The brains high fat content makes it especially vulnerable to free radicals, but these antioxidants may act as shields, says
study author Peter Zandi, PhD, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health.
«The study is important because it definitively shows how drinking impacts employment,» said
study author Peter Bamberger.
«Tens of thousands of patients have been studied and the connections between common medications and the genetic variants that can lead to adverse drug reactions or treatment non-response have been described, but few physicians track this information or even know where to find it,» said
study author Peter H. O'Donnell, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago.
«Our findings suggest new ways of tackling the still - difficult task of working out which patients should receive which drug and how drugs should be combined to maximize therapeutic benefit,» said senior
study author Peter Sorger, the Otto Krayer Professor of Systems Pharmacology and director of the Harvard Program in Therapeutic Science and the Laboratory of Systems Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School.
«Lungs started to appear in fish underwater when they evolved air breathing in response to low oxygen levels in water 350 to 400 million years ago,» says
study author Peter Madsen, a biologist at Aarhus University in Denmark.
Study author Peter Davis, a physicist at the NTT Corporation in Kyoto, Japan, says lasers could add some much - needed chaos to the online world.
Not exact matches
And yet very few of them said yeah, pay me $ 2 and I'd be happy to do word puzzles»cause at least I'll be having fun,»
Peter Ubel, an
author of the
study and a professor of marketing and public policy at Duke University, told NPR.
According to NYU psychologist
Peter Gollwitzer, one of the
authors of the
study, that's not the case.
Emeritus Professor
Peter Moss Thomas Coram Research Unit, Institute of Education, University of London Professor Margaret O'Brien Co-director, Centre for Research on the Child and Family, University of East Anglia Professor Michael Lamb Professor of psychology, fellow and director of
studies, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge University Professor Tina Miller Professor of sociology, Oxford Brookes University Adrienne Burgess Joint chief executive, Fatherhood Institute Susanna Abse Chief executive, Tavistock Centre for Couple Relationships Rebecca Asher
Author, Shattered Duncan Fisher
Author, Baby's Here: Who Does What?
When asked about what sparked the
study,
author Keith Anderson from the University of Montana commented «As a geriatric social work researcher, I've always been interested in finding creative, cost effective ways to improve the lives and well - being of older adults... My co-authors direct the Veterinary Outreach Program, affiliated with The Ohio State University, which provides mobile wellness care for the
pets of older adults and / or homebound residents.
«In our
study, 18F - fluoride
PET / MR provided more diagnostic information at a higher diagnostic certainty compared to 18F - fluoride
PET / CT in patients with foot pain of unclear cause,» states Isabel Rauscher, corresponding
author of the
study.
«It is now time to evaluate how to make the most of satellite and in situ data to help us understand ocean acidification, and to establish where remotely sensed data can make the best contribution,»
Peter Land, lead
author of the new
study and researcher at Plymouth Marine Laboratory, said in a press release accompanying the new
study.
«There is little justification in prescribing an antidepressant that will not work and will only cause side effects,» says Dr. Madhukar Trivedi, senior
author of the JAMA
study and director of the Center for Depression Research and Clinical Care, part of the
Peter O'Donnell Jr..
«Future
studies [are needed] to understand why some babies are born with increased innate immune responsiveness, and ultimately, what can be done to prevent this,» said senior
author Peter Vuillermin, also from the University of Melbourne.
says
Peter Franek first
author of the
study, and researcher at CAGE Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate.
Now ancient DNA has rewritten the evolutionary history of this iconic group,» said first
author Peter Heintzman, who led the
study as a postdoctoral researcher at UC Santa Cruz.
Professor
Peter Jones, Head of the Department of Psychiatry and senior
author of the
study, says: «Inflammation may be a common mechanism that influences both our physical and mental health.
