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To adsorb or to do not adsorb? That is the question

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Prolonged exposure to antibiotics leads to the gain of bacteria's ability to defeat the drugs designed to fight them. Thus, if such antibiotic-resistant bacteria cause the infection, the only chance to use a specialized virus called phage infecting specific bacteria species. It is a powerful weapon against deadly diseases. At the same time, the effective treatment depends on factors that would not be suspected for years to impact the successful therapy.
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What makes vets feel good at work?

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Receiving a simple thank you, spending time with peers and further developing their expertise, are all factors that make veterinarians feel good at work, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Adelaide.
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DNA barcodes decode the world of soil nematodes

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Toyohashi University of Technology used a next-generation sequencer to develop a highly efficient method to analyze soil nematodes by using the 18S ribosomal RNA gene regions as DNA barcodes. They successfully used this method to reveal characteristics of nematode communities. The target will be expanded to cover all soil-dwelling organisms in agricultural soils to allow investigations into a soil's environment and bio-diversity. This is expected to contribute to advanced agriculture.
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A world first! Visualizing atomic-scale structures with the optical force

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
A team of scientists from Osaka University, Osaka Prefecture University, and Nagoya University created three-dimensional maps of the force fields around quantum dots caused by laser light. Using atomic force microscopy with frequency modulation, they were able to achieve spatial resolution of less than one nanometer for the first time. This work may greatly advance the fields of nanotechnology and photocatalysis.
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AAFP releases updated feline senior care guidelines to the veterinary community

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
The American Association of Feline Practitioners (AAFP) has released the updated 2021 AAFP Feline Senior Care Guidelines to be published in the July issue of the Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery. This update provides emerging advances in feline medicine with respect to the aging cat. The Task Force of experts provides a thorough current review in feline medicine that emphasizes the individual senior patient.
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Cell-based immunotherapy shows promise against melanoma

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have shown in preclinical studies conducted in mice and human cells that a type of immunotherapy based on natural killer cells could be effective against solid tumors, starting with melanoma, a type of skin cancer that can be deadly if not caught early.
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Mongoose in the city: How landscape can impact disease transmission in Botswana

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
"The question has always been how do we predict what's going to happen once an infectious disease emerges," said Kathleen Alexander, the William E. Lavery Professor in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation. "By using systems that are tractable, we can begin to learn a lot more about how disease dynamics are shaped by host behavior and environmental drivers, including urbanizing landscapes."
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Looking at tumors through a new lens

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Neoadjuvant immune checkpoint blockade is a promising treatment for melanoma and other cancer types, and has recently been shown to provide a modest survival benefit for patients with recurrent glioblastoma. To improve the treatment efficacy, researchers are looking for vulnerabilities in surgically removed glioblastoma tissues, but this has been difficult due to the vast differences within the tumor and between patients. To address this challenge, ISB researchers and their collaborators developed a new way to study tumors.
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Collaborative care effective for pain, depression and anxiety

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Chronic pain, depression, anxiety, and other symptom-based conditions are growing in prevalence. Regenstrief Institute Research Scientist Kurt Kroenke, M.D., writes in the Journal of General Internal Medicine how collaborative care can and should play a major role targeting the treatment of symptoms and functional decline, both too frequently marginalized in medically oriented care delivery.
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UofL researchers lead call to increase genetic diversity in immunogenomics

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Historically, most large-scale immunogenomic studies - those exploring the association between genes and disease - were conducted with a bias toward individuals of European ancestry. Corey T. Watson, Ph.D., assistant professor in the University of Louisville Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, is leading a call to actively diversify the genetic resources he and fellow immunogenomics researchers use in their work to advance genomic medicine more equitably.
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The final dance of mixed neutron star-black hole pairs

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Another missing piece has just been added to our knowledge of cosmic phenomena. The LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA collaborations have announced the first detection of gravitational waves resulting from the 'mixed' merger between a black hole and a neutron star. The discovery, published on June 29, 2021 in Astrophysical Journal Letters, involves CNRS researchers working within the Virgo scientific collaboration.
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Astrophysicists detect first black hole-neutron star mergers

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Discovered by an international team of astrophysicists including Northwestern University researchers, two events -- detected just 10 days apart -- mark the first-ever detection of a black hole merging with a neutron star. The findings will enable researchers to draw the first conclusions about the origins of these rare binary systems and how often they merge.
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LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA finds elusive mergers of black holes with neutron stars

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
For the first time, researchers have confirmed the detection of a collision between a black hole and a neutron star. In fact, the scientists detected not one but two such events occurring just 10 days apart in January 2020.
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Air pollution from wildfires impacts ability to observe birds

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Researchers from the University of Washington provide a first look at the probability of observing common birds as air pollution worsens during wildfire seasons. They found that smoke affected the ability to detect more than a third of the bird species studied in Washington state over a four-year period. Sometimes smoke made it harder to observe birds, while other species were actually easier to detect when smoke was present.
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Black holes swallow neutron stars like 'Pac Man'

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Scientists have for the first time detected black holes eating neutron stars, "like Pac Man", in a discovery documenting the collision of the two most extreme and enigmatic objects in the Universe.
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Worse outcomes observed after heart attacks during pandemic compared to previous year

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Heart attacks during the COVID-19 pandemic were more likely to result in heart failure compared with heart attacks one year earlier, according to research presented today at Heart Failure 2021, an online scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). 'Heart attack patients waited an average of 14 hours to get help during the pandemic, with some delaying for nearly two days. That compares to a delay of six hours in the previous year.'
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Study identifies biomarker that could help to diagnose pancreatic cancer

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Researchers from Queen Mary University of London have identified a protein that could be used to aid in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.
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Clinics retrieving 'far too many' eggs from IVF patients

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Studies indicate that the optimal and safe number of oocytes needed for achieving an ongoing pregnancy is between six and 15. A retrospective observational study suggests that IVF clinics in the UK may be retrieving "far too many oocytes" and that most of them "may never be used and are probably discarded".
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'Edge of chaos' opens pathway to artificial intelligence discoveries

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
Some neuroscience theories suggest the human brain operates best 'at the edge of chaos'. Now scientists in Australia and Japan have found that keeping a nanowire network at the edge of becoming chaotic is the best state for it to produce useful signals to solve problems.
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Blood-based biomarkers may predict HIV remission after stopping antiretroviral therapy

Eurekalert - Jun 29 2021 - 00:06
New biomarkers that predict HIV remission after antiretroviral therapy (ART) interruption are critical for the development of new therapeutic strategies that can achieve infection control without ART, a condition defined as functional cure. Wistar scientists have identified metabolic and glycomic signatures in the blood of a rare population of HIV-infected individuals who can naturally sustain viral suppression after ART cessation, known as post-treatment controllers.
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