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Tandem Diabetes Care to Announce Third Quarter 2020 Financial Results on November 5, 2020 – Business Wire

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 8:00 pm

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc. (NASDAQ: TNDM), a leading insulin delivery and diabetes technology company, plans to release its third quarter 2020 results after the financial markets close on Thursday, November 5, 2020. The Company will hold a conference call and simultaneous webcast on the same day at 4:30 pm Eastern Time (1:30 pm Pacific Time), to discuss its third quarter 2020 financial and operating results.

Conference Call/Webcast Details:Date: November 5, 2020Time: 4:30 pm Eastern Time (1:30 pm Pacific Time)Toll Free Dial-In Number: (855) 427-4396International Dial-In Number: (484) 756-4261Conference ID: 8072078Webcast Link: https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/mp7mdi2q

An archive of the webcast will be available for 30 days following the event on Tandem Diabetes Cares Investor Center website located at http://investor.tandemdiabetes.com in the Events & Presentations section.

About Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc.

Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc. (www.tandemdiabetes.com) is a medical device company dedicated to improving the lives of people with diabetes through relentless innovation and revolutionary customer experience. The Company takes an innovative, user-centric approach to the design, development and commercialization of products for people with diabetes who use insulin. Tandems flagship product, the t:slim X2 insulin pump, is capable of remote software updates using a personal computer and features integrated continuous glucose monitoring, and optional automated insulin delivery technology. Tandem is based in San Diego, California.

Follow Tandem Diabetes Care on Twitter @tandemdiabetes, use #tslimX2 and $TNDM.Follow Tandem Diabetes Care on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/TandemDiabetes.Follow Tandem Diabetes Care on LinkedIn at http://www.linkedin.com/company/TandemDiabetes.

Tandem Diabetes Care is a registered trademark and t:slim X2 is a trademark of Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc.

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Tandem Diabetes Care to Announce Third Quarter 2020 Financial Results on November 5, 2020 - Business Wire

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Earlier pubertal timing predicts higher psychosexuality in adulthood – PsyPost

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

New research from Penn States Behavioral Endocrinology and Evolution Lab provides evidence that pubertal timing is associated with psychosexuality in men and women. The findings have been published in the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology.

We are interested in how sex hormones influence the development of the brain and behavior, said study authors Talia Shirazi and David Puts, a PhD candidate and associate professor, respectively.

There is growing evidence that sex hormones have permanent effects on the brain and on psychological traits during least two windows in development the first is during gestation and right after birth, and the second is during puberty. Studies in laboratory animals show that testosterone exposure earlier in the pubertal window has a larger effect on male sexual behaviors than hormone exposure later on, but little is known about whether this is also the case in humans.

For their study, the researchers examined 72 men and 32 women with isolated GnRH deficiency (IGD), a rare disorder in which individuals have absent or nonfunctional gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons in the hypothalamus. GnRH is a neurohormone that controls sexual maturation, the appearance of puberty, and fertility in adults.

Because individuals with IGD are unable to produce endogenous gonadal hormones, they require hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to initiate puberty and must remain on HRT across adulthood. By utilizing data on the timing of initiation of HRT, we are thus able to pinpoint the precise age at which pubertal hormone exposure began for this clinical group.

The study also included 231 healthy men and 648 healthy women, who provided estimates of when they first started experiencing pubertal changes.

The participants completed a measure of sociosexuality, which assessed attitudes, behaviors, and desires regarding casual sex, along with a general measure of sexual desire. Many participants also provided saliva samples, which were used to statistically control for variations in hormone concentrations.

The researchers found that earlier onset of puberty was associated with heightened psychosexuality.

Earlier puberty was associated with greater sexual interest in both sexes, but it was more strongly associated with interest in uncommitted sex in men and with general sexual desire in women. This pattern may reflect decreasing sensitivity of the brain to sex hormones across the pubertal time window, Shirazi and Puts told PsyPost.

Beyond having implications for our basic understanding of behavioral neuroendocrinology, our results have clinical implications. There are several cases in which doctors will medically block or induce puberty. In these cases, the top concern is usually the physical health of the adolescent. What our research suggests is that altering pubertal timing also has long-term psychological effects, the researchers explained.

The extent to which these psychological effects should be considered when creating treatment plans is up to clinicians, patients, and their families, but it is our hope that our research provides information for people to make better-informed decisions.

But, as with all research, the new findings come with some caveats.

