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Life Technology™ Medical News

Key Driver of Breast Cancer: Inavolisib Combo Boosts Survival

Students Learn AI for Medical Diagnosis But Miss Data Flaws

Trump Administration's Termination of LGBTQ+ Health Grants

Future Hope: Human Sperm Production Breakthrough

Heatwave Dilemma: Wig in Sweltering Heat

Summer Events: Beware of Loud Noises

Coffee's Interaction with Medicines: Effects and Risks

Study Shows Dostarlimab Boosts Endometrial Cancer Survival

Radionuclide Therapy with Terbium Fights Lymphoma

Family's Round-the-Clock Care in Idaho Woods

Study: Higher Emergency Surgery Costs for Black, Hispanic, and Asian Patients

Breakthrough Drug Treatment for Rare Brain Disease

1 in 4 U.S. Children Have Parent with Substance Use Disorder

Menopause Linked to Increased UTIs in Canadian Women

Police First Responders Lack Mental Health Crisis Training

Heartwarming Viral Videos: Parents Chat with Babies

Retinol Skincare Products: Clear, Radiant, Youthful Skin

Rising Temperatures Spark Increase in Tick-Borne Diseases

Marijuana Use Surges Among US Seniors

Study Reveals EMR Enhancement Boosts Fertility Preservation

Genetically Modified Fruit Flies Addicted to Cocaine

New Visualization Tool Simplifies Cancer Cell Metastasis Tracking

Unique Tumor Profiling Study Reveals Precise Treatment Options

Grandmother's Alzheimer's Battle: Nuri Jeong's Emotional South Korea Visit

Study Reveals How Digital Games Educate on Depression

University of Chicago Study: Health Insurance Access Saves Lives

Denver Hospital Nurse-Led Initiative Reduces Complications

New Study Reveals Effective Trauma Support for Young Children

Scientists Race to Uncover Liver Cancer Growth Mechanisms

Purebred Dogs: Powerful Model for Studying Gastric Cancer

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Life Technology™ Science News

Merging Neutron Stars: Key for Multi-Messenger Astronomy

Impact of Industrial Iron Release on Ocean Ecosystem

Poxvirus Exploits Host's Protein Synthesis Machinery

Global Sea Level Rise Accelerates: Predicted 1.6m Surge

UK and US Deal Raises Concerns Over Food Safety

2024-25 School Year Nears End: Summer Slide Concerns

Storms Hit City: Vulnerable Neighborhoods at Risk

Building and Construction Sectors: Major Contributors to Global Greenhouse Gases

WVU Student Discovers LSD-Like Fungus for Pharma Innovation

Detroit's Population Grows Second Year: Remarkable Comeback

Veterans Protest Trump Administration Cuts

Victorians Discover Leadbeater's Possum Beyond State Borders

Importance of Forest Soil in Water, Carbon, and Nutrient Storage

Volcanologists Uncover Campi Flegrei Caldera Structure

Polycavity Materials: Solution State Functions Revealed

New Catalytic Material Developed for Efficient Hydrogen Production

New Protein Activation Strategy Developed for Living Mice

Paignton: Hub of Global Seaweed Innovation

Advancements in Artificial Intelligence Transform Business

Ancient Bone Etchings Hint at Prime Number System

University of Waterloo Researchers Achieve Vertical Sphere Roll

California's Dust Issue: Impact of 1M Idled Farmland Acres

9-Year-Old Shares Thoughts on Environment

Colossal Biosciences Restores Dire Wolf in Ecosystem

Community Policies: PolicyCraft Boosts Support & Consensus

Australia's Historic Challenges: Climate, Food, Energy, Pandemics

Maine Researchers' Guide to Enhancing Cemetery Beauty

Chemist Kim Steenbakkers Discovers Space Molecules

Australia's National Science Agency Completes Food System Stocktake

Study Reveals Virginia Neighborhood Disparities in Heat Exposure

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Life Technology™ Technology News

The Vulnerability of Big Tech Sharing Economy Platforms

Solar panels' shade helps boost Colorado grassland productivity in dry years

Airbnb scams: New book explores thriving criminal activity on big tech platforms

Shaded Solar Grasses Thrive in Dry Year

Solid Electrolytes Enhance Lithium-Ion Battery Safety

'Space charge layer' effect could boost solid-state battery performance

High Hopes for Green Hydrogen Production in Africa

Green hydrogen from Africa much more costly than previously assumed

Big Tech's AI Experiment: Language Models' Persistent Errors

Neurosymbolic AI is the answer to large language models' inability to stop hallucinating

Belief in Action: The Little Engine's Steep Climb

The biggest barrier to AI adoption in the business world isn't tech—it's user confidence

Global Craze for Blind Box Toys Sweeps Internet

Blind box toys are booming: Are they just child's play or something more concerning?

Your smartphone is a parasite, according to evolution

The Modern Age Parasite: Wi-Fi Addiction

Students Revolutionize Maritime Transport with Self-Sailing Boats

Charting a new course with autonomous sailboat fleets

Tesla Sales Rebound in Norway, Defying European Trend

As Tesla stalls across Europe, sales rise in Norway

EU Fines Delivery Hero & Glovo €329M for Antitrust Violations

Germany's Competition Watchdog Criticizes Amazon's Pricing Rules

Amazon price rules anti-competitive: German regulator

EU hits food delivery company Delivery Hero with 329 mn-euro-fine

New laser crystals and fibers aim to reduce reliance on rare-earth imports

Germany's Vulnerability to Raw Material Restrictions

Smartphones: The parasite of the modern era?

Smartphones: The Greatest Parasite of the Modern Age

How Wireless Sensors Drive Smart Home Efficiency

Intelligent sensors cut energy use by enabling more efficient decision-making

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Monday, 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 research finds coastal living linked with better mental health

Living close to the sea could support better mental health in England's poorest urban communities, finds a new study published today in the journal Health and Place.

Microneedle biosensor accurately detects patient's antibiotic levels in real time

Small, non-invasive patches worn on the skin can accurately detect the levels of medication in a patient's system, matching the accuracy of current clinical methods.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

'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.

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.