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Big data carryes a moral burden: the heart will stop, who will decide the data to stay?
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
In this study, we reviewed the literature on cardiac arrest and other acute conditions to determine the harm that the use of relevant data in the study may cause to patients and measures to mitigate them.
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Defective glial cells or cause Parkinson's disease
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
The paper, published recently in Stem Cell Reports, suggests that glial cells play an important role in Parkinson's disease and may provide new therapeutic targets.
Our results suggest that aspartic glial cells in Parkinson's disease transfer a toxic protein to neurons that produce dopamine.
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People with diabetes have a higher risk of neck and back pain
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
a new study from the University of Sydney in Australia found that people with type 2 diabetes have a higher risk of neck and back pain than those without diabetes.
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FASE Album Article: The Latest Research Progress and Scientific Outlook on Pig Erpotent Stem Cells
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
FASE magazine is responsible for domestic and foreign scientific research workers, reporting on the latest research results and cutting-edge progress in the field of agricultural science and engineering, carrying out academic exchanges, promoting the development of disciplines, and enhancing China's academic influence in this field and other important missions.
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Selection and symptomation of antibodies against dengue virus
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
researchers selected the best antibody pair, which has the best sensitivity to the four DENV NS1 antigens added to 50 percent of the human serum, and does not cross-react with NS1 from Zika virus, yellow fever virus, and tick-to-encephalitis virus, and is largely non-binding to NS1 from Japanese encephalitis virus and West Nile virus.
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The study found immune cells that allow cancer cells to "hibernate."
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
The TRM cells found in this study may also be effective in other types of cancer cells, which could help develop new ways to treat cancer.
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Genetically modified hens lay eggs that are expected to help the drug
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
In the study, a team led by researchers at the University of Edinburgh intended to use eggs from genetically modified hens to obtain proteins for scientific research, but they eventually found that the proteins were as reliable as those produced in the industry using existing methods and could be used in drug production.
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The skin hides clues to bowel disease
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
"In addition, its presence is associated with a common variant of a gene that is important for fungal immunity -- a trait that is more common in Crohn's patients than in healthy people," said David Underhill of the Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Cedars-Sinai, USA.
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The new treatment is expected to improve autoimmunity
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
, an antibody that can mediate fragments of certain types of bacterial cell walls can reduce the severity of autoimmune diseases in several mice, according to a new study.
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Rasha virus intrusion inhibitors were successfully screened
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
Recently, the Wuhan Institute of Virology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences / National Key Laboratory of Virology Xiao Weifu Research Group and Nanca University School of Pharmacy, Tianjin International Institute of Biopharmaceuticals joint research team successfully screened out inhibitors that can block the invasion of the Rasa virus, with a broad spectrum of antiviral activity.
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Ultrasound can be used in non-invasive therapies
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
In another separate study using mouse and mouse models, Chris Puleo, Vicky Cottero and colleagues at GE's Global Research and Development Center in New York used non-invasive ultrasound to the spleen, reducing the inflammatory response of mice and rats to bacterial endotoxins.
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Scientists open up new avenues for Ebola vaccine research and development
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
, the researchers produced a crystal structure of antibodies that bind to the viral glycoproteins of the Ebola virus, indicating that ADI-15946 targeted a pocket structure in the virus base region, which formed a new vulnerability.
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The study found that enterobacteria can affect the ability of mosquito-borne viruses to spread
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
recently, Cheng Gong, a researcher at Tsinghua University School of Medicine, found that regulating a mosquito's gut symbox, the mucosal sarepia, can affect the mosquito's ability to transmit the virus.
the effects of different intestinal strains, the researchers found that mucous sarepsis significantly increased the susceptivity of the Aedes aegypti mosquito to mosquito-borne viruses.
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A new drug can destroy the biological clock of cancer cells
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
researchers at the University of Southern California and Nagoya University in Japan have teamed up to develop a new drug that can inhibit the growth of cancer cells by destroying their biological clocks.
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Cancer cell mutation levels may predict the effectiveness of immunotherapy
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
, published online January 15, showed that mutation levels in cancer cells were associated with survival after patients were treated with checkpoint inhibitors.
findings suggest that tumor mutation loads may be a useful indicator for predicting the response of patients with different types of cancer to checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy.
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A high-fat, high-sugar diet may affect the effectiveness of breast cancer treatment
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
Now, a new U.S. study has found that high-fat, high-sugar foods lead to elevated levels of glycosylated end-product (AGEs) in the body, affecting the effectiveness of treatment for some breast cancer patients.
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Less than 6 hours of sleep increases the risk of atherosclerosis
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, suggests that less than six hours of sleep or poor sleep quality may increase the risk of atherosclerosis.
, people with poor sleep quality had a 34 percent increased risk of atherosclerosis compared to subjects with good sleep quality.
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Chinese scientists have mapped the world's most "toxic" breast cancer
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
Chinese Three Negative Breast Cancer Genome Map 8 March, International Women's Day. of the same day, cancer cells, a leading international oncology journal, published an important study by Chinese s
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Scientists have found potential targets for overcoming tumor resistance
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
Reporters from the Chinese University of Science and Technology Department of Life Sciences and Medicine was informed that recently, the Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Laboratory of Natural Immunity and Chronic Diseases and Hefei National Research Center for Microscale Matter Science Professor Wu Myanmar research team and the University of Newcastle, Australia, Jinlei researchers, found that a long non-coding RNA in the process of tumor cell resistance plays an important role, may become a potential target to overcome tumor resistance.
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Cao Xuetao and others found a new surface regulatory mechanism for immune inflammation
Time of Update: 2020-12-21
Exploring the regulatory mechanisms of DC migration process is of great significance for understanding DC's regulatory role in natural immunity and inflammation, and for finding potential therapeutic targets for inflammatory diseases caused by DC migration or active abnormalities.