ScienceDaily: Top News |
- New processing technology converts used packing peanuts to battery components
- Air pollutants could boost potency of common airborne allergens
- Special microbes make anti-obesity molecule in the gut
- Chlorine use in sewage treatment could promote antibiotic resistance
- Opossum-based antidote to venom from snake bites could save thousands of lives
- Molecule from plants could make our roads and roofs 'greener'
- Vitamin D may keep low-grade prostate cancer from becoming aggressive
- Regaining normal sexual functioning is 'rare' after prostate operations
New processing technology converts used packing peanuts to battery components Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:03 AM PDT |
Air pollutants could boost potency of common airborne allergens Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:02 AM PDT A pair of air pollutants linked to climate change could also be major contributors to the unparalleled rise in the number of people sneezing, sniffling and wheezing during allergy season. The gases, nitrogen dioxide and ground-level ozone, appear to provoke chemical changes in certain airborne allergens that may increase their potency. That, in combination with changes in global climate could help explain why allergies are becoming more common. |
Special microbes make anti-obesity molecule in the gut Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:02 AM PDT Microbes may just be the next diet craze. Researchers have programmed bacteria to generate a molecule that, through normal metabolism, becomes a hunger-suppressing lipid. Mice that drank water laced with the programmed bacteria ate less, had lower body fat and staved off diabetes -- even when fed a high-fat diet -- offering a potential weight-loss strategy for humans. |
Chlorine use in sewage treatment could promote antibiotic resistance Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:02 AM PDT Chlorine, a disinfectant used in most wastewater treatment plants, may be failing to eliminate pharmaceuticals from wastes. As a result, trace levels get discharged from the treatment plants into waterways. Now, scientists are reporting that chlorine treatment may encourage the formation of new, unknown antibiotics that could enter the environment, potentially contributing to the problem of antibiotic resistance. |
Opossum-based antidote to venom from snake bites could save thousands of lives Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:02 AM PDT |
Molecule from plants could make our roads and roofs 'greener' Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:01 AM PDT |
Vitamin D may keep low-grade prostate cancer from becoming aggressive Posted: 22 Mar 2015 05:01 AM PDT |
Regaining normal sexual functioning is 'rare' after prostate operations Posted: 21 Mar 2015 04:55 PM PDT |
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