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Life Technology™ Medical News

Study Reveals Vegan Diets Lack Key Amino Acids

Physical Activity Linked to Brain Health in Adults

How Liver Zones Aid Waste Clearance & Organ Repair

Novel Strategy for Treating Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Multinational Team Reports Positive Results in Asian Blood Cancer Trial

Stem Cell Trials Show Safety for Parkinson's

Fermentation: Microorganisms Breaking Down Carbs & Protein

Global Mpox Outbreak Impacts 100+ Countries, Sparks Scientific Interest

Most Effective Treatments for Children's Abdominal Pain

Metabolic Pathways Influence Osteoarthritis Development

Vision Impairment Linked to Driving Cessation

High Demand for Kidneys in US Organ Transplant Queue

Study Reveals Colorectal Cancer Trends in UK

Nature-Based Program for Mental Health Shows Mood Improvement

Role of Carbon Dioxide in Airborne Disease Transmission

Ingestible Gas-Sensing Capsule Advances Gut Health Monitoring

Improving Mobility for Children and Adults with Disabilities

Scientists at The Jackson Laboratory Uncover Blood Stem Cell Mutation Mechanism

Unraveling Brain Mechanisms of Musical Pleasure

Boy Killed in Hyperbaric Chamber Fire: Four Charged

Early Menopause Linked to Poor Cognitive Outcomes

Men's Reluctance to Visit Doctor Puts Prostate Cancer Detection at Risk

Europe's Aging Population: Who Will Care for Your Relatives?

Researchers Uncover Mechanisms of Severe Schistosomiasis

Smartwatches Gain FDA Approval for Sleep Apnea Detection

Challenges of Discharge for Heart Failure Patients

Improved Access to Care for Low-Income Michiganders

Protein Deactivation in Liver Cells Reduces Cancer Risk

Improving Indigenous Health with Cultural Medicines

Genetic Link to Alzheimer's: Early Neuronal Damage Detected

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Life Technology™ Science News

Viral TikTok Cookie Challenge Tests Child's Sharing Willingness

Neuroscience Importance in Children's Education

Rattlesnake Venom Potency Linked to Weather

Study Links Earthquake Shaking Intensity to Car Crash Risk

Giant Virus Jyvaskylavirus Found in Finland

Boosting Anticipatory Governance Worldwide: AI Predicts Future

Media Buzz: Dire Wolf De-Extinction Sparks Headlines

NYU Study Reveals Pollution-Fighting Genes in Gowanus Organisms

Role of Mitochondria in Cell Fate Determination

Unlocking Africa's Diverse Indigenous Foods

Study Reveals Potential Decline in U.S. Broiler Egg Fertility

Chirality-Induced Spin Selectivity in Electron Motion

Dynamic Control of Optical Bleaching for Advanced Technologies

Innovative Coastal Resilience Pilot at Morningside Park

Absurdly Long Pine Needles Sing in Southeastern U.S. Savanna

Protein Interactions in Synapses: New Insights on Memory Formation

Role of Railroads in the Holocaust

Cash Transfers Reduce Child Marriage in Rural Areas

Physicists Uncover New Cell Mobility Mechanism

Study: Americans Favor Longer Jail for Opponents after Violence

Academic Publishing Incentives Impacting Scientific Progress

New Tool Argo Tracks Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Environment

First Confirmed Video of Colossal Squid in Natural Habitat

Australia's Election Campaign Lacks Homelessness Solutions

Masters of Camouflage: Meet the Ground-Dwelling Dirt Ants

Debate: Do Non-Human Animals Understand Fairness?

Unesco Study: Seashell Mineral Key to Safer Plastic

Plant Bioengineering: Enhancing Crop Resilience for Global Demand

Study Reveals Importance of Workplace Culture for Australian Lawyers

Ancient Metabolic Activity: Glycolysis Converts Glucose into Energy

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Harvard RoboBee Masters Safe Landing Technology

Lehigh University Researchers Predict Abnormal Grain Growth

Electric Trains Boost Air Quality on Caltrain Line

Innovative Building Material: Mycelium and Bacteria Cells

Scientists Develop Zero Thermal Expansion Materials for Lithium-Ion Batteries

Energy and Climate Policy Clash in Australia's 2025 Election

UQ Researchers Achieve Record Solar Cell Efficiency

Challenges Facing Lead Halide Perovskite Solar Cells

Innovative Cookbook: Using Eggshells in Recipes

How Contact Between Materials Generates Static Electricity

Developing Bio-Compatible Organic Energy Generators

California's Silicon Valley Crosswalks Mock Trump, Zuckerberg, Musk

Nvidia Expects $5.5 Billion Hit in China Chip Sales

Dutch Tech Giant ASML Warns of Economic Uncertainty

Europe Urged to Declare Independence from US Tech

Solar Panels Transforming Niger's Capital

South Korean Actor Simon Lee Shocked by Unauthorized Image Use

Drone Outperforms Pilots in International Racing Event

Penn Engineers Develop First Light-Powered Neural Network Chip

Mark Zuckerberg Defends Meta in Antitrust Trial

Lithium Salt Unveils Potential for Affordable Battery Innovation

Virtual Worlds in Video Games: Architectural Environments Influence Gameplay

Innovative Desalination Tech Cuts Waste

Online Opinions Split: A Divided Conversation

The Power and Perils of AI Models

"Stretchable Self-Healing Lithium Battery Innovation"

