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Patients with high blood pressure who partnered with community health workers more likely to achieve blood pressure control

2023-02-23
Patients with hypertension paired with a community health worker (CHW) through their primary care practice were more than three and a half times as likely to achieve blood pressure control within six months compared to patients who were not. New research, led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, suggest that similar CHW inventions could help other underserved, immigrant communities experiencing similar disparities. Published online today in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, the findings focus on community health workers (CHWs), lay members of a community who usually share ethnicity, language, income level, and/or life experiences with the people ...

Dr. Omar Abdul-Rahman named Chief of Division of Medical Genetics in Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital

Dr. Omar Abdul-Rahman named Chief of Division of Medical Genetics in Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital
2023-02-23
Dr. Omar Abdul-Rahman, a leading specialist in pediatric genetic medicine, has been named chief of the Division of Medical Genetics in the Department of Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital, effective March 1. The Division of Medical Genetics provides inpatient and outpatient consultation and medical care for children and adolescents with common and rare genetic conditions, including screening and counseling for inherited disease risk during pregnancy. Dr. Abdul-Rahman, who was recruited ...

New treatment regimen may decrease mortality in patients with cardiotoxicity from immune checkpoint inhibitors

2023-02-23
Bottom Line: Among cancer patients who developed cardiotoxicity after treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy, those treated with abatacept (Orencia), ruxolitinib, and/or mechanical ventilation as needed had a significantly lower mortality rate than those treated with standard-of-care corticosteroids. Journal in Which the Study was Published: Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Author: Joe-Elie Salem, MD, PhD, a professor at Sorbonne Université, and executive assistant director of one of France’s Clinical Investigation Centers focused on cardio-metabolism Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors comprise ...

U.S. Department of Energy announces $68 million for small businesses developing technologies to cut emissions and study climate

2023-02-23
WASHINGTON, D.C.—The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced awards totaling more than $68 million that will go to 53 small businesses that are solving scientific problems. Projects include developing tools for climate research and advanced materials and technologies for clean energy conversion. Understanding the climate and the ability to convert and store energy are instrumental to meeting President Biden’s goal of a completely clean electrical grid by 2035 and net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions ...

Researchers identify breakthrough in understanding fentanyl abuse

2023-02-23
The ongoing opioid epidemic continues to take a heavy toll on American communities, with more than 80,000 opioid-related deaths reported in 2021, according to the National Institutes of Health. Despite the severity of this issue, the neurological mechanisms underlying opioid addiction, withdrawal and relapse are not fully understood. A study recently published in Cell Reports sheds light on the subject. Jun Wang, associate professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics at the Texas A&M University School of Medicine, and members ...

Simplified HIV treatment options just as effective: Major clinical trial

2023-02-23
(SEATTLE, Wednesday 22 February 2023) Two newer simplified treatment options are at least as effective as current approaches, according to the results of a world-first international clinical trial into second-line HIV therapy led by the Kirby Institute at UNSW Sydney and presented today at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Seattle. Second-line treatment is the name given to the range of treatment options available to a person for whom the first HIV treatment offered to them does not work. Worldwide, this is about 10% of people ...

New design for lithium-air battery could offer much longer driving range compared with the lithium-ion battery

New design for lithium-air battery could offer much longer driving range compared with the lithium-ion battery
2023-02-23
Many owners of electric cars have wished for a battery pack that could power their vehicle for more than a thousand miles on a single charge. Researchers at the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) and U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have developed a lithium-air battery that could make that dream a reality. The team’s new battery design could also one day power domestic airplanes and long-haul trucks. The main new component in this lithium-air battery is a solid electrolyte instead of the usual liquid variety. Batteries with solid electrolytes ...

Parkinson’s disease patients experience significant reduction in symptoms with non-surgical focused ultrasound treatment

2023-02-23
VIDEOS: Interviews, B-Roll https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/b1tpiamgunp5ekymyxaks/h?dl=0&rlkey=zk15bee6kru69ebryxaha0g3j YouTube Video. Unlisted & only viewable w/ link until embargo lifts. https://youtu.be/Ceg7R3sw7Qs   Patients with Parkinson’s disease achieved a significant improvement in their tremors, mobility, and other physical symptoms after having a minimally invasive procedure involving focused ultrasound, according to a new study today published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The clinical trial was led by researchers at the ...

UTA research explores how T-cells detect cancer

UTA research explores how T-cells detect cancer
2023-02-23
A University of Texas at Arlington bioengineering professor is leading a state-funded project that will try to identify what T-cells are detecting in cancerous cells to better craft a personalized cancer immunotherapy. George Alexandrakis received a $250,000 Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) grant titled “Ultrasensitive Nanosensor-Based Detection of Tumor Immunogenic Peptides to Enable Personalized Cancer Immunotherapy.” “One of the challenges with cancer is that it is so variable. It changes all the time and is different in all people,” Alexandrakis said. ...

