Healthcare

WebDirectory link exchange logo

Free Web Directory » Business » Consumer Goods and Services » Healthcare

Want to know more about adding your link to our Web Directory? Do you have any questions regarding submission to our free web link exchange? Simply write us an email on our mail: info@webdirectory.si. We will be happy to answer any questions regarding our link exchange web directory for you.

Add your link for freeHere could be your link
You can add link to featured links - why not? It cheap and will help you grow your business. Add free link to this web directory.

A Better Way To 'Spell Check' Gene Sequences:
A PhD student from CSIRO and the University of Queensland has found a better way to 'spell check' gene sequences and help biologists better understand the natural world. The student, Lauren Bragg, has contributed to the May issue of the prestigious journal Nature Methods highlighting her new approach and its software implementation called Acacia. Acacia analyses the output of next-generation gene sequencing instruments which read the four-letter alphabet of As, Cs, Ts and Gs - the 'bases' that code for DNA and spell out the genes of different living organisms... [ Read about A Better Way To 'Spell Check' Gene Sequences]
How A Drug-Lead Compound Kills Cancer Cells By 'Starving' Them Of Energy, Preventing Tumor Formation:
A team of scientists from the National University of Singapore's (NUS) Department of Biological Sciences and Mechanobiology Institute have discovered how a drug-lead compound - a compound that is undergoing preclinical trials as a potential drug - can deprive cancer cells of energy and stop them from growing into a tumour. This drug-lead compound is named BPTES. This is the first time a research group has provided evidence showing how a drug-lead compound suppresses tumour formation... [ Read about How A Drug-Lead Compound Kills Cancer Cells By 'Starving' Them Of Energy, Preventing Tumor Formation]
Men With Slower Electrical Impulses Through Heart At Greater Risk Of Sudden Cardiac Death:
Men whose electrical impulses take a few milliseconds longer to travel through the lower chambers of the heart have an increased risk for sudden cardiac death (SCD), according to research reported in Circulation, an American Heart Association journal. An electrocardiogram (ECG) measures electrical impulses, or waves, that travel through the heart and cause it to pump blood through its four chambers. The waves have distinct patterns and are labeled on the ECG printout alphabetically from P to T... [ Read about Men With Slower Electrical Impulses Through Heart At Greater Risk Of Sudden Cardiac Death]