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

AADOCR announces recipients of the 2024 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Application (SCADA)

2024-03-29
(Press-News.org) Alexandria, VA – The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) has named the recipients of the 2024 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Application (SCADA). The recipients were recognized during the Opening Ceremonies of the 53rd Annual Meeting of the AADOCR, which was held in conjunction with the 102nd General Session of the International Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research and the 48th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association for Dental Research, on March 13-16, 2024 in New Orleans, LA.

The winners are:

CLINICAL RESEARCH & PUBLIC HEALTH CATEGORY

1st – Daniel Rexin, Loma Linda University, California, Steam Sterilization of 3D-Printed Surgical Guides Affects Implant Placement Accuracy

2nd – Robert Zhou, University of the Pacific, San Francisco, California, Comprehensive Assessment of Deep Overbite Correction Using Clear Aligners

3rd – Chao Dong, University of Washington, Seattle, Influence of Gender on OMS Applicants’ Recommendation Letters


BASIC & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE CATEGORY

1st – Ameera Samaher Haque, University of California at San Francisco, Unraveling the Cellular Basis of Murine Incisor Morphogenesis

2nd – Conrad Harness, Texas A&M University, Dallas, Mechanical Forces Regulate Plasticity of Scx+ Cells During Condyle Growth

3rd – Ali Al Hatem, UT Health at Houston, MDT-15 Mediates Enhanced Immunity in C. Elegans Against S. Gordonii


In 2017, AADOCR and Dentsply Sirona joined forces to co-sponsor SCADA, which was previously known as the Student Clinicians of the American Dental Association (ADA). The dental student research program was first presented in 1959 at the centennial session of the ADA annual meeting in New York City as a joint venture between DENTSPLY International and the ADA. The program has run continuously since 1959 and has expanded globally, engaging dental hygiene students and more than 7,000 undergraduate dental students from 39 countries. Many participants have gone on to serve in leadership roles in dental professional organizations, academics, and industry.

About AADOCR

The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research is a nonprofit organization with a mission to drive dental, oral, and craniofacial research to advance health and well-being. AADOCR represents the individual scientists, clinician-scientists, dental professionals, and students based in academic, government, non-profit and private-sector institutions who share our mission. AADOCR is the largest division of the International Association for Dental Research. Learn more at www.aadocr.org.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Veterans help provide greater insight into Klinefelter and Jacobs syndromes

2024-03-29
AURORA, Colo. (March 29,  2024) –Researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and collaborators across the country have conducted the largest and most diverse study of men with extra X or Y chromosomes in the US using a large dataset of military veterans. The results could lead to better diagnoses of these underrecognized conditions and earlier treatment of associated diseases. The study was published today in JAMA Network Open. “One in 400 males have an additional X or Y chromosome, however 86 percent of these individuals are not diagnosed,” said ...

Three renowned Argonne scientists accept joint appointments at the University of Houston

Three renowned Argonne scientists accept joint appointments at the University of Houston
2024-03-29
HOUSTON, March 29, 2024 – Three top researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory have accepted joint appointments in various capacities at the University of Houston. These appointments are part of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) Argonne signed recently with the Greater Houston Partnership. The MoU creates greater collaboration across academia, industry, private investors and government to accelerate and scale decarbonization efforts in the region, with the goal of achieving a net-zero emissions economy by 2050, according to an Argonne press release. “This strategic collaboration leverages the combined strengths ...

High-resolution images reveal similarities in protein structures between Alzheimer’s disease and Down syndrome

2024-03-29
INDIANAPOLIS – More than 90% of people with Down syndrome, the most common chromosomal disorder in humans and the most frequent genetic cause of intellectual disability, are diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease by ages 55-60. A new study recently published in Nature Structural and Molecular Biology uses leading-edge cryo-electron microscopy imaging technology to determine whether differences exist between the protein structures in those with Alzheimer’s disease and those with both Alzheimer’s disease and Down syndrome. “Just like in Alzheimer’s disease, the neuropathological phenotype in those with ...

How blocking a neural receptor responsible for addiction could reduce alcohol use

2024-03-29
LA JOLLA, CA—Scripps Research scientists have found that LY2444296—a compound that selectively blocks the kappa opioid receptor (KOP)—may reduce drinking in cases of alcohol dependence in animal studies. The findings, which were published March 9, 2024, in Scientific Reports, could eventually inform new treatment options for people who experience alcohol use disorder (AUD). “Compounds designed to selectively block the KOP are very promising because this receptor is involved in a lot of mental illnesses, such as ...

Researchers discover skin biomarkers in infants that predict early development of food allergies

2024-03-29
DENVER — (MARCH 29, 2024) Food allergies occur often in childhood and can be severe or even fatal. Researchers at National Jewish Health are working to develop a program to prevent food allergies and have now identified early predictors of the condition.         During a recent study just published online in the March 2024 issue of the Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology, skin tape strips were collected from the forearms of newborns at the age of two months, an age before there ...

