Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 769
Sep 30, 2018
My Journey With Cancer and Hope for the Future!
Posted by Nicholi Avery in category: biotech/medical
My Journey With Cancer and the Hope for the Future
I would like to share a story. A story about sadness, depression, anger, and frustration. But most of all this is my personal story about triumphing over the death sentence of #cancer. I hope this story will give others who went through and are going through hope for the future.
My story started about 5 years ago on a cold winter day. Up until this point my life seemed invincible. That all changed. At the time I was working at the plasma center and we were preparing for an audit by the FDA. Before an audit we would have the floors waxed and make the center look as nice as possible. A few co-workers and I stayed late to help move the donor beds. I knew I had been feeling pain in my neck/shoulder area for a few weeks so I really didn’t want to. I figured it must have been from repetitive motions at work. I decided to just ignore it and help anyways: this decision changed my life dramatically.
Continue reading “My Journey With Cancer and Hope for the Future!” »
Sep 30, 2018
Early clinical trials showing promise for new kind of cancer vaccine
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
Promising early results are in from a phase 1 clinical trial into the safety and efficacy of a new cancer vaccine. The new treatment is designed to stimulate the immune system into attacking certain cancers known to overexpress a specific protein.
Sep 30, 2018
Liz Parrish in an insightful conversation with Nick Delgado (Sept 22, 2018 @RAADfest)
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones
Liz talking about gene therapy.
Liz Parrish in conversation with Nick Delgado, PhD, ABAAHP, CHT, Lifestyle Anti-Aging Medicine Author.
Sep 30, 2018
NIH ACD BRAIN Initiative Working Group 2.0 Workshop 2
Posted by Mike Ruban in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Perhaps you read the stories last week (including the NYT piece linked to below) about the researchers at Johns Hopkins, led by Gul Dolen, who gave ecstasy (MDMA) to octopuses and found that they, like humans, became more social on the drug. Dr. Dolen talked about using the octopus as a model organism in neuroscience research during last Friday’s day-long workshop hosted by the NIH BRAIN 2.0 working group.
By dosing the tentacled creatures with MDMA, researchers found they share parts of an ancient messaging system involved in social behaviors with humans.
Sep 29, 2018
The end of HIV transmission in the U.S.: A once-unthinkable dream becomes an openly discussed goal
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, health
And yet, today, the struggle against HIV may be undergoing a sea change.
U.S. health officials and HIV experts are beginning to talk about a future in which transmission in the United States could be halted. And that future, they say, could come not within a generation, but in the span of just a few years.
“We have the science to solve the AIDS epidemic,” Dr. Robert Redfield, the director of the CDC, himself a longtime HIV researcher and clinician, told STAT in a recent interview. “We’ve invested in it. Let’s put it into action.‘’
Sep 29, 2018
There Is a Rogue Group of Stars Behaving Very Suspiciously in the Milky Way’s Disk
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, space
The Milky Way has a violent past. When it isn’t swallowing renegade sausage galaxies, it seems to be waging endless games of interstellar tug-of-war with its nearest galactic neighbors — and not always winning. According to a new study published Sept. 19 in the journal Nature, one such encounter ended with a cosmic wound to the Milky Way’s disk that still hasn’t fully healed, 300 million years later.
That wound, researchers say, is visible in a cluster of several million stars that are not behaving as they should be. While still rotating around the Milky Way’s galactic center, these rogue stars also orbit around one another in a wobbly, spiral pattern that has only become more tangled over the past eon. [Big Bang to Civilization: 10 Amazing Origin Events]
“We have observed shapes. [of star clusters] with different morphologies, such as a spiral similar to a snail’s shell,” lead study author Teresa Antoja, a researcher at the Institute of Cosmos Sciences (ICCUB) at the University of Barcelona, said in a statement. “These substructures allow us to conclude that the disk of our galaxy suffered an important gravitational disturbance.”
Sep 29, 2018
‘Mosquito-pocalypse is in full effect’: North Carolina hit by blood-sucking pest outbreak
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
Mosquitoes that are three times larger than normal are swarming areas affected by Hurricane Florence.
Sep 29, 2018
In the Face of High Costs, DIYers Hope to Brew Their Own Insulin
Posted by Xavier Rosseel in category: biotech/medical
Home kits could one day allow diabetes patients to make their own insulin — potentially saving them thousands of dollars a year.
Sep 29, 2018
Meet the B.C. man who implants technology to increase his physical capabilities News
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, cyborgs, mobile phones, robotics/AI, supercomputing, transhumanism
But where advocates like Foxx mostly see the benefits of transhumanism, some critics say it raises ethical concerns in terms of risk, and others point out its potential to exacerbate social inequality.
Foxx says humans have long used technology to make up for physical limitations — think of prosthetics, hearing aids, or even telephones. More controversial technology aimed to enhance or even extend life, like cryogenic freezing, is also charted terrain.
The transhumanist movement isn’t large, but Foxx says there is a growing awareness and interest in technology used to enhance or supplement physical capability.