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  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
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    • Agriculture
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    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • Polluted City Neighborhoods Are Bad News for Asthmatic Children

    Children with asthma who grow up in a New York City neighborhood where air pollution is prevalent need emergency medical treatment more often than asthmatics in less polluted areas. This is according to researchers from Columbia University in the US in a new study published in the Springer Nature-branded journal Pediatric Research. Lead author, Stephanie Lovinsky-Desir, warns however that neighborhoods where asthma cases in children are less common should not be excluded from efforts to improve air quality. This is because children that live in neighborhoods where asthma is less common may be more vulnerable to the effects of air pollution.

  • How Technology and America’s Heartland Play Key Roles in a Healthy Seafood Diet

    Fish farming--or aquaculture--is a winning situation. It's a win for the economy, a win for the consumer, and a win for the planet.

  • Environmental Factors May Trigger Onset of Multiple Sclerosis

    A new Tel Aviv University study finds that certain environmental conditions may precipitate structural changes that take place in myelin sheaths in the onset of multiple sclerosis (MS). Myelin sheaths are the "insulating tape" surrounding axons; axons carry electrical impulses in neurons.

  • Diets Rich in Fish Oil Could Slow the Spread and Growth of Breast Cancer Cells

    Omega-3 fatty acids, such as those typically contained in fish oil, may suppress the growth and spread of breast cancer cells in mice. This is according to a new study in the journal Clinical & Experimental Metastasis, which is published under the Springer imprint. According to lead author, Saraswoti Khadge of the University of Nebraska Medical Centre in the US, fatty acids stopped further delayed tumors from forming, and blocked the cancerous cells from spreading to other organs in mice. The researchers speculate that this might be because of the way in which omega-3 fatty acids support the body’s immune and anti-inflammatory systems.

  • New Test Rapidly Identifies Antibiotic-Resistant ‘Superbugs’

    When you get sick, you want the right treatment fast. But certain infectious microbes are experts at evading the very anti-bacterial drugs designed to fight them.

  • Letting your dog sleep with you is good for chronic pain sufferers

    For chronic pain sufferers, it may be smart to let sleeping dogs lie, a new University of Alberta study suggests.

  • Arctic Sea Ice Decline Driving Ocean Phytoplankton Farther North

    Phytoplankton blooms that form the base of the marine food web are expanding northward into ice-free waters where they have never been seen before, according to new research.

  • Air pollution linked to “huge” reduction in intelligence

    Air pollution can have a “huge” negative effect on cognitive intelligence – especially amongst older men – according to a study released this past August.

  • Discovery of Inner Ear Function May Improve Diagnosis of Hearing Impairment

    Results from a research study published in Nature Communications show how the inner ear processes speech, something that has until now been unknown. The authors of the report include researchers from Linköping University.

  • Zebrafish help find cause of Saul-Wilson syndrome

    A line of zebrafish specially generated at the University of Oregon had a key role in discovering the cause of Saul-Wilson syndrome, a rare disease seen in just 15 cases worldwide.

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