Chinese Scientists Develop iDust Tool for Improved Dust Storm Predictions

Texas Engineers Uncover Breakthrough in Battery Technology

Scientists Uncover Peculiar Term: Vegetative Electron Microscopy

Ukraine War Impact: Geothermal Solution for UK Energy Crisis

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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.

Gold-DNA nanosunflowers for efficient gene silencing and controlled transformation

Developing an efficient delivery system for enhanced and controlled gene interference-based therapeutics is an existing challenge in molecular biology. The advancing field of nanotechnology can provide an effective, cross-disciplinary strategy to facilitate nucleic acid delivery. In a new report, Shuaidong Huo and colleagues in the interdisciplinary departments of Nanoscience, Interactive Materials, Chemistry and Polymer Research in China, Germany and the U.S. used triplex-forming oligonucleotide sequences coupled to its complementary strand to mediate the self-assembly of ultra-small gold nanoparticles.

The hidden traffic impacts of private schooling

In Australia today, just over 40% of secondary school children and almost 30% of primary school children attend a private school. By contrast, in the UK only 7% of children are privately educated.

Student maps Niagara's invasive species

They hitch rides on the soles of people's shoes and in water carried and dumped by ships, enabling them to sneak through borders undetected.

Cyberbullying: Help children build empathy and resilience as their identity develops

Disturbing events related to cyberbullying in recent months and years have raised great concern among parents, youths and educators regarding the everyday lives of children in online spaces —as well as how they develop their capacities to judge right and wrong.

An ultrathin nanoelectromechanical transducer made of hafnium zirconium oxide

Recently developed nanomechanical resonators that can operate at super-high (i.e., three to 30 GHz) and extremely high (30 to 300 GHz) frequency regimes could be extremely valuable for the development of more advanced semiconductor electronics such as wideband spectral processors and high-resolution resonant sensors. Integrated nanoelectromechanical transducers could enable the development of very small sensors and actuators to facilitate mechanical interaction with the outside world at the atomic level with ultra-high resolution. However, realizing integrated electromechanical transduction at the nanoscale has so far proved to be very challenging.

Technology will not save us from climate change, but imagining new forms of society will

Citizen action on climate change has reached a new intensity: school children by the thousands regularly skip school to protest and Extinction Rebellion's civil disobedience recently caused widespread disruption in cities around the world. Challenge and disruption is important in prompting change. But it's also key that we consider—and show—how a zero carbon future could work in practice. This is where the field of social innovation – the development of new ideas that meet social needs—is coming of age.

Gluten-free diets won't help healthy guts

Healthy people who avoid gluten by choice may not get any benefit from the gluten-free restriction on their diet, according to new research.

Preserved pollen tells the history of floodplains

Many of us think about pollen only when allergy season is upon us.

New study reveals important yet unprotected global ocean areas

The largest synthesis of important marine areas conducted to date reveals that a large portion of Earth's oceans are considered important and are good candidates for protection. A first of its kind, the study was conducted by a multidisciplinary team of researchers including Ellen Pikitch, Ph.D., and Christine Santora of Stony Brook University and Dr. Natasha Gownaris, a Ph.D. graduate of Stony Brook University. The team examined 10 diverse and internationally recognized maps depicting global marine priority areas. The findings, published in Frontiers in Marine Science, may serve as a roadmap for the goal set by the United Nations to create 10 percent of the ocean as marine protected areas (MPAs) by 2020.

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.

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.

Nerve cell protection free from side effects

The hormone erythropoietin (Epo) is a well-known doping substance that has a long history of abuse in endurance sports such as cycling. In addition to promoting red blood cell production (erythropoiesis), which improves the oxygen supply, Epo also protects nerve cells from cell death. In order to use this effect to cure neurodegenerative diseases, however, the negative effects caused by Epo through the stimulated formation of red blood cells need to be prevented. Researchers at the University of Göttingen have now discovered an alternative Epo receptor that could potentially also trigger protective effects in humans without the side effects on erythropoiesis. The results were published in the journal Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience.

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.