Cesarean Sections Current Events | Cesarean Sections News | 4
|
| Page
4 of
7 |
130 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
New sensor to provide early warning of oxygen loss to unborn children esearchers at the University of Warwick, and the University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, have devised a new sensor which has the power to dramatically improve the amount of early warning doctors and midwives get of a dangerous situation in the birth process when the unborn child's brain is starved of oxygen-Fetal Hypoxia. view more (2006-02-14)
Portion-control dishes may help obese diabetics lose weight A plate and cereal bowl with markers for proper portion sizes appear to help obese patients with diabetes lose weight and decrease their use of glucose-controlling medications. view more (2007-06-26)
www.basqueresearch.com is online!! Times are changing and these changes are determined by the technological and scientific development. Everyday a new technological change is launched and adequate means are necessary to understand those developments. That is exactly the reason for creating Basque Research. Basque Research wants to become the reference point of Research and... view more... (2002-06-10)
Probability Controls The Molecule Of Life Thanks to biophysicists, statistics has reached the most intimate aspect of life - regulation of genes' activity. Investigation on probabilistic aspects of molecular biology has been supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research and the INTAS Foundation. Regulation of genes' activity is one of the most important biological problems which... view more... (2004-05-24)
Lack of inhibition and the internet This is the finding presented today, Wednesday 15 September, by Dr Adam Joinson of the University of Glamorgan, as part of a symposium at The British Psychological Society's Social Psychology Section's Annual Conference, held at the University of Lancaster. view more (1999-09-03)
Computer can follow you even when you’re out of sight Researchers at the University of Amsterdam (UvA) have come up with a method of video manipulation which makes it possible to follow an object even if its contours change or it moves out of sight. The system is based on computational rules that can be carried out on a PC. The program looks for parts of an image that are the same colour and move in... view more... (2001-05-08)
Picture this - automatic image categorisation Creating, storing and transmitting visual images has become increasingly easy. Yet the same problem always arises - how to categorise or classify visual images automatically without using external metadata or image thumbnails? There now may be an answer. view more (2005-05-02)
Distinguished Service Award presented by science society 9 July 2003, London, UK: Mrs Rosemary Wood, Society of Chemical Industry (SCI) will be presented with the Distinguished Service Award at the 122nd Annual Meeting today at SCI international headquarters, London, UK. Mrs Wood contributed 21 years of service to SCI starting in 1981. The first half was spent as Personal Assistant to the General... view more... (2003-07-08)
Bonn researchers localise manic depression gene Yesterday on top of the world, down in the dumps today: manic-depressives suffer from extreme fluctuations of mood. Many such people take their own lives during the phase of depression. An interdisciplinary team headed by the University of Bonn’s Institute of Human Genetics has succeeded in localising a gene which contributes towards the... view more... (2002-01-17)
Vaginal birth increases risk of hemorrhage in newborns The first researchers to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study the brains of a large group of babies soon after birth found a small amount of bleeding in and around the brains of one in four babies who were delivered vaginally. The study appears in the February issue of Radiology. view more (2007-01-30)
Link found between muscle damage during childbirth, condition causing fallen bladder, uterus An increase among women electing to have caesarean sections in recent years has been due in large part to a concern that giving birth vaginally will lead to a fallen bladder and uterus in later life, and the issue has been hotly debated in the medical community. view more (2007-01-31)
Study identifies factors correlated with cerebral palsy Several factors, including maternal infection during pregnancy, very preterm birth, and certain findings on brain MRI scans were correlated with cerebral palsy. view more (2006-10-04)
Women feel unprepared for operative deliveries Antenatal classes do not adequately prepare women for operative deliveries (caesarean sections, use of ventouse or forceps), according to study in this week's BMJ. Researchers interviewed 27 women who had undergone operative delivery in the second stage of labour at two UK hospitals between 2000 and 2002. Many women felt unprepared for operative... view more... (2003-11-11)
Test can reduce recurrence of breast cancer A new test that examines large sections of the sentinel lymph node for genes expressed by breast cancer could reduce the risk of recurrence and multiple surgeries, doctors say. view more (2008-02-26)
World Psychiatric Association launches a new journal. World Psychiatry is the new official journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA), which will be sent free of charge to all the psychiatrists whose names and addresses will be provided by the WPA Member Societies and Sections. The first issue, published in February, contains 27 pieces by experts from 18 different countries. They include... view more... (2002-03-19)
Postpartum hospital discharges -- when is the 'right time?' A landmark nationwide study, published today in the journal Pediatrics, is the first ever to prospectively examine the decision-making process of over 4,000 mothers and their physicians around the readiness of mothers and their infants to leave the hospital after childbirth. view more (2007-08-06)
Superformula offers an original and refreshing look at nature and science. New book: `Inventing the Circle` (in Dutch; English version is in process). The geometry of life. Just imagine the impossible and the unthinkable. A set of abstract shapes, like a triangle, a circle, square and rectangle, with convex or concave sides, with sharp or rounded corners, spheres, cubes, pyramids, as well as shapes from nature, like... view more... (2002-01-30)
Coffee Makes People Nervous They did not work with people; instead they examined rats of two lines. The rats of the first line were more anxious by their nature. Some rats were kept in groups, while others were kept in single cages. It is known that solitude is an unfavourable factor for rats. The animals were given 0.1%... view more... (2002-04-12)
Evolution: fish select for the survival of teh fittest An important breakthrough has been made in determining the forces responsible for the evolution of populations in nature. By studying wild populations of grayling (a close relative of salmon), Mikko Koskinen and Craig Primmer at the University of Helsinki and Thrond Haugen at the University of Oslo found that natural selection, a force suggested... view more... (2002-10-30)
Reactor of the future destroys nuclear waste--KTH to head major EU project to cut storage times dramatically A power plant that generates energy from used nuclear waste and destroys it as well. Could this become a reality? A three-year research project involving 23 European partners coordinated by KTH is being launched to investigate the matter. In the last few years great strides have been taken in research into so-called transmutation (see footnote)... view more... (2004-03-18)
| |
| Page
4 of
7 |
130 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
|