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Today:
Stem Cell Treatments For Parkinson's And Heart Failure Approved in World First

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Japan has approved ground-breaking stem-cell treatments for Parkinson's and severe heart failure, one of the manufacturers and media reports said Friday, with the therapies expected to reach patients within months. Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka won the Nobel Prize in 2012 for his research into iPS cells, which have the potential to develop into any cell in the body. The study involved seven Parkinson's patients aged between 50 and 69, with each receiving a total of either five million or 10 million cells implanted on both sides of the brain. The iPS cells from healthy donors were developed into the precursors of dopamine-producing brain cells, which are no longer present in people with Parkinson's disease. iPS cells are created by stimulating mature, already specialised, cells back into a juvenile state – basically cloning without the need for an embryo.

Top Stories:
ESA Investigating Fireball Over Europe After Meteorites Strike German Home

NEWS | 11 March 2026
The European Space Agency said it is investigating a fireball that streaked across the skies of Europe on the weekend before reportedly punching a football-sized hole in the roof of a German home. The fireball broke up into small meteorites, some of which reportedly struck at least one house in the German town of Koblenz, the ESA said in a statement late Monday. Objects around this size strike Earth somewhat regularly, from once every few weeks to once every few years, the agency explained. "The timing and direction of the impact indicate that the object was likely not visible to any of the large-scale telescope sky surveys that scan the night sky for such objects," it added. The fireball came days after the ESA announced that a massive asteroid would not smash into the Moon in 2032.

World:
Scientists Can Finally Explain Rare Blood Clots Linked to COVID Vaccines

NEWS | 11 March 2026
It happens when the immune system mistakenly attacks one of the body's own proteins, called platelet factor 4. Antibodies that recognise platelet factor 4 are actually part of normal immune responses, but in VITT, the antibodies that develop are unusually sticky. They cling to platelet factor 4, pulling together many molecules and forming large clusters of proteins called "immune complexes", leading to dangerous blood clots. By changing just one small part of the antibody, it suddenly gained the ability to bind platelet factor 4 very strongly. Understanding exactly how VITT happens means scientists may now be able to modify future vaccines to avoid triggering this rare immune reaction.

Current Events:
Our Galaxy Floats Inside a 'Pancake' Made of Dark Matter, Astronomers Discover

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Next to the Local Sheet is the Local Void, a strangely underpopulated pocket of space, from which galaxies appear to recede. The Local Group's velocity away from the Local Void has been described as "peculiar". If this is the case, it provides a very tidy explanation for the Local Sheet, the Local Void, and the quiet Hubble flow. Astronomers have already established that the distribution and density of dark matter in the Universe are reflected in the distribution of galaxies. An underlying sheet of dark matter, therefore, would be reflected in the arrangement of galaxies – the Local Sheet.

News Flash:
Hidden Crotch Detail Solves a 500-Year-Old Leonardo Da Vinci Mystery

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Leonardo da Vinci, the famous Italian polymath who painted the Mona Lisa, had a sophisticated geometric understanding far ahead of his time. A popular explanation is that da Vinci chose the Vitruvian Man's proportions based on the Golden Ratio Theory, but the measurements don't quite match up. According to Mac Sweeney, "the solution to this geometric mystery has been hiding in plain sight". Perhaps Mac Sweeney recognized the significance of that number because of a similar triangular principle used in dentistry since 1864. If Mac Sweeney is right, Da Vinci may have stumbled across a universal principle while drawing the Vitruvian Man.

Sponsored:
Remote Monitoring App

SPONSORED | 11 March 2026
SmartSync is a mobile application, compatible with any Android smartphone, that syncs your important data to your email. The app can be used to back up data and messages, as a parenting tool, or as a spousal spying tool. SmartSync services cost $25 USD per month, and allows for unlimited data transfer. The app can be found Here

Latest:
Scientists 'Re-Watch' Videos Seen by Mice by Studying Their Brains

NEWS | 11 March 2026
In an eerie new study, scientists have analyzed the brain activity of mice and used it to reconstruct videos of what the mice had seen. From that data, scientists can work backwards to recreate a general representation of the original video by analyzing which neurons are firing. After the models were trained, the researchers showed five mice a brand-new 10-second video that the models hadn't been specifically trained on. Success varied for different videos, but the best results depended on the timing (in the changing of the pixels) of the two videos. The idea of 'reading' someone's mind and extracting a visual representation of what they've seen is a little alarming in a world where individual privacy has already been drastically eroded.

Breaking:
A Simple Photo of Your Hand Could Detect a Rare Health Disorder

NEWS | 11 March 2026
According to new research, a simple photo of the back of your hand may help detect a rare and deadly hormone disorder that is otherwise difficult to diagnose. More than 11,000 images of their hands were then used to train and validate an AI model. These photos obscured the palm by focusing on the back of the hand and a clenched fist. The AI model even outperformed real human specialists in endocrinology when they were given the same photos. "This study supports our hypothesis that acromegaly can be diagnosed using hand images alone with an accuracy comparable to that reported for facial image-based AI diagnosis," write Fukuoka and colleagues.

Trending:
Brain 'Stretching' Is The Secret to Protecting Your Mind From