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In Africa, heat waves are hotter and longer than 40 years ago, UIC researchers say

2025-08-19
Heat waves — prolonged periods of abnormally hot weather — influence egg prices, energy bills and even public transit. And they’re becoming more common as temperatures increase. In a new study, UIC researchers report that heat waves across Africa are hotter, longer and more frequent today than 40 years ago, mainly due to increased greenhouse gas and black carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels. Understanding heat waves’ origins and effects can help African countries predict them and ...

Healing takes a ‘toll’ and how mental health providers cope matters

2025-08-19
Mental health providers are trained to guide others through trauma, yet their own exposure to clients’ suffering can take a significant toll. Studies show that between 40% and 85% of providers experience compassion fatigue or secondary traumatic stress – key signs of reduced professional quality of life. These stressors are often ongoing and layered, and when combined with limited coping tools and a sense that they have little control over their circumstances, the impact can be even greater. Researchers from Florida Atlantic University examined how different coping styles affect the relationship between a provider’s sense of control over ...

Interim analysis of 48-week tenofovir amibufenamide treatment in chronic hepatitis B patients with normal alanine aminotransferase levels

2025-08-19
Background and Aims Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected patients may exhibit liver fibrosis and other pathological changes despite normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT). This study aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of tenofovir amibufenamide (TMF) in chronic HBV-infected patients with normal ALT levels. Methods The ongoing PROMOTE study (NCT05797714) is the first prospective, multicenter, randomized, open-label, blank-controlled clinical trial involving chronic HBV-infected patients with normal ALT levels. Participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive ...

AI, full automation could expand artificial pancreas to more diabetes patients

2025-08-19
Automated insulin delivery (AID) systems such as the UVA Health-developed artificial pancreas could help more type 1 diabetes patients if the devices become fully automated, according to a new review of the technology. Even as the artificial pancreas and other AID systems have helped millions of people with type 1 diabetes better manage their blood sugar and improve their overall health, there are still limitations to overcome, according to the review from University of Virginia Center for Diabetes Technology scientists and their colleagues. These limitations include: AID systems are not yet fully ...

Mapping West Nile virus risk

2025-08-19
West Nile virus (WNV) has been the dominant cause of mosquito-borne illness in the United States since its introduction into North America in 1999. There are no vaccines nor medications to prevent or treat illness in people, so surveillance, prevention, and control remain the best options to protect the public. Mosquito surveillance for WNV is a central component of the public health response, but this approach is labor intensive and limited by practical constraints on the number of locations that can be sampled. To address this limitation, Joseph McMillan and colleagues developed a validated machine learning model that uses freely ...

Extreme heat increases infant mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa

2025-08-19
Sub-Saharan Africa currently has the highest infant mortality rate in the world, with 27 babies out of every 1,000 live births dying in their first month. As the climate warms, pregnant women in the region are increasingly exposed to extreme heat, which can cause reduced placental blood flow and dehydration, potentially affecting fetal development. In addition, extreme heat can lead to the proliferation of pathogenic bacteria in the environment, and can make it  difficult for women to travel to prenatal care appointments. Jiafu An and colleagues sought to determine whether in-utero exposure to extreme ...

Alien aurora: Researchers discover new plasma wave in Jupiter’s aurora

2025-08-19
MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (08/19/2025) — Researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have made a groundbreaking discovery by observing and analyzing the first new type of plasma wave in Jupiter’s aurora. This research helps us understand “alien aurora” on other planets, which in turn teaches us more about how Earth’s magnetic field protects us from the sun’s harmful radiation.  The research is published in Physical Review Letters, a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary, high-impact scientific journal. The observation is based on data from NASA’s Juno spacecraft, which made a historic low ...

Evaluating FAST walk system for neuromodulation-assisted gait recovery in chronic stroke

2025-08-19
Stroke remains one of the leading causes of long-term disability worldwide, affecting millions each year. Among its most debilitating consequences is gait impairment, which affects over 80% of stroke survivors. Impaired walking not only reduces independence but also limits participation in daily and social activities, significantly diminishing the quality of life. While some patients regain partial ambulatory function, walking speed and coordination often remain impaired. Alarmingly, up to 22% of survivors never regain the ability to walk and are ...

