Synopsis: 5. medicine & health: Health professionals: Doctor:


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Dr. Thilo Fischer Privatdozent at The chair of Plant Biochemistry and Physiology at LMU and Professor Wilfried Schwab of the Center for Life and Food Sciences Weihenstephan at the Technische Universitã¤t


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Their study was supervised by environmental microbiologist Dr. Sebastian Behrens and geomicrobiologist Professor Andreas Kappler of the Center for Applied Geosciences at the University of TÃ bingen in cooperation with researchers from the University of Hohenheim.


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We think there is incredible potential for a start-up company to develop new repellents based on Dr. Ray's current research said Michael Pazzani the vice chancellor for research and economic development at UCR.


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when we this research was how different nitrogen fertilizer supplements affected the overall soil organic matter composition says Dr. Adam Gillespie a postdoctoral fellow working with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC).


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and/or an antidepressant would help reduce them in men as it does in many women said Mara Vitolins Dr. P. H. professor of public health sciences at Wake Forest Baptist


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and adolescents who are exposed highly to pro-smoking messages are more likely to smoke said Dr. Dina Borzekowski lead author of the Pediatrics study

This study reiterates that more needs to be done to reduce the ability of tobacco companies to market their products to children said co-author Dr. Joanna Cohen director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Global Tobacco Control.


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The discovery in the October edition of the journal Infection and Immunity may inform changes in the ways doctors treat patients.


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Overuse injuries in young people are said definitely preventable Dr. David Martin an orthopedic surgeon at Wake Forest Baptist Medical center.

and many more single-sport athletes said Martin who is director of sports medicine for Wake Forest University athletics and team physician for the Winston-salem Dash minor-league baseball team.

Playing different sports on the other hand is good for young people on multiple levels said Dr. Daryl Rosenbaum who specializes in family medicine and sports medicine at Wake Forest Baptist.

and playing different sports definitely helps with that said Rosenbaum who has been a team physician for the U s. Soccer Federation's under-20

That view is echoed by Dr. Michael Freehill a Wake Forest Baptist orthopedic surgeon who specializes in shoulder injuries and assists as team physician for the Winston-salem Dash.

And it can't be just'Well the doctor says you can only throw so many pitches.'


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but it didn't Dr. Fayock said. Based on work by Doyle T. Hall in 1992 Dr. Fayock has created a model that describes how light is reflected by neutral hydrogen atoms coming from the interstellar medium and drifting through the heliosphere.

Neutral particles from space travel through the electrons and ions in the solar boundary and swap electrons with the plasma inside the boundary to generate another highly energized hydrogen atom called an energetic neutral atom (ENA.

Based on the flux densities Dr. Fayock's model maps out the heliosphere and its features like where the heliopause area is expected to be.

When Voyager data is compared to Dr. Fayock's models there is a close correlation. As the model gets farther from the sun things start to change based on the location of the heliopause he said.

The impact of the work Brian is doing is said significant Dr. Gary Zank heliophysics professor and director of the Center for Space Plasma and Aeronautic Research (CSPAR.

which the Voyager team released recently said Zirnstein whose advisor is Dr. Jacob Heerikhuisen assistant professor of physics and assistant director of CSPAR.

Zirnstein's work sheds a great deal of light on the IBEX measurements said Dr. Zank. Tying together the IBEX global view with the extremely microscopic view of Voyager is very important.

For example NASA's Dr. Fayock says funding is drying up for his Voyager work and he is holding on to the hope that an upcoming UAH graduate student may see value in continuing it.

Taking a momentary break during a hectic day CSPAR Director Dr. Zank indulges a visitor to his office by setting aside mounds of calculation-laden journal proofs he's reading

and humans are extinct this craft could still be out there in orbit Dr. Zank said where it will exist for billions more years.


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#A snack helps reduce cardiovascular risk in obese childrenresearchers at the Universitat de Valã ncia Universitat Politã cnica de Valã ncia (UPV) Doctor Peset University Hospital

and functional value of the snack a study was conducted involving 48 obese children aged 9 to 15 who were being treated at the Department of Paediatrics of the University Hospital Doctor Peset.

and other substances) said Dr. Pilar Codoã er head of the Department of Paediatrics University Hospital Doctor Peset and professor in the Department of Paediatrics at the Universitat de Valã ncia.


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Dr Sue Ward the Senior Research Associate for the project at Lancaster Environment Centre said:

Dr Ward said the study would be of interest and relevance to ecological and climate change scientists and policy makers.


