By University of Texas at Austin
nspired by the paper-folding art of origami, chemists at the University of Texas at Austin have developed a 3-D paper sensor that may be able to test for diseases like malaria and HIV for less than ten cents a pop.
READ MORE


By Association for Psychological Science
Feeling angry and annoyed with others is a daily part of life, but most people don't act on these impulses. What keeps us from doing everything from sneaking an extra cookie to murdering conniving co-workers? Self-control.
READ MORE


By John Hopkins Medicine
Using human immune system cells in the lab, AIDS experts at Johns Hopkins have figured out a way to kill off latent forms of HIV that hide in infected T cells long after antiretroviral therapy has successfully stalled viral replication to undetectab
READ MORE


By Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
Wii remotes are not all about fun and games. Scientists can use them to assess and diagnose children with an abnormal head position caused by eye diseases. As described in a recent Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science article, researcher
READ MORE


By Salynn Boyles
Risk of Death 31% Higher for Men, Study Finds
READ MORE


By Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry
The chaperone DnaK binds to new proteins and mediates their folding. Proteins it cannot fold, DnaK transports to GroEL, a highly specialised folding machine.
READ MORE


By Cell Press
Everyone is familiar with the pain of skinned knees. However, the complex pathway of proteins that works behind the scenes after the bleeding has stopped is not as well known. Central to this process is the production of plasmin, a powerful blood en
READ MORE


By King's College London
Researchers at King's College London and Hiroshima University, Japan, have identified a specific gene linked to throat cancer following a genetic study of a family with 10 members who have developed the condition.
READ MORE


By McGill University
A research group led by Dr. A. Claudio Cuello of McGill University's Faculty of Medicine, Dept. of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, has uncovered a critical process in understanding the degeneration of brain cells sensitive to Alzheimer's disease (AD)
READ MORE


By City College of New York
The humble aspirin may soon have a new role. Scientists from The City College of New York have developed a new aspirin compound that has great promise to be not only an extremely potent cancer-fighter, but even safer than the classic medicine cabine
READ MORE


By California Institute of Technology
In both animals and humans, vocal signals used for communication contain a wide array of different sounds that are determined by the vibrational frequencies of vocal cords. For example, the pitch of someone's voice, and how it changes as they are sp
READ MORE


By WebMD Health News
New Research Shows ‘Personalized’ Treatment for Cancer Not So ‘Simple’
READ MORE


By NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center/Weill Cornell Medical College
By engineering cells to express a modified RNA called "Spinach," researchers have imaged small-molecule metabolites in living cells and observed how their levels change over time. Metabolites are the products of individual cell metabolism.
READ MORE


By University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine
New animal research sheds light on how the drug methylphenidate may affect learning and memory in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
READ MORE


By Salynn Boyles
Study Also Suggests a 30% Increase in Stroke Risk
READ MORE


By UNC Chapel Hill School of Medicine
A team of researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has successfully flushed latent HIV infection from hiding, with a drug used to treat certain types of lymphoma. Tackling latent HIV in the immune system is critical to finding
READ MORE


By Salynn Boyles
Approach Could Free Organ Patients From Anti-Rejection Drugs
READ MORE


By Massachusetts General Hospital
Mutations in HIV that develop during the first few weeks of infection may play a critical role in undermining a successful early immune response, a finding that reveals the importance of vaccines targeting regions of the virus that are less likely t
READ MORE


By California Pacific Medical Center
Researchers say they may have discovered a new drug for the treatment of metastatic melanoma, one that uses the patient's own tumor cells to customize the therapy. The findings are published in the March issue of the journal Clinical Cancer Research
READ MORE


By Denise Mann
Continued Treatment With Aricept Shows Some Merit
READ MORE


<<... <... 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 ...> ...>>
 
 
 
Patent Pending:   60/481641
 
Copyright © 2024 NetDr.com. All rights reserved.