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Latest 麻豆传媒 from: Harvard Medical School

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麻豆传媒: Study Identifies Gut Sensor That Propels Intestines To Move
Released: 24-Mar-2025 11:00 AM EDT
Study Identifies Gut Sensor That Propels Intestines To Move
Harvard Medical School

Research in mice identifies protein responsible for regulating gut movement in response to pressure, exercise, and inflammation. The findings can inform precision-targeted treatments for intestinal inflammation and disorders of gut motility. The results add to a growing body of research showing the nervous and immune systems interact in various organs, including the brain, lungs, and skin.

麻豆传媒: Open-Source AI Matches Top Proprietary Model in Solving Tough Medical Cases
Released: 14-Mar-2025 6:45 PM EDT
Open-Source AI Matches Top Proprietary Model in Solving Tough Medical Cases
Harvard Medical School

Open-source AI model performed on par with leading proprietary AI tool in solving tough medical cases that require complex clinical reasoning. AI can optimize clinicians鈥 performance and help reduce diagnostic errors and delays. Greater competition, more choice in AI diagnostic tools to better serve patients, clinicians, and health care systems.

Released: 19-Feb-2025 11:00 AM EST
How the Brain Balances Risk and Reward in Making Decisions
Harvard Medical School

Research in mice identifies brain circuitry that supports certain reward-based decisions

麻豆传媒: Research Pinpoints Weakness in Lung Cancer鈥檚 Defenses
Released: 10-Feb-2025 10:00 PM EST
Research Pinpoints Weakness in Lung Cancer鈥檚 Defenses
Harvard Medical School

Scientists uncover an enzyme that boosts cancer cell metabolism to fuel growth

Released: 10-Feb-2025 9:00 AM EST
The Science of Love
Harvard Medical School

The article highlights some of the most tantalizing insights that science has gleaned about a behavior that so intensely captivates our collective imagination but continues to defy understanding.

麻豆传媒: Study Finds Three New Safe, Effective Ways To Treat Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
Released: 29-Jan-2025 5:00 PM EST
Study Finds Three New Safe, Effective Ways To Treat Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
Harvard Medical School

鈥 Study finds three new safe and effective drug regimens to fight multidrug-resistant TB 鈥 The treatments, which include recently discovered TB drugs, give new options for shorter, personalized treatment and are cleared for use for more people than ever

麻豆传媒: Special Class of Immune Cells Found To Safeguard Brain Health, Memory Formation
Released: 28-Jan-2025 10:00 AM EST
Special Class of Immune Cells Found To Safeguard Brain Health, Memory Formation
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School research reveals highly specialized regulatory T cells that curb inflammation and act as gatekeepers to protect the inner regions of the brain.

Released: 20-Jan-2025 11:00 AM EST
Scientists Uncover Structure of Critical Component in Deadly Nipah Virus
Harvard Medical School

Researchers have profiled the molecular structure and features of a key part of the deadly Nipah virus. Experiments in cells showed how changes in the viral polymerase 鈥 a protein involved in viral replication 鈥 can alter the virus鈥檚 ability to make copies of itself and infect cells. Further analysis revealed parts of the Nipah virus polymerase that may render the pathogen susceptible to drugs.

Released: 2-Jan-2025 5:00 AM EST
How Good Are AI Doctors at Medical Conversations?
Harvard Medical School

Researchers design a new way to more reliably evaluate AI models鈥 ability to make clinical decisions in realistic scenarios that closely mimic real-life interactions. The analysis finds that large-language models excel at making diagnoses from exam-style questions but struggle to do so from conversational notes. The researchers propose set of guidelines to optimize AI tools鈥 performance and align them with real-world practice before integrating them into the clinic.

麻豆传媒: How Sound and Vibration Converge in the Brain to Enhance Sensory Experience
Released: 18-Dec-2024 11:00 AM EST
How Sound and Vibration Converge in the Brain to Enhance Sensory Experience
Harvard Medical School

Study in mice reveals high-frequency mechanical vibrations detected by nerve endings on the skin are processed in a brain region deemed to be involved primarily in sound perception. Neurons in this brain region respond more strongly to sound and mechanical vibrations combined than to either one alone, resulting in an enhanced sensory experience.