Pusan National University unveils 3D-printed brain vessels to transform atherosclerosis research

2025-08-19
Cerebrovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis and stroke remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. A common feature of these diseases is vascular stenosis, i.e., the narrowing of blood vessels, which disrupts normal blood flow and contributes to chronic inflammation in the vessel wall. Endothelial cells lining the vasculature play a key role in sensing shear stress from blood flow and responding to disturbed hemodynamics by expressing pro-inflammatory molecules. However, studying this phenomenon in vivo is challenging due to the complexity ...

Sensing sour: How SNAP25 powers taste signals and keeps sensory cells alive

2025-08-19
The tongue contains numerous taste buds—tiny sensory organs responsible for detecting taste. Taste buds consist of specialized cells that translate chemical stimuli into neural signals. Among them, type II cells, which respond to sweet, umami, and bitter stimuli, utilize channel-based signal transmission. In contrast, type III cells are believed to mediate sour signals via synaptic vesicle release. While the signaling mechanisms of type II cells are well-characterized, the process of vesicular synaptic transmission in type III cells is poorly understood.   Synaptic signal transmission relies on the SNARE complex, ...

International Progressive MS Alliance launches MS Clinical and Imaging Data Resource (CIDR) to accelerate global research

2025-08-19
The International Progressive MS Alliance announces the launch of its MS Clinical and Imaging Data Resource (CIDR), which provides the academic and research community access to anonymized and harmonized MRI and clinical data from thousands of people living with MS who participated in one of many clinical trials. The Alliance, in conjunction with McGill University in Montréal, Canada, and four industry partners – Biogen, Novartis, Roche and Sanofi - is making this resource available exclusively to the MS research community to help accelerate ...

Scientists discover new phenomenon in chiral symmetry breaking

2025-08-19
Osaka, Japan-Researchers at The University of Osaka have discovered a new type of chiral symmetry breaking (CSB) in an organic crystalline compound. This phenomenon, involving a solid-state structural transition from an achiral to a chiral crystal, represents a significant advance in our understanding of chirality and offers a simplified model to study the origin of homochirality. This transformation also activates circularly polarized luminescence, enabling new optical materials with tunable light properties. Chirality, or "handedness," is a fundamental property of objects, from galaxies to molecules, and plays a crucial role in biological ...

Liquid gold: Prototype harvests valuable resource from urine

2025-08-19
A newly developed system transforms human waste into a powerful tool for profitable and sustainable energy and agriculture in resource-limited regions. The prototype, outlined in a Stanford-led study published Aug 19 in Nature Water, recovers a valuable fertilizer from urine, using solar energy that can also provide power for other uses. In the process, the system provides essential sanitation, making wastewater safer to discharge or reuse for irrigation. “This project is about turning a waste problem into a resource opportunity,” said study ...

This protein slows the aging brain and we know how to counter it

2025-08-19
Aging is particularly harsh on the hippocampus — the brain region responsible for learning and memory. Now, researchers at UC San Francisco have identified a protein that’s at the center of this decline.  They looked at how the genes and proteins in the hippocampus changed over time in mice and found just one that differed between old and young animals. It’s called FTL1.  Old mice had more FTL1, as well as fewer connections between brain cells in the hippocampus and diminished cognitive abilities.  When the researchers artificially increased FTL1 levels in young mice, their ...

Scientists debut a new foundational atlas of the plant life cycle

2025-08-19
LA JOLLA (August 19, 2025)—Nearly everything you know about plants was first discovered in a plant you’ve likely never heard of. Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, is a small, flowering weed that has shaped much of plant biology as we know it. Serving as the representative plant species in most plant research across the last half century, Arabidopsis has taught us how plants respond to light, which hormones control plant behavior, and why some plants grow long, deep roots ...

Cambridge scientist reveals how curiosity transformed toxic protein discovery

2025-08-19
CAMBRIDGE, Cambridgeshire, UNITED KINGDOM, 19 August 2025 -- In a revealing Genomic Press Interview published today in Brain Medicine, Dr. David Rubinsztein shares the remarkable journey that led him to discover how cells naturally clear toxic proteins that cause devastating neurodegenerative diseases. The comprehensive interview unveils both the scientific breakthroughs and personal philosophy that have positioned autophagy modulation at the forefront of therapeutic innovation for conditions affecting millions worldwide. From Cape Town Curiosity to Cambridge Discovery Dr. Rubinsztein traces his scientific awakening to childhood in South Africa, ...

