Thu.May 30, 2024

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Lab Innovations 2024 to champion sustainability and innovation

Drug Discovery Today

London, 25/04/2024: The lab industry’s largest annual trade show is returning to the NEC, Birmingham, on October 30 and 31, 2024, to showcase sustainability and the latest innovations from the lab industry. The highly anticipated event will see thousands of attendees from across the lab sector descend on the NEC to meet with over 200 of the industry’s leading companies and enjoy the show’s world-leading conference programme, hosted across four free-to-attend theatres.

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How does 'not' affect what we understand? Scientists find negation mitigates our interpretation of phrases

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

When we're told 'This coffee is hot' upon being served a familiar caffeinated beverage at our local diner or cafe, the message is clear. But what about when we're told 'This coffee is not hot'? Does that mean we think it's cold? Or room temperature? Or just warm? A team of scientists has now identified how our brains work to process phrases that include negation (i.e., 'not'), revealing that it mitigates rather than inverts meaning -- in other words, in our minds, negation merely reduces the tem

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High- Dose Agomelatine Combined to Haloperidol Decanoate Improves Cognition, Downregulating MT2, Against Upregulating D5, Maintaining Krüppel- Like Factor 9, Though Alters Cardiac Electrophysiology [Neuropharmacology]

ASPET

Haloperidol decanoate (HD) was implicated in cognitive impairment. Agomelatine (AGO) was claimed to improve cognition. We aimed at investigating the effects of HD + low- or high- dose AGO on cognition, verifying the melatonergic/dopaminergic-to-the cholinergic hypothesis of cognition and exploring relevant cardiovascular issues in adult male Wistar albino rats.

Disease 100
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Musankwa sanyatiensis, a new dinosaur from Zimbabwe

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Fossils found on the shoreline of Lake Kariba in Zimbabwe represent a completely new dinosaur species. This remarkable find, named Musankwa sanyatiensis, marks only the fourth dinosaur species named from Zimbabwe.

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From Diagnosis to Delivery: How AI is Revolutionizing the Patient Experience

Speaker: Simran Kaur, Founder & CEO at Tattva Health Inc.

The healthcare landscape is being revolutionized by AI and cutting-edge digital technologies, reshaping how patients receive care and interact with providers. In this webinar led by Simran Kaur, we will explore how AI-driven solutions are enhancing patient communication, improving care quality, and empowering preventive and predictive medicine. You'll also learn how AI is streamlining healthcare processes, helping providers offer more efficient, personalized care and enabling faster, data-driven

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Tauroursodeoxycholic acid reverses DSS-induced colitis in mice via modulation of intestinal barrier dysfunction and microbiome dysregulation [Gastrointestinal, Hepatic, Pulmonary, and Renal]

ASPET

Background: Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an immune-mediated inflammatory disease that can lead to persistent damage and even cancer without any intervention. Conventional treatments can alleviate UC symptoms but are costly and even cause various side effects. Tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA), a secondary bile acid derivative, possesses anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective properties for various diseases, but its potential therapeutic benefits in UC have not been fully explored.

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Who decides whether you get into a clinical trial?

Antidote

One may choose to participate in a clinical trial for many reasons. Volunteering often has multiple benefits, from advancing medical research to gaining access to cutting-edge medical care. However, deciding to enroll in a clinical trial is only one part of the process.

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Your Idea Factory – Quality Innovation from Quantity

Perficient: Drug Development

Quality innovation is not for the weak at heart! Innovation myths may have you thinking it is for the lucky or the extremely talented – that’s not true. Pablo Picasso said, “Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working.” Thomas Edison quipped, “Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.” In this blog post, I want to focus on a different quote with the same intent.

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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope finds most distant known galaxy

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Over the last two years, scientists have used NASA's James Webb Space Telescope to explore what astronomers refer to as Cosmic Dawn -- the period in the first few hundred million years after the big bang where the first galaxies were born.

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Will Epilepsy Meds Taken in Pregnancy Affect a Child's Creativity?

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- Newer epilepsy drugs taken while pregnant won’t affect the creative thinking of children, an effect that had been observed in older medications, a new study reports.Researchers found no difference in creativity scores at a.

