By Kumamoto UniversityDecember 14, 202484 Comments3 Mins Read FacebookTwitterPinterestTelegram Share HPH-15 offers multiple benefits for managing Type 2 diabetes, including effective blood glucose control, reduced risk of lactic acidosis, improved insulin resistance, and suppression of fat buildup and fibrosis in the liver and fat tissue, with these effects observed in studies using muscle, liver, and fat...
Women Largely Unaware of Anti-Seizure Med Risks, More Education Needed
Pauline Anderson December 11, 2024 161 The majority of women with epilepsy are inadequately educated about the potential risks associated with anti-seizure medications (ASMs), which include teratogenicity and a reduction in the efficacy of hormonal birth control, early results of a new survey suggested. In addition, only about a third of survey respondents indicated that...
Wearable Device Can Warn of Worsening Heart Failure
Carolyn Brown November 19, 2024 3182 Added to Email Alert A simple, lightweight device worn on the sternum can calculate intracardiac filling pressures, warning that heart failure is worsening, according to a study conducted to determine whether the device can produce the data needed. The developers are designing the CardioTag device to offer advantages over...
Noninvasive imaging method can penetrate deeper into living tissue
Using high-powered lasers, this new method could help biologists study the body’s immune responses and develop new medicines. Adam Zewe|MIT News Publication Date: December 11, 2024 Press Inquiries Caption: The new technique enables laser light to penetrate deeper into living tissue, which captures sharper images of cells at different layers of a living system. On...
Some aging cells heal wounds, others cause harm: Study shows how to distinguish between the two
by Kim Krieger, University of Connecticut Images showing the distribution of cells in the skin of intact (left) and wounded (right) mice. The colors represent different cell types. The black lines show the edges of the wound. Credit: University of Connecticut Lengthening life by eliminating old, inflammatory cells is a tantalizing idea, but anti-aging researchers suspect...
Molecular insights unlock a targeted approach to cancer immunotherapy
by Monash University Human LAG-3 homodimer (with domains D1, D2, D3 and D4) binding to two separate HLA-II (MHC-II) molecules on the surface of an antigen-presenting cell (APC), imposing a distinct 38° offset angle. This figure has been modified from the original figure 1c of Petersen et al to aid visualization. Credit: Monash University Australian-led research...
Prenatal SSRI exposure linked to functional constipation in offspring
by Elana Gotkine Prenatal exposure to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) is associated with an increased risk of functional constipation developing in offspring, according to a study published online Dec. 10 in Molecular Psychiatry. Helene Kildegaard, M.D., from the Hans Christian Andersen Children’s Hospital in Odense, Denmark, and colleagues examined associations between gestational SSRI exposure and...
Japanese researchers test pioneering drug to regrow teeth
by Tomohiro OSAKI Handout images from the Medical Research Institute Kitano Hospital show before (top) and after images of the regrowth of teeth in a ferret (centre) and mice (R and L). People with missing teeth may be able to grow new ones, say Japanese dentists testing a pioneering drug they hope will offer an...
Refrigerated raw milk harbors infectious flu virus for 5 days, study finds
by Stanford University Credit: Environmental Science & Technology Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00971 Raw milk, hailed by some as a natural and nutritious alternative to pasteurized dairy, may come with hidden dangers, according to a new Stanford University study. The research, published December 12 in Environmental Science & Technology Letters reveals that influenza or flu virus can remain infectious in refrigerated raw milk...
New immunotherapy platform has increased potential to target cancer cells
by Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and Stanford University have revealed the molecular structure of TRACeR-I, a protein platform for reprogramming immune responses. A better understanding of its structure may help optimize designs for the platform, which can be used to develop cancer treatments by either...