Latest News from: McGill University

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Released: 23-Sep-2014 1:05 PM EDT
Microplastic Pollution Discovered in St. Lawrence River Sediments
McGill University

A team of researchers from McGill University and the Quebec government have discovered microplastics (in the form of polyethylene ‘microbeads,’ less than 2 mm in diameter) widely distributed across the bottom of the St. Lawrence River, the first time such pollutants have been found in freshwater sediments.

Released: 11-Sep-2014 4:55 PM EDT
Drugs for Depression Linked with Failure of Dental Implants
McGill University

A team from McGill University has discovered that people who take the most common antidepressants (such as Celexa, Paxil, Lexapro, Prozac, and Zoloft, the Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors or SSRIs) are twice as likely to have dental implants fail as those who are not taking SSRIs.

Released: 29-Aug-2014 11:00 AM EDT
Reducing Water Scarcity Possible by 2050
McGill University

It is possible to significantly reduce water scarcity in just over 35 years, according to researchers from McGill University and Utrecht University. They outline strategies in six key areas that they believe can be combined in different ways in different parts of the world to effectively reduce water stress by 2050.

27-Aug-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Walking Fish Reveal How Our Ancestors Evolved Onto Land
McGill University

About 400 million years ago a group of fish began exploring land and evolved into tetrapods – today's amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. But just how these ancient fish used their fishy bodies and fins in a terrestrial environment and what evolutionary processes were at play remain scientific mysteries.

Released: 25-Aug-2014 3:00 PM EDT
Black Carbon – a Major Climate Pollutant –Also Linked to Cardiovascular Health
McGill University

Black carbon pollutants from wood smoke are known to trap heat near the earth’s surface and warm the climate. A new study led by McGill Professor Jill Baumgartner suggests that black carbon may also increase women’s risk of cardiovascular disease.

31-Jul-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Life Expectancy Gap Between Blacks and Whites in the U.S. Varies Considerably Across States
McGill University

Racial differences in life expectancy have declined nationally but still vary substantially across U.S. states, according to a new study by McGill University researchers. The findings, published in the journal Health Affairs, suggest that state policies could play a key role in further reducing racial differences in mortality. The researchers calculated annual state-specific life expectancies for blacks and whites from 1990 to 2009 and found that progress was uneven across states during the past two decades.

Released: 4-Aug-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Speedier Diagnosis of Diseases Such as Cancer Likely Thanks to New DNA Analysis Technique
McGill University

Researchers from McGill University and the Génome Québec Innovation Centre have achieved a technical breakthrough that should result in speedier diagnosis of cancer and various pre-natal conditions.

Released: 21-Jul-2014 3:15 PM EDT
Global Warming ‘Pause’ Since 1998 Reflects Natural Fluctuation
McGill University

Statistical analysis of average global temperatures between 1998 and 2013 shows that the slowdown in global warming during this period is consistent with natural variations in temperature, according to research by McGill University physics professor Shaun Lovejoy.

Released: 10-Jul-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Radio-Burst Discovery Deepens Astrophysics Mystery
McGill University

The discovery of a split-second burst of radio waves by scientists using the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico provides important new evidence of mysterious pulses that appear to come from deep in outer space.

25-Jun-2014 11:30 AM EDT
A Breakthrough for Organic Reactions in Water
McGill University

Green-chemistry researchers at McGill University have discovered a way to use water as a solvent in one of the reactions most widely used to synthesize chemical products and pharmaceuticals.

Released: 17-Jun-2014 3:00 PM EDT
Death by Prescription Painkiller
McGill University

The number of deaths involving commonly prescribed painkillers is higher than the number of deaths by overdose from heroin and cocaine combined, according to researchers at McGill University. In a first-of-its-kind review of existing research, the McGill team has put the spotlight on a major public health problem: the dramatic increase in deaths due to prescribed painkillers, which were involved in more than 16,000 deaths in 2010 in the U.S. alone. Currently, the US and Canada rank #1 and #2 in per capita opioid consumption.