Correlation doesnt mean causation, so we cannot be certain that earlier pubertal timing causes higher psychosexuality in adulthood. To better understand relationships between pubertal timing and adult phenotypes, we need longitudinal studies that recruit children before puberty and follow them throughout puberty and into adulthood, Shirazi and Puts explained.

If studies continue finding links between pubertal timing and adult phenotypes, an important next step will be to figure out the neurobiology underpinning these relationships. How do the neural regions and circuits responsive to hormones at puberty differ between individuals based on the timing of puberty, and can those neural differences predict differences in psychological traits? Theres a lot of exciting work to be done.

The study, Pubertal timing predicts adult psychosexuality: Evidence from typically developing adults and adults with isolated GnRH deficiency, was authored by Talia N. Shirazi, Heather Self, Khytam Dawood, Rodrigo Crdenas, Lisa L.M. Welling, Kevin A. Rosenfield, Triana L. Ortiz, Justin M. Carr, Ravikumar Balasubramanian, Angela Delaney, William Crowley, S. Marc Breedlove, and David A. Puts.

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Menopause: we asked an expert to answer the most common Google-searched questions – SBS News

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

Video above: Kayte explains her views on hormone replacement therapy. Full ep. available on SBS On Demand.

Even though half the population will experience it, menopause and perimenopause, the hormonal rollercoaster years leading up to a womans final period, are often still taboo subjects to discuss and neglected areas of womens health.

But theThe World Health Organisation (WHO) and the International Menopause Society have designated October as world menopause month, and October 18 as world menopause day. This was done to raise awareness of the stage in a womans life when she stops menstruating.

In Australia, some women are turning to Google to find the answers to their menopause questions.

Below are the top 10 questions related to menopause in the past six months in Australia and the answers to those questions from Dr Nicola Gates, a clinical neuropsychologist and author of The Feel Good Guide to Menopause.

How long does menopause last?

Menopause is determined retrospectively after a woman has had no periods for 12 months. The symptoms of menopause begin earlier and last longer so the term 'menopause transition' is often used to cover the whole time of symptoms. On average menopause symptoms last four to five years however some women experience symptoms of much longer and I personally know of one woman who had hot flashes into her 70s.

What is perimenopause?

Perimenopause is the time before menopause is determined. It usually starts in the mid to late 40s, and the first symptom is usually a change to menses shorter or longer period duration, heavier or lighter periods, and less regular periods. However for some women it is the hot flashes, poor sleep, and mood changes they first notice. Research suggests that the symptoms of perimenopause can be more difficult than menopause because the cyclical ratio or oestrogen and progesterone becomes haywire.

When does menopause start?

The average age in Australia for menopause a woman's finalperiod is 51 years however this varies as women from Asia for example enter menopause earlier.

How to deal with menopause.

There are many things women can do to help themselves through the menopause transition. We can try multiple things simultaneously, from practical things like wearing looser clothing, to lifestyle changes such as drinking less alcohol and improving stress management as these both increase hot flashes and sleep disturbance. You can also try more psychological strategies like acceptance or cognitive behaviour therapy and medical interventions such as hormone therapy. Talk to your doctor to discuss other strategies, or you can read about some other options in my book,The Feel Good Guide toMenopause.

What happens during menopause?

In menopause women are essentially switching over from the hormones that supported sexual reproduction and potential pregnancy (oestrogen and progesterone) back to a simpler less potent form of oestrogen that we had prior to puberty. In puberty we go through massive hormone changes that take several years as our bodies change into our female reproductive high point and then in menopause we go back. Imagine going up a hill in puberty and then back down in menopause. Women are switching back to the same oestrogen levels as men as oestrogen is required by multiple body systems.

How to lose weight during menopause.

It is easy to put on weight during the menopause transition for many, often inter connected reasons. However, as womens risks for cardiovascular disease increase it is important that we attain or maintain optimum weight and cardiovasacular health. This may mean changes to what we eat, how much we eat as well as how much we move and exercise. Post menopause we will convert androgens into oestrogen in adipose tissue (fatty tissue) so it is also important not to be too thin, too stressed, or do too much aerobic exercise as these things impact the synthesis of androgens. It is about getting a healthy balance for ourselves as individuals.

Does not having a child affect menopause?

