PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

OU professor and team discover first evidence of milk consumption in ancient dental plaque

2014-11-27
(Press-News.org) Led by a University of Oklahoma professor, an international team of researchers has discovered the first evidence of milk consumption in the ancient dental calculus--a mineralized dental plaque--of humans in Europe and western Asia. The team found direct evidence of milk consumption preserved in human dental plaque from the Bronze Age to the present day.

"The study has far-reaching implications for understanding the relationship between human diet and evolution," said Christina Warinner, professor in the OU Department of Anthropology. "Dairy products are a very recent, post-Neolithic dietary innovation, and most of the world's population is unable to digest lactose, often developing the symptoms of lactose intolerance." Warinner led a group of researchers from the universities of York and Copenhagen, and the University College London.

Understanding how, where and when humans consumed milk products is a necessary link between human consumption and their livestock. The new research provides direct protein evidence that the milk of all three major dairy livestock--cattle, sheep and goats--has been consumed by human populations for at least 5,000 years. This corroborates previous evidence for milk fats identified on pottery and cooking utensils in early farming communities.

"The discovery of milk proteins in human dental calculus will allow scientists to unite these lines of evidence and compare the genetic traits and cultural behaviors of specific individuals who lived thousands of years ago," said Warinner.

INFORMATION:

A research article, "Direct evidence of milk consumption from ancient human dental calculus" has been published in Nature's Scientific Reports at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep07104. The research was supported by the Swiss Foundation for Nutritional Research, the Zurich Maxi Foundation, the University of York's Centre for Chronic Diseases and Disorders (Wellcome Trust) and EUROTAST (EU Marie Curie).

For more information on this research, please contact Christina Warinner at christina.warinner@ou.edu or visit the OU Department of Anthropology website at http://LMAMR.org.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Stroke damage mechanism identified

2014-11-27
Researchers have discovered a mechanism linked to the brain damage often suffered by stroke victims--and are now searching for drugs to block it. Strokes happen when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off but much of the harm to survivors' memory and other cognitive function is often actually caused by "oxidative stress" in the hours and days after the blood supply resumes. A team from the University of Leeds and Zhejiang University in China studied this second phase of damage in laboratory mice and found a mechanism in neurons that, if removed, reduced the ...

Study reveals significantly increased risk of stillbirth in males

2014-11-27
A large-scale study led by the University of Exeter has found that boys are more likely to be stillborn than girls. Published in the journal BMC Medicine, the study reviewed more than 30 million births globally, and found that the risk of stillbirth is about ten percent higher in boys. This equates to a loss of around 100 000 additional male babies per year. The results could help to explain why some pregnancies go wrong. Around a quarter of stillbirths have no known cause. Of the remainder, many are linked to placental abnormalities but it is often unclear why the abnormalities ...

Moderate coffee consumption may lower the risk of Alzheimer's disease by up to 20 percent

2014-11-27
Drinking 3-5 cups of coffee per day may help to protect against Alzheimer's Disease, according to research highlighted in an Alzheimer Europe session report published by the Institute for Scientific Information on Coffee (ISIC), a not-for-profit organisation devoted to the study and disclosure of science related to coffee and health. The number of people in Europe aged over 65 is predicted to rise from 15.4% of the population to 22.4% by 20251 and, with an aging population, neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease are of increasing concern. Alzheimer's Disease ...

New research supporting stroke rehabilitation

2014-11-27
Using world-leading research methods, the team of Dr David Wright and Prof Paul Holmes, working with Dr Jacqueline Williams from the Victoria University in Melbourne, studied activity in an area of the brain responsible for controlling movements when healthy participants observed a video showing simple hand movements and simultaneously imagined that they were performing the observed movement. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation - a technique where a coil placed over the scalp delivers a stimulation to the brain, activates neurons in the underlying area, and causes ...

Teens with a history of TBI are nearly 4 times more likely to have used crystal meth

2014-11-27
TORONTO, Nov. 26, 2014 - Ontario students between Grades 9 and 12 who said they had a traumatic brain injury in their lifetime, also reported drug use rates two to four times higher than peers with no history of TBI, according to research published today in The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. "Overall, a teen with a history of TBI is at least twice as likely as a classmate who hasn't suffered a brain injury to drink alcohol, use cannabis or abuse other drugs," said Dr. Michael Cusimano, co-principal investigator of the study and a neurosurgeon at St. Michael's ...

