Nicoya gets NRC IRAP financing to create salivation based indicative test for COVID-19 Kumar Jeetendra | June 23, 2020 Nicoya, a main supplier of cutting edge expository instruments for the biotechnology and pharmaceutical businesses, will get warning administrations and up to $299,190 in innovative work subsidizing from the National Research Council of Canada Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC IRAP) to build up a compact COVID-19 demonstrative test called Atlas. This financing comes as a …
Test mRNA-based COVID-19 immunization evokes defensive safe reactions in animals Kumar Jeetendra | July 25, 2020 Two injections of this vaccine were enough to induce robust immunity, completely preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection in mice. MRNA-based vaccines are all attractive options for protecting against SARS-CoV-2 because they may be quickly designed and manufactured at a huge scale within weeks. Moreover, preclinical studies have shown that mRNA-based vaccines cause potent and broadly protective immune …
Study: Mosquitoes species Have Been Drawn and repelled by light at different times Daily Kumar Jeetendra | July 28, 2020 In a new study, researchers found that nighttime – versus day-biting species of mosquitoes have been behaviorally attracted and repelled by different colors of light at different times of day. Mosquitoes are one of important disease vectors impacting animals and humans around the globe and also the findings have important implications for applying light to …
New test can pinpoint which individuals with gonorrhea can be relieved with ciprofloxacin Kumar Jeetendra | August 7, 2020 A test made by UCLA researchers could pinpoint which individuals with gonorrhea will react successfully to the inexpensive oral antibiotic ciprofloxacin, which had formerly been sidelined over concerns the bacterium that causes the disease was becoming resistant to it. In study published in the peer-reviewed journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, a UCLA-led team found that of …
Effect of Discreet Monsoon on Dengue Epidemiology Kumar Jeetendra | September 17, 2020 The arrival Mosquitoes and Dengue with the seasonal rains are pivotal in understanding the pathogenesis of the virus in tropical medicine. Dengue has been a resonant feature in the Indian subcontinent making epidemic outbreaks in the last 4 decades, but it was in the last decade that the diagnosis of the virus took the impetus …
BAT study dissects the toxicological effect of nicotine pocket items Kumar Jeetendra | September 28, 2020 New research by BAT suggests that contemporary oral goods (MOPs) revealed lower toxicity reactions in certain assays than traditional cigarettes. Scientists analyzed the toxicological impact of one of BAT’s nicotine pouch products, previously called Lyft and now called Velo, in an in vitro laboratory-based test. Velo was found to be less biologically active than cigarette …
Antibiotics directed before age 2 are connected to ongoing conditions Kumar Jeetendra | November 16, 2020 In a retrospective case study, Mayo Clinic researchers have found that antibiotics administered to children younger than 2 are associated with several ongoing illnesses or ailments, which range from allergies to obesity. The findings appear in Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Using health record data from the Rochester Epidemiology Project, a population-based research cooperation in Minnesota and …
Poisonous pesticide transformed into treatment against antibiotic-resistant bacteria Kumar Jeetendra | December 30, 2020 They are used as pesticides and fungicides. However, these substances could be poisonous to humans and cause mutations. As they aren’t frequently used, there’s little data about them in the medicinal chemistry literature. However, it has been suggested recently that the groups of substances that are traditionally avoided can help to fight pathogenic bacteria. Yet, …
Daily aspirin can lessen danger of colorectal disease in adults Kumar Jeetendra | January 22, 2021 Regular aspirin use has clear benefits in reducing colorectal cancer incidence among middle-aged adults, but also comes with some risk, such as gastrointestinal bleeding. And when should adults start taking regular aspirin and for how long? There is substantial evidence that a daily aspirin can reduce risk of colorectal cancer in adults up to age …
Genomic surveillance can help recognize how SARS-CoV-2 spreads in care homes Kumar Jeetendra | March 4, 2021 Care homes are at high risk of experiencing outbreaks of COVID-19, the disease brought on by SARS-CoV-2. Older people and people affected by heart disease, respiratory disease and type 2 diabetes – all of which increase with age – are at greatest risk of severe disease and even death, which makes the care home population …
Compounds in green and black tea relax blood vessels by activating ion channel proteins Kumar Jeetendra | March 9, 2021 A new study from the University of California, Irvine shows that chemicals in both black and green tea relax blood vessels by activating ion channel proteins in the blood vessel wall. The discovery helps explain the antihypertensive properties of tea and could lead to the design of new blood pressure-lowering medications. Released in Cellular Physiology …
Pregnancy builds the danger of first-time symptomatic kidney stone Kumar Jeetendra | April 15, 2021 Though researchers have long known that several physiological and anatomical changes occur during pregnancy which could contribute to kidney stone formation, evidence of the connection has been lacking. An observational study that reviewed the medical records for nearly 3,000 female patients from 1984 to 2012 finds that pregnancy increases the risk of a first-time symptomatic …