In a discovery that could hasten treatment for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), UC San Francisco scientists have discovered a harbinger in the blood of some people who later went on to develop the disease.
Not for public release
This news release is embargoed until 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 15-Apr-2024 12:00 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
Not for public release
This news release is embargoed until 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 15-Apr-2024 12:00 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
Not for public release
This news release is embargoed until 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 15-Apr-2024 12:00 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 19-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
The latest results of the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2024 have been announced on April 10, 2024. Chulalongkorn University is ranked No. 1 in Thailand for 32 subjects and Top 200 in the world with 30 outstanding subjects.
Traditional juice extraction methods, though sufficient for juice production, have limitations in terms of yield, quality, nutritional value, and sustainability. This has led to a growing need for improved juice extraction methods that can address these challenges and meet the evolving preferences of health-conscious consumers. PEF excels in juice extraction with high efficiency, preserving sensory properties and nutrients, while consuming less energy and offering excellent scalability as compared to other physical field technologies.
access_time Embargo lifts in 2 days
This news release is embargoed until 24-Apr-2024 8:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 19-Apr-2024 8:00 AM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 24-Apr-2024 8:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
Indiana University School of Medicine researchers recently were awarded $4.7 million from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to further the study of caregiver intervention in reducing adolescent alcohol use and other substance use disorders (SUDs).
The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that a joint research team has developed a fiber-like electrode material that can store energy. The fibers are strong, lightweight, and highly flexible, enabling greater freedom in wearable device form factors and the ability to be made into various shapes and applications.
In a new study published today in Nature Biomedical Engineering, researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have designed a new method for developing immunotherapy drugs using engineered peptides to elicit a natural immune response inside the body.
Liver inflammation, a common side-effect of cancers elsewhere in the body, has long been associated with worse cancer outcomes and more recently associated with poor response to immunotherapy. Now, a team led by researchers from the Abramson Cancer Center and Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania has found a big reason why.
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is the most widely cultivated and consumed horticultural crop.
access_time Embargo lifts in 2 days
This news release is embargoed until 19-Apr-2024 2:00 PM EDT
Released to reporters: 19-Apr-2024 1:00 AM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 19-Apr-2024 2:00 PM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
access_time Embargo lifts in 2 days
This news release is embargoed until 24-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 18-Apr-2024 9:00 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 24-Apr-2024 9:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
“It all starts at the Bronx Zoo!” said Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson
access_time Embargo lifts in 2 days
This news release is embargoed until 22-Apr-2024 5:00 PM EDT
Released to reporters: 18-Apr-2024 7:05 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 22-Apr-2024 5:00 PM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
The mystery of how futuristic aircraft embedded engines, featuring an energy-conserving arrangement, make noise has been solved by researchers at the University of Bristol.
This news release is embargoed until 23-Apr-2024 11:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 18-Apr-2024 4:05 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 23-Apr-2024 11:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
access_time Embargo lifts in 2 days
This news release is embargoed until 25-Apr-2024 12:00 AM EDT
Released to reporters: 18-Apr-2024 4:05 PM EDT
A reporter's PressPass is required to
access this story until the embargo expires on 25-Apr-2024 12:00 AM EDT
The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories.
Please log in to complete a presspass application.
If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you
fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to
advance to the presspass application form.
April is Oral Cancer Awareness Month, and the American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology (AANA) reminds the public that the best prevention of oral health issues is early detection. However, patients also need to be aware of the critical importance of ensuring access to safe anesthesia care during oral cancer treatments including surgery.
A student team from The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of the University of Alabama System, has been crowned national champion in the first Virtual Institutes for Cyber and Electromagnetic Spectrum Research and Employ (VICEROY) National Cyber Competition. The VICEROY Institute is a program of the Air Force Research Laboratory managed by the Griffiss Institute to provide support for a virtual institute at UAH to develop expertise in critical cyber and electromagnetic spectrum operational skills for future military and civilian leaders of the Armed Forces and the Department of Defense.
De acordo com a Associação Cardíaca Americana, cerca de 3 milhões de americanos estão vivendo com uma condição cardíaca chamada fibrilação atrial. E os Centros de Controle e Prevenção de Doenças afirmam que o número poderá chegar a 12 milhões de pacientes no começa da próxima década.
روتشستر، ولاية مينيسوتا — وفقًا لجمعية القلب الأمريكية، فإن ما يقرب من 3 ملايين أمريكي مصاب بحالة قلبية تسمى الرجفان الأذيني. وتصرح مراكز مكافحة الأمراض والوقاية منها أن العدد قد يصل إلى 12 مليونًا بحلول بداية العقد القادم.
At Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS), a 3D printer is manufacturing custom-made joint replacements for the most complex cases when a standard implant won’t work. HSS was the first hospital in the U.S. to house a 3D printing facility onsite for custom implants, in collaboration with LimaCorporate (recently acquired by Enovis).
