From: Newsletter Phys.org <not-for-reply@physorg.com>
Date: Fri, Nov 7, 2014 at 2:29 AM
Subject: Science X Newsletter Thursday, Nov 6
To: Pascal Alter <pascal.alter@gmail.com>
Mechanical Simulation Showcase
The analysis of mechanical systems and designs is crucial for optimizing your designs throughout the product life cycle. Check out this online resource to see different examples from a wide variety of mechanical applications: http://goo.gl/qZAXMM
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Here is your customized Phys.org Newsletter for November 6, 2014:
Spotlight Stories Headlines
- Rare 2.5-billion-year-old rocks reveal hot spot of sulfur-breathing bacteria- Ghost illusion created in the lab: Neuroscientists awaken 'ghosts' hidden inside the cortex (w/ Video)
- Tiny scallop-like robotic swimmers could deliver drugs to treat diseases
- Ancient DNA shows earliest European genomes weathered the Ice Age
- Caltech rocket experiment finds surprising cosmic light
- Princeton team explores 3D-printed quantum dot LEDs
- Chemical engineers borrow technique to store solar energy
- Researchers create unique graphene nanopores with optical antennas for DNA sequencing
- European satellite could discover thousands of planets in Earth's galaxy
- Human stem cell-derived neuron transplants reduce seizures in mice
- Sustainability, astrobiology illuminate future of life in universe, civilization on Earth
- Microsoft releases Office apps for iPhones, iPads
- Before there will be blood: Pro-inflammatory signaling plays surprising role in creation of hematopoietic stem cells
- New research shows vulnerability in mobile phones' applications offering voice communication security
- Japan scientists make see-through mice
Astronomy & Space news
European satellite could discover thousands of planets in Earth's galaxyA recently launched European satellite could reveal tens of thousands of new planets within the next few years, and provide scientists with a far better understanding of the number, variety and distribution of planets in our galaxy, according to research published today. | |
Caltech rocket experiment finds surprising cosmic lightUsing an experiment carried into space on a NASA suborbital rocket, astronomers at Caltech and their colleagues have detected a diffuse cosmic glow that appears to represent more light than that produced by known galaxies in the universe. | |
Synthetic biology could be big boost to interplanetary space travel(Phys.org) —Genetically engineered microbes could help make manned missions to Mars, the moon and other planets more practical, according to a new analysis by UC Berkeley and NASA scientists. | |
Birth of planets revealed in astonishing detail in ALMA's 'best image ever'Astronomers have captured the best image ever of planet formation around an infant star as part of the testing and verification process for the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array's (ALMA) new high-resolution capabilities. | |
Neutron stars could shine new light on universe expansionAstrophysicists have developed a new way to use gravitational waves to measure the expansion rate of the universe. | |
Jets, bubbles, and bursts of light in TaurusThe NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has snapped a striking view of a multiple star system called XZ Tauri, its neighbour HL Tauri, and several nearby young stellar objects. XZ Tauri is blowing a hot bubble of gas into the surrounding space, which is filled with bright and beautiful clumps that are emitting strong winds and jets. These objects illuminate the region, creating a truly dramatic scene. | |
Sustainability, astrobiology illuminate future of life in universe, civilization on EarthHuman-caused climate change, ocean acidification and species extinctions may eventually threaten the collapse of civilization, according to some scientists, while other people argue that for political or economic reasons we should allow industrial development to continue without restrictions. | |
Hubble surveys debris-strewn exoplanetary construction yards(Phys.org) —Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have completed the largest and most sensitive visible-light imaging survey of dusty debris disks around other stars. These dusty disks, likely created by collisions between leftover objects from planet formation, were imaged around stars as young as 10 million years old and as mature as more than 1 billion years old. | |
CEO: Virgin Galactic looks to resume tests in 2015 (Update)The space tourism company that suffered a tragic setback when its experimental rocket-powered spaceship broke apart over the California desert could resume test flights as early as next summer if it can finish building a replacement craft, its CEO said Wednesday. | |
Behind-the scenes account of seven specks of interstellar dust returned by the Stardust probeThis August, a consortium of 65 scientists announced in the journal Science that they have so far found seven probable but not confirmed ("level 2" ) interstellar dust specks in a collector returned to Earth by the Stardust spacecraft in 2006. An entire issue of the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science was also devoted to the hunt for the dust. | |
Black holes come to the big screenThe new movie "Interstellar" explores a longstanding fascination, but UA astrophysicists are using cutting-edge technology to go one better. They're working on how to take pictures of the black hole at the center of the galaxy. | |