Your life time exposure to oestrogen may make a difference to your health but not to your menopause experience. There are so many factors that can influence the menopause experience but the important thing, I believe, is to remember that you only get to go through menopause if you are; still alive; have been healthy; and were fertile in the first place. It is easy to forget those blessings when we feel lousy with menopause but there are so many women world wide who do not have those three things.

How do you know if you are in perimenopause?

I suggest any changes that you are experiencing in your menstrual cycle need to be examined at any age. The most common symptoms are changes to periods, hot flashes, night sweats, headaches and mood changes. It is good to pay attention to your body to learn its rhythms so you can detect changes and check them out.

Are your prolactin levels high during menopause?

Prolactin is a hormone to support breast feeding (breast growth and the production of milk) and surges after a child is born.Both women and men have very small amounts of prolactin circulating in their blood. The more common things that change with menopause, in terms of sexual reproduction, are oestrogen (to release eggs), progesterone (to support pregnancy), and testosterone (to give you a sex drive so you can procreate.)

Does menopause make you cry for no reason?

Oestrogen and progesterone are often described as psychologically protective as they keep stress levels down (mother nature doesnt want potential mothers to be stressed, anxious, or depressed). During the menopause transition women can experience higher stress levels, and mood changes. The reduction in oestrogen and progesterone is also associated with other hormone changes which can impact mood. The transition can be very hard for women with mental health issues and for some, it can significantly compromise their psychological health. However, there is help available and things that can be done to assist.

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Menopause: we asked an expert to answer the most common Google-searched questions - SBS News

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Latest Report By QYResearch on Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market Trend, Overview, Competitor Analysis, Growth by 2026 – Weekly Wall

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

Los Angeles, United State, The report comes out as an intelligent and thorough assessment tool as well as a great resource that will help you to secure a position of strength in the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market. It includes Porters Five Forces and PESTLE analysis to equip your business with critical information and comparative data about the Global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market. We have provided deep analysis of the vendor landscape to give you a complete picture of current and future competitive scenarios of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market. Our analysts use the latest primary and secondary research techniques and tools to prepare comprehensive and accurate market research reports.

Key manufacturers cited in the report: Abbott Laboratories, Novartis, Pfizer, Mylan Laboratories, Merck & Co., Amgen, Novo Nordisk, Bayer, Eli Lily, Wyeth, Genentech

Get PDF template of this report:https://www.qyresearch.com/sample-form/form/1534791/global-hormone-replacement-therapy-hrt-market

Each segment of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market is extensively evaluated in the research study. The segmental analysis offered in the report pinpoints key opportunities available in the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market through leading segments. The regional study of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market included in the report helps readers to gain a sound understanding of the development of different geographical markets in recent years and also going forth. We have provided a detailed study on the critical dynamics of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market, which include the market influence and market effect factors, drivers, challenges, restraints, trends, and prospects. The research study also includes other types of analysis such as qualitative and quantitative.

Global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market: Competitive Rivalry

The chapter on company profiles studies the various companies operating in the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market. It evaluates the financial outlooks of these companies, their research and development statuses, and their expansion strategies for the coming years. Analysts have also provided a detailed list of the strategic initiatives taken by the Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market participants in the past few years to remain ahead of the competition.

Global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market by Type Segments:

Oral, Parenteral, Transdermal, Others

Global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market by Application Segments:

Menopause, Hypothyroidism, Male Hypogonadism, Growth Hormone Deficiency, Others

Global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market by Regional Segments:

The chapter on regional segmentation details the regional aspects of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market. This chapter explains the regulatory framework that is likely to impact the overall market. It highlights the political scenario in the market and the anticipates its influence on the global Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) market.

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Latest Report By QYResearch on Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) Market Trend, Overview, Competitor Analysis, Growth by 2026 - Weekly Wall

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Heller Heathcare teams up with world-renowed physician – Brunswick News

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

Israeli innovator and designer Dror Benshetrit once said, Thinking outside the box means crossing disciplines and pulling in expertise and perspective from outside of the standard boundaries.

Thats a concept that Dr. Jennifer Heller believes in wholeheartedly and has built for the Golden Isles. Multidiscipline healthcare is something that has always been at the forefront of her practice, Heller Healthcare in Brunswick.

Dr. Heller has forged an innovative path, creating individualized programs that incorporate traditional medicine, chiropractic care, massage therapy, functional and regenerative medicine, within her offices practice. Everything from hormone replacement therapy to weight loss; from regenerating bone on bone knees and combating low back disc disease to chiropractic care; her patients have reaped the benefits of Heller Healthcares approach with countless men and women finding a new life free from chronic pain.

