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Released: 31-Oct-2024 3:00 AM EDT
أسئلة وأجوبة مايو كلينك: يقيّم فحص الكالسيوم التاجي خطر التعرض لأمراض القلب والسكتة الدماغية
Mayo Clinic

الأعزاء في مايو كلينك: أجريتُ مؤخرًا تصويرًا مقطعيًا محوسبًا لصدري لتقييم ما إذا كنت مصابًا بالالتهاب الرئوي. لم أكن مصابًا بالتهاب الرئة، ولكن كانت لدي نسبة مرتفعة وغير متوقعة من الكالسيوم في الشرايين التاجية. هل للكالسيوم الذي أتناوله دور في ذلك؟ لأنني كنت أظن أن الكالسيوم مرتبط بصحة العظام؟ والآن يجري تقييم خطر إصابتي بأحد أمراض القلب والسكتة الدماغية. هل يجب على أفراد أسرتي الآخرين قياس نسبة الكالسيوم لديهم؟

Newswise: Fundamental quantum model recreated from nanographenes
Release date: 31-Oct-2024 2:00 AM EDT
Fundamental quantum model recreated from nanographenes
Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

Quantum technologies promise breakthroughs in communication, computing, sensors and much more. However, quantum states are fragile, and their effects are difficult to grasp, making research into real-world applications challenging. Empa researchers and their partners have now achieved a breakthrough: Using a kind of “quantum Lego”, they have been able to accurately realize a well-known theoretical quantum physics model in a synthetic material.

Newswise: Safer and More Precise Nuclear Plant Dismantlement!
Released: 31-Oct-2024 12:00 AM EDT
Safer and More Precise Nuclear Plant Dismantlement!
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The research team, led by Dr. In-Deok Park at KIMM, successfully developed an underwater laser cutting technology.

28-Oct-2024 11:35 AM EDT
Sustained Remission of Diabetes and Other Obesity-Related Conditions Found a Decade After Weight Loss Surgery in Adolescence
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Ten years after undergoing bariatric surgery as teens, over half of study participants demonstrated not only sustained weight loss, but also resolution of obesity-related conditions, such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, according to the report published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

24-Oct-2024 4:05 PM EDT
Costs Still on the Rise for Drugs for Neurological Diseases
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

The amount of money people pay out-of-pocket for branded drugs to treat neurological diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS), Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s disease continues to rise, especially for MS drugs, according to a study published in the October 30, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Newswise: Genetic Risk, Sexual Trauma Associated with Mental Illness: Study
Released: 30-Oct-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Genetic Risk, Sexual Trauma Associated with Mental Illness: Study
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A research team exploring how genes and environmental factors interact in psychiatry has discovered that a history of sexual trauma and a genetic tendency to develop mental illness are associated with increased risk for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression.

Released: 30-Oct-2024 3:00 PM EDT
Healthy Brains Suppress Inappropriate Immune Responses
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at WashU Medicine have found a process by which the brain guards against attack by the immune system. In mice with multiple sclerosis, such "guardian" proteins that train the immune system were drastically depleted, and replenishing them improved symptoms, according to a study in Nature.

Newswise: New Illinois Study Explores Adoption of Robotic Weeding to Fight Superweeds
Released: 30-Oct-2024 3:00 PM EDT
New Illinois Study Explores Adoption of Robotic Weeding to Fight Superweeds
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Superweeds that have developed resistance to common herbicides is jeopardizing weed management in agriculture. Robots for mechanical weeding is an emerging technology that could potentially provide a solution. A new study from the University of Illinois estimates farmer adoption of weeding robots.

Newswise: Study Finds COVID-19 Pandemic Worsened Patient Safety Measures
Released: 30-Oct-2024 3:00 PM EDT
Study Finds COVID-19 Pandemic Worsened Patient Safety Measures
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

A new study – published in Nursing Research – has found that the COVID-19 pandemic significantly impacted patient safety indicators in U.S. hospitals. The study, from Penn Nursing’s Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research (CHOPR), examined data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators to assess trends in nursing-sensitive quality indicators from 2019 to 2022. The prevention of these very distressing, uncomfortable conditions is considered to be under the nurse’s purview and directly influenced by nursing care.

Release date: 30-Oct-2024 2:45 PM EDT
Research shows new method helps doctors safely remove dangerous heart infections without surgery
Mayo Clinic

Doctors at Mayo Clinic used a new catheter-based approach to draw out resistant pockets of infection that settle in the heart, known as right-sided infective endocarditis, without surgery. Unless treated quickly, the walled-off infections can grow, severely damaging heart valves and potentially affecting other organs as well. In a recent study, over 90% of the participants had their infection cleared, and they had lower in-hospital mortality compared to those whose infections remained.


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