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More Effective Cancer Treatment And The Migration Of Modern Man From Africa To Western Eurasia
The Collaborative Research Centre 806 "Unser Weg nach Europa: Kultur-Umwelt-Interaktion und menschliche Mobilität im Späten Quartär" (Our Road to Europe: Culture-Environment-Interaction and human Mobility in the late Quaternary) will be directed by Professor Dr. JÃørgen of the Department of Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology. This research centre is looking at the mobility of populations in the last 190,000 years. The focus of research will be the journey of modern man from Africa to Western Eurasia and Europe, in particular. Migration processes, and the exchange of ideas, technology and culture that entails, are an important prerequisite for important developments. The centre"s main aim is to research, using scientific and archaeological methods, how human behaviour, the climate and the environment influenced important population movements. The scientists particularly want to examine the impacts that these factors have had on the actions and reactions of populations such as emigration, immigration and adaptation to new environments. Other universities and institutions are also involved the project. These include: the University of Bonn; RWTH Aachen University; Heidelberg University; the University of Duisburg-Essen as well as the Rhineland Regional Council; the Rheinisches Amt fÃør Bodendenkmalpflege (Rheinland Department for the Preservation and Care of Field Monuments) as well as the Neanderthal Museum in Mettmann.
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Psychotherapy Of Depression Changes Biological Parameters?
A group of German investigators demonstrated that the early increase in phosphorylated CREB (pCREB) is related to treatment response and does not depend on pharmacological interventions or brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plasma levels. For the first time, cellular biological markers could be associated with response to psychotherapy.
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Physical Activity In Children Improves Their Sleeping Patterns
A research published ahead of print in the Archives of Disease in Childhood reports that every hour of the day children are inactive adds three minutes to the time it takes them to fall asleep.
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Scientists Working On 3-Minute Prostate Cancer Test

US and UK scientists are developing a test for prostate cancer that uses samples of prostate fluid taken through a needle inserted under local anasthetic and takes less than three minutes to complete. The research is being led by Professor David Parker at Durham University in the UK, whose team, together with scientists from the University of Maryland in the US, are working on a method that measures levels of citrate and lactate in bodily fluids. They published a paper about it recently in Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry. Citrate and lactate are "anions" or negatively charged molecules that are formed during cell metabolism and whose levels change when cancers grow. For example, citrate levels in prostate fluid go down as prostate cancer progresses. Parker said in an interview that these two chemicals are important markers for disease. Parker"s team use the fact that citrate and lactate anions bind to various luminescent europium complexes. Once bound to the complexes, the new compound "glows" with an intensity that depends on how much anion is present. He and his team have worked with other types of responsive complexes before, the lanthonide complexes, and drew on this experience to create the new ones. The researchers then developed calibration curves that related the intensity of luminescence with different levels of anion. This is the core of the test: basically the intensity of the glow shows how much biomarker is present in the sample. To check the test, the scientists compared its results with those of current tests that use enzyme methods to measure levels of citrate and lactate. Although reliable, enzyme methods take much longer, hence the attraction of a faster alternative. Parker and colleagues found that the luminescent test showed similar results to the enzyme test. A Prasanna de Silva, chair of organic chemistry at Queen"s University Belfast, UK, said that the new test was: "A convenient and quick method which provides early warning of prostate cancer which will bring relief to many men." Parker said the test is currently being evaluated for commerical use. "Ultimately this could form the basis of a simple screening procedure that could be carried out in local surgeries up and down the country," he said. However, it is still early days and the researchers still have to prove the test is reliable over a large number of samples. John Neate, chief executive of the Prostate Cancer Charity in the UK also reminded the BBC that the test was an invasive procedure that required a needle to be inserted into the prostate under anasthetic, and it could only give a preliminary diagnosis which would have to be confirmed with another invasive procedure, the biopsy, to see how aggressive the cancer might be, before determining treatment. "The researchers hope to able to refine the test by using samples of seminal fluid which may be easier to obtain. If this was the case, it would be easier to see how this test could take a useful place in clinical practice," said Neate. Men will welcome the new test if it means they don"t have to wait 2 weeks to find out the result like they currently have to with the PSA blood test, which is also unreliable. Prostate cancer affects 34,000 and kills 10,000 men in the UK every year. One of the problems is reliable diagnosis, and current methods sometimes lead to unnecessary treatment, which carries the risk of incontinence and impotence. "A europium luminescence assay of lactate and citrate in biological fluids." Robert Pal, David Parker and Leslie C. Costello. Org. Biomol. Chem., 2009, 7, 1525 DOI: 10.1039/b901251f s: RSC Publishing, BBC News. Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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