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Life Technology™ Medical News

Treatment-Resistant Depression: Challenges in Medication Response

Study Reveals Brain Protein Variations in Alzheimer's

Infant Sophie Diagnosed with Rare CODE Condition

Lower Your Risk of Age-Related Brain Diseases

American Cancer Society Updates Guidelines for Cancer Survivors

Cedars-Sinai Study Reveals Adverse Medication Events

Surge in Non-Medical Ultrasound Providers: Nine Newspapers Coverage

Gut Microbiome Function Linked to Delaying Type 1 Diabetes

Drug Mavoglurant Reduces Cocaine Use Disorder

Global Impact: Osteoarthritis Affects 500M People

Schizophrenia Treatment Guidelines by International Experts

Protein Diet Craze Sweeps TikTok

New CT-Scan-Based Risk Score for Revision Sinus Surgery

Perinatal Brain Inflammation: Risks and Consequences

Weight Loss Programs: Beyond Percentage Targets

Physicians' Knowledge Gap in Identifying Axial Spondyloarthritis

Improving Body Image for Transgender Men

Fda Approves Sanofi's Qfitlia for Hemophilia Prophylaxis

"Hku & Innohk Develop Nasal Spray H5n1 Avian Influenza Vaccine"

Study Suggests Six Million Americans with Heart Failure at Risk of Early Cognitive Decline

Nurse Practitioners Combat Vaccine Hesitancy

Montana's Preparedness for Measles Outbreak

Understanding Stroke Recovery: Hospital Stay and Brain Healing

Republican Plan Could Lead to Millions Losing Medicaid Coverage

Study: 1 in 5 U.S. Adults Use Multiple Drugs

Lowest Vaccination Rates in Sutter County Kindergarten

Parkinson's Research Links Heart Impact

Benefits of Walking for Health and Longevity

Beagle Dogs with Shank3 Gene Mutations Show Face-Processing Abnormalities

Urgent Need for Improved Diagnosis of ME and Long COVID

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Life Technology™ Science News

Parents' After-School Inquiry: How Was Your Day?

Study Reveals Roach Fish with Better Eyesight in Migration

Seabirds and Marine Mammals at Risk in Wind Farm Areas

Fudan University Engineers Develop 32-Bit RISC-V Microprocessor

Satellites Monitoring Antarctic Ice Loss

Parents of Accused Boy in "Adolescence" Face Responsibility

Ai Revolutionizes Society, Targets Ocean

EU Directive Limits Animal Testing for Cosmetics: Nanoparticle Absorption Alternatives

White Americans in Counties with Higher Black Poverty Rates More Likely to Believe in Racial Equality

Solar Wind Squishes Jupiter's Protective Bubble

California Residents Witness Los Angeles Wildfires: Climate Change Impact

El Niño and Southern Oscillation: Global Climate Influence

Rare Yellow Supergiant Star HD 144812 Observed with Gemini Telescope

Unlocking Molecular Physics: Controlling Reactions at Low Temperatures

Study Reveals Ground Cover's Role in Soil Carbon Preservation

Understanding Crystal Melting: Temperature's Impact on Structural Dynamics

Overfishing Threatens Coral Reef Fisheries in East Africa

Study Suggests Indigenous-Western Collaboration for Critter Conservation

Researchers Develop Pathway to Convert Harmful Nitric Oxide into Valuable Nitric Acid

Polycystic Kidney Disease Treatments: Dialysis and Transplantation

Groundbreaking Bacterial Evolutionary Map for Precision Treatments

Study Reveals Gut Bacteria Impact on Medication Efficacy

Australia Records Hottest Year with Extreme Weather

Webb Space Telescope Captures Images of Earth's Top Asteroid

Unearthed: Ancient Roman Empire Warriors Found in Vienna

"Imdea Nanociencia Scientists Develop Switchable Materials"

Atacama Cosmology Telescope Reveals Clearest Images of Universe's Infancy

Study Reveals Government Propaganda in Chinese Newspapers

Endangered Corpse Flower: Threats and Conservation

World's Finest Yodelers Discovered in Latin American Rainforests

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Challenges Faced by Consumers Submitting Complaints

Motorbikes Hold Steady at 4.5% of Australian Vehicles

Northwestern Study Reveals Abundant Materials for Carbon Capture

Are Big Appliances Losing Durability Over Time?