Through her extensive training and research, Heller has been able to engage with others in the field who are also committed to offering patients a new lease on life. Her team includes not just her as the chiropractor, but Dr. Kalpesh Mistery, MD, nurse practitioner Kyndra Thomas, and regenerative medicine specialist, Dr. Rajen Naidoo, MD.

Dr. Naidoo is a physician scientist with a doctorate in medicine from Yale University. The orthopedic surgeon also holds biomedical engineering degrees and has a 30-year history in the biosciences, studying, researching, and providing clinical trials and treatments for re-growing cartilage, ligaments, and tissue. We know it as regenerative medicine, while most people refer to it as stem cell therapy.

The best part of working with Dr. Naidoo is taking his knowledge, research, and experience and providing that same level of care not just in a big city, but right here in Brunswick, Heller said.

Following a career teaching orthopedic surgery at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York City, Dr. Naidoo relocated to Florida where he has an orthopedic practice located in Palm Beach and Broward counties. He also travels to continue his research, lecture, and treat patients all over the world with regenerative medicine and is a guest lecturer on regenerative medicine at Harvard University.

Today, these modalities include the use of Human Umbilical Cord Tissue (HUCT) stem cells, which are derived from the mindfully donated umbilical cords from healthy mothers who birthed healthy babies.

For Naidoo, the scientific benefit of these treatments and the results they provide is truly revolutionary.

The science is incredible. Even though this is cutting edge, it is very simple when you look at it. Every nanosecond a baby is born in the world and you can obtain these naive stem cells from the umbilical cord, the amniotic fluid, the placenta cells, Dr. Naidoo said. All of these cells can then be used to treat diseases in different products in different ways.

While Dr. Naidoo notes that the stem cells are not being claimed to cure diseases, they do allow for drastic improvements in treating inflammation and providing relief for multiple ailments.

Umbilical cells regenerate musculoskeletal tissue the best. Ligament, muscle, cartilage, disc tissue has the highest growth Heller said. Patients with severe arthritis, pain, or told that surgery is their only option are our best patients with the most drastic results she added.

Dr. Naidoo states Its a very powerful treatment, especially for autoimmune disorders. Its regenerative in nature and so it can regenerate damaged tissues, he said. The best part of it is you dont have a down side. Ninety percent of people respond and do very well.

These new age treatments provide a viable alternative to pharmaceutical drugs, which come with a host of side effects and risks. Finding natural modalities for treatments rather than relying on potentially dangerous medications is a passion that Dr. Naidoo and Dr. Heller share.

Once they started to confer, they discovered that their approach to care was very much in-step. Thats why Dr. Heller asked Dr. Naidoo to come on board and join her practice. Dr. Naidoo will be a constant point of contact for Heller and her practitioners, offering his expertise and insights on treatment programs.

I think that because, in the U.S., stem cell therapy is still so new that people dont think its available or reliable. Thats not true. Dr. Naidoos 30 years of experience regenerating the body and choosing that over surgery as a surgeon says a lot. Its been said that this type of therapy is the wave of the future. It is and its here and has been here for a while. Weve already seen a great amount of change in the lives of our patients, Dr. Heller stated.

I always believe in working as a team. No one person. Theres no one person who has all the answers. When we work together, we are at our strongest, Dr. Naidoo said.

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One key to improving medical care:… – Kirkland Reporter

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

Talk less, listen more. Thats Dr. Kyle Jordans goal in every patient visit.

Primary care medicine is about reaching out to people and creating connections so there arent barriers to care, he says. Sometimes, the crucial piece of information isnt the first sentence a patient tells you sometimes, its the last sentence that slipped out almost by accident. If I jump in too early, I might miss something important.

Dr. Jordan has a wealth of medical knowledge, but knowing what information to share and when is dictated by quality conversations with patients. Strong doctor-patient relationships are essential to improving access to proper care, and building those relationships often starts before Dr. Jordan meets patients face-to-face.

Things like having posters and literature in patient areas, using peoples preferred pronouns and names theyre all very important when working with cultures that have been historically suppressed. Theyre ways of validating a patients personhood, and making sure they feel heard, Dr. Jordan says. Patients need to feel comfortable talking to their doctor. If your trust level isnt high, the fractured relationship will affect your health.

