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Outcomes of non-operatively treated elbow ulnar in professional baseball players Posted: 13 Jul 2019 07:39 AM PDT Professional baseball players with a low-grade elbow injury that occurs on the humeral side of the elbow have a better chance of returning to throw and returning to play, and a lower risk of ulnar collateral ligament surgery than players who suffered more severe injuries on the ulnar side of the elbow. |
Over-conditioning kills: Non-traumatic fatalities in football is preventable Posted: 13 Jul 2019 07:39 AM PDT Most non-traumatic fatalities among high school and college football athletes do not occur while playing the game of football, but rather during conditioning sessions which are often associated with overexertion or punishment drills required by coaches and team staff, according to new research. |
Coping strategy therapy for family dementia carers works long-term Posted: 11 Jul 2019 05:06 PM PDT A program of therapy and coping strategies for people who care for family members with dementia successfully improves the carers' mental health for at least a six-year follow-up, finds a new study. |
Salt intake in China among highest in the world for the past 4 decades Posted: 11 Jul 2019 05:06 PM PDT Salt intake in China is confirmed to be among the highest in the world, with adults over the past four decades consistently consuming on average above 10g of salt a day, which is more than twice the recommended limit, according to new research. |
Pairing targeted drugs for breast and lung cancer could overcome treatment resistance Posted: 11 Jul 2019 05:06 PM PDT Targeted drugs for breast and lung cancer could be used together to overcome resistance to treatment in several different tumour types, a new study shows. Scientists discovered that when the breast cancer drug palbociclib was combined with the lung cancer drug crizotinib, the two-drug combination was significantly more effective against cancer cells in the laboratory than either drug used on its own. |
Wildfires disrupt important pollination processes by moths and increase extinction risks Posted: 11 Jul 2019 05:06 PM PDT Researchers have shown for the first time the detrimental effect of wildfires on moths and the ecological benefits they provide by transporting pollen, making interacting plant and insect communities more vulnerable to local extinctions. |
Sheaths drive powerful new artificial muscles Posted: 11 Jul 2019 11:13 AM PDT Over the last 15 years, researchers at The University of Texas at Dallas and their international colleagues have invented several types of strong, powerful artificial muscles using materials ranging from high-tech carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to ordinary fishing line. In a new study published July 12, 2019 in the journal Science, the researchers describe their latest advance, called sheath-run artificial muscles, or SRAMs. |
Ancient genomics pinpoint origin and rapid turnover of cattle in the Fertile Crescent Posted: 11 Jul 2019 11:13 AM PDT Ancient DNA has revealed how the prehistory of the Near East's largest domestic animal, the cow, chimes with the emergence of the first complex economies, cities and the rise and fall of the world earliest human empires. |
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