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

New comparison of ocean temperatures reveals rise over the last century

2012-04-02
A new study contrasting ocean temperature readings of the 1870s with temperatures of the modern seas reveals an upward trend of global ocean warming spanning at least 100 years. The research led by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego physical oceanographer Dean Roemmich shows a .33-degree Celsius (.59-degree Fahrenheit) average increase in the upper portions of the ocean to 700 meters (2,300 feet) depth. The increase was largest at the ocean surface, .59-degree Celsius (1.1-degree Fahrenheit), decreasing to .12-degree Celsius (.22-degree Fahrenheit) at ...

Raising the school leaving – while learning from another age

2012-04-02
In April 1947 the post-war Labour Government raised the school leaving age from 14 to 15 and paved the way for a further increase to 16 in 1972. Now, 65 years later, as the UK prepares to raise the 'education participation age' to 17 in 2013 and to 18 in 2015, new research reveals that the transitions of 1947 and 1972 met with more controversy and difficulty than previously thought. In a study funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, Dr Tom Woodin and Professor Gary McCulloch of the Institute of Education, London, analysed the debate surrounding the implementation ...

Expert task force recommends halving global fishing for crucial prey species

Expert task force recommends halving global fishing for crucial prey species
2012-04-02
WASHINGTON – Fishing for herring, anchovy, and other "forage fish" in general should be cut in half globally to account for their critical role as food for larger species, recommends an expert group of marine scientists in a report released today. The Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force conducted the most comprehensive worldwide analysis of the science and management of forage fish populations to date. Its report, "Little Fish, Big Impact: Managing a crucial link in ocean food webs," concluded that in most ecosystems at least twice as many of these species should be left in ...

New discovery may lead to effective prevention and treatment of graft-versus-host dsease

2012-04-02
Bethesda, MD -- A new discovery in mice may lead to new treatments that could make bone marrow transplants more likely to succeed and to be significantly less dangerous. According to new research findings published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology (https://www.jleukbio.org) Brazilian scientists may have found a way to prevent the immune system from attacking transplant grafts and damaging the host's own cells after a bone marrow transplant. Specifically, they found that a receptor for a mediator of the inflammatory process, known as platelet activating factor plays ...

Gene variations linked to intestinal blockage in newborns with cystic fibrosis

Gene variations linked to intestinal blockage in newborns with cystic fibrosis
2012-04-02
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. -- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers working as part of the International Cystic Fibrosis Consortium have discovered several regions of the genome that may predispose cystic fibrosis (CF) patients to develop an intestinal blockage while still in the uterus. A report of this international study appears online April 1, 2012 in the journal Nature Genetics. It was the work of the North America CF Gene Modifier Consortium, which brought together dozens of investigators from the United States, Canada, and from France, to identify genetic ...

Picky females promote diversity: UBC-IIASA study

2012-04-02
Picky females play a critical role in the survival and diversity of species, according to a Nature study by researchers from the University of British Columbia and the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Austria. To date, biodiversity theories have focused on the role played by adaptations to the environment: the species best equipped to cope with a habitat would win out, while others would gradually go extinct. The new study presents the first theoretical model demonstrating that selective mating alone can promote the long-term coexistence ...

DNA sequencing lays foundation for personalized cancer treatment

DNA sequencing lays foundation for personalized cancer treatment
2012-04-02
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis are using powerful DNA sequencing technology not only to identify mutations at the root of a patient's tumor – considered key to personalizing cancer treatment – but to map the genetic evolution of disease and monitor response to treatment. "We're finding clinically relevant information in the tumor samples we're sequencing for discovery-oriented research studies," says Elaine Mardis, PhD, co-director of The Genome Institute at the School of Medicine. "Genome analysis can play a role at multiple time ...

Los Angeles Personal Injury Lawyer, Farhad Hamdam, is Now Offering Representation for All Personal Injury Cases Involving Car Accidents

Los Angeles Personal Injury Lawyer, Farhad Hamdam, is Now Offering Representation for All Personal Injury Cases Involving Car Accidents
2012-04-02
Minor accidents take place every single day in Southern California. These ordeals can often be resolved with the assistance of an insurance company and a fair settlement that is going to quickly pay for injuries, damage to property, or any other associated costs. When drivers are not receiving the financial assistance that they need in order to pay for serious or ongoing medical expenses though, it will not take much for the situation to enhance into a messy legal situation. In order to assist victims, the leading Los Angeles personal injury lawyer, Farhad Hamdam, is now ...

Epigenetic changes in twins of dieting mothers increases risk of obesity and diabetes

2012-04-02
Bethesda, MD—If you're expecting, this might make you feel a little better about reaching for that pint of ice cream: New research published online in the FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org) suggests that twins, and babies of mothers who diet around the time of conception and in early pregnancy, may have an increased risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes throughout their lives. This study provides exciting insights into how behavior can lead to epigenetic changes in offspring related to obesity and disease. "This study may provide a new understanding of why twins can ...

