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Released: 10-Jan-2022 12:25 PM EST
‘Male menopause’ is real and treatable, say pharmacy researchers
University of Alberta

A pair of University of Alberta pharmacy professors have published guidelines to help pharmacists support men experiencing late-onset hypogonadism, also known as “male menopause” or “manopause.”

Newswise: When Shoveling Snow Is Bad for Your Heart
Released: 10-Jan-2022 12:00 PM EST
When Shoveling Snow Is Bad for Your Heart
Henry Ford Health

Winter snowfalls can provide a beautiful wintry landscape. They also bring the chore of clearing heavy snow from your driveway and walkway. What may seem like a simple task, though, can also raise your risk for a heart attack.

Newswise:Video Embedded weathering-the-omicron-surge-explaining-flurona
VIDEO
Released: 5-Jan-2022 3:30 PM EST
Weathering the Omicron Surge, Explaining "Flurona"
Cedars-Sinai

First on the list: Get vaccinated and get a booster shot if you qualify.

Released: 29-Dec-2021 12:55 PM EST
New Study Shows Weight-Loss Surgery Significantly Cut Risk of Severe Complications From COVID-19 in Patients with Obesity
American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS)

Adults with obesity who had weight-loss surgery and achieved substantial weight loss prior to contracting COVID-19 reduced their risk for developing severe outcomes from the infection by 60% compared to those who did not have surgery, according to a new Cleveland Clinic study published online today in the journal JAMA Surgery.

Newswise: High-fiber diet associated with improved progression-free survival and response to immunotherapy in melanoma patients
20-Dec-2021 8:00 AM EST
High-fiber diet associated with improved progression-free survival and response to immunotherapy in melanoma patients
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Patients with melanoma who reported eating more fiber-rich foods when they began immunotherapy treatment survived longer without cancer growth than patients with insufficient dietary fiber intake, according to new research from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center published today in Science.

Released: 23-Dec-2021 11:45 AM EST
Cochlear Implant in Deaf Children with Autism Can Improve Language Skills and Social Engagement
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Restoring hearing through cochlear implantation for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can help them understand spoken language and enhance social interactions, according to a study from Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. The study reported long-term outcomes of the largest number of children with ASD who received a cochlear implant, with mean follow-up of 10.5 years.

Newswise: Can we unlearn pain? Helping make sense of chronic pain.
Released: 22-Dec-2021 9:05 PM EST
Can we unlearn pain? Helping make sense of chronic pain.
University of South Australia

Outwit, outplay, outlast. Just like the motto on television show Survivor, a three-pronged approach to learning about pain could improve the lives of people experiencing chronic pain, according to new research from the University of South Australia.

15-Dec-2021 4:00 PM EST
Exploring problematic smartphone use during COVID-19 pandemic
PLOS

Survey study finds links to sense of control, FOMO, and repetitive negative thinking.

   
Newswise: How the Matterhorn sways
AUDIO
Released: 22-Dec-2021 12:40 PM EST
How the Matterhorn sways
University of Utah

The Matterhorn appears as an immovable, massive mountain. A study shows that this impression is wrong. The Matterhorn is instead constantly in motion, swaying gently back and forth about once every two seconds.

Newswise: The Medical Minute: Health tips for a jolly old elf (a holiday survival guide for the rest of us)
Released: 22-Dec-2021 9:55 AM EST
The Medical Minute: Health tips for a jolly old elf (a holiday survival guide for the rest of us)
Penn State Health

It’s his biggest night of the year. But for all the gift giving and fun, stress comes with the package for Santa Claus. Penn State Health experts offer tips to keep Santa healthy this year (and you as well).

Newswise: Understanding human-elephant conflict and vulnerability in the face of climate change
Released: 21-Dec-2021 10:50 AM EST
Understanding human-elephant conflict and vulnerability in the face of climate change
Northern Arizona University

How do climate change and human-elephant conflict affect household food security in Africa? NAU wildlife conservationist Duan Biggs spent three years with an international team of researchers investigating the dynamics between wildlife, people and the environment on the African savannah to better understand how both climate change and human-elephant conflict can impact household food insecurity in the region.

16-Dec-2021 2:10 PM EST
Botox Injections May Reduce Anxiety
UC San Diego Health

Researchers at Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at University of California San Diego discover that Botox injections may reduce anxiety.

Newswise: An ancient relative of Velociraptor is unearthed in Great Britain
Released: 21-Dec-2021 4:05 AM EST
An ancient relative of Velociraptor is unearthed in Great Britain
University of Portsmouth

A new bird-like dinosaur that used brute strength to overcome its prey has been found by paleontologists combing through fossils found on the Isle of Wight, on the south coast of Great Britain.

