 |

|
 |
|
 |
Last Updated: Nov 1, 2009 - 11:48:48 PM |
Latest Research
:
Haematology
:
Thalassemias
Alpha-Thalassemia and Protection from Malaria
Over the course of human history, hundreds of thousands of genetic mutations have arisen in the global population. The most harmful ones usually disappearby affecting an individual's fitness, i. e., the ability to reproduce, the mutations are lost before carriers can pass them on to their childrenwhereas most mutations are maintained in the population in low frequencies. Some mutations, however, can give the carrier such a large survival advantage that the mutations become positively selected for, leading to their presence in high frequencies in some populations.
Apr 21, 2006 - 12:36:37 AM
|
Latest Research
:
Haematology
:
Thalassemias
MBD2 Protein mediates silencing of the fetal gamma-globin gene through DNA methylation
Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center researchers have identified the role of a protein in hemoglobin gene silencing that may one day be a potential target for the treatment of genetic blood disorders like sickle-cell anemia and beta-thalassemia on the molecular level.
Apr 11, 2006 - 10:41:37 PM
|
<< prev
next >>
|
|
 |
 |
Health |
Best way to boost adult immunizations is through office-based action, study finds
|
'Pep talk' can revive immune cells exhausted by chronic viral infection
|
Burning more sugar drives super athleticism
|
Research aims to prevent obesity by reaching parents, young children through child care
|
AMD-like lesions delayed in mice fed lower glycemic index diet
|
Low vitamin C levels may raise heart failure patients' risk
|
Sugar-sweetened beverages may increase cardiovascular risk in women
|
Study finds shifting disease burden following universal Hib vaccination
|
UT study: Climate change affects ants and biodiversity
|
Dirt prevents allergy
|
 | Healthcare |
Fitness club memberships help insurance plans to enrol healthier patients
|
Anxiety disorders mount since credit crunch
|
Doctors diagnose patients within moments of meeting
|
Physician-defined patient complexity differs from current diagnosis-based measures
|
Free health screening for school children Nov 14
|
Systematic bias in the assessment of UK doctors
|
White children far more likely to receive CT scans than Hispanic, African-American children
|
Suspected brain disease kills 51 kids in Bihar
|
New rules for bio-medical waste management in India
|
Delhi hospitals lacking in emergency protocols
|
 | Latest Research |
New device performs better than old for removing blood clots
|
Gene related to fat preferences in humans found
|
Cardiovascular Nursing Spring Meeting
|
The effect of occasional binge drinking on heart disease and mortality among moderate drinkers
|
ORNL, partners earn FLC honor for cookstove technology
|
Clot-busting drugs appear safe for treating 'wake-up' stroke patients
|
Infections in childhood linked to high risk of ischemic stroke
|
Penn State scientists elected to American Geophysical Union
|
Wayne State University project aims to reduce HIV, AIDS among African-Americans
|
Scientists help define structure of exoplanets
|
 | Medical News |
Women delivers baby near lift in Noida hospital
|
Obesity on rise in school children: Study
|
Over 10,000 dengue cases in India this year
|
NRI doctors demands removal of 'tainted' medical council members
|
Watch out for sexually transmitted 'superbug': Expert
|
Panel stresses on infection control in hospitals
|
Healthcare cost up 22 times in rural areas, shows study
|
Superbug exists, but nothing alarming: Walia
|
No power problem at AIIMS: Official
|
40 percent Indians embarrassed to ask for contraceptives
|
 | Special Topics |
Behold India's unfolding democratic revolution
|
Chinese woman cuts open her belly to save surgery cost
|
Improved Sense of Smell Produced Smarter Mammals
|
Two-year-old world's first to have extra DNA strand
|
172,155 kidney stones removed from one patient!
|
'Primodial Soup' theory for origin of life rejected in paper
|
Human species could have killed Neanderthal man
|
History, geography also seem to shape our genome
|
3,000 Kerala medical students to attend inter-college meet
|
Tamil Nadu seeks to control deemed universities
|
 |

|