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Newswise: Reproductive health counseling in young women with epilepsy: Room for improvement
Released: 7-Jun-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Reproductive health counseling in young women with epilepsy: Room for improvement
International League Against Epilepsy

Pediatric neurologists are not counseling young adults with epilepsy about reproductive issues as frequently as needed, according to a recent 10-year study. Some conversations, such as those about pregnancy and the potential effects of antiseizure medications, are almost nonexistent.

Newswise: Transforming agriculture: engineered nanoparticles for plant gene regulation
Released: 7-Jun-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Transforming agriculture: engineered nanoparticles for plant gene regulation
Chinese Academy of Sciences

In a major advancement for plant biology and agriculture, researchers have developed a novel method for systemic gene silencing in plants using engineered dsRNA-protein nanoparticles. This technique, which rapidly characterizes gene functions, could revolutionize in planta gene editing.

Newswise: Lavender's secret: genetic regulator boosts plant health and fragrance output
Released: 7-Jun-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Lavender's secret: genetic regulator boosts plant health and fragrance output
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A groundbreaking study has identified a gene that plays a dual role in enhancing both the aromatic compounds and disease resistance in lavender plants. The research uncovers how the LaMYC7 gene positively regulates the biosynthesis of linalool and caryophyllene, key for lavender's scent and its resistance to common plant pathogens.

Newswise: A catalyst's best friend: how neighboring atoms boost CO2 electrochemical reduction
Released: 7-Jun-2024 9:00 AM EDT
A catalyst's best friend: how neighboring atoms boost CO2 electrochemical reduction
Chinese Academy of Sciences

The quest for sustainable energy solutions has led to a new study that explores the neighboring effects in single-atom catalysts (SACs) for the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2).

Newswise: K-space translation strategy lets metasurfaces project multiple images without crosstalk
Released: 7-Jun-2024 9:00 AM EDT
K-space translation strategy lets metasurfaces project multiple images without crosstalk
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Researchers have developed a new type of planar-glass-waveguide-based metasurface holograms that feature multiple crosstalk-free display channels by precisely manipulating guided incident light.

Released: 7-Jun-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Engineering Cancer’s End: Moffitt Scientists Say Bioengineering Will Change Our Ability to Research and Treat Cancer
Moffitt Cancer Center

Bioengineering is revolutionizing cancer research, and Moffitt Cancer Center is at the forefront of this transformative movement. Moffitt is the first National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center with a dedicated bioengineering department. This area of science integrates engineering and physical sciences with oncology to change how we understand and treat this complex disease.

Newswise: Roots of resistance: unveiling the soil-saving secrets of grafting
Released: 7-Jun-2024 7:05 AM EDT
Roots of resistance: unveiling the soil-saving secrets of grafting
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Grafting, an age-old horticultural technique, has been revealed as a powerful tool against soil-borne diseases like crown gall. New research uncovers how the composition of root exudates changes when plants are grafted onto resistant rootstocks, creating a defensive mechanism that reduces the prevalence of pathogenic Agrobacterium.

Newswise: Decoding salvia miltiorrhiza: a molecular approach to boosting bioactive compounds
Released: 7-Jun-2024 6:05 AM EDT
Decoding salvia miltiorrhiza: a molecular approach to boosting bioactive compounds
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Salvia miltiorrhiza, known as Danshen, is widely used in traditional Chinese medicine for treating cardiovascular diseases, cancer, and Alzheimer's disease. The medicinal properties of Danshen are primarily attributed to its two major bioactive compounds: tanshinones and phenolic acids.

Released: 7-Jun-2024 3:05 AM EDT
JMIR Publications and Swedish Consortium Bibsam Join Forces in a Landmark Agreement to Advance Open Access
JMIR Publications

Open access publisher JMIR Publications, in partnership with Sweden's academic consortium Bibsam, with sales support by Accucoms, recently announced a landmark national agreement to eliminate the burden of article processing charges (APCs) for researchers in Sweden.

Newswise: Advances in Omics Research of Rosaceae
Released: 7-Jun-2024 2:05 AM EDT
Advances in Omics Research of Rosaceae
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A research team has provided a comprehensive overview of the applications of omics technologies in Rosaceae plants.