Engineering students embedded intelligence systems headed to International Space StationTwo embedded intelligence systems designed and developed by undergraduate students in Texas A&M University's Dwight Look College of Engineering were aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket headed to the International Space Station (ISS). | |
Earth science on Mars"All systems go!" I said cautiously with a long sigh of relief. I had approved plans for the first soil analysis that would give humankind clues to the past and future habitability of Mars. | |
Is your religion ready to meet ET?How will humankind react after astronomers hand over rock-solid scientific evidence for the existence of life beyond the Earth? No more speculating. No more wondering. The moment scientists announce this discovery, everything will change. Not least of all, our philosophies and religions will need to incorporate the new information. | |
Image: Orion prepares to move to launch padOn Dec. 4, Orion is scheduled to launch atop a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Space Launch Complex 37 in Florida. During the test, Orion will travel 3,600 miles in altitude above Earth. 4 1/2 hours later, the spacecraft will reenter the atmosphere at 20,000 mph and splash down in the Pacific Ocean. Orion's first flight will verify launch and high-speed reentry systems such as avionics, attitude control, parachutes and the heat shield. | |
NASA test flight still on track despite accidents (Update)NASA's biggest test flight in years remains on track for next month, despite last week's space-related accidents. | |
Rosetta: The dark side of the comet(Phys.org) —Rosetta's scientific imaging system OSIRIS has caught a glimpse of the southern side of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. During the past months, this side has continuously faced away from the Sun making it impossible to determine shape and surface structures. Only the light scattered from dust particles in the comet's coma very slightly illuminates this uncharted territory. | |
Orion launch to test human flight risks in deep spaceWith memories still fresh of two commercial space flight accidents in the past 10 days, NASA is readying its first test flight of the Orion spacecraft that could one day carry humans to Mars. |
Medicine & Health news
Ghost illusion created in the lab: Neuroscientists awaken 'ghosts' hidden inside the cortex (w/ Video)Ghosts exist only in the mind, and scientists know just where to find them, an EPFL study suggests. Patients suffering from neurological or psychiatric conditions have often reported feeling a strange "presence". Now, EPFL researchers in Switzerland have succeeded in recreating this so-called ghost illusion in the laboratory. | |
Does life satisfaction increase with age? Only in some places, new study findsLife satisfaction dips around middle age and rises in older age in high-income, English-speaking countries, but that is not a universal pattern, according to a new report published in The Lancet as part of a special series on ageing. In contrast, residents of other regions—such as the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa—grow increasingly less satisfied as they age. | |
Cellular extensions with a large effect: Study explains the link between cilia and diabetesTiny extensions on cells, cilia, play an important role in insulin release, according to a new study, which is published in Nature Communications. The researchers report that the cilia of beta cells in the pancreas are covered with insulin receptors and that changed ciliary function can be associated with the development of type 2 diabetes. | |
Genetically modified cells learn to fight mesotheliomaIt's been called the "fifth pillar" of cancer treatment: genetically re-engineering the human immune system to recognize cancers and fight them. | |
Chemicals found in everyday fruits could minimise organ damage after heart attack and stroke(Medical Xpress)—Scientists have identified chemicals found in some everyday fruit that could protect vital organs from long-term damage following a heart attack or stroke, according to new research carried out in mice. The researchers now hope the chemicals will provide a starting point for developing new injectable drugs that could be used to prevent some of the long-term damage caused by heart attack and stroke. | |
MicroRNA molecule modulates behavioural response to stressChronic stress influences our mood and behavior. Scientists of the "Max Planck – Weizmann Laboratory for Experimental Neuropsychiatry and Behavioral Neurogenetics" investigated the molecular mechanisms of how the brain reacts to stress. For the first time, they could link changes in the level of the microRNA molecule miR19b in stress-related brain areas to different behavior in mice. These findings may pave the way for a better understanding of the way our brain copes with stress. | |
Discovery may revolutionise diabetes treatmentResearch published in the journal Nature Medicine on Monday by my team provides hope for a new approach to treating type 2 diabetes. In animal models of the disease, our treatment restores natural control of blood sugar. | |
