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

Advancing skin science: explore Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Strategic Topics in Malta this November

Advancing skin science: explore Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Strategic Topics in Malta this November
2024-05-24
(Press-News.org)

Get introduced to the latest advances in skin research at the 15th International Conference on Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 on November 5-6 at Corinthia Palace in Malta.

Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 will cover the hottest topics shaping the future of skin aging and rejuvenation.

How will Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Expand Your Knowledge?

Senolytics: Exploring new ways to fight cell aging with innovative senolytic treatments. Extracellular Vesicles: Discovering the potential of EVs for skin regeneration and repair. Skin Microbiota / Mitochondria Transplantation: Introducing approaches to harness the power of microbiome and mitochondrial transplantation for skin rejuvenation. Microbiome & Skin: Investigating the dynamic interplay between the skin microbiome and aging processes. Mitochondrial Function: Understanding the critical role of mitochondrial function in skin aging and exploring novel therapeutic strategies. Phage Therapy: Highlighting the application of phage therapy in skin infection control and tissue regeneration. Iron Metabolism: Discussing the intricate relationship between iron metabolism and skin aging.  

Meet Our First Speakers

Keynote Speaker: Helmut Sies, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany Helmut Sies, a distinguished professor from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany, celebrated for his groundbreaking contributions in oxidative stress research, will deliver the keynote speech. His presentation” Oxidative Stress: Eustress and Distress” will shed light on the intricate balance between beneficial and harmful oxidative stress on skin health.

Jean Krutmann, President of Skin Ageing & Challenges, Leibniz Research Institute for Environmental Medicine, Germany Karin Scharffetter-Kochanek, Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Germany Andres Caicedo, Universidad San Francisco de Quito USFQ, Ecuador Jill Helms, Stanford University, USA Markus Schosserer, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria Julia Oh, The Jackson Laboratory, USA  

Want to Showcase Your Latest Research and Innovation at Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024?

We’re seeking abstracts and innovations that explore advancements in skin health and aging. Whether you’re investigating new treatments, uncovering cellular mechanisms, or showcasing the latest skin technologies, this is your chance to share your work.

Awards will be distributed for the best short oral presentation, best poster presentation, and best innovation.

Learn more about the conference, speakers, and important dates on our www.skin-challenges.com.

For scientific Inquiries please contact: president@skin-challenges.com.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Advancing skin science: explore Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Strategic Topics in Malta this November Advancing skin science: explore Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Strategic Topics in Malta this November 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Controlling water, transforming greenhouse gases

Controlling water, transforming greenhouse gases
2024-05-24
Carbon dioxide is the greenhouse gas, singlehandedly responsible for 78% of the change in energy balance in Earth's atmosphere between 1990 and 2022. A byproduct of burning fossil fuels, carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere from car exhaust and coal-fired power plants. Even some renewable energy resources produce a small amount of carbon dioxide, although at a tiny fraction of the amount coal and natural gas create. At its core, this molecule is just an arrangement of one carbon and two oxygen atoms that can be reorganized through a ...

MSK Research Highlights, May 24, 2024

MSK Research Highlights, May 24, 2024
2024-05-24
New research from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) investigates a promising approach against diabetic retinopathy and finds patients with early-onset colorectal cancer likely don’t need more frequent surveillance colonoscopies. Anti-ceramide immunotherapy promising against diabetic retinopathy, animal studies suggest Diabetic retinopathy is a condition that affects blood vessels in people with diabetes and can cause blindness. Now a new study from a team at MSK, Michigan State University, and the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center shows that diabetic retinopathy can be considered a “ceramidopathy” — which ...

ASCO: Large precision oncology study identifies differences in prostate cancer genomics among a racially and ethnically diverse cohort of U.S. veterans

2024-05-24
FINDINGS A new study led by a UCLA-VA collaborative team looking at the landscape of genomic alterations in more than 5,000 veterans with metastatic prostate cancer uncovered differences in the genomic makeup of cancer cells that were associated with race and ethnicity.  Although the team found that a similar set of cancer-related genes were altered in both non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic white veterans, the frequencies that these alterations were observed at varied significantly ...

ASCO: Combination therapy significantly improves outcomes for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

2024-05-24
FINDINGS A study led by UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers found that using a combination of experimental immunotherapy drugs with chemotherapy significantly improves progression-free survival and overall survival for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who have previously undergone standard chemotherapy treatment when compared to those who received the targeted therapy regorafenib alone. The median progression-free survival, which is the amount of time during and after treatment when the cancer does not worsen or progress, with the combination treatment was 6.2 months compared to 2.1 months for those ...