On your side

During his medical residency in Wyoming, Dr. Jordan saw how broader social issues created barriers to care, particularly for LGBTQ patients who didnt feel they were represented in the healthcare system.

I recognized a need and took time to educate myself I have a whole lot of knowledge in terms of medicine, but am always searching for better ways to apply it in peoples lives, he says.

In the exam room at Pacific Medical Centers (PacMed) Totem Lake, Dr. Jordan sees patient conversations like a walk down a long hallway with doors on either side. The patient will open some doors, the doctor will knock on others. For a 25-year-old with no previous medical conditions, mental health is likely to be the most important door. For a 55-year-old, colon cancer screening and heart disease are more common. A transgender patient may want to open the hormone replacement therapy door, and Dr. Jordan will make sure thats a safe and healthy option. As a family doctor hes often a first point of contact for nutrition counseling, blood work, sexual health education, and other common questions.

Im in this with you, as a team member. Im not here to carry or push you, Im here to walk beside you, he says. You just have to come and talk. It can be nuanced and difficult, but its worth it.

Dr. Jordan is accepting new patients at Pacific Medical Centers (PacMed) Totem Lake, 12910 Totem Lake Blvd. NE in Kirkland. To make an appointment call 425-814-5000 or book online at pacmed.org.

In consideration of how we voice our opinions in the modern world, weve closed comments on our websites. We value the opinions of our readers and we encourage you to keep the conversation going.

Please feel free to share your story tips by emailing editor@kirklandreporter.com.

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Raising awareness of menopause, what it is and why you arent alone – Brighton & Hove Independent

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

It usually occurs between 45 and 55 years of age and is when a woman stops having periods and is no longer able to get pregnant naturally.

Even though it impacts all women at some point talking about it is still seen as a taboo subject and something people shy away from addressing.

This is something that Vicky OFarrell is keen to tackle.

Vicky was 49 when she went through the menopause but noticed the start of the peri-menopause around the age of 40.

She said: I think it is a taboo subject because people dont understand it. When you understand it, you can make sense of it and you can support others.

To raise awareness of health and menopause, the World Health Organisation and the International Menopause Society have designated October as World Menopause Month and October 18 is World Menopause Day.

Vicky, from Haywards Heath, said: We need to have a menopause awareness full stop.

The fact that we now have a day / month gives us a reason to talk about it.

Whether we like it or not, we will ALL be affected by menopause, as females both physically and emotionally and as men feeling the emotional effects from partners, family, (sister, mother, aunt) work colleagues, the more we talk about it, the more we are aware of these symptoms, the more we normalise it, the better equipped we are to manage menopause.

In the UK, the average age for a woman to reach the menopause is 51.

During the menopause a womans oestrogen levels decline.

Periods usually start to become less frequent over a few months or years before they stop altogether. Sometimes they can stop suddenly.

On the NHS website it says that most women will experience menopausal symptoms.

Some of these can be quite severe and have a significant impact on womens everyday activities.

Common symptoms include: hot flushes, night sweats, vaginal dryness and discomfort during sex, difficulty sleeping, low mood or anxiety, reduced sex drive (libido), and problems with memory and concentration

Menopausal symptoms can begin months or even years before someones periods stop and last around four years after the last period, although some women experience them for much longer.

Vicky, 49, explained how going through menopause impacted her.

She said: It was horrendous.

I had a my worst year last year, I term it the tsunami.

All the emotions, all the symptoms, all the feelings and all at once.

I hit a very low, dark stop where I would just cry myself to sleep every night, not wanting to wake up in the morning, because I was so miserable and I couldnt see a way out.

I felt so alone, so useless, so tired and so exhausted.

There are a number of treatments your GP can and they may suggest lifestyle changes if you have severe menopausal symptoms that interfere with your day-to-day life.

Treatments include hormone replacement therapy (HRT) tablets, skin patches, gels and implants that relieve menopausal symptoms by replacing oestrogen. Vaginal oestrogen creams, lubricants or moisturisers for vaginal dryness, and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) a type of talking therapy that can help with low mood and anxiety.

Other things you can do include eating a healthy, balanced diet and exercising regularly maintaining a healthy weight and staying fit and strong can improve some menopausal symptoms.

There are many misconceptions when it comes to the menopause, which is something else Vicky wants to address.

She said: The misconceptions are that its an old age thing, seriously Im 49 and I am not old.

That HRT gives you breast cancer. That is just all hot flushes and mood swings. That women get depressed , hormonal depression is way different to depression and needs to be treated differently.

