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Dupont gets new business manager
The Swedish API manufacturer Dupont Chemoswed has appointed a new business development manager.
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Crafoord Prize to an American and two Japanese
Today the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announces the laureates of the Crafoord Prize in Polyarthritis 2009.
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View pathology images in your iPhone
The Institute for Medical Informatics in Oslo announces a brand new iPhone application for virtual microscopy.
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Norwegian cancer therapy leaves phase II
New clinical results from Algeta highlights the potential of Alpharadin to treat bone metastases in major cancer indications.
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Prenatal testing breakthrough
For the first time specific gene expression information from fetal cells isolated from maternal blood samples is available.
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Trio goes in for high tech medicines
The Swedish drug discovery company Beactica announces fragment-based drug discovery research collaboration with GE Healthcare and the University of Uppsala.
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Elekta gets ok from China
The Swedish medtech comapny Elekta has received approval from the Chinese authority State Food and Drug Administration, SFDA, to sell its linear accelerator in China.
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Blood type decide resistance to HIV
A Canadian-Swedish research team has found a blood type molecule that increases the resistance to HIV-infections.
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Norwegian describes scrapie gene
Intestinal lymphatic tissue is important for the absorption and spread of the scrapie prion, suggests a Norwegian researcher.
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Danish biorefinery can save US billions
The Danish Inbicon biorefinery process could save the US billions on foreign oil, the organization states.
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Control of blood vessels can treat obesity
Mice exposed to low temperatures develop more blood vessels in their adipose tissue and metabolise body fat more quickly, according to a new study from Karolinska Institutet.
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Glucose facilitates the use of indigo
The Finnish researcher Anne Vuorema oat the MTT Agrifood Research Finland proves in her new doctoral dissertation that glucose can serve as a reducing agent of indigo.
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Academy for a new turn at work
Are you qualified within life science, but unemployed? Here is your chance for a new career, in high demand.
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Fat cells' reaction differs with body weight
The fat cells of overweight people may react differently to dietary changes than in their lean peers, according to a pioneering study from the Dutch organization TNO Quality of Life.
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New tools to fight bacteria
Better guidelines for doctors, detailed patient journals, and national monitoring systems are some of the tools needed to combat the increasing problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. That is stated in a report commissioned by the Swedish government.
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Martin Bergö: "The Idea is the Thing"
Martin Bergö, 38, goes wherever ideas take him - it's a process that has led to, and resulted from, plenty of unexpected results. Those ideas have been recognized as good ones: in 2008, he was awarded the Eric K. Fernström Foundation's Prize for young researchers. It isn't the first award for the Associate Professor at Gothenburg University's Sahlgrenska Academy. In 2007, he received a grant award of 16 million SEK from the European Research Council for his pioneering work.
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Ambassador program makes MVA big in Japan
The first ambassadors of the Medicon Valley Ambassador Programme have only worked in each other's countries for six months. But they have already made a significant difference for their sister clusters.
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Grape extract kills cancer cells
Grapes contain potentially beneficial chemicals that can destroy cancer cells, a new research proves.