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Puzzling Streaks On Mars May Be From Flowing Water Read More » Nobel awards ceremony held with many VIPs away for Mandela memorial Read More » Some Tarantula Bites More Harmful Than Thought A 45-year-old man went to an emergency room in Switzerland complaining of severe muscle spasms and chest pains, according to the case report. Those symptoms can appear with a number of conditions, said Dr. Joan Fuchs, a junior physician and specialist in venomous and poisonous animals at the Swiss Toxicological Information Center, who reported the man's case in the journal Toxicon in November. Read More »Common Stomach Drugs May Increase Risk of Vitamin Deficiency People who take common stomach acid-suppressing medications may be at increased risk of not getting enough vitamin B12, a new study suggests. In the study, people who took proton pump inhibitors — medications used to treat acid reflux and other stomach and esophageal conditions — for two or more years were 65 percent more likely to be diagnosed with vitamin B12 deficiency than those who did not take such medications. And people who took another type of acid-suppressing drug, called histamine 2 receptor antagonists, for two or more years were 25 percent more likely to have vitamin B12 deficiency, the study found. The findings held even after the researchers accounted for factors that might increase the risk of vitamin B12 deficiency, such as having diabetes or thyroid disease, or abusing alcohol. Read More »Weapons watchdog receives Nobel Peace Prize Read More » NASA Spacecraft Captures Unprecedented Views of the Sun's Mystery Layer Read More » Trippy! Chameleons Intimidate Rivals with Quick Color Change Read More » Giant Blob of Hot Rock Hidden Under Antarctic Ice Read More » What Lives in Antarctica's Buried Lake? Read More » Human-Caused Climate Change May Have Worsened Syrian Unrest Read More » Climate Change May Worsen Mold Allergies A common fungus tends to grow more allergenic traits in the presence of high carbon dioxide, Naama Lang-Yona, a doctoral candidate in environmental sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, said here Monday (Dec. 9) at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union. The fungus, called Aspergillus fumigatus, is incredibly common. "Its natural habitat is decomposed biomass and soils, but you could find it in many other places, such as our walls, air-conditioning filters," Lang-Yona said in an email. Allergies have been on the rise in the past several decades, and Lang-Yona and her colleagues wondered how atmospheric changes influenced this trend. Read More »Alan Alda's science contest asks: What is color? MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — How do you explain color to an 11-year-old? Read More »Russian Meteor, from Birth to Fiery Death: An Asteroid's Story Read More » G8 summit calls for AIDS-style fight against dementia By Ben Hirschler LONDON (Reuters) - The world needs to fight the spread of dementia in the same way it mobilized against AIDS, a British government minister told a special summit on the disease on Wednesday, saying failure to tackle it would wreck state health budgets. Global cases of dementia are expected to treble by 2050, yet scientists are still struggling to understand the basic biology of the memory-robbing brain condition, and the medicine cupboard is bare. "In terms of a cure, or even a treatment that can modify the disease, we are empty-handed," World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Margaret Chan told ministers, campaigners, scientists and drug industry executives from the Group of Eight leading economies at the summit in London. British Health Minister Jeremy Hunt said there were lessons to be learnt from the fight against AIDS, where a 2005 G8 summit played a key role in pushing for better and more widely available drugs. Read More »Terracotta Warriors Inspired by Ancient Greek Art Read More » People Who Fear Single Life Settle for Less, Study Finds Confirming a bit of conventional wisdom, a new study finds that people who fear being single often settle for less in love; they're more likely to cling to unhappy relationships and more willing to date duds, the research suggests. Read More »G8 summit calls for AIDS-style fight against dementia Read More » Canada Makes North Pole Claim Read More » Undersea Cliff May Hold Clues to Dinosaur-Killing Cosmic Impact Read More » RIP Comet ISON: Scientists Declare Famous 'Sungrazer' Dead After Sun Encounter Read More » Stronger Tornadoes May Be Menacing US Read More » US Navy's Submarine-Launched Drone Paves Way For Future Military Tech Read More » Actor Alan Alda Challenges Scientists to Explain Color to Kids Read More » Amateur Astronomer Sees Jupiter, 2 Moons & a Shadow (Photo) Read More » Raw Milk: 1 in 6 Who Drink It Gets Sick On average, one in six people who drink raw milk becomes ill with bacterial or parasite infections, according to researchers at the Minnesota Department of Health. The researchers found 530 laboratory-confirmed cases of infections — including bacterial infections from Salmonella, E. coli and Campylobacter, as well as parasitic infections called cryptosporidiosis — among Minnesota patients who reported drinking raw milk between 2001 and 2010. Raw milk is milk that has not been pasteurized (heated to kill germs and then cooled quickly). Based on known rates of underdiagnosing these infections, the researchers estimated that 20,502 Minnesotans, or 17 percent of raw milk consumers, actually became ill during the study period after consuming raw milk, according to the study, published today (Dec. 11) in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, a public health journal of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, December 11, 2013
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Tuesday, December 10, 2013
