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Medical News
13th Jan, 2026
phys.org
Researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have reported the first observation of a dynamic magnetochiral instability in a solid-state material. Their findings, published in Nature Physics, bridge ideas from nuclear and high-energy physics with materials science and condensed matter physics to explain how the interplay between symmetry and magnetism can amplify electromagnetic waves.
A new study shows that resilient and remarkably diverse populations of organisms can persist in the soil despite harsh and extremely dry conditions. An international team led by researchers from the University of Cologne, has examined tiny nematodes in the Chilean Atacama Desert. Along with the polar regions, the Atacama Desert is considered one among the most arid regions in the world.
A new study published in Business Strategy and the Environment, from the University of Eastern Finland offers a fresh perspective on how circular economy startups succeed in developing their business in markets where consumer demand for sustainable products is equivocal, institutional support is lacking and dominant players are slow to adapt.
Once a picturesque garden beneath the sea, some stretches of the Florida Coral Reef have now become graveyards. Unburied coral skeletons stand as haunting remnants of the catastrophic marine heat wave that swept through in the summer of 2023, leading to the total functional collapse of endangered elkhorn and staghorn corals.
Evolutionarily speaking, the ultimate goal of a lifeform is to reproduce and stave off extinction. Many plants and animals have evolved unique tricks to do so. One of these tricks is mimicry, which might be used to trick other species into believing it is dangerous in order to avoid becoming a meal, or to increase the likelihood of reproduction.
Medical Journal
15th Jan, 2026
Sage Journals
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Ahead of Print. Patients in the intensive care unit often develop anion gap metabolic acidosis most commonly from lactic acidosis. Clinicians routinely measure serum lactate levels, but it is not clear if one is able to use the measured serum lactate level to determine … Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Ahead of Print. Patients in the intensive care unit often develop anion gap metabolic acidosis most commonly from lactic acidosis. Clinicians routinely measure serum lactate levels, but it is not clear if one is able to use the measured serum lactate level to determine …
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 165-166, February 2026. This letter responds to the systematic review and meta-analysis by Ryota et al, which examines the safety profile of ECMO cannulation performed by intensivists. The authors report an overall complication rate of 2% per cannula and 5% per patient, with … Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 165-166, February 2026. This letter responds to the systematic review and meta-analysis by Ryota et al, which examines the safety profile of ECMO cannulation performed by intensivists. The authors report an overall complication rate of 2% per cannula and 5% per patient, with …
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 118-127, February 2026. Cardiovascular disease is an increasing risk of morbidity and mortality in cancer patients, related to an growing number of aging survivors with pre-existing cardiovascular disease and the use of traditional and novel cancer therapies with cardiotoxic … Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 118-127, February 2026. Cardiovascular disease is an increasing risk of morbidity and mortality in cancer patients, related to an growing number of aging survivors with pre-existing cardiovascular disease and the use of traditional and novel cancer therapies with cardiotoxic …
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 156-164, February 2026. BackgroundThere is not a consensus in critical care medicine on when arterial catheters are indicated, nor is there evidence that ACs improve patient outcomes. There is wide variability in AC use across PICUs that is independent of illness severity…. Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 41, Issue 2, Page 156-164, February 2026. BackgroundThere is not a consensus in critical care medicine on when arterial catheters are indicated, nor is there evidence that ACs improve patient outcomes. There is wide variability in AC use across PICUs that is independent of illness severity….
PNAS
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificancePrevious work has demonstrated that the proteome of SARS-CoV-2 can potentially be a rich source of AMP-like viral fragments, exemplars of which are associated with severe COVID-like inflammation in vitro and in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that …
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificanceDetermining past changes in the composition of seawater is important as seawater chemistry can be thought of as an integrated record of geological processes that drive the carbon cycle. In addition, seawater major ion chemistry data are …
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificanceIn a paper published in PNAS in 1988, R. Zwanzig introduced a model of diffusion in a rough potential, in which energy roughness reduces the effective diffusivity. Recently, this model has been used in numerous biophysics studies to reconcile …
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificanceThe control of cell numbers is essential to many developmental processes, but it has been relatively understudied. A clear example of this can be seen in heart development. Hearts develop from precursor cells called cardiopharyngeal mesoderm. …
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificanceDuctal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a mammary precursor lesion with no clinical strategy to stratify indolent lesions from those that will become invasive, and the natural history of DCIS progression is unknown. The standard of care includes …
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 123, Issue 2, January 2026. SignificanceThis project addressed the content of gender stereotypes and its relation to the distribution of women and men into social roles in society. The data derived from worldwide public opinion poll data with samples from 1995 and 2023 that …
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