Newswise: Desert shrubs cranked up water use efficiency to survive a megadrought. It may not be enough.
15-Dec-2021 4:15 PM EST
Desert shrubs cranked up water use efficiency to survive a megadrought. It may not be enough.
University of Utah

Shrubs in the desert Southwest have increased their water use efficiency at some of the highest rates ever observed to cope with a decades-long megadrought. That’s the finding of a new study from University of Utah researchers, who found that although the shrubs’ efficiency increases are unprecedented and heroic, they may not be enough to adapt to the long-term drying trend in the West.

13-Dec-2021 1:30 PM EST
Protective effect of education against midlife mental health struggle waning for Americans
Arizona State University (ASU)

A new study published in American Psychologist has shown that middle-aged adults in the US (40-65 years) experience worse mental health than older American generations and same-age peers in Europe and Asia. Years of education was associated with better mental health in midlife, but this buffering effect waned for current middle-aged Americans relative to older generations and to middle-aged peers in Australia, Germany, South Korea and Mexico.

Released: 16-Dec-2021 11:55 AM EST
Green Tea Extract is not appropriate to treat any infectious disease, including COVID-19
Harrisburg University of Science and Technology

Two Harrisburg University of Science and Technology alumni and a professor examined the evidence that exists regarding the therapeutic efficacy of green tea extracts as an anti-infective. The study results indicate that currently, there is no conclusive evidence that green tea extract is appropriate to treat any infectious disease (including COVID-19

Released: 16-Dec-2021 10:20 AM EST
Belzutifan offers hope for patients with von Hippel-Lindau disease
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The anti-cancer effect of the drug may help those with rare, hereditary cancer syndromes avoid surgeries by shrinking tumors via a daily oral dose.

Released: 16-Dec-2021 10:10 AM EST
Intense meditation brings robust immune system activation
University of Florida

Eight days of intense meditation cause robust activation of the immune system, University of Florida researchers and their colleagues have found. The findings are believed to be the first comprehensive genomic study of how meditation affects the biological processes directly involved in disease development.

Newswise: The Medical Minute: A healthy holiday includes giving gifts – and a good attitude
Released: 15-Dec-2021 8:05 AM EST
The Medical Minute: A healthy holiday includes giving gifts – and a good attitude
Penn State Health

Giving and receiving aren’t just holiday traditions. They’re good for your brain, too. A Penn State Health counselor shares his perspective.

9-Dec-2021 8:05 PM EST
Despite cleaner air, pollution disparities for people of color remain across the US
University of Washington

University of Washington researchers investigated disparities in exposure to six major air pollutants in 1990, 2000 and 2010 by comparing models of air pollution levels to census data. While overall pollutant concentrations have decreased since 1990, people of color are still more likely to be exposed to all six pollutants than white people, regardless of income level, across the continental United States.

   
Newswise: Closing In on Fusion
Released: 14-Dec-2021 2:35 PM EST
Closing In on Fusion
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A team led by Emily Belli of General Atomics used the Summit supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to model plasma turbulence in a nuclear fusion device . The simulations will help inform the design of next-generation tokamaks like ITER with optimum confinement properties.

Newswise: UAH involved in Parker Solar Probe breakthrough in effort to a solve solar puzzle
Released: 14-Dec-2021 2:20 PM EST
UAH involved in Parker Solar Probe breakthrough in effort to a solve solar puzzle
University of Alabama Huntsville

Scientists are closer to solving a solar heating puzzle using direct data now that NASA’s Parker Solar Probe (PSP), on which The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) teamed to develop an instrument suite to directly measure particles from the solar wind, has for the first time entered a region never before explored.

Newswise: Spacecraft Enters the Sun’s Corona for the First Time in History
Released: 14-Dec-2021 12:55 PM EST
Spacecraft Enters the Sun’s Corona for the First Time in History
Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian

An instrument made by scientists and engineers at the Center for Astrophysics has helped verify that — for the first time in history — a spacecraft has entered the corona of the Sun.

Released: 14-Dec-2021 11:25 AM EST
Overweight children are developing heart complications
University of Georgia

The study measured abdominal visceral fat levels and arterial stiffness in more than 600 children, adolescents and young adults. Visceral fat is the fat found in the abdomen that infiltrates vital organs.

Released: 13-Dec-2021 5:30 PM EST
Will you check your emails over Christmas?
University of South Australia

When the holiday season rolls around, will you get to relax, or do you let work creep into your down time? If you fit in the latter category and can’t seem to keep work at bay, you may be putting your health at risk, according to research from the University of South Australia.

   
10-Dec-2021 2:55 PM EST
Stress, by itself, can lead to excessive drinking in women but not men
Arizona State University (ASU)

A new study that has important implications for the understanding of sex differences in alcohol consumption has shown that stress alone leads to excessive drinking in women but not men. The study, from the Arizona State University Department of Psychology, used a simulated bar environment to test how stress affected whether participants drank more than intended.