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To the Cold, Bed Bugs Say 'Bite Me' To survive in cold environments, the bugs use "freeze-intolerant" strategies, such as lowering the freezing point of their bodily fluids. In the study, researchers measured the supercooling point (the temperature below the normal freezing point at which supercooled liquids become solid) and lower lethal temperature (the body temperature below which an organism cannot survive) for bed bugs of all life stages, from egg through several nymph forms to adult. The team also studied the bugs' ability to feed after being exposed to sublethal temperatures. A minimum exposure of 80 hours at 3.2 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 16 degrees Celsius) was needed to kill 100 percent of the bed bugs, the researchers found. Read More »Tea Kettles Stop Whistling In The Dark More than a century after relativity, physics can now explain how a tea kettle whistles. Wayt Gibbs reports. Read More »New Device Bypasses Destroyed Area in Rat's Brain A device called a "neural prosthesis" can bypass an injured part of the brain, and connect two distant brain regions, according to new research. In experiments, the device allowed rats with brain injuries to regain the ability to move their forelimbs, said the researchers who conducted the proof-of-concept study. The researchers mimicked traumatic brain injury in 16 rats by severing communication across the communication hub between the motor and sensory areas that control the limb movements. The prosthesis is a microchip connected to microelectrodes that are implanted in the two disconnected brain regions. Read More »Drugs Used in Newborns Need Better Study, Docs Say Many medications commonly given to newborns still have not been officially approved for use in this very young population, despite recent law changes encouraging the study of drugs in children, a new study finds. That means that drug labels often do not have information about the correct dose that should be used in newborns, and doctors instead must use their best guesses based on their experience and information from adults and older children, said study researcher Dr. Matthew Laughon, an associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine. But researchers must find a way around such obstacles, because such studies are critical to understanding how to most effectively use drugs in newborns, Laughon said. Children and babies have a unique physiology and will not necessarily respond to drugs the way adults do, Laughon said. Read More »Moon May Outshine Geminid Meteor Shower Peak This Week Read More » Does Age Bring Death? Not For All Species Read More » Coldest Places on Earth Found, In Antarctica, Of Course Read More » Healthier Fatty Acids Found in Organic Milk Organic milk contains a healthier balance of omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids compared with milk from cows raised on conventionally managed dairy farms, according to a new study. The healthier fatty acid profile of organic milk is likely a result of cows foraging on grass, the researchers said. The scientists took 400 samples of organic and conventional milk from multiple regions in the United States over an 18-month period, and looked for the levels of various fatty acids in the milk. In particular, they looked for the balance between omega-6 and omega-3 contents , essential fatty acids that the human body cannot make from other raw materials and needs to obtain from diet. Read More »Record low temperature recorded in Antarctica: scientists Read More » Nearly 1 in 4 Women Are Obese Before Pregnancy Nearly 1 in 4 women now are obese when they becomes pregnant, according to a new study that includes information from most of the United States. Read More »New Orchid Species Found on 'Lost World' Volcano in the Azores Read More » Binge Drinking Rates Lower in States with Strong Alcohol Policies States with lower rates of binge drinking have stronger policies toward alcohol, a new study suggests. This is the first study to relate alcohol policies within each U.S. state to the levels and likelihood of binge drinking in adults. "We found that states with stronger and more effective alcohol policies had less binge drinking than states with weaker alcohol policies," said study researcher Dr. Timothy Naimi, an associate professor of medicine at Boston University's Schools of Medicine and of Public Health. "Most states could be doing a lot better to address a leading cause of preventable deaths," Naimi said. Read More »Elusive Dark Matter May Have Already Been Found Read More » Orbital Sciences Names Next Private Space Station Freighter for NASA Astronaut Read More » Private Mars Colony Project Unveils 1st Private Robotic Mission to Red Planet Read More » Why Eerie Green Lightning Zapped an Erupting Volcano Read More » Bacterial Bubble Hitchhikers Could Help Keep Greenhouse Gas in Check Read More » Forests Recover Quickly After Bark Beetles Attack Read More » Floating Seismic Devices Peer Deep Beneath Ocean Floor Read More » China-Brazil satellite launch fails, likely fell back to Earth Read More » Spinning Trap Measures 'Roundness' of an Electron A new technique could one day provide the most precise measurement yet of the roundness of an electron, scientists say. That measurement, in turn, could help scientists test extensions of the standard model, the reigning particle physics model that describes the behavior of the very small, said study co-author Eric Cornell, a physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the JILA Center for Atomic, Molecular & Optical Physics in Boulder, Colo. An electron's shape comes from a cloud of virtual particles surrounding a dimensionless point; Past measurements have suggested the positive and negative charges are at equal distances from the center of the electron, Cornell said. Read More »NASA Mars rover finds evidence of life-friendly ancient lake Read More » | ||||
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