By Asociación RUVID
A multidisciplinary team of scientists from Spanish universities and research centers has managed to design small synthetic molecules capable of joining to the genetic material of the AIDS virus and blocking its replication.
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By Elhuyar Fundazioa
The evolution that took place between 1984 and 2011 in paediatric HIV infection in Gipuzkoa has been studied. The development of methods to diagnose the disease coupled with increasingly more effective treatments have made it possible to reduce mother-to-
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By Wolters Kluwer Health
Once viewed as an "outlandish, morally objectionable" concept with science-fiction overtones, face transplantation is now accepted as a "feasible and necessary treatment" for severely disfigured patients. The evolving ethical debate ov
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By University of California - San Diego
Nanosponges that soak up a dangerous pore-forming toxin produced by MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) could serve as a safe and effective vaccine against this toxin. This "nanosponge vaccine" enabled the immune systems of mice t
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By Johns Hopkins Medicine
Heart researchers are unraveling the mystery of how a modified pacemaker used to treat many patients with heart failure, known as cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), is able to strengthen the heart muscle while making it beat in a coordinated fashion
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By American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Brazilian researchers study acoustics of the caxirola, official World Cup instrument.
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By University of Michigan Health System
Improvements in education levels, health care and lifestyle credited for decline in dementia risk.
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By Saint Louis University Medical Center
Experts offer two ways to battle the holiday bulge.
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By Universitaet Tübingen
For a few years, optogenetics has been seen as a very promising therapy for progressive blindness, for example when it is a result of retinal degeneration. In order to further develop this therapeutic approach, researchers have developed a computer model
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By University of Houston
Do fruit flies hold the key to treating dementia? Biologists have taken a significant step forward in unraveling the mechanisms of Pavlovian conditioning. Their work will help them understand how memories form and, ultimately, provide better treatments to
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By Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Current laser therapy approaches are effective for treating excessive scars resulting from abnormal wound healing, concludes a study.
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By University of Michigan Health System
A year after a trauma injury, seniors had difficulty with daily tasks such as simple shopping trips.
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By Duke University Medical Center
A byproduct of cholesterol functions like the hormone estrogen to fuel the growth and spread of the most common types of breast cancers, researchers report.
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By Scripps Research Institute
Scientists have determined the most detailed picture yet of a crucial part of the hepatitis C virus, which the virus uses to infect liver cells. The new data reveal unexpected structural features of this protein.
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By University of California - San Diego
Using quantitative models of bacterial growth, a team biophysicists has discovered the bizarre way by which antibiotic resistance allows bacteria to multiply in the presence of antibiotics, a growing health problem in hospitals and nursing homes across th
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By NIH/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Researchers have identified the protein in malaria-causing Plasmodium parasites that is inhibited by a newly discovered class of anti-malarial compounds known as imidazopyrazines. The protein, phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase, is the first potential malaria
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By University of Utah Health Sciences
A new technique uses a minimally invasive method for a physician to go backwards through a patient’s main cardiac vein, or coronary sinus, and inserts a catheter. A balloon is then inflated to block blood flow out of the heart so that a very hig
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By Stony Brook Medicine
A team of researchers has discovered in a model of Alzheimer’s disease that early accumulation of a small protein, known as amyloid β, in the blood vessels of the brain can drive early cognitive impairment.
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By Georgia Institute of Technology
Individuals with paralysis in a new clinical trial were able to use a tongue-controlled technology to access computers and execute commands for their wheelchairs at speeds that were significantly faster than those recorded in sip-and-puff wheelchairs, but
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By Centre for Genomic Regulation
A study published points, for the first time, to the gene trkC as a factor in susceptibility to a panic disorder. The researchers define the specific mechanism for the formation of fear memories which will help in the development of new pharmacological an
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