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  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
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    • Agriculture
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  • Processed Foods May Hold Key to Rise in Autism

    With the number of children diagnosed with autism on the rise, the need to find what causes the disorder becomes more urgent every day.

  • Americans Still Eat Too Much Processed Meat and Too Little Fish

    A new study in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, published by Elsevier, found that the amount of processed meat consumed by Americans has remained unchanged in the past 18 years, nor has their intake of fish/shellfish increased. 

  • Major Study Finds No Conclusive Links to Health Effects from Waste Incinerators

    Researchers have found no link between exposure to emissions from municipal waste incinerators (MWIs) and infant deaths or reduced fetal growth.

  • Engineers 3-D Print Flexible Mesh for Ankle and Knee Braces

    Hearing aids, dental crowns, and limb prosthetics are some of the medical devices that can now be digitally designed and customized for individual patients, thanks to 3-D printing.

  • Deaths from Cardiovascular Diseases Attributable to Heat and Cold Down 38% in Spain

    Temperature-related mortality has been decreasing in Spain over the past four decades, according to a new study led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a research centre supported by ”la Caixa”.

  • Scientists Identify Novel Protrusions in Blood Vessels of the Brain Which May Allow New Insight into Mechanisms of Stroke

    The previously undescribed large structures are spherical and so have been termed kugeln (German for sphere) by the Sheffield team, who discovered them in collaboration with scientists from the USA and Germany.

    No cell has ever been shown to develop kugeln in the past, possibly because they are easily mistaken for normal blood vessels. Kugeln contain a molecule called nitric oxide which is essential for the health of blood vessels.

    Stroke is a life-threatening condition affecting more than 100,000 people in the UK each year. Some forms of stroke are caused by mutations in genes which the Sheffield researchers have shown are required to form kugeln. Although the function of kugeln is not yet fully understood, this link to genetic forms of stroke could provide new insights into neurological and cardiovascular research.

    Elisabeth Kugler, a PhD student from the University of Sheffield’s Department of Infection, Infection and Cardiovascular Disease and the main author of the study, said: “The finding of kugeln highlights the need for basic research to understand the mechanisms of development and disease.

    Read more at: The University of Sheffield

    Photo credit: VSRao via Pixabay

  • Powerful Pollen

    Antibiotics are powerful medication that are used to fight infections, but the ongoing and well publicized issues with resistance has made the search for new medicines critical to human health.  

  • South African Forests Show Pathways to a Sustainable Future

    Native forests make up 1 percent of the landscape in South Africa but could play a key role in reducing atmospheric carbon and identifying sustainable development practices that can be used globally to counter climate change, according to a Penn State researcher.

  • New Biomarker Test Improves Diagnosis of Ovarian Cancer

    The majority of women who undergo surgery for suspected ovarian cancer do not have cancer. 

  • ‘Alexa, Monitor My Heart’: Researchers Develop First Contactless Cardiac Arrest AI System for Smart Speakers

    Almost 500,000 Americans die each year from cardiac arrest, when the heart suddenly stops beating.

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