Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Newswise: FAU Receives State Grant for Cybersecurity, IT Training
Released: 18-Jul-2022 9:40 AM EDT
FAU Receives State Grant for Cybersecurity, IT Training
Florida Atlantic University

FAU was awarded more than $800,000 by the state of Florida as part of a $15.6 million initiative to prepare students and mid-career professionals for jobs in the burgeoning fields of cybersecurity and information technology.

Released: 15-Jul-2022 4:05 PM EDT
Researchers pulled 700,000 years of glacial history from an Andean lakebed
University of Pittsburgh

Our understanding of the ice-age cycles has been limited by a lack of well-dated tropical records to understand the past of climate change. However, a core of mud from Lake Junín discovered by a team of researchers provides the first continuous and independently dated archive of tropical glaciation that reveals more than 700,000 years of glacial records.

Newswise: What the Mechanical Forces Behind Protein Folding Can Tell Us About Metastatic Cancer
13-Jul-2022 2:00 PM EDT
What the Mechanical Forces Behind Protein Folding Can Tell Us About Metastatic Cancer
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Cells communicate with themselves and their cellular environment through mechanical bonds. This work advances understanding of the role of these forces on proteins as they interact to accomplish their biological functions, including the control of cancer.

Released: 15-Jul-2022 11:50 AM EDT
Online Parenting Skills Program Shields Children From Adverse Effects of Divorce
Arizona State University (ASU)

A randomized controlled trial conducted by scientists in the Arizona State University Department of Psychology has shown that an online parenting program for divorcing or separating parents reduces interparental conflict, improves quality of parenting, and decreases children’s anxiety and depression symptoms. The reduction in interparental conflict quality was stronger the outcome of in-person versions of the same program that are based on decades of research. The findings, published in Family Court Review, were based on parent and child reports.

   
14-Jul-2022 9:55 AM EDT
Whole blood exchange could offer disease-modifying therapy for Alzheimer’s disease, study finds
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

A novel, disease-modifying therapy for Alzheimer’s disease may involve the whole exchange of blood, which effectively decreased the formation of amyloid plaque in the brains of mice, according to a new study from UTHealth Houston.

Newswise: Epo Does Not Help with Neurological Damage to Newborns
Released: 14-Jul-2022 4:10 PM EDT
Epo Does Not Help with Neurological Damage to Newborns
University of Washington School of Medicine

Adding erythropoietin to cooling therapy for term newborns with birth asphyxia has no benefit over cooling therapy alone, a study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine. The findings contrast with results from small trials in which erythropoietin appeared safe and effective, noted Dr. Sandra “Sunny” Juul, senior author of the study. The Alan Hodson Endowed Professor of Pediatrics at the UW School of Medicine, Juul is also the UW Medicine chief of neonatology (newborn medical care) and practices at Seattle Chldren's.

Newswise: Rensselaer Researchers Learn to Control Electron Spin at Room Temperature To Make Devices More Efficient and Faster
Released: 14-Jul-2022 10:45 AM EDT
Rensselaer Researchers Learn to Control Electron Spin at Room Temperature To Make Devices More Efficient and Faster
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

As our devices become smaller, faster, more energy efficient, and capable of holding larger amounts of data, spintronics may continue that trajectory. Whereas electronics is based on the flow of electrons, spintronics is based on the spin of electrons.

Newswise: Study Suggests That C. Difficile Drives Some Colorectal Cancers
Released: 14-Jul-2022 10:00 AM EDT
Study Suggests That C. Difficile Drives Some Colorectal Cancers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Data collected by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and the Bloomberg~Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy suggest that Clostridioides difficile, or C. diff, a bacterial species well known for causing serious diarrheal infections, may also drive colorectal cancer.

