Human life spans may be limited to a maximum of about 115 years, claim US scientists. Their conclusions, published in the journal Nature, were made by analysing decades of data on human longevity. They said a rare few may live longer, but the odds were so poor you’d have to scour 10,000 planet Earths to…
As tech trickles in, medicine is about to hit warp speed
Digital Trends explores the near future trends in medicine and how what technology did to postal mail, CD music, newspapers and video is coming for medicine next. Now, instead of just puzzling over complex medical questions with our limited human brainpower, we’ve begun enlisting the help of machines to analyze vast amounts of data, recognize…
More Progress in Defeating Alzheimer’s
Alzheimer’s is a terrible disease. If we do not solve its mysteries, 13.5 million Americans are forecast to get the disease by 2050. What is less often talked about, is the impact on the families of the victims. For every person with the sickness, there are family members who suffer along with them, watching their…
Parabiosis: rejuvention by young blood
Read up on how young blood apparently rejuvenates older blood. While interpretations were often simplified and no, young blood can’t make you live forever, there has been a number of findings over the last decade around the power of blood that have significant implications for human health and the ageing process. More at TheLong+Short here:…
CRISPR: Genetic Engineering Will Change Everything Forever
A great video explaining what CRISPR is and how it will change our existence in the near future.
Drug Restores Hair Growth in Patients
Drug Restores Hair Growth in Patients with Alopecia Areata Clinical trial results suggest that JAK inhibitor may be first effective treatment for people with an autoimmune type of hair loss NEW YORK, NY, Sept. 22, 2016—Seventy-five percent of patients with moderate to severe alopecia areata—an autoimmune disease that causes patchy and, less frequently, total hair…
Stem cell therapy helps paralyzed man regain use of arms and hands
The 21-year-old who suffered a cervical spine injury in March gains significant improvement in his motor function at Keck Hospital of USC after a team of doctors injected an experimental dose of 10 million AST-OPC1 cells directly into patient’s cervical spinal cord in early April 2016. Two weeks after surgery, Boesen began to show signs…
Swedish Scientist Seeks To Edit DNA Of Healthy Human Embryos
Breaking Taboo, Swedish Scientist Seeks To Edit DNA Of Healthy Human Embryos A scientist in Sweden has started trying to edit the DNA in healthy human embryos, NPR has learned. The step by the developmental biologist Fredrik Lanner makes him the first researcher known to attempt to modify the genes of healthy human embryos. That…
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative commits to investing $3 billion to cure diseases
The philanthropic initiative founded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, will spend $3 billion over the next decade in an effort to cure and manage all human diseases. The Chan Zuckerberg’s latest effort will begin with a $600 million investment in a project called Biohub, an independent research center located at…
Fighting the aging process at a cellular level
It was about 400 BC when Hippocrates astutely observed that gluttony and early death seemed to go hand in hand. Too much food appeared to ‘extinguish’ life in much the same way as putting too much wood on a fire smothers its flames. If obesity led to disease and death, he thought, then perhaps restraint…
Microsoft will ‘solve’ cancer within 10 years by ‘reprogramming’ diseased cells
Microsoft has vowed to “solve the problem of cancer” within a decade by using ground-breaking computer science to crack the code of diseased cells so they can be reprogrammed back to a healthy state. In a dramatic change of direction for the technology giant, the company has assembled a “small army” of the world’s best…
Mixed messages from Genetically Engineered Crops Study
According to new research from University of Virginia economist Federico Ciliberto, widespread adoption of genetically modified crops has decreased the use of insecticides, but increased the use of weed-killing herbicides as weeds become more resistant. So while less corn-munching critters are present, more chemicals are used to kill the weeds around the crops, chemicals which…