   
Released: 10-Dec-2021 4:05 PM EST
Headlines about a "concerning" asteroid that will "skim" Earth on Saturday are not giving us an accurate picture
Newswise

"NASA says huge, 'potentially hazardous' asteroid will break into Earth's orbit next week" reads a headline from The Hill posted on December 1st. "ROCKY HORROR: Giant asteroid will skim Earth’s orbit tomorrow in hair-raising near miss" reads another headline posted on December 9th in The Sun (UK). These are some of the many headlines describing 4660 Nereus, an asteroid that is around 1,083-feet long (330-meter), will come within 2.4 million miles (3.9 million km) of Earth, still about 10 times farther away than the moon.

Released: 10-Dec-2021 3:20 PM EST
Asthma may reduce risk of brain tumors — but how?
Washington University in St. Louis

Asthma has been associated with a lowered risk of brain tumors, and researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis now think they know why: Immune cells activated under conditions of asthma are less able to promote the growth of brain tumors. The findings could lead to new therapeutic approaches.

Newswise: ‘Would you like a little ice with your exoplanet?’ For Earth-like worlds, that may be a tall order
Released: 10-Dec-2021 12:15 PM EST
‘Would you like a little ice with your exoplanet?’ For Earth-like worlds, that may be a tall order
University of Washington

Scientists computationally simulated more than 200,000 hypothetical Earth-like worlds all in orbit of stars like our sun, and found that about 90% of these potentially habitable hypothetical worlds lacked partial surface ice like polar caps. When partial ice is present, ice belts — permanent surface ice along the equator — were more common than ice caps.

Newswise: A longer-lasting COVID vaccine? UCLA study points the way
Released: 10-Dec-2021 12:10 PM EST
A longer-lasting COVID vaccine? UCLA study points the way
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA have identified rare, naturally occurring T cells that are capable of targeting a protein found in SARS-CoV-2 and a range of other coronaviruses.

Newswise: Speaking “baby talk” to infants isn’t just cute: It could help them learn to make words
7-Dec-2021 11:05 AM EST
Speaking “baby talk” to infants isn’t just cute: It could help them learn to make words
University of Florida

By mimicking the sound of a smaller vocal tract, the researchers think, caretakers are cluing babies in to how the words should sound coming out of their own mouths.

7-Dec-2021 6:05 AM EST
Almost two-thirds of species at deep-sea hydrothermal vents are at risk of extinction
Queen's University Belfast

New research from Queen’s University Belfast has led to 184 deep-sea species being added to the global Red List of Threatened Species. With almost two-thirds of the species assessed listed as threatened, it highlights the urgent need to protect them from extinction.

Newswise: Family dynamics can motivate and prevent talking about health
Released: 9-Dec-2021 4:55 PM EST
Family dynamics can motivate and prevent talking about health
Iowa State University

New research explores how family dynamics factor into whether 18- to 25-year-olds share private health information and involve their parents when making medical decisions. Having open and respectful conversations and reciprocal information sharing early on could help improve an emerging adult’s overall health.

   
Newswise: Mini-Jet Found Near Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole
Released: 9-Dec-2021 1:00 PM EST
Mini-Jet Found Near Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

Astronomers using Hubble and radio telescopes have found increasing evidence that the black hole near the center of our Milky Way galaxy periodically awakens, captures a star or gas cloud that falls into it, and then releases powerful beams of radiation and particles.

3-Dec-2021 1:05 PM EST
Does Air Pollution Reduce the Benefits of Physical Activity on the Brain?
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

A new study shows that people who do vigorous physical activities, like jogging or playing competitive sports, in areas with higher air pollution may show less benefit from that exercise when it comes to certain markers of brain disease. The markers examined in the study included white matter hyperintensities, which indicate injury to the brain’s white matter, and gray matter volume. Larger gray matter volumes and smaller white matter hyperintensity volumes are markers of overall better brain health. The research is published in the December 8, 2021, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Newswise: Ancient DNA found in soil samples reveals mammoths, Yukon wild horses survived thousands of years longer than believed
7-Dec-2021 10:45 AM EST
Ancient DNA found in soil samples reveals mammoths, Yukon wild horses survived thousands of years longer than believed
McMaster University

New research finds megafaunal collapse occurred before major environmental shift, small pockets of mammoths and horse adapted to change.

Newswise:Video Embedded gemini-catches-a-one-winged-butterfly
VIDEO
Released: 7-Dec-2021 2:15 PM EST
Gemini Catches a One-Winged Butterfly
NSF's NOIRLab

This ethereal image, captured from Chile by the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF's NOIRLab, looks as delicate as a butterfly’s wing. It is, however, a structure known as the Chamaeleon Infrared Nebula, which is located near the center of the mammoth Chamaeleon I dark cloud, one of the nearest star-forming regions in our Milky Way.