The diamonds that could find cancer

2025-08-19
University of Warwick researchers have built a new diamond-based magnetic field sensor that could be used to better find tumours through tracing magnetic fluid injected in the body.  A cancer diagnosis is most problematic when cells from the tumour have metastasised (spread) to other organs. This most often occurs through the lymph nodes and the lymphatic draining system. Tests to find whether cancer cells are lodged in the lymph nodes are the gold standard for detecting metastasis and directing the course of treatment. Published in Physical Review Applied, Warwick researchers report they have built a ...

Supernovae: How to spot them at record speed

2025-08-19
Supernovae appear to our eyes—and to astronomical instruments—as brilliant flashes that flare up in the sky without warning, in places where nothing was visible just moments before. The flash is caused by the colossal explosion of a star. Because supernovae are sudden and unpredictable, they have long been difficult to study, but today, thanks to extensive, continuous, high-cadence sky surveys, astronomers can discover new ones almost daily. It is crucial, however, to develop protocols and methods that detect them promptly; ...

Kelp forests in Marine Protected Areas are more resilient to marine heatwaves

2025-08-19
New research finds that Marine Protected Areas can boost the recovery of globally important kelp forests following marine heatwaves. The findings are published in the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Applied Ecology. Using four decades of satellite images, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) researchers have looked at impacts Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are having on kelp forests along the coast of California. They found that although the overall effect of MPAs on kelp forest cover was modest, the benefits ...

Smarter hydrogel surface achieves 5× faster oil–water separation

2025-08-19
Oil spills and oily industrial wastewater are a nightmare for factories, the environment, and public health. Separating oil from water might sound simple, but in reality it's one of the toughest jobs in wastewater treatment—especially when the mixture contains oils of different densities, tiny droplets, or sticky contaminants. Traditional membrane filters often clog, slow down, and lose efficiency over time. In International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing, a research team has developed an organic ...

Novel unsymmetrical molecule produces perfect photocatalyst potential

2025-08-19
Osaka, Japan – Life as we know it is based on organic molecules. In these molecules, carbon and hydrogen atoms are linked into a fascinating array of structures, such as chains or rings. One special class of organic molecules, hetero[8]circulenes, can behave in interesting ways because of their ring of eight atoms, and have many applications, including electronic devices responsible for controlling and detecting light. However, creating these molecules through planned chemical reactions, or the synthetic route, ...

Takotsubo Syndrome: The hidden heart risks in Intensive Care Units

2025-08-19
It’s often mistaken for a heart attack, but Takotsubo cardiomyopathy – previously known as Broken Heart syndrome – is a serious and sometimes fatal heart condition increasingly reported in intensive care units (ICUs). Yet without a clear clinical pathway in ICUs, it’s often missed, putting critically ill patients at risk.   New research from the University of South Australia shows that using electrocardiogram (ECG) patterns and blood markers could provide an early warning system for Takotsubo Syndrome in ICU patients.   The review highlights how critical care nurses with advanced ECG skills can play a key role in recognising early signs of the condition ...

Charting the evolution of life through the ancient chaetognath

2025-08-19
One of the stranger forms of life on our planet is the tiny, torpedo-shaped chaetognath, which roams the seas on the hunt for small crustaceans. These predators are named after the chitinous grasping spines surrounding their mouth (Greek: “chaite”, bristle, and “gnathos”, jaw), and are also known as arrow worms. Despite their ubiquity in the world’s oceans, the evolutionary origin of this unique lifeform has long baffled biologists – Charles Darwin himself noted their “obscurity of affinities” in 1844. Notably, the worm has characteristics of both protostomes, which include ...

Two genomes are better than one for studying reptile sex

2025-08-19
Today marks the publication by two different studies presenting the near-complete reference genomes of the central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps), a widely distributed species of dragon lizard common in central eastern Australia and popular as pets in Europe, Asia, and North America. This species has an unusual trait for an animal species: whether this lizard grows up to be a male or a female depends not only on genetics but also on the temperature of its nest. This has long made it a useful model to study the ...

Is your health care provider really listening to you?

2025-08-18
When you visit a doctor, you expect them to listen. But in today’s fast-paced health care system, real listening — the kind that makes you feel seen, heard and understood — can be the first thing to go. A new article, co-authored by Dr. Leonard Berry of Texas A&M University’s Mays Business School, argues that listening isn’t just a nice gesture, it’s a powerful tool that can improve your care and even help heal the health care system itself. Berry and colleagues at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Boston and Henry Ford Health Detroit published their findings in Mayo Clinic Proceedings. The Case ...
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