It is also important for women to talk to their female family members.

Vicky said: It is important for two reasons. One to understand what is is and two because we often follow the female line in terms of age and symptoms.

After I was introduced to Kathryn Colas, we met and realised we had so much synergy running our own business and she watched me present my training programmes and asked if I would like to become a menopause ambassador and the rest is history.

Kathryn and Vicky also run workshops to help women going through the menopause.

Vicky said: I was introduced to Kathryn about six years ago because I was struggling to find the support.

Kathryn set the business up over ten years ago because of her journey through menopause hell. We are not doctors or medical practitioners but every ambassador has had one hell of journey with menopause so we talk openly and frankly about the physical and emotional impact of menopause. The impact to business, the impact of ignorance and we are there to give guidance not medical advice but to open the conversations for organisations to have with their employees and give support to their workforce - both female and male.

In terms of what need to change when it comes to menopause Vicky said: Affordable and available specialists so every women has the chance to get the support she needs. Teach it in schools, train it in the workplace, make a menopause policy compulsory for every employer.

Dont be alone going through menopause - open up and talk about it, there are groups on social media and so much support. PLUS its only a stage in your life - its not forever, there IS LIFE on the other side !!!!!!

Vicky also has her own business Motivational Voice, which helps people achieve their potential, through coaching, training and motivational speaking.

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Raising awareness of menopause, what it is and why you arent alone - Brighton & Hove Independent

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Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Size 2020, Production, Share, Revenue, Analysis and Innovative Revolution and Forecast Report to 2026 -…

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:57 pm

The research study presented here is a brilliant compilation of different types of analysis of critical aspects of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market. It sheds light on how the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market is expected to grow during the course of the forecast period. With SWOT breakdown and Porters Five Forces study, it gives deep details of the strengths and weaknesses of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market and different players operating therein. The authors of the report have also provided qualitative and quantitative analyses of several microeconomic and macroeconomic factors impacting the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market.

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PfizerAbbott LaboratoriesNovo NordiskMylan LaboratoriesEli LillyNovartisRocheBayer HealthcareMerck SeronoGenentech

This report provides an overview and forecast of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market based on product and application. It also delivers market size and forecast till 2025 for the complete Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Industry Market with respect to regions as North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific (APAC), Middle East and Africa (MEA) and South America (SAM).

Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Segment by Application can be Split into:

MenopauseMale HypogonadismHypothyroidismGrowth Hormone DeficiencyOthers

Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Segment by Type can be Split into:

Human Growth Hormone TherapiesEstrogenTestosteroneThyroid Hormones

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Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Size 2020, Production, Share, Revenue, Analysis and Innovative Revolution and Forecast Report to 2026 -...

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Helping grains thrive in increasingly salty soil – ISRAEL21c

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:56 pm

Too dry, too hot, too cold, too salty the devasting results of extreme weather and overuse of natural resources threaten crop production worldwide.

The problems are vast, so Israeli ag-tech company SaliCrop zeroed in on the salinity issue. Its non-genetically modified seed treatment allows crops such as wheat, corn and rice to grow well in high-salinity soil or soil irrigated with brackish water.

From North Carolinas coastal plain to the isles of West Bengal, India, salt from flooding or rising seawater plagues approximately 20 percent of the worlds irrigated agricultural fields at a loss of $12 billion annually.

One of our cofounders, Rca Godbol, is an Indian plant biologist who returned home from her postdoc in Munich and wanted to assist smallholder farmers in coastal Mumbai, where theres a lot of salinity, explains CEO Dotan Bronshtein.

While in Israel on an exchange program, Godbol met Omar Massarwa founder of TopSeed, which was acquired by seed and breeding technology company Kaiima and agricultural engineer Sharon Devir.

They formed SaliCrop [in 2013] and worked for three years under the radar till they had a proof of concept. And then they hired me to scale it up, Bronshtein tells ISRAEL21c.

SaliCrop now has facilities in Israel and India serving eight pilot projects in those markets.

As business is expanding to Mexico and Australia, treatment facilities would normally have been set up in those countries too, but due to the pandemic the seeds will instead be treated and exported.

Chemical process

SaliCrops treatment is a wet chemistry process that stimulates an epigenetic reaction to salinity conditions meaning the DNA of the plant is altered without genetic engineering.

Unlike other treatments, this is cost effective and fast and has increased yield by 12 to 30%, says Bronshtein.

