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Blood tests monitor the death of myocardial cells
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
In the plasma of patients with sepsis, the level of heart-specific free DNA markers increased significantly, indicating the mass death of myocardial cells in the patient's body.
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Blood flow affects tumor cell metastasis
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
However, studies that have tested this hypothesis in zebrafish and humans have confirmed that circulating blood flow affects the position of tumor cells in the vein system that stagnates and excretes the body, where they can form metastasis.
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Animal studies have shown that anti-cancer drugs can treat autism social defects
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Xinling University of New York at Buffalo researchers say the new study, which looked at mice with autism due to the Shank 3 gene defect, used low-dose roxycin for three days and found that improving social behavior lasted about three weeks, the equivalent of several years in humans.
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Brain immune memory affects the progress of neuropathy in mice
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
The possibility of regulating the response of small glial cells, which are related to diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and stroke, has attracted widespread interest.
After a single injection of lipid polysaccharies, small glial cells appear to have a training response.
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British stem cell therapy helps nearly blind eyes regain vision
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
two "wet" elderly macular degeneration patients in the UK are being treated with embryonic stem cell therapy, and their nearly blind eyes are able to see and read, bringing hope for the treatment of this common eye disease.
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American geneticists have crafted the largest genealogy of 13 million people
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Using a database of one of the platforms, the researchers analyzed 86 million of these profiles and identified their kinship, producing more than 5 million genealogies, the largest of which included 11 generations of 13 million people, mainly European and North Africans, who lived between 1660 and 2000.
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Breast cancer risk factors and breast density in high-risk women in Chinese cities
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Yang of the Beijing Concord Medical School of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and NIH looked at 11,478 women (45-69 years old); 36% are in pre-menomanovascular care and are participating in a national cancer screening program in 11 urban provinces in China and are predicted to have a higher risk of breast cancer.
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Pre-pregnancy diet and lifestyle affect the health of future generations
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
's diet and lifestyle have a devastating impact on the growth, development and long-term health of their children, according to a new study released today by University College London.
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New research has found a number of genes associated with intelligence
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
researchers from the University of Edinburgh, the University of Southampton and Harvard University in the United States compared DNA from more than 240,000 people to see how different genes and intelligences were linked.
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Harvard University research shows that plant fat may extend life
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
a study by the Harvard T.T. Chan School of Public Health in the United States showed that the association of unsaturated fatty acids, which are often eaten from plants, was lower at all-cause risk of death.
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Ha Medical University invented molecular probes to predict the effect of cancer-targeted treatment
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Professor Shen Baozhong said the data showed that the probe-sensitive lung cancer patient population has better treatment results, longer tumor progressive survival and better prognostication, probe can be used to target the prediction of cancer treatment effect.
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Feedback immune autoi recognition promotes inflammation receding in a timely manner
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
April 26, 2018, published a research paper by Cao Xuetao, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, former president of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and president of Nankai University, reporting on the team's new breakthrough in the field of natural immunity and inflammation control research, and proposing a new mechanism and new viewpoint for self-immune identification to trigger anti-inflammatory effects and prevent antiviral natural immune over-response in a timely manner, thus maintaining the body's self-stabilization.
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Studies have shown that eating red meat often has a high risk of far-end colon cancer
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
women who regularly eat red meat have a higher risk of developing far-end colon cancer, according to a study by the University of Leeds in the UK.
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Vaccines won't 'overload' children's immune systems
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
It is estimated that between 10 and 15 per cent of parents did not follow the recommended vaccination procedures for children under two years of age by 2015.
This means that following the child immunization procedures recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be in everyone's best interests, the researchers said.
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Fat cells help wounds heal
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
, the researchers say that while it can be confirmed that fat cells are not called by immune cells, it is still unclear how they know how to reach the wound.
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Anti-inflammatory drugs may prevent the spread of breast cancer after surgery
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
After surgery, the immune system causes cells to move to new positions and divide, and also causes blood vessels to grow in order to heal the wound, causing cancer metastasis to return.
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The new study says there are nearly 300 million people living with the hepatitis B virus worldwide
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
new published in the British Journal of Medicine shows that there were nearly 300 million people living with hepatitis B virus worldwide in 2016.
According to statistics, about 600,000 people worldwide die each year from more serious liver disease caused by hepatitis B.
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Three breast cancer susceptible genes have been found
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Tang Copper, director of thyroid breast surgery at Anhui Medical University's Second Affiliated Hospital, said the discovery of individualized genetic information will help adjust breast cancer screening methods or pave the way for new targeted treatments, greatly reducing the risk.
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Taking paracetic pain in pregnant women increases your child's risk of ADHD and autism
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
Israeli researchers found that pregnant women taking paracetic pain increased their risk of developing ADHD, or ADHD, by up to 30 percent after birth, and by up to 20 percent.
Researchers have so far failed to find out why paracetic pain taken by mothers during pregnancy increases the risk of ADHD and autism in children.
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The scientific research team of Shandong University identified new targets for the treatment of acute kidney injury
Time of Update: 2020-12-17
team from Shandong University has published new research in an internationally renowned medical journal, confirming for the first time the role of the Gpr97 gene in kidney disease injury.
Finding drug targets for acute kidney injury will help provide new clinical treatment strategies.