregnancy and is recommended as the treatment of choice by the NHS.
Obesity linked to a nearly 6-fold increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes
Obesity is linked to a nearly 6-fold increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D), with high genetic risk and unfavorable lifestyle also increasing risk but to a much lesser extent. These are the conclusions of new research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept), by Hermina Jakupovic, University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, Copenhagen, Denmark, and colleagues.
Latest studies suggest a possible downturn in rate of new cases of diabetes
While overall, the numbers (prevalence) of people with type 2 diabetes continue to grow at an alarming rate, new research presented at this year's annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that recent studies suggest the rate at which new cases develop (incidence) may be falling. The study is by Professor Dianna Magliano and Professor Jonathan Shaw, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia, and colleagues.
Types and rates of co-existing conditions in diabetes are different for men and women
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 Sept) shows that men and women experience different comorbidities (other diseases at the same time) as having diabetes or prediabetes, as well as an unexpectedly high rate of prediabetes among children aged 6-10 years.
Scanning the lens of the eye could predict type 2 diabetes and prediabetes
New research presented at this year's annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that specialist analysis of the lens in the eye can predict patients with type 2 diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) (also known as prediabetes, a condition that often leads to full blown of type 2 diabetes).
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