By DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
New understanding of where muscles get their power from turns 50 years of strength belief on its head. New insight could aid everything from bodybuilding to cardiac care.
READ MORE


By Wiley
New research reveals a causal association between elevated body mass index (BMI) and increased risk of gallstone disease. Results show women are at greater risk of developing gallstones.
READ MORE


By Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Utilizing crowdsourcing in medical research can improve the quality, cost, and speed of a research project while engaging large segments of the public and creating novel science.
READ MORE


By Oxford University Press (OUP)
A new study has demonstrated that patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) lose the emotional content/color of their memories. These findings explain why FTD patients may not vividly remember an emotionally charged event like a wedding or funeral.
READ MORE


By Autism Speaks
New research has found that full genome sequencing provides the definitive look at wide ranging genetic variations associated with ASD. Inherited, de novo and X-linked genetic alterations found in one half of the affected families sequenced included four
READ MORE


By Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
The number of tick-borne illnesses reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is on the rise. Lyme disease leads the pack, with some 35,000 cases reported annually. In the Northeast, the black-legged ticks that spread Lyme disease als
READ MORE


By Garvan Institute of Medical Research
Studies of patients with immunodeficiencies involving single gene mutations can reveal a great deal about our immune systems, especially when actual symptoms do not accord with clinical expectations. Australian scientists acknowledge such a gap between ex
READ MORE


By Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
If you are obese and hope to be a father, here's another reason to lose weight: your children and grandchildren may inherit your waistline or metabolic disorders. Scientists have discovered in mice that obese fathers, even those with no symptoms of diabet
READ MORE


By Brookhaven National Laboratory
Scientists have captured new details of the biochemical interactions necessary for cell division. The research may suggest ways for stopping cell division when it goes awry.
READ MORE


By American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM)
Certain elements of a pitcher’s throwing mechanics can increase the risk for elbow injuries.
READ MORE


By University of Minnesota
Researchers have discovered that a human antiviral enzyme causes DNA mutations that lead to several forms of cancer.
READ MORE


By Georgetown University Medical Center
When a neurologist began enrolling people with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease into a nationwide study last year, he expected to find only a handful of participants with undiagnosed glucose intolerance, as all the patients were already under a doctor
READ MORE


By University of Oxford
Yoga can improve mood and mental wellbeing among prisoners, a new study suggests, and may also have an effect on impulsive behavior. The researchers found that prisoners after a ten-week yoga course reported improved mood, reduced stress and were better a
READ MORE


By Arizona State University
Paralytic drugs like succinylcholine are often used during surgery or when critically ill patients require endotracheal intubation. But if the drug is not swiftly cleared from the patient's system, the results can be deadly.
READ MORE


By Scripps Research Institute
Scientists have shown that a drug candidate significantly increases exercise endurance in animal models.
READ MORE


By University of Southampton
Researchers have discovered a novel way of killing cancer cells. The scientists found a new potential treatment for cancer, which leaves the body's healthy cells undamaged, unlike traditional therapies such as radiotherapy.
READ MORE


By Northwestern University
In the first step toward animal-to-human transplants of insulin-producing cells for people with type 1 diabetes, scientists have successfully transplanted islets, the cells that produce insulin, from one species to another. And the islets survived without
READ MORE


By University of Warwick
A new study suggests that some very preterm babies have trouble bonding with their care-givers due to neurological impairments and not to the way their parents interact with them.
READ MORE


By American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM)
40,000 high school football kids get a concussion every year, but contrary to equipment manufacturers' claims, the specific brand of helmet and helmet age were not associated with lower risk of concussion, say researchers.
READ MORE


By Garvan Institute of Medical Research
By comparing the human genome to the genomes of 34 other mammals, Australian scientists have described an unexpectedly high proportion of functional elements conserved through evolution. While other studies have shown that around 5-8 percent of the genome
READ MORE


<<... <... 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 ...> ...>>
 
 
 
Patent Pending:   60/481641
 
Copyright © 2024 NetDr.com. All rights reserved.