Biotech company develops way to carry antibodies across blood-brain barrier to treat Alzheimer's(Medical Xpress)—A team of researches with the biotech firm Genentech Inc has found a way to carry an antibody across the blood-brain barrier using transferrin in a monkey. In their paper published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, the team describes how they came up with the technique, how it works, and how it might be used to help prevent Alzheimer's disease. | |
Researchers provide first peek at how neurons multitaskResearchers at the University of Michigan have shown how a single neuron can perform multiple functions in a model organism, illuminating for the first time this fundamental biological mechanism and shedding light on the human brain. | |
Human stem cell-derived neuron transplants reduce seizures in miceMcLean Hospital and Harvard Stem Cell Institute scientists have new evidence that stem cell transplantation could be a worthwhile strategy to help epileptics who do not respond to anti-seizure drugs. | |
Team genetically 'edits' human blood stem cellsHarvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers at Massachusetts General (MGH) and Boston Children's hospitals (BCH) for the first time have used a relatively new gene-editing technique to create what could prove to be an effective technique for blocking HIV from invading and destroying patients' immune systems. | |
Scientists discover a key to mending broken heartsResearchers at the Salk Institute have healed injured hearts of living mice by reactivating long dormant molecular machinery found in the animals' cells, a finding that could help pave the way to new therapies for heart disorders in humans. | |
Antibiotics: On-the-spot tests reduce unnecessary prescriptionsFast, on-the-spot tests for bacterial infections may help to reduce excessive antibiotic use. A systematic review published in The Cochrane Library, found that when doctors tested for the presence of bacterial infections they prescribed fewer antibiotics. | |
Orange is not the new black: Just highly allergenic for one toddlerMany people don't realize allergies and asthma go hand-in-hand, and about 90 percent of kids with asthma also have allergies. Even more important, when asthma is undiagnosed or poorly controlled, children are at risk for suffering difficult-to-treat allergic reactions to food. | |
New airport security screening method more than 20 times as successful at detecting deceptionAirport security agents using a new conversation-based screening method caught mock airline passengers with deceptive cover stories more than 20 times as often as agents who used the traditional method of examining body language for suspicious signs, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. | |
Researchers use ultrasound and microbubbles to improve stroke treatmentWhen University of Virginia biomedical engineering professor John Hossack and colleagues in the School of Engineering and Applied Science and the School of Medicine consider bubbles, they think of something much more useful than a child's plaything or sparkling wine. They are building an entire technology around tiny, microscopic bubbles – a technology that has the potential to play an important role in diagnosing as well as treating disease like stroke and cancer. | |
Australia a world leader in safe IVFAustralia and New Zealand are world leaders when it comes to safe IVF practice thanks to their focus on single-embryo transfer, according to the Assisted Reproductive Technology in Australia and New Zealand 2012 report by the National Perinatal Epidemiology and Statistics Unit at UNSW Australia. | |
How parents help toddlers catch up on language skillsA conversation about the day's events can play a critical role in a toddler's language development. | |
Skin disease drug finally wins approvalA synthetic hormone developed years ago at the UA can now be marketed in Europe, and U.S. approval will be sought next. | |
Ricin vaccine shows promise in pilot studyA recent study at the Tulane National Primate Research Center showed for the first time that an experimental vaccine could completely protect nonhuman primates exposed to deadly ricin toxin, a potential bioterrorism agent. | |
Battling drug-resistant pathogensEvolution kills people. Andrew Read has been saying so for years. But he never actually saw it firsthand until he worked this summer in a hospital in Ann Arbor, Michigan. | |
Overuse of antibiotics tied to increase in painful gut infectionGoing to the hospital can save your life, but it is not without risks. Patients can be exposed to dangerous infections while receiving treatment. In the United States, health care-associated infections are the fifth leading cause of death among hospitalized patients, accounting for nearly 100,000 deaths in the US each year. | |
Further evidence of potential for new anti-cancer drug(Medical Xpress)—Manchester scientists have shown that a new drug inhibits the growth of tumours in the lab and that its effectiveness is improved by combining it with radiotherapy – suggesting a new approach that could be used in the clinic. | |
Immune system research also may help reveal new asthma cluesA new method of developing vaccines could point the way forward in the fight against infectious diseases for which traditional vaccination has failed, according to a new Rutgers study. | |
New study shows strong link between selenium levels and depressionA new University of Otago study has found that selenium levels that are both too high in the body, and worse, too low, can place young people at greater risk of depression. | |
