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Hopkins-led research team takes gene mutation detection in blood to the next level
    Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center researchers have developed a new technology to overcome the inefficiencies and high error rates common among next-generation sequencing techniques that have previously limited their clinical application.  
  
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The intersection of child poverty with race, immigrant status and environmental threats
    Pediatric Academic Societies 2021 Virtual Meeting plenary session will bring together national experts on child poverty, racism and racial inequities, immigrant health, Native American culture, and environmental threats.  
  
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Addressing the persistent controversies and questions in preterm infant nutrition
    National Institutes for Health and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics recognized the need for evidence-based practice guidelines for very low birth weight infant nutrition.  
  
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New graphite-based sensor technology for wearable medical devices
    Researchers from AMBER and Trinity College Dublin have developed next-generation, graphene-based sensing technology using their innovative G-Putty material. The team's printed sensors are 50 times more sensitive than the industry standard and outperform other comparable nano-enabled sensors in an important metric seen as a game-changer in the industry: flexibility.  
  
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More youth report concussions since 2016, U-M study shows
    Educating athletes, parents and coaches about concussion treatment and prevention has been a priority during the last decade, but are the intended audiences hearing the message?  
  
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Soybean cyst nematode is the most damaging soybean pathogen--and it's rapidly spreading
    The soybean cyst nematode (SCN) is the most damaging pathogen of soybean in the United States and Canada and it is spreading rapidly, according to information compiled by Gregory Tylka and Christopher Marett, nematologists at Iowa State University. SCN was first found in the United States in 1954 and most recent estimates show that SCN results in $1.5 billion in annual yield losses.  
  
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Investigating the role of Brd4 in diet-induced obesity
    A new study, published in JCI insight, looks at how Brd4, a regulator of the innate immune response, influences diet-induced obesity. The researchers believe that Brd4 could be used as a target for obesity and insulin resistance.  
  
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A calculator that predicts risk of lung cancer underperforms in diverse populations
    Research finds that a commonly used risk-prediction model for lung cancer does not accurately identify high-risk Black patients who could benefit from early screening.  
  
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New GSA Bulletin articles published ahead of print in April
    The Geological Society of America regularly publishes articles online ahead of print. For April, GSA Bulletin topics include multiple articles about the dynamics of China and Tibet; the Bell River hypothesis that proposes that an ancestral, transcontinental river occupied much of northern North America during the Cenozoic Era; new findings in the climatic history during one of Earth's coldest periods: The Late Paleozoic Ice Age; and the age an nature of the Chicxulub impact crater.  
  
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The sensitive brain at rest
    You know that raw overwhelm people have been reporting after months of a pandemic, compounded by economic issues and social unrest? Does fatigue and compulsive social media scrolling strike a familiar chord?  
  
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Emergency physicians first to safely treat vaccine-induced blood clot with heparin alternative
    A new case report, detailed in Annals of Emergency Medicine, is the first known case of a patient with VITT (vaccine-induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia) treated with a heparin alternative following the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidance.  
  
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Immunomics: A conversation on the future of diagnostics with Ramy Arnaout
    In Frontiers in Immunology, pathologists outline how the immunome -- all of the genes collectively expressed by an individual's immune cells -- holds the potential to provide researchers and physicians with unprecedented insight into an individual's health.  
  
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With new treatments, PET imaging adds valuable information to brain metastasis monitoring
    For patients with brain metastases, amino acid positron emission tomography (PET) can provide valuable information about the effectiveness of state-of-the-art treatments. When treatment monitoring with contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is unclear, adding 18F-FET PET can help to accurately diagnose recurring brain metastases and reliably assess patient response. This research was published in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine.  
  
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Why does heart scarring cause abnormal rhythms in some people but not others?
    Scientists have shed light on why some people who have a stroke do not also have abnormal heart rhythms, even though their hearts contain similar scar tissue.  
  
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Bringing up baby: A crocodile's changing niche
    New research by University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Lecturer of Earth and Planetary Sciences Stephanie Drumheller sheds light on how ancient giant crocodiles changed their diet as they matured.  
  
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Forty years of nursing science in HIV/AIDS: JANAC marks progress and challenges
    From the very beginning of the AIDS epidemic in 1981, nurses have been at the forefront of patient care, advocacy, and research. But even in the age of antiretroviral therapy and pre-exposure prophylaxis, many challenges remain in reducing the impact of HIV and AIDS, according to the special May/June issue of The Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (JANAC). The official journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care, JANAC is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.  
  
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One step closer to efficient cannabis production
    Micropropagation is a technique used for growing large quantities of new plants from fewer "parent" plants, yielding clones with the same, predictable qualities. The cannabis (Cannabis sativa) industry, however, has been largely left out of this beneficial technique, because this species of plant is extremely difficult to micropropagate.  
  
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Researchers identify potential combination therapy for aggressive lung cancer
    The combination approach uses immune checkpoint inhibitors with ATRA, a safe medication that is widely used to treat leukemia.  
  
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Forest fires drive expansion of savannas in the heart of the Amazon
    Researchers analyzed the effects of wildfires on plant cover and soil quality in the last 40 years. The findings of the study show that the forest is highly vulnerable even in well-conserved areas far from the 'deforestation arc'.  
  
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Population-based study shows air pollution exposure contributes to childhood asthma
    New findings from Ontario have shown that children born in Sarnia have a higher risk of developing asthma compared to neighbouring cities. A research team from Lawson Health Research Institute and Western University, using provincial data from ICES, found that higher air pollution exposure in the first year of life very likely contributed to this higher risk.  
  
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