Low sodium in blood triggers anxiety in mice by disrupting their brain chemistry
2025-06-12
Hyponatremia, or low blood sodium concentration, is typically viewed as a symptomless condition—until recently. A research team led by Professor Yoshihisa Sugimura, including Dr. Haruki Fujisawa, Professor Atsushi Suzuki, Professor Tsuyoshi Miyakawa, and Professor Akihiro Mouri, from Fujita Health University, Japan, has demonstrated that chronic hyponatremia (CHN) can directly cause anxiety-like behaviors in mice by disrupting key neurotransmitters in the brain. Their findings, published online in the journal Molecular Neurobiology on May 14, 2025, reveal that CHN alters monoaminergic signaling in the amygdala, a brain region ...
Hanyang University researchers discovered new breakthrough catalyst for cheaper green hydrogen production
2025-06-12
To reduce greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change, the world urgently needs clean and renewable energy sources. Hydrogen is one such clean energy source that has zero carbon content and stores much more energy by weight than gasoline. One promising method to produce hydrogen is electrochemical water-splitting, a process that uses electricity to break down water into hydrogen and oxygen. In combination with renewable energy sources, this method offers a sustainable way to produce hydrogen and can contribute ...
Depression linked to a less diverse oral microbiome
2025-06-12
A rich and varied mix of microbes in the mouth, particularly bacteria, is not only important for our oral health, but may hold clues for other conditions. A new study led by researchers at NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing finds that a lower diversity of microbes in the mouth is associated with depression.
The mouth is home to between 500 billion and 1 trillion bacteria—the second-largest community of microorganisms in our bodies, after the gut. A growing number of studies point to the connection between the oral microbiome and our overall health, from diabetes to dementia, a relationship thought to be driven by inflammation and disruptions to the immune system.
A recent ...
Geographic bias in virus naming: Lessons from coronavirus show it’s better to act early
2025-06-12
“China virus”, the Chinese virus — at the start of the 2020 pandemic, you likely often encountered this epithet in the media. The use of geographically-based labels to define the disease (COVID-19) and the virus causing it (SARS-CoV-2) had significant consequences on public opinion, fueling and amplifying — sometimes with very serious outcomes — prejudices against specific people and countries, accused of having a causal role in spreading the contagion. The neutral designation COVID-19, proposed for the disease by the WHO in mid-February 2020, was quickly adopted globally. However, ...
Cultured mini-organs reveal the weapons of aggressive bacteria
2025-06-12
Thanks to lab-grown miniature intestines, researchers at Uppsala University have successfully mapped how aggressive Shigella bacteria infect the human gut. The study opens the door to using cultured human mini-organs to investigate a wide range of other serious infections.
Understanding how human-specific bacteria make us sick is challenging, as laboratory animals rarely reflect human physiology. In a new study published in Nature Genetics, researchers show that it is now possible to use cultured mini-organs to map how bacteria colonise the human intestinal mucosa. The team focused specifically on Shigella, a bacterium that causes severe ...
Centuries-old mercury pollution hidden in the ocean threatens arctic wildlife
2025-06-12
New Danish research reveals ocean currents as a major source of mercury contamination in the Arctic
Despite global reductions in mercury emissions, mercury concentrations in Arctic wildlife continue to rise. A new study published in Nature Communications by researchers from Aarhus University and the University of Copenhagen reveals that ocean currents may be transporting legacy mercury pollution to the Arctic—posing a long-term threat to ecosystems and human health.
“We’ve ...
Researchers identify how physical activity protects the brain—cell by cell—in Alzheimer's disease
2025-06-12
Using advanced single-nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) and a widely used preclinical model for Alzheimer’s disease, researchers from Mass General Brigham and collaborators at SUNY Upstate Medical University have identified specific brain cell types that responded most to exercise. These findings, which were validated in samples from people, shed light on the connection between exercise and brain health and point to future drug targets. Results are published in Nature Neuroscience.
“While we’ve long known that exercise helps protect ...
The EU CAR-T Handbook released to advance clinical practice and education
2025-06-12
Barcelona, Spain - 12 June 2025 - The EBMT, the EHA, and the GoCART Coalition proudly announce the release of the second edition of the EU CAR-T Handbook, a comprehensive, open-access resource covering the latest developments in CAR-T cell therapies. This updated edition provides expanded insights into scientific advances, clinical applications, and evolving regulatory frameworks.
