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    The algorithm is Sphinks, which can detect three groups of tumors Many cells are usually considered “not transformed” and present close to a tumor might have already some genetic abnormalities. The novel algorithm-based method of “spatial transcriptomics,” allows the possibility of identifying genetic changes in tissues that are usually considered “normal” but are close to tissues already damaged by cancer. This approach highlights the fact that many changes related to cancer development might b

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    • #Blogpost: "AI Can Now Detect Cancer" Spatial transcriptomics reveals hidden genetic changes in nearby normal tissues aiding early cancer detection. Click here to read: https://t.co/PyZesNMevK #SpatialTranscriptomics #EarlyDiagnosis #PrecisionMedicine #CancerResearch… https://t.co/T582zvpGQu https://t.co/snkvDSiyq5

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    The algorithm is Sphinks, which can detect three groups of tumors Many cells are usually considered “not transformed” and present close to a tumor might have already some genetic abnormalities. The novel algorithm-based method of “spatial transcriptomics,” allows the possibility of identifying genetic changes in tissues that are usually considered “normal” but are close to tissues already damaged by cancer. This approach highlights the fact that many changes related to cancer development might b

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    • #Blogpost: "AI Can Now Detect Cancer" Spatial transcriptomics reveals hidden genetic changes in nearby normal tissues aiding early cancer detection. Click here to read: https://t.co/b2k4pyxeZW #SpatialTranscriptomics #EarlyDiagnosis #PrecisionMedicine #CancerResearch… https://t.co/1AMCy9Glz4

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    This blog was originally published in La Voce Di New York by Prof Antonio Giordano, click here to read in Italian. Recent research demonstrates that anti-retroviral (ARV) therapies to HIV patients prevent almost two-thirds of cancers, including Kaposi’s sarcoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymph nodes. These neoplastic diseases are frequently linked to patients with advanced AIDS or HIV-positive. This finding is very intriguing but larger studies are required to evaluate the use of

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    • #Blogpost: "Blood cancers linked to HIV: Insights from recent studies" ARV therapies prevent two-thirds of cancers in HIV patients, including Kaposi's sarcoma. Click here to read: https://t.co/9pPXaQGh1Z #HIV #CancerPrevention #sarcoma #NonHodgkinLymphoma #OncologyResearch

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    “A disease is regarded as rare when it affects a small proportion of the population, more specifically, no more than five people out of every 10,000 people. The term “Orphan drugs,” which first appeared in Regulation EC No. 141/2000 to identify drugs used to treat an “orphan” disease, often genetic pathologies, is considered of low impact for manufacturing companies, which are known to evaluate research and large-scale investments. Today, many rare diseases have received proper attention from re

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    • #Blogpost: "Orphan Drugs" For Rare Diseases: Just 5% Of The Costs Are Covered In Italy" Rare diseases, affecting few, lack attention and need urgent funding for effective treatments and fair care. Click here: https://t.co/UZtNOu44IZ #RareDiseases #OrphanDrugs… https://t.co/0UfDSWykwH

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    “Athletes’ injuries are written in genetics. Here’s how to reduce the risks,” ~ Professor Antonio Giordano, M.D., Ph.D. This is stated by Professor Antonio Giordano, director of the “Sbarro Health Research Organization” in Philadelphia, who conducted with his team a critical study entitled “Genomic analysis reveals association of specific SNPs with athletic performance and susceptibility to injuries in professional soccer players”. This work, published in the international scientific journal “Jo

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    • #Blogpost: "Athletes' injuries are written in genetics. Here's how to reduce the risks" Professor Giordano led a study on genetics affecting soccer players' performance and injuries. Click here: https://t.co/agKUiBFZ0C #AthleticWellbeing #AthleteInjuries #Geneticscience… https://t.co/Zk1eTMDwym

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    There is a correlation between the intestinal microbiota and the onset of mood and memory disorders, and it is determined by the ability of the microbiota to regulate the production of neurotransmitters such as dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine. Inflammation of the intestinal tract, which causes the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha, IL-6, and MCP, able to pass the blood-brain barrier and affect an individual’s health and mind, is in fact one of the most reliable biologi

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    • #Blogpost: "The Role of Microbiota in Depressive Disorders" The gut microbiota significantly impacts mood and memory disorders by regulating neurotransmitter production, including dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine. Click here: https://t.co/qGERY1OY5m #microbiota #health… https://t.co/N3rCfL7HmH

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    The key role of the doctor’s “no” to patients’ “wishes.” The conflict between natural apparency and conformity to contemporary aesthetic standards, influenced by cinema and TV, and personal perception of one’s own corporeality, necessitates a collective reflection on the implications of aesthetic surgery from an ethical-deontological perspective. The use of plastic surgery is more and more frequent and is of fundamental importance in prolonging and, in the consequent dynamic concept of psycho-ph

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    • #Blogpost:"The border between ethics and aesthetics in #plasticsurgery". Exterior beauty's ethical impact pushes non-conforming individuals to resort to cosmetic surgery, relying on skilled surgeons to avoid negative results. Click here to read more: https://t.co/Fhhxq9ATdy… https://t.co/CHXDmdJJNX

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    The below blog post was first published in Italian for Fortune Italia by Dr. Antonio Giordano As seen by the Obama Reform of 2010, the American Health System is increasingly adopting the European model, focusing on universal access to services, especially for the less privileged, who lack insurance coverage. On the other hand, the Old Continent’s healthcare systems are moving away from the “solidarity model” and the general population and, as a result, more or less intentionally, guiltily of end

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    • #Blogpost: "Health Care Systems in Italy and America: A Gordian Knot combining Public and Private" The American and European healthcare systems are navigating complex transformations, each with its unique approach.. Click here: https://t.co/4YolR7zYMe #healthcare #research

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    ‘Honey, I shrunk my intelligence…’ It may seem unbelievable, but a recent study on the evolution of the brain was just published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. The size of the human brain has allegedly shrunk starting 3,000 years ago, according to a group of experts from Dartmouth College in Hanover. According to Antonio Giordano, Founder and Director of the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine of the Temple University of Philadelphia and Professor of Anatomy and P

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    • #blogpost: "Brain", were our ancestors more intelligent? Our brain size has been a longstanding mystery to anthropologists. Click here to more: https://t.co/3EtAA9wV4k #brain https://t.co/VPLh2sPzra

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    A unique study, published by “Scientific Report” revealed the DNA content of one of the inhabitants of Pompeii from around 2000 years ago, who likely lived at the time of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. Up to now, only fragments of mitochondrial DNA have been analyzed. This DNA is the code contained in specific organelles present in cells and was taken from human and animal remains found in Pompeii. Professor Gabriele Scorrano of the University of Copenhagen and the University of Rome “

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    • #blogpost: "The 2000-year-old genome and the eruption of Mount Vesuvius" Click here: https://t.co/Si23v9curn #research #pompeii #vesuvio