Health & Medicine

Health & Medicine

Medicare Coverage for Obesity Drugs: Seniors’ Strong Support

Data could inform federal, state and private employer policies regarding GLP-1 drugs and others A large majority of older Americans feel that health insurance – including Medicare – should cover anti-obesity medications, according to a new University of Michigan study. And more than half of older adults who meet criteria for obesity say they’re interested in trying one of these drugs to manage their weight. Current law prevents Medicare from covering medications to treat obesity, and most private plans don’t…

Health & Medicine

Study Reveals How Your Brain Filters Out Distractions

The human brain can learn through experience to filter out disturbing and distracting stimuli – such as a glaring roadside billboard or a flashing banner on the internet. Scientists at Leipzig University and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam have used electroencephalography (EEG) to show that early visual processing in humans changes with repeated exposure. Their joint study has just been published in The Journal of Neuroscience. Distractions are often easier to ignore after we have encountered them multiple times. This learned suppression…

Health & Medicine

Chlorotonil: New Hope Against Multidrug-Resistant Pathogens

Researchers at the HIPS decipher novel mode of action of natural product antibiotic The development and spread of antibiotic resistance represents one of the greatest threats to global health. To overcome these resistances, drugs with novel mode of action are urgently needed. Researchers at the Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland (HIPS) have now uncovered the mode of action of a promising class of natural products – the chlorotonils. These molecules simultaneously target the bacterial cell membrane and the bacteria’s…

Health & Medicine

Unlocking Generosity: How Our Brain Regulates Giving

Psychology: Publication in PNASAre there areas of the brain, which regulate prosocial, altruistic behaviour? Together with colleagues from the universities in Lausanne, Utrecht and Cape Town, researchers from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) have studied a very special group of patients and established that the “basolateral amygdala” (part of the limbic system) plays an important role in this. In the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), they describe that this region calibrates social behaviour. Prosocial behaviour,…

Health & Medicine

Brain Control of Movement Under Uncertainty Explained

A new study by neuroscientists at the German Primate Center (DPZ) – Leibniz Institute for Primate Research in Göttingen shows that our brain deals with different forms of visual uncertainty during movements in distinct ways. Depending on the type of uncertainty, planning and execution of movements in the brain are affected differently. These findings could help to optimize brain-computer interfaces that, for example, help people with paralysis to control prostheses or computers with their thoughts alone (Nature Communications). Imagine waking…

Health & Medicine

New Pathoblocker Halts Salmonella by Targeting HilD

Team from the University of Tübingen and the German Center for Infection Research discovers a substance that inhibits signaling pathways of pathogens as they invade a cell Pathogenic Salmonella injects effector proteins into the cells of the gastrointestinal tract to penetrate and multiply within them. The bacteria are usually ingested with contaminated food. They can cause serious gastrointestinal inflammation and even systemic infections. Now, an international research team led by Professor Samuel Wagner of the University of Tübingen Cluster of…

Health & Medicine

Natural Light: A Simple Fix for Morning Fatigue

Light conditions in the morning before waking up affect restfulness Sleep is a necessary part of people’s daily routine, but modern lifestyles and technology have ushered in an era of decreased rest time and subsequent fatigue. Further, the bedroom environment, such as light, sound, and temperature, is important for a good night’s sleep, though this is often neglected in residential architecture. In search of a conclusive remedy, common sleep studies use artificial light that is easy to control. Osaka Metropolitan…

Health & Medicine

New Study Unveils Scaffold for Targeting Drug Breakdown

Cytochrome P450 (CYP) proteins are responsible for breaking down more than 80% of all Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved drugs, reducing their effectiveness. However, how to prevent CYPs from doing this without off-target effects has puzzled researchers until now. Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital have designed new drug frameworks that selectively target CYP3A4, one of the most critical CYP proteins. Structural insights from this work offer a roadmap for future drug developers to better evaluate drug interactions and selectively…

