SAN FRANCISCO, CA, April 21, 2014 (Press-News.org) The fine Italian wrought iron Furnishing Collections of CIANI - EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE www.EmporioSanFirenze.com have continually satisfied the need for art and commercial production, typical of the evolution of artisan workmanship from the Florentine Renaissance to today. Each product begins with hand drawings and is then fabricated by carefully pairing various materials of art glass, bronze, pewter, marble or fine fabrics with specialty finishes of gold, rust, silver or painted color combinations. Interior and exterior collections from antique reproductions to modern design styles of furniture, planters, light fixtures, and more. Custom orders are welcome.
ANNE THULL FINE ART DESIGNS is proud to represent CIANI - EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE in America because it blends with our focus of creating unique artistic designed and fabricated products for residential, hospitality and commercial projects. Visit www.EmporioSanFirenze.com and contact www.AnneThullFineArtDesigns.com to order your amazing selections.
CIANI - EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE: Italian Wrought Iron Furnishing Collections have continually satisfied the need for fine artisan workmanship for residential, hospitality and commercial projects. Interior and exterior antique reproductions to modern design style collections of furniture, planters, light fixtures and more. Custom orders are welcome. www.EmporioSanFirenze.com available through www.AnneThullFineArtDesigns.com located in the San Francisco Design Center and Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA., USA.
EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE: Fine Italian Wrought Iron Furnishing Collections - Now Available Through Anne Thull Fine Art Designs
Interior and exterior Italian wrought iron furnishings of EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE satisfy the need for artisan workmanship and commercial production of Florentine Renaissance designs to modern design styles of today.
2014-04-21
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2014-04-21
Despite its potentially harmful effects in children, codeine continues to be prescribed in U.S. emergency rooms, according to new research from UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital San Francisco.
As reported in the May issue of Pediatrics, solutions include changing provider prescription behaviors to promote the use of better alternatives to codeine, such as ibuprofen or hydrocodone.
"Despite strong evidence against the use of codeine in children, the drug continues to be prescribed to large numbers of them each year," said Sunitha Kaiser, MD, UCSF assistant clinical professor ...
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2014-04-21
LIVERMORE, Calif.— A recent Sandia National Laboratories study offers insight into how a federal transportation security officer's thought process can influence decisions made during airport baggage screening, findings that are helping the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) improve the performance of its security officers.
The TSA-funded project, led by Sandia researchers Ann Speed and Kiran Lakkaraju, focused on the impacts on threat detection when transportation security officers are asked to switch between the pre-check (indicated by TSA as TSA Pre✓) ...
Low tolerance for pain? The reason may be in your genes
2014-04-20
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"Our study is quite significant because it provides an objective way to understand pain and why different individuals have different pain tolerance levels," said study author Tobore Onojjighofia, MD, MPH, with Proove Biosciences and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. "Identifying ...
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2014-04-20
NEW YORK, NY (April 20, 2014) — A team of researchers from Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC), Weill Cornell Medical College, and Brandeis University has devised a wholly new approach to the treatment of Alzheimer's disease involving the so-called retromer protein complex. Retromer plays a vital role in neurons, steering amyloid precursor protein (APP) away from a region of the cell where APP is cleaved, creating the potentially toxic byproduct amyloid-beta, which is thought to contribute to the development of Alzheimer's.
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Bulletproof nuclei? Stem cells exhibit unusual absorption property
2014-04-20
Stem cells – the body's master cells – demonstrate a bizarre property never before seen at a cellular level, according to a study published today from scientists at the University of Cambridge. The property – known as auxeticity – is one which may have application as wide-ranging as soundproofing, super-absorbent sponges and bulletproof vests.
Most materials when stretched will contract. For example, if one pulls on an elastic band, the elastic itself will get thinner. The opposite is also true: squeeze a material and it will expand – for example, if one squeezes a tennis ...
Computational method dramatically speeds up estimates of gene expression
2014-04-20
PITTSBURGH—With gene expression analysis growing in importance for both basic researchers and medical practitioners, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Maryland have developed a new computational method that dramatically speeds up estimates of gene activity from RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data.
With the new method, dubbed Sailfish after the famously speedy fish, estimates of gene expression that previously took many hours can be completed in a few minutes, with accuracy that equals or exceeds previous methods. The researchers' report on their ...
Cancer stem cells linked to drug resistance
2014-04-20
Most drugs used to treat lung, breast and pancreatic cancers also promote drug-resistance and ultimately spur tumor growth. Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have discovered a molecule, or biomarker, called CD61 on the surface of drug-resistant tumors that appears responsible for inducing tumor metastasis by enhancing the stem cell-like properties of cancer cells.
The findings, published in the April 20, 2014 online issue of Nature Cell Biology, may point to new therapeutic opportunities for reversing drug resistance in a range ...
Study of gut microbes, antibiotics: Clues to improving immunity in premature infants
2014-04-20
Mothers give a newborn baby a gift of germs—germs that help to kick-start the infant's immune system. But antibiotics, used to fend off infection, may paradoxically interrupt a newborn's own immune responses, leaving already-vulnerable premature babies more susceptible to dangerous pathogens.
A new animal study by neonatology researchers at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) sheds light on immunology in newborns by revealing how gut microbes play a crucial role in fostering the rapid production of infection-fighting white blood cells, called granulocytes.
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Dana-Farber researchers uncover link between Down syndrome and leukemia
2014-04-20
BOSTON –Although doctors have long known that people with Down syndrome have a heightened risk of developing acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) during childhood, they haven't been able to explain why. Now, a team of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute investigators has uncovered a connection between the two conditions.
In a study posted online today by the journal Nature Genetics, the researchers track the genetic chain of events that links a chromosomal abnormality in Down syndrome to the cellular havoc that occurs in ALL. Their findings are relevant not only to people with ...
Stanford scientists identify source of most cases of invasive bladder cancer
2014-04-20
STANFORD, Calif. — A single type of cell in the lining of the bladder is responsible for most cases of invasive bladder cancer, according to researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
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[Press-News.org] EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE: Fine Italian Wrought Iron Furnishing Collections - Now Available Through Anne Thull Fine Art DesignsInterior and exterior Italian wrought iron furnishings of EMPORIO SAN FIRENZE satisfy the need for artisan workmanship and commercial production of Florentine Renaissance designs to modern design styles of today.