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Life Technology™ Medical News

Texas Measles Outbreak Ends in Gaines County

Israeli Study Reveals Home's Vital Role in Health

Study on Vector-Borne Chagas Transmission in Florida

Navigating Head and Neck Cancer Conversations

Global Collaboration Key in Fighting Antimicrobial Resistance

New Study: Multi-Contaminant Water Treatment Prevents 50K+ Cancer Cases

Study Links NRTIs to Higher Glaucoma Risk

Shoulder Instabilities: Challenges in Diagnosis

Longevity Linked to Cognitive Decline: Boost Memory with Brain Exercises

Importance of Implantable Bioelectronics in Neuroscience

Updated Guidelines for Managing WHO Grade 4 Glioma

Scientists Uncover Promising Drug Candidates for Tissue Stress Conditions

Boosting Skin-to-Skin Contact: Newborn Care Training Success

First Malaria Treatment for Newborns Approved by Swiss Health Regulators

Norwegian Policy Strains Family Caregivers

Human Stem Cells Prompted to Turn into Bone Cells by Squeezing

Study Reveals 1 in 10 Workers in Their 30s Use Drugs at Work

Prototype Imaging System Enhances Gastrointestinal Cancer Detection

Breakthrough Discovery: Adult Stem Cells Found in Non-Human Primate

New AI Diagnostic Approach for Neurodivergent Disorders

Study Reveals Misconceptions About Processed Foods

Nutrition Importance for Cancer Patients: Head & Neck Challenges

Study Reveals Impact of Discharges Against Medical Advice

Scientists Uncover Cancer Cell Power Waves

Experts Emphasize Lived Experience in Health Care

Generation Z Disregards Doctor's Orders

Over 230,000 Lives Saved: Cancer Control Impact Study

Measles Cases in U.S. Surge to 25-Year High

Observational Trial Reveals Insights on Metastatic Breast Cancer Treatment

Report by York Academics Reveals Regional Disparities in Children's Food Security

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Life Technology™ Science News

Photosystem II: Vital Role in Oxygen Production

False Claims Spread Amid Texas Flash Flood Tragedy

Climate Change Accelerates Heat Wave Lengthening

Study Shows Surge in Atmospheric Methane Not from Tropical Wetlands

Debunking Myths: Raccoons in Germany

New Method for Building Microscopic Robots

New Selective Biocatalyst Produces Useful Epoxides

UC San Diego Scholar Amy Eguchi on AI's Impact on Education

Impact of Heat Stress on Broiler Chicken Meat Quality

Scientists Discover Luminescent Complex in Organic Molecules

University of Adelaide's Optical Quantum Clocks Outperform GPS

Study Reveals Sex-Specific Genetic Loci in Cichlid Fish

Catching Invasive Nocturnal Fish: A Guide

Study Reveals Restoring Seabird Populations Benefits Coral Reefs

Spanish Firefighters Fight Massive Forest Fire

Wildfire Forces Marseille Airport Closure

Peter Jackson's Rare Moa Bones Collection Sparks Biotech Partnership

Study Reveals Climate Impact on Atmospheric Dryness

Breakthroughs Unveil Energy Flow in Photosystem II

Evolution of Predatory Fish: Insights on Mammal Origins

Humans Lock Up Water in Dams, Shifting Earth's Poles

University of Houston Professor Transforms Bacterial Cellulose

Older Brits Delay Retirement as Younger Workers Hold Unrealistic Hopes

Nasa's Hubble Telescope Spots V 372 Orionis in Orion Nebula

Discovery of Sunspots' Magnetic Significance

Study Reveals Impact of Warmer Winters on Forest Carbon Storage

Ph.D. Student Develops Precision Genome Editing Software

Genetic Insights on Siberian Flying Squirrel

Quantum Battery Lifespan Boosted by Australian Researchers

Rare Discovery: Traveling Workshop Finds 15th-Century Orit Books

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Metal 3D Printing Boosts Strength with Cellular Structures

Study quantifies how cellular structures enhance strength in 3D-printed metals

Impact of Weather on CO2 Capture Efficiency in Germany

Direct air capture—A lever for climate action, but not cost-effective everywhere

"Governments Pass New Cybersecurity Laws Amid Record Investments"

