Misconceptions keep some cancer patient populations from benefitting from hormone therapy
2025-09-10
CLEVELAND, Ohio (September 10, 2025)—Despite evidence suggesting the safety of hormone therapy for patients with a history of low-grade endometrial or epithelial ovarian cancer, a new survey shows that many gynecologists and some gynecologic oncologists are still uncomfortable prescribing the therapy for this patient population. This indicates a need for more clinician education to help overcome lingering misconceptions. Results of the survey are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society.
Although ...
Predicting the green glow of aurorae on the red planet
2025-09-10
Planetary scientists believe they can now predict the green glow of an aurora in the night sky above Mars, and they have the images to prove it.
The first observations of a visible-light aurora from the surface of the Red Planet were made by NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover in 2024. Now, presenting at the Europlanet Science Congress–Division of Planetary Science (EPSC–DPS) joint meeting in Helsinki this week, Dr Elise Wright Knutsen of the University of Oslo will reveal a second snapshot of the aurora by Perseverance and, more importantly, the tools to predict when an aurora will occur on Mars.
"The fact that we captured the aurora again demonstrates that our method ...
Giant DNA discovered hiding in your mouth
2025-09-10
Researchers including those at the University of Tokyo have made a surprising discovery hiding in people’s mouths: Inocles, giant DNA elements that had previously escaped detection. These appear to play a central role in helping bacteria adapt to the constantly changing environment of the mouth. The findings provide fresh insight into how oral bacteria colonize and persist in humans, with potential implications for health, disease and microbiome research.
You might think that modern medical science knows everything there is to know about ...
Children lose muscle during early cancer treatment — new ECU study warns of a hidden danger to recovery
2025-09-10
Children lose muscle during early cancer treatment — new ECU study warns of a hidden danger to recovery
New research from the Exercise Medicine Research Institute at Edith Cowan University (ECU) has highlighted that children undergoing cancer treatment often lose skeletal muscle at a time when they should be rapidly gaining it, a loss that could increase treatment complications and raise the risk of long-term health problems.
“Both the cancer itself and the cancer treatment can cause muscle loss in ...
World-first koala chlamydia vaccine approved
2025-09-10
World-first koala chlamydia vaccine approved
In a world first, a vaccine has been approved to protect Australia’s endangered koalas from infection and death caused by chlamydia.
Developed by the University of the Sunshine Coast, the vaccine’s approval by Australia’s veterinary medicine regulator is a major step in the fight against one of the greatest threats to the long-term survival of the nation’s iconic marsupial.
Led by Professor of Microbiology Peter Timms, University of the Sunshine Coast researchers have spent more than 10 years developing the vaccine to protect ...
Taking the pulse of digital health in Asia
2025-09-10
HONG KONG (9 September 2025)—Advancing digital healthcare innovation across the region is the key driver behind Digital Health Asia 2025, organised by Times Higher Education (THE) in partnership with City University of Hong Kong (CityUHK) and the Institute of Digital Medicine (IDM).
Digital Health Asia, from 8 to 10 September, has brought together over 420 delegates from 17 regions, including leaders from academia, healthcare, government, and industry, to foster collaboration and drive progress in digital health.
“Digital Health Asia 2025 is more than just a conference. It is a celebration of the spirit of collaboration,” ...
Even healthy children can be severely affected by RSV
2025-09-10
It is not only premature babies and children with underlying diseases who suffer from serious respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections. Even healthy, full-term babies are at significant risk of intensive care or prolonged hospitalisation – especially during the first three months of life. This is according to a comprehensive registry study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden published in The Lancet Regional Health – Europe.
RSV is a common cause of respiratory infections in young children and accounts for around 245,000 ...
Keto diet linked to reduced depression symptoms in college students
2025-09-10
[Embargoed until 8 p.m. ET Sept. 9, 2025 (1 a.m. UK Sept. 10, 2025), coinciding with publication in Translational Psychiatry]
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study shows an association between at least 10 weeks of following a well-formulated ketogenic diet and a roughly 70% decrease in depression symptoms among a small group of college students.
Beyond the reduction in self-reported and clinician rated depression, the students’ global well-being increased nearly three-fold and their performance improved on several cognitive tasks. All but one participant ...
Blood test identifies HPV-associated head and neck cancers up to 10 years before symptoms
2025-09-10
Human papilloma virus (HPV) causes around 70% of head and neck cancers in the United States, making it the most common cancer caused by the virus, with rates increasing each year. Unlike cervical cancers caused by HPV, there is no screening test for HPV-associated head and neck cancers. This means that patients are usually diagnosed after a tumor has grown to billions of cells in size, causing symptoms and spreading to lymph nodes. Screening methods that can detect these cancers much earlier could mean earlier treatment interventions for patients.