Industries Embrace Drones: Safety Management for Growth

Tesla Sales Drop in Germany Amid Electric Car Market Rebound

Apple Inc. Faces Trump Tariffs Amid Supply Chain Concerns

Nintendo Fans Excited for Upcoming Switch Console, Disappointed by High Price Tag

Siemens Acquires Dotmatics for $5.1 Billion

Amazon Set to Launch Project Kuiper Satellites

Global Coal Capacity Growth Slows, China and India Surge

"Shenmue Voted Most Influential Video Game by BAFTA"

Bill Gates Reflects on Groundbreaking Computer Code

Innovative Water-Smart Industrial Symbioses Transforming Wastewater

Finnish Research Project: Carbon Capture for Renewable Plastics

Innovative Soil-Based Thermal Energy Storage Solution

Mit Lincoln Lab & Notre Dame Develop Soft Pathfinding Robot

Amazon Makes Last-Minute Bid for TikTok Acquisition

Microsoft Marks 50th Year Milestone: $88B Profit in 2024

Enhancing Vegetarian Food Appeal with Extended Reality

Eric Yuan Unhappy at Cisco Systems Despite High Salary

Pennsylvania's Largest Coal Plant to Become $10B Gas Data Center

Scientists Develop Fungi Tiles for Energy-Efficient Cooling

Tesla Sees 13% Decline in Q1 Auto Sales

Claude Shannon's Language Probability Model

Nintendo Announces June 5 Launch for Switch 2 with Interactive Features

World's Smallest Light-Controlled Pacemaker Unveiled

World Health Organization Declares Loneliness Crisis: AI Chatbots in Demand

Cyclist Safety: Global Impact of Road Collisions

Mainstream Sites Moderate, 4chan Fosters Online Hate

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Tuesday, 29 October 2019

Study finds 'cluster of disadvantage' behind BAME psychosis rates

Excess psychosis diagnoses amongst Black and South Asian men in deprived urban areas could reflect a cluster of disadvantage in specific places, rather than individual experiences of deprivation alone, a study led by Queen Mary University of London researchers concludes.

Switching to 'green' inhalers could reduce carbon emissions and cut costs

Many current inhalers for conditions such as asthma contain propellants that are potent greenhouse gases. A study from researchers at the University of Cambridge has found that switching to alternative, greener inhalers would not only result in large carbon savings, but could be achieved alongside reduced drug costs by using less expensive brands.

Classic energy theory fails to explain coral distribution across depth

Coral species richness at different depths is unrelated to energy availability, according to a new study analysing diversity across an Australasian reef.

Study finds inequities in access to heart failure care

Nationally, heart failure patients who receive specialized cardiology care after admission tend to have better outcomes, including lower readmission rates and lower rates of death. But not all patients may have equal access to cardiology services. As part of an initiative by the Department of Medicine Health Equity Committee at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Brigham investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients admitted to the Brigham with a diagnosis of heart failure. They evaluated whether race and other factors, such as age and gender, influenced whether the patient was admitted to either the specialized cardiology service or general medicine service, as well as the subsequent relationship between admission service and outcomes. The team found that patients who self-identified as black, Latinx, female or over the age of 75 were less likely to be admitted to the cardiology service, even after adjusting for demographic and clinical factors. Their results are published in Circulation: Heart Failure.

Genetic variants for autism linked to higher rates of self-harm and childhood maltreatment

People with a higher genetic likelihood of autism are more likely to report higher childhood maltreatment, self-harm and suicidal thoughts according to a new study by researchers at the University of Cambridge. A better understanding of these issues is critical to improving wellbeing in autistic people. The results are published today in Molecular Psychiatry.

Facebook employees sign letter opposing political ads policy

Hundreds of Facebook employees have signed a letter to CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other executives saying they oppose the social network's policy of letting politicians lie in advertisements.

Researchers move closer to new vaccine for killer TB

Scientists said Tuesday they are closing in on a new game-changing vaccine for tuberculosis, the world's deadliest infectious disease that claimed some 1.5 million lives last year.

