Bugs in boxes are helping University of California, Davis, researcher Alan Hastings improve scientific tools used to predict the spread of invasive plants and animals.
| Biology | September 18, 2009 07:38 PM |
Bugs in boxes are helping University of California, Davis, researcher Alan Hastings improve scientific tools used to predict the spread of invasive plants and animals.
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| Biotechnology | September 18, 2009 07:38 PM |
Many medical conditions, such as chronic pain, cancer and diabetes, require medications that cannot be taken orally, but must be dosed intermittently, on an as-needed basis, over a long period of time. A few delivery techniques have been developed, using an implanted heat source, an implanted electronic chip or other stimuli as an "on-off" switch to release the drugs into the body. But thus far, none of these methods can reliably do all that's needed: repeatedly turn dosing on and off, deliver consistent doses and adjust doses according to the patient's need.
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| Health & Medicine | September 18, 2009 07:38 PM |
A person, usually a child, dies of rabies every 20 minutes. However, only one inoculation may be all it takes for rabies vaccination, according to new research published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases by researchers at the Jefferson Vaccine Center.
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