Our solution is applicable to a wide range of crops and varieties and is an economically viable solution for both smallholder farmers and big players.

Harishchandra Patil, a farmer in the Indian village of Masadbedi in the Raigad district, wrote to the company in April 2019 to explain why he is ordering more seeds.

I cultivate rice in my farm, which is in a high salinity area, he wrote. I tried out seeds with SaliCrop technology in 2018 on a trial plot and observed very good plant growth with 25% yield increase.

Following good results in wheat, corn and rice, SaliCrop tried the treatment on millet and cotton seeds, and is developing a treatment for tomatoes, bell peppers, carrots and leafy greens such as coriander and spinach, Bronshtein says.

The business model will be to license the technology to seed producers and NGOs.

A trial of SaliCrop treated seeds in an Israeli wheat field, February 2020. Photo: courtesy

Easy scaleup

Dealing with salinity at the seed level the smallest volume weight in its lifecycle lets us scale up pretty easily, Bronshtein explains. Treating and sending back millions of metric tons of seeds would cost much more than treating them close to the field.

Furthermore, the calibration of our treatment is based on one season, whereas classic seed breeding takes about seven years. So we have a fairly fast time to market.

A pilot project growing corn with SaliCrop treated seeds in Israel, May 2019. Photo: courtesy

With a problem of this magnitude, SaliCrop isnt the only company developing solutions for soil salinity.

Some of its competitors hybridize seeds to tolerate salinity, while others sell products to remove the salinity from the soil, which can be effective but costly, according to Bronshtein.

Its clear that a variety of solutions are needed as the situation worsens. Bronshtein reports that some farmers in Vietnam are switching from rice paddies to aquaculture due to the rising sea level making the groundwater salty.

SaliCrop raised about $1.5 million from Rimonim VC and angel investors, plus grants from the European Commissions Horizon 2020 program, the Israel Innovation Authority and the eastern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The seven-employee company won first prize in Rimonims 2019 India-Israeli agro competition.

SaliCrop now has early revenue from its pilot projects and will launch a Series A financing round in 2021.

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Scientists Found a New Way to Control the Brain With LightNo Surgery Required – Singularity Hub

Posted: October 13, 2020 at 7:56 pm

If I had to place money on a neurotech that will win the Nobel Prize, its optogenetics.

The technology uses light of different frequencies to control the brain. Its a brilliant mind-meld of basic neurobiology and engineering that hijacks the mechanism behind how neurons naturally activateor are silencedin the brain.

Thanks to optogenetics, in just ten years weve been able to artificially incept memories in mice, decipher brain signals that lead to pain, untangle the neural code for addiction, reverse depression, restore rudimentary sight in blinded mice, and overwrite terrible memories with happy ones. Optogenetics is akin to a universal programming language for the brain.

But its got two serious downfalls: it requires gene therapy, and it needs brain surgery to implant optical fibers into the brain.

This week, the original mind behind optogenetics is back with an update that cuts the cord. Dr. Karl Deisseroths team at Stanford University, in collaboration with the University of Minnesota, unveiled an upgraded version of optogenetics that controls behavior without the need for surgery. Rather, the system shines light through the skulls of mice, and it penetrates deep into the brain. With light pulses, the team was able to change how likely a mouse was to have seizures, or reprogram its brain so it preferred social company.

To be clear: were far off from scientists controlling your brain with flashlights. The key to optogenetics is genetic engineeringwithout it, neurons (including yours) dont naturally respond to light.

However, looking ahead, the study is a sure-footed step towards transforming a powerful research technology into a clinical therapy that could potentially help people with neurological problems, such as depression or epilepsy. We are still far from that visionbut the study suggests its science fiction potentially within reach.

To understand optogenetics, we need to dig a little deeper into how brains work.

Essentially, neurons operate on electricity with an additional dash of chemistry. A brain cell is like a living storage container with doorscalled ion channelsthat separate its internal environment from the outside. When a neuron receives input and that input is sufficiently strong, the cells open their doors. This process generates an electrical current, which then gallops down a neurons output brancha biological highway of sorts. At the terminal, the electrical data transforms into dozens of chemical ships, which float across a gap between neurons to deliver the message to its neighbors. This is how neurons in a network communicate, and how that network in turn produces memories, emotions, and behaviors.

Optogenetics hijacks this process.