In a new federally funded study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Mass General Brigham researchers ...
Odds of dementia strongly linked to number of co-existing mental health disorders
2025-09-09
The odds of developing dementia are strongly linked to the number of co-existing mental health disorders, rising from twice as high for one disorder to 11 times as high for four or more, finds research published in the open access journal BMJ Mental Health.
In particular, the combination of concurrent mood and anxiety disorders is linked to odds of dementia of up to 90%, the findings indicate.
Psychiatric disorders, such as depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder, have been individually associated with an increased risk ...
Large social and economic inequalities persist among UK doctors
2025-09-09
Large social and economic inequalities persist among UK doctors, with those from a professional background 6 times more likely to become a medical practitioner than those from a working class background, reveals a 10 year study, published in the open access journal BMJ Open.
Greater efforts are needed to boost the social mobility of medical school applicants and better understand the effects of these inequalities on patient care, say the researchers.
National data from 2014 show that only 4% of practising doctors came from lower-income working class backgrounds. And despite concerted efforts over the past 20 years to ...
Research reveals how microplastics threaten Gulf of Mexico marine life
2025-09-09
Critical wildlife habitats are exposed to pollution risk in the seas off the southern United States, with implications for human health and food security. “Most of the pollution comes from rivers and not from wastewater treatment plants,” says CMCC scientist Annalisa Bracco, co-author of the study that used advanced computer models to track tiny plastic particles across three years.
The Gulf of Mexico is facing a growing threat from microplastic pollution, with new research revealing how tiny plastic particles are accumulating in areas crucial to marine life including sea turtles, red snapper, and dolphins. A comprehensive study ...
AI tool developed at Oxford helps astronomers find supernovae in a sky full of noise
2025-09-09
A new AI-powered tool has reduced astronomers’ workload by 85% - filtering through thousands of data alerts to identify the few genuine signals caused by supernovae (powerful explosions from dying stars). The findings have been published today (10 Sept) in The Astrophysical Journal.
Lead researcher Dr Héloïse Stevance (Department of Physics, University of Oxford) said: “The surprising thing is how little data it took. With just 15,000 examples and the computing power of my laptop, I could train smart algorithms to do the heavy lifting and automate what used to take a human beings hours to do each day. This demonstrates that ...
Hungry star is eating its cosmic twin at rate never seen before
2025-09-09
A greedy white dwarf star not far from Earth is devouring its closest celestial companion at a rate never seen before, space scientists have discovered.
Their study found the double star, named V Sagittae, is burning unusually bright as the super-dense white dwarf is gorging on its larger twin in a feeding frenzy.
Experts think the stars are locked in an extraterrestrial tango as they orbit each other every 12.3 hours, gradually pulling each other closer.
They say it could cause a massive explosion so bright it would be seen by the naked eye from Earth, some 10,000 lightyears away.
The findings were made by an international team of astronomers involving Professor Phil Charles from University ...
The Age of Feasting: Late Bronze Age networks developed through massive food festivals, with animals brought from far and wide
2025-09-09
Middens, massive prehistoric rubbish heaps which became part of the British landscape, are revealing the distances people travelled to feast together at the end of the Bronze Age.
In the largest study of its kind, archaeologists from Cardiff University used cutting-edge isotope analysis on material found within six middens in Wiltshire and the Thames Valley.
The results, which reveal where the animals that were feasted on were raised, shed light on the catchment of these vast feasts, arguably the largest to take place in Britain ...
Study of breast cell changes in motherhood provides clues to breastfeeding difficulties
2025-09-09
In a study in mice, researchers have identified genes associated with the dramatic transformation of the mammary gland in pregnancy, breastfeeding, and after breastfeeding as it returns to its resting state.
Their results form the most detailed atlas of genetic expression ever produced for the adult developmental cycle of the mammary gland. They are published today in the journal Nucleic Acids Research.
The mammary gland is made up of different cell types, each with a different function - such as fat cells that provide structural support, and basal cells that are crucial for milk ejection.
The ...
Seizure spread marks loss of consciousness
2025-09-09
Seizure spread marks loss of consciousness
Loss of consciousness can pose real dangers for people with seizure disorders. And while not all seizures cause loss of consciousness, Yale researchers have now discovered how one common type of seizures do.
Frontal lobe seizures are classified as “focal” seizures, a subtype in which the problematic activity generates in a single region of the brain. In the case of frontal lobe seizures, activity originates in the brain’s frontal lobes, located behind the forehead.
