ScienceDaily: Top Health News |
- Epigenetic changes may explain chronic kidney disease
- Link between allergies, increased risk of blood cancers in women
- Tell-tale genes linked to eating disorders
- Stuck on flu
- Sugar-sweetened beverage consumption increases endometrial cancer risk
- Chemotherapy: When intestinal bacteria provide reinforcement
- Why some ear, respiratory infections become chronic
- Researchers pioneer first patient-specific 3-D virtual birth simulator
- Better prediction for epileptic seizures through adaptive learning approach
- Growth stunted in lower-income youth with kidney disease
Epigenetic changes may explain chronic kidney disease Posted: 23 Nov 2013 04:48 PM PST Researchers found, in a genome-wide survey, significant differences in the pattern of chemical modifications on DNA that affect gene expression in kidney cells from patients with chronic kidney disease versus healthy controls. This is the first study to show that changes in these modifications – the cornerstone of the field of epigenetics – might explain chronic kidney disease. |
Link between allergies, increased risk of blood cancers in women Posted: 22 Nov 2013 01:54 PM PST A team of scientists looking into the interplay of the immune system and cancer have found a link between a history of airborne allergies – in particular to plants, grass and trees – with risk of blood cancers in women. |
Tell-tale genes linked to eating disorders Posted: 22 Nov 2013 01:54 PM PST Until recently, no one knew how eating disorders occur or what triggers them. Recently published research suggests a new strategy to understand eating disorders, and it may lead to innovative treatments. |
Posted: 22 Nov 2013 01:54 PM PST Researchers have shown for the first time how influenza A viruses snip through a protective mucus net to both infect respiratory cells and later cut their way out to infect other cells. |
Sugar-sweetened beverage consumption increases endometrial cancer risk Posted: 22 Nov 2013 10:23 AM PST Postmenopausal women who consumed sugar-sweetened beverages were more likely to develop the most common type of endometrial cancer compared with women who did not drink sugar-sweetened beverages, according to a study published. |
Chemotherapy: When intestinal bacteria provide reinforcement Posted: 22 Nov 2013 08:57 AM PST Research has led to a rather surprising discovery on the manner in which cancer chemotherapy treatments act more effectively with the help of the intestinal flora (also known as the intestinal microbiota). |
Why some ear, respiratory infections become chronic Posted: 22 Nov 2013 07:39 AM PST Scientists have figured out how a bacterium that causes ear and respiratory illnesses is able to elude immune detection in the middle ear, likely contributing to chronic or recurrent infections in adults and children. |
Researchers pioneer first patient-specific 3-D virtual birth simulator Posted: 22 Nov 2013 05:45 AM PST Computer scientists are working to create a virtual birthing simulator that will help doctors and midwives prepare for unusual or dangerous births. The new program will take into account factors such as the shape of the mother's body and the positioning of the baby to provide patient-specific birth predictions. |
Better prediction for epileptic seizures through adaptive learning approach Posted: 21 Nov 2013 01:33 PM PST An engineering professor has developed a computational model that can more accurately predict when an epileptic seizure will occur next based on the patient's personalized medical information. |
Growth stunted in lower-income youth with kidney disease Posted: 21 Nov 2013 06:15 AM PST Even with more prescriptions for growth hormone, children and adolescents with chronic kidney disease were less likely to grow to normal height ranges if they came from lower-income families, according to research. |
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