All news from Anaesthesiology
The new study at Chalmers University of Technology now shows that there are potential technology-based solutions that can replace many of the metals with carbon nanomaterials, such as graphene. Scarce metals are found in a wide range of everyday objects around us. They are complicated to extract, difficult to recycle and so rare that several of them have become "conflict minerals" which can promote conflicts and oppression. This study is published in the Journal of Cleaner Production.
Researchers from the Health Department has identified and investigated approximately 28,000 complaints of suspected foodborne illness overall since 2012. Using Yelp, 311, and reports from health care providers. 10 outbreaks of foodborne illness were identified solely through a computer system jointly created with Columbia University's Department of Computer Science. This study has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
Scientists from the Universities of Edinburgh and Aberdeen, study helped them to understand more about ways to limit painful side effects of chemotherapy. The drug known as melatonin – appeared to prevent pain caused by chemotherapy damage to nerves. It blocked harmful effects on nerve health, the study with rat’s shows.
According to study, researchers from at Indiana University School of Medicine, they showed a new method to grow hairy skin from mouse pluripotent stem cells. The discovery that could lead to new approaches to model disease and new therapies for the treatment of skin disorders and cancers. This study published in the journal Cell Reports
In this study, researchers declared that, American Geophysical Union (AGU) and Atypon announced today a joint initiative to develop
Earth and Space Science Open Archive (ESSOAr), a community server for the open dissemination of Earth and space science preprints and rich conference presentations.
The umbilical cords contains potentially lifesaving stem cells that can treat a host of blood-based cancers and other diseases. Yet the blood found in newborns' umbilical cords is almost always discarded as medical waste, rather than banked for future needs.
According to new research in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American Heart Association journal. Neighborhood-level socioeconomic factors in low-income areas may significantly predict heart failure risk beyond individual health factors and socioeconomic status. Researchers grouped the participants in three groups ranging from the least-deprived to the most-deprived neighborhoods. During an average follow-up of more than five years, 4,300 participants were diagnosed with heart failure.
In a new report in The Journal of Urology®, researchers found that contrary to some previous studies, neither recreational nor intense cycling appear to have a negative impact on men's sexual and urinary function.