Engineers and physicians propose new approach to single-ventricle heart surgery for infantsEngineers at the University of California, San Diego, are proposing a new surgical intervention for children born with a single ventricle in their heart—instead of the usual two. The new approach would potentially reduce the number of surgeries the patients have to undergo in the first six months of life from two to just one. If successful, it would also create a more stable circuit for blood to flow from the heart to the lungs and the rest of the body within the first days and months of life. | |
Bats identified as hosts of Bartonella mayotimonensisThe modern sequencing techniques have shown that bats can carry a bacterial species previously been shown to cause deadly human infections in USA. | |
Discovery of genetic and environmental links to lymphomasIn 2001, Christine Skibola, Ph.D., now a professor of epidemiology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health, joined forces with a small group seeking a large goal – discovery of genetic and environmental links to the white blood cell tumors that collectively are called lymphomas. | |
Social support critical to women's weight-loss efforts, study findsBeing accountable to another person and receiving social support may be vital in motivating some women to lose weight and keep it off, a new study says. | |
Researcher's weight management program helps adolescentsOn her way out of the pediatrician's office with her son, Becky Loftus noticed a flyer seeking adolescents interested in learning about nutrition, exercise and maybe shedding a few pounds in the process. Intrigued, she inquired about the weight management program at UVM, which in 12 weeks time would turn her son's poor eating habits into healthy ones and convert a high percentage of fat into muscle. | |
Athlete exhaustion tool measures up to training regimeA tool to help athletes consistently and reliably measure their level of post-performance exhaustion has been developed by Murdoch University researchers. | |
East and West African sickle cell anaemia are genetically similarSickle cell anaemia is most common in Africa and up to 11,000 children are born with the condition every year in Tanzania alone. Yet most of what is known about the genetic basis of this inherited disease comes from studies of US-based or UK-based African-Caribbean populations. | |
Allergy sufferers are allergic to treatment more often than you'd thinkWhether allergy sufferers have symptoms that are mild or severe, they really only want one thing: relief. So it's particularly distressing that the very medication they hope will ease symptoms can cause different, sometimes more severe, allergic responses. | |
Sorting bloodborne cancer cells to better predict spread of diseaseFor most cancer patients, primary tumours are often not the most deadly. Instead, it is the metastatic tumours - tumours that spread from their original location to other parts of the body - that are the cause of most cancer deaths. | |
Diversity Outbred mice better predict potential human responses to chemical exposuresA genetically diverse mouse model is able to predict the range of response to chemical exposures that might be observed in human populations, researchers from the National Institutes of Health have found. Like humans, each Diversity Outbred mouse is genetically unique, and the extent of genetic variability among these mice is similar to the genetic variation seen among humans. | |
Hepatitis A hospitalization rate declines in USNew research reports that the rate of hospitalization due to hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection has significantly declined in the U.S. from 2002 to 2011. Findings published in Hepatology, a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, show that older patients and those with chronic liver disease are most likely to be hospitalized for HAV. Vaccination of adults with chronic liver disease may prevent infection with hepatitis A and the need for hospitalization. | |
First-in-class nasal spray demonstrates promise for migraine pain reliefResearchers are developing a novel prochlorperazine nasal spray formulation as a potential new treatment for migraines. This work is being presented at the 2014 American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS) Annual Meeting and Exposition, the world's largest pharmaceutical sciences meeting, in San Diego, Nov. 2–6. | |
Scientists create Parkinson's disease in a dishA team of scientists led by The New York Stem Cell Foundation (NYSCF) Research Institute successfully created a human stem cell disease model of Parkinson's disease in a dish. Studying a pair of identical (monozygotic) twins, one affected and one unaffected with Parkinson's disease, another unrelated Parkinson's patient, and four healthy control subjects, the scientists were able to observe key features of the disease in the laboratory, specifically differences in the patients' neurons' ability to produce dopamine, the molecule that is deficient in Parkinson's disease. In addition, the scientists also identified a potential strategy for developing novel therapies for Parkinson's disease. | |
Body weight heavily influenced by microbes in the gut, finds twin studyOur genetic makeup influences whether we are fat or thin by shaping which types of microbes thrive in our body, according to a study by researchers at King's College London and Cornell University. | |