Your data privacy is slipping away. Here's why, and what you can do about it

Test-time training could lead to LLMs that are better at complex reasoning

Challenges Faced by Large Language Models

AI personal assistants could buy your groceries and book your plane tickets

Tech Industry Introduces Digital Personal Shopping Assistants

What makes a good AI prompt? Here are 4 expert tips

Working Harmoniously with AI: A Key to Success

AI-Generated Video Revolutionizes Creative Industry

AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry

Georgia Tech Researchers Develop Carbon Dioxide Removal Method

Low-cost method can remove CO₂ from air using cold temperatures and common materials

Unist Research Team Reveals Next-Gen 6G Semiconductor

Low-power, nonvolatile RF switch promises energy-efficient 6G and autonomous vehicle communications

AI cloud infrastructure gets faster and greener: NPU core improves inference performance by over 60%

Generative AI Models Demand High Memory Capacity

Mass timber could elevate hospital construction: Study shows engineered wood is more microbe-resistant than plastic

University of Oregon Researchers Promote Wood in Healthcare

Optimizing Water Transportation: Key Strategies for Efficiency

Predictive model uses pressure data to help reduce water leaks in pipes

Potassium-Ion Batteries Outperform Sodium-Ion: Energy Storage Boost

Potassium-ion batteries may offer higher energy density than sodium-ion batteries

AI Enhances Basketball Foul Detection

AI system brings new precision to basketball foul detection and analysis

Decoupled electrolysis method paves way for industrial-scale green hydrogen production

Pathway for Scaling Up Decoupled Water Electrolysis Technology

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Thursday, 12 September 2019

Over one-fifth of injured U.S. adult cyclists, mostly men, not wearing a helmet

Men and ethnic minorities are less likely to wear cycle helmets and more likely to suffer from head and neck injuries in accidents, according to new research published in Brain Injury.

Study offers verdict for China's efforts on coal emissions

Researchers from China, France and the U.S. have evaluated China's success in stemming emissions from its coal-fired power plants (CPPs).

Few people with peanut allergy tolerate peanut after stopping oral immunotherapy

Allergy to peanut, which is often severe, is one of the most common food allergies in the United States. Although previous studies have shown that peanut oral immunotherapy (OIT)—ingesting small, controlled amounts of peanut protein—can desensitize adults and children and prevent life-threatening allergic reactions, the optimal duration and dose is unknown. In a study that followed participants after OIT successfully desensitized them to peanut, discontinuing OIT or continuing OIT at a reduced dose led to a decline in its protective effects. The study, published online today in The Lancet, also found that several blood tests administered before OIT could predict the success of therapy. The Phase 2 study was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the NIH, and may inform who may benefit from peanut OIT and what changes in this experimental treatment should be implemented.

Innovative treatment to prevent common brain infection could save NHS 7 million pounds per year

An innovative solution used to prevent common brain infections in patients having surgery for hydrocephalus has been found to significantly reduce infection rates according to a report published in The Lancet today.

At NY Fashion Week, robotic dresses take on a life of their own

Fashion and technology have often gone hand in hand, improving supply chains and bringing the world's runways to the masses, but at this week's shows in New York, robotic designs took center stage.

Beijing to exit 200 most polluted cities list

Beijing's notoriously bad air quality has improved in recent years and the Chinese capital is expected to drop out of a list of 200 most polluted cities in the world this year, a data provider said Thursday.

Oil spill adds to list of Dorian-induced woes in Bahamas

The air smells like fuel, the ground is covered in a black paste-like substance and the residents of Grand Bahama are afraid.

Leonardo da Vinci's mechanical lion goes on display in Paris

Leonardo da Vinci's famous mechanical lion on Wednesday went on display in Paris for a month, in a tribute to the Renaissance master 500 years after his death.

Four things to know about vaping

The Trump administration has announced it will soon ban flavored e-cigarette products to deter an ever growing number of young users.

Uber vows to keep fighting sweeping California labor bill

California lawmakers confronting the changing definition of work approved sweeping legislation Wednesday designed to give many contract workers new pay and benefit protections, but tech giants Uber and Lyft vowed to keep fighting the changes, possibly by bankrolling an expensive fight on the 2020 ballot.

Mint, menthol: Vape industry has dug heels in on flavor bans

Efforts to ban flavored e-cigarettes and reduce their appeal to youngsters have sputtered under industry pressure in over a half-dozen states this year even as one state, Michigan, moves ahead with its own restrictions and President Donald Trump promises federal ones.

