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Study finds unhealthy eating habits may cause 'proteinuria'
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
Recently, researchers from The University Hospital of Kaiser in Japan conducted a retrospective cohort study to explore the relationship between poor eating habits and CKD's key prognostic factor, protein urine attacks.
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Patients diagnosed with PD may actually have NIID
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
Genetic screening of their NOTCH2NLC GGC re-amplification revealed mutations that led to NIID in patients diagnosed with PD.
The researchers also suggest that because NIID is caused by a genetic mutation, it is also necessary to look for family members of PD patients who may show NIID symptoms.
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Machine learning successfully simulates and predicts the spread of influenza
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
Using a model of infectious disease transmission calibrated based on hospital registration and inspection data, they used the mobile map to successfully simulate "forecasting" flu activity in and around New York City from 2016 to 2017.
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Israel has found that pure oxygen therapy reverses the body's aging process
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
A study led by Professor Shay Efrati of Tel Aviv University in Israel and part of a team of researchers at Shamir Medical Center found that older people receive 90 minutes of pure oxygen therapy five days a week in pressurized rooms, delaying their aging process after three months, local media reported.
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Cop: How the new coronavirus "changed" to escape the immune system 'attack'
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and others, found that the new coronavirus was able to selectively remove tiny fragments of its genetic sequence, which occurred in the position of the prickly protein responsible for encoding it, resulting in a change in the shape of the hedgehog protein, making it difficult to "capture" neutralized antibodies that had not seen the "new appearance" of the hedgehog protein.
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Be careful! Eating time disorders may increase the risk of heart disease
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
At a virtual meeting of the American Heart Association (AHA) held last year, the team suggested that women who ate more calories at night tended to be at higher risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, excess body mass index (BMI) and worse long-term blood sugar control.
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Studying fruit fly eyes could find new ways to fight cancer
Time of Update: 2021-02-24
The study found that RPS-12 indirectly affects the activation of important intercellular signaling path paths (WNT genes), which are activated during embryonic development and shut down in the adult life of healthy cells, with researchers looking at the eyes of fruit flies, the findings of which were published in the journal Scientific Reports.
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The world's first preventive treatment for chemotherapy bone marrow protection has been approved
Time of Update: 2021-02-23
Recently, G1 Therapeutics announced that its main product, Trilaciclib (trade name: COSELA), has been approved by the U.S. FDA to prevent bone marrow inhibition in adult patients with diffused stage small cell lung cancer due to platinum-based etoposide or topological tetosoma chemotherapy.
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Science: What are the factors that make up the size of the human brain?
Time of Update: 2021-02-22
Recently, researchers published a paper in the journal SCIENCE reporting that they have developed a method of LOF determination of brain tissue that can be used for high-volume screening.
A human tissue screen identifies a regulator of ER secretion as a brain size determinant.
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Science: Reveals dynamic compositional changes in ABL kinases
Time of Update: 2021-02-22
in a new study, researchers at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in the United States visualized the structure of previously unknown ABL kinases, providing new insights into the design of targeted therapies for adult and child cancer patients.
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Two blood molecules may predict the development of Alzheimer's disease
Time of Update: 2021-02-22
The levels of two molecules in the blood may predict future cognitive decline and the development of Alzheimer's disease in patients with mild cognitive impairment, according to a new study of neurodegenerative diseases published in nature-aging, a professional academic journal of Springer Nature.
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South Korea: Revealing the path of lung injury in patients with neo-crown pneumonia
Time of Update: 2021-02-22
A joint study led by Xu Ying-chun, a senior researcher in the Institute's Special Research Group on Aging Artificial Intervention, and a team at Lingnan University in South Korea and Gyeon North University in South Korea found that the steroid regulator binding protein (SREBP), a key transcription factor that controls lipid synthesis in the human body, was involved in a cytokine storm in patients with new pneumonia crowns.
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Japan develops new cancer treatment technology with drug microcapsules directly to brain tumors
Time of Update: 2021-02-22
Japan Economic News reported that Kawasaki City, Japan's industrial revitalization consortium "nano-medical innovation center" and the University of Tokyo jointly developed a centralized treatment of malignant brain tumor technology.
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Small glial cells that "devour memory" or allow memory regulation to follow
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
After more than 3 years of efforts, Zhejiang University School of Medicine Guyan Researcher Group and Wang Lang Associate Researcher Team first found that the small glial cells used for immunity by removing synapses caused memory forgetting, and further found that complement signaling path is involved in small glial cell-mediated forgetting.
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Genetic studies provide the most comprehensive map of breast cancer risk to date
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
major international study on breast cancer genetics has identified more than 350 DNA "errors" that increase an individual's risk of developing the disease.
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The study found that the rare disease multiple sclerosis pathogenic protein
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
The protein, called GSDMD, was found in mouse experiments by a team of professors at Nan medical university Yang Shuo to exacerbate disease development and inhibit it to effectively relieve clinical symptoms.
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A "breakthrough" in breast cancer could end an unnecessary biopsy
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
European scientists have developed a new mammogram system that could "end" unnecessary biopsies by identifying benign or malignant breast lesions.
Scientists at Horizon2020 project SOLUS say they have developed a non-invasive, multi-mode imaging system that uses ultrasound and light technology to easily distinguish between benign or malignant lesions without biopsy.
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The new recommendations could provide innovative treatments for cancer patients more quickly
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
The researchers say the recommendations could improve the conduct, quality and acceptability of complex innovative design trials for tumors in clinical studies, as well as improve how different stakeholders interact to promote and share their experiences from the study.
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Bayer and Excientia will explore artificial intelligence in drug discovery
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
collaboration between Bayer and UK-based Exscientia will accelerate the discovery of small molecule drugs, with a focus on cardiovascular disease and oncology. The companies announced that they wil
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Studies have shown that lactate may contribute to cancer formation
Time of Update: 2021-02-19
"We found lactic acid to be the catalyst that triggers the mechanisms necessary for mutant cells to continue the cancer formation process," said Iñigo San Millán, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and the University of Colorado Springs.