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Mercredi 18 Juin 2008 - 09:28 - 6 mois, 3 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse généraliste  -  Nouvel Observateur Sciences
Le site MusicMe propose, depuis hier, l’écoute en ligne d’un large choix de titres ainsi qu’une offre de téléchargement illimité moyennant un abonnement mensuel de 9,90 euros par mois.
HPV Vaccine Deemed Safe and Effective, Despite Reports of Adverse Events
Samedi 09 Août 2008 - 06:38 - 5 mois depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Medscape hematology oncology
Questions over the safety of the human papillomavirus vaccine have been raised by consumers, parents, healthcare professionals, and others. But having analyzed the available data, the CDC and FDA offer reassurance. Medscape Medical News
The Last Hours of Living: Practical Advice for Clinicians
Vendredi 08 Août 2008 - 09:00 - 5 mois depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Medscape hematology oncology
Clinical concerns in the last hours of living include managing feeding and hydration, changes in consciousness, delirium, pain, breathlessness, and secretions. Learn what to expect and what to do. Medscape Nurses
Should Patients With Colorectal Cancer and Nonresectable Liver Metastasis Have Surgery?
Vendredi 08 Août 2008 - 11:58 - 5 mois depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Medscape hematology oncology
Commentary on a study on whether surgery is justified for CRC and nonresectable liver metastasis, published April 2008 in the Archives of Surgery. Medscape General Surgery
A Deadline on Malaria (Extended version) [Scientific American Magazine]
Mercredi 25 Juin 2008 - 04:00 - 6 mois, 2 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Scientific American
Editor's Note: This is an extended version of the "Sustainable Developments" column from the July Issue of Scientific American.In a dramatic call to action in April, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon--backed by the African Union, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation, ExxonMobil, the World Bank, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, among other key international organizations and businesses--set a timetable for comprehensive malaria control in Africa by the end of 2010. Ki-moon has listened to the best science, weighed the recent evidence, and thrown down the gauntlet: there is no reason why a million or more children should die every year of a largely preventable and wholly treatable disease. Now we have a global timetable and a coalition to end the scourge. [More]
La fièvre catarrhale de retour dans l'Orne - maville.com
Mardi 29 Juillet 2008 - 20:13 - 5 mois, 1 semaine depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse généraliste  -  Google santé france
Arnaud Delafosse, directeur du Groupement de défense sanitaire de l'Orne, indique sur une carte la progression de la maladie. Elle arrive en Basse-Normandie par le Nord et le Sud-Est. C'était malheureusement prévu. La fièvre catarrhale revient avec la ...
Just Smelling Coffee Helps Head [60-Second Science]
Mardi 24 Juin 2008 - 22:01 - 6 mois, 2 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Scientific American
[The following is an exact transcript of this podcast.]That morning coffee is just the thing to get the brain in gear and the body moving. But it turns out that just the aroma of coffee also gets some of our genes up and at ‘em. That’s according to research in the June 25th issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. The authors report that a sniff of coffee turns on several genes in the brain in ways that help diminish the impact of sleep deprivation. In rats, at least.  [More]
Is Animal Assisted Therapy Really the Cat's Meow? [Scientific American Mind]
Jeudi 19 Juin 2008 - 07:45 - 6 mois, 3 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Scientific American
In 1857 British novelist George Eliot wrote, “Animals are such agreeable friends. They ask no questions and they pass no criticism.” So it is no surprise that scholars have long been intrigued by the possibility that animals possess largely untapped therapeutic powers. But are animals good for our psychological and physical health, either as pets or as “therapists”?Most Americans are animal lovers; about 63 percent of U.S. households contain one or more pets, according to the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association. Several, but not all, studies suggest that those of us who own pets tend to be somewhat happier than those of us who do not. In addition, research by Erika Friedmann and her colleagues at the University of Maryland School of Nurs­ing shows that pet ownership predicts one-year survival rates among victims of heart attacks. [More]
Patient, Heal Thyself: Body's Own Immune Cells Whack Late-Stage Tumor [News]
Mercredi 18 Juin 2008 - 17:00 - 6 mois, 3 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Scientific American
In what could be a breakthrough in cancer therapy, researchers report in The New England Journal of Medicine today that they succeeded in bolstering a patient's immune system enough to wipe out late-stage malignant tumors on its own. The scientists say the successful experiment could pave the way for new treatments of advanced cancer that spare patients the side effects of chemotherapy, which kills healthy as well as malignant cells. [More]
Jeremy Nicholson's Gut Instincts: Researching Intestinal Bacteria [Scientific American Magazine]
Lundi 16 Juin 2008 - 22:00 - 6 mois, 3 semaines depuis   - 8  lectures  -  Presse spécialisée  -  Scientific American
Editor's Note: The extended Q&A with Jeremy Nicholson mentioned in the July magazine can be found here. Jeremy Nicholson was only trying to be thorough. It was 1981, and the young biochemist was using a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which can identify chemicals based on the magnetic properties of atomic nuclei. In particular, Nicholson wanted to study how red blood cells absorb cadmium, a metal that causes cancer. Realizing that he would achieve the best results if he could mimic the cells’ natural environment, he added a few drops of blood to the cells and ran the test. [More]

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