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Jul 10 2025SCIENCE

How Your Body Handles Oxygen During Exercise

Ever wonder why your body gets better at delivering oxygen during a workout? It turns out there's a specific moment when things shift. This moment is linked to how your blood carries and releases oxygen. Scientists looked at old data from 1994. They used new tools to study how oxygen, carbon dioxid

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Jul 09 2025SCIENCE

How Body Clocks Might Be Behind Muscle Loss in Low Testosterone

Testosterone levels dropping in men can lead to muscle loss, especially in the limbs. But why does this happen? Scientists have been digging into this question. They found that when testosterone levels drop, the body's internal clocks in muscles get messed up. This mess-up is linked to higher levels

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Jul 08 2025SCIENCE

How Cold Weather Slows Down Flowering in Plants

Plants have a clever way of knowing when to flower. They use a special protein called florigen, made in the leaves, to tell other parts of the plant it's time to bloom. But how does this protein move around, and what happens when it's cold outside? Scientists wanted to understand how florigen trave

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Jul 03 2025TECHNOLOGY

Why Do Young Vietnamese Share News Online?

In Vietnam, young people are sharing news on social media a lot. To understand why, researchers looked at what makes news interesting, what people want from it, and how they feel about sharing. They found that news that matters to society and connects with people is more likely to be shared. Young p

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Jul 01 2025SCIENCE

Lifting Weights and Hormones: A Look at Muscle and Nerve Changes

People often wonder how lifting weights and taking certain hormones affect muscles and nerves. A recent investigation dug into this by looking at how resistance training and a specific hormone, nandrolone decanoate, change the way muscles connect with nerves and how certain proteins are made. First

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Jun 30 2025LIFESTYLE

Gen Z Women Find Peace in Unexpected Places

Young women from Generation Z are trading in their usual summer plans for a unique experience. Instead of beach houses or partying, they are choosing to spend their time at convents and monasteries. This trend is not just about taking a break from social media and dating apps. It is also about embra

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Jun 28 2025HEALTH

Tiny Tools, Big Impact: How Precision Surgery Tackles Rare Skin Tumors

In the world of medicine, sometimes the smallest tools make the biggest difference. A recent study shows how a special kind of surgery, called microscopically controlled surgery, is being used to treat a rare type of skin tumor. This tumor, known as eccrine porocarcinoma, is quite unusual and can be

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Jun 28 2025SCIENCE

Boosting Biohydrogen Production with Green Nanoparticles

Biohydrogen (Bio-H₂) is a clean energy source, but making it pure is tricky. Tiny organisms called hydrogenotrophic methanogens can mess it up. Scientists have tried different ways to stop these organisms, but often, these methods hurt the good bacteria that make hydrogen. Now, researchers have foun

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Jun 26 2025HEALTH

Spotting Talaromycosis: New Tools for a Tough Fungus

Talaromycosis, a sneaky fungal infection common in Southeast Asia, has been a challenge to diagnose. The usual method, growing the fungus in a lab, takes too long and often misses the mark. But there's hope on the horizon. Scientists have been cooking up new ways to spot this tricky infection. They

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Jun 26 2025HEALTH

Pet Allergies: What You Need to Know

Pet allergies are more common than you might think. They affect a big chunk of people worldwide. The culprits aren't the fur, but tiny proteins in an animal's skin, saliva, or urine. These allergens can stick around for weeks, even after a pet is gone. Living with pets might actually lower allergy

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