Researchers reveal evolutionary path of important proteins

Researchers reveal evolutionary path of important proteins
2024-03-29
New research from the University of Wisconsin–Madison decodes the evolutionary pathway of regulatory proteins, the molecules that help control gene expression. The findings from the Raman Lab in the Department of Biochemistry recently published their findings in the journal Cell Systems. Here’s a rundown on what they discovered: Proteins acquire and lose functions through evolutionary processes as cells adapt to changes in their environment over time. Protein evolution is well studied in certain enzymes but is understudied in regulatory proteins, which help control gene expression. A new, ...

Insilico Medicine presents progress of 5 novel AI cancer drugs at AACR

2024-03-29
Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”), a clinical-stage generative artificial intelligence (AI)-driven drug discovery company, today announced that five preclinical programs have been accepted as poster presentations in the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024 (AACR 2024) happening April 5-10 in San Diego. Abstracts are now available on the AACR website. Insilico’s drug discovery efforts are driven by its validated and commercially viable AI drug discovery platform, Pharma.AI, ...

Study finds benefits in prescribing alcohol use disorder medications upon discharge from alcohol-related hospitalizations

2024-03-29
BOSTON – For adults hospitalized for alcohol-related reasons, receiving a prescription for an alcohol use disorder (AUD) medication at the time of discharge may lower their risk of return to hospital within 30 days of discharge, including emergency room visits and readmissions. That’s according to a recent study published in JAMA Network Open led by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and the University of Pittsburgh. For the study, the investigators identified 9,834 alcohol-related hospitalizations among 6,794 Medicare Part D beneficiaries across the United States in 2016. Only 2.0% of hospitalizations involved filled ...

USC Schaeffer Center study finds few hospitals promoting potentially predatory medical payment products

2024-03-29
Fifty million Americans are on a financing plan to pay off medical or dental bills, with one-quarter of those bearing some interest. Increasingly, medical payment products (MPPs) – which include credit cards and loans administered by hospitals, physician practices, or third-party companies – have come under scrutiny by the Consumer Financial Protections Bureau, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and the Treasury.  The agencies’ concern is that the products may be sidestepping a broad range of patient and consumer protections and inflating ...

Mandatory standards for the indoor environment would result in immense benefits to the health and productivity of people around the world

2024-03-29
This publication is a call to action for governments and agencies to develop, legislate and enforce IAQ standards. Boerstra: “Traditionally, governments have regulated outdoor air. But inhabitants of industrialized countries now spend more than 90% of their time indoors.” As a result, indoor pollutants have major consequences for our long-term health. Bluyssen: “For example, we now know that tiny airborne particles can pass directly from lungs to bloodstream, where they cause all kinds of diseases.” And indoor air is also a prime transmitter of pathogens, as demonstrated by the COVID-19 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Terahertz imaging: a breakthrough in non-invasive cochlear visualization

ENO2: a key player in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma metastasis

Biocompatible hydrogel enables wearable electronics for monitoring marine life health

We must not ignore eugenics in our genetics curriculum, says professor

Semaglutide and Nonarteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy Risk Among Patients With Diabetes

Electronic Screen Use and Sleep Duration and Timing in Adults

State Minimum Wage and Food Insecurity Among US Households With Children

Novel adsorbent offers effective solution for perchlorate removal from water

Terahertz imaging reveals new views of internal cochlear structure

Machine learning program enhances transplant risk assessment in myelofibrosis patients better than current models

Beyond ambiguous reflections: Bridging optical 3D metrology and computer vision

Baylor Anthropology scientist Julie Hoggarth, Ph.D., named AAAS Fellow

Joint clinical commitment will advance integration of telehealth, value of patient care

The Protein Society announces its 2025 Award Recipients

AI is as good as pathologists at diagnosing celiac disease, study finds

AI could help sonographers identify abnormalities in unborn babies more quickly

First clinical trial of an AI therapy chatbot yields significant mental health benefits

AI learns to ‘speak’ genetic ‘dialect’ for future SARS-CoV-2 mutation prediction

$50 million gift from the Weill Family Foundation establishes the Weill Cancer Hub East

Physics meets art: a new twist on interference patterns

Elevating global heart failure care with new certification

The MIT Press releases 2025 Direct to Open (D2O) Impact Report

New study reveals the curative potential of genome editing approach for genetic deafness

AAAS elects Keck School of Medicine of USC molecular biologist Yali Dou as 2025 fellow

Damaging cluster of UK winter storms driven by swirling polar vortex miles above Earth

Losing forest carbon stocks could put climate goals out of reach

From weight to wellness: New database transforms obesity research

Nature’s viny vampire: Discovering what drives parasitic Cuscuta campestris

How calcium may have unlocked the origins of life’s molecular asymmetry

Study finds long Covid patients feel pressure to prove their illness is real

[Press-News.org] AADOCR announces recipients of the 2024 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Application (SCADA)