GrrlScientist, to SciComm
@GrrlScientist@mstdn.science avatar

The Devil Lost In Details: Tasmanian Devil Cancer Transmission Is NOT Slowing | University of Cambridge, published by RoyalSociety

by @GrrlScientist

🧪 https://www.forbes.com/sites/grrlscientist/2024/04/21/the-devil-lost-in-details-tasmanian-devil-cancer-transmission-is-not-slowing/

danyal, to Neuroscience
@danyal@neuromatch.social avatar

I am overqualified for a research assistant position and under qualified for a Phd position 😭 Is there a door in the middle of these two I can use to sneak into a research group ? ​

msquebanh, to movies
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

A about & with is currently being shown in the & .

"BIG," which is directed by Wei Te-sheng (魏德聖) and is about children living in a Taiwanese ward who move into Room 816, or "BIG" as they call it, began its North American tour on March 7 as part of the 6th Tour Festival.

https://focustaiwan.tw/culture/202403120020

janeadams, to pso2
@janeadams@vis.social avatar

I've accepted a Graduate Research internship offer from Ozette for this summer! Looking forward to working with Fritz Lekschas and team at the intersection of 🔬 ✨

Learn more about Ozette's research here: https://www.ozette.com/technology-and-applications/

mattotcha, to random
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar

Forget lung, breast or prostate cancer: why tumour naming needs to change
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-00216-3 #organ

garry, to science
@garry@mstdn.social avatar

Cancer vaccine with minimal side effects nearing Phase 3 clinical trials

'Each shot would be completely personalized to the patient'

https://abcnews.go.com/Health/melanoma-cancer-vaccine-minimal-side-effects-nearing-phase/story?id=106521186

eLife, to random
@eLife@fediscience.org avatar

Some anti-cancer drugs cause nucleolar stress, leading to unwanted side effects. https://elifesciences.org/articles/88799?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic

video/mp4

garry, to science
@garry@mstdn.social avatar

Exciting new cancer drug kinder than chemotherapy

'Some children with cancer are receiving a new type of drug treatment far less toxic than chemotherapy. Arthur, 11, is one of the first to try it, at London's Great Ormond Street Hospital, for his blood cancer. His family call the therapy "a little bit of sunshine", since it worked without making Arthur feel much sicker.'

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-67793887

eLife, to Microbiology
@eLife@fediscience.org avatar

Spanning , , , and even , this Special Issue illuminates the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer patients: http://elifesciences.org/collections/104e5304?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic.

mattotcha, to random
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
garry, to science
@garry@mstdn.social avatar

A banana a day could keep cancer at bay

'A starch found in bananas can reduce some cancers by more than half, according to a 20-year trial'

https://medicinehealth.leeds.ac.uk/faculty-/news/article/565/a-banana-a-day-could-keep-cancer-at-bay

TheEuropeanNetwork, to space

Reserve astronaut and oncologist Sara García: ‘We still outperform machines’.

Sara García, 33, is a reserve on the new team of European Space Agency (ESA) astronauts and a researcher at the National Cancer Research Center (CNIO) in Madrid, Spain. She works on both of these frontiers.

The researcher defends the utility of human presence in space to study aging and cancer in order to apply that knowledge on Earth.

https://english.elpais.com/science-tech/2023-10-08/reserve-astronaut-and-oncologist-sara-garcia-we-still-outperform-machines.html

mloxton, to random
@mloxton@med-mastodon.com avatar

Hey and other peeps, does your ward/facility have a specific cancer that a has put together?

If so, how is that working, and if not, why not?

Please boost for visibility

helenajambor, to SciComm

✅ ✅ ✅ 289 responses, 1️⃣ 1️⃣ 1️⃣ to go!

--> CAN YOU SPARE 3 MINUTES? 🙏

We research if pictures improve patients understanding of treatment plans. For this, we test which images help best.

Link to survey: https://tud.link/9hj3
Everybody can participate --> feel free to share.

