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mice: search
Scientists have found that the compound resveratrol slows age-related deterioration and functional decline of mice on a standard diet, but does not increase longevity when started at middle age. This study, conducted and supported in part by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health, is a follow-up to 2006 findings that resveratrol improves health and longevity of overweight, aged mice. The report confirms previous results suggesting the compound, found naturally in foods like grapes and nuts, may mimic, in mice, some of the effects of dietary or calorie restriction, the most effective and reproducible way found to date to alleviate age-associated disease in mammals.
in Biological Science
via PhysOrg.com @ 9:00 4th Jul
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Scientists have found that the compound resveratrol slows age-related deterioration and functional decline of mice on a standard diet, but does not increase longevity when started at middle age. This study, conducted and supported in part by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health, is a follow-up to 2006 findings that resveratrol improves health and longevity of overweight, aged mice. The report confirms previous results suggesting the compound, found naturally in foods like grapes and nuts, may mimic, in mice, some of the effects of dietary or calorie restriction, the most effective and reproducible way found to date to alleviate age-associated disease in mammals.
in Biological Science
via EurekAlert! @ 16:20 3rd Jul
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TaeKwonDood tips us to news that a new cancer resistance treatment is going into clinical trials after being quite successful at eradicating cancer in mice. Researchers discovered that certain white blood cells called granulocytes from cancer-immune mice were able to cure cancer in other mice. Now, doctors are putting out the call for healthy granulocyte donors in order to test how well it works on humans. The article quotes lead researcher Zheng Cui saying, "In mice, we've been able to eradicate even highly aggressive forms of malignancy with extremely large tumors. Hopefully, we will see the same results in humans. Our laboratory studies indicate that this cancer-fighting ability is even stronger in healthy humans."
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 9:54 30th Jun
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aztektum among many other readers sent us news that medical researchers have developed two drugs that can build muscle tone in mice without exercise. While such an advance may inspire dreams of a "couch potato pill," the article mostly talks about other medical uses, should the drugs prove safe and effective in humans. The doctor in charge of the research is working with sports authorities to develop a test to detect the drugs in athletes. "Researchers at the Salk Institute in San Diego reported that they had found two drugs that did wonders for the athletic endurance of couch potato mice. One drug, known as Aicar, increased the mice's endurance on a treadmill by 44 percent after just four weeks of treatment. A second drug, GW1516, supercharged the mice to a 75 percent increase in endurance but had to be combined with exercise to have any
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 0:00 2nd Aug
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Researches are now able to stop ageing in mice by halting harmful build-up of proteins in the liver.Researches are now able to stop ageing in mice by halting harmful build-up of proteins in the liver.
in Biological Science
via Nine MSN @ 10:00 11th Aug
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BEIJING, July 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Unhappy and want to be happy? A new study says you should get hungry.
in Biological Science
via EView Week @ 16:57 15th Jul
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When our bodies notice we need more calories, levels of a hormone called ghrelin increase. Ghrelin is known to trigger hunger, but new research suggests this may be a side effect of its primary job as a stress-buster.
in Biological Science
via People's Daily Online @ 17:02 15th Jul
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Jun. 29--Clinical trials begin this week at Wake Forest University on a cancer therapy that has completely cured the disease in every mouse tested over the past few years.
in General Science
via Macro World Investor @ 1:14 30th Jun
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Meetings, conferences and incentive rewards, all MICE requirements among the vines at Parehua Martinborough Country Estate’s luxurious accommodation (up to 30 singles or option of twin share) and new The Terrace Room (up to 60 pax) and The Boardroom (15 pax).
in Biological Science
via Scoop @ 5:11 31st Jul
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Such mice block the smell of their urine that can cause miscarriage, besides reactivating the ovulatory cycle.
in Biological Science
via NetIndia123.com @ 5:34 22nd Jul
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Such mice block the smell of their urine that can cause miscarriage, besides reactivating the ovulatory cycle.
in Biological Science
via Webindia123 @ 10:08 21st Jul
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British Conservatives said the Labor party isn't doing enough to keep pests such mice, rats and bedbugs out of National Health Service hospitals.