A heart attack will leave a permanent scar on a human heart, yet other animals, including zebrafish, can clear cardiac scar tissue and regrow damaged muscle as adults. New research by University of Utah biologists sheds new light on how zebrafish heal heart tissue by comparing how this species responds to heart injury with medaka, a fish species that cannot regenerate cardiac tissue.
Cedars-Sinai investigators have identified significant variations in the microbes of the small bowel (small intestine) are strongly associated with various body weights, from a normal body mass index, or BMI, to having obesity.
With more than 200 types of cancer and every cancer individually unique, ongoing efforts to develop precision oncology treatments remain daunting. In a new study published in the journal Nature Cancer, first author Sanju Sinha, Ph.D., at Sanford Burnham Prebys, with senior authors Eytan Ruppin, M.D., Ph.D., and Alejandro Schaffer, Ph.D., at the National Cancer Institute—and colleagues—describe a first-of-its-kind computational pipeline to systematically predict patient response to cancer drugs at single-cell resolution.
Leadership Women selected pacesetters from across the state for their professional, cultural, geographic and ethnic diversity. Each one has also shown a desire to collaborate with leaders from a broad spectrum of disciplines and interests. Through the program, participants learn about the opportunities and challenges of different communities they visit, develop new leadership skills and gain new perspectives.
UCLA Health researchers will be co-principal investigators in the Untangling Addiction program launched this year by the nonprofit health research organization Wellcome Leap. The three-year, $50 million project includes 13 other partnering universities and organizations and is aimed at developing new ways to quantify addiction risk and progression through biomarkers.
A third of China’s urban population at risk of city sinking, according to new satellite data. In an invited article for the journal Science, Manoochehr Shirzaei discusses how this phenomenon points to a global problem: Land is sinking everywhere.
Mount Sinai researchers, in collaboration with scientists at The Rockefeller University, have uncovered a mechanism in the brain that allows cocaine and morphine to take over natural reward processing systems.
Artificial heterostructures made of freestanding 2D and 3D membranes developed by WashU's Sang-Hoon Bae have an energy density up to 19 times higher than commercially available capacitors.
Helen Boucher and Jeffrey Griffiths, both infectious disease physicians and at Tufts University School of Medicine, offer their advice for those concerned about measles affecting them or their family.
Open-water swimming requires athletes to take into account a wide number of variables. Roberta Freitas-Lemos said when she’s in the ocean, temperature fluctuations, murky conditions, and the motion of the waves make it a challenging sport, both physically and mentally. Complexity also characterizes Freitas-Lemos’ research at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, where she works at the intersection of tobacco use, health equity, and cancer.
Anticipating changes to ecosystems is often at best an educated guess, but what if there was a way to better tune into possible changes occurring? A team of researchers led by Grace O’Malley, a Ph.D. candidate in biological sciences, and Gabrielle Ripa, a Ph.D. student in plant and environmental sciences, have discovered that the silent growth of non-native invasive plants can affect the soundscape of an ecosystem.
Tom Dingus has dedicated his life’s work to improving roadway safety through innovative transportation technologies and amassed multiple awards for his efforts. The Society of Automotive Engineers’ (SAE) International Humanitarian Award now joins that list. The award recognizes work with undeniably positive impact on safety in transportation in honor of Arnold W.
The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Office of Science will sponsor the participation of 1,073 undergraduate students and 113 faculty members in three STEM-focused workforce development programs at 17 DOE national laboratories and a national fusion facility during Summer 2024. Collectively, these programs ensure DOE and our nation have a strong, sustained workforce trained in the skills needed to address the energy, environment, and national security challenges of today and tomorrow.
The American Association of Immunologists (AAI) proudly congratulates President Akiko Iwasaki, Ph.D., for her remarkable achievement in being named one of TIME's 100 Most Influential People of 2024. Dr. Iwasaki, a Sterling Professor of Immunobiology and Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at Yale University, has been recognized for her groundbreaking contributions to science and public health.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump continues to maintain a formidable lead over U.S. President Joe Biden among Florida voters. The survey found that 50 percent of registered voters in Florida expressed support for Trump, while 42 percent favored Biden. Another 5 percent opted for alternative candidates, while 3 percent remained undecided.
Irvine, Calif., April 18, 2024 — Four University of California, Irvine researchers – working in fields as diverse as computational chemistry, statistical methods, particle physics and inorganic chemistry – have been named fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the world’s largest general scientific society.
Poor metabolic health or dysfunction, not obesity, leads to poor anti-influenza immune responses. Learn about the new St. Jude influenza vaccination research.
An analysis of more than 30 million grading records from U-M finds students with alphabetically lower-ranked names receive lower grades. This is due to sequential grading biases and the default order of students’ submissions in Canvas—the most widely used online learning management system—which is based on the alphabetical rank of their surnames.
In an effort to understand how and why 2D interfaces take on the structures they do, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed a method to visualize the thermally-induced rearrangement of 2D materials, atom-by-atom, from twisted to aligned structures using transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
On April 22, the United States Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in, a landmark case that could drastically affect the rights people have when experiencing homelessness.