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Early menopause and HRT among hormonal factors linked to heightened rheumatoid arthritis risk

2024-01-10
Early menopause—before the age of 45—taking hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and having 4 or more children are among several hormonal and reproductive factors linked to a heightened risk of rheumatoid arthritis in women, finds a large long term study published in the open access journal RMD Open.   Women are more susceptible to this autoimmune disease than men, note the researchers. They are 4–5 times as likely as men to develop rheumatoid arthritis under the age of 50, and twice as likely to do so between the ages of 60 and 70. And the disease seems to take a greater physical toll on women than it does on men. While ...

City of Hope Children’s Cancer Center, Children’s Oncology Group conduct largest clinical trial seeking to prevent heart failure among childhood cancer survivors

City of Hope Children’s Cancer Center, Children’s Oncology Group conduct largest clinical trial seeking to prevent heart failure among childhood cancer survivors
2024-01-10
LOS ANGELES — Physicians at City of Hope, one of the largest cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States, in cooperation with the Children’s Oncology Group (COG), have conducted the largest clinical trial to date seeking to reduce the risk of people who have survived childhood cancer from developing heart failure. The findings published in The Lancet Oncology show that the blood vessel relaxing medication carvedilol is safe for childhood cancer survivors to take and may improve important markers of heart injury sustained as a result of chemotherapy exposure. One devastating ...

New research sheds light on an old fossil solving an evolutionary mystery

New research sheds light on an old fossil solving an evolutionary mystery
2024-01-10
New York, January 9, 2024 — A research paper published in Royal Society’s Biology Letters on January 10 has revealed that picrodontids —an extinct family of placental mammals that lived several million years after the extinction of the dinosaurs—are not primates as previously believed. The paper—co-authored by Jordan Crowell, an Anthropology Ph.D. candidate at the CUNY Graduate Center; Stephen Chester, an Associate Professor of Anthropology at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center; ...

No laughing matter: Leadership critical to help address NHS retention crisis

2024-01-10
Frontline healthcare workers in busy hospitals feel that they are “just rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic” according to new research into the impact of under-resourced and high-pressure emergency hospital departments in the UK. A study from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine and University of Bath, led by clinical psychologist Dr Jo Daniels in collaboration with colleagues at UWE Bristol and the University of Bristol, argues that hospitals need better leadership to help change cultures and support people’s basic needs. In addition to reflections ...

Acidity of Antarctic waters could double by century’s end, threatening biodiversity

2024-01-10
The acidity of Antarctica’s coastal waters could double by the end of the century, threatening whales, penguins and hundreds of other species that inhabit the Southern Ocean, according to new research from the Univeristy of Colorado Boulder. Scientists projected that by 2100, the upper 650 feet (200 meters) of the ocean—where much marine life resides—could see more than a 100% increase in acidity compared with 1990s levels. The paper, appeared Jan. 4 in the journal Nature Communications.  “The findings are critical for our understanding ...

Injectable hydrogel electrodes open door to a novel painless treatment regimen for arrhythmia

Injectable hydrogel electrodes open door to a novel painless treatment regimen for arrhythmia
2024-01-09
HOUSTON (Jan 9, 2024)— A breakthrough study led by Dr. Mehdi Razavi at The Texas Heart Institute (THI), in collaboration with a biomedical engineering team of The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) Cockrell School of Engineering led by Dr. Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez, sets the foundation of a ground-breaking treatment regimen for treating ventricular arrhythmia.  Their study published in Nature Communications demonstrates the design and feasibility of a new hydrogel-based pacing modality. The urgent need for an effective therapeutic ...

Inspired by Greek mythology, this potential drug shows promise for vanquishing Parkinson’s RNA in early studies

Inspired by Greek mythology, this potential drug shows promise for vanquishing Parkinson’s RNA in early studies
2024-01-09
JUPITER, Fla. — Like the Greek mythological beast with a snake’s tail and two ferocious heads, a potential Parkinson’s medicine created in the lab of chemist Matthew Disney, Ph.D., is also a type of chimera bearing two heads. One seeks out a key piece of Parkinson’s-causing RNA, while the other goads the cell to chop it to pieces for recycling. The research is described in the Jan. 9 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, or PNAS. Parkinson’s is a frustrating and all too common disease. Slowly, people with Parkinson’s lose brain cells and other neurons needed to make the neurotransmitter dopamine. This progressive ...

Plant warfare: the crucial function of Nrc proteins in tomato defense mechanisms

2024-01-09
In the fascinating world of plant biology, an innovative study recently featured on the cover of The Plant Journal has been turning heads. The research delves into the intricate defense mechanisms of tomatoes against the notorious bacterial pathogen, Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato (Pst). It's a classic tale of nature's arms race: as pathogens evolve to outsmart plant defenses, plants counter with more sophisticated immune responses. The study is based on research conducted by scientists in Dr. Greg Martin’s lab ...

