All news from Venereology
Researchers at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM) have shown that immunotherapy treatments against cancer could reduce the amount of virus that persists in people on triple therapy. In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, they show, in the cells of people living with HIV, how these therapies reveal the virus —…
Potentially lethal heart conditions may become easier to spot; and may lead to improvements in prevention and treatment thanks to innovative new software that measures electrical activity in the organ. The heart’s pumping ability is controlled by electrical activity; that triggers the heart muscle cells to contract and relax. In certain heart diseases such as…
A new compound based on Iridium, a rare metal which landed in the Gulf of Mexico 66 M years ago, hooked onto albumin, a protein in blood, can attack the nucleus of cancerous cells when switched on by light, University of Warwick researchers have found. An organoiridium–albumin bioconjugate (Ir1‐HSA) was synthesized by reaction of a…
Two chemicals commonly used as e-cigarette flavors might harm users’ airway passages, a small experiment suggests. Researchers exposed human bronchial epithelial cells to two flavoring compounds: diacetyl a chemical with a butter-like smell – and its “chemical cousin” 2,3-pentanedione. Both chemicals induced hundreds of genetic changes in the cells. The chemicals also impaired the ability…
Linear growth restriction continues to be a major public health challenge globally for poor communities in low- and middle-income countries. Stunting before 2 years of age is prominent among the nutrition factors related to disease burden and mortality in early childhood. Longer-term associations of early linear growth faltering include impairment of motor development; cognition, educational…
Imagine there was a store where there were no prices on items, and you never knew what you’d pay until you’d picked out your purchases and were leaving the shop. You might be skeptical that the store would have any incentive to offer reasonable prices. This exact situation has become the norm in U.S. health care,…
Nine patients at Penn Medicine have been cured of the Hepatitis C virus (HCV) following lifesaving heart transplants from deceased donors who were infected with the disease, according to a study published in the American Journal of Transplantation. The results highlight the potential for expanding the use of HCV-infected organs, including hearts, to broaden the donor…
New technique developed at UCLA can screen hundreds of drugs using patients’ own cells. UCLA scientists have developed a new method to quickly screen hundreds of drugs in order to identify treatments that can target specific tumors. The approach could help scientists understand how a person’s tumor would respond to a certain drug or drug…
Aging promotes lung function decline and increases susceptibility to diseases of the respiratory tract. In order to understand these effects in detail; researchers at Helmholtz Zentrum München; a partner in the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), analyzed the aging process in the lung at single-cell level using AI approaches. They have now presented this…
Bringing the science of high intensity interval training (HIIT) into everyday life could be the key to helping unfit; overweight people get more of the exercise they need to improve their health; according to an international research team. So, from washing the car to climbing stairs or carrying groceries; each of these activities is an…
Melanoma patients with a history of smoking cigarettes are 40% less likely to survive their skin cancer than people who have never smoked, according to a new report funded by Cancer Research UK. The study of more than 700 melanoma patients mainly from the north of England and published today in Cancer Research provides evidence…
Many men with low-risk prostate cancer who most likely previously would have undergone immediate surgery or radiation are now adopting a more conservative “active surveillance” strategy;l according to an analysis of a new federal database by scientists from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The use of active surveillance increased from 14.5 % to 42.1 % of men…