Health & Medicine

New Insights into Immune Response Phases Unveiled

The research groups led by Wolfgang Kastenmüller and Georg Gasteiger employed innovative microscopy techniques to observe how specific immune cells, known as T-cells, are activated and proliferate during a viral infection. Their findings revealed novel mechanisms: the immune system amplifies its defense cells in a far more targeted way than previously believed. T-Cells Proliferate and Specialize During the Immune Response T-cells are crucial defense cells in the immune system. To effectively find and destroy infected cells in the body, rare…

Health & Medicine

Smart Delivery Solutions for Gene Editors in Engineering

A research team from Helmholtz Munich and the Technical University of Munich has developed an advanced delivery system that transports gene-editing tools based on the CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing system into living cells with significantly greater efficiency than before. Their technology, ENVLPE, uses engineered non-infectious virus-like particles to precisely correct defective genes – demonstrated successfully in living mouse models that are blind due to a mutation. This system also holds promise for advancing cancer therapy by enabling precise genetic manipulation of engineered…

Health & Medicine

New Antibiotic Class Shows Promise Against MRSA Infections

The development of new antibiotics to treat superbugs and other bacterial infections is a global priority, with the rate of infections that cannot be treated with current antibiotics rising and presenting one of the biggest threats to human health. In line with that, new research has shown a daily dose of epidermicin NI01 – an antibiotic compound developed by University of Plymouth spinout company Amprologix – is as effective at removing Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) as the current standard of…

Health & Medicine

Shaping the Future of Medicine: How Young Scientists Are Reinventing RNA Therapies for the Heart and Beyond

At the RNApp graduate school, young researchers are working to make RNA-based drugs safer and more effective. Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is an important component of our cells. As messenger RNA (mRNA), it is the blueprint for translating genetic information into proteins. This process can also be used medically to produce specific proteins. One well-known application is mRNA vaccines against coronaviruses. There is also so-called non-coding RNA (ncRNA), which does not contain protein blueprints but instead takes over control mechanisms in…

Health & Medicine

New Tool Promises Significant Advances in Cancer Treatment

New Australian technology is set to transform the way that gastrointestinal cancers are detected and treated with precise, minimally invasive surgery. Backed by the Federal Government’s Economic Accelerator (AEA) Ignite Grant, researchers from the University of South Australia (UniSA) are using quantum technology to develop a first-of-its-kind laparoscopic probe that will allow surgeons to accurately map the spread of tumours. The technology has the potential to improve cancer survival rates and patient quality of life worldwide. Led by Dr Nicole…

Health & Medicine

Uncovering Mitochondria’s Recycling Power: A Key to Fighting Age-Related Diseases

Medicine: Publication in Science Advances Damage to the mitochondria, the “power plants” of the cells, contributes to many diseases. Researchers from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) and the University of Cologne led by HHU professor of medicine Dr David Pla-Martín, now describe in the scientific journal Science Advances how cells with defective mitochondria activate a special recycling system to eliminate damaged genetic material. Damage to the genetic material of mitochondria – the mitochondrial DNA or mtDNA for short – can…

Health & Medicine

Pancreatic Cells Retain Epigenetic Marks Without DNA Changes

Study led by Johns Hopkins researchers may advance efforts to reveal how epigenetic events contribute to cancer development Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found a pattern of so-called epigenetic “marks” in a transition state between normal and pancreatic cancer cells in mice, and that the normal cells may keep at least a temporary “memory” of those cancer-linked marks. Epigenetic marks are chemical modifications that help regulate genetic expression without directly altering DNA sequence in the makeup of genes….

Health & Medicine

Raising Awareness: Prevalence of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder in Sweden’s Schoolchildren

Out of 206 fourth-grade students, 19 met criteria for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. This was found in a pilot study conducted at the University of Gothenburg. The results indicate that birth defects caused by alcohol consumption during pregnancy may be as common in Sweden as in several other European countries. The study ran at six schools in western Sweden and constituted an add-on to the regular health check-up for all fourth-grade students. The participants underwent a physical examination, review of…

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