NASA’s Webb finds signs of possible aurorae on isolated brown dwarf

NASA’s Webb finds signs of possible aurorae on isolated brown dwarf
2024-01-09
Astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have found a brown dwarf (an object more massive than Jupiter but smaller than a star) with infrared emission from methane, likely due to energy in its upper atmosphere. This is an unexpected discovery because the brown dwarf, W1935, is cold and lacks a host star; therefore, there is no obvious source for the upper atmosphere energy. The team speculates that the methane emission may be due to processes generating aurorae. These findings are being presented at the 243rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society in New Orleans. To help explain the mystery of the infrared ...

Meagan Brem and team receive grant to study alcohol-fueled acts of violence among intimate partners

Meagan Brem and team receive grant to study alcohol-fueled acts of violence among intimate partners
2024-01-09
Beer pong. Quarters. Flip cup. The drinking games college students play can seem like an alcohol-laced version of intramural sports. When college-aged drinkers imbibe too heavily, the risk for physically harming a romantic partner rises considerably. What if there was a way for heavy drinkers to monitor their alcoholic intake and blood-alcohol levels in real time, before an intimate situation cascades into physical violence? Or, as Virginia Tech researcher and assistant professor of psychology Meagan Brem put it: “If we can identify ...

Unlocking the secrets of a "hot Saturn" and its spotted star

Unlocking the secrets of a hot Saturn and its spotted star
2024-01-09
Led by researchers from Université de Montréal's Trottier Institute for Research on Exoplanets (iREx), a team of astronomers has harnessed the power of the revolutionary James Webb Space Webb Telescope (JWST) to study the "hot Saturn" exoplanet HAT-P-18 b. Their findings, published last month in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, paint a complete picture of the HAT-P-18 b's atmosphere while exploring the great challenge of distinguishing its atmospheric signals from the activity of its star. HAT-P-18 b is located over 500 light-years away ...

RSV shown to infect nerve cells, cause inflammation and damage

2024-01-09
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a common infection in children and senior adults, can also infect nerve cells and trigger inflammation leading to nerve damage, according to a new Tulane University study. RSV can cause mild symptoms such as coughing, sneezing and fever or lead to more severe conditions such as pneumonia or bronchiolitis. But since the disease was first discovered in 1956, it has been thought to only infect the respiratory tract. This study, published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases, is the first to prove that RSV can penetrate nerve cells and may provide the ...

A common marker of neurological diseases may play role in healthy brains

2024-01-09
https://www.ninds.nih.gov/news-events/press-releases/common-marker-neurological-diseases-may-play-role-healthy-brainsResearchers have discovered that a protein called phosphorylated α-synuclein, which is associated with several neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia, is also involved in the normal processes of how neurons communicate with each other in a healthy brain. The research, published in Neuron, was funded in part by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a part of the National Institutes of Health.   Phosphorylation is a process where a phosphate ...

ChatGPT poem regurgitation raises ethical questions

2024-01-09
ITHACA, N.Y. – Ask ChatGPT to find a well-known poem and it will probably regurgitate the entire text verbatim – regardless of copyright law – according to a new study by Cornell University researchers. The study showed that ChatGPT was capable of “memorizing” poems, especially famous ones commonly found online. The findings pose ethical questions about how ChatGPT and other proprietary artificial intelligence models are trained – likely using data scraped from the internet, researchers said. “It’s generally not good for large language models to memorize large chunks of text, in part because it’s a privacy concern,” ...

Sickle cell raises COVID-19 risk, but vaccination lags

2024-01-09
Despite the fact that people with sickle cell disease have a much higher risk of serious illness or death if they develop COVID-19, a new study shows they’re also much less likely than those without sickle cell disease to have gotten vaccinated against coronavirus.  Completion of the initial COVID-19 vaccination series was nearly two times lower for adults with sickle cell disease as others their age, the analysis of data in Michigan shows.  In in teens and children over 5, who overall have lower rates of COVID-19 vaccination, those with sickle cell disease were far less likely than other young people to have gotten their doses by summer 2022, the analysis ...

Brookline Housing Authority partners with Hebrew SeniorLife for health and social services in senior housing

2024-01-09
The Brookline Housing Authority (BHA) has partnered with Hebrew SeniorLife, New England’s largest nonprofit provider of senior health care and living communities, and the only senior care organization affiliated with Harvard Medical School, to provide community life services including resident services, fitness, social programming, and nursing in BHA’s senior housing sites. Hebrew SeniorLife brings to the BHA its model of housing with services called the Right Care, Right Place, Right Time (R3) program. This model uses a preventive approach to resident services, focused on one-on-one relationship building, community-wide ...

