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Device Would Allow TB Dosing to Switch From Daily to Monthly
A drug delivery device is under development, which works by slowly releasing antibiotics directly into the patient's stomach. This would allow patients to switch from daily to monthly doses, reducing the burden of tuberculosis treatment.
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Machine Learning Tracks Moving Cells
All humans share a common characteristic: the many cells making up their bodies are always on the move. As we humans commute to work, cells migrate through the body to get their jobs done. Biologists have long struggled to quantify the movement and changing morphology of cells through time, but now, scientists have devised an elegant tool to do just that.
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From Mirror-image Biology to Enhanced Therapeutic Proteins
Biomolecules are being synthesized in their mirror-image form, as part of a bigger long-term goal: to create simple, artificial biological systems in mirror-image form that correspond to those in nature but do not interact with the environment.
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BRAIN Scientists Make Strides in Mapping the Mouse Cortex
Researchers have outlined a way to classify neurons based not only on how they look, but on with which other neurons they are capable of communicating.
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Fast-acting Psychedelic Eases Depression and Anxiety
Researchers have discovered that use of the synthetic psychedelic, 5-methocy-N,-N-dimethyltryptamine, appears to be associated with unintended improvements in self-reported depression and anxiety when given in a ceremonial group setting.
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Response to Skin Fungi Pivotal in Dermatitis Pathway
How does the immune system respond to fungi on our skin? Researchers at the University of Zurich have demonstrated that the same immune cells that protect us against skin fungi also encourage the inflammatory symptoms of atopic dermatitis. An antibody therapy could alleviate this chronic inflammatory skin disease.
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"Inflamm-aging" Results in Loss of Bone-healing Ability in the Elderly
The current study explains how this age-driven increase in immune signals diminishes the ability of stem cells, essential ingredients in bone repair, to multiply.
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Study Ties Common Heartburn Medications to Kidney Disease
Common medications prescribed to treat heartburn, acid reflux and ulcers are linked to increased risks for kidney failure and chronic kidney disease, found a recent University at Buffalo study.
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The Key to a Common Cancer Pathway
A team reports the discovery of an unexpected regulator of the critical protein p53, opening the door to the development of drugs that could target it.
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Gene Medication to Treat Spinal Cord Injury
After several months of gene medication treatment, rodents were able to use previously paralyzed limbs, a study has found.
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