麻豆传媒: How HIV Research Reshaped Modern Medicine
Released: 29-Nov-2024 9:00 AM EST
How HIV Research Reshaped Modern Medicine
Harvard Medical School

Decades of scientific work turned the tide on a fatal disease and yielded insights into immunity, vaccines, and more

麻豆传媒: How Cells Get Used to the Familiar
Released: 19-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST
How Cells Get Used to the Familiar
Harvard Medical School

Up until recently, habituation 鈥 a simple form of learning 鈥 was deemed the exclusive domain of complex organisms with brains and nervous systems, such as worms, insects, birds, and mammals. But a new study, published Nov. 19 in Current Biology, offers compelling evidence that even tiny single-cell creatures such as ciliates and amoebae, as well as the cells in our own bodies, could exhibit habituation akin to that seen in more complex organisms with brains.

麻豆传媒: Study Sheds Light on How BRCA1 Gene Mutations Fuel Breast Cancer
Released: 11-Nov-2024 6:00 PM EST
Study Sheds Light on How BRCA1 Gene Mutations Fuel Breast Cancer
Harvard Medical School

At a glance: A new study in mice explains how even a single faulty copy of the BRCA1 gene can fuel tumor growth. The findings suggest the dominant 鈥渢wo-hit鈥 hypothesis of cancer development may not tell the full story behind how cancer arises. Study identifies cellular changes that prime cancer-related genes for action and render cells vulnerable to tumor growth. The findings can inform new treatments that block the priming effect to prevent breast cancer formation.

Released: 7-Nov-2024 3:45 PM EST
Ancient DNA Challenges Stories Told About Pompeii Victims
Harvard Medical School

An international team led by scientists at Harvard Medical School, the University of Florence, and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology analyzed DNA from the remains of five people who died in the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 CE and were cast in plaster nearly two millennia later. Researchers retrieved the DNA in conjunction with the Archaeological Park of Pompeii during restoration of 86 damaged casts in 2015.

麻豆传媒:Video Embedded challenging-current-understanding-study-reveals-rapid-release-of-dopamine-not-needed-for-initiating-movement
VIDEO
Released: 16-Oct-2024 11:00 AM EDT
Challenging Current Understanding, Study Reveals Rapid Release of Dopamine Not Needed for Initiating Movement
Harvard Medical School

At a glance: Study in mice reveals rapid release of dopamine is not needed for initiating movement but is important for activities related to reward-seeking and motivation. The findings help explain why the widely used Parkinson鈥檚 drug levodopa improves movement-related symptoms but often fails to ameliorate some cognitive ones. The work may inform the development of new therapies that restore both slow and fast dopamine action to treat multiple symptoms.

麻豆传媒: Researchers Harness AI to Repurpose Existing Drugs for Treatment of Rare Diseases
Released: 25-Sep-2024 5:00 AM EDT
Researchers Harness AI to Repurpose Existing Drugs for Treatment of Rare Diseases
Harvard Medical School

New AI model identifies possible therapies from existing medicines for thousands of diseases, including rare ones with no current treatments. The AI tool generates new insights on its own, applies them to conditions it was not trained for, and offers explanations for its predictions.

Released: 17-Sep-2024 8:05 PM EDT
Studies Deepen Understanding of LGBTQ Health Disparities
Harvard Medical School

Three new studies pinpoint challenges and opportunities for closing health disparities for LGBTQ+ people, showing how the convergence of political and social environments, structural inequities, and implicit and explicit bias within the medical system erode LGBTQ+ well-being.

麻豆传媒:Video Embedded a-new-artificial-intelligence-tool-for-cancer
VIDEO
Released: 4-Sep-2024 11:00 AM EDT
A New Artificial Intelligence Tool for Cancer
Harvard Medical School

The new approach marks a major step forward in the design of AI tools to support clinical decisions in cancer diagnosis, therapy. The model uses features of a tumor鈥檚 microenvironment to forecast how a patient might respond to therapy and to help inform individualized treatments.

麻豆传媒: Deadly Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Is a Familiar But Formidable Foe
Released: 29-Aug-2024 12:30 PM EDT
Deadly Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Is a Familiar But Formidable Foe
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School virologist Jonathan Abraham has studied EEE virus in detail. In research published in Nature in 2022 and 2024, Abraham and team mapped the structure and behavior of the cell receptors 鈥 the entryways on the surfaces of cells 鈥 that allow EEE virus and similar viruses to infect their hosts and cause mischief.

麻豆传媒: What Enables Herpes Simplex Virus To Become Impervious to Drugs?锘
Released: 27-Aug-2024 11:00 AM EDT
What Enables Herpes Simplex Virus To Become Impervious to Drugs?锘
Harvard Medical School

At a glance: New research explains how herpes simplex virus can develop resistance to antiviral medicines. Study shows that movements in specific parts of a protein that enable viral replication can alter susceptibility to drugs The findings answer long-standing questions about viral drug resistance and can inform new approaches to designing more effective therapies.



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