Oral nutritional supplements may help hospitals achieve readmission reduction policies
2013-10-18
Oral nutritional supplements may help hospitals achieve readmission reduction policies
As Affordable Care Act penalties on hospital readmissions increase, nutritional intervention may help decrease 30-day readmission rates among Medicare patients
In the U.S., one ...
To swallow or to spit?
2013-10-18
To swallow or to spit?
New medicines for llamas and alpacas
South American camelids, especially llamas and alpacas, are very susceptible to infections caused by endoparasites. The so-called small liver fluke (Dicrocoelium ...
Mutations in cancer often affect the X chromosome
2013-10-18
Mutations in cancer often affect the X chromosome
Every case of cancer originates from changes in a person's genetic material (mutations). These usually occur as "somatic mutations" in individual cells during an ...
Evolution is not a one-way road towards complexity
2013-10-18
Evolution is not a one-way road towards complexity
Development of cryptic worms provides new insights into molluscan evolution
This news release is available in German. There are still a lot of unanswered questions about mollusks, e.g. snails, ...
Tiny 'Lego brick'-style studs make solar panels a quarter more efficient
2013-10-18
Tiny 'Lego brick'-style studs make solar panels a quarter more efficient
Rows of aluminum studs help solar panels extract more energy from sunlight than those with flat surfaces.
Most solar cells used in homes and industry are made using thick layers of ...
Lots of oxygen does not necessarily lead to the evolution of advanced life
2013-10-18
Lots of oxygen does not necessarily lead to the evolution of advanced life
Any textbook will tell you that oxygen is essential for advanced life to evolve. For example, ancient dinosaurs and modern large-brained mammals need a lot of oxygen to keep their large and sophisticated ...
Tanning gene linked to increased risk of testicular cancer, according to NIH scientists
2013-10-18
Tanning gene linked to increased risk of testicular cancer, according to NIH scientists
A gene important in skin tanning has been linked to higher risk for testicular cancer in white men, according to a study led by scientists ...
The benefits of bacteria for gut health
2013-10-18
The benefits of bacteria for gut health
HEIDELBERG, 18 October 2013 – Scientists from the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, United States have shown that specific gut bacteria are beneficial for maintaining a healthy intestine ...
Wrangling flow to quiet cars and aircraft
2013-10-18
Wrangling flow to quiet cars and aircraft
'Serpentine plasma actuators' described in Journal of Applied Physics may reduce noise and drag and increase fuel efficiency for future land and air vehicles
WASHINGTON D.C. Oct. 18, 2013 -- Plasmas are a soup ...
Salmonella sensing system
2013-10-18
Salmonella sensing system
A new approach to detecting food contamination enables real-time testing of food and processing plant equipment
WASHINGTON D.C. Oct. 18, 2013 -- As anyone who has ever consumed bacteria-contaminated food and experienced "food ...
Study strengthens link between low dietary fiber intake and increased cardiovascular risk
2013-10-18
Study strengthens link between low dietary fiber intake and increased cardiovascular risk
Results reported in The American Journal of Medicine
Philadelphia, PA, October 18, 2013 – A new study published in the December issue of The American Journal of Medicine ...
Fires in China Oct. 18, 2013
2013-10-18
Fires in China Oct. 18, 2013
Shuangyashan is a coal mining prefecture-level city located in the eastern part Heilongjiang province, People's Republic of China, bordering Russia's Khabarovsk and Primorsky krais to the east. Since China is known to have underground ...
Agricultural fires in India October 18, 2013
2013-10-18
Agricultural fires in India October 18, 2013
The Indian state of Punjab has two growing seasons—one from May to September and another from November to April. In November, Punjab farmers typically sow crops such as wheat and vegetables; but before they do that, farmers ...
Automatic speaker tracking in audio recordings
2013-10-18
Automatic speaker tracking in audio recordings
A new system dispenses with the human annotation of training data required by its predecessors but achieves comparable results
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- A central topic in spoken-language-systems research is what's ...
CNIO researchers delve into the behavior of cohesins
2013-10-18
CNIO researchers delve into the behavior of cohesins
Pds5 proteins modulate the behavior of cohesins to ensure the proper division of cells -- Understanding the regulation of cohesins can improve diagnosis and treatment for some cancer patients ...