Inga_eyesanstuff, to random
@Inga_eyesanstuff@medibubble.org avatar

Gibt es Jemanden in Fediverse die/der sich mit Morbus Waldenström auskennt?

Ich habe da ein paar Fragen.

Kontakt gerne per PN.

Boost für mehr Reichweite ist erwünscht.
Vielen Dank!


I'm looking for someone in the Fediverse who would be able to answer some questions about Waldenström macroglobulinaemia.
You can contact me via DM.

Boost is highly appreciated.
Thank you!

admin, (edited ) to psychology

TITLE: Long Covid’s Brain Fog Is Akin to "Aging Ten Years"—N=3,000

Once again -- Thank you Dr. Pope for your summaries.

----FORWARDED---
Smithsonian Magazine includes an article: “Long Covid’s Brain Fog Is Akin to ‘Aging Ten Years,’ Study Finds—Scientists tested the cognitive function of more than 3,000 participants and found those with longer-lasting Covid symptoms had the strongest decline.”

Here are some excerpts:

People struggling with “long Covid,” or the persistence of symptoms after an initial Covid-19 infection, can face cognitive difficulties such as “brain fog” and memory problems. Now, a study finds the severity of these symptoms is comparable to the brain aging ten years.

By testing the mental speed and accuracy of participants who had and had not been diagnosed with Covid-19, researchers found the cognitive decline was worst for people who had experienced Covid symptoms for more than 12 weeks, according to a study published this month in eClinicalMedicine, a journal published by The Lancet.

“The fact remains that two years on from their first infection, some people don’t feel fully recovered, and their lives continue to be impacted by the long-term effects of the coronavirus,” Claire Steves, a co-author of the study who researches aging and mental health at King’s College London, says in a statement.

<snip>

Since the Covid-19 pandemic’s early days, scientists have raced to understand the symptoms associated with long Covid, such as depression, major fatigue, brain fog and even dementia.

In 2020, a separate team of researchers examined the brains of people who had died from Covid-19 and discovered their blood vessels, which were covered with antibodies, had sustained significant damage, reports Time’s Jamie Ducharme. The scientists concluded the virus had somehow caused the body’s immune system to attack its blood vessels, leading to inflammation in the brain.

It’s not clear whether this inflammation is the cause of brain fog and cognitive difficulties in living patients with long Covid, but Lara Jehi, a researcher at the Cleveland Clinic who was not involved in the current study or the 2020 research, tells Time she’s seen it impact both people with long Covid and Alzheimer’s disease. “We found many areas of overlap between the two, and these areas of overlap centered on…inflammation in the brain and microscopic injuries to the blood vessels,” she tells the publication.

To better understand long Covid’s effect on the brain, the new study put more than 3,000 participants through 12 different types of cognitive tests designed to measure memory, processing speed, attention, motor control and other thinking skills. A little over half of the participants had previously tested positive for Covid-19, and all were recruited through the Covid Symptom Study Biobank smartphone app.

In the first round of testing in 2021, researchers found the cognitive impairment associated with long Covid was clear, comparable to the brain being under “mild or moderate symptoms of psychological distress,” or ten years of aging, write the authors in the paper.

During the second round of testing, which took place in 2022, patients showed no significant improvement. At that point, some participants’ cognitive decline had lasted nearly two years after infection.

The positive takeaway? Once a person’s Covid symptoms disappeared—regardless of whether they had persisted for three months or one week—their cognitive function appeared to recover.

This, at least, is “good news,” says Nathan Cheetham, a senior postdoctoral data scientist at King’s College London and study co-author, in the statement.

“This study shows the need to monitor those people whose brain function is most affected by Covid-19, to see how their cognitive symptoms continue to develop and provide support toward recovery,” he says in the statement.

About 15 percent of U.S. adults have experienced long Covid, according to the Household Pulse Survey by the National Center for Health Statistics. In the United Kingdom, about two million adults were impacted by the persistent condition as of January 2023, reports the Guardian’s Geneva Abdul.

Steves calls for more research into how long Covid victims can be aided in their recovery process, especially those who have been living with the symptoms for years.