The artificial pancreas shown to improve the treatment of type 1 diabetes

The artificial pancreas shown to improve the treatment of type 1 diabetes
2014-11-27
This news release is available in French. The world's first clinical trial comparing three alternative treatments for type 1 diabetes was conducted in Montréal by researchers at the IRCM and the University of Montreal, led by endocrinologist Dr. Rémi Rabasa-Lhoret. The study confirms that the external artificial pancreas improves glucose control and reduces the risk of hypoglycemia compared to conventional diabetes treatment. The results, published today in the scientific journal The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, could have a significant impact on the ...

The Lancet: Leading medical experts call for an end to UK postcode lottery for liver disease treatment and detection

2014-11-27
Leading medical experts today [Thursday 27 November] warn that rising numbers of deaths from liver disease - already the UK's third commonest cause of premature death - will be unavoidable without radical improvements in treatment and detection services, and tougher government policies to control the excessive alcohol use and obesity responsible for much of the national burden of liver disease. In a major new Lancet Commission, led by Professor Roger Williams, Director of the Institute of Hepatology, London, UK, doctors and medical scientists from across the UK call ...

Two studies identify a detectable, pre-cancerous state in the blood

2014-11-27
Boston, MA. Wednesday, November 26, 2014 -- Researchers from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Harvard Medical School, and Harvard-affiliated hospitals have uncovered an easily detectable, "pre-malignant" state in the blood that significantly increases the likelihood that an individual will go on to develop blood cancers such as leukemia, lymphoma, or myelodysplastic syndrome. The discovery, which was made independently by two research teams affiliated with the Broad and partner institutions, opens new avenues for research aimed at early detection and prevention of ...

Nervous system may play bigger role in infections than previously known

Nervous system may play bigger role in infections than previously known
2014-11-27
TORONTO, Nov. 26, 2014--The nervous system may play a bigger role in infections and autoimmune diseases than previously known. If researchers can learn more about that role, it could provide insight into diagnosing and treating everything from the stomach flu to rheumatoid arthritis. Researchers at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, in conjunction with the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y., reviewed the latest, most vigorous pre-clinical trials on this topic in a commentary published Wednesday (Nov. 26) in the New England Journal of Medicine. ...

NIAID/GSK experimental Ebola vaccine appears safe, prompts immune response

NIAID/GSK experimental Ebola vaccine appears safe, prompts immune response
2014-11-27
An experimental vaccine to prevent Ebola virus disease was well-tolerated and produced immune system responses in all 20 healthy adults who received it in a Phase 1 clinical trial conducted by researchers from the National Institutes of Health. The candidate vaccine, which was co-developed by the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), was tested at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. The interim results are reported online in advance of print in the New England Journal of Medicine. "The unprecedented scale ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

People with diabetes face higher risk of sudden cardiac death

Breast density notification increases levels of confusion and anxiousness among women

K’gari’s world famous lakes could be at risk of drying

Airplane and hospital air is cleaner than you might think

Concern over harmful medical advice from social media influencers

Telling women as part of mammography screening that they have dense breasts may have unintended effects

Note- taking alone or combined with large language models helps students understand and remember better than large language models alone

Astronomers spot one of the largest spinning structures ever found in the Universe

Retinal organoid platform identifies biomarkers and affords genetic testing for retinal disease 

New roadmap reveals how everyday chemicals and microbes interact to fuel antimicrobial resistance

Scientists clarify how much metal in soil is “too much” for people and the environment​

Breakthrough pediatric kidney therapy emerges from U. Iowa research

Breakthrough iron-based magnetic material achieves major reduction in core loss

New design tackles heat challenges in high-power fiber lasers

Rapid fabrication of self-propelled, steerable magnetic microcatheters for precision medicine

Poor kidney health linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in blood

A metamaterial that bridges air and water

Evaluating building materials for climate impact and noise suppression

Scores of dinosaurs walked and swam along a Bolivian shoreline

Captive bottlenose dolphins vary vocalizations during enrichment activities

Adults who want children favor older-looking partners (but not for their money), study suggests

Authoritative parenting styles are associated with better mental health and self-esteem among adolescents, while authoritarian parenting styles are associated with depression and lower self-esteem and

A rose by any other name? Not necessarily—how words sound aesthetically correlates with their memorability, study finds

The odds of iron deficiency in adolescent girls are almost 14 times higher among those who experience heavy menstruation and follow a meat-restricted diet, compared to girls with normal menstruation w

Sperm tails and male infertility: Critical protein revealed by ultrastructure microscope

Bumblebees launch a three-stage defensive response when their nest is disturbed

Experimental drug repairs DNA damage caused by disease

Study shows common childhood virus can drive bladder cancer development

New test distinguishes vaccine-induced false positives from active HIV infection

Becoming human in southern Africa: What ancient hunter-gatherer genomes reveal

[Press-News.org] OU professor and team discover first evidence of milk consumption in ancient dental plaque