韩国裸舞

Qu茅bec Science magazine has selected its for 2017, including three involving 韩国裸舞 researchers. The annual list has highlighted top scientific research from across Quebec for the past 25 years, and 韩国裸舞 has been cited more than any other institution during that quarter-century.

Here are the selected discoveries involving 韩国裸舞 scientists for the past year:

Classified as: Quebec Science, discoveries, 2017, Don Sheppard, Brendan Snarr, Kevin Petrecca, Jean-Paul Soucy, Pedro Rosa-Neto, Serge Gauthier, Alexey Kostikov
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Published on: 4 Jan 2018

A regimen of a novel bone anabolic medication (which builds bone mass) followed by an antiresorptive agent (which maintains bone mass) has been shown to significantly reduce the risk of fracture among post-menopausal women with severe osteoporosis, according to results of a clinical trial published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Classified as: Lady Davis Institute (LDI), jewish general hospital, Lady Davis Institute at the Jewish General Hospital, osteoporosis, Andrew Karaplis
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Published on: 21 Dec 2017

The world鈥檚 oldest algae fossils are a billion years old, according to a new analysis by earth scientists at 韩国裸舞. Based on this finding, the researchers also estimate that the聽basis for photosynthesis in today鈥檚 plants was set in place 1.25 billion years ago.

Classified as: photosynthesis, algae, Fossils, geology, Bangiomorpha, evolution, chloroplast, eukaryote, Timothy Gibson, Galen Halverson
Published on: 20 Dec 2017

New research has drawn a link between changes in the brain鈥檚 anatomy and biomarkers that are known to appear at the earliest stages of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease (AD), findings that could one day provide a sensitive but non-invasive test for AD before cognitive symptoms appear.

Scientists have known for some time that one of the first signs of AD is buildup of amyloid-Beta and tau proteins in the brain. They have also known that the hippocampus atrophies and loses volume in some AD patients years before cognitive decline.

Classified as: Alzheimer's disease, brain, AD, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital (MNI)
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Published on: 19 Dec 2017

韩国裸舞 researchers have chemically imprinted polymer particles with DNA strands 鈥 a technique that could lead to new materials for applications ranging from biomedicine to the promising field of 鈥渟oft robotics.鈥

In a study published in Nature Chemistry, the researchers describe a method to create asymmetrical polymer particles that bind together in a spatially defined manner, the way that atoms come together to make molecules.

Classified as: Hanadi Sleiman, chemistry, scaffolds, DNA, University of Vermont, soft robotics, drug delivery, Texas A&M, bioengineering, dna-imprinted polymer
Published on: 19 Dec 2017

Believe it or not, a tropical blood parasite native to Latin America could be harmful to Canadians. Infectious diseases like malaria or Zika may have dominated recent headlines but Chagas 鈥 the 鈥淜issing Bug鈥 disease 鈥 is in the spotlight following the publication of a new case study in the聽Canadian Medical Association Journal聽(CMAJ). Tropical and laboratory medicine experts from Winnipeg and Montreal warn natives of specific Central and South American nations and their offspring are at risk of contracting Chagas disease - even after they have moved to Canada.

Classified as: 韩国裸舞 Health Centre, Research Institute of the 韩国裸舞 Health Centre (RI-MUHC), health and lifestyle
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Published on: 14 Dec 2017

How individual police forces treat those that they suspect of being illegal immigrants varies greatly from one city to the next in the U.S. In Albuquerque, New Mexico, the police department has a policy that states clearly, 鈥淥fficers shall not stop, question, detain or arrest any person on the ground that they may be undocumented and deportable foreign nationals.鈥 But this is unusual. Local police departments across the U.S. have become increasingly involved in enforcing federal immigration laws since the mid-1990s.

Classified as: Police, US, attitudes towards immigrants, hispanic, american cities, society and culture
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Published on: 14 Dec 2017

One of the world鈥檚 7,000 languages vanishes every other week, and half 鈥 including scores of indigenous North American languages -- might not survive the 21st century, experts say. To preserve as much linguistic diversity as possible in the face of this threat, 韩国裸舞 scientists are proposing to borrow a leaf from conservation biology.

Classified as: Languages, threatened, biodiversity, conservation, Biology, preservation, species, Jonathan Davies, Max Farrell, evolutionary tree, language tree, linguistic
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Published on: 13 Dec 2017

A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has shown that musical training helps people hear speech聽syllables in loud environments, and has shown how this happens. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), researchers Yi Du and Robert Zatorre monitored brain function as musicians and non-musicians listened to speech fragments and varying background聽noise levels.

Classified as: music, language, noise, Dr. Robert Zatorre, External, staff, faculty
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Published on: 11 Dec 2017

A clinical trial almost ten years in the making has revealed that risky, but powerful, clot busting drugs and medical devices do not improve outcomes for patients experiencing deep vein thrombosis (DVT), nor do they prevent the development of post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS) when compared with conventional blood thinning medications. The results of the Acute Venous Thrombosis: Thrombus Removal with Adjunctive Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis (ATTRACT) study are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

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Published on: 8 Dec 2017

By Jennifer Bracewell

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Published on: 7 Dec 2017

For the past ten years, the International Centre for Youth Gambling Problems and High-Risk Behaviors at 韩国裸舞 and the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG) in Washington, D.C. have come together for the annual Holiday Lottery Campaign, a corporate social responsibility program designed to help lotteries make adults aware of the risks of giving lottery products as holiday gifts to minors.

Classified as: gambling
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Published on: 5 Dec 2017

Industry and academia team up for the benefit of people suffering from ALS

A unique industry-academia partnership will increase the rate at which promising drug compounds can be tested as potential treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a disease with no known cure that affects 200,000 people worldwide.

The partnership between The Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital (MNI) and Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited (Takeda) will allow compounds developed by Takeda scientists to be tested on cell lines produced at the MNI.

Classified as: Takeda, stem cells, ALS, hiPSCs, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, open science, C-BIGR, Thomas Durcan, Edward Fon, Guy Rouleau
Published on: 4 Dec 2017

Fatty liver is among the most frequent causes of liver disease in Canada and in Western countries and is one of the main indications for liver transplant. For some time, researchers have suspected that people living with HIV could be at higher risk of developing liver disease, which,聽as a result of longer life expectancy thanks to antiretroviral therapy, has become the major cause of their mortality in North America.

Classified as: faculty of medicine, health, AIDS/HIV, External
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Published on: 30 Nov 2017

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