Heart attack patients take longer to call emergency when symptoms are gradual

Heart attack symptoms can be gradual or abrupt and both situations are a medical emergency. That's the main message of research published today in the European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

Strategies to connect with barricaded buyers

Researchers from Clemson University and University of Kentucky published a new paper in the Journal of Marketing, which examines several means by which suppliers can enhance their competitiveness when selling to barricaded buyers.

How marketers can shape customer sentiment during events

Researchers from University of Tennessee, IESEG School of Management, and Georgia State University published a new paper in the Journal of Marketing that investigates the role of firms' customer engagement initiatives in social media and analyzes how firms seek to influence digital sentiment by shaping customers' experiential interactions.

It takes a 'consortium': Researchers develop metabolic engineering technique

For years, scientists have explored ways to alter the cells of microorganisms in efforts to improve how a wide range of products are made—including medicines, fuels, and even beer. By tapping into the world of metabolic engineering, researchers have also developed techniques to create "smart" bacteria capable of carrying out a multitude of functions that impact processes involved in drug delivery, digestion, and even water decontamination.

Gene therapy helps functional recovery after stroke

A new gene therapy turns glial cells—abundant support cells in the brain—into neurons, repairing damage that results from stroke and significantly improving motor function in mice. A paper describing the new therapy, which uses the NeuroD1 gene, appears online in the journal Molecular Therapy. Once further developed, this NeuroD1-based gene therapy could potentially be used to treat stroke, which is a leading cause of disability in the U.S., with 800,000 new stroke patients every year.

UK improves cancer survival, but is still behind other high-income countries

Cancer survival in the UK has improved since 1995, although it still lags behind other high-income countries, according to new analysis by the International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP), which is managed by Cancer Research UK.

Specialized training benefits young STEM researchers

The First-year Research Immersion (FRI) program at Binghamton University, State University of New York has proven that young college students are capable of leading real research. And according to a new study, students in FRI do better when the instructors who oversee their projects are provided extra training.

Enhancing the way epilepsy is managed by engaging community pharmacists

The University of Washington's School of Pharmacy announced on Thursday, Sept. 12, a collaboration with global biopharmaceutical company UCB to improve access to care for people living with epilepsy. This interdisciplinary project will explore ways in which community pharmacists can better support people living with this neurological disorder.

Electrical-first cardioversion strategy for AFib results in shorter ED length of stay

A multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial confirms that both chemical-first and electrical-first approaches are effective strategies for acute atrial fibrillation; however, an electrical-first strategy results in a significantly shorter emergency department (ED) length of stay. The study findings are published in the September 2019 issue of Academic Emergency Medicine (AEM), a journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM).

Infant with deadly leukemia saved by drug for adult liver cancer

UCSF Benioff Children's Hospitals have successfully treated a months-old infant with a rare childhood leukemia using a targeted therapy approved for adults with inoperable liver cancer and advanced kidney cancer.

Talking receptors may affect relaxin at work

Fibrosis, the damaging build-up of hardened or scarred tissue in the body, is a hallmark of various diseases and can lead to the dysfunction and failure of organs such as the heart and kidney. Fibrosis-related diseases in various organs contribute to around 45 per cent of deaths in developed countries.

Study finds genetic analysis can aid treatment of eosinophilic Esophagitis

Personalized medicine—where the proper medicine and proper dose are used for the individual patient—moved a step closer to reality for children suffering from eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), an inflammation of the food pipe often caused by an allergic reaction to certain foods. The study, led by researchers from Nemours Children's Health System and published today in the Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology & Nutrition, suggests that a simple genetic test from a saliva sample may greatly boost response rates in children with eosinophilic esophagitis who are treated with a class of medications called proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), which are commonly prescribed to treat acid-related conditions.

Victims of physical or sexual assault should have better access to medical services

Victims of sexual and physical attacks should have greater access to specialist medical forensic examinations, even if they have not reported the offence to police, according to new research published in peer-reviewed journal Forensic Sciences Research.

Microplastics stunt growth of worms: study

New research shows that the presence of microplastics can stunt the growth of earthworms, and even cause them to lose weight—potentially having a serious impact on the soil ecosystem.