Science News
How weight affects 'wait'
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:51
Overweight and obese children are at greater risk for pedestrian injury, new research shows. It's not because overweight and obese kids can't cross the street fast enough. Rather, in a study involving traffic simulations...
How to predict pediatric post-concussion symptoms
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:47
A new study based on the largest prospective cohort of children with concussion in the world introduces a validated clinical prediction score that will help health providers and researchers to predict the duration of ped...
HIV targets tissue macrophages, researchers demonstrates
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:47
HIV infects and reproduces in macrophages, large white blood cells found in the liver, brain and connective tissues of the body, new research demonstrates. This discovery has significant implications for HIV cure researc...
Custom-fitted spine implants
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 23:08
Advances in medical imaging and implant manufacturing are making it possible to tailor an implant to the patient receiving it, and using patient-specific rods in reconstructive surgery gives patients with spinal deformit...
Man's Routine Dental Procedure Causes Life-Threatening Infection
Live Science - 8 Mar 2016 05:15
A rare and potentially life-threatening liver infection developed in a Pennsylvania man after a routine dental exam, a new report says.
Antidepressants linked to tooth implant failure, new study finds
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 23:08
Antidepressants, commonly used to treat anxiety, pain and other disorders, quadruple the risk of dental implant failure, according to a new pilot study. Each year of antidepressant use doubled the odds of failure.
Trouble sleeping? The size of your tongue, tonsils could be why
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 23:08
Oversized tonsils and tongues place people at high risk for obstructive sleep apnea, a disorder in which breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep due to blocked upper airways, suggests a new report.
Predicting potential pharma side effects
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:49
A computer program that can predict whether or not a given pharmaceutical will have worrying side effects has been developed. Researchers have developed the 'in silico' testing system for drugs in the early stage of drug...
Researchers unlock mechanisms in brain that separate food consumption from cravings
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:49
Understanding non-homeostatic eating -- or eating that is driven more by palatability, habit and food cues -- and how it works in the brain may help neuroscientists determine how to control cravings, maintain healthier w...
Positive attitudes prevail within families of people with Down syndrome
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:48
Within most families, the experience of having a member with Down syndrome is generally a positive one, new research concludes. Investigators evaluated surveys of more than 2,000 parents or guardians of individuals with ...
Design research can improve patient experiences of radiotherapy
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:47
Patients risk experiencing anxiety and fear when health care does not meet individual patients' needs. New approaches to reduce anxiety for instance over radiotherapy are needed and design research is well-suited to meet...
Health apps and the sharing of information with third parties
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:31
One-fifth of smartphone owners had health apps in 2012. Now a new study examined the privacy policies of Android diabetes apps and the sharing of health information.
Cardiovascular safety of obesity treatment naltrexone-bupropion uncertain
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:31
The cardiovascular safety of the obesity treatment naltrexone-bupropion remains uncertain because of the unanticipated early termination of a trial to determine its safety, according to a study.
Women suffer more neck pain than men
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:30
Women are 1.38 times more likely than men to report neck pain due to cervical degenerative disc disease, according to a new study.
How skin cancer starts: Skin cancer teams up with Sonic the Hedgehog
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:30
An international team of scientists studied what mutations are responsible for formation of the most common skin cancer type.
First case of acute myelitis in a patient infected with Zika virus
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:29
A first case of acute myelitis following infection with Zika virus has been reported for the first time. A young patient in the acute phase of an infection by Zika virus presented motor deficiency in the four limbs, asso...
Do gun restrictions help reduce gun deaths?
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:29
Researchers looked at the associations between firearm-related laws and firearm homicides, suicides, and unintentional injuries and deaths. The results indicate that gun violence tended to decline after countries passed ...
New scanning technology benefits diabetic eye care in national telemedicine trial
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:29
Ultrawide field (UWF) scanning technology significantly improved the ability of experts at a remote central location to identify diabetic retinopathy in a patient, and to judge whether the eye disease warranted referring...
For lupus patients, anti-inflammatory immune cells are maturing Into wrong cell type
Science Daily - 8 Mar 2016 22:29
One of the mysteries of lupus is why the immune cells that normally keep inflammation at bay can't seem to do their job. A study now suggests that for people with lupus, the B cells that regulate inflammation are getting...
Multi-scale simulations solve a plasma turbulence mystery
e! Science News - 8 Mar 2016 03:22
Cutting-edge simulations run at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) over a two-year period are helping physicists better understand what influences the beh...
NIST's internet time service serves the world
Phys.org - 9 Mar 2016 01:51
The Internet Time Service operated by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) serves much of the Earth, with customers from around the globe. In one month of study alone, just two of the 20 NIST servers...
Shades of Luke Skywalker? Bionic Fingertip Lets Amputee Feel Textures
Live Science - 9 Mar 2016 00:02
Using a bionic fingertip, an amputee for the first time has been able to feel rough and smooth textures in real-time, as though the fingertip were naturally connected to his hand.