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According to principal investigators Dr Matthew Struebig and Anthony Turner from the University of Kent's Durrell Institute of Conservation Ecology (DICE) these findings challenge a long-held belief that there is limited

Dr Struebig Lecturer in Biological Conservation from DICE explains:''Recent studies have emphasised similar numbers of species living in unlogged

'says Dr Struebig.''For biodiversity simple measures such as setting artificial nest boxes for bats and birds may


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Lead author Dr Louise Matthews Senior Research Fellow in the Institute of Biodiversity Animal health and Comparative Medicine said:


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and effective way without having to resort to a trial-and-error approach says Dr. Ron Scattergood a professor of materials science

and high-temperature alloys for nuclear energy applications says Dr. Mostafa Saber lead author of the study and a postdoctoral research scholar in materials science and engineering at NC State.


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Dr Samik Datta of the WIDER group based at the School of Life sciences at the University of Warwick said:

Dr Datta said: Using just two snapshots of data we have been able to reconstruct this epidemic


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Dr. Dickinson's research currently focuses on how sulforaphane--a naturally occurring compound in broccoli with established chemopreventive properties--could possibly be used to help patients reduce their risk for skin cancer.

What sets Dr. Dickinson's research apart? Instead of eating broccoli to unlock the risk-reduction nutrients she's asking patients to apply small doses of sulforaphane to their skin.

and use of sunscreens we're still seeing far too many cases of skin cancer each year Dr. Dickinson said.

Dr. Dickinson a research assistant professor in the Pharmacology Department at the University of Arizona and a UA Cancer Center member began investigating broccoli's chemopreventive properties

Prior to joining Dr. Bowden's laboratory Dr. Dickinson earned her Phd through the Genetics Graduate Interdisciplinary Program at the UA studying oxidative stress and heart disease.

Under Dr. Bowden's guidance Dr. Dickinson pursued her postdoctoral training and built up an impressive list of credentials in her own right.

As Dr. Bowden transitions into retirement Dr. Dickinson will take over the majority of his lab's ongoing projects including this in depth look into sulforaphane.

I learned so much from working with Dr. Bowden Dr. Dickinson said. He is driven a hypothesis old-school scientist who quietly extracts the best out of everyone around him.

Dr. Dickinson's research shows that sulforaphane is a highly adaptable highly effective agent when it comes to inhibiting cancer-causing pathways (such as the AP-1 protein) while activating chemoprotective genes (such as the Nrf2 gene).

If the research proves to be successful Dr. Dickinson believes this could lead to even more applications for sulforaphane.

if the dosage is measured properly Dr. Dickinson said. We already know that it is very effective in blocking sunburns

and pharmaceutical agents being explored for use in topical prevention of UV-induced skin cancers through the Chemoprevention of Skin cancer Program Project Grant headed by Dr. Bowden and UACC Director David Alberts MD.

Dr. Dickinson's research could potentially lead to a day when parents are instructing their children to not only eat their vegetables


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Benjamin Cheong a doctor in the Department of Radiology St luke's Episcopal Hospital Houston; and research scientist Maria da Graã§a Cabreira-Hansen;


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Marder M d. M p h. of Columbia University college of Physicians and Surgeons New york N y. and colleagues. The Mediterranean diet a diet high in plant foods (e g. fruits nuts legumes


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Dr Dan Bebber from the University of Exeter said: If crop pests continue to march polewards as Earth warms the combined effects of a growing world population


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Dr Bryony Jones also from the UCL Department of Genetics Evolution and Environment and lead author of the paper said:

Dr Jones explained: Ethiopia has been a crossroads of human migrations in the last five thousand years


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PSW Research Wildlife Biologist Dr. Hartwell Welsh and Garth Hodgson examined two species of woodland salamanders across four stages of tree development at Mill Creek--a disturbed


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and other worms of this type acquire resistance to a wide range of anthelmintics#the drugs used to treat worm infections#says Dr James Cotton senior author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.#


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Lead author Dr Ben Krause-Kyora from Christian-Albrechts University in Kiel Germany said: Mesolithic hunter-gatherers definitely had dogs

Co-author Dr Greger Larson from the Department of Archaeology at Durham University added: Humans love novelty and though hunter-gatherers exploited wild boar it would have been hard not to be fascinated by the strange-looking spotted pigs owned by farmers living nearby.


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Dr. Beth Middleton of the U s. Geological Survey National Wetlands Research center and Evelyn Anemaet of Five Rivers Services Inc. discovered a way to simplify the construction of dendrometer bands.


