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Science News

Location American Science News for 10 September 2013

Immune system kills healthy cells

Science Daily - 10 Sep 2013 23:14
Medical scientists have made a key discovery about how the immune system kills healthy cells while attacking infections. This finding could one day lead to better solutions for cancer and anti-viral treatments.
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DNA repair could lead to improved cancer treatments

Science Daily - 10 Sep 2013 23:14
Medical researchers made a basic science discovery that advances the understanding of how DNA repairs itself. When DNA becomes too damaged it ultimately leads to cancer.
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Researchers have identified a previously unrecognized type of pathology in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease. These tangle-like structures appear at early stages of Alzheimer's and are not found in other ne...
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The pain and itching associated with shingles and herpes may be due to the virus causing a "short circuit" in the nerve cells that reach the skin.
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Treatment with two common drugs reduced viral replication and lung damage when given to monkeys infected with the virus that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome. The condition is a deadly pneumonia that has killed mo...
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Vast supplies of groundwater found under Kenya

New Scientist - 10 Sep 2013 23:00
A remote region of north-west Kenya is sitting on 250 trillion litres of groundwater – enough to keep 40 million people in water if tapped sustainably     
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Every day, in dozens of synchrotrons around the globe, electrons are whip­ped around in circular storage rings to provoke them into emitting X-rays, useful for imaging materials, identifying... --
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Hey Ladee

Physics Buzz - 10 Sep 2013 23:00
Last Friday was the perfect night to witness a moon mission. Lucky for me, NASA thought so too, and thus hurled a golf cart-sized probe aboard an Air Force Minotaur V rocket out of Earth's atmosphere en route to our frie...
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Physicists Net Fractal Butterfly

Scientific American - 10 Sep 2013 23:00
After a nearly 40-year chase, physicists have found experimental proof for one of the first fractal patterns known to quantum physics: the Hofstadter butterfly. Named after Douglas Hofstadter, the... --
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Heart disease patients with positive attitudes are more likely to exercise and live longer, says a new study. Patients may have better health outcomes when doctors' treatments are aimed at increasing positive attitude an...
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Stepping closer to personalized medicine

Science Daily - 10 Sep 2013 22:53
What we think of today as a "complete" genome is not truly complete. But, with the new technology, scientists can finally sequence an entire "complete" genome from an individual. The new technology gives unprecedented ac...
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As a woman in her mid-forties who didn't smoke, Elizabeth Lacasia never expected to be diagnosed with lung cancer. But in 2006, after she developed a persistent and serious cough, a chest X-ray and CT scan revealed sever...
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Among patients with diabetes, use of an outpatient electronic health record (EHR) in an integrated healthcare delivery system was associated with modest reductions in emergency department visits and hospitalizations, but...
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Truman Show Syndrome: Why People Think They're Living In A Reality Show Sufferers of the "Truman Show" syndrome imagine a world where everyone is watching them. And they're just barely wrong. What do you do when delusions and paranoia look an awful lot like the real world? That's at least on...
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Israeli Researchers Debut Software That Extracts 3-D Objects From Photos When editing digital images, algorithms struggle to differentiate one object from another, even when it seems obvious to the human eye. Some Israeli researchers have developed a workaround software that prompts the human...
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Nanotube-coated spider silk can sense your heartbeat

New Scientist - 10 Sep 2013 20:56
The tough yet flexible material is electrically conductive and can be made in a few simple steps – it might find uses in a range of bendy medical sensors     
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By studying how memories are made, neurobiologists created new, specific memories by direct manipulation of the brain, which could prove key to understanding and potentially resolving learning and memory disorders.
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A new study reports that fatty liver and insulin resistance may result from fructose produced in the liver from non-fructose containing carbohydrates.
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Use of stimulant medications to treat Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children and adolescents has increased significantly over the past several years. This trend toward increased use of prescription s...
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How long until there's a Pixar movie?     
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A quarter of men in some parts of Asia admit to rape

New Scientist - 10 Sep 2013 19:19
In the aftermath of high-profile trials for rape in India, a study has revealed the extent of sexual violence in other parts of Asia     
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Fossilised dinosaur battle expected to fetch millions

New Scientist - 10 Sep 2013 18:18
One of the most significant fossil discoveries in North America, showing two dinosaurs frozen in a fight to the death, will be auctioned in November     
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