A cause of age-related inflammation foundAs animals age, their immune systems gradually deteriorate, a process called immunosenescence. It is associated with systemic inflammation and chronic inflammatory disorders, as well as with many cancers. The causes underlying this age-associated inflammation, and how it leads to diseases, are poorly understood. New work in Carnegie's Yixian Zheng's lab sheds light on one protein's involvement in suppressing immune responses in aging fruit flies. It is published in Cell. | |
New knowledge about the human brain's plasticityThe brain's plasticity and its adaptability to new situations do not function the way researchers previously thought, according to a new study published in the journal Cell. Earlier theories are based on laboratory animals, but now researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have studied the human brain. The results show that a type of support cell, the oligodendrocyte, which plays an important role in the cell-cell communication in the nervous system, is more sophisticated in humans than in rats and mice – a fact that may contribute to the superior plasticity of the human brain. | |
Research strategy supports GSIG's efforts to integrate aging into chronic disease researchScientists who have been successful in delaying mammalian aging with genetic, dietary and pharmacological approaches have developed a research strategy to expand Geroscience research directed at extending human healthspan. The strategy comes at a critical time, given the dramatic increase in the elderly population and a growing recognition that aging is the greatest risk factor for a majority of the chronic diseases that drive later-life disability and death. The strategy is set forth in a commentary published in the November 6th edition of Cell. | |
Transplant of stem-cell-derived dopamine neurons shows promise for Parkinson's diseaseParkinson's disease is an incurable movement disorder that affects millions of people around the world, but current treatment options can cause severe side effects and lose effectiveness over time. In a study published by Cell Press November 6th in Cell Stem Cell, researchers showed that transplantation of neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can restore motor function in a rat model of Parkinson's disease, paving the way for the use of cell replacement therapy in human clinical trials. | |
New research adds spice to curcumin's health-promoting benefitsThe health benefits of over-the-counter curcumin supplements might not get past your gut, but new research shows that a modified formulation of the spice releases its anti-inflammatory goodness throughout the body. | |
Scientists discover new step in a molecular pathway responsible for birth defectsMary R. Loeken, Ph.D., Investigator in the Section on Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology at Joslin Diabetes Center and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, has discovered a molecular pathway responsible for neural tube defects in diabetic pregnancies. Her latest research findings in this pathway were published in the October issue of Diabetes. | |
Is violent injury a chronic disease? Study suggests so and may aid efforts to stop the cycleTeens and young adults who get seriously injured in an assault are nearly twice as likely as their peers to end up back in the emergency room for a violent injury within the next two years, a new University of Michigan Injury Center study finds. | |
Arm pain in young baseball players is common, preventableThe most in-depth survey of its kind found that arm pain is common among supposedly healthy young baseball players and nearly half have been encouraged to keep playing despite arm pain. The findings suggest that more detailed and individualized screening is needed to prevent overuse injury in young ballplayers. The study, led by Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) researchers, was published this week in the online edition of the American Journal of Sports Medicine. | |
Lifestyle education crucial to help young Americans control their blood pressureFar too many "teachable moments" are lost in a doctor's office during which young adults with hypertension could have learned how to reduce their blood pressure. In fact, only one in every two hypertensive young Americans does in fact receive such advice and guidance from a healthcare provider within a year from being diagnosed, says Heather M. Johnson of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in the US. She led a study which examined how regularly such education is provided and documented by one of the ten largest physician practice groups in the US. The findings appear in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, published by Springer. | |
All kidding aside: Medical clowns calm children during uncomfortable allergy testThe dreaded scratch or puncture test is the most common way of assessing allergic reactions to as many as 40 different substances at once. But because the test involves needles that prick multiple points along the skin's surface, it's a particularly high-stress examination for children—and their understandably anxious parents. | |
Research resolves contradiction over protein's role at telomeresMice and humans share a lot more than immediately meets the eye, and their commonalities include their telomeres, protective ends on chromosomes. But in recent years, the role of one particular protein at telomeres has puzzled scientists. | |