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and Missouri Botanical gardens Dr Chris Stapleton turned his attention to the bamboos of Africa. He found that the features of the mountain bamboos were significantly different to those of Asia


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'This is a whole new approach to plant nutrition says Dr Peter Leggo of the Department of Earth sciences who developed the material.


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According to Dr Matt Heard of CEH: All workers in a bumblebee colony are daughters of a singly-mated queen

because they can devote more energy to reproduction explains Dr Heard. Our findings could help land managers to plan schemes to help conserve bumblebee populations in both agricultural

Dr Claire Carvell the project leader says Ultimately we want to be able to predict which types of landscapes work best for bumblebees

Dr Heard will present the team's findings to INTECOL at Excel London on Thursday 22 august 2013.

He and Dr Carvell are working with Professor Andrew Bourke at the University of East Anglia Dr Seirian Sumner and Dr Stephanie Dreier at the University of Bristol and Dr Jinliang Wang at the Institute


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Dr Claire Spottiswoode from the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology who carried out the research said:

Dr Spottiswoode said: Under these circumstances it makes good sense that honeyguides have a lot to gain from tricking other honeyguides.

and their hosts in Zambia led by Dr Claire Spottiswoode who adds My colleagues and I are very lucky to be helped by a wonderful team of local field assistants who find all the nests we study


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Co-researcher Dr Joram Mwacharo added: Of course it's not only some breeds of chicken that produce blue eggs.


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This new fossil from eastern China is very similar to the Late Jurassic fossil teeth of multituberculates from Portugal in Western europe explained Dr. Luo.


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The research was led by Dr Diana Bell and Dr Kelly Edmunds from UEA's school of Biological sciences.

Dr Bell said: Since 1980 an average of one new infectious disease emerges in humans every eight months--representing a substantial global threat to human health.

Dr Edmunds added: We also showed that adopting the Hazard Analysis of Critical Control Points (HACCP) system


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Author Dr Kathryn Arnold from the University of York's Environment Department said: Previous studies have shown that male blue tits prefer mates that exhibit highly UV-reflectant crown feathers.

Dr Arnold said: With up to 14 chicks to care for blue tit mothers in our study were feeding their broods every couple of minutes.


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Dr Alison Gray and Magnus Peterson of Strathclyde's Department of mathematics and Statistics warn the figures ought to be of major concern

Dr Gray said: This is an extremely high loss rate. In fact the loss rate last winter is the highest we have found

Dr Gray told how bees face many challenges internationally. She said: Honey bees worldwide are having to contend with habitat loss


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Dr Vanessa Adams says that late dry season wildfires in Australia's tropical north generate about 3%of the country's annual greenhouse gas emissions so strategic burning could be an important abatement activity.

and fires can burn up to five times hotter than a native wildfire Dr Adams said. We examined the spatial and financial extent of the threat of gamba grass


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Dr Zhou says that the reason for carrying out this study was because there was no definite evidence to show that the novel virus can transmit person-to-person plus she


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and fish oil use said the study's lead author Dr. Aaron Watson. Supported by another paper published in the Journal of Fisheries

This makes aquaculture completely sustainable said Dr. Allen Place. The pressure on natural fisheries in terms of food fish can be relieved.


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Dr. Alan Fahey a lecturer at the University college Dublin said the gilts were studied during two pregnancies.


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and Dr. Stephanie Spehar from the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh travelled to the East Kalimantan region of Borneo.

and that some populations may frequently come to the ground to travel they still need forests to survive said Dr. Spehar.


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and Dr. Stephanie Spehar from the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh travelled to the East Kalimantan region of Borneo.

and that some populations may frequently come to the ground to travel they still need forests to survive said Dr. Spehar.


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Dr Stefan Kepinski senior lecturer in the University of Leeds'Faculty of Biological sciences and lead author of a paper in the journal Current Biology that gets to the bottom of the mystery said:

Dr Kepinski said: We have found that another growth component--the'anti-gravitropic offset'--counteracts the normal gravitropic growth in these lateral branches.

Dr Kepinski added: You can compare it to the way a tank or paddle steamer is steered.

Dr Kepinski said: The angle of growth of branches is an exceptionally important adaptation because it determines the plant's capacity to capture resource above and below ground.


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Dr Susan Huxtable Director of Intellectual Property Commercialisation at The University of Nottingham believes that the N-Fix technology has significant implications for agriculture she said:


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and behavior such as gustatory perception said Dr. Ying Wang of Arizona State university. She and a team of scientists are behind the experiment titled RNAI-mediated Double Gene Knockdown and Gustatory perception Measurement in Honey Bees.