Newswise: Enhancing Forest Productivity through Improved Phosphorus Use: A Comprehensive Review of Phosphorus Uptake, Transport, and Signaling in Woody and Model Plants
Released: 7-Jun-2024 1:05 AM EDT
Enhancing Forest Productivity through Improved Phosphorus Use: A Comprehensive Review of Phosphorus Uptake, Transport, and Signaling in Woody and Model Plants
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A research team has reviewed the mechanisms of inorganic phosphorus (Pi) uptake, transport, and signaling in woody plants based on the backbone of model and crop plants. A research team has reviewed the mechanisms of inorganic phosphorus (Pi) uptake, transport, and signaling in woody plants based on the backbone of model and crop plants.

Newswise: Timing key for type 2 diabetes drug performance
Released: 7-Jun-2024 12:05 AM EDT
Timing key for type 2 diabetes drug performance
University of Adelaide

Researchers from the University of Adelaide could be closer to discovering a better way to use metformin, a common type 2 diabetes medication. Metformin, which has been a cornerstone in diabetes treatment since the 1960s, is typically taken with meals to reduce gastrointestinal side effects but new research is suggesting patients could see improved results if it’s taken before meals.

Newswise: Specialist scanning needed to help endo patients
Released: 7-Jun-2024 12:05 AM EDT
Specialist scanning needed to help endo patients
University of Adelaide

A review of existing research shows there is a growing benefit to using specialist scanning to diagnose endometriosis. Endometriosis affects 1 in 9 women and those assigned female at birth. However, it takes 6.4 years to diagnose using the conventional standard of surgical laparoscopy.

Newswise: Attending local events strengthens neighbourhood bonds
Released: 6-Jun-2024 9:05 PM EDT
Attending local events strengthens neighbourhood bonds
University of South Australia

Researchers at the University of South Australia have investigated how often people visit and actively participate in local events and how this affects their sense of place or their connection to their community.

Newswise: Dangerous work, unmet health care needs add up to more deaths, negative health outcomes for Texas shrimpers, according to UTHealth Houston research
Released: 6-Jun-2024 4:50 PM EDT
Dangerous work, unmet health care needs add up to more deaths, negative health outcomes for Texas shrimpers, according to UTHealth Houston research
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

A dangerous work environment and limited access to health care are related to higher death rates and negative health outcomes among Texas shrimpers in the Gulf of Mexico, according to a new study from UTHealth Houston.

Newswise: UTEP Pharmacy Researchers Develop Potential Treatment for Fibrosis
Released: 6-Jun-2024 4:05 PM EDT
UTEP Pharmacy Researchers Develop Potential Treatment for Fibrosis
University of Texas at El Paso

Researchers at The University of Texas at El Paso are developing a new therapeutic approach that uses nanoparticles for the treatment of skin and lung fibrosis, conditions that can result in severe damage to the body’s tissues.

Newswise: galactic-wrinkles-1440.jpg
Released: 6-Jun-2024 4:05 PM EDT
UAH researcher demonstrates Milky Way’s last major galactic collision happened much more recently than previously thought
University of Alabama Huntsville

Dr. Tom Donlon, a postdoctoral researcher at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of the University of Alabama System, is the lead author of a new paper published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society that reveals the Milky Way Galaxy’s last major collision occurred billions of years later than previously thought.

Newswise: High Blood Pressure in the Hospital: What Doctors Should Know
Released: 6-Jun-2024 3:05 PM EDT
High Blood Pressure in the Hospital: What Doctors Should Know
University of Utah Health

A new statement from the American Heart Association recommends a much more conservative approach to treating high blood pressure in acute care.

Newswise: It’s been 16 Years since sweet-spot brain stimulation slowed Parkinson’s progression for Hermitage man
Released: 6-Jun-2024 3:05 PM EDT
It’s been 16 Years since sweet-spot brain stimulation slowed Parkinson’s progression for Hermitage man
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

In 2008 at VUMC there were a group of doctors trying something unheard of on a handful of patients who signed up for their study. Half would receive deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery in attempt to slow the progression of their early-stage Parkinson’s disease, and the others would not.

