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Unusual Parasite from Organ Donor Sickens 3 People Three people who received organ transplants from the same donor all developed serious brain problems shortly after their operations. The mysterious symptoms turned out to be due to a little-understood parasite that infected the donor before she died, according to a new report of the case. Doctors were concerned that the man had contracted an infection from the donor, which happens in about 1 to 2 percent of U.S. transplants. Read More »Canada's frozen north feels financial burn of global warming Read More » Prawn sex-change boosts male yields, say scientists By Ori Lewis and Elana Ringler An Israeli-developed method to enhance prawn yields without resorting to genetic modification has started to take hold in Asia, the researcher who has developed the technology said. Male prawns can grow up to 60 percent larger than females and a breakthrough by a team of researchers at Ben Gurion University in creating all-male prawn populations is significantly increasing income for farmers. "This technology is using a cutting-edge scientific approach called temporal gene silencing through RNA interference and the idea is that if we use this technology we can produce an all male population that is for the benefit of the end user, the grower," Professor Amir Sagi, who heads the research group, told Reuters. Read More »For Pregnant Women, Absolutely No Drinking, Docs Say There is no amount of alcohol that is safe to drink during any trimester of pregnancy, advises a new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics. And all forms of alcohol — including beer, wine and liquor — pose a similar risk to the developing fetus, according to the report from the nation's largest group of pediatricians. Women who binge drink when they are not pregnant may be more likely to consume alcohol during pregnancy, the researchers noted in their report published online today (Oct. 19) in the journal Pediatrics. Read More »Gay Conversion Therapy Harms Minors, Government Says Read More » Everything's Bigger in Texas: Ancient Supersize Shark Fossils Unearthed Read More » Astronauts Relive Their 'Secret Space Escapes' at NY Comic Con Read More » Syfy's 'The Expanse' Explores a Complicated Future on Far-Flung Worlds Read More » Apple-1 Computer & Rare Enigma Machine Up for Auction Read More » Going Once! WWII-Era 'Grizzly' Tank Sells for $155,000 Read More » Signal-Scrambling Tech 'Freezes' Drones in Midair Read More » | ||||
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Monday, October 19, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Saturday, October 17, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Oldest Draft of King James Bible Discovered, Historian Says Read More » Man's Fatal Rabies Mimicked Drug Side Effect Read More » High-Stress Jobs May Raise Stroke Risk People who have high-stress jobs may have an increased risk of stroke, according to a new analysis of previous research. In their analysis, researchers looked at six studies that involved a total of nearly 140,000 people ages 18 to 75, and examined the relationship between work stress and people's risk of stroke. The researchers found that people who had high-stress jobs were 22 percent more likely to experience a stroke than those who had low-stress jobs. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, October 16, 2015
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French president in Iceland to see global warming's damage Read More » Why 'Doctor Who' Still Rules Time and Space After 50 Years
Colliding Galaxies Shock Particle Cloud Back to Life
Cold Comfort: Why People in Antarctica Are Such Boozehounds Read More » If Aliens Exist, Would They Have Sex? Read More » Wearable Sensors Could Translate Sign Language Into English Read More » Cretaceous Fur Ball: Ancient Mammal With Spiky Hair Discovered Read More » Mystery of Antarctica's Strange Disappearing Snow Is Solved Read More » Canada's frozen north feels financial burn of global warming By Chris Arsenault YELLOWKNIFE, Northwest Territories, Canada (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Climate change is taking a heavy economic toll on Canada's far north, with buildings collapsing as melting permafrost destroys foundations, rivers running low and wildfires all a drain on the region's limited finances, senior government officials said. A sprawling area spanning the Arctic Circle with a population of less than 50,000, Canada's Northwest Territories has spent more than $140 million in the last two years responding to problems linked to global warming, the territory's finance minister said. "Our budgets are getting squeezed dramatically from climate change," Finance and Environment Minister J. Michael Miltenberger told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Read More »Ebola May Stay in Survivors' Semen for Many Months Male survivors of Ebola may carry the virus in their semen even months after they recover from the infection, according to a recent study. In the study, researchers looked for genetic material from the Ebola virus in semen and found that 100 percent of the specimens sampled between two and three months following an Ebola infection showed signs of the virus. Among the samples taken four to six months after an Ebola infection, 65 percent carried signs of the virus, and 26 percent of the samples taken at the seven- to nine-month mark also tested positive for the virus. Read More »Supplements Send 23,000 People to ER Yearly Dietary supplements are responsible for an estimated 23,000 visits to hospital emergency rooms, and more than 2,100 hospitalizations, in the United States each year, a new study reveals. Researchers found that more than one-quarter of these emergency visits involved young adults ages 20 to 34, and about one-fifth of them involved unsupervised children who swallowed adult supplements, according to the study, which was published online today (Oct. 14) in the New England Journal of Medicine. The visits involved people who had taken herbal, homeopathic and nutritional supplements, such as amino acids and probiotics, as well as vitamins and minerals, according to the study. Read More »The Doctor-Parent Disconnect: Why Are Antibiotics Overprescribed for Kids? Read More » North Pole of Saturn's Icy Moon Enceladus Captured in Best-Ever Photos Read More » NASA Manager George Mueller, 'Father of Space Shuttle,' Dies at 97 Read More » Modern Hunter-Gatherers Probably Get Less Sleep Than You Do Although it might seem that the glowing lights from smartphones and other trappings of modern life reduce people's ability to get a decent amount of shut-eye, scientists now suggest that people do not get any less sleep today than they did in prehistoric times. "We find that contrary to much conventional wisdom, it is very likely that we do not sleep less than our distant ancestors," said the study's senior author, Jerome Siegel, a sleep researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles. People complain that modern life allows us less sleep than is natural, and earlier studies done on animals in captivity gave the researchers an idea for studying sleep in people, Siegel said. Read More »Adrian Robinson's Brain Disorder: What Is CTE? Adrian Robinson Jr., a professional football player who died by suicide earlier this year, had a brain disease, his autopsy recently revealed. Robinson, who played for several football teams, including the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Pittsburgh Steelers, died on May 16. During his two years in the National Football League (NFL), he suffered several concussions. Read More » | ||||||
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