Science News
Important step taken toward an HIV vaccine
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 18:11
Researchers have developed a strategy that can revolutionize vaccine design. The new strategy is used to develop vaccines that can prevent HIV infection and the development of AIDS.
Proof-of principle study finds imatinib improves symptoms for patients with severe asthma
Science Daily - 18 May 2017 01:44
In a new, proof-of-principle study researchers have found that targeting the mast cells with imatinib, a drug used to effectively treat certain forms of cancer, improved airway hyperresponsiveness, a measure of the sensi...
Mepolizumab helps patients with refractory Churg-Strauss syndrome
Science Daily - 18 May 2017 01:44
Mepolizumab, an anti-IL5 monoclonal antibody, increased remission rates, cut exacerbations in half and reduced the need for ongoing corticosteroid therapy in patients with refractory cases of the rare autoimmune disease ...
Number of mutations in a tumor varies by age and type of cancer
Science Daily - 18 May 2017 01:44
The tumor mutation load, or TML, in a patient's cancer biopsy varied by age and the type of cancer, along with several other factors, a team of investigators has found.
Pain linked to non-medical prescription opioid use in young adults
Science Daily - 18 May 2017 01:44
Physical pain -- often "self-medicated" without help from healthcare professionals -- is an important contributor to non-medical prescription opioid (NMPO) use by young adults.
Friendship group influences dating violence risk for early-maturing girls
Science Daily - 18 May 2017 01:44
A new study has found that early-maturing girls are more likely to be the victim of abuse from a dating partner if their friend group contains more boys.
Cheap illumination's benefits in remote areas may be limited
The Economist - 18 May 2017 01:18
But will it help him learn? FOR sunny places not connected to the electricity grid, the falling price of solar panels and LED lighting promises a bright future. No more smoky, lung-damaging kerosene lamps. Greater securi...
Beaver dams keeps streams cool and protect sensitive fish
New Scientist - 18 May 2017 00:00
We used to think that beaver dams warmed up stream waters as felling trees to build them reduces shade. Now it seems the opposite might be true
Cutting down on cancer surgeries
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 23:47
Engineers have combined light and sound in a microscopy technique that could allow surgeons to determine -- in the operating room -- whether a tumor has been completely removed from a cancer patient, reducing the need fo...
Early MRI may lower costs for prostate cancer treatment
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 23:47
A diagnostic MRI followed by one of three MRI-guided biopsy strategies is a cost-effective method to detect prostate cancer, according to a new study.
Hopping miniature parrots suggests how birds first got airborne
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 23:00
Parrotlets save energy when foraging by jumping from perch to perch with a few wingbeats, a technique that might have predated true flight
Hopping miniature parrots suggest how birds first got airborne
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 23:00
Parrotlets save energy when foraging by jumping from perch to perch with a few wingbeats, a technique that might have predated true flight
Cardiovascular disease causes one-third of deaths worldwide
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 22:36
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD), including heart diseases and stroke, account for one-third of deaths throughout the world, according to a new scientific study that examined every country over the past 25 years.
Microbes seen controlling action of host's genes
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 22:36
Microbes can control their animal hosts by manipulating the molecular machinery of their cells, triggering patterns of gene expression that consequently contribute to health and disease, new research shows. The work, whi...
Exposure to BPA potentially induces permanent reprogramming of painted turtles' brains
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 22:36
BPA is a chemical that is used in a variety of consumer products, such as food storage containers and water bottles. In previous studies, researchers determined that BPA can disrupt sexual function and behavior in painte...
Metabolism harnessed to reverse aggressiveness in leukemia
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 22:36
Researchers have identified a new drug target for the two most common types of myeloid leukemia, including a way to turn back the most aggressive form of the disease.
Advancing cancer immunotherapy with computer simulations and data analysis
Science Daily - 17 May 2017 22:36
Immunotherapy supercharges the body's own disease-fighting mechanisms to combat cancer. Researchers are using advanced computing resources to simulate the effects of immunotherapy drugs, develop novel dose-finding design...
Human blood stem cells grown in the lab for the first time
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 22:00
Two labs have found a way to create cells that can form new blood - paving the way for donor-free blood transfusions and bone marrow transplants
What the end of the atomic renaissance means for nuclear power
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 22:00
The next generation of nuclear reactors was meant to bring cheaper, safer power. Where are they, and can they save the industry from bankruptcy and closure?
Plasma jet engines that could take you from the ground to space
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 22:00
Jet engines that compress gas into a plasma have been successfully tested at ground level for the first time
Brain stent to let five paralysed people control exoskeleton
New Scientist - 17 May 2017 22:00
The implant travels to the brain via the blood and could provide a permanent way of recording signals used to direct an exoskeleton that helps paralysed people walk
Destruction of a quantum monopole observed
Phys.org - 17 May 2017 21:45
Scientists at Amherst College (USA) and Aalto University (Finland) have made the first experimental observations of the dynamics of isolated monopoles in quantum matter.