Released: 10-Jun-2014 12:00 PM EDT
New Permafrost Is Forming Around Shrinking Arctic Lakes, but Will It Last?
McGill University

Researchers from McGill and the U.S. Geological Survey, more used to measuring thawing permafrost than its expansion, have made a surprising discovery. There is new permafrost forming around Twelvemile Lake in the interior of Alaska. But they have also quickly concluded that, given the current rate of climate change, it won’t last beyond the end of this century.

6-Jun-2014 1:00 PM EDT
A Tiny Molecule May Help Battle Depression
McGill University

Levels of a small molecule found only in humans and in other primates are lower in the brains of depressed individuals, according to researchers at McGill University and the Douglas Institute. This discovery may hold a key to improving treatment options for those who suffer from depression.

   
Released: 5-Jun-2014 12:00 PM EDT
What a 66-Million-Year Old Forest Fire Reveals About the Last Days of the Dinosaurs
McGill University

As far back as the time of the dinosaurs, 66 million years ago, forests recovered from fires in the same manner they do today, according to a team of researchers from McGill University and the Royal Saskatchewan Museum.

Released: 26-May-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Melatonin Makes Old Bones Stronger
McGill University

Faleh Tamimi, a professor in McGill’s School of Dentistry, is the leader of a research team that has just discovered that melatonin supplements make bones stronger in elderly rats and therefore, potentially, in elderly humans too.

Released: 15-May-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Students From Concordia and McGill Win International Competition
McGill University

An innovative proposal to harvest water in some of the world’s most arid locations has won the international competition Shell Ideas360.

7-May-2014 3:00 PM EDT
What Doesn’t Kill You May Make You Live Longer
McGill University

What is the secret to aging more slowly and living longer? Not antioxidants, apparently. Many people believe that free radicals, the sometimes-toxic molecules produced by our bodies as we process oxygen, are the culprit behind aging. Yet a number of studies in recent years have produced evidence that the opposite may be true.

Released: 6-May-2014 12:25 PM EDT
Neutron Star Magnetic Fields: Not So Turbulent, After All?
McGill University

A study by McGill University physicists sheds new light on the expected geometry of the magnetic field in neutron stars.

29-Apr-2014 10:30 AM EDT
Like Puzzle Pieces, 3D Genomics Holds a Key to Classifying Human Diseases
McGill University

To solve a puzzle, you need to recognize shapes, patterns and a particular kind of order. In much the same way, researchers at McGill University have discovered that the 3D shape of a leukemia cell’s genome holds a key to solving the puzzle of human diseases. The researchers report their findings in the open access journal Genome Biology.

24-Apr-2014 2:00 PM EDT
The Scent of a Man
McGill University

An international team of pain researchers led by scientists at McGill University has found that the gender of experimenters has a big impact on the stress levels of rodents used in research.

Released: 24-Apr-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Paying Closer Attention to Attention
McGill University

Researchers from McGill have suggested that there may be an overreporting of attention problems in children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD), simply because parents and teachers are using a misplaced basis for comparison. They are testing and comparing children with FASD with children of the same physical or chronological age, rather than with children of the same mental age, which is often quite a lot younger.

17-Apr-2014 3:00 PM EDT
Pain Curbs Sex Drive in Female Mice, but Not in Males
McGill University

A study published in the April 23 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience found that pain from inflammation greatly reduced sexual motivation in female mice in heat -- but had no such effect on male mice.

15-Apr-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Antibiotics Improve Growth in Children in Developing Countries
McGill University

Antibiotics improve growth in children at risk of undernourishment in low and middle income countries, according to researchers at McGill University who have just conducted a research literature review on the subject. Their results, published in the British Medical Journal, suggest that the youngest children from the most vulnerable populations benefit most and show significant improvements toward expected growth for their age and sex, particularly for weight.

