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Author: healthadmin
Researchers at the University of Waterloo have identified the most distant jellyfish galaxy ever observed. The discovery was made using deep space observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The jellyfish galaxy gets its name from the long streams of gas that extend behind it, resembling tentacles. These galaxies zip through crowded galaxy clusters filled with extremely hot gas. As they move, the surrounding gas pushes against them like a powerful headwind, sweeping their own gas backwards and creating a trailing bundle. Astronomers call this process ram pressure stripping. This newly identified galaxy is located at z = 1.156.…
Ilulissat, Greenland (AP) — Fisherman Helgi Argil doesn’t know what’s going to happen. greenland In the fjords, he spends up to five days at a time on a boat with his dog Molly, watching the ever-changing Northern Lights in the sky.Last year, his boat got stuck in ice that had broken off a nearby glacier. This year, on the contrary, there was a lot of rain. His income is similarly unpredictable. You could go out and get about 100,000 Danish kroner (about $15,700), or you might get nothing at all.arctic rapidly changing climate Bringing more questions to Denmark’s semi-autonomous region…
Altering gut bacteria with antibiotics reduces inflammation caused by traumatic brain injury
A recent study found that a short course of antibiotics after a head injury can reduce inflammation and tissue damage in the brain. By temporarily altering the bacterial population that lives in the gastrointestinal tract, this drug may help protect the brain during the critical recovery period. These findings were published in the journal communication biology. Traumatic brain injury triggers a series of immune responses that affect the entire body. Physical impact damages brain cells and causes a local inflammatory response. At the same time, this damage disrupts the delicate ecosystem of microorganisms that live in the digestive system. This…
There are probably more tiny plastic debris in the Yakima River than you expected. This is a first-of-its-kind study.Researchers from Central Washington University sampled nine sites in the Yakima River. Samples were taken from Snoqualmie Pass all the way to the mouth of the Tri-Cities. Clay Arango, a professor of biological sciences at the university, said this kind of research had not been done before in rivers.Plastic fibers were present in every location the researchers sampled, even near the source. Arango said most sample areas detected between 2.5 and 5 pieces of debris per liter.”Who would have thought there would…
Modern neuroscience often describes the brain as a collection of specialized systems. Functions such as attention, perception, memory, language, and reasoning are each associated with specific brain networks, and scientists have typically studied these systems separately. This approach has led to significant advances. However, a central feature of human thinking – how all these separate systems come together to form a single unified mind – is not fully explained. Researchers at the University of Notre Dame decided to address this question. They used advanced neuroimaging to examine how the brain is organized as a whole and how that organization produces…
Pfizer CEO Dr. Albert Bourla, one of the most influential voices in the biopharmaceutical industry, has harshly criticized FDA Director Vinay Prasad, MD, and his work as director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), which regulates vaccines in the United States. “We have a problem with the leadership at CBER,” Bourla said Monday at the TD Cowen Healthcare Conference. “I don’t think the current director is following the recommendations of the staff.” The rebuke was in response to questions about Pfizer’s interactions with the FDA regarding the vaccine. The company is one of the world’s most prolific…
Grow Therapy, a hybrid mental health provider, wins $150 million to build physician-employer relationships. The Series D round was led by TCV and Goldman Sachs Alternatives Growth Equity, with participation from new investors BCI and Menlo Ventures. Physicians and employers are a new customer type for Grow, but they have been the focus of the platform’s growth over the past five years. The funding will also be used to enhance the technology behind Grow and improve the user experience for patients, therapists, and other partners. Grow currently has a wide range of partners including 125 payers, provider groups such as…
Bones fractured in (skiing) accidents often repair without medical intervention. However, if the fracture is particularly severe or a bone tumor needs to be surgically removed, doctors will rely on implants to stabilize the area and support new bone growth. Today’s implants are typically made from the patient’s own bone, called an autograft, or from metal or ceramic materials. Autografts require additional surgery to harvest bone tissue, which increases recovery time and surgical risks. Problems can arise because metal implants are much harder than natural bone and can loosen over time, reducing long-term stability. Biologically compatible bone implant design Bones…
Asexual women tend to prioritize different characteristics in their partners compared to heterosexual women
New research published in Sexual behavior archives It turns out that asexual women seek emotionally intimate relationships, but they tend to prefer nontraditional settings like platonic relationships over traditional monogamy. This finding highlights how expectations for intimacy and partnership follow different paths when sexual desire is not the primary factor. Asexuality is generally defined as feeling little or no sexual attraction to others. Importantly, many asexual people still experience a strong desire for emotional intimacy, so a lack of sexual attraction does not necessarily mean a lack of romantic attraction. The authors of the new study sought to better understand…
An international team of scientists has discovered that albumin, the most abundant protein circulating in human blood, plays a powerful, previously unrecognized role in protecting the body from mucormycosis, a rare but often fatal fungal infection. The survey results are nature. The research was led by Dr. George Chamilos and his team at the University of Crete and the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, with key contributions from a group at the Lundquist Institute for Biomedical Innovation led by Professor Ashraf Ibrahim. Mucormycosis, also known as “black fungus”, is caused by fungi of the order Mucorales and spreads rapidly…