“We need more work to understand why this is the case and what can be done to help,” she says in the statement.

Ken Pope

Hector Y. Adames, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Melba J.T. Vasquez, & Ken Pope:
Succeeding as a Therapist: How to Create a Thriving Practice in a Changing World (APA, 2022)

Ken Pope, Melba J.T. Vasquez, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, & Hector Y. Adames:
Ethics in Psychotherapy & Counseling: A Practical Guide, 6th Edition (Wiley, 2021)

#psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research <https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/long-covids-brain-fog-is-akin-to-aging-ten-years-study-finds-180982594/> @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #Vaccines #COVID #longcovid #oncology #science #medicine #brain #neurology #brainfog
admin, to psychology

TITLE: Mental Health Professional Lemmy & Mastodon Instances!
https://lem.clinicians-exchange.org (Lemmy)
https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org (Mastodon)
https://www.clinicians-exchange.org (email list sign-up)

We now have Lemmy & Mastodon instances up and operational for mental health professionals. Members are vetted by admin staff to be broadly employed in a mental health field. PSEUDONYMS ALLOWED IN PROFILES! Full name, credentials, and location encouraged in profiles. (For a fuller discussion on pseudonyms, vetting, and privacy please see https://lem.clinicians-exchange.org/post/24291 or email me off-list.)

The changes from our last announcement are an upgraded server, longer Mastodon post limits, broader membership criteria, and allowing pseudonyms -- which many professionals requested to feel safe participating online.

These are worldwide forums and do not replace local resources in any way. They lack the privacy of invite-only email lists so don't replace them either.

Please also see https://www.join-lemmy.org for more information on what the heck this is.

You can also search by keyword to find Lemmy server instances and special topic communities world-wide at https://browse.feddit.de and https://lemmyverse.net/communities .

Lemmy is to Reddit as Mastodon is to Twitter. Lemmy is like a BBS (bulletin board system) that can also connect to other bulletin board systems world-wide (allowing communities and enduring threads of conversation). Mastodon works like Twitter -- and all the Mastodon server instances communicate too.

Be aware that Lemmy is being updated frequently and remains somewhat buggy!

#psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #mRNA #Vaccines #COVID #longcovid #oncology #science #medicine #policy #political #pandemic @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe  
#psychiatry @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #lemmy #fediverse #reddit #socialmedia #graduatestudents #PsyNP #doctors #nursepractitioners #OMHC

--   
Michael Reeder, LCPC  
Hygeia Counseling Services : Baltimore / Mt. Washington Village location  
410-871-TALK / michael(at)hygeiacounseling.com  
<https://lem.clinicians-exchange.org> (Lemmy)  
<https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org> (Mastodon)  
<https://www.clinicians-exchange.org> (email list sign-up)
gpollara, to random
@gpollara@med-mastodon.com avatar

Increased lung cancer risk post-TB - tho smoking (& COPD) clearly bigger contributors.

How this may be the case is an interesting question. Additive effect of chronic inflammation? Some other confounding environmental exposure? 🤷‍♂️

https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciad373/7204959?utm_source=advanceaccess&utm_campaign=cid&utm_medium=email&nbd=39370074470&nbd_source=campaigner

garry, to science
@garry@mstdn.social avatar

Blood test for 50 types of cancer could speed up diagnosis, study suggests

'NHS trial results of liquid biopsy indicate Galleri test has potential to spot cancer in people with symptoms'

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/jun/02/blood-test-50-types-cancer-could-speed-up-patient-diagnosis-study

Tinu, to random
@Tinu@mastodon.social avatar

Just sharing that I,

a and patient,

have been coughing and had ANOTHER fever

as a result of my appointment.

Where only 50% of the people were masked.

At JPS Oncology. In Texas.

Where my appointment was expedited. Due to a mandatory ER appointment.

Where also few masked.

And I went in, as mentioned, for a fever.

As I have a mandatory ER not UV visit

whenever my fever goes over 100.5.

As the cancer I have advances when I have an infection.

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