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Assessing safety and gender-based variations in cardiac pacemakers and related devices

2026-02-13
Background and objectives Cardiac pacemaker implantation is a primary therapy for various arrhythmic disorders; however, safety concerns persist in India. This study aimed to evaluate two-year safety outcomes of cardiac pacemakers, implantable cardioverter-defibrillators, and cardiac resynchronization therapy devices in a tertiary care setting. Methods In this prospective cohort study, data collection was conducted over a one-year enrolment period (February 2023 to January 2024), encompassing patient demographics, pacemaker implantation details, indications, and comorbidities. Patients were prospectively followed for a total of two years from enrolment—during the ...

New study reveals how a key receptor tells apart two nearly identical drug molecules

2026-02-13
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are one of the largest families of cell surface proteins in the human body that recognize hormones, neurotransmitters, and drugs. These receptors regulate a wide range of physiological processes and are the targets of more than 30% of currently marketed drugs. The histamine H1 receptor (H1R) is one such GPCR subtype that plays a key role in mediating allergic reactions, inflammation, vascular permeability, airway constriction, wakefulness, and cognitive functions in the human body. While antihistamines primarily target H1R, current drugs can exhibit limited therapeutic efficacy, prompting researchers to look at H1R ligands from new perspectives. Recently, ...

Parkinson’s disease triggers a hidden shift in how the body produces energy

2026-02-13
Weight loss is a well-recognized but poorly understood non-motor feature of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Many patients progressively lose weight as the disease advances, often alongside worsening motor symptoms and quality of life. Until now, it was unclear whether this reflected muscle loss, poor nutrition, or deeper metabolic changes. New research shows that PD-related weight loss is driven mainly by a selective loss of body fat, while muscle mass is largely preserved, and is accompanied by a fundamental shift in how the body produces energy. Although PD is classically viewed as a neurological disorder, increasing evidence points to widespread ...

Eleven genetic variants affect gut microbiome

2026-02-13
In two new studies on 28,000 individuals, researchers are able to show that genetic variants in 11 regions of the human genome have a clear influence on which bacteria are in the gut and what they do there. Only two genetic regions were previously known. Some of the new genetic variants can be linked to an increased risk of gluten intolerance, haemorrhoids and cardiovascular diseases. The community of bacteria living in our gut, or gut microbiome, has become a hot research area in recent years because of its great significance for health and disease. However, the extent ...

Study creates most precise map yet of agricultural emissions, charts path to reduce hotspots

2026-02-13
Study creates most precise map yet of agricultural emissions, charts path to reduce hotspots New map breaks down agricultural emissions by crop and source East Asia and Pacific contributed to about half of the total agricultural greenhouse gas Rice alone contributed 43% of cropland emissions Regions that produce a lot of food are often high emitters Authors says that mitigation planning should take productivity into account ITHACA, N.Y. – To lower agricultural emissions, policymakers and communities first need to pinpoint the sources. Not just by country ...

When heat flows like water

2026-02-13
To understand how heat normally flows, you could study the second law of thermodynamics – or wrap your hands around a hot mug of coffee. Both tell us that heat tends to flow toward cooler regions. As a material’s thermal energy increases, its atoms vibrate, and quantum mechanics describes these vibrations as phonons: quasiparticles that transport heat. Normally, collisions between phonons cause heat to dissipate slowly. But in highly ordered, pure crystals, these collisions can result in a fluid-like, directional heat flow known as phonon hydrodynamics. Researchers from the group of Theory and Simulation of Materials, led ...

Study confirms Arctic peatlands are expanding

2026-02-13
New research confirms Arctic peatlands are expanding as temperatures continue to rise.  The Arctic is warming faster than the rest of the planet, with average temperatures increasing by about 4°C in the last four decades.  The new study, led by the University of Exeter, shows peatlands have expanded since 1950, with some peatland edges moving by more than a metre a year.  Given that the study covered a broad range of Arctic conditions – ...

KRICT develops microfluidic chip for one-step detection of PFAs and other pollutants

2026-02-13
Environmental pollutant analysis typically requires complex sample pretreatment steps such as filtration, separation, and preconcentration. When solid materials such as sand, soil, or food residues are present in water samples, analytical accuracy often decreases, and filtration can unintentionally remove trace-level target pollutants along with the solids. To address this challenge, a joint research team led by Dr. Ju Hyeon Kim at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT), in collaboration with Professor Jae Bem You’s group at Chungnam National University, has developed a microfluidic-based analytical device that enables direct ...

