In the News
New Medical Technique Punches Holes In Cells, Could Treat Tumors A large animal study has shown that certain microsecond electrical pulses can punch nanoscale holes in the membranes of target cells without harming tissue scaffolding, including that in the blood vessels - a potential breakthrough in minimally invasive surgical treatments of tumors. Researchers Find A Mutation In LRRK2 Gene Causes Parkinson's Disease I Neuroscientists at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., leading a team of researchers in the United States and Europe, have discovered that a novel mutation in the recently identified LRRK2 gene causes parkinsonism in several North American and European families. Bystander-delivered Defibrillation Improves Survival After Cardiac Arr Cardiopulmonary resuscitation combined with bystander use of an automated external defibrillator more than doubled the chances of surviving out-of-hospital cardiac arrest compared with using CPR alone, researchers report. Cities Battle Blinking Billboards Giant digital displays, designed to give roadside advertisers more options for capturing drivers' eyes, encounter opposition in the face of safety concerns. By the Associated Press. Online Library Gives Readers Access To 1.5 Million Books The Million Book Project has completed the digitization of more than 1.5 million books, which are now available online. For the first time since the project was initiated in 2002, all of the books, which range from Mark Twain's "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court"to "The Analects of Confucius,"are available through a single Web portal of the Universal Library, said Gloriana St. Clair, Carnegie Mellon's dean of libraries. Eco Concern: Coal Plant Boom Scores of new coal-fired plants are on drawing boards to boost the U.S. power grid. Pollution, energy costs, energy demand and proven vs. unproven technology all weigh in on whether they should be permitted. Marijuana Component Opens The Door For Virus That Causes Kaposi's Sarc The major active component of marijuana could aid the Kaposi's sarcoma virus in infecting cells and multiplying, according researchers at Harvard Medical School. They report that low doses of THC, equivalent to that in the bloodstream of an average marijuana smoker, could be enough to facilitate infection of skin cells and could even foster malignancy. Researchers Train The Immune System To Deliver Virus That Destroys Can Scientists have designed a technique that uses the body's own cells and a virus to destroy cancer cells that spread from primary tumors to other parts of the body through the lymphatic system. Mars Express Mission Extended ESA's Mars Express mission has been extended by one Martian year, or about 23 months, from the beginning of December 2005. Genetically Engineered Rice Found In Two Rice Varieties, USDA Investig Trace amounts of genetically engineered rice was present in two varieties of rice, Cheniere and CL131. No short- or medium-grain rice varieties tested positive for either GE strain investigated. The exact mechanism for introduction of the GE material could not be determined in either instance.
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