There are four main areas where molecular imaging can have a major impact, according to the
study's lead
author David A. Mankoff, MD, PhD, the Gerd Muehllehner Professor of Radiology and director of the
PET Center at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
«Although the link between traffic - related air pollution and left ventricular hypertrophy, heart failure, and cardiovascular death is established, the effects of traffic - related air pollution on the right ventricle have not been well
studied,» said lead
author Peter Leary, MD, MS, of the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle.
«In no way is the nonsecretor mother's milk less healthy, and their babies are at no greater risk,» said David Mills,
Peter J. Shields Endowed Chair in Dairy Food Science at UC Davis and senior
study author.
Co-first
author Alice Eunjung Lee, PhD, from the lab of
Peter Park, PhD, at the Center for Biomedical Informatics at Harvard Medical School, developed the
study's retrotransposon analysis tool, which detects somatic retrotransposon mutations in single - cell sequencing data.
The
study was funded by the Haywood Rheumatism Research and Development Foundation, and was
authored by John Glossop, Kim Haworth, Nicola Nixon, Jon Packham,
Peter Dawes, Anthony Fryer, Derek Mattey and William Farrell (ISTM / Haywood Rheumatology Centre), together with Richard Emes, Professor of Bioinformatics at the University of Nottingham.
This is the result of a current
study, led by primary
author Peter Ferenci from the University Department of Internal Medicine III at the MedUni Vienna, which has been published in the highly New England Journal of Medicine.
«That big a drop actually reduced the risk levels to those of about 20 years ago,» says
Peter Ravdin of the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, the first
author on that
study.
«It has been a big mystery whether increasing astrocyte reactivity would be beneficial,» said Dr. Meifan Amy Chen, the
study's lead
author and Instructor of Neurology at the
Peter O'Donnell Jr..
Study authors are Anjie Zhen, Mayra Carrillo, Cindy Youn, Brianna Lam, Nelson Chang, Heather Martin, Jonathan Rick, Jennifer Kim, Nick Neel, Valerie Rezek, Masakazu Kamata, Irvin Chen, Jerome Zack, and Scott Kitchen of UCLA; Christopher W. Peterson and Hans -
Peter Kiem of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the University of Washington in Seattle; and Sowmya Somashekar Reddy of the Hutchinson Center.
«Our
study provides further evidence that sleep - disordered breathing negatively affects attention, processing speed and memory, which are robust predictors of cognitive decline,» said senior
study author Susan Redline, MD, MPH,
Peter C. Farrell Professor of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
Noninvasive imaging using
PET and other technologies reduces the number of animals in a
study by permitting the use of animals as their own controls, according to the
authors.
Dr
Peter Campbell, joint lead
author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said: «Our
study shows that in order to catch breast cancer before it spreads, early detection of breast cancer is key, and we provide a good rationale for continuing to improve methods for detecting breast cancer sooner.
«Previous behavioural
studies of decision making do not tell us about the actual events or networks that are responsible for making speed - accuracy adjustments,» says senior
author Peter Brown, Professor of Experimental Neurology at the University of Oxford.
«This is the first research project to investigate if having law enforcement officers equipped with naloxone and trained to refer victims to drug rehabilitation will encourage more people to call 911 and receive treatment,» said
Peter Davidson, PhD, lead
study author and assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine.
«On one occasion, we had access to a large hollow mountain ash tree and found catching ladders and supporting webs of juveniles inside of it, «comments the lead
author of the
study Peter Michalik, Zoological Institute and Museum of the University of Greifswald (Germany), about the unusual bit of luck to have a glimpse into the secluded retreats of the spiders.
«We have not had clear evidence for treatment, so recommendations vary greatly from surgeon - to - surgeon, cardiologist - to - cardiologist and institution - to - institution with perhaps one - third opting for valve repair in addition to CABG,» said
Peter K. Smith, M.D., professor and division chief, Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Duke University School of Medicine, and the
study's primary
author.
«What the
authors of [this
study] did is carefully quantify the incidence of vestibular sensations and their relation to symptoms traditionally labeled «psychiatric,»»
Peter Brugger, a psychologist at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, told Live Science.
