Ultimi Articoli

Genetic Forecasting in Embryo Selection: Navigating a New Ethical and Legal Frontier

Genetic Forecasting in Embryo Selection: Navigating a New Ethical and Legal Frontier

30 Marzo 2026

For over forty years, in vitro fertilization (IVF) has been...

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

27 Marzo 2026

Con la campagna Our Future, l'associazione ambientalista presenta la petizione...

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

26 Marzo 2026

Una ricerca pionieristica rivela come la tDCS (stimolazione transcranica a...

Oltre lo Schermo: l’Università di Padova lancia la bussola per la crescita digitale

Oltre lo Schermo: l’Università di Padova lancia la bussola per la crescita digitale

19 Marzo 2026

In un’epoca in cui tablet e smartphone sono diventati compagni...

Foreste europee a rischio: entro il 2100 i danni da eventi estremi potrebbero raddoppiare

Foreste europee a rischio: entro il 2100 i danni da eventi estremi potrebbero raddoppiare

18 Marzo 2026

Un nuovo sguardo sul futuro degli ecosistemi boschiviUn'importante ricerca internazionale...

Global Recycling Day 2026: come trasformare la differenziata in una risorsa per il Pianeta

Global Recycling Day 2026: come trasformare la differenziata in una risorsa per il Pianeta

18 Marzo 2026

In vista della Giornata Mondiale del Riciclo del 18 marzo,...

Marzo 2026
 
Ha un impatto maggiore della mastectomia, ed e' l'aspetto piu' pesante della chemioterapia tanto che per molte donne l'ansia di perdere i capelli non e' accettabile sino al punto di rifiutare le cure o sceglierne di meno efficaci. Le manifestazioni cutanee causate dalla tossicita' delle terapie oncologiche possono avere un impatto molto pesante sulla qualita' della vita dei pazienti. Provocano una estrema varieta' di sintomi fisici ma hanno manifestazioni 'estetiche' che preludono a gravi ripercussioni sulla vita sociale e di relazione, nonche' sulla psiche dei pazienti.
"Di certo l'effetto piu' noto che spaventa il paziente oncologico e' l'alopecia indotta da chemioterapici la cui incidenza ed entita' varia in base al farmaco assunto, con frequenze piu' elevate soprattutto per i taxani, le antracicline e gli agenti alchilanti- spiega la dottoressa Adele Sparavigna Specialista in Dermatologia e Presidente dell'Istituto di ricerche dermatologiche Derming durante la riunione annuale del Board Scientifico Il Corpo Ritrovato a Roma- La chemioterapia, di norma, agisce distruggendo tutte le cellule, sia quelle cancerose che quelle sane. Le cellule normali piu' sensibili all'azione tossica della chemio sono quelle in rapida crescita. Dal momento che le cellule responsabili della crescita dei capelli tendono a dividersi molto rapidamente per riprodursi, esse possono essere frequentemente uccise dalla chemioterapia, causando l'assottigliamento dei capelli e, molto spesso, la caduta totale dei capelli, ovvero l'alopecia da chemioterapia". L'alopecia acuta del cuoio capelluto insorge da 1 a 8 settimane dall'inizio della chemioterapia ed e' di solito reversibile. Casi di alopecia permanente da chemioterapici, sono associati alla somministrazione di busulfano (50% dei pazienti) e radiazioni (correlata alla dose).
Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Ruthenium 106 has been detected by several European networks involved in the monitoring of atmospheric radioactive contamination. Ruthenium 106 is a radionuclide of artificial origin. It is a fission product from the nuclear industry. This radionuclide is also used in the medical field for brachytherapy treatments. The Austrian Ministry of the Environment published Tuesday October 3rd 2017 a statement indicating that it detected small quantities of ruthenium without consequences for environment and health. The Norwegian Nuclear Safety Authority (NRPA) issued a press release also reporting low levels of ruthenium in the atmosphere.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Mercoledì, 04 Ottobre 2017 11:10

UN FARO COSMICO VISIBILE ALL’OCCHIO UMANO

Un team di astronomi ha osservato la prima pulsar al millisecondo capace di emettere impulsi periodici di luce visibile