How much can an autonomous robotic arm feel like part of the body

2026-02-13
Summary When AI powered prosthetic arms that move autonomously become widespread, understanding how people feel about them and accept them will be crucial. In this study, we used virtual reality to simulate a situation in which a participant’s own arm was replaced by a robotic prosthetic arm, and examined how the prosthesis movement speed affects embodiment, including body ownership, the sense of agency, usability, and social impressions of the robot such as competence and discomfort. We found that both overly fast and overly slow movements reduced body ownership and usability, whereas a moderate speed close to natural human reaching, with a movement duration of about ...

Cell and gene therapy across 35 years

2026-02-13
Kyoto, Japan -- Cell and gene therapies, or CGT, have come a long way since they were first introduced. In the last few decades, both cell therapy -- the transplantation of living cells -- and gene therapy -- the use of genetic material to modify cell functions -- have been increasingly incorporated into clinical practice. Various challenges and advances have propelled the use of CGT in innovative treatments for diseases that had otherwise proven difficult to conquer. Yet progress has been uneven across different therapies and regions. To accelerate ...

Rapid microwave method creates high performance carbon material for carbon dioxide capture

2026-02-13
Scientists have developed a fast and energy efficient way to produce advanced carbon materials capable of capturing carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas driving climate change. The new method dramatically reduces production time while improving adsorption performance, offering a promising pathway toward low cost carbon capture technologies. In a recent study, researchers designed a novel strategy that combines pre oxidation treatment with microwave activation to create nitrogen doped ultramicroporous carbon derived from coal. The material demonstrates exceptional ability to capture and selectively separate carbon dioxide from gas mixtures. “Carbon capture technologies must ...

New fluorescent strategy could unlock the hidden life cycle of microplastics inside living organisms

2026-02-13
Microplastics and nanoplastics are now found everywhere on Earth, from ocean depths to agricultural soils and even inside the human body. Yet scientists still struggle to understand what these particles actually do once they enter living organisms. A new study proposes an innovative fluorescence-based strategy that could allow researchers to track microplastics in real time as they move, transform, and degrade inside biological systems. Global plastic production now exceeds 460 million tons annually, with millions ...

HKUST develops novel calcium-ion battery technology enhancing energy storage efficiency and sustainability

2026-02-13
Researchers at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have achieved a breakthrough in calcium-ion battery (CIB) technology, which could transform energy storage solutions in everyday life. Utilizing quasi-solid-state electrolytes (QSSEs), these innovative CIBs promise to enhance the efficiency and sustainability of energy storage, impacting a wide range of applications from renewable energy systems to electric vehicles. The findings are published in the international journal Advanced Science titled “High-Performance Quasi-Solid-State Calcium-Ion Batteries from Redox-Active Covalent Organic Framework ...

High-risk pregnancy specialists present research on AI models that could predict pregnancy complications

2026-02-13
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL TIME OF SESSION LISTED BELOW   (New York, NY – February 9, 2026) – High-risk pregnancy specialists from the Raquel and Jaime Gilinski Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Science at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai are presenting research at the Annual Pregnancy Meeting of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) in Las Vegas until February 13. These presentations include analysis of an AI-assisted tool to diagnosis severe congenital heart defects from fetal scans and a machine learning model that could predict placenta accreta spectrum. The Mount Sinai doctors and ...

Academic pressure linked to increased risk of depression risk in teens

2026-02-13
Pressure to achieve at school at age 15 is linked to depressive symptoms and risk of self-harm, and the association appears to persist into adulthood, finds a study led by University College London (UCL) researchers. The authors of the new study, published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, say their findings suggest that reducing academic pressure in schools could reduce depression and self-harm among young people. Senior author Professor Gemma Lewis (UCL Psychiatry) said: “In recent ...

Beyond the Fitbit: Why your next health tracker might be a button on your shirt

2026-02-13
Measuring human movement with tracking devices on looser clothing is more accurate than on tight body suits or straps.   The discovery by scientists at King’s College London could mark a potential breakthrough for a range of technologies, including improving accuracy on personal health devices, such as Fitbits and smart watches, to enhancing motion capture for CGI movie characters.  It could also support health and medical research by making it easier to gather data on conditions affecting mobility such as Parkinson’s.   The research, published in Nature ...