Euclid space mission releases first scientific results and new images of the cosmos

Euclid space mission releases first scientific results and new images of the cosmos
2024-05-24
European space mission Euclid has released early scientific papers based on observations made by the space telescope, along with five new astronomical images of the Universe, as the project sets about unravelling the secrets of the cosmos. The new images are part of Euclid’s Early Release Observations (EROs) and accompany the mission’s first scientific data and 10 forthcoming science papers. Their publication comes less than a year after the space telescope’s launch and some six months after it returned its first full-colour ...

Sociodemographic heterogeneity in the associations of social isolation with mortality

2024-05-24
About The Study: Social isolation was associated with increased risks of all-cause, cardiovascular diseases, and malignant neoplasm mortality, with associations varying across populations. This study fills an important gap in research on social isolation, emphasizing its varied associations across demographic and socioeconomic groups.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Atsushi Nakagomi, M.D., Ph.D., email anakagomi0211@gmail.com. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.13132) Editor’s Note: Please ...

COVID-19 admission rates and changes in care quality in us hospitals

2024-05-24
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study, COVID-19 surges were associated with declines in hospital quality, highlighting the importance of identifying and implementing strategies to maintain care quality during periods of high hospital use.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Giacomo Meille, Ph.D., email giacomo.meille@ahrq.hhs.gov. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.13127) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, ...

Preterm and early-term delivery after heat waves in 50 US metropolitan areas

2024-05-24
About The Study: Preterm and early-term birth rates increased after heat waves, particularly among socioeconomically disadvantaged subgroups in this cohort study. Extreme heat events have implications for perinatal health.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Lyndsey A. Darrow, Ph.D., email ldarrow@unr.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.12055) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and ...

Research spotlight: Virtual scribes reduced physicians’ time spent on electronic health records

Research spotlight: Virtual scribes reduced physicians’ time spent on electronic health records
2024-05-24
Lisa Rotenstein, MD, of the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is the lead author of a new study published in JAMA Network Open, “Virtual Scribes and Physician Time Spent on Electronic Health Records.” What question were you investigating? We sought to understand the impact of virtual scribes (human scribes who are not physically present in the exam room with the physician and patient) on how physicians spend their time and which characteristics are associated with physicians responding best to scribes. What methods or approach did you use? We studied the experiences of 144 physicians across specialties treating patients ...

Duke-NUS researchers develop new light-controlled ‘off switch’ for brain cells

Duke-NUS researchers develop new light-controlled ‘off switch’ for brain cells
2024-05-24
Researchers from Duke-NUS Medical School have found that a new class of light-sensitive proteins are capable of turning off brain cells with light, offering scientists an unprecedentedly effective tool to investigate brain function. The study, recently published in Nature Communications, opens exciting new opportunities to apply optogenetics to investigate the brain activity underlying neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders such as Parkinson’s disease and depression. Optogenetics is a technique where specific cells are bioengineered to include light-sensitive proteins that act as switches, allowing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Interpretation on feature groups for tree models

Military discharge is a time of challenge and opportunity

Common pregnancy complications may be a signal of future stroke risk

Barcodes uncover early blueprints of our cellular origins

Stanford Medicine-led phase 3 trial shows gene therapy skin grafts help epidermolysis bullosa

‘Pill-on-a-thread’ could replace endoscopies for half of all patients being monitored for esophageal cancer risk

Study casts doubt on ‘incestuous royalty’ in Neolithic Ireland

Heart valve developed at UC Irvine shines in early-stage preclinical testing

In diseases due to exposure to toxic particles like gout, macrophages elicit separate pathways for inflammation and lysosomal function

Zoning out could be beneficial—and may actually help us learn faster

Weekly semaglutide improves blood sugar and weight in adults with Type 1 diabetes

Concerned father, statistician develops software to improve skills therapy

Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics

ImmunoPET tracer enhances early detection of liver cancer

AI-based brain-mapping software receives FDA market authorization

New PET tracer identifies diverse invasive mold infections behind life-threatening illnesses in cancer and transplant patients

Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) achieves notable impact factor growth in latest journal citation reports

AI chatbot safeguards fail to prevent spread of health disinformation

UTIA researcher to receive award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society

HSE linguists study how bilinguals use phrases with numerals in Russian

Cold winters halt the northward spread of species in a warming climate

Study finds early signs of widespread coastal marsh decline

Massive burps of carbon dioxide led to oxygen-less ocean environments in the deep past

US muslims’ attitudes toward psychedelic therapy

HSE scientists reveal how staying at alma mater can affect early-career researchers

Durham University scientists reveal new cosmic insights as first Rubin Observatory images released

Emotional and directional enabled programmable flexible haptic interface for enhanced cognition in disabled community

Music on the brain: exploring how songs boost memory

Non-contact and nanometer-scale measurement of shallow PN junction depth buried in Si wafers

A unified approach to first principles calculations of Parton physics in hadrons

[Press-News.org] Advancing skin science: explore Skin Ageing & Challenges 2024 Strategic Topics in Malta this November