Developed with contributions from leading experts in academia and industry, the new edition includes approximately 50% more chapters than the first and offers ...
Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients
2025-06-12
About The Study: In adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation and supplemental oxygen in the intensive care unit, minimizing oxygen exposure through conservative oxygen therapy did not significantly reduce all-cause mortality at 90 days.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Daniel S. Martin, PhD, email daniel.martin@plymouth.ac.uk.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2025.9663)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, ...
Molecular hopscotch boosts light upconversion
2025-06-12
A new molecule that lets energy hop around quickly within its structure makes the upcycling of light more efficient and tunable. The Kobe University development lays out a design strategy for better solar power harnessing as well as medical and sensor applications.
While low-energy light is abundant and harmless, many technical applications from solar power generation to medical treatments rely on high-energy light. To increase the efficiency of light harvesting and to avoid high-energy light as much ...
Prolonged use of desogestrel pill linked to small increased brain tumour risk
2025-06-11
Taking the progestogen-only contraceptive pill desogestrel continuously for more than five years is associated with a small increased risk of developing a type of brain tumour called an intracranial meningioma, finds a study from France published by The BMJ today.
However, the researchers stress that the risk is low compared with some other progestogens (for every 67,000 women taking desogestrel, one might need surgery for meningioma) and disappeared one year after stopping treatment.
Intracranial meningiomas are typically non-cancerous brain tumours that occasionally require surgery. ...
Doctors raise concern over rise in recreational ketamine use
2025-06-11
The rise in non-prescribed ketamine use across the UK in recent years is a cause for concern, say doctors in The BMJ today.
Irene Guerrini at South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and colleagues warn that its low cost has made it popular among young people, and the number of people starting treatment for ketamine addiction in 2023-2024 reached 3609, more than eight times higher than in 2014-2015.
They say public awareness of the risks and long term harms associated with ketamine remains insufficient, and they call for better diagnostic criteria, a ...
New index ranks 917 European cities on urban design for health and well-being
2025-06-11
The Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the ’la Caixa’ Foundation, has unveiled a new tool: the Healthy Urban Design Index (HUDI). The HUDI is a composite index that evaluates 917 European cities based on 13 indicators connected to peoples’ health and well-being and divided into four domains: urban design, sustainable transport, environmental quality and green space accessibility. The HUDI is the result of scientific work published in The Lancet Planetary Health. The data for all cities is publicly available on https://isglobalranking.org/hudi/.
In order to make the cities comparable, they have been grouped into five ...
Exposure to pollution during pregnancy linked with changes in fetal brain structures
2025-06-11
Fetuses more exposed to certain air pollutants show changes in the size of specific brain structures, particularly during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. This is the main finding of a new study led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a center supported by the ”la Caixa” Foundation, in collaboration with the BCNatal center (Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Hospital Clínic, and University of Barcelona) and the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau. It is the first study to specifically ...
New way of measuring blood pressure could be a lifeline for thousands of people
2025-06-11
A new method improving the accuracy of interpreting blood pressure measurements taken at the ankle could be crucial for people who cannot have their arm blood pressure measured.
New research from the University of Exeter Medical School, published in BMJ Open and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), analysed data from over 33,000 people to create a personalised predictive model for more accurately estimating arm blood pressure from ankle readings - when compared to previously available methods. The team has developed an online calculator for healthcare professionals and patients to interpret ...
Famous Ice Age ‘puppies’ likely wolf cubs and not dogs, study shows
2025-06-11
New analysis of the remains of two ‘puppies’ dating back more than 14,000 years ago has shown that they are most likely wolves, and not related to domestic dogs, as previously suggested.
The genetic analysis also proved that the cubs were sisters at the age of around two months, and like modern day wolves had a mixed diet of meat and plants. Researchers, however, were surprised to see evidence of a wooly rhinoceros as part of their last meals, as this would have been a considerably large animal for a wolf to hunt.
The ‘Tumat Puppies’ are two remarkably well-preserved puppy remains found in northern Siberia, about 40 km from Tumat, the nearest village. One was found ...
Leg amputation caused by arterial disease four times higher in disadvantaged areas
2025-06-11
Leg amputation caused by arterial disease four times higher in disadvantaged areas
A new study from the University of Sheffield highlights the scale of socioeconomic disparities in leg amputation caused by arterial disease across England
Lower limb amputation rates are four times as high in the most socioeconomically disadvantaged areas in England compared with the least disadvantaged areas
Peripheral arterial disease is a debilitating condition which is caused by a build-up of fatty deposits in the arteries to the legs which restricts blood supply
Findings show patients living ...