Newswise: Rutgers Study Unveils Carbon Mitigation Solutions to Combat Climate Change
Released: 7-Dec-2021 10:55 AM EST
Rutgers Study Unveils Carbon Mitigation Solutions to Combat Climate Change
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Increasing adoption of certain agricultural practices can help combat climate change, according to a new report by researchers from Rutgers and the University of Maine. The study explores how New Jersey’s plants and soils can help to absorb and store carbon dioxide from greenhouse gas emissions.

Released: 7-Dec-2021 9:45 AM EST
Severe COVID could reduce male fertility
University of Georgia

A new study from the University of Georgia explores the potential impact of the virus on male fertility.

30-Nov-2021 3:55 PM EST
The Human and Economic Impacts of COVID-19
Society for Risk Analysis (SRA)

Throughout its unsteady course, the COVID-19 pandemic has altered the behavior of businesses and households. Those behavioral changes, intensified by government actions like mandatory closures, have had a reverberating impact on the U.S. economy.

1-Dec-2021 1:30 PM EST
Microgrids and Solar Reduce Risk of Power Outages
Society for Risk Analysis (SRA)

Climate change is fueling more floods, droughts, wildfires, and extreme storms across the United States. As a result, aging power grids are being pushed beyond their limits, sometimes with deadly impacts. (In 2020, a series of unusual winter storms knocked the power out in Texas for days -- leading to shortages of water and heat and more than 100 deaths.)

Released: 6-Dec-2021 3:15 PM EST
Scientists find first in human evidence of how memories form
UT Southwestern Medical Center

In a discovery that could one day benefit people suffering from traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer’s disease, and schizophrenia, UT Southwestern researchers have identified the characteristics of more than 100 memory-sensitive neurons that play a central role in how memories are recalled in the brain.

Newswise:Video Embedded study-cataract-surgery-linked-with-lessened-dementia-risk
VIDEO
2-Dec-2021 5:35 PM EST
Study: Cataract surgery linked with lessened dementia risk
University of Washington School of Medicine

In this study of 3,000 adults with cataracts, the risk of developing dementia was lower in participants who underwent cataract removal compared with those who didn’t.

Newswise: Can Seven Questions Determine How Wise You Are?
30-Nov-2021 11:20 AM EST
Can Seven Questions Determine How Wise You Are?
UC San Diego Health

Researchers report that an abbreviated, seven-item scale can help determine with high validity a person’s level of wisdom, a potentially modifiable personality trait that has been shown to have a strong association to well-being.

   
Released: 2-Dec-2021 2:15 PM EST
Data Shows Increase in Autism Spectrum Disorder Prevalence
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt Kennedy Center (VKC) researchers, as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM) network, report an increase in the number of children in Tennessee with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Released: 2-Dec-2021 9:55 AM EST
Open talk, open door: Helping kids, teens after a school shooting
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Tips and resources for parents of children in the wake of the Michigan school shooting and amid the stress of the pandemic

   
30-Nov-2021 2:45 PM EST
COVID-19 pandemic puts spotlight on science misinformation ‘triggers’
University of Sydney

Pandemic highlights existing issues in our health information ecosystem.

   
29-Nov-2021 2:05 PM EST
E-Cigarettes May Be Independently Linked to Erectile Dysfunction, New Research Finds
NYU Langone Health

In the first population-based study of its kind, researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine published online today in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine suggests that men between 20 and 65 years of age with no prior history of CVD but who use ENDS daily are more than twice (2.4 times) as likely as men who have never used ENDS to report erectile dysfunction.

Newswise: FDA Approves “Glowing Tumor” Imaging Drug to Better Identify Ovarian Cancer Cells Using Approach Pioneered by Surgeons at the University of Pennsylvania
Released: 30-Nov-2021 1:40 PM EST
FDA Approves “Glowing Tumor” Imaging Drug to Better Identify Ovarian Cancer Cells Using Approach Pioneered by Surgeons at the University of Pennsylvania
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

FDA approved an imaging drug known as Cytalux (pafolacianine), which is attracted to ovarian cancer tissue and illuminates it when exposed to fluorescent light, allowing surgeons to more easily find and more precisely remove the cancer.

Newswise: Antarctic drilling project to offer insight into climate future
Released: 30-Nov-2021 11:25 AM EST
Antarctic drilling project to offer insight into climate future
Binghamton University, State University of New York

An international team of researchers including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York will drill into the ocean floor to discover the West Antarctic Ice Sheet's sensitivity to global warming.



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