Glacial buzz-saws, gold in fool's gold, fingerprints in sea water, and fluvial iron
2013-10-18
Glacial buzz-saws, gold in fool's gold, fingerprints in sea water, and fluvial iron
New Geology articles posted online ahead of print 16 October 2013
Boulder, Colo., USA – New article postings for Geology cover glacial erosion and glacial slip; the work of marine organisms ...
Light to moderate alcohol leads to good cheer at Danish high-school parties
2013-10-18
Contact: Marie Eliasen, M.Sc.
mae@niph.dk
45-6550-7777 (Denmark)
University of Southern Denmark
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Light to moderate alcohol leads to good cheer at Danish high-school parties
Many people, especially young adults, engage in high-risk drinking because of the belief it will lead to positive mood effects such as cheerfulness. A new study of the association between blood alcohol content (BAC) and the subjective effects of alcohol like cheerfulness, focus distraction, and sluggishness among students in a real-life setting ...
Adolescence: When drinking and genes may collide
2013-10-18
Contact: Carmen van der Zwaluw, Ph.D.
cvdzwaluw@gmail.com
31-61-4443988 (Netherlands)
Radboud University Nijmegen
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Adolescence: When drinking and genes may collide
Many negative effects of drinking, such as transitioning into heavy alcohol use, often take place during adolescence and can contribute to long-term negative health outcomes as well as the development of alcohol use disorders. A new study of adolescent drinking and its genetic and environmental influences has found that different trajectories of adolescent ...
Use of false ID by youth to buy alcohol is a slippery slope toward alcohol use disorders
2013-10-18
Contact: Amelia M. Arria, Ph.D.
aarria@umd.edu
301-405-9795
University of Maryland School of Public Health
Jennifer Read, Ph.D.
jpread@buffalo.edu
716-645-0193
State University of New York at Buffalo
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Use of false ID by youth to buy alcohol is a slippery slope toward alcohol use disorders
Many underage youth use false identification (ID) to buy alcohol.
A new study has found that almost two-thirds of a college student sample used false IDs.
False ID use might contribute to the development of alcohol use ...
Human neutrophil peptide-1: A new anti-leishmanial drug candidate
2013-10-18
Human neutrophil peptide-1: A new anti-leishmanial drug candidate
Leishmaniasis is a vector borne disease caused by different Leishmania species with different clinical manifestations. Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is endemic and widespread especially ...
Pioneering use of oral cholera vaccine during outbreak
2013-10-18
Pioneering use of oral cholera vaccine during outbreak
In a report publishing October 17th, 2013 in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and ...
5-year-old children are as likely to suffer from bilharzia as their mothers
2013-10-18
5-year-old children are as likely to suffer from bilharzia as their mothers
Children of women harboring the bilharzia (schistosomiasis) worm during pregnancy are more likely to suffer the infection by the age of five years, a new study publishing October 17th, ...
To sleep, perchance to clean
2013-10-18
In findings that give fresh meaning to the old adage that a good night's sleep clears the mind, a new study shows that a recently discovered system that flushes waste from the brain is primarily active during sleep. This revelation could transform scientists' understanding of the biological purpose of sleep and point to new ways to treat neurological disorders.
"This study shows that the brain has different functional states when asleep and when awake," said Maiken Nedergaard, M.D., D.M.Sc., co-director of the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) Center for ...
The sly maneuvers of the fungus fatal to frogs
2013-10-18
This news release is available in Spanish.
Like subsurface ninjas, the cells of a particular fungus are slipping into the skins of amphibians worldwide, killing them, and now a new study hints at why this particular fungus has been so successful.
In 1998, a new species of chytrid fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis was identified. In recent decades, it has contributed to rendering dozens of frog species extinct, researchers think. They know the fungus inserts itself into the skin of frogs, drying out a layer they require to be hydrated, but just how the ...
Complete skull from early Homo evokes a single, evolving lineage
2013-10-18
This news release is available in French and Arabic.
What if the earliest members of our Homo genus—those classified as Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis, Homo erectus and so forth—actually belonged to the same species and simply looked different from one another? That's precisely the implication of a new report, which describes the analysis of a complete, approximately 1.8-million-year-old skull that was unearthed in Dmanisi, Georgia.
Unlike other Homo fossils, this skull, known as Skull 5, combines a small braincase with a long face and large teeth. It was ...
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