Failed Alzheimer's test shows in which direction the research should continueDisappointing results in clinical Alzheimer's studies discourage doctors and scientists from continuing their research into ɣ-secretases and a possible treatment against Alzheimer's disease. In the prestigious journal Cell, the Alzheimer's expert Bart De Strooper (VIB-KU Leuven) argues that these studies are not pointless, but merely indicate what the next steps should be for the Alzheimer's research. This article - or rather, this message - will be spread at the largest Neuroscience meeting that will take place mid-November in Washington. | |
Pneumonia vaccine reducing pediatric admissionsIn Tennessee, the introduction in 2010 of a new pneumococcal vaccine for infants and young children coincides with a 27 percent decline in pneumonia hospital admissions across the state among children under age 2. | |
Pregnant women with PTSD more likely to give birth prematurely, study findsPregnant women with post-traumatic stress disorder are at increased risk of giving birth prematurely, a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine and the U.S. Department of Veterans' Affairs has found. | |
Carving memories at their jointsHow the brain decides when to modify old memories and when to carve new memories is revealed in a study published this week in PLOS Computational Biology. | |
Location of oral cancers differs in smokers, nonsmokersThe location of oral cancers differed in smokers and nonsmokers with nonsmokers having a higher proportion of cancers occur on the edge of the tongue, according to a study published online by JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery. | |
Black, Hispanic kids underrepresented in autism identificationThe number of children diagnosed with autism has increased in recent years, but a new study co-authored by a University of Kansas professor shows that while the number of students with autism increased in every state from 2000 to 2007, black and Hispanic children were significantly underrepresented. | |
Migration negation: Blocking a receptor may combat cancer metastasisMost cancer deaths occur because of metastasis, yet progress in preventing and treating migratory cancer cells has been slow. | |
Olaparib shows success in tumor response rate for patients with BRCA-related cancersOlaparib, an experimental twice-daily oral cancer drug, produces an overall tumor response rate of 26 percent in several advanced cancers associated with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations, according to new research co-led by the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania. The positive response provides new hope for patients with ovarian, breast, pancreatic and prostate cancers whose conditions have not responded to standard therapies. Results of the phase II study are available online in the current issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. | |
Study shows integrative medicine relieves pain and anxiety for cancer inpatientsPain is a common symptom of cancer and side effect of cancer treatment, and treating cancer-related pain is often a challenge for health care providers. | |
Vaccine spray may not work for swine flu in kidsHealth officials say the nasal spray version of the flu vaccine did not protect young children against swine flu last winter and might not work again this year. | |
Lower doses of rheumatoid arthritis drugs may work for some(HealthDay)—Some people in the early stages of rheumatoid arthritis may be able to safely lower their medication doses once their symptoms are well under control, a new study suggests. | |
Walking program feasible, safe for older adults in hospital(HealthDay)—A clinical demonstration program of supervised walking for older adults admitted to the hospital is feasible and safe, and its participants are more often discharged directly to home, according to a study published online Oct. 30 in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. | |
ASCO endorses guideline for radiation after prostatectomy(HealthDay)—The American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO) has endorsed a recent guideline for adjuvant and salvage radiotherapy after prostatectomy. The endorsement was published online Nov. 3 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. | |
Weight-loss surgery has low complication rates, study finds(HealthDay)—People with type 2 diabetes who undergo a weight-loss procedure called laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery have a low risk for complications or death, according to a new study. | |
Collaborative care cuts depression with diabetes(HealthDay)—Using a nurse case-manager-based collaborative primary care team can cut depressive symptoms in patients with type 2 diabetes, according to a study published online Oct. 14 in Diabetes Care. | |
The Lancet: 'Ageing well' must be a global priorityA major new Series on health and ageing, published in The Lancet, warns that unless health systems find effective strategies to address the problems faced by an ageing world population, the growing burden of chronic disease will greatly affect the quality of life of older people. As people across the world live longer, soaring levels of chronic illness and diminished wellbeing are poised to become a major global public health challenge. | |
