Search Results for: Virus

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6,165 results
  1. Humans

    Bat killer is still spreading

    Since 2006, some 6 million to 7 million North American bats have succumbed to white-nose syndrome, a virulent fungal disease. That figure, issued in January by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, at least sextupled the former estimate that biologists had been touting. But the sharp jump in the cumulative death toll isn’t the only disturbing new development. On April 2, scientists confirmed that white-nose fungus has apparently struck bats hibernating in two small Missouri caves. The first signs of clinical disease have also just emerged in Europe.

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  2. Life

    Antibiotics may make fighting flu harder

    The drugs kill helpful bacteria that keep the immune system primed against viral infections.

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  3. Health & Medicine

    New drug boosts hepatitis C treatments

    An experimental medication has cleared a major hurdle and seems poised for FDA approval, two studies show.

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  4. Tech

    When Networks Network

    Once studied solo, systems display surprising behavior when they interact.

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  5. Science & Society

    90th Anniversary Issue: 1990s

    Detecting climate change and other highlights, 1990–99

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Don’t share that clarinet

    Bacteria can linger on woodwind instruments, particularly those with reeds, for days, a new study finds.

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  7. 2011 Science News of the Year

    You can’t make this stuff up. An earthquake and tsunami trigger the worst nuclear accident in decades, contaminating thousands of square kilometers in one of the world’s most densely populated countries. Analyses of a sliver of finger bone reveal that the genes of an extinct human relative survive in many people living today. Single-celled organisms […]

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  8. Genetics

    Today’s information revolution illuminates diseases spread in the age of discovery

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  9. Life

    Genes & Cells

    How nanotubes trigger a cell’s gag reflex, the skulking 1918 flu and more in this week’s news.

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  10. Life

    New gene therapy fixes mistakes

    For the first time scientists have repaired a damaged gene in a living mouse.

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  11. Life

    Genes & Cells

    European scientists object to genetic testing, plus triggers for Alzheimer’s and asthma in this week’s news.

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  12. Life

    Genes & Cells

    The genetics of wrinkly dogs, plus cancer killers and diabetes thwarters in this week’s news.

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