After 25 years of AI health tech research computers are slowly beginning to listen to patients

2023-02-23
Patients experiences of health conditions are slowly being integrated into healthcare AI studies, a review of 25 years of studies has found. In a new paper published in Lancet Digital Health along with an associated opinion piece, experts from the University of Birmingham and University Hospitals Birmingham have looked at more than 600 interventional studies on AI healthcare technologies. While the team, funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), found that only 24% of studies have a patient reported outcome element included in their study, there has been an increase in the number in recent years with 2021 and 2022 seeing nearly two thirds of all studies ...

Prioritise tackling toxic emissions from tyres, urge Imperial experts

2023-02-23
Imperial experts are calling for more to be done to limit the potentially harmful impact of toxic tyre particles on health and the environment.  The researchers, from Imperial College London’s Transition to Zero Pollution initiative, warn that even though electric vehicles remove the problem of fuel emissions, we will continue to have a problem with particulate matter because of tyre wear.   Six million tonnes of tyre wear particles are released globally each year, and in London alone, 2.6 million vehicles emit around nine thousand tonnes of tyre wear particles annually.   Despite this, research on the environmental ...

Surge in nitrous oxide abuse: New guidelines to help clinicians recognise cases and prevent spinal cord damage

Surge in nitrous oxide abuse: New guidelines to help clinicians recognise cases and prevent spinal cord damage
2023-02-23
Recommendations from research published today on the diagnosis and treatment of spinal cord damage caused by nitrous oxide abuse have been simultaneously adopted as official clinical practice guidelines by the Association of British Neurologists. The unprecedented speed in translating research into practice is necessary as medical cases of nitrous oxide abuse surge in parallel with increased use of what is now the second most popular recreational drug among young people in the UK. Recreational use of nitrous oxide (N2O - also known as laughing gas) ...

Technical adequacy of artificial intelligence body composition assessed in external CT

Technical adequacy of artificial intelligence body composition assessed in external CT
2023-02-23
Leesburg, VA, February 23, 2023—According to an accepted manuscript published in ARRS’ American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR), certain reasons for AI tool failure relating to technical factors may be largely preventable through proper acquisition and reconstruction protocols. “The automated AI body composition tools had high technical adequacy rates in a heterogeneous sample of external CT examinations, supporting the tools’ generalizability and potential for broad use,” concluded head researcher B. Dustin Pooler, MD, from the University of ...

New predatory fish species which lived about 360 million years ago may have grown to over 2.5m long, according to analysis of South African fossils

New predatory fish species which lived about 360 million years ago may have grown to over 2.5m long, according to analysis of South African fossils
2023-02-22
New predatory fish species which lived about 360 million years ago may have grown to over 2.5m long, according to analysis of South African fossils ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0281333 Article Title: A high latitude Gondwanan species of the Late Devonian tristichopterid Hyneria (Osteichthyes: Sarcopterygii) Author Countries: South Africa, Sweden Funding: PEA: Wallenberg Scholarship (not numbered), from the Knut & Alice Wallenberg Foundation. https://kaw.wallenberg.org PEA: ERC Advanced ...

Influence of US weather conditions on tornado trends since 1980 explored by new model

Influence of US weather conditions on tornado trends since 1980 explored by new model
2023-02-22
Influence of US weather conditions on tornado trends since 1980 explored by new model ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0281312 Article Title: Long term temporal trends in synoptic-scale weather conditions favoring significant tornado occurrence over the central United States Author Countries: USA Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this work. END ...

Cash transfers in LMICs may help alleviate depression and anxiety symptoms - especially if such transfers are unconditional

Cash transfers in LMICs may help alleviate depression and anxiety symptoms - especially if such transfers are unconditional
2023-02-22
Cash transfers in LMICs may help alleviate depression and anxiety symptoms - especially if such transfers are unconditional ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0281283 Article Title: Do cash transfers alleviate common mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries? A systematic review and meta-analysis Author Countries: UK, Germany Funding: JS was supported by the Joachim Herz Foundation (https://www.joachim-herz-stiftung.de/en/). AR received funding from the Wellcome Trust (220206/Z/20/Z, ...

Two high status brothers had access to “brain surgery” in Bronze Age Israel

Two high status brothers had access to “brain surgery” in Bronze Age Israel
2023-02-22
Two high status brothers buried in a Bronze Age tomb in Israel were severely ill but apparently had access to rare treatments including trephination, according to a study published February 22, 2023 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Rachel Kalisher of Brown University, Rhode Island, and colleagues. In this study, authors examined the remains of two individuals buried in a tomb beneath an elite residence in the archaeological site of Tel Megiddo in Israel. The tomb dates to the Late Bronze Age (around 1550-1450 BC), and DNA testing suggests the buried individuals are brothers. Both skeletons show evidence of disease, providing an opportunity ...

