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    Last update: December 22, 2009

    +Social Standing Influences Elephant Movement
      A study of African elephants finds that dominant elephants will trek significantly fewer miles in search of food during the dry season compared with their less dominant counterparts. The findings are the first to highlight the influence of social standing on the dispersal of elephants in an ecosystem.

    +Smoking Increases Risk Of Psoriasis, Study Shows
      Another disease can be added to the list of smoking-related disorders -- psoriasis. Researchers have found that smoking increases the risk of developing psoriasis, heavier smoking increases the risk further, and the risk decreases only slowly after quitting.

    +Role Of A Key Enzyme In Reducing Heart Disease Identified
      Researchers have identified the role of a key enzyme called CEH in reducing heart disease, paving the way for new target therapies to reduce plaques in the arteries and perhaps in the future, help predict a patient's susceptibility to heart disease.

    +New Guideline Recommends When To Use CT Scans In ER For Seizures
      A guideline developed by the American Academy of Neurology recommends immediate brain CT scans to screen certain emergency room patients with seizures. Evidence shows such scans can help doctors select the right treatment option.

    +Chemical Stabilization Procedures Successfully Recover Brownfield Sites
      A new way to clean up brownfield sites, which are abandoned industrial or commercial lands contaminated by low concentrations of hazardous waste or pollutants, has been developed. Common contaminants of industrial sites include copper, chromium, and arsenic. Iron-containing blaster sand treatment appeared to produce better long-term effects than treatment with oxygen-scarfing granulate.

    +The Economic Power -- And Pitfalls -- Of Positive Thinking
      In general, people who are optimistic are more likely than others to display prudent financial behaviors, according to new research. In small doses optimism can lead to wise decision making, but extreme optimists "display financial habits and behavior that are generally not considered prudent,"according to researchers.

    +Fossilized Spider, 50 Million Years Old, Clear As Life
      A 50-million-year-old fossilized spider has been 'brought back to life'in stunning 3D. The male spider is a new species named Cenotextricella simoni. It was found preserved in amber in an area of France known as the Paris Basin.

    +Radiation Seeds Effectively Cure Prostate Cancer In Young Men
      Radiation seed implants are just as effective at curing prostate cancer in younger men (aged 60 and younger) as they are in older men, according to a study presented at a scientific session on Oct. 31, 2007, at the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology's 49th Annual Meeting in Los Angeles.

    +Unprecedented Global Measurement Network Achieves Full Coverage Of Oceans
      An array of instruments that allows scientists to observe the basic physical state of all world oceans simultaneously is approaching its coverage goal after eight years of deployments.

    +Smoking Does Not Lead To More Aggressive Or Advanced Breast Cancers, Study Says
      Smoking cigarettes is associated with an increased risk of cancers of the lung, head and neck, esophagus, bladder and many others and also affects response to anti-cancer treatments. But smoking does not result in more advanced stage diagnoses or aggressive breast cancers at the time of diagnosis. That is the result of an analysis of 35 years of data for more than 6,000 patients.

    +Unlocking The Secrets Of Ripening For Better Tasting Fruits And Veggies
      Researchers worldwide are learning to control the key chemical processes involved in ripening, a development that will lead to longer lasting, better tasting tomatoes, apples, and other fruits and vegetables, according to a new article.

    +Quality Of Life Study Examines Burden Of Epilepsy
      This study assesses quality of life among adults with epilepsy. People with epilepsy were found to have worse general health status and to engage in some risky behaviors, such as smoking. Among adults with active epilepsy who had suffered a seizure within the past three months, about one-quarter reported not taking any medication for their disorder.

    +Hubble Spies Shells Of Sparkling Stars Around Quasar
      New images reveal the wild side of an elliptical galaxy nearly two billion light-years away, that previously had been considered mild-mannered. Hubble photos show shells of stars around a bright quasar, known as MC2 1635+119, which dominates the center of the galaxy. The presence of the shells is an indication of a titanic clash with another galaxy in the relatively recent past.

    +Tiny Radioactive Spheres Effectively Treat Cancer That Has Spread To The Liver
      Placing tiny radioactive spheres directly into the liver through its blood supply halted growth of tumors that had spread to the organ in 71 percent of patients tested in a small clinical trial, researchers report.

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