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People are altering decomposition rates in waterways

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Humans may be accelerating the rate at which organic matter decomposes in rivers and streams on a global scale, according to a new study. That could pose a threat to biodiversity in waterways around the world and increase the amount of carbon in Earth's atmosphere, potentially exacerbating climate change. The study is the first to combine a global experiment and predictive modeling to illustrate how human impacts to waterways may contribute to the global climate crisis.

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How Machine Learning Drives Clinical Trial Efficiency

Clinical trial data management is increasingly challenging as studies grow in complexity. Quickly accessing and analyzing study data is vital for assessing trial progress and patient safety. In this paper, we explore real-time data access and analysis for proactive study management. We investigate using adverse event (AE) data to monitor safety and discuss a clinical analytics platform that supports collaboration and data review workflows.

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Cancer Patients Get Poorer Care at Hospitals Serving Minority Communities

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- Cancer patients receive less effective treatment at hospitals that mainly serve minority communities, a new study shows.More than 9% of cancer patients are treated at hospitals where a significant percentage of patients.

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In the brain at rest, neurons rehearse future experience

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

New research sheds light on how individual neurons in the hippocampus of rats stabilize and tune spatial representations during periods of rest following the animals' first time running a maze, offering first proof of neuroplasticity during sleep.

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Being a Dad May Take Toll on Men's Hearts

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- The old joke holds that fatherhood causes a man’s hair to go prematurely gray.Whether or not that’s true, being a father does appear to put men at greater risk of poor heart health later in life, a new study finds.Dads ten.

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Scientists develop visual tool to help people group foods based on their levels of processing

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Scientists studying ultra-processed foods have created a new tool for assessing the rewarding and reinforcing properties of foods that make up 58 percent of calories consumed in the United States. The foods have been linked to a wide range of negative health outcomes.

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Deliver Fast, Flexible Clinical Trial Insights with Spotfire

Clinical research has entered a new era, one that requires real-time analytics and visualization to allow trial leaders to work collaboratively and to develop, at the click of a mouse, deep insights that enable proactive study management. Learn how Revvity Signals helps drug developers deliver clinical trial data insights in real-time using a fast and flexible data and analytics platform to empower data-driven decision-making.

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Mummies Study Finds Heart Disease Plagued the Ancients, Too

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- Folks typically think of heart disease as a byproduct of modern fast-food living, but a new study shows the condition has plagued humanity for centuries.More than a third (37%) of 237 adult mummies from seven different.

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Historic iceberg surges offer insights on modern climate change

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A great armada entered the North Atlantic, launched from the cold shores of North America. But rather than ships off to war, this force was a fleet of icebergs. And the havoc it wrought was to the ocean current itself. The future of the Atlantic circulation will be determined by a tug-o-war between Greenland's decreasing ice flux and its increasing freshwater runoff.

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CDC Reports Third Dairy Worker Infected With Bird Flu, Risk to Public Remains 'Low'

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- Amid an ongoing outbreak of bird flu in dairy cows, there's been a third case of H5N1 avian flu confirmed in a dairy worker, U.S. health officials reported Thursday. The previous two human cases -- the first in Texas, the.

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Statin therapy may prevent cancer by blocking inflammatory protein

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Scientists have found that statins -- commonly used cholesterol-lowering drugs -- may block a pathway that leads to the development of cancer in the context of chronic inflammation.

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Clinical Data Like You´ve Never Seen It Before: Why Spotfire Is the Leading Tool for Clinical Analytics

Clinical development organizations face a wide array of challenges when it comes to data, many of which can impact the operational effectiveness of their clinical trials. In this whitepaper, experts from Revvity Signals explore how solutions like TIBCO® Spotfire® enable better, more streamlined studies. The whitepaper also features a success story from Ambrx, a leading biopharmaceutical company, detailing how it has leveraged Spotfire to tackle data quality and collaboration challenges in clinic

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PTSD, Anxiety Is Rising Among College Students

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- America's college students seem to be more stressed than ever, with a new report finding a sharp rise in cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and acute stress disorder (ASD) on campuses across the country.In a.

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Local bright spot among melting glaciers: 2000 km of Antarctic ice-covered coastline has been stable for 85 years

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A whaler's forgotten aerial photos from 1937 have given researchers the most detailed picture of the ice evolution in East Antarctica to date. The results show that the ice has remained stable and even grown slightly over almost a century, though scientists observe early signs of weakening. The research offers new insights that enhance predictions of ice changes and sea level rise.

