Non-invasive brain stimulation, combined with cognitive training, could significantly improve symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children, according to new research jointly led by the University of Surrey and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Decades of research have left knowledge gaps about cells that regulate the immune system
Four decades of research have produced a vast pool of knowledge about regulatory T cells, a subset of our immune cells. Even so, scientists at Purdue University and the National Institutes of Health have identified 14 understudied T-reg proteins that merit increased attention for the molecular roles they play in disease onset.
Treating anemia with gene scissors
ETH Zurich molecular biologist Mandy Boontanrart is researching gene therapies that could be used to cure two of the most common types of inherited anemia. She has now developed a promising approach for so-called beta-hemoglobinopathies. The paper is published in the journal eLife.
Q&A: How to tell if symptoms are due to allergies, the common cold, the flu, or COVID-19
Spring and summer have a lot to offer—warmer weather, pretty flowers, and relaxing vacations. For some people, however, they also bring on the dreaded seasonal allergies and the sneezing and sniffling that go with them.
Zambia makes strides in mining investment from Japan
THE Japanese Government has reaffirmed that it is committed to deepening the bilateral cooperation which exists between itself and Zambia in the mining sector. Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) Nishimura Yasutoshi who is a member of the House of representatives under the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in Japan says Zambia’s political dispensation is […]
I TAUGHT M’MEMBE, MUSUMALI A LESSON -KABIMBA
…says he won a defamation case against Fred M’membe after he
was sued for revealing that the Socialist Party leader was receiving funding from organisations that support, promote homosexuality
By NATION REPORTER
WYNTER Kabimba SC has bragged of having taught Fred M’membe and Cosmas Musumali a lesson following the High Court ruling in a case the Socialist Party leader and his deputy had sued him for defamation after an exposé that the defunct Rainbow Party was seeking funding from organisations that support and promote homosexuality.
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Man crushed to death after building collapses on him
By SHARON ZULU
A 23-YEAR-OLD man of Lusaka’s John Howard Township has been crushed to death after an incomplete two-storey building collapsed on him.
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World-first human trial: Experimental hookworm infection led to improvements in type 2 diabetes patients
A world-first human trial at James Cook University using live hookworms to combat diseases such as type 2 diabetes has proven successful—sparking interest in staging a larger-scale international trial.
Graft fight under UPND lost – Changala
By NATION REPORTER
Brenar Changala has asserted that the fight against corruption under the UPND government was lost the day gazette notice number 1123 was signed to move the law enforcement agencies, including the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) to the Office of the President at State House.
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Mimicking the body’s own defenses to destroy enveloped viruses
Just as bacteria can develop antibiotic resistance, viruses can also evade drug treatments. Developing therapies against these microbes is difficult because viruses often mutate or hide themselves within cells. But by mimicking the way the immune system naturally deals with invaders, researchers reporting in ACS Infectious Diseases have developed a “peptoid” antiviral therapy that effectively inactivates three viruses in lab tests. The approach disrupts the microbes by targeting certain lipids in their membranes.