Researchers solve ultrasound imaging problem using seismology technique
2025-06-11
Scientists from Colorado State University and the University of São Paulo have overcome a challenge that has prevented medical ultrasound imaging from being used in intensive care and emergency room settings. This technological advancement could someday lead to improved critical care for patients.
Obtaining accurate medical images using ultrasound computed tomography (USCT) is challenging due to the uncertainty of sensor positioning, which changes with patient movement. The interdisciplinary team, including a mathematician, an engineer ...
Among new dads, 64% take less than two weeks of leave after baby is born
2025-06-11
Only 36% of dads reported taking more than two weeks of paternal family leave
Findings support U.S. lagging ‘behind the rest of the world in availability of paid family leave’
‘If there was paid family leave, fathers would have fewer barriers, and they’d take it’
CHICAGO --- When it comes to family leave, American fathers are left behind.
In a survey of new fathers led by scientists at Northwestern University and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, 64% of fathers reported taking less than two weeks of leave or no leave after the birth of their child. Only 36% of ...
Decades-old mystery of AlCl dipole moment resolved
2025-06-11
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- In a study that closes a long-standing knowledge gap in fundamental science, researchers Boerge Hemmerling and Stephen Kane at the University of California, Riverside, have successfully measured the electric dipole moment of aluminum monochloride (AlCl), a simple yet scientifically crucial diatomic molecule. Their results, published in Physical Review A, have implications for quantum technologies, astrophysics, and planetary science.
Until now, the ...
Stroke, dementia more common in people with biomarker of aging
2025-06-11
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 2025
MINNEAPOLIS — Stroke and dementia as well as late-life depression are more common in people who have a biomarker of aging called short leukocyte telomere length, according to a study published on June 11, 2025, online in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The good news is that this relationship was not found in people with healthy lifestyle habits, such as eating healthy and maintaining low cholesterol and blood pressure.
The study does not prove that shorter telomeres cause these brain diseases; it only shows an association.
“Our findings support the potential ...
Shorter telomeres linked to increased risk of age-related brain diseases
2025-06-11
Scientists from Mass General Brigham explored the associations between telomere length—which decreases as a person ages or is exposed to unhealthy environments—and the risk for age-related brain diseases. The research team found evidence suggesting that healthier lifestyle choices could mitigate telomere length-associated risks. Their results are published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
“Reducing risk factors like weight and alcohol consumption as well as getting more sleep and exercise can all help reverse ...
Calling for renewed Israeli-Palestinian health cooperation
2025-06-11
New editorial in the American Journal of Public Health calls for the renewal of Israeli–Palestinian public health cooperation, even amid the current conflict. Drawing on decades of joint successes—including polio eradication, measles control, maternal health advances, and epidemic surveillance—the editorial urges stakeholders to revive collaborative efforts in critical areas like immunization, environmental health, and hospital rehabilitation. Emphasizing that health partnerships have historically bridged divides, the authors argue against academic boycotts and stress that shared public health is both a moral imperative and a strategic ...
Rutgers health researchers challenge FDA warning on common epilepsy drug
2025-06-11
Rutgers Health researchers found that lamotrigine, a widely prescribed antiseizure medication, to be safe in older adults with epilepsy, contrary to a safety warning by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 2.9 million adults throughout the United States are living with the neurological disorder.
Lamotrigine, sold under the brand name Lamictal, represents about 10% of all antiseizure medication use. In 2020, the FDA placed a safety warning label on lamotrigine based on reports the drug ...
In the belly of the beast: massive clumps reveal star factories from a bygone era of the cosmos
2025-06-11
Astronomers have surveyed massive, dense star factories, unlike any found in the Milky Way, in a large number of galaxies across the local universe. The findings provide a rare glimpse into processes shaping galaxies in the very early universe and possibly the Milky Way a few billion years from now.
Known as luminous and ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, or LIRGs and ULIRGs, these galaxies are relatively rare in the local universe, with only 202 known within 400 megaparsecs (1.3 billion light-years) from Earth, according to Sean Linden, a research associate at the University of Arizona Steward Observatory, who presented ...
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