News Articles

News Account

News Account

News Releases From All Over The World, Right To You
RSS Feed
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Active Substance Developed

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Active Substance Developed

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is a
relatively rare
congenital disease which causes muscle degeneration and eventual death in teenagers.  Around 1 in 3500 newborns is affected and by approximately 10 years of age, Duchenne patients are dependent on a wheelchair and in increasing need for care. They are not expected to make it to their late 20s and often die from heart or respiratory failure. There is no current cure for
Duchenne muscular dystrophy
 but recently researchers from Bern, France, England and Sweden tested a promising active substance successfully.

Teenage Smartphone Use Linked To Sleep Problems And Depression

Teenage Smartphone Use Linked To Sleep Problems And Depression

Teenagers who own smart phones spend more time online – including during the night, which may affect their sleep. A new University of Basel study on more than 300 students reports that teenagers' digital media use during the night is associated with an increased risk of sleep problems and depressive symptoms. Though they only became ubiquitous around 2007, most teenagers nowadays own smart phones. Due to wireless Internet connections and cheap data rates, teenagers with smart phones spend more time online and communicate with their peers for less money – for example via WhatsApp – which has changed their digital media use pattern profoundly. 

Have Warming Seas Caused Skyrocketing Sea Slug Populations?

Have Warming Seas Caused Skyrocketing Sea Slug Populations?

The warm ocean temperatures that brought an endangered green sea turtle to San Francisco in September have triggered a population explosion of bright pink, inch-long sea slugs in tide pools along California's central and northern coastline. The Hopkins' Rose nudibranch, while no strange sight in Southern California, is rarely spotted farther north. A team of scientists, including experts from the California Academy of Sciences, believes this far-flung Okenia rosacea bloom--along with a slew of other marine species spotted north of their typical ranges--may signal a much larger shift in ocean climate and a strong forthcoming El Niño.

Skull Amplification: Baleen Whales Hear Through Their Bones

Skull Amplification: Baleen Whales Hear Through Their Bones

Understanding how baleen whales hear has posed a great mystery to marine mammal researchers. New research by San Diego State University biologist Ted W. Cranford and University of California, San Diego engineer Petr Krysl reveals that the skulls of at least some baleen whales, specifically fin whales in their study, have acoustic properties that capture the energy of low frequencies and direct it to their ear bones.
Baleen whales, also known as mysticetes, are the largest animals on earth, and include blue whales, minke whales, right whales, gray whales and fin whales. These whales can emit extremely low frequency vocalizations that travel extraordinary distances underwater. The wavelengths of these calls can be longer than the bodies of the whales themselves.

Fossil Radiation Is Probably Dust, So Doubts Remain About Gravitational Waves

Fossil Radiation Is Probably Dust, So Doubts Remain About Gravitational Waves

The third chapter in the ongoing saga of the "first direct image of gravitational waves through the primordial sky" has been written. The first chapter was in March of last year when the BICEP2 team announced that it had observed the portion of cosmic background radiation (the "fossil radiation" from the Big Bang) generated by gravitational waves. This would have been the first observation of the cosmological effects of the elusive phenomenon predicted by Einstein's theory of General Relativity. 

Sexual Behavior Of Female College Students Has Gotten More Risky

Sexual Behavior Of Female College Students Has Gotten More Risky

A new study indicates that sexual behavior among female university students in Sweden has changed during the last 25 years, with behavior now appearing more risky than before.The surveys were taken as part of contraceptive counseling delivered at a Student Health Center in Sweden. 

Bowhunting As Neolithic Status Symbol

Bowhunting As Neolithic Status Symbol

Bowhunting has made a big comeback in the 21st century. Suddenly women love it - and their inclination to shoot something up close and personal without getting their hands messy is reason enough not to provoke American women.But it won't be for food, and perhaps it stopped being for food thousands of years ago. We may think of bowhunting in neolithic times as being functional - to find food - but it may have instead been social cohesion, according to archaeologists who have analyzed the Neolithic bows found in the site of La Draga (Girona, Spain). Most in-the-know Americans assumed The Hunger Games was ripping off Battle Royale. It

Democrats Redeemed? Republicans More Anti-Vaccine, Says Paper

Democrats Redeemed? Republicans More Anti-Vaccine, Says Paper

Though the anti-vaccine hotbeds in the United States are strongest in regions that are overwhelmingly Democratic, a new paper says it may not be Democrats that are most anti-vaccine. Why would they be? the authors argue, when Democrats like government the most.

Maternal Glycemia Lnked To Childhood Obesity

Maternal Glycemia Lnked To Childhood Obesity

A secondary analysis of a mild gestational diabetes mellitus treatment trial long-term follow-up study looked at the relationship between maternal oral glucose tolerance testing and childhood body mass index, fasting glucose, insulin and anthropometrics in the offspring of untreated mild GDM and non GDM assessed at ages five to 10 years. They concluded that maternal glycemia impacts childhood obesity and metabolic dysfunction.

New Instrument Can Detect Atmospheric Mercury

New Instrument Can Detect Atmospheric Mercury

A new sensor can detect ambient levels of mercury in the atmosphere. This new highly sensitive, laser-based instrument provides scientists with a method to more accurately measure global human exposure to mercury. The measurement approach is called sequential two-photon laser induced fluorescence (2P-LIF) and uses two different laser beams to excite mercury atoms and monitor blue shifted atomic fluorescence. University of Miami Rosenstiel School Professor of Atmospheric Sciences Anthony Hynes and colleagues tested the new mobile instrument, alongside the standard instrumentation that is currently used to monitor atmospheric mercury concentrations, during the three-week Reno Atmospheric Mercury Intercomparison Experiment (RAMIX) performed in 2011 in Reno, Nevada.

Will More Midwives Mean Fewer Cesarean Deliveries?

Will More Midwives Mean Fewer Cesarean Deliveries?

An upcoming presentation at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine's annual meeting argues that more midwives and a general change to the American child delivery process can reduce cesarean delivery rates - the very thing doctors were sued for not doing enough of in the 1990s. Primary and repeat cesarean delivery rates are now high in the U.S., with nearly one-third of women delivering by cesarean compared to 21 percent in 1995. Cesarean delivery has also associated with a higher risk of maternal complications, longer length of stay and longer postpartum recovery, but there are non-medical reasons why it is difficult to lower the rates.

Staircase Fractures In Microbialites And Travertines

Staircase Fractures In Microbialites And Travertines

In the new GSA BULLETIN, Matteo Maggi and colleagues from Italy and Brazil present a new model of the development of fractures showing a stairway trajectory, commonly occurring in finely laminated rock, such microbialites and travertines.
These fractures strongly enhance permeability by connecting several highly porous zones enveloped in tight impermeable levels. Understanding and predicting this fracture pattern geometry, distribution, and interconnection is valuable not only for locating water supplies, but also for oil, gas, and geothermal exploration.