24/7 News Coverage
February 04, 2015
INTERN DAILY
No more money and time down the drain say antibody experts in Nature
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Feb 05, 2015
In the latest issue of Nature, a worldwide group of antibody experts appeal for a standardised approach to the creation and use of antibodies in research and therapeutics. While it might cost roughly $US1billion to "generate characterized recombinant binding reagents to target the products of all human genes", this would "probably be less than what is wasted worldwide on bad reagents in two or three years", says Dr Andrew Bradbury from Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, the lead author ... read more
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Smartphone, finger prick, 15 minutes, diagnosis - done!
A team of researchers, led by Samuel K. Sia, associate professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia Engineering, has developed a low-cost smartphone accessory that can perform a point-of-care tes ... more
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Bioengineered miniature structures could prevent heart failure
The delivery of tiny biodegradable microstructures to heart tissue damaged by heart attack may help repair the tissue and prevent future heart failure. A team led by cardiovascular researchers at th ... more
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Scientists discover viral 'Enigma machine'
Researchers have cracked a code that governs infections by a major group of viruses including the common cold and polio. Until now, scientists had not noticed the code, which had been hidden in plai ... more
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Artificial blood vessels
By combining micro-imprinting and electro-spinning techniques, researchers at Shanghai University's Rapid Manufacturing Engineering Center have developed a vascular graft composed of three layers fo ... more


EPIDEMICS

Indonesian minister sparks anger with HIV comments
Indonesia's trade minister sparked anger Wednesday after saying that second-hand clothes could spread HIV as he campaigned to stop the import of used garments. ... more
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Small Modular Reactors - USA - 2015
Nuclear Decommissioning Conference Europe May 2015

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Transparent PDMS eggshell created as step towards embryo lab on a chip
Lab-on-a-chip (LOC) systems have registered tremendous progress over the past 20 years. Myriad "chip" schemes have already emerged, ranging from the lung-on-a-chip and heart-on-a-chip to the liver-o ... more
INTERN DAILY

New technique captures real-time diagnostic 3-D images
This technique uses Optical Projection Tomography, which is "similar to X-rays, but uses light," explains UC3M researcher Jorge Ripoll, from the UC3M Department of Bioengineering and Aerospace Engin ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Slingshot to embed AI agent in US Space Force space warfare training
AST SpaceMobile secures role on MDA SHIELD defense architecture
Energy learning algorithm boosts complex UAV swarm tasking
EPIDEMICS

WHO says Ebola epidemic on the decline
Weekly Ebola infections in west Africa have dropped to below 100 for the first time in more than six months, figures showed Thursday, raising hopes the worst-ever outbreak of the virus is coming to an end. ... more
EPIDEMICS

Second bird flu case confirmed in Canada
The husband of a Canadian who was diagnosed earlier this week with bird flu after returning from a trip to China has also tested positive for the virus, health officials said Friday. ... more
EPIDEMICS

GMO mosquito plan sparks debate in Florida
A British company's plan to unleash hordes of genetically modified mosquitoes in Florida to reduce the threat of dengue fever and other diseases has sparked an outcry from fearful residents. ... more
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EPIDEMICS

H5N1 bird flu spreads to 11 states in Nigeria: govt
Nigeria on Thursday confirmed that the H5N1 strain of bird flu has spread from seven to 11 states within a week, resulting in the deaths of tens of thousands of poultry but no human cases. ... more
EPIDEMICS

Scientists develop potential late-stage rabies treatment
A person bit by a rabid animal has only a finite amount of time to get treated with the proper vaccine before it is too late. Allow a rabid bite to fester long enough for the virus to reach the brain and for neurological symptoms to set in, and the infection is almost invariably fatal. ... more
24/7 News Coverage
China's birth rate falls to lowest on record: official data
China bids to host secretariat of new high seas treaty
Protected forests under threat in DRC's lucrative mining belt
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Diaper compound may expand power of microscopes
Pour, mix, set, add water and voila: highly detailed images of the inside of cells. A study, partially funded by the National Institutes of Health, showed that a modified form of the superabsorbent ... more
EPIDEMICS

Bird flu confirmed in Canadian patient after China trip
The first human case of H7N9 bird flu in North America has been confirmed in a Canadian woman who recently returned from a trip to China, health officials said Monday. ... more
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Australian boy, 4, gets 'world first' artificial pancreas
A four-year-old Australian boy has been fitted with an artificial pancreas in what researchers said was a world first treatment for managing type 1 diabetes. ... more
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Microcapsules have potential to repair damage caused by osteoarthritis
A new 'microcapsule' treatment delivery method developed by researchers at Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) could reduce inflammation in cartilage affected by osteoarthritis and reverse damage ... more
FARM NEWS

Synthetic amino acid offer biotech solutions to global problems
Scientists from Yale have devised a way to ensure genetically modified organisms (GMOs) can be safely confined in the environment, overcoming a major obstacle to widespread use of GMOs in agricultur ... more

INTERN DAILY

Major limitations found with nanotubes in blood facing medical devices
Scientists in the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in Trinity College Dublin, have made an important discovery about the safety issues of using carbon nanotubes as biomaterials which c ... more
EPIDEMICS

No new polio cases in Syria reported for a year: WHO
Syria has gone a year without a reported polio case, the World Health Organization said Wednesday, after a massive immunisation campaign triggered by the disease's appearance in the war-torn country. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
Gold, silver hit records and stocks fall as Trump fans trade fears
Light driven charging turns gold nanorods into nanocapacitors
Coal plant conversion seen boosting China nuclear share to 22 percent by 2060
EPIDEMICS

Nigeria reports H5N1 bird flu in five states

INTERN DAILY

Wearable sensor clears path to long-term EKG, EMG monitoring

EPIDEMICS

Two Nigerian cities hit by bird flu: authorities

EPIDEMICS

Schools reopening as W.Africa turns page on Ebola epidemic

INTERN DAILY

Pythagoras theorem shows when a patient has turned a corner

EPIDEMICS

AIDS crisis brewing in Crimea and east Ukraine says UN

EPIDEMICS

Two die of bird flu in China

EPIDEMICS

China diagnosed 104,000 new HIV/AIDs cases in 2014

EPIDEMICS

UN Ebola czar says epidemic has 'passed the tipping point'

EPIDEMICS

Flu shot just 23 percent effective: US

How to predict responses to disease

DNA 'glue' could someday be used to build tissues, organs

Prolonged weightlessness moves blood from bottom to top of body

Hybrid 'super mosquito' resistant to insecticide-treated bed nets

Newly discovered antibiotic kills pathogens without resistance

US okays Roche test to identify HIV, hepatitis viruses

Flexible, biocompatible implant slips into the spinal cord

Sierra Leone now has means to control Ebola epidemic

Five years after quake, cholera epidemic haunts Haiti

At least 26 US kids die of flu in 'bad' season: officials

Scientists discover hybrid insecticide-resistant mosquito in Mali

Contaminated equipment behind Cambodia HIV outbreak

DigitalGlobe products used in fight against Ebola

Researchers develop soil-derived antibiotic

New clues in quest for HIV cure: researchers

'Flying carpet' uses graphene to deliver one-two punch

Nanotech guides cancer surgery; also kills remaining malignant cells

DNA origami could lead to nano 'transformers' for biomedical applications

One Pakistani's dogged fight against rats

Predicting superbugs' countermoves to new drugs

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