in Biological Science
via Webindia123 @ 11:42 7th Aug
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Clyde Hodge of the University of Carolina at Chapel Hill and his colleagues found that mice who voluntarily drank moderate amounts of alcohol exhibited depression-like behaviour when the alcohol was withdrawn.
in Biological Science
via New Scientist @ 19:35 16th Jul
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LONDON, Aug. 7 (UPI) -- British Conservatives said the Labor party isn't doing enough to keep pests such mice, rats and bedbugs out of National Health Service hospitals.
in Biological Science
via UPI @ 9:28 7th Aug
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London, July 24 : It’s not just humans who get the blues when they abstain from alcohol, for even mice become depressed and lose brain cells when they stay away from liquor, says a new study.
in Biological Science
via Topnews.in @ 23:59 25th Jul
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NORTH STONINGTON, Conn., Aug. 13 (UPI) -- A pilot whose single-engine Cessna crashed in North Stonington, Conn., said investigators told him the crash was caused by mice aboard the plane.
in Quirky
via UPI @ 20:22 13th Aug
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Mouse mothers-to-be have a remarkable way to protect their unborn pups. Because the smell of a strange male's urine can cause miscarriage and reactivate the ovulatory cycle, pregnant mice prevent the action of such olfactory stimuli by blocking their smell. Researchers from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Monterotondo, Italy, have now revealed the nature of this ability. A surge of the chemical signal dopamine in the main olfactory bulb - one of the key brain areas for olfactory perception -- creates a barrier for male odours, they report in the current issue of Nature Neuroscience.
in Biological Science
via Science Daily @ 6:37 21st Jul
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Mouse mothers-to-be have a remarkable way to protect their unborn pups. Because the smell of a strange male's urine can cause miscarriage and reactivate the ovulatory cycle, pregnant mice prevent the action of such olfactory stimuli by blocking their smell. Researchers from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Monterotondo, Italy, have now revealed the nature of this ability. A surge of the chemical signal dopamine in the main olfactory bulb - one of the key brain areas for olfactory perception – creates a barrier for male odours, they report in the current issue of Nature Neuroscience.
in Biological Science
via PhysOrg.com @ 6:38 21st Jul
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Mouse mothers-to-be have a remarkable way to protect their unborn pups. Because the smell of a strange male's urine can cause miscarriage and reactivate the ovulatory cycle, pregnant mice prevent the action of such olfactory stimuli by blocking their smell. Researchers from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Monterotondo, Italy, have now revealed the nature of this ability. A surge of the chemical signal dopamine in the main olfactory bulb - one of the key brain areas for olfactory perception – creates a barrier for male odours, they report in the current issue of Nature Neuroscience.
in Biological Science
via EurekAlert! @ 18:06 20th Jul
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Clyde Hodge of the University of Carolina at Chapel Hill and his colleagues found that mice who voluntarily drank moderate amounts of alcohol exhibited depression-like behaviour when the alcohol was withdrawn.
in Biological Science
via New Scientist @ 21:44 16th Jul
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The study of dark-skinned mice has led to a surprising finding about a common protein involved in tumor suppression, report researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The results may lead to new treatments for bone marrow failure in humans.
in Biological Science
via PhysOrg.com @ 6:38 21st Jul
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U.S. scientists say they're studying mice that can naturally regenerate cartilage to find ways to improve treatment of damaged human cartilage.
in Biological Science
via Post Chronicle @ 5:09 1st Aug
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U.S. scientists say they're studying mice that can naturally regenerate cartilage to find ways to improve treatment of damaged human cartilage.
in Biological Science
via Webindia123 @ 5:11 1st Aug
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NEW YORK - Talk about an extreme makeover: Scientists have transformed one type of cell into another in living mice, a big step toward the goal of growing replacement tissues to treat a variety of diseases.
in Biological Science
via CNEWS @ 21:59 27th Aug
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STANFORD, Calif. - The study of dark-skinned mice has led to a surprising finding about a common protein involved in tumor suppression, report researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The results may lead to new treatments for bone marrow failure in humans.
in Biological Science
via EurekAlert! @ 3:04 21st Jul
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