Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Mouse Study: Inactivity in Obesity May be Tied to Dopamine Receptors and other top stories.

  • Mouse Study: Inactivity in Obesity May be Tied to Dopamine Receptors

    Just in time for New Year’s resolutions, a new study has revealed why so many of us seem to have a hard time sticking to a workout routine — and it’s not just about extra weight. The findings, published in the journal Cell Metabolism, show that in obese mice, physical inactivity results from altered dopamine receptors rather than excess body fat.“We know that physical activity is linked to overall good health, but not much is known about why people or animals with obesity are less active,” said ..
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  • CRISPR Has An Off Switch: Researchers Identify Anti-CRISPR Proteins To Inactivate Gene Editing System

    CRISPR Has An Off Switch: Researchers Identify Anti-CRISPR Proteins To Inactivate Gene Editing System
    There's a way to turn off CRISPR-Cas9 and researchers uncovered it by going over the same bacteria and viruses that led to the gene-editing system's development in the first place. In a study published in the journal Cell, researchers detailed identifying anti-CRISPR proteins produced by bacterial viruses, coming up with a technique that will benefit CRISPR by making clinical and research applications of the gene-editing system safer and more accurate. Many are throwing their hopes behind CRISP..
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  • Keeping pets safe during fireworks holidays

    Keeping pets safe during fireworks holidays
    × Keeping pets safe during fireworks holidays MEMPHIS, Tenn. — We love a holiday, but our pets don’t always share our excitement. Brittany Gilliam, regional manager of Hollywood Feed, had some advice to keep your furry friend safe on the Fourth of July, but it’s also applicable for holidays like New Year’s Eve. 1. Keep pets indoors and in a safe room or a crate. 2. Don’t take pets with you to a fireworks display. 3. Block outside lights and sounds by lowering blinds and turning on the TV at..
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  • Time to rethink the failed war on drugs

    Time to rethink the failed war on drugs
    America finds itself in the midst of what some call an “epidemic,” as tens of thousands of people are losing their lives every year due to overdosing on illicit or prescription drugs, while many more are using, misusing and potentially growing dependent or addicted to such drugs. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 50,000 Americans lost their lives last year to drug overdoses, more than 33,000 of which were attributable to prescription and illicit opioids, whi..
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  • Next anti-porn bill? Measure would let Utahns sue makers of X-rated movies

    Next anti-porn bill? Measure would let Utahns sue makers of X-rated movies
    "Right now porn is available without any warnings and labeling, without any protections online," Weiler said. "This would just open the valve for a cause of action. Let these attorneys go after these cases." If the Legislature passes his proposal, he said, he expects courts to initially reject claims that pornography causes real harm. "But I think, eventually, the tide will turn," he said. Weiler ties his push against such material to the court cases that proved cigarettes caused cancer, and h..
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  • Zika Fears, Opioid Abuse Crisis Top Health News for 2016

    Zika Fears, Opioid Abuse Crisis Top Health News for 2016
    THURSDAY, Dec. 29, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- When news reports first began to emerge of mysterious, severe birth defects in Brazilian newborns, few could have imagined these isolated tragedies would explode into the leading health news story of 2016: the Zika virus.Soon, those few Brazilian cases of microcephaly -- babies born with abnormally small heads and underdeveloped brains -- grew to become thousands. Doctors quickly made the link between maternal infection with mosquito-borne Zika in pre..
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  • 7 ways to fail at your resolutions - Times Herald

    7 ways to fail at your resolutions - Times Herald
    Tiffany Gee Lewis - Deseret News Service It's the week after Christmas — is your pen poised over paper, like mine, itching to write down those New Year's resolutions? Before you do, let's make absolute certain those goals are as unachievable as possible. Don't worry, I'm here to help. I have over 35 years of experience when it comes to unachievable goals. So let's get started, shall we? 1. Goals like elephants First off, you should make huge goals. If you haven't run in a few year..
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  • See what happens to your body in the hours, days, weeks, months and years after you quit smoking

    See what happens to your body in the hours, days, weeks, months and years after you quit smoking
    As the bells ring in 2017, we start to make New Year’s resolutions. And many North East smokers will have taken their last puff of smoke as the clock struck midnight. Quitting smoking is the best thing any smoker can do for their health. It’s a fact that around half of long-term smokers will die from the deadly addiction. We know that “we all die eventually”, but smokers die on average 10 years earlier, and tragically from much more painful and debilitating illnesses, such as lung cancer, heart ..
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  • California's Gigantic Medical-Marijuana Industry Could Be Devastated by an Unlikely Source

    California's Gigantic Medical-Marijuana Industry Could Be Devastated by an Unlikely Source
    Image source: Getty Images. If you support the legalization of marijuana, 2016 didn't give you much to complain about. Last year, residents in four states approved recreational-marijuana ballot initiatives, doubling the total from the end of 2015, while five new states put medical-cannabis laws on their books. By year's end, 28 states and Washington, D.C., had legalized medical pot. And there's more where that came from. We saw two battleground states -- Pennsylvania and Ohio -- introduce and p..
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PHOTOS: Throng Heads To Times Square To Welcome 2017 .Thais Face an Anxious Wait to See How Their New King Will Wield His Power .
North Korean Volcano Provides Rare Chance For Scientific Collaboration .Revitalizing historic African American community in St. Petersburg .

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