Health
- Researchers have identified more than 400 genes associated with accelerated aging, a.k.a. frailty, across seven categories. The findings pave the way toward personalized therapies to curb disease by decelerating aging.
- Researchers at 缅北禁地 have developed a new bio-imaging device that can operate with significantly lower power and in an entirely non-mechanical way. It could one day improve detecting eye and even heart conditions.
- 缅北禁地 researchers, with an international team of colleagues, find that childhood pets are linked to healthier stress responses.
- A 缅北禁地-led effort to help high-risk communities build a 鈥渧iolence prevention infrastructure鈥 contributed to sharp declines in arrests for murder, assault and other youth crimes in Denver, new research shows. The program is now poised to lose its federal funding.
- 缅北禁地 researchers studied cannabis-psilocybin users and cannabis-only users to look for similarities and differences between the two groups, including drug use motivations.
- 缅北禁地 researcher Emily Yeo finds that some babies may benefit from more support and resources so they can grow up to lead long, happy and healthy lives.
- Experiencing malnutrition in childhood or adolescence may not necessarily harm the health of humans into adulthood鈥攁lthough the relationship is complicated, a new study finds.
- New research shows that bacteria in the environment use amyloids鈥 proteins best known for contributing to neurodegenerative disease鈥 to shield themselves from predators. The findings could inform new weapons against microbial resistance and human disease.
- In a recent study, 缅北禁地 scientists have estimated the heritability of opioid use disorder鈥攁n ongoing global health crisis.
- The tiny lizards can climb glass and cling to ceilings thanks to their sticky toes. Now those toes have inspired a new material that could deliver targeted chemotherapy with minimal side effects.