Sylvester-led research group unveils the first individual risk prediction model for multiple myeloma

Sylvester-led research group unveils the first individual risk prediction model for multiple myeloma
2024-01-09
  MIAMI, FLORIDA (EMBARGOED UNTIL JAN. 9, 2024 AT 4 PM EST) – A multicenter collaboration led by researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine has produced the first computational model for newly diagnosed multiple myeloma that predicts an individual’s personalized prognosis based on their tumor genomics and treatments. The prediction model for individualized risk in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma, or IRMMa, improves on previous prognostic tools because it takes into account ...

Systemic changes induced by ASCOT in plasma proteome of women with impaired ovarian reserves

Systemic changes induced by ASCOT in plasma proteome of women with impaired ovarian reserves
2024-01-09
“Identifying plasma proteins that regenerate aged or damaged ovaries could lead to more effective, targeted and/or preventive therapies for patients.” BUFFALO, NY- January 9, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 15, Issue 24, entitled, “Systemic changes induced by autologous stem cell ovarian transplant in plasma proteome of women with impaired ovarian reserves.” Patients with poor ...

Green wheels, bright skies: NREL analysis unveils the connection between electric vehicles and photovoltaics

2024-01-09
People who own electric vehicles (EVs) are more likely to go a step further and add solar panels to their home, according to an analysis of a behavioral study by researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). Conversely, the impact of owning solar panels also has a bearing on whether a homeowner buys an electric vehicle but not as strongly. The study relied on a survey of 869 households in the San Francisco Bay Area. NREL’s Shivam Sharda, lead author of the newly published research paper that analyzes the ...

V Foundation grant enables research on radiation resistance in pancreatic cancer treatment

2024-01-09
University of Colorado Cancer Center member Sana Karam, MD, PhD, has received a translational research grant from the V Foundation for Cancer Research, co-founded by ESPN and legendary basketball coach Jim Valvano, to study a new therapeutic that may help pancreatic cancer patients overcome resistance to radiation therapy.  “Pancreatic cancer is deadly. The only treatment that can cure it is surgery to fully remove the tumor, but that is only an option when the cancer is caught early, which is rare,” Karam explains. “Radiation alone to shrink tumors before surgery has been tried, but with limited benefit. By studying patient ...

The role of fibronectin in BRAF-mutant thyroid cancer treatment

2024-01-09
New research overseen by University of Colorado Cancer Center member Rebecca Schweppe, PhD, could lead to improved treatment for people with thyroid cancer characterized by a mutation in the BRAF gene — a mutation also responsible for some types of melanoma, colorectal cancer, leukemia, lymphoma, and ovarian cancer.   “The BRAF mutation is a common mutation in thyroid cancer,” Schweppe says. “It has a high prevalence of mutations in two different subtypes — papillary thyroid cancer, or PTC, and anaplastic thyroid cancer, or ATC — and there's a lot of interest in targeting this pathway. Other tumor types, like melanoma ...

Current research on prevalence of prolonged grief disorder is inadequate

2024-01-09
Waltham — January 8, 2024 — Proper procedures for diagnosing prolonged grief disorder (PGD) are not being followed in research into its prevalence, according to a study published in Harvard Review of Psychiatry, part of the Lippincott portfolio from Wolters Kluwer. What’s more, most published literature doesn’t clearly acknowledge the limitations of the methodology used.  The lead investigator was Margaret S. Stroebe, PhD, a clinical psychologist at Utrecht University and the University of Groningen ...

New NIH-funded center could soon reduce the need for pharmaceutical trials on animals

New NIH-funded center could soon reduce the need for pharmaceutical trials on animals
2024-01-09
The University of Rochester will house a new national center focused on using tissue-on-chip technology to develop drugs more rapidly and reduce the need for animal trials. The National Institutes of Health awarded a $7.5 million grant to establish the Translational Center for Barrier Microphysiological Systems (TraCe-bMPS) at Rochester in partnership with Duke University. The center aims to develop five Food and Drug Administration–qualified drug development tools related to ...

Police leaders face challenges when seeking to accommodate community stakeholders

2024-01-09
Police reform movements often focus on improving police-public relationships. These ties are a focus of community policing and procedural justice, two significant reform efforts in policing worldwide over the last three decades. In a new article, researchers examine issues involved in these efforts, especially limitations to communication, and highlight implications for police-community relations. The article, by researchers at Arizona State University (ASU) and the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), is published in Psychology, Public Policy, and the Law. “Reform movements that try to improve relationships ...

New book provides roadmap for police management of public order

2024-01-09
Managing public order at large demonstrations, protests, and assemblies is a demanding and necessary task. A new book provides an international review of public order management experiences and effective practices. Through practical examples grounded in multidisciplinary theory and science, the book offers a roadmap to improve police response and increase safety at large gatherings in democratic countries. The book, Public Order Policing: A Professional's Guide to International Theories, Case Studies, and Best Practices, was edited by researchers at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV); ...
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