13-Jul-2022 9:40 AM EDT
Where and When Violent Crime Rates Fall, Heart Disease Deaths Fall, Too
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

A new study of data from Chicago found that the neighborhoods where violent crime fell the most, cardiovascular disease mortality fell sharply, too

Newswise: New Research on Colorectal Cancer
Released: 13-Jul-2022 1:35 PM EDT
New Research on Colorectal Cancer
Yale Cancer Center/Smilow Cancer Hospital

Michael Cecchini, MD, recently received a K08 grant from the NCI to conduct research aimed at investigating multiple clinical trials for patients with colorectal cancer. The first trial is a Phase II study in which patients will be treated with a combination not normally used against colorectal cancer: temozolomide (TMZ), a well-known drug, and olaparib, from the relatively new class of drugs of PARP inhibitors.

Released: 13-Jul-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Study Finds No Benefit to Taking Fluticasone Furoate for COVID-19 Symptoms
Duke Clinical Research Institute

A study led by the Duke Clinical Research Institute (DCRI) in partnership with Vanderbilt University found no symptomatic or clinical benefit to taking fluticasone furoate for the treatment of mild-to-moderate COVID-19 symptoms.

Released: 12-Jul-2022 5:10 PM EDT
UW study strengthens evidence of link between air pollution and child brain development
University of Washington

A new study led by the University of Washington has added evidence showing that both prenatal and postnatal exposure to air pollution can harm kids.

Newswise: Faculty Receives $3 Million National Institutes of Health Grant to Develop Novel Bayesian Machine Learning Methods
Released: 12-Jul-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Faculty Receives $3 Million National Institutes of Health Grant to Develop Novel Bayesian Machine Learning Methods
Rutgers School of Public Health

Rutgers School of Public Health associate professor, Liangyuan Hu, has received a $3,301,474 grant (R01HL159077) from the National Institutes of Health National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Newswise:Video Embedded new-structure-found-in-cells
VIDEO
Released: 12-Jul-2022 12:05 PM EDT
New Structure Found in Cells
Washington University in St. Louis

A research group led by Rohit Pappu in the McKelvey School of Engineering and Anthony Hyman at the Max Planck Institute have discovered a new, relevant level of structure in cells.

11-Jul-2022 4:45 PM EDT
Costs for Emergency Allergy Injectors Still High for Some?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

People with severe allergies now have more choices for which epinephrine auto-injector to carry in case they suffer a life-threatening attack, and most pay less for it than they did when the EpiPen was the primary option, a new study shows. But for a significant minority, the amount they pay has stayed high – largely due to their health insurance plans.

Newswise: UTSW researchers show effectiveness of migraine drug in weight loss
Released: 11-Jul-2022 3:05 PM EDT
UTSW researchers show effectiveness of migraine drug in weight loss
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Triptans, a commonly prescribed class of migraine drugs, may also be useful in treating obesity, a new study by scientists at UT Southwestern suggests. In studies on obese mice, a daily dose of a triptan led animals to eat less food and lose weight over the course of a month, the team reported in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Newswise: New $3.25M NIH grant to support research in oral manifestations of HIV, including mouth cancer
Released: 11-Jul-2022 1:05 PM EDT
New $3.25M NIH grant to support research in oral manifestations of HIV, including mouth cancer
Case Western Reserve University

Researchers at the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine will use a $3.25 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to better understand how HIV impacts the human body, from mouth lesions to oral cancer.

Newswise: Pulse oximeter performance among minority patient groups may lead to reduced delivery of supplemental oxygen
Released: 11-Jul-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Pulse oximeter performance among minority patient groups may lead to reduced delivery of supplemental oxygen
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Minority patient groups may receive less supplemental oxygen in the ICU due to inaccurate readings from pulse oximeters.

Newswise: UT Southwestern researchers capture first images of antibody attacking neuron receptor
Released: 11-Jul-2022 11:55 AM EDT
UT Southwestern researchers capture first images of antibody attacking neuron receptor
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Using UT Southwestern’s Cryo-Electron Microscopy Facility, researchers for the first time have captured images of an autoantibody bound to a nerve cell surface receptor, revealing the physical mechanism behind a neurological autoimmune disease. The findings, published in Cell, could lead to new ways to diagnose and treat autoimmune conditions, the study authors said.



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