Wednesday, 7 October 2015

8 October, 2015

Interacting face-to-face helps ward off depression

A study has revealed that face-to-face socialising is more powerful than phone calls and emails in guarding against depression. 

Researcher Alan Teo found that all forms of socialisation were not equal. Phone calls and digital communication, with friends or family members, do not have the same power as face-to-face social interactions in helping to stave off depression. In the study, Teo's research team assessed more than 11,000 adults aged 50 and older. They examined the frequency of in-person, telephone and written social contact, including email. Then they looked at the risk of depression symptoms two years later and found that having little face-to-face social contact nearly doubles your risk of having depression. Participants, who met up with family and friends at least three times a week, had the lowest level of depressive symptoms than those who had less frequent contact. Individuals who met up just once every few months or less frequently had an 11.5% chance of depressive symptoms.

08.10.2015



Tiny DNA 'machine' could cut HIV diagnosis cost

Researchers have designed and synthesised a nanometer-scale DNA "machine" that can make the process of detecting the antibodies that can help with the diagnosis of infectious and auto-immune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and HIV much cheaper.

Their new approach promises to support the development of rapid, low-cost antibody detection at the point-of-care, thereby eliminating the treatment initiation delays.

"One of the advantages of our approach is that it is highly versatile," said senior co-author of the study Francesco Ricci from University of Rome Tor Vergata in Italy.

"This DNA nanomachine can be in fact custom-modified so that it can detect a huge range of antibodies, this makes our platform adaptable for many different diseases," Ricci said.

The binding of the antibody to the DNA machine causes a structural change (or switch), which generates a light signal.

The sensor does not need to be chemically activated and is rapid - acting within five minutes - enabling the targeted antibodies to be easily detected, even in complex clinical samples such as blood serum.

"Our modular platform provides significant advantages over existing methods for the detection of antibodies," professor Alexis Vallee-Belisle from University of Montreal in Canada noted.

"It is rapid, does not require reagent chemicals, and may prove to be useful in a range of different applications such as point-of-care diagnostics and bioimaging," Vallee-Belisle said.

"Another nice feature of our this platform is its low-cost," professor Kevin Plaxco of the University of California, Santa Barbara, US, pointed out.

"The materials needed for one assay cost about 15 cents, making our approach very competitive in comparison with other quantitative approaches," Plaxco said.

08.10.2015








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