Newswise: Webb Finds Plethora of Carbon Molecules Around Young Star
6-Jun-2024 1:50 PM EDT
Webb Finds Plethora of Carbon Molecules Around Young Star
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

In a new study, astronomers used NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope to study a red dwarf star weighing just one-tenth as much as our Sun. No known planets have formed around this young star yet, which is just one to two million years old. The team found that the gas in the planet-forming region of the star is rich in carbon-bearing molecules.

Newswise: URI invasive species expert co-leads two global studies published in two Nature journals
Released: 6-Jun-2024 1:05 PM EDT
URI invasive species expert co-leads two global studies published in two Nature journals
University of Rhode Island

The spread of invasive alien species has long been recognized as a global threat to nature and people. In September, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) for the United Nations issued a global assessment providing clear evidence of the growing threat to people, the economy and nature from invasive alien species.

Newswise: Mpox continues to circulate at low numbers among gay and bisexual men who have sex with men
5-Jun-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Mpox continues to circulate at low numbers among gay and bisexual men who have sex with men
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Mpox continues to circulate in the U.S. among gay and bisexual men who have sex with men. Though the number fell sharply to only 3 cases during the June through December 2023 multisite surveillance period compared to the previous highs, concern for its reemergence continues due to, among other things, incomplete knowledge among other groups.

Newswise: Artificial Intelligence Blood Test Provides a Reliable Way to Identify Lung Cancer
Released: 6-Jun-2024 12:15 PM EDT
Artificial Intelligence Blood Test Provides a Reliable Way to Identify Lung Cancer
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Using artificial intelligence technology to identify patterns of DNA fragments associated with lung cancer, researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and other institutions have developed and validated a liquid biopsy that may help identify lung cancer earlier.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Minimally invasive blood collection could advance health equity for people experiencing homelessness
Association for Diagnostic and Laboratory Medicine (ADLM (formerly AACC))

A new study demonstrates that minimally invasive blood collection devices could increase the participation of people experiencing homelessness (PEH) in public health studies and clinical research.

Newswise: 1920_immune-system-cedars-sinai.jpg?10000
Released: 6-Jun-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Investigators Discover Mechanisms of Immunity
Cedars-Sinai

A novel study, led by the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Cedars-Sinai and published today in the peer-reviewed journal Nature, shows how cells use a protein called PD-L1 to rally white blood cells to battle infections.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 12:00 PM EDT
Media Tip Sheet: Honoring the 80th Anniversary of D-Day
George Washington University

World leaders are gathering in Normandy, France, today to honor the 80th anniversary of D-Day. ...

Newswise: UAH researcher shows, for the first time, gravity can exist without mass, mitigating the need for hypothetical dark matter
Released: 6-Jun-2024 11:05 AM EDT
UAH researcher shows, for the first time, gravity can exist without mass, mitigating the need for hypothetical dark matter
University of Alabama Huntsville

Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that is implied by gravitational effects that can’t be explained by general relativity unless more matter is present in the universe than can be seen.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 11:05 AM EDT
Association for Molecular Pathology Publishes Evidence-based Recommendations for Tumor Mutational Burden Testing
Association for Molecular Pathology

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) has published a set of evidence-based recommendations for the analytical validation and reporting of tumor mutational burden (TMB) testing as a potential predictive biomarker for immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies. These recommendations encompass pre-analytical, analytical, and post-analytical factors of TMB analysis, and emphasize the importance of comprehensive methodological descriptions in publications to allow comparability between assays.

Newswise: UTSW studies clarify link between exercise, risk of heart disease
Released: 6-Jun-2024 11:05 AM EDT
UTSW studies clarify link between exercise, risk of heart disease
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Exercising at a high level doesn’t affect the progression of calcium buildup in the arteries, even among older athletes such as marathoners who tend to have higher coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores, according to new research from UT Southwestern Medical Center. But a longer duration of exercise is associated with higher CAC.

Newswise: ‘Artificial Lymph Node’ Used to Treat Cancer in Mice
Released: 6-Jun-2024 11:00 AM EDT
‘Artificial Lymph Node’ Used to Treat Cancer in Mice
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have developed an artificial lymph node with the potential to treat cancer, according to a new study in mice and human cells.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Regenerating Damaged Heart Cells
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Scientists from Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago have discovered a way to regenerate damaged heart muscle cells in mice, a development which may provide a new avenue for treating congenital heart defects in children and heart attack damage in adults, according to a study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Breakthroughs in Breast Cancer: Susan G. Komen(R) Scholars and Studies Highlighted at ASCO 2024
Susan G. Komen

Scholars and studies funded by Susan G. Komen(R), the world’s leading breast cancer organization, showcased cutting-edge breast cancer research aimed at advancing the field at the ASCO Annual Meeting 2024. Organized by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, this premier conference annually convenes over 40,000 oncologists and stakeholders worldwide.

