-
The study found new types of anti-allergic cells
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
, Ph.D., Australian National University and co-author of the study, said: "Our study shows that this previously undiscovered cell can block the formation of IgE, a key cause of allergic diseases.
Mr Carnett said the findings provided a new pathway to treating allergies, with significant effects in the first stage of an allergic reaction.
-
Scientists give new ideas to fight drug-resistant bacteria
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
"Although the human immune response against Staphylococcus aelobacter infection is still elusive, as a starting point, we have determined in mice that protective immunity against Staphylococcus ale is driven by specific immune cells called gamma T cells, which move from the lymph nodes to the infected skin at the time of infection, triggering a protective host response.
-
Research reveals how gut microbes alter drugs
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
many oral medications can be altered by human gut microbes, which can affect the patient's treatment.
The gut microbiome contains 150 times more genes than the human genome, producing a large number of enzymes that are likely to metabolize drugs.
-
Excessive muscle gain in young people can trigger eating disorders
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
The study, published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders, says that some young people are forced to overtrain and focus on body shape in order to follow strict diets, avoid fat and carbohydrate intake, which can lead to a "muscle-oriented eating disorder" that, in the most extreme cases, can lead to heart failure due to low calories and excessive exercise.
-
Anti-perspirants and foot powder increase the micro-biodiversity of the human body
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
In addition to a small amount of shower gel, the volunteers did not apply any other cosmetics to the skin for the first three weeks.
Over the next three weeks, participants used modern "skin care weapons": sunscreen, skin care fluids, sweatkillers and foot powder.
-
For the first time, scientists are using patients' urine for accurate treatment of bladder cancer
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
Guo Jianming told China Science Daily that the study is the first time that bladder cancer tumor progenitor cells have been acquired through patients' urine invasively, and a large-scale automated drug screening platform has been established to understand the sensitivity of bladder cancer patients to a large number of anti-tumor drugs in a short period of time, and truly achieves an individualized prediction of anti-tumor therapy.
-
The world's largest census of Streptococcus pneumoniae genome completed
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
The researchers sequenced the genomes of some 20,000 bacterial samples from 51 countries and regions, and the data are important for understanding the distribution and evolution of different strains and helping to determine the future direction of vaccine development.
-
Influenza viruses are more likely to spread at low humidity
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
A new study from Yale University in the United States has found that one of the key factors that makes influenza viruses more likely to spread during the fall and winter seasons is low humidity.
-
DE cells may be associated with type I diabetes
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
, U.S. researchers said in a paper published in the journal Cell that they have confirmed for the first time the long-suspected existence of "X cells," a "disrupted hybrid" immune system cell that may play a key role in the development of type I diabetes.
-
2019 China Orthopaedics Annual Meeting - Face-to-face with editors
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
Link: The 12th Chinese Orthopaedic Physicians (CAOS2019) will be held Beijing National Convention Center in Beijing, China.
-
Do you think melanoma is equal to skin cancer? A selection of BMC studies
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
Title: Skin Cancer Awareness Month: Highlighting our open access skin cancer research Aoife Buckley Published: 2019/05/06 paper Label: Applied Cancer Research, Biomarker Research, BMC Cancer, Cancer
-
Scientists are developing a new drug for Parkinson's disease
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
recently developed new drugs to inhibit protein build-up associated with Parkinson's disease, which has been confirmed in animal experiments to improve symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
-
Autism is associated with specific brain cell abnormalities
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
U.S. researchers found that in the brains of children and young people with autism, several specific types of nerve cell gene expression abnormalities affect neuron growth and communication with each other, and that the extent of some gene expression abnormalities is associated with the severity of the condition.
-
Humans are more susceptible to cardiovascular disease
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
A group of mice had the same CMAH mutation gene as humans, which causes the body to lack a sugar molecule called N-hydroxyacetyl neuraline.
found that mice with CMAH mutations nearly tripled their atherosclerosis after being fed a high-fat diet.
-
Tissue immersion lymphocyte characteristics predict the survival of patients with early/mid-stage liver cancer BMC Medicine。
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
The ROC curve analysis shows that the predictive ability of ICPI models in training sets and validation sets is better than that of okuda, CLIP, LCSGJ and BCLC in 7 traditional liver cancer stage systems.
-
Liver secretes new 'obesity factors'
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
The researchers found that expressing Ggpnmb increased diet-induced obesity in mouse models, increased the weight of adipose tissue, increased the ability of fat synthesis in adipose tissue, and observed that the heat production capacity of adipose tissue was inhibited, the body's energy consumption decreased, and insulin resistance was increased.
-
A new mechanism for eduard-host interoperability has been revealed
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
this study is the first to discover the role of thioxygen as an effect molecule in bacterial infection, providing a new way of thinking for further analysis of the pathogen-host mutual molecular mechanism.
-
Research provides new tools to combat schistosomiasis
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
Freshwater prawns are common aquaculture products around the world, and we know they are predators of snails that transmit schistosomiasis," said Christopher Hoover of the University of California, Berkeley, who led the study.
-
The fecal transplant allowed premature mice to live longer
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
, a biologist at the University of Oviedo in Spain, and colleagues found that aging and age-related diseases often go hand in hand with intestinal disorders because the balance between multiple bacteria in the gut is disrupted.
with the development of the disease, sick children and mice have become more and more serious intestinal disorders.
-
The current state of infectious diseases written by Chinese scholars Infectious Diseases of Poverty。
Time of Update: 2020-12-26
The article published in this journal focuses on addressing basic public health issues related to impoverished infectious diseases, including all aspects of pathogen and parasite vector biology, such as diagnosis, testing, treatment, case management, epidemiology and modeling.