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Pooled Library Amplifications

addgene Blog

If you’re depositing a pooled library with Addgene, you may be surprised to learn that we ask for an amplification protocol with your deposit. This is because repeated amplifications of pooled libraries can lead to issues such as recombination and loss of plasmid diversity, so Addgene strives to distribute aliquots of the original library whenever possible.

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Health Insurer Trends to Watch at AHIP 2024

Perficient: Drug Development

Health insurers from every corner of the country are set to assemble in Las Vegas for the 2024 AHIP conference —and here at Perficient, we’re excited to have two of our colleagues attending as well. At AHIP 2024, thought leaders will address some of the industry’s most pressing questions, and the conference will feature educational sessions, Q&As, and networking opportunities.

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'Ugly' fossil places extinct saber-toothed cat on Texas coast

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

This fossil looks like a lumpy, rounded rock with a couple of exposed teeth that are a little worse for wear, having been submerged and tumbled along the floor of the Gulf of Mexico for thousands of years before washing up on a beach. But when it was X-rayed a doctoral student saw there was more to the fossil that met the eye: a hidden canine tooth that had not yet erupted from the jaw bone.

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Scientists May Have Spotted Stuttering's Origins in the Brain

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- Stuttering is a neurological condition, not a psychological one, and scientists in Finland now believe they've found the disrupted network in the brain that may cause it."These findings explain well-known features of.

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Scientists develop most sensitive way to observe single molecules

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A technical achievement marks a significant advance in the burgeoning field of observing individual molecules without the aid of fluorescent labels. While these labels are useful in many applications, they alter molecules in ways that can obscure how they naturally interact with one another. The new label-free method makes the molecules so easy to detect, it is almost as if they had labels.

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New patent for Corcept Therap drug KORLYM

Drug Patent Watch

Annual Drug Patent Expirations for KORLYM Korlym is a drug marketed by Corcept Therap and is included in one NDA. It is available from one supplier.

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Glimpses of a volcanic world: New telescope images of Jupiter's moon Io rival those from spacecraft

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Combining a new imaging instrument with the powerful adaptive optics capabilities of the Large Binocular Telescope, astronomers have captured a volcanic event on Jupiter's moon Io at a resolution never before achieved with Earth-based observations.

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CinCor’s ‘hub-and-spoke’ parent nabs new funding to build its next biotechs

BioPharma Drive: Drug Pricing

The $73 million round for CinRx Pharma, which created a startup AstraZeneca bought last year, will help fund subsidiaries making drugs for obesity, irritable bowel syndrome and gastroparesis.

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Medium and mighty: Intermediate-mass black holes can survive in globular clusters

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

New research demonstrated a possible formation mechanism of intermediate-mass black holes in globular clusters, star clusters that could contain tens of thousands or even millions of tightly packed stars. The first ever star-by-star massive cluster-formation simulations revealed that sufficiently dense molecular clouds, the 'birthing nests' of star clusters, can give birth to very massive stars that evolve into intermediate-mass black holes.

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Immunovant changes up plans for closely watched autoimmune drugs

BioPharma Drive: Drug Pricing

The company is prioritizing development of an earlier so-called FcRn inhibitor, a type of medicine that’s shown promise treating multiple inflammatory conditions.

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Doctors Used See-Through Plastic 'Window' to Monitor Injured Man's Brain

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- California skateboarder Jared Hager has become the first person to receive a transparent skull replacement, which allows doctors to better view the function of his brain. The window has allowed doctors to both monitor his.

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Otsuka defies digital health downturn with new company

BioPharma Drive: Drug Pricing

With “no playbook out there” to fall back on, the new company is taking a long-term approach as it develops its portfolio, an Otsuka Precision Health exec told MedTech Dive.

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Study Confirms Effectiveness of 'Watch-and-Wait' Approach to Prostate Cancer

Drugs.com

THURSDAY, May 30, 2024 -- For a large percentage of men with prostate cancer, the tumor may be so slow-growing that doctors advise a "watch-and-wait" approach instead of active treatment.Now, a study of almost 2,200 patients followed for up to a.

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