Archaeologists uncover early evidence of brain surgery in Ancient Near East

Archaeologists uncover early evidence of brain surgery in Ancient Near East
2023-02-22
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Archaeologists know that people have practiced cranial trephination, a medical procedure that involves cutting a hole in the skull, for thousands of years. They’ve turned up evidence that ancient civilizations across the globe, from South America to Africa and beyond, performed the surgery. Now, thanks to a recent excavation at the ancient city of Megiddo, Israel, there’s new evidence that one particular type of trephination dates back to at least the late Bronze Age. Rachel Kalisher, a Ph.D. candidate at Brown University’s Joukowsky ...

Keeping babies alive will lower population growth – new research

Keeping babies alive will lower population growth – new research
2023-02-22
Keeping babies alive will lower population growth – new research    New research showing high infant mortality rates are contributing to an incessant rise of the global human population supports arguments for greater access to contraception and family planning in low- and middle-income nations.   In an article published in PLOS ONE, research led by Professor Corey Bradshaw, Matthew Flinders Professor of Global Ecology from Flinders University and Peter Le Souëf, Professor of Paediatrics from The University of Western Australia has found that with higher baby death rates and larger household sizes (as an indicator of population density), ...

First transient electronic bandage speeds healing by 30%

First transient electronic bandage speeds healing by 30%
2023-02-22
Wireless, battery-free bandage delivers electrical signals to help wounds heal Bandage monitors healing, streaming data in real time to a smartphone or tablet After healing is complete, bandage and electronics harmlessly absorb into the body EVANSTON, Ill. — Northwestern University researchers have developed a first-of-its-kind small, flexible, stretchable bandage that accelerates healing by delivering electrotherapy directly to the wound site. In an animal study, the new bandage healed ...

Giant proteins in a giant cell: Molecular basis behind fastest biological movement of single-celled eukaryotes

Giant proteins in a giant cell: Molecular basis behind fastest biological movement of single-celled eukaryotes
2023-02-22
In his famous letter to the Royal Society dated Oct. 9, 1676, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek described a single-celled eukaryote (Vorticella) and its fascinating ultrafast cell contraction as the first set of discoveries. This kind of ultrafast cell contraction triggered by a Ca2+-dependent mechanism is distinct from the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent mechanisms found in actin-myosin and dynein/kinesin-tubulin systems.  Spirostomum, is a genus of millimeter-scale single-celled protists that are known for their incredibly rapid movement like Vorticella. They are capable ...

Bow-and-arrow, technology of the first modern humans in Europe 54,000 years ago at Mandrin, France

2023-02-22
If the emergence of mechanically propelled weapons in prehistory is commonly perceived as one of the hallmarks of the advance of modern human populations into the European continent, the existence of archery has always been more difficult to trace. The recognition of these technologies in the European Upper Paleolithic has been hampered by ballistic overlaps between weapons projected with a thruster or a bow. Archery technologies are essentially based on the use of perishable materials; wood, fibers, leather, resins, and sinew, which are rarely preserved in European Paleolithic sites and make archaeological recognition ...

Climate change, urbanization drive major declines in L.A.’s birds

Climate change, urbanization drive major declines in L.A.’s birds
2023-02-22
Berkeley — Climate change isn’t the only threat facing California’s birds. Over the course of the 20th century, urban sprawl and agricultural development have dramatically changed the landscape of the state, forcing many native species to adapt to new and unfamiliar habitats. In a new study, biologists at the University of California, Berkeley, use current and historical bird surveys to reveal how land use change has amplified — and in some cases mitigated — the impacts of climate ...

Twin-bioengine self-adaptive micro/nanorobots developed for gastrointestinal inflammation therapy

Twin-bioengine self-adaptive micro/nanorobots developed for gastrointestinal inflammation therapy
2023-02-22
Micro/nanorobots with self-propelling and -navigating capabilities have attracted extensive attention in drug delivery and therapy owing to their controllable locomotion in hard-to-reach body tissues. However, developing self-adaptive micro/nanorobots that can adjust their driving mechanisms across multiple biological barriers to reach distant lesions is still a challenge. Recently, a research team led by Prof. CAI Lintao from the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy ...

Custom, 3D-printed heart replicas look and pump just like the real thing

Custom, 3D-printed heart replicas look and pump just like the real thing
2023-02-22
No two hearts beat alike. The size and shape of the the heart can vary from one person to the next. These differences can be particularly pronounced for people living with heart disease, as their hearts and major vessels work harder to overcome any compromised function. MIT engineers are hoping to help doctors tailor treatments to patients’ specific heart form and function, with a custom robotic heart. The team has developed a procedure to 3D print a soft and flexible replica of a patient’s heart. They can then ...
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