Using viruses, scientists can add a gene for opsins, a special family of proteins from algae, into living neurons. Opsins are specialized doors that open under certain frequencies of light pulses, something mammalian brain cells cant do. Adding opsins into mouse neurons (or ours) essentially gives them the superpower to respond to light. In classic optogenetics, scientists implant optical fibers near opsin-dotted neurons to deliver the light stimulation. Computer-programmed light pulses can then target these newly light-sensitive neurons in a particular region of the brain and control their activity like puppets on a string.

It gets cooler. Using genetic engineering, scientists can also fine-tune which populations of neurons get that extra powerfor example, only those that encode a recent memory, or those involved in depression or epilepsy. This makes it possible to play with those neural circuits using light, while the rest of the brain hums along.

This selectivity is partially why optogenetics is so powerful. But its not all ponies and rainbows. As you can imagine, mice dont particularly enjoy being tethered by optical fibers sprouting from their brains. Humans dont either, hence the hiccup in adopting the tool for clinical use. Since its introduction, a main goal for next-generation optogenetics has been to cut the cord.

In the new study, the Deisseroth team started with a main goal: lets ditch the need for surgical implants altogether. Immediately, this presents a tough problem. It means that bioengineered neurons, inside a brain, need to have a sensitive and powerful enough opsin door that responds to lighteven when light pulses are diffused by the skull and brain tissue. Its like a game of telephone where one person yells a message from ten blocks away, through multiple walls and city noise, yet you still have to be able to decipher it and pass it on.

Luckily, the team already had a candidate, one so good its a ChRmine (bad joke cringe). Developed last year, ChRmine stands out in its shockingly fast reaction times to light and its ability to generate a large electrical current in neuronsabout a 100-fold improvement over any of its predecessors. Because its so sensitive, it means that even a spark of light, at its preferred wavelength, can cause it to open its doors and in turn control neural activity. Whats more, ChRmine rapidly shuts down after it opens, meaning that it doesnt overstimulate neurons but rather follows their natural activation trajectory.

As a first test, the team used viruses to add ChRmine to an area deep inside the brainthe ventral tegmental area (VTA), which is critical to how we process reward and addiction, and is also implicated in depression. As of now, the only way to reach the area in a clinical setting is with an implanted electrode. With ChRmine, however, the team found that a light source, placed right outside the mices scalp, was able to reliably spark neural activity in the region.

Randomly activating neurons with light, while impressive, may not be all that useful. The next test is whether its possible to control a mouses behavior using light from outside the brain. Here, the team added ChRmine to dopamine neurons in a mouse, which in this case provides a feeling of pleasure. Compared to their peers, the light-enhanced mice were far more eager to press a lever to deliver light to their scalpsmeaning that the light is stimulating the neurons enough for the mice to feel pleasure and work for it.

As a more complicated test, the team then used light to control a population of brain cells, called serotonergic cells, in the base of the brain, called the brainstem. These cells are known to influence social behaviorthat is, how much an individual enjoys social interaction. It gets slightly disturbing: mice with ChRmine-enhanced cells, specifically in the brainstem, preferred spending time in their test chambers social zone versus their siblings who didnt have ChRmine. In other words, without any open-brain surgery and just a few light beams, the team was able to change a socially ambivalent mouse into a friendship-craving social butterfly.

If youre thinking creepy, youre not alone. The study suggests that with an injection of a virus carrying the ChRmine geneeither through the eye socket or through veinsits potentially possible to control something as integral to a personality as sociability with nothing but light.

To stress my point: this is only possible in mice for now. Our brains are far larger, which means light scattering through the skull and penetrating sufficiently deep becomes far more complicated. And again, our brain cells dont normally respond to light. Youd have to volunteer for what amounts to gene therapywhich comes with its own slew of problemsbefore this could potentially work. So keep those tin-foil hats off; scientists cant yet change an introvert (like me) into an extrovert with lasers.

But for unraveling the inner workings of the brain, its an amazing leap into the future. So far, efforts at cutting the optical cord for optogenetics have come with the knee-capped ability to go deep into the brain, limiting control to only surface brain regions such as the cortex. Other methods overheat sensitive brain tissue and culminate in damage. Yet others act as 1990s DOS systems, with significant delay between a command (activate!) and the neurons response.

This brain-control OS, though not yet perfect, resolves those problems. Unlike Neuralink and other neural implants, the study suggests its possible to control the brain without surgery or implants. All you need is light.

Image Credit: othebo from Pixabay

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