 

Un team di astronomi della Sapienza e dell’Istituto nazionale di astrofisica (Inaf) ha scoperto una pulsar al millisecondo che emette impulsi periodici, come un potentissimo faro cosmico, non solo nella banda dei raggi X, ma anche nella luce visibile. I risultati, pubblicati sulla rivista Nature Astronomy, sono stati ottenuti grazie all'uso del fotometro ottico ad altissima risoluzione temporale SiFAP (Silicon Fast Astronomical Photometer) ideato e realizzato da Franco Meddi presso il laboratorio del Dipartimento di Fisica della Sapienza, in collaborazione con Filippo Ambrosino e con il contributo degli astrofisici Roberto Nesci e Corinne Rossi. Il fotometro è stato poi montato al Telescopio Nazionale Galileo dell'INAF alle Isole Canarie.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 

One of the dolmens analysed, located in Elvillar (Araba, Basque Country, Spain). In the background, the Cantabria mountain ridge, where the caves included in the study are located (Teresa Fernández-Crespo / UPV/EHU).

 

The journal PLOS ONE has published a piece of research conducted by the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country and the University of Oxford and which reveals the existence of social differences 5,000 years ago A study by the UPV/EHU’s Department of Genetics, Physical Anthropology and Animal Physiology and the School of Archaeology of the University of Oxford has measured stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes of the bones of individuals buried in dolmens and caves; the aim is to establish their diet and thus obtain information on their social structure and type of society in the Rioja Alavesa area during the late Neolithic and early Chalcolithic. The researcher Teresa Fernández-Crespo, lead author of this study, had in a previous piece of work found demographic differences between the people buried in dolmens and those buried in caves: while male adults predominated in the dolmens, children and women were more common in the caves. This funerary variability is common across the continent of Europe, although “it has hardly ever been investigated systematically,” explained the researcher.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Mercoledì, 04 Ottobre 2017 10:58

Improving air quality with soy

 

 

soy beans

 

Air pollution is a major public health issue worldwide. Filters can help improve the quality of the air we breathe, but they also contribute to landfill when they are finished with and thrown away, as they are often made of plastic. Could bio-based filters be the answer? Researchers in the US have developed bio-based air filters that they claim can capture toxic chemicals that current filters can’t. The scientists, at Washington State University (WSU), say that these inexpensive soy filters could lead to better air purification and improve air quality. Air pollution causes an estimated 467,000 premature deaths every year in Europe, according to the European Environment Agency (EEA). The agency’s Air quality in Europe — 2016 report found that 85% of people living in urban areas in the EU are exposed to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) at levels deemed harmful by the World Health Organization (WHO). These tiny particles, which have a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres, are considered some of the most dangerous air pollutants.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Chemists at the University of Basel have been able to show for the first time that anaerobic bacteria can produce the vitamin ergothioneine in the absence of oxygen. This suggests that bacteria were forming this compound even before there was oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere. The vitamin’s function therefore remains a mystery, as it was previously ascribed a role in oxygen-dependent processes.

Ergothioneine is a sulfur-containing vitamin. Whereas bacteria and fungi can produce it themselves, higher organisms rely on absorbing it from food or from the ground. It is suspected that ergothioneine plays an important physiological role in combating oxidative stress in cells. However, its precise role remains unclear. There are currently no known symptoms of its deficiency, which explains why the vitamin has long been overlooked. To gain a better understanding of its function, the group led by Professor Florian Seebeck at the University of Basel’s Department of Chemistry is researching the sequence of chemical reactions by which bacteria produce the vitamin. Scientists have long been aware of an oxygen-dependent reaction pathway in which a key step is the formation of a carbon–sulfur bond using oxygen from the air. Until now, however, studies had only focused on aerobic organisms, which require oxygen in order for their metabolism to operate.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 European bass (Dicentrarchus labrax). Illustration by Citron

 