UCSB scientists bottle the sun with liquid battery

2026-02-12
When the sun goes down, solar panels stop working. This is the fundamental hurdle of renewable energy: how to save the sun’s power for a rainy day — or a cold night. Chemists at UC Santa Barbara have developed a solution that doesn’t require bulky batteries or electrical grids. In a paper published in the journal Science, Associate Professor Grace Han and her team detail a new material that captures sunlight, stores it within chemical bonds and releases it as heat on demand. The material, a modified organic molecule called pyrimidone, is the latest advancement in Molecular Solar Thermal (MOST) energy ...

Lung cancer drug offers a surprising new treatment against ovarian cancer

2026-02-12
ROCHESTER, Minn. — A new study published by Mayo Clinic researchers suggests that ovarian cancer cells quickly activate a survival response after PARP inhibitor treatment, and blocking this early response may make this class of drugs work better. PARP inhibitors are a common treatment for ovarian cancer and can be especially effective in cancers with impaired DNA repair. However, many tumors eventually stop responding, even when the drugs initially show results. The new research identifies ...

When consent meets reality: How young men navigate intimacy

2026-02-12
A new study suggests that young men overwhelmingly support affirmative sexual consent in principle—yet often find its verbal implementation difficult in practice. The research, led by scholars at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and Melbourne University’s Department of General Practice and Primary Care, explores how young heterosexual men interpret and navigate consent during real-world sexual encounters. The findings were published in the Journal of Sex & ...

Siemens Healthineers and Mayo Clinic expand strategic collaboration to enhance patient care through advanced technology

2026-02-12
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Siemens Healthineers and Mayo Clinic are expanding their strategic collaboration to enhance patient care for neurodegenerative disease and the management of prostate cancer and metastatic liver tumors. The two organizations have signed an agreement that will improve care for people with those diseases and expand access to new imaging and interventional technologies. Initial areas for collaboration include: Neurodegenerative disease: Developing and bringing to clinical use artificial ...

Physicists develop new protocol for building photonic graph states

2026-02-12
Physicists have long recognized the value of photonic graph states in quantum information processing. However, the difficulty of making these graph states has left this value largely untapped. In a step forward for the field, researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have proposed a new scheme they term “emit-then-add” for producing highly entangled states of many photons that can work with current hardware. Published in npj Quantum Information, their strategy lays the groundwork for a wide range of quantum enhanced operations including measurement-based quantum computing. Entanglement is a key driver in delivering ...

OHSU-led research initiative examines supervised psilocybin

2026-02-12
A federally funded research initiative will enable researchers at Oregon Health & Science University and other organizations to assess the safety and effectiveness of state-regulated access to psilocybin, also known as magic mushrooms. The five-year, $3.3 million award is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health — a first. “This is the first federally funded work to study the impact of legal psychedelic services delivered in community settings,” said co-principal investigator Adie ...

New review identifies pathways for managing PFAS waste in semiconductor manufacturing

2026-02-12
As semiconductor manufacturing rapidly expands to meet growing global demand for generative AI and advanced electronics, a new review published in Environmental Science & Technology assesses the current state of science, technology and policy around managing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) waste in the industry and outlines recommendations for a path forward. PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” play a central role in modern chipmaking due to their unique properties and essential function in complex chemical processes like photolithography and etching, yet their links to environmental and health ...

New research finds state-level abortion restrictions associated with increased maternal deaths

2026-02-12
Embargoed until 1:45 PM PST, February 12, 2026 New Research Finds State-Level Abortion Restrictions Associated with Increased Maternal Deaths Las Vegas, NV – The increased number of state-level abortion restrictions in the U.S. was associated with a parallel increase in maternal deaths between 2005 and 2023, according to new research presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) 2026 Pregnancy Meeting™. Researchers found that states with five or more different abortion restrictions had higher rates of maternal deaths from any cause, cardiovascular disease, and violence than those states with fewer restrictions. “Abortion ...

New study assesses potential dust control options for Great Salt Lake

2026-02-12
A new collaborative study, led by University of Utah Professor of atmospheric sciences Kevin Perry, provides policymakers, agency leaders, and the public with the most comprehensive assessment to date of potential dust control options for the Great Salt Lake, as declining water levels continue to expose vast areas of lakebed to wind erosion. The study, supported by the Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy in collaboration with the Great Salt Lake Commissioner’s Office, Utah Division of Water Resources and Department of Environmental Quality, considers a wide-range of options to engineer dust ...
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