Newswise:Video Embedded researchers-find-flavor-restrictions-affect-tobacco-buyers-differently-depending-on-socioeconomic-status
VIDEO
Released: 6-Jun-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Researchers find flavor restrictions affect tobacco buyers differently depending on socioeconomic status
Virginia Tech

Restricting menthol flavor in cigarettes while making nicotine replacement therapy, such as a skin patch that can help ease withdrawal, more available and affordable has the potential to reduce socioeconomic disparities in tobacco use.

Newswise:Video Embedded how-do-you-know-where-a-fish-goes
VIDEO
Released: 6-Jun-2024 10:00 AM EDT
How Do You Know Where a Fish Goes?
Florida Atlantic University

An acoustic transmitter – or tag – emits unique signals or “pings” when scientists want to study the long-distance movement of marine animals. However, this method has limitations. Using a pioneering movement model, researchers reconstructed animal tracks and leveraged an iterative process to measure the accuracy and precision of these reconstructions from acoustic telemetry data.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 9:05 AM EDT
To hire the right job candidate, humans and machines should clear up this simple miscommunication
University of Florida

Hiring teams need to teach machine learning algorithms how hiring works to find the best candidates.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Innovative Combination Therapy Shows Promise for Bladder Cancer Patients Unresponsive to Standard Treatment
Moffitt Cancer Center

In a groundbreaking advance that could revolutionize bladder cancer treatment, a novel combination of cretostimogene grenadenorepvec and pembrolizumab has shown remarkable efficacy in patients with Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG)-unresponsive non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.

Newswise: Rensselaer Researchers Upend Theory About the Formation of the Milky Way Galaxy
Released: 6-Jun-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Rensselaer Researchers Upend Theory About the Formation of the Milky Way Galaxy
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s Heidi Jo Newberg, Ph.D., professor of astronomy; Tom Donlon, Ph.D., a visiting researcher at Rensselaer and a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Alabama; and their team have recently published research that reveals a shocking discovery about the history of our universe: the Milky Way Galaxy’s last major collision occurred billions of years later than previously thought.

Released: 6-Jun-2024 8:05 AM EDT
How to Build a Team of ‘Appropriately Skeptical’ Financial Statement Auditors
North Carolina State University

A new study identifies the characteristics that make auditing professionals more likely to reward skepticism in the people they supervise, which is associated with an increased likelihood of identifying potential fraud during the auditing process.

Newswise: Unlocking banana disease resistance: key enzymes identified for phytoalexin synthesis
Released: 6-Jun-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Unlocking banana disease resistance: key enzymes identified for phytoalexin synthesis
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A breakthrough in banana disease resistance was achieved with the identification of novel O-methyltransferases (OMTs) involved in the biosynthesis of phenylphenalenone phytoalexins. These compounds, found in wild bananas, hold promise for developing disease-resistant commercial cultivars.

Newswise: Citrus saviors: discovering the genetic defense against Huanglongbing disease
Released: 6-Jun-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Citrus saviors: discovering the genetic defense against Huanglongbing disease
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A recent study has pinpointed two key enzymes in Citrus sinensis that play a crucial role in the plant's defense mechanism against the Asian citrus psyllid (ACP), a vector for the lethal huanglongbing (HLB) disease. This research offers a promising lead in the battle against a disease that has caused significant losses in the citrus industry.

Newswise: Desert hero unveiled: Cissus quadrangularis genome decodes drought survival tactics
Released: 6-Jun-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Desert hero unveiled: Cissus quadrangularis genome decodes drought survival tactics
Chinese Academy of Sciences

In a recent study, scientists have unlocked the genetic secrets of Cissus quadrangularis, a plant that flourishes in the harshest of desert climates. The discovery of its adaptive traits and the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) pathway marks a significant leap forward in the quest for drought-resistant crops.



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