Live sports, the newest weapon in the TV streaming war

Streaming services have long focused on series and movies, but as online TV competition heats up could live sports—historically a bit player on these platforms—change the game?

Poor evidence cannabis improves mental health: study

People with psychiatric disorders may want to pass on the joint—at least until further research is done, a new Australian study suggests.

Fishing plastic 'ghost nets' out of the Baltic

On a small fishing boat out in the Baltic Sea, Pekka Kotilainen rifles through buckets of fishing gear, mixed with rubbish and mussel shells.

Maker of China's TikTok denies report it is planning HK listing

Chinese internet start-up ByteDance, whose globally popular app TikTok has raised US security concerns, on Tuesday denied reports that it was considering an initial public offering in Hong Kong in the first quarter of next year.

Virgin Galactic becomes first space tourism company to land on Wall Street

Virgin Galactic landed on Wall Street Monday, debuting its listing on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in a first for a space tourism company.

Juul to cut jobs as e-cigarette firm restructures

Electronic cigarette maker Juul Labs on Monday said it will cut jobs as part of a restructuring plan, with the threat of a US vaping ban on the horizon.

Survey: Kids' appetite for online video doubles in four years

The number of young Americans watching online videos every day has more than doubled, according to survey findings released Tuesday. They're glued to them for nearly an hour a day, twice as long as they were four years ago.

The streaming war's first victim: your wallet

With two young daughters, Mery Montenegro is preparing to add Disney+ to her list of streaming subscriptions, which already includes Netflix, Hulu and Amazon—and, when combined with her cable TV bill, costs her almost $1,500 per year.

How far schoolkids live from junk food sources tied to obesity

For the more than 1 million children attending New York City public schools, their choice of what to eat depends on which food sources are close to where they live.

Automakers side with Trump in legal fight with California

General Motors, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota and many others in the auto industry are siding with the Trump administration in a lawsuit over whether California has the right to set its own greenhouse gas emissions and fuel economy standards.

Aussie consumer watchdog sues Google over location data use

Australia's consumer watchdog on Tuesday announced legal action against Google for allegedly misleading customers about the way it collects and uses personal location data.

How do you save endangered gorillas? With lots of human help

Deep in the rainforest of Volcanoes National Park, a 23-year-old female gorilla named Kurudi feeds on a stand of wild celery. She bends the green stalks and, with long careful fingers, peels off the exterior skin to expose the succulent inside.

Chameleon's tongue strike inspires fast-acting robots

Chameleons, salamanders and many toads use stored elastic energy to launch their sticky tongues at unsuspecting insects located up to one-and-a-half body lengths away, catching them within a tenth of a second.

Narcissism can lower stress levels and reduce chances of depression

People who have grandiose narcissistic traits are more likely to be 'mentally tough', feel less stressed and are less vulnerable to depression, research led by Queen's University Belfast has found.

Exerting self-control does not mean sacrificing pleasure

Choosing to eat chocolate cake instead of carrot sticks does not equal a lack of self-control, according to new research co-authored by a Cass Business School academic.

Cognitive screen paired with odor identification predicts lack of transition to dementia

A new study has found that performing well on two brief tests measuring cognitive ability and ability to identify odors indicates very low risk for Alzheimer's. We know that these tests can help predict the risk of developing dementia, but didn't know if they could help rule out those unlikely to develop Alzheimer's.

Can aspirin decrease the rate of intracranial aneurysm growth?

Researchers conducted a database search to investigate whether aspirin can aid in the prevention of intracranial aneurysm rupture by hindering aneurysm growth. The researchers identified 146 patients harboring multiple intracranial aneurysms, five millimeters or less in diameter, that had been observed for at least five years. In this set of patients, the researchers found an association between aspirin use and a decreased rate of aneurysm growth. Growth is important in intracranial aneurysms because it increases the risk of aneurysm rupture. Detailed findings are found in the article, "Aspirin associated with decreased rate of intracranial aneurysm growth," by Mario Zanaty, M.D., and colleagues, published today in the Journal of Neurosurgery.