The
study's
authors — including
Peter Roopnarine, PhD, of the California Academy of Sciences — say inventive, cutting - edge modeling techniques helped highlight the critical importance of understanding food webs (knowing «who eats what») when trying to predict what communities look like before, during, and after a mass extinction.
First
author of the
study, Dr
Peter Harrison (UCL Genetics, Evolution & Environment), said: «We chose a particular group of birds which differ in how they display male and female traits, and the extent to which males compete for mating.
A new test using peripheral vision reaction time could lead to earlier diagnosis and more effective treatment of mild traumatic brain injury, often referred to as a concussion, according to
Peter J. Bergold, PhD, professor of physiology and pharmacology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and corresponding
author of a
study newly published online by the Journal of Neurotrauma.
«It's like committing suicide by stabbing yourself, shooting yourself and jumping off a building all at the same time,» said Northwestern scientist and lead
study author Marcus
Peter.
Our
study shows that in addition to habitat fragmentation, the addition of human - made structures benefit ravens, whereas some species of raptors like the Ferruginous Hawk have been impacted and limited in nesting areas,» said
study lead
author Peter Coates, an ecologist with the USGS Western Ecological Research Center.
«You can see these results as a cup half empty or a cup half full,» said
Peter Kudenchuk, M.D., a cardiac electrophysiologist and professor of medicine at the University of Washington and the
study's lead
author.
«There are a bewildering numbers of pathways or stimuli that can either trigger EMT or reverse that process,» said
study author Marcus E.
Peter, PhD, professor in the Ben May Department for Cancer Research at the University of Chicago.
Additional
study authors for the three
studies include Wendy London, Tom Monclair,
Peter Ambros, Garrett Brodeur, Andreas Faldum, Barbara Hero, Tomoko Iehara, David Machin, Veronique Mosseri, Thorsten Simon, Victoria Castel, Katherine Matthay, Keith Holmes, Alberto Garaventa, Giovanni Cecchetto, Herve Brisse, Michio Kaneko, Jed Nuchtern, Dietrich von Schweinitz, Rochelle Bagatell, Maja Beck - Popovic, and Yang Zhang.
Title: Amphetamine decreases a2C - adrenoceptor binding of [11C] ORM - 13070 — A
PET study in the primate brain
Author: S. J. Finnema et al..
Title: Sensitivity of [11C] ORM - 13070 to increased extracellular noradrenaline in the CNS - a
PET study in human subjects
Author: J. Lehto et al..
Additional Penn
authors include the
study's senior
author,
Peter L. Abt, and Michael J. Kallan.
The same biochemical pathway the molecule acts on might one day be targeted in humans to improve memory, according to the senior
author of the
study,
Peter Walter, PhD, UCSF professor of biochemistry and biophysics and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
«If the pilot trial is successful, we plan to pursue a larger trial to explore this strategy's potential as a straightforward and cost - effective way to improve the existing therapy for AML and MDS,» said
Peter Jones, Ph.D., D.Sc., co-senior
author of the PNAS
study, chief scientific officer at Van Andel Research Institute (VARI) and co-leader of the Van Andel Research Institute — Stand Up To Cancer (VARI — SU2C) Epigenetics Dream Team.
«No matter how much the customers had or earned, no matter how much debt they had, having a buffer of easily accessible cash was associated with greater happiness,» says
Peter Ruberton, the
study's lead
author and a doctoral candidate in social personality psychology at the University of California, Riverside.
«This was a breakthrough finding that needs to be confirmed by larger
studies,» said co-senior
author Peter R. Carroll, MD, MPH, professor and chair of the UCSF Department of Urology.
Edward Krenzelok, PharmD, director of the Pittsburgh Poison Control Center and Drug Information Center at the University of Pittsburgh (and lead
author of the 1996
study), says that it is possible to become ill by consuming a large amount of the plant — but it's also rare, even in small children and
pets.