Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Technology
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Space
  • Our Bloggers
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

cancer

Researchers at WashU Medicine identified a direct connection between cancer-related inflammation and the loss of motivation characteristic of advanced cancer. In a mouse study they describe a brain pathway that starts with neurons (labeled in green, above) that sense inflammation signals, and the researchers were able to treat the loss of motivation by blocking this pathway.

Brain Pathway Links Inflammation to Loss of Motivation in Advanced Cancer

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
Strength training activates cellular waste disposal mechanisms which are essential for long-term preservation of muscle mass. This is the finding of a University of Bonn research team.

Being physically active, even just a couple of days a week, may be key to better health

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
Researchers Ángel Márquez, José López-Atalaya, Berta Sánchez-Laorden, F. Javier Rodríguez, Pablo Ballesteros, and Alba Castillo

Scientists Hack Brain’s Immune Cells to Fight Deadly Melanoma

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
horizon logo

EU health experts take to the road to boost cancer screening and prevention

Categories Bloggers
Chromosomes from cancer cells with DNA stained blue, telomeres stained green, and centromeres stained pink.

Scientists Uncover Why Cancer Cells Die Differently After Radiation Treatment

Categories Health
A digital illustration of CAR T cells.

Keto diet metabolite may power up CAR T cells to kill cancer

Categories Health
geese at a park

Middle School Student’s Park Discovery Leads to Promising Cancer-Fighting Compound

Categories Health, Life & Non-humans
Untreated patient-derived glioblastoma cells (left) compared to glioblastoma cells treated with a combination of radiation and ABBV-155 (right). Green fluorescence marks viable cells, illustrating how the therapy induces cell death. Courtesy of the Nathanson Laboratory.

Machine Learning Breakthrough Reveals New Hope for Deadly Brain Cancer Treatment

Categories Brain & Behavior
woman exhaling smoke or vape steam

Vaping and Smoking Cause Similar DNA Changes Linked to Disease Risk, Study Finds

Categories Health
Nanotubes deliver mitochondria to T cells, supercharging the T cells to make them more effective in the fight against cancer. Image courtesy of Shiladitya Sengupta, BWH

Study finds ‘supercharging’ T cells with mitochondria enhances their antitumor activity

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
infographic on research

Breakthrough in Glioblastoma Research: Scar Tissue Linked to Tumor Recurrence

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
person blowing smoke out

Cannabis Use Linked to Higher Risk of Head and Neck Cancer

Categories Health
Animal model reseach led by Rebecca Delconte, PhD, and Joseph Sun, PhD, has shown for the first time that fasting can reprogram the metabolism of natural killer cells, helping them to survive in the harsh environment in and around tumors, while also improving their cancer-fighting ability.

Fasting primes the immune system’s natural killer cells to better fight cancer

Categories Health
Older posts
Page1 Page2 … Page5 Next →

Bloggers

  • Cities of tomorrow: young Poles share vision for smarter, greener living
  • On the City of Fresno’s laudable waste-handling programs
  • Serving California’s PG&E, world’s first ultra-long duration hybrid green hydrogen energy storage microgrid moves forward
  • Truing the Sun
  • Hidden hunger in Europe: well fed yet undernourished
  • Where curiosity meets innovation: EU science fair in Belgium dazzles young minds
  • Spiralling weather and climate impacts documented in WMO report
Substack subscription form sign up

© 2025 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed