Science News
Can Your BMI Predict How Long You'll Live?
Live Science - 25 Jan 2016 16:48
Many people would face the lowest risk of dying if their BMI was 26 -- which is considered overweight, new research suggests.
Global, national burden of diseases, injuries among children and adolescents
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 20:41
A new report examines global and national trends in the fatal and nonfatal burden of diseases and injuries among children and adolescents in 188 countries based on results from the Global Burden of Disease 2013 study.
No more insulin injections?
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 01:11
In patients suffering from Type 1 diabetes, the immune system attacks the pancreas, eventually leaving patients without the ability to naturally control blood sugar. These patients must carefully monitor the amount of su...
Toward more predictive genetic mouse models of Alzheimer's disease
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 01:03
Alzheimer's disease is a degenerative brain disease that leads to cognitive decline, dementia and ultimately death, mostly in the elderly. It's already a huge health burden, and it's getting worse as the population ages....
Recombinant bacterium boosts production of compound that can relieve menopause symptoms
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 01:03
A soy isoflavone derivative that goes by the scientific moniker, (S)-equol, has proven potent for mitigating menopausal symptoms. However, it has been impossible to produce in quantities sufficient for widespread commerc...
Extra sperm analysis could help involuntarily childless couples
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 00:59
A simple analysis of chromosomal breaks in sperms can help guide choice of fertility treatment and, thereby, increase chances of successful assisted reproduction for involuntary childless couples, new research shows.
Acid-sensitive molecular changes contribute to the emergence of pandemic influenza
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 00:57
Scientists have linked increased resistance of hemagglutinin protein to acidic pH with emergence of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic flu virus; the finding may help spot future pandemic viruses.
New mouse-human modeling system enables study of disease development in vivo
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 00:57
A new mouse-human modeling system has been created that could be used to study neural crest development as well as the modeling of a variety of neural crest related diseases, including such cancers as melanoma and neurof...
The aftermath of 1492: Study shows how Native American depopulation impacted ecology
Science Daily - 26 Jan 2016 00:57
Among the Pueblo Indians of northern New Mexico, disease didn't break out until nearly a century after their first contact with Europeans, following the establishment of mission churches in the seventeenth century, a tea...
'4D-Printed' Objects Change Shape After They're Made
Live Science - 26 Jan 2016 00:48
By mimicking the way orchids, calla lilies and other plants bend and twist, scientists have created shape-shifting "4D-printed" structures that they say could one day help heal wounds and be used in robotic surgical tool...
Watch brainy zoo animals figure out a box puzzle to get at food
New Scientist - 26 Jan 2016 00:00
Tests on 35 species show that relative brain size predicts a carnivore's ability to solve problems, with bears beating meerkats
'Behemoth' Daddy Longlegs Discovered in Oregon
Live Science - 25 Jan 2016 23:07
A new species of daddy longlegs has been unearthed lurking on the forest floor in the mountains of Oregon, and it's a relative beast compared to its close cousins.
Novel 4-D printing method blossoms from botanical inspiration
e! Science News - 25 Jan 2016 23:04
A team of scientists at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences has evolved their microscale 3D printing t...
Most commonly used TB test fails to accurately diagnose pregnant HIV+ women
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 22:00
The most commonly used test for tuberculosis fails to accurately diagnose TB in up to 50 percent of pregnant women who are HIV+, new research has found. The research is believed to be the first study to compare the accur...
Gene often lost in childhood cancer crucial in cells' life or death decision
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 22:00
A gene that is often lost in childhood cancer plays an important role in the decision between life and death of certain cells, according to a new study. Researchers have discovered the process by which that gene, KIF1B-?...
Smartphones may decrease sedentary time, increase activity, study finds
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 21:56
Using smartphone reminders to prompt people to get moving may help reduce sedentary behavior, report investigators. Evidence has linked sedentary time to increased risk of breast, colorectal, ovarian, endometrial, and pr...
Mom's in control, even before you're born
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 21:55
Researchers have uncovered previously unappreciated means by which epigenetic information contained in the egg influences the development of the placenta during pregnancy. The research, which was performed in mice, indic...
Did ear sensory cell stereocilia evolve from gut microvilli?
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 21:54
Evolution likes to borrow. It can take an already-successful biological structure and alter it until it serves a new function. Two independent groups studying the proteins that organize gut microvilli now suspect that th...
Did Zika's recent mutations let it explode as a global threat?
New Scientist - 25 Jan 2016 21:36
As the virus continues to spread, scientists are trying to understand how it went from causing sporadic, contained outbreaks to threatening almost an entire hemisphere
Potential therapeutic targets identified for multiple sclerosis
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 20:52
Treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) and other inflammatory diseases may benefit by new findings from a study that identified potential therapeutic targets for a devastating disease striking some 2.3 million people world...
Microscopic drug 'depots' boost efficacy against tumors in animal model
Science Daily - 25 Jan 2016 20:47
Biomedical engineering researchers have developed a technique for creating microscopic 'depots' for trapping drugs inside cancer tumors. In an animal model, these drug depots were 10 times more effective at shrinking tum...
US east coast snowstorms linked to slowdown of Atlantic current
New Scientist - 25 Jan 2016 20:43
The record-breaking snowfall seen in the US over the weekend may become more common if Atlantic ocean current is slowing down as some suggest