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The researchers further assumed a 12-month gestation period for North Atlantic right whales similar to that estimated for the closely-related southern right whale (Eubalaena australis) by the South african whale biologist Dr. Peter Best.


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The vets have cared for him with amazing dedication and thoughtfulness especially Dr. Barrell. It's been a wonderful effort on the part of several people:


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and its champions worldwide says Datuk Dr. Choo Yuen May the Director General of the Malaysian Palm oil Board (MPOB) an agency of the Malaysian federal government.

and oil yield explains Dr. Rajinder Singh of the MPOB first author of the Nature paper describing the Shell gene.

Palm oil also has the best energy balance of any commercial product currently used in biofuel applications yielding about 9 times the energy required to produce it according to Dr. Martienssen.


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and then north along the Gulf stream said co-author Dr Wenju Cai. Together with a greenhouse gas-induced southward shift the Indian subtropical ocean gyres towards the Antarctic these processes delay the Indian ocean warming in the models Dr Cai said.

What makes this work fascinating is the fact that human-emitted aerosols have such a large impact on remote ocean temperatures says Mr Cowan.


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and East Africa or the Amazon said co-author Dr. Lauren Coad. However severe ecological changes below the forest canopy driven by hunting are already occurring.

and with them on the future of the forests themselves and all the people who depend on them said Dr. James Deutsch Executive director of WCS's Africa Program.


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The study supported by the Natural Environment Research Council was published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Dr Ed Mitchard of the University of Edinburgh's School of Geosciences who led the study said:


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Dr Ashok K Giri who led the Indian research team added: Although high arsenic in rice is a potential threat to human health there should not be any panic about the consequences particularly as the health risks arise from long-term chronic exposure.


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The new species A. chamrani has its name in honour of Dr. Mostafa Chamran (1932-1981) an Iranian scientist and defence minister.


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and the Verband Deutscher Zoodirektoren Association of German Zoo Directors the Dresden team led by biologists Dr. Raffael Ernst


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Dr Cynthia Mcdonnell who led this study commented Parasitized bees tend to leave the colony earlier to perform foraging activity


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Lead author Dr Amy Bogaard from the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford said:'


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Children's decision making has explained few dimensions Dr. Adam Drewnowski (CQ) director of the Center for Public health Nutrition and professor of epidemiology at the School of Public health University of Washington Seattle.

and are not making food choices based on health said Dr. Jennifer Orlet Fisher an associate professor of public health at Temple University Philadelphia.


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Particle size has bioaccessibility of the energy of the food that is being consumed said Dr. Richard Mattes (CQ) professor of foods and nutrition at Purdue University West Lafayette Ind.

Dr. Roger Clemens (CQ) chief scientific officer of Horn Company of La Mirada Calif. and an adjunct professor of pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences within the USC School of Pharmacy

Dr. Martin Wickham (CQ) director of nutrition at Leatherhead Food Research in the United kingdom also presented an update at the conference session on similar studies in the European union


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Dr Evropi Theodoratou of the University of Edinburgh's School of Molecular Genetic and Population Health Sciences said:


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Herbivory is a fundamental driver of plant diversity explains Dr Sarah Barlow who carried out the work

On the bright side said Dr Barlow the slugs did not like the seedlings of some of the desirable wildflowers such as wood cranesbill rough hawkbit and greater burnet.

Newcastle University's Dr Gordon Port a senior lecturer and an expert in pest management said:


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the Campaign To end Antibiotic Overuse in Animal Agriculture believes that physicians and policymakers have overlooked the critical role played by the ongoing overuse of antibiotics in livestock and poultry.


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Through the use of animal models scientists and doctors are able to perfect techniques drugs and materials without risking human lives.

After the splint was placed the pigs'tracheobronchomalacia symptoms disappeared All of our work is inspired physician Wheeler said.

and despite the aid of a mechanical ventilator he had to be resuscitated daily by doctors.

April and Bryan Gionfriddo believed their son's chance of survival was slim until Marc Nelson a doctor at Akron Children's Hospital in Ohio mentioned researchers from the University of Michigan were testing airway splints similar to those used in Wheeler's study.


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We chose the term'lobes'very carefully says Dr. Dave Mccomas IBEX principal investigator and assistant vice president of the Space science and Engineering Division at Southwest Research Institute.


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Above the large crack the glacier last flowed at a speed of twelve metres per day reports Humbert's colleague Dr. Dana Floricioiu from DLR.


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But as Dr. Bayer notes the health risk of exposure is far less certain than some supporters claimed.