Released: 11-Apr-2014 12:00 PM EDT
Odds That Global Warming Is Due to Natural Factors: Slim to None
McGill University

An analysis of temperature data since 1500 all but rules out the possibility that global warming in the industrial era is just a natural fluctuation in the earth’s climate, according to a new study by McGill University physics professor Shaun Lovejoy.

9-Apr-2014 2:00 PM EDT
Researchers Find That Influenza Has an Achilles’ Heel
McGill University

Flu epidemics cause up to half a million deaths worldwide each year, and emerging strains continually threaten to spread to humans and cause even deadlier pandemics. A study by McGill University professor Maziar Divangahi published by Cell Press on April 10 in the journal Immunity reveals that a drug that inhibits a molecule called prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) increases survival rates in mice infected with a lethal dose of the H1N1 flu virus. The findings pave the way for an urgently needed therapy that is highly effective against the flu virus and potentially other viral infections.

Released: 8-Apr-2014 11:00 AM EDT
What Songbirds Tell Us About How We Learn
McGill University

When you throw a wild pitch or sing a flat note, it could be that your basal ganglia made you do it. This area in the middle of the brain is involved in motor control and learning. And one reason for that errant toss or off-key note may be that your brain prompted you to vary your behavior to help you learn, from trial-and-error, to perform better. But how does the brain do this, how does it cause you to vary your behavior?

Released: 1-Apr-2014 12:00 PM EDT
Plugged in but Powered Down
McGill University

Study signals that young men may be more vulnerable to becoming sedentary later on than women are if they are depressed at a young age.

25-Mar-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Should Whole-Genome Sequencing Become Part of Newborn Screening?
McGill University

The possibility of making whole-genome sequencing part of routine screening programs for newborns raises ethical, legal and social issues that should be weighed carefully, according to researchers at McGill University.

19-Mar-2014 2:10 PM EDT
Making Life Simpler for Control Freaks
McGill University

Two brothers, Profs. Justin and Derek Ruths, from Singapore University of Technology and Design and McGill University respectively, have suggested, in an article published in Science, that all complex systems, whether they are found in the body, in international finance, or in social situations, actually fall into just three basic categories, in terms of how they can be controlled.

10-Mar-2014 2:00 PM EDT
Play It Again, Sam: How the Brain Recognizes Familiar Music
McGill University

Research from McGill University reveals that the brain’s motor network helps people remember and recognize music that they have performed in the past better than music they have only heard. A recent study by Prof. Caroline Palmer of the Department of Psychology sheds new light on how humans perceive and produce sounds, and may pave the way for investigations into whether motor learning could improve or protect memory or cognitive impairment in aging populations. The research is published in the journal Cerebral Cortex.

   
Released: 11-Mar-2014 11:00 AM EDT
Tracking Neighborhood Eating Habits to Promote Healthier Diets
McGill University

Poor food choices, such as overconsumption of carbonated soft drinks, are an important factor driving the global obesity epidemic and have been linked directly to diabetes and heart disease. While public health agencies are working to help people to make healthier choices, monitoring the effectiveness of these efforts has been costly and difficult. But now, using the same digital data employed by marketers to promote food products, McGill University’s David Buckeridge has developed a way for health agencies to track Montreal consumers’ food choices, neighborhood by neighborhood. This novel approach could pave the way to better monitoring of consumers’ behavior and more targeted efforts to encourage healthier diets.

28-Feb-2014 3:15 PM EST
Global Warming Felt to Deepest Reaches of Ocean
McGill University

Study shows the 1970s polynya within the Antarctic sea ice pack of the Weddell Sea may have been the last gasp of what was previously a more common feature of the Southern Ocean, and which is now suppressed due to the effects of climate change on ocean salinity.

Released: 13-Feb-2014 1:00 PM EST
World Renowned Scientist Dr. Brenda Milner Receives Dan David Prize
McGill University

Dr. Brenda Milner, an active researcher at the age of 95 at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, has been awarded the 2014 Dan David Prize for her fundamental contributions to the science of memory and the brain.