We may be underestimating the long-term impact of oil spills on fish, particularly their ability to tolerate low oxygen environments, according to research from the University of British Columbia (UBC), the Université de Bretagne Occidentale (UBO) and L'Institut Français de Recherche pour l'Exploitation de la Mer (Ifremer). The new study tested the capacity of European sea bass to perform not just in typical seawater but also in low-oxygen level sea water. Researchers used a novel integrated respiratory assessment paradigm (IRAP) to screen both the fish’s aerobic capacity and tolerance for low-oxygen (hypoxic) levels, grouping the fish into hypoxia tolerant and hypoxia sensitive phenotypic groups. They then exposed the fish to dispersed crude oil for 48 hours. The fish’s performance was retested nearly six months later—much longer than most previous studies – to see if the exposure to oil had residual effects.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 

The Nobel prize in Physics 2017 has been awarded to Rainer Weiss, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Barry C Barish and Kip S Thorne, both of the California Institute of Technology, for their work on constructing the Ligo gravitational wave detector and the amazing record of those waves.The waves, which were predicted by Albert Einstein a hundred years ago, came from a collision between two black holes, more than a thousand million years ago. According to the Nobel committee "The signal was extremely weak when it reached Earth, but is already promising a revolution in astrophysics. Gravitational waves are an entirely new way of observing the most violent events in space and testing the limits of our knowledge." The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) was designed to detect the gravitational waves predicted by Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. The prediction of these waves (GWs), oscillations in the space–time metric that propagate at the speed of light, is one of the most profound differences between Einstein's general theory of relativity and the Newtonian theory of gravity that it replaced.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

According to a research conducted at the University of Jyväskylä, estrogen acts as a regulator of muscle energy metabolism and muscle cell viability. Menopause leads to the cessation of ovarian estrogen production concurrent to the deterioration of muscle function. After menopause, the risk of metabolic diseases also increases. Although a healthy lifestyle does not increase the amount of estrogen in circulation, it reduces risks. The well-known symptoms of menopause include hot flashes, mood swings and other so-called women’s troubles. The consequences of the menopausal withdrawal of estrogen production are, however, broader than commonly assumed. Menopause accelerates the aging changes of many tissues, of which perhaps the most known and well-studied is osteoporosis. The effects of estrogen on skeletal muscles are not yet well known. The study from the University of Jyväskylä discovered that estrogen acts as an upstream regulator for the energy metabolism and viability of muscle cells.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 

Research points to a new model of mental health service delivery that can save therapist time and money.



A stepped care model of treatment for youth with anxiety can be effectively delivered using at least 14% less therapist time than traditional treatment service, reports a study published in the October 2017 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (JAACAP). In today's stretched economy, finding cheaper and more efficient ways to spend our public health dollars is critical. Mental health professionals can now treat young people with anxiety disorders effectively. But professional treatment comes at a cost. Standard, scientifically proven treatments for youth with anxiety usually require 15 to 20 hours of input from a mental health professional. Finding ways to reduce this time but still maintain good outcomes is the next research frontier.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

26 Marzo 2026

Una ricerca pionieristica rivela come la tDCS (stimolazione transcranica a...

Paleontologia

I denti come specchio dell'antica Sumer: dieta, infanzia e società ad Abu Tbeirah

I denti come specchio dell'antica Sumer: dieta, infanzia e società ad Abu Tbeirah

13 Marzo 2026

Un'indagine internazionale coordinata dall'Università La Sapienza di Roma, pubblicata sulla rivista PNAS, ha gettato...

Geografia e Storia

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

15 Dicembre 2025

Un team internazionale ha applicato metodologie analitiche portatili avanzate per esaminare in situ le...

Astronomia e Spazio

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

30 Dicembre 2025

Inaugurato presso l'Università Roma Tre un centro di eccellenza mondiale: studierà...

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

27 Marzo 2026

Con la campagna Our Future, l'associazione ambientalista presenta la petizione "Basta...

 

Scienzaonline con sottotitolo Sciencenew  - Periodico
Autorizzazioni del Tribunale di Roma – diffusioni:
telematica quotidiana 229/2006 del 08/06/2006
mensile per mezzo stampa 293/2003 del 07/07/2003
Scienceonline, Autorizzazione del Tribunale di Roma 228/2006 del 29/05/06
Pubblicato a Roma – Via A. De Viti de Marco, 50 – Direttore Responsabile Guido Donati

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