Trusted by:

clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients
Released: 1-Nov-2024 8:00 AM EDT
Fueling Greener Aviation with Hydrogen
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Now, researchers reporting in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering have used computer modeling to study the feasibility and challenges of hydrogen-powered aviation.

Released: 1-Nov-2024 7:45 AM EDT
Don’t Let Diabetes Dim Your Vision
American Society of Retina Specialists

During November’s Diabetic Eye Disease Awareness Month, the American Society of Retina Specialists encourages people with diabetes, their friends, and loved ones to learn more about diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema and prioritize their eye health to protect and preserve vision.

Newswise: Stress Linked to Perceptions of Miscommunication for Parents of PICU Patients
30-Oct-2024 11:10 AM EDT
Stress Linked to Perceptions of Miscommunication for Parents of PICU Patients
American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN)

A survey of parents of children admitted to a PICU found that 16.5% of respondents agreed that miscommunication had occurred during their child’s hospital stay. Perceptions of miscommunication with clinicians are significantly associated with the stress level reported by parents.

Released: 31-Oct-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Apixaban vs Aspirin in Patients with Cancer and Cryptogenic Stroke
Ochsner Health

The ARCADIA study was a multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial conducted between 2017 and 2020.

Released: 31-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Moffitt Study Links Methylmalonic Acid to Weakening of Immune Cells in Lung Cancer
Moffitt Cancer Center

A new study has found a surprising link between high levels of methylmalonic acid and the weakening of CD8+ T cells, shedding light on potential pathways through which aging may promote lung cancer progression. Moffitt Cancer Center researchers have found new insights into how metabolic changes associated with aging can impact immune responses against tumors.

Newswise: Researchers Solve Medical Mystery of Neurological Symptoms in Kids
30-Oct-2024 4:35 PM EDT
Researchers Solve Medical Mystery of Neurological Symptoms in Kids
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at WashU Medicine collaborated with an international team of doctors and scientists to identify the cause of a rare disorder involving intellectual disability and brain malformations. The team found a link between the child’s neurological symptoms and a genetic change that affects how proteins are properly folded within cells, providing the parents with a molecular diagnosis and identifying an entirely new type of genetic disorder. The findings are published in Science.

Newswise: A Newly Developed Algorithm Shows How a Gene Is Expressed at Microscopic Resolution
Released: 31-Oct-2024 1:50 PM EDT
A Newly Developed Algorithm Shows How a Gene Is Expressed at Microscopic Resolution
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new method developed by University of Michigan researchers creates images that are worth many gigabytes of data, which could revolutionize the way biologists study gene expression.

Released: 31-Oct-2024 1:35 PM EDT
AI Tools Show Biases in Ranking Job Applicants’ Names According to Perceived Race and Gender
University of Washington

University of Washington researchers found significant racial, gender and intersectional bias in how three state-of-the-art large language models ranked resumes. The models favored white-associated names 85% of the time, female-associated names only 11% of the time, and never favored Black male-associated names over white male-associated names.

Newswise: The Breadth of Breast Cell Types
Released: 31-Oct-2024 1:30 PM EDT
The Breadth of Breast Cell Types
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and fittingly, University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center biologist Curt Hines, PhD, has published a pair of papers that comprehensively describe the twelve major types of cells in the human breast.


close
1.02048