Secure genetic data moves into the fast lane of discoveryToday, the international open-access open-data journal GigaScience (a BGI and BioMed Central journal) announced publication of an article that presents GWATCH, a new web-based platform that provides visualization tools for identifying disease-associated genetic markers from privacy-protected human data without risk to patient privacy. This dynamic online tool, developed by an international team of researchers from Russia, Australia, Canada, and the US, allows and facilitates disease gene discovery via automation and presentation of intuitive data visualization tools. GWATCH provides results in three dimensions via a scrolling (Guitar Hero-like) chromosome highway. The reviewers get an extremely useful, visually appealing bird's-eye view of positive disease-association results, while all sensitive information and raw data remain secure behind firewalls. | |
US preterm birth rate hits healthy people 2020 goal seven years earlyThe national preterm birth rate fell to 11.4 percent in 2013 – the lowest in 17 years—meeting the federal Healthy People 2020 goal seven years early. Despite this progress, the U.S. still received a "C" on the 7th annual March of Dimes Premature Birth Report Card because it fell short of the more-challenging 9.6 percent target set by the March of Dimes, the group said today. | |
Despite losses, GMO label backers aren't quittingNot even Oregon's backyard chicken owners and vegan foodies had enough money and clout to persuade voters to require labeling of genetically modified foods. | |
AstraZeneca profits tumble in third quarterBritish pharmaceuticals group AstraZeneca announced on Thursday a slump in quarterly profits, in part on higher investment costs, but raised its outlook for full-year revenues. | |
UN health agency sounds alarm over needs for elderlyThe explosion in the world's ageing population presents herculean challenges for health systems, especially in poorer countries, the UN's World Health Organisation (WHO) warned on Thursday. | |
Prison and probation risk assessment tool is not effective in judging re-offendingA psychological risk assessment tool used by prisons and the probation service (NOMS) is not effective when evaluating the future risk of convicted male sex offenders. | |
A means of combatting childhood obesityRecently, the World Health Organisation has highlighted that child obesity is a major problem. More than 40 million pre-school children worldwide are now overweight, the UK being no exception. Child obesity tends to track into adulthood, and increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and some cancers in later life. | |
Convincing psoriasis sufferers to seek treatmentStigma surrounding psoriasis has persisted as long as people have manifested its dry red scaly patches on their skin. Doctors suspect that this includes references in the Bible to "lepers." | |
Women's Health Issues launches Special Collection on Women Veterans' HealthIn honor of Veterans Day, the peer-reviewed journal Women's Health Issues (WHI) today released a new Special Collection on women veterans' health, with a focus on mental health. The special collection also highlights recent studies addressing healthcare services, reproductive health and cardiovascular health of women veterans. | |
To eat fish or not to eat fish? That is the question for pregnant and breastfeeding womenThere is no doubt that pregnant and breastfeeding women try to do everything they can to ensure a healthy outcome for their baby, including eating a healthy, well-balanced diet that provides the necessary nutrients for fetal growth and development. In recent years, there has been significant debate about the consumption of fish among pregnant and breastfeeding women. | |
'Thousands' of Ebola deaths likely unreported: WHO expertThe raging Ebola outbreak has likely killed far more people than the 4,818 deaths reported by the World Health Organization, an expert at the UN health agency said Thursday, warning that thousands of fatalities were likely not accounted for. | |
Ebola watch period nears end in TexasTexas is almost done watching for Ebola in people who had contact with either a Liberian patient or two nurses who were infected while caring for him, officials said Thursday. | |
Drug treatment may help restore kidney function in patients with renovascular diseaseA drug that's currently available for treating a certain type of hypertension may help patients with a kidney condition that can lead to heart problems and premature death, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). | |
Study highlights prevalence of mistreatment between nursing home residentsInappropriate, disruptive, or hostile behavior between nursing home residents is a sizable and growing problem, according to new research from Weill Cornell Medical College and Cornell University. | |
UN Ebola chief optimistic of future drop in casesThe U.N.'s Ebola chief said an extraordinary global response over the past month has made him hopeful the outbreak could end in 2015, though he cautioned that the fight to contain the disease is not even a quarter done. | |
Colon cancer on the rise for U.S. adults under 50(HealthDay)—There's good news and bad news in the war against colon cancer: While rates have fallen among older Americans, cases among adults aged 20 to 49 are rising and expected to continue to do so, a new study finds. |
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