PI3K/mTOR pathway proteins tied to poor prognosis in breast cancer

2012-04-02
CHICAGO - Four proteins involved in translation, the final step of general protein production, are associated with poor prognosis in hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer when they are dysregulated, researchers reported at the AACR Annual Meeting 2012. All of the aberrantly activated translational proteins are regulated by the PI3K/mTOR molecular signaling pathway, which has been implicated in development and progression of several cancers. More recently, mTOR activation has been tied to resistance to standard endocrine therapy in estrogen-receptor positive breast ...

Scientists uncover clue to preventing, and possibly reversing, rare childhood genetic disease

2012-04-02
Rutgers scientists think they have found a way to prevent and possibly reverse the most debilitating symptoms of a rare, progressive childhood degenerative disease that leaves children with slurred speech, unable to walk, and in a wheelchair before they reach adolescence. In today's online edition of Nature Medicine, Karl Herrup, chair of the Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience in the School of Arts and Sciences provides new information on why this genetic disease attacks the cerebellum – a part of the brain that controls movement coordination, equilibrium, and ...

How black holes grow

How black holes grow
2012-04-02
SALT LAKE CITY -- A study led by a University of Utah astrophysicist found a new explanation for the growth of supermassive black holes in the center of most galaxies: they repeatedly capture and swallow single stars from pairs of stars that wander too close. Using new calculations and previous observations of our own Milky Way and other galaxies, "we found black holes grow enormously as a result of sucking in captured binary star partners," says physics and astronomy Professor Ben Bromley, lead author of the study, which is set for online publication April 2 in Astrophysical ...

The Perfect Puree of Napa Valley Offers a Culinary Adventure in Napa

The Perfect Puree of Napa Valley Offers a Culinary Adventure in Napa
2012-04-02
Tracy Hayward, Founder of The Perfect Puree of Napa Valley, announced today the kick-off of an Enter-to-Win sweepstakes. Entitled "Whisk, Shake & Stir The Perfect Puree," the sweepstakes will offer one lucky winner a week in Napa, California, during the renowned Culinary Institute of America's Worlds of Flavor Conference on November 1 - 3, 2012. The online sweepstakes is open to all and there is no purchase necessary to enter. Entrants simply sign up at the "Whisk, Shake, and Stir" contest page on the Perfect Puree website between April 2 and ...

Mayo Clinic study finds dramatic rise in skin cancer in young adults

2012-04-02
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Even as the rates of some cancers are falling, Mayo Clinic is seeing an alarming trend: the dramatic rise of skin cancer, especially among people under 40. According to a study by Mayo Clinic researchers published in the April issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, the incidence of melanoma has escalated, and young women are the hardest hit. "We anticipated we'd find rising rates, as other studies are suggesting, but we found an even higher incidence than the National Cancer Institute had reported using the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Result ...

Measles-containing vaccines not linked with increased risk of febrile seizures in kids 4-6

2012-04-02
OAKLAND, Calif., (April 2, 2012) — Vaccines for measles were not associated with an increased risk of febrile seizures among 4-6 year olds during the six weeks after vaccination, according to a study by the Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center that appears in the current issue of Pediatrics. Funded by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, the study of 86,750 children follows an earlier study published in Pediatrics that showed one particular combination of measles-containing vaccine — the measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox containing vaccination (or MMRV) — ...

Madeira Optical Optometry Practice Partners with Virtual Hosted Environment iManaged Solutions

Madeira Optical Optometry Practice Partners with Virtual Hosted Environment iManaged Solutions
2012-04-02
Madeira Optical knows the challenges of 21st century medical practice. When they decided to moved to a new location at 7800 Laurel Ave. Madeira, OH 45243 on March 1st of 2012, Madeira Optical was faced with relocating a complex server and terminal practice management software package. Moving medical equipment and adding a state-of-the art exam lane were also on the agenda. So, Madeira Optical decided to convert from a locally maintained server to the iManaged Solutions virtual hosted environment. When Madeira Optical moved to 7800 Laurel Ave., all they have to do is connect ...

Aging accelerates brain abnormalities in childhood onset epilepsy patients

2012-04-02
New research confirms that childhood onset temporal lobe epilepsy has a significant impact on brain aging. Study findings published in Epilepsia, a peer-reviewed journal of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE), show age-accelerated ventricular expansion outside the normal range in this patient population. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), epilepsy affects nearly 2 million Americans. Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common form of partial epilepsy, with 60% of all patients having this form of the disease. Previous evidence ...

