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Released: 30-Apr-2025 6:20 PM EDT
Preclinical Study from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Highlights Innovative Approach to Replacing Brain Cells in the Treatment of Leukodystrophies
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Researchers at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania announced the first ever direct approach to the depletion and replacement of microglia, the native immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS).

Newswise: Hackensack Meridian Health Hospitals Named to Newsweek’s America’s Best Maternity Hospitals 2025
Released: 30-Apr-2025 6:20 PM EDT
Hackensack Meridian Health Hospitals Named to Newsweek’s America’s Best Maternity Hospitals 2025
Hackensack Meridian Health

Hackensack Meridian Health Hospitals named to Newsweek's best maternity hospitals

Newswise: External_PLS_875x500.jpg?itok=skJdZE5R
Released: 30-Apr-2025 5:55 PM EDT
Nuclear Chemistry Research Gets an Efficiency Boost
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Heavy actinides — elements at the bottom of the periodic table, after plutonium — are radioactive, rare and chemically complex, making them notoriously difficult to study.

Newswise: Gene Therapy Restores Immune Function and Extends Lives of Children with Rare Immune Disorder
25-Apr-2025 6:15 PM EDT
Gene Therapy Restores Immune Function and Extends Lives of Children with Rare Immune Disorder
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Two years after receiving an investigational gene therapy as part of a clinical trial co-led by UCLA’s Dr. Donald Kohn, nine children born with a life-threatening immune disorder are living free of disease symptoms.

24-Apr-2025 9:10 PM EDT
Does Your Biological Age Affect Your Risk of Dementia?
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

People whose biological age is higher than their chronological age may be more likely to develop dementia than people whose biological age matches or is lower than their chronological age, according to a study published on April 30, 2025, online in NeurologyÂŽ, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Newswise: 043025-bes-semiconductor.jpg?itok=PA1OVgXJ
Release date: 30-Apr-2025 3:55 PM EDT
Semiconductor Takes an Unconventional Path from Insulator to Metal
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Scientists have discovered that Mn3Si2Te6 changes from an insulator to an electrically conductive metal when exposed to a magnetic field. In Mn3Si2Te6, applying a magnetic field causes a weak metallic state with trapped electrical changes to form in the material. This study examined the processes that cause this behavior.

Release date: 30-Apr-2025 2:50 PM EDT
Inside the latest research advancements to help combat brain cancer
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Here’s a look at some of the most recent discoveries that are helping to advance more effective and targeted treatment strategies for glioblastoma and other aggressive brain cancers.

Release date: 30-Apr-2025 2:30 PM EDT
More men with prostate cancer are avoiding unnecessary surgery
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

In a study, published in JAMA Oncology, researchers at University of Michigan showed that the proportion of patients undergoing prostatectomy for the lowest-risk type of cancer dropped over fivefold between 2010 to 2024. They concluded that efforts to increase active surveillance and improved diagnostic methods have helped more men avoid unnecessary surgery.

Newswise: ‘Scratching’ More Than the Ocean’s Surface to Map Global Microplastic Movement
Release date: 30-Apr-2025 2:15 PM EDT
‘Scratching’ More Than the Ocean’s Surface to Map Global Microplastic Movement
Florida Atlantic University

An international team of scientists has moved beyond just “scratching the surface,” to understand how microplastics move through and impact the global ocean. For the first time, scientists have mapped microplastic distribution from the surface to the deep sea at a global scale – revealing not only where plastics accumulate, but how they infiltrate critical ocean systems.

Release date: 30-Apr-2025 2:05 PM EDT
From lab to sight: How new retina research is changing lives
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

Salt Lake City, Utah — From May 4 - 8, more than 8,000 scientists will gather at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology’s (ARVO) 2025 Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah, to share the latest discoveries in eye and vision research. Many studies being presented focus on the retina, the light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye that captures the images people see and sends signals to the brain so that people can see and understand the world around them.


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