But while some cause loss of consciousness, others don’t.
The reason, researchers found, is that ...
Carlos Collet, MD, Ph.D., joins CRF® as director, cardiovascular imaging, physiology and translational therapeutics
2025-09-09
NEW YORK – September 9, 2025 – The Cardiovascular Research Foundation® (CRF®) is proud to announce the appointment of Dr. Carlos Collet as Director, Cardiovascular Imaging, Physiology and Translational Therapeutics. A globally recognized interventional cardiologist and imaging expert, Dr. Collet will spearhead efforts to accelerate the integration of cutting-edge research into clinical practice, elevate CRF®’s academic contributions, and expand its global leadership in cardiovascular education. His work will unify translational science, technological innovation, and education to advance ...
Beyond weight loss: How healthy eating cuts chronic pain
2025-09-09
We all know the benefits of a healthy diet. But new research from the University of South Australia shows that eating nutritious food is about far more than ticking off the five food groups – it can also significantly reduce chronic pain.
In a weight-loss study of 104 Australian adults living with overweight or obesity, researchers found that people who improved their diet quality over a three-month period reported far less joint and muscle pain, with the benefits not simply explained by weight lost.
The findings challenge common assumptions that weight loss is the ...
Mayo Clinic physician awarded Dr. Scott C. Goodwin Grant for Adenomyosis
2025-09-09
FAIRFAX, VA (Sept. 3, 2025)—The Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR) Foundation is proud to announce that Wendaline M. VanBuren, M.D., a radiologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, has been awarded the Dr. Scott C. Goodwin Grant for Adenomyosis.
Through this award, SIR Foundation will provide funding over two years to support Dr. VanBuren’s study, “Endo-Deep: An AI-Powered Model for Diagnosis and Treatment Planning in Adenomyosis and Endometriosis.”
“This multifunctional AI model represents a transformative diagnostic pipeline for endometriosis and adenomyosis, offering ...
Kennesaw State researcher developing electronic nose to detect foodborne illness
2025-09-09
The presence of a strong, unpleasant odor in food is an indication that bacteria has contaminated the food past the point of human consumption. However, oftentimes pathogens such as salmonella and E. coli are difficult to detect.
Taeyeong Choi, assistant professor of information technology in Kennesaw State University’s College of Computing and Software Engineering, is working on developing an electronic nose (e-nose) to detect abnormalities from their version of the sniff test.
His proposed method would not only eliminate the need to “waste” food to discern whether it ...
New global database opens the door for better understanding of terrestrial ecosystem productivity
2025-09-09
With CMCC’s contribution a new study and database provides scientists with an unprecedented resource for understanding how Earth's land systems store carbon and produce biomass, establishing a benchmark for calibrating vegetation models and assessing ecosystem responses to environmental change.
Net primary production (NPP) represents the carbon accumulated by plants through photosynthesis after accounting for their own respiration - essentially the amount of biomass ecosystems produce annually. This fundamental measurement underpins our understanding of global ...
Surviving hostile Venus conditions, finding rare earths and other critical metals
2025-09-09
Whether helping create an alloy that can withstand the withering conditions of Venus in partnership with NASA or collaborating with the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) to develop a portable sensor that can identify rare earth elements (REE), the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering’s Paul Ohodnicki is fueling innovative research while solving problems both in space and right here on Earth.
R&D World has recognized Ohodnicki and his team of collaborators with 2025 R&D 100 Awards, this year for two emerging technologies: VulcanAlloy and ...
New ways of producing methanol from electricity and biomass
2025-09-09
In future, it could become easier to manufacture methanol from biomass decentrally on site. Researchers at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) are proposing a method with which raw and waste materials from plants can be processed in a self-contained procedure under mild reaction conditions. This method means that the complex drying and transportation of biomass to large biomass gasification plants becomes superfluous. The results were published in the journal Green Chemistry.
Methanol is a versatile basic chemical and promising energy carrier – for example, as a drop-in fuel that can be used directly in ...
Gemini South aids in discovery of elusive cloud-forming chemical on ancient brown dwarf
2025-09-09
Brown dwarfs are peculiar objects that are too massive to be considered planets, but not massive enough to sustain nuclear fusion like a star. Among this curious class of objects, a brown dwarf nicknamed The Accident stands out for its unique mix of physical features, exhibiting characteristics previously seen only in warm, young brown dwarfs and others previously seen only in cool, ancient ones.
The Accident’s properties are highly unusual compared to all other known stars and brown ...
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