Cancer stem cell vaccine in development shows antitumor effect

2012-04-02
PHILADELPHIA -- Scientists may have discovered a new paradigm for immunotherapy against cancer by priming antibodies and T cells with cancer stem cells, according to a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. "This is a major breakthrough in immunotherapy research because we were able to use purified cancer stem cells to generate a vaccine, which strengthened the potency of antibodies and T cells that selectively targeted cancer stem cells," said Qiao Li, Ph.D., a research assistant professor in the department of surgery ...

PTSD genes identified by UCLA study

2012-04-02
Why do some persons succumb to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while others who suffered the same ordeal do not? A new UCLA study may shed light on the answer. UCLA scientists have linked two genes involved in serotonin production to a higher risk of developing PTSD. Published in the April 3 online edition of the Journal of Affective Disorders, the findings suggest that susceptibility to PTSD is inherited, pointing to new ways of screening for and treating the disorder. "People can develop post-traumatic stress disorder after surviving a life-threatening ordeal ...

TGen presents triple-negative breast cancer study supported by Life Technologies

2012-04-02
CHICAGO -- Because cases of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) are so genetically different, whole-genome sequencing is needed to detect the subtle molecular differences that might point to specific treatments for individual patients. Dr. John Carpten, Ph.D., head of the Integrated Cancer Genomics Division at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), will deliver that message along with other preliminary findings about whole-genome sequencing of TNBC at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2012, March 31-April 4, in Chicago. "Every ...

Mesothelioma Breathing Device Could Lead to Safer Diagnosis

Mesothelioma Breathing Device Could Lead to Safer Diagnosis
2012-04-02
The breathalyzer is widely used by law enforcement to determine the amount of alcohol a person has consumed. Researchers from the Netherlands and Italy have, with a level of certainty, developed a device that detects malignant pleural mesothelioma from a breath sample, according to Medical News Today. The report says the "electronic nose," known to developers as Cyranose 320, is able to analyze a person's breath and pick out harmful compounds in the sample. The research conducted at the respiratory disease departments of the University of Bari in Italy ...

Atlanta Perimeter Hotel Provides Nearby Lodging to Georgia Tech May 2012 Commencement Ceremony

2012-04-02
Sheraton Atlanta Perimeter Hotel North, located near Dunwoody, GA, offers convenient accommodations to parents and guests attending Georgia Tech's spring 2012 Commencement Ceremonies. The Master's and PhD Ceremony will be held at 7:00pm on Friday, May 4 and the Bachelor's Ceremony will be held at 9:00am on Saturday, May 5 at Georgia Dome in downtown Atlanta. Spring commencement is a special annual event for Georgia Tech graduates. The National Academy of Engineering, President, Dr. Charles Vest, will be the speaker at the Master's and PhD Ceremony. The Bachelor's Ceremony ...

Marketing Aces Reveal Secret to Generating Additional Thousands in Used Part Sales

2012-04-02
Ron Sturgeon and co-author Linda Allen will speak at the United Recyclers' Group (URG) Denver Pinnacle Training Conference on April 13, 2012. Sturgeon and Allen will be speaking on event marketing, the subject of their new book, 409 Low-Cost Events That Will Produce New Clients for Your Small Business in Any Economy. Sturgeon, who helped found URG in 1995, is well known in the recycling industry where he built a single-employee Fort Worth salvage yard into one of the largest salvage operations in the United States before selling to Ford in the 1990s. He is a successful ...

4th R Foundation: Our Leaders are Ignorant of the Real Issues of Education Reform. Our Experts Sincerely Want to Reform Education but Have Very Little Clue how to Educate Both the Mind and Brain

2012-04-02
/A RELATIVELY new field, called interpersonal neurobiology, draws its vigor from one of the great discoveries of our era: that the brain is constantly rewiring itself based on daily life./ - The Brain on Love, By Diane Ackerman in the NY Times. We have created a subject that rewires the brain of an emotionally challenged student. In effect making the student's brain emotionally healthy and capable of becoming a successful student. It is now becoming more and more scientifically evident that the brain changes physically as time goes by. It is well known that experience ...

Business Plus to Publish Organization with Heart! By Kip Tindell

Business Plus to Publish Organization with Heart! By Kip Tindell
2012-04-02
Business Plus, an imprint of Grand Central Publishing, announced today that it has acquired North American rights to publish ORGANIZATION WITH HEART by The Container Store Chairman and CEO, Kip Tindell. The book will be published in Fall 2013. ORGANIZATION WITH HEART takes an intimate look at the underlying philosophy and passion behind the hugely successful and much loved retailer--included in FORTUNE Magazine's list of "100 Best Companies to Work For" 13 years running--outlining the company's seven Foundation Principles and adherence to the tenets of Conscious ...
Previous
Site 5913 from 8101
Next
[1] ... [5905] [5906] [5907] [5908] [5909] [5910] [5911] [5912] 5913 [5914] [5915] [5916] [5917] [5918] [5919] [5920] [5921] ... [8101]

Press-News.org - Free Press Release Distribution service.