In the argument for smoking bans in parks and on beaches the most striking aspect according to Dr. Bayer is the assertion that just the act of smoking in public poses a threat to the well-being of children

and hospitality industries and of people who invoke threats of Big brother writes Dr. Bayer. While the rules for bans on smoking in public are gaining in popularity

and death in the short term Dr. Bayer and co-author Kathleen E. Bachynski suggest that healthcare policymakers will need to make a stronger case with more conclusive evidence to gain the public trust.

Beach and park bans represent measures that contribute to those goals said Dr. Bayer. Tobacco is the number-one preventable cause of death in the United states


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which allowed Dr. Du to perform electrophysiological experiments with the clone. The team then spent nearly two years to discover the new pyrethroid-binding site she added.


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and carbohydrates for nourishing the newborn baby says Dr. Nommsen-Rivers. Considering that 20 percent of women between 20 and 44 are prediabetic it's conceivable that up to 20 percent of new mothers in the United states are at risk for low milk supply due to insulin dysregulation.

Dr. Nommsen-Rivers and her colleagues were able to use a noninvasive method to capture mammary gland RNA--a chain of molecules that are blueprints for making specified proteins--in samples of human breast milk.

While a drug is not an ideal way to solve the problem of sub-optimal glucose metabolism impairing breastfeeding according to Dr. Nommsen-Rivers it is excellent for establishing proof-of-concept through the use of a placebo controlled randomized clinical trial.

Dr. Nommsen-Rivers began her quest to understand why so many U s. mothers today struggle with low milk supply


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and carbohydrates for nourishing the newborn baby says Dr. Nommsen-Rivers. Considering that 20 percent of women between 20 and 44 are prediabetic it's conceivable that up to 20 percent of new mothers in the United states are at risk for low milk supply due to insulin dysregulation.

Dr. Nommsen-Rivers and her colleagues were able to use a noninvasive method to capture mammary gland RNA--a chain of molecules that are blueprints for making specified proteins--in samples of human breast milk.

While a drug is not an ideal way to solve the problem of sub-optimal glucose metabolism impairing breastfeeding according to Dr. Nommsen-Rivers it is excellent for establishing proof-of-concept through the use of a placebo controlled randomized clinical trial.

Dr. Nommsen-Rivers began her quest to understand why so many U s. mothers today struggle with low milk supply


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The goal of sustainable intensification is to increase food production from existing farmland says the article in the journal's Policy Forum by lead authors Dr Tara Garnett and Professor Charles Godfray from the University

Lead author Dr Tara Garnett from the Food Climate Research Network at the Oxford Martin School said:'

''Sustainability requires consideration of economic environmental and social priorities'added Dr Michael Appleby of the World Society for the Protection of Animals.'


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Six targets proposedthis is why Dr. Marco Steinacher Prof. Fortunat Joos and Prof. Thomas Stocker are proposing a combination of six different specific global and regional climate targets in their work


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The study led by Dr Reinhard Stã ger Associate professor in Epigenetics in the University's School of Biosciences was conducted under field realistic conditions

Dr Stã ger said: Although larvae can still grow and develop in the presence of imidacloprid the stability of the developmental process appears to be compromised.


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Dr. Kim Stackhouse National Cattleman's Beef Association Director of Sustainability said animal agriculture has reduced emissions through the use of technologies.


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but with a mechanism they had never been able to observe according to Dr. Hays Rye Texas A&m Agrilife Research biochemist.


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but with a mechanism they had never been able to observe according to Dr. Hays Rye Texas A&m Agrilife Research biochemist.


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Physicians and scientists from the university and from the California Department of public health found no increase in specific diagnoses that are considered most likely to be associated with pesticide exposure including respiratory gastrointestinal skin eye and neurological conditions.


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According to co-author PSW wildlife biologist Dr. Kathryn Purcell exposure of wildlife to pesticides has been documented widely

By increasing the number of animals that die from supposedly natural causes these pesticides may be tipping the balance of recovery for fishers says Dr. Craig Thompson a PSW wildlife ecologist and the study's lead author.


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According to co-author PSW wildlife biologist Dr. Kathryn Purcell exposure of wildlife to pesticides has been documented widely

By increasing the number of animals that die from supposedly natural causes these pesticides may be tipping the balance of recovery for fishers says Dr. Craig Thompson a PSW wildlife ecologist and the study's lead author.


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Dr Jon Blount from Biosciences at the University of Exeter who led the research said:

Dr Kate Plummer lead author of the paper said: There could be a number of different explanations for our results.


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because most doctors and scientists have thought that it was the fat in and around tissues in the body that caused the health problems.


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