Science News
Princeton graduate student creates program that helps stabilize fusion plasma
e! Science News - 16 Apr 2016 12:37
Imène Goumiri, a Princeton University graduate student, has worked with physicists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) to simulate a method for limiting instabilities that...
Disappointing data for diabetes drug in the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
EurekAlert! - 16 Apr 2016 08:00
(European Association for the Study of the Liver) New data presented today at The International Liver Congress™ 2016 in Barcelona, Spain, demonstrates that the drug sitagliptin - more commonly used to treat diabetes - ...
SLAC researchers recreate the extreme universe in the lab
Phys.org - 16 Apr 2016 03:13
Conditions in the vast universe can be quite extreme: Violent collisions scar the surfaces of planets. Nuclear reactions in bright stars generate tremendous amounts of energy. Gigantic explosions catapult matter far out ...
Farmers are not just the backbone of a nation, they may have stronger hips too
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 23:31
This study found that in Sweden, for male farmers, the risk of a hip fracture was 14 percent lower compared to other occupations, adjusted for age. When also adjusted for rural status of residence, the risk reduction was...
UK study supports cardiovascular safety of calcium and vitamin D supplementation
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 23:31
Rsearchers have presented a new study that supports the cardiovascular safety of calcium and vitamin D supplementation. The study was based on analysis of the UK Biobank, a very large study comprising 502,664 men and wom...
Hip fracture risk rises in the 10 years after total knee replacement
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 23:31
A Swedish study shows that individuals with total knee replacement (TKR) due to primary osteoarthritis had a low risk for hip and vertebral fracture in the decade before surgery. However, after total knee replacement, th...
Going tobacco-free, tall order for health-care facilities
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 21:08
Healthcare facilities being tobacco-free seems like a natural fit, but enforcing a tobacco-free policy that prohibits all people from using tobacco in buildings and on campus grounds it owns and leases can be a tall orde...
In the face of chronic pain, clinicians seek best practices for management while evading opioid abuse
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 21:08
Researchers have discussed best practices in management of chronic pain in people with cancer.
This Week's Awesome Stories From Around the Web (Through April 16)
Singularity Hub - 16 Apr 2016 19:00
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: Neural Networks: What Are They, and Why Is the Tech Industry Obsessed With Them? John Brownlee | Fast Company "Combine them with conversational interfaces, and neural networks can make true artif...
At-home cognitive remediation may help cognitive symptoms in multiple sclerosis
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:47
In a randomized controlled trial, people with MS who used a computer-based cognitive remediation training program at home for 12 weeks had significantly higher cognitive test scores than those who used a placebo computer...
Standardizing care improves outcomes for infants born with neonatal abstinence syndrome
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:47
Standardizing hospital care policies across institutions for infants diagnosed with drug withdrawal symptoms at birth reduces their length of treatment and hospitalization, according to new collaborative research.
Preliminary study: Antibody therapy reduces cancer stem cells in multiple myeloma
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:47
An experimental antibody treatment decreased by half the number of cancer stem cells that drive the growth of tumors in nearly all patients with multiple myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow and bone tissue, according to...
Numerical simulations of tensile tests of red blood cells
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:47
The researchers investigate the effects of the hold position of the red blood cells on strain field during tensile testing using numerical simulations.
Experimental drug guadecitabine found safe in patients with colorectal cancer
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:46
In a small, phase I clinical trial, researchers say they show for the first time that the experimental drug guadecitabine (SGI-110) is safe in combination with the chemotherapy drug irinotecan and may overcome resistance...
Low fat diet helps postmenopausal women avoid deadly breast cancers
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:46
Women who stayed on a low fat diet for approximately eight years reduced their risk of death from invasive breast cancers and improved their survival rates.
Pollutants in fish inhibit human's natural defense system
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:46
In a new study, environmental pollutants found in fish were shown to obstruct the human body's natural defense system to expel harmful toxins. The research team suggests that this information should be used to better ass...
Heart attack patients more depressed but get fewer antidepressants
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:46
Heart attack patients are more depressed but are less often prescribed antidepressants than people who have not had a heart attack, according to new research.
Sarcopenia (loss of muscle) which affects up to 20 percent of European seniors, may increase 63 percent by 2045
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:46
Sarcopenia is a disease associated with the ageing process. Hallmark signs of the disorder are loss of muscle mass and strength, which in turn affects balance, gait and overall ability to perform tasks of daily living. T...
Phase 2 data show treatment efficacy in 'difficult-to-cure' hepatitis C patients
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:38
A hepatitis C (HCV) drug currently under investigation, ABT-493 and ABT-530, which is an all-oral once-daily antiviral treatment, helped HCV genotype 3 patients with heavily scarred livers and no previous treatment histo...
New study demonstrates efficacy of all-oral treatment regimens in adolescents with hepatitis C virus
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:00
Adolescents with Hepatitis C (HCV) could benefit from a combination of direct-acting antivirals, according to new data. The study demonstrated that adolescent patients with HCV genotype 1 aged 12 to 18 years who were tre...
Low-cost generic direct-acting antiviral treatment for hep C is equivalent to branded formulations
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:00
New data demonstrates that generic direct-acting antivirals are as effective and safe as branded treatments to cure hepatitis C.
New study challenges the concept of treatment failure in hepatitis C
Science Daily - 16 Apr 2016 17:00
New data demonstrate that choosing a different combination of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment for hepatitis C can eradicate the virus at four weeks in patients who had already failed on previous medication regime...