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Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 1868

May 6, 2019

A pill to turn back time

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

AM I Wrong for wondering about Metformin and its true benefits against the Senesonic-Sensonic pandemic Plague mankind has called aging??? Metformin has been in use truly since the 1920’s and we have not found today an elderly person who is living 125 or 150 years who states they merely took metformin for diabetes??? Now Met has proven itself as a resistant against diabetes due to preventing the liver from making to much glucose that then enters the body. But is it a Longevity drug for mankind is the burning question??? You be the Judge… {I found this link on Antonei Benjamin Csoka group page on the book of faces} Respect r.p.berry & AEWR wherein we have found the causes and a cure for the Pandemic plague mankind has called aging… https://we search for partners and investors to join us in agings end…


Does it make sense to treat ageing as a disease?


May 6, 2019

Bone Marrow Transplants Increase Healthy Lifespan in Mice

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Stem cell transplants have been of great interest to aging researchers, and, in a new study, they have successfully increased mouse lifespan by using stem cell therapy. While this has been previously achieved, this experiment was more refined than older studies and sheds new light on the potential of tissue regeneration through stem cells.

The significant extension of maximum lifespan could be considered an indication that any intervention is targeting a core hallmark of aging or, in the case of small increases of lifespan, at least indirectly influencing it.

Through bone marrow transplants, the researchers have significantly increased the lifespans of mice and believe that they are directly targeting an aging process directly [1]. Given that stem cell exhaustion is a hallmark of aging, they are likely correct.

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May 6, 2019

Dataset bridges human vision and machine learning

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, robotics/AI

Neuroscience, computer vision collaborate to better understand visual information processing PITTSBURGH—Neuroscientists and computer vision scientists say a new dataset of unprecedented size — comprising brain scans of four volunteers who each viewed 5,000 images — will help researchers better understand how the brain processes images. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Fordham University, reporting today in the journal Scientific Data, said acquiring functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans at this scale presented unique challenges. Each volunteer participated in 20 or more hours of MRI scanning, challenging both their perseverance and the experimenters’ ability to coordinate across scanning sessions. The extreme.


May 6, 2019

Staying Healthy Longer in Space

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, space

Spaceflight — in addition to being awesome — causes significant changes in the human immune system. We are careful with our astronauts so they don’t get sick during spaceflight, but we need to ensure their immune systems are strong when they start embarking on longer trips. Learn about the latest International Space Station research: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/rr-…y-in-space

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May 5, 2019

Eye Doctor Shares Graphic Photos to Warn Against Sleeping in Contacts

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

It might be tempting to not take your contacts off before bed, however, graphic images of an eye ulcer that formed when someone slept with their soft lenses might make you think twice about it.

Patrick Vollmer, an eye doctor who works at the Vita Eye Clinic in Shelby, North Carolina, posted stomach-churning photos of a patient he recently treated, who had a cultured pseudomonas ulcer from wearing their contacts when they slept, The New York Post reported. Vollmer shared the graphic images on Facebook and urged people to think about the harmful consequences of sleeping with contacts.

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May 5, 2019

Podcast: Preserving Organs for the Future

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

Organ preservation could be an effective therapy for end-stage organ failure, says Sebastian Giwa, the Chairman and CEO of the Organ Preservation Alliance, a non-profit organization focused on advancing organ preservation. Giwa discusses the challenges and strategies related to organ preservation.

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May 5, 2019

Stanford Scientist Says in-Ear Gadgets Will Be Able to Monitor Our Brains

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Personal gadgets known as “hearables,” which communicate with the neural signals passing through our ears in order to monitor and interact with our brains, are on their way.

Hearables could help us focus on specific conversations, like smart hearing aids, or monitor our brain activity to treat tinnitus. That’s according to Poppy Crum, the Stanford University neuroscientist and chief scientist at Dolby Laboratories who coined the term, who recently wrote about the concept in IEEE Spectrum.

The emerging tech stands to blur the lines between artificial and biological intelligence, Crum argues — augmenting our thought processes and collaborating with our brains.

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May 5, 2019

Scientists Successfully 3D Print an Organ That Mimics Lungs

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical

This revolutionary model could have a major impact on organ donations.

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May 5, 2019

The Bitcoiners Who Want to Defeat Death

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, life extension

As he sits stroking his Rip Van Winkle-worthy beard, it’s easy to see how de Grey’s achieved this “kind of a spiritual leader-status,” as he calls it. He dives easily into intricate explanations of two research projects unfolding in the lab down the hall, eagerly describing how one studies mitochondrial mutations, which are thought to cause an increase in oxidative stress. The other looks at atherosclerosis, the narrowing and hardening of artery walls. If we understood more about this buildup, the logic goes, we could better clean it up before too much damage is done.

Though he attends lab meetings and oversees the SENS’s research, his primary task is convincing the general public that death is, in fact, bad and that we should be doing everything we can to stop it. This focus on messaging suits him just fine. “I’m not in this to do science for the sake of doing science,” he says. “I’m in it for the ultimate goal.” He does a “ridiculous” amount of media, he says, and gives around 50 talks a year, from Vietnam to the Czech Republic.

Back in April, at a San Francisco blockchain conference called Block 2 the Future, de Grey began his talk with a disclaimer: “I probably ought to start by emphasizing that I don’t know fuck-all about cryptocurrencies. I am really only here because I have apparently quite a significant fan base in this community, and I am delighted that I do.”

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May 4, 2019

A novel technique that uses quantum light to measure temperature at the nanoscale

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

Being able to measure, and monitor, temperatures and temperature changes at miniscule scales—inside a cell or in micro and nano-electronic components—has the potential to impact many areas of research from disease detection to a major challenge of modern computation and communication technologies, how to measure scalability and performance in electronic components.

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