Released: 30-Jan-2014 1:00 PM EST
McGill HPV Study: Does Vaccinating One Sexual Partner Also Benefit the Other?
McGill University

A new study by McGill University will examine whether vaccinating only one partner in a couple against the human papillomavirus (HPV) can help prevent transmission of HPV to the unvaccinated partner.

Released: 29-Jan-2014 9:50 AM EST
Glass That Bends but Doesn’t Break
McGill University

Prof. François Barthelat and his team from McGill's Department of Mechanical Engineering have successfully taken inspiration from the mechanics of natural structures like seashells in order to significantly increase the toughness of glass.

22-Jan-2014 3:45 PM EST
When Nanotechnology Meets Quantum Physics in One Dimension
McGill University

Scientists from McGill University and Sandia National Laboratories have succeeded in conducting a new experiment that supports the existence of the long-sought-after Luttinger liquid state.

Released: 17-Jan-2014 4:00 PM EST
Nahum Sonenberg awarded prestigious Wolf Prize
McGill University

Nahum Sonenberg, a James McGill Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and the Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre at McGill University, is one of eight winners of the prestigious Wolf Prize as announced in Tel Aviv yesterday.

14-Jan-2014 11:00 AM EST
How Metabolism and Brain Activity Are Linked
McGill University

A new study by scientists at McGill University and the University of Zurich shows a direct link between metabolism in brain cells and their ability to signal information. The research may explain why the seizures of many epilepsy patients can be controlled by a specially formulated diet.

Released: 15-Jan-2014 2:20 PM EST
Resisting the Flu
McGill University

McGill researchers, led by Dr. Maya Saleh of the Department of Medicine, have identified an enzyme, cIAP2 that helps the lungs protect themselves from the flu by giving them the ability to resist tissue damage.

12-Dec-2013 3:00 PM EST
Health Spending Is More Efficient for Men Than for Women
McGill University

Health care spending is a large – and ever increasing - portion of government budgets. Improving its efficiency has therefore become critically important. In the first-ever study to estimate health spending efficiency by gender across 27 industrialized nations, researchers discovered significant disparities within countries, with stronger gains in life expectancy for men than for women in nearly every nation.

5-Dec-2013 2:00 PM EST
You Are What Your Father Eats
McGill University

Mothers get all the attention. But a study led by McGill researcher Sarah Kimmins suggests that the father’s diet before conception may play an equally important role in the health of their offspring. It also raises concerns about the long-term effects of current Western diets and of food insecurity.

3-Dec-2013 3:45 PM EST
Deep-Sea Study Reveals Cause of 2011 Tsunami
McGill University

The tsunami that struck Japan’s Tohoku region in 2011 was touched off by a submarine earthquake far more massive than anything geologists had expected in that zone. Now, a team of scientists has published a set of studies in the journal Science that shed light on what caused the dramatic displacement of the seafloor.

Released: 26-Nov-2013 12:00 PM EST
A Brain Reward Gene Influences Food Choices in the First Years of Life
McGill University

Research has suggested that a particular gene in the brain’s reward system contributes to overeating and obesity in adults. This same variant has now been linked to childhood obesity and tasty food choices, particularly for girls, according to a new study by Dr. Patricia Silveira and Prof. Michael Meaney of McGill University and Dr. Robert Levitan of the University of Toronto.

8-Oct-2013 10:50 AM EDT
Discovery Should Save Wheat Farmers Millions of Dollars
McGill University

The global wheat industry sometimes loses as much as $1 billion a year because prolonged rainfall and high humidity contribute to grains germinating before they are fully mature. This phenomenon, known as pre-harvest sprouting or PHS, has such important economic repercussions for farmers around the world that scientists have been working on finding a solution to the problem for at least a couple of decades. Findings by a McGill team now suggest that the solution may lie not with genetics alone, but rather with a combination of genetic and epigenetic factors.


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