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Nosespray vaccine using aloe vera has exciting potential, researcher says
09-25-2007 · EurekAlert!Researchers at Texas A&M University are participating in developing a medicine that is worth sneezing about: a treatment for influenza that forms a jelly when sprayed into the nose.
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Keywords: nosespray, vaccine, aloe, vera, exciting, potential, researcher
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- Carnegie Mellon researcher proposes development of artificial cells to fight disease
02-07-2007 · EurekAlert!
Carnegie Mellon University's Philip Leduc predicts the use of artificially created cells could be a potential new therapeutic approach for treating diseases in an ever-changing world.
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- New treatment mechanisms for schizophrenia
01-08-2008 · EurekAlert!
The field of schizophrenia research has come alive with many exciting new potential approaches to treatment. From the introduction of chlorpromazine to the current day, all treatments approved by the US Food and Drug Administration have had, at their core, a single treatment mechanism, the blockade of the dopamine D2 receptor.
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- UC Davis scientists' groundbreaking research: Mate-attracting chemicals
10-27-2006 · EurekAlert!
It's all about "the birds and the bees." And now, "the silkworm moths and the fruit flies."A chemical ecologist and a genetics researcher at the University of California, Davis, have joined forces to trick fruit flies into thinking that silkworm moths are potential mates.Groundbreaking research in the labs of chemical ecologist Walter Leal and genetics researcher Deborah Kimbrell shows that genetically engineered fruit flies responded to the silkworm moth scent of a female.
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- Research holds promise for herpes vaccine
10-13-2006 · EurekAlert!
A study by a Montana State University researcher suggests a new avenue for developing a vaccine against genital herpes and other diseases caused by herpes simplex viruses.
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- Harvesting machine driving mesquite-to-ethanol potential
10-11-2006 · EurekAlert!
Knocking down mesquite hasn't been a problem in the past. Picking it up and getting it off the land has, said a Texas Agricultural Experiment Station researcher. That will change with a new mesquite harvester for use inwood-to-ethanol production, said Dr. Jim Ansley, Experiment Station rangeland ecologist. The only one of these machines in existence was demonstrated at the 2006 Range and Wildlife Field Day on Oct. 5 in Vernon.
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- Transdermal vaccine effective in treating Alzheimer's disease in mouse model
01-22-2007 · EurekAlert!
A novel needle-free vaccine approach was found safe and effective in clearing brain-damaging plaques from mice bred to develop Alzheimer's disease. The transdermal vaccination may offer a simple, noninvasive way of preventing or treating Alzheimer'swith less potential for adverse immune reactions.
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- UCF research links proteins, stem cells and potential Alzheimer's treatment
08-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
UCF researcher finds link between protein and stem cells, which may lead to a new way to treat Alzheimer's disease.
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- Research identifies causes contributing to poor development of over 200 million children worldwide
03-05-2007 · EurekAlert!
Inadequate intellectual stimulation and poor nutrition, especially iodine and iron deficiencies, are likely to blame for hindering more than 200 million children in developing countries from meeting their full potential, says a Purdue University researcher.
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- UT medical researcher determines link between foie gras and disease
06-18-2007 · EurekAlert!
Experimental data published today by University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine researchers shows a potential link between foie gras consumption and amyloid-related dieases such as Alzheimer's, rheumatoid arthritis and adult onset diabetes.
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- Global study concludes 'attack rate' of flu in kids is 55 percent lower with nasal spray vaccine
02-14-2007 · EurekAlert!
A new flu vaccine study led by a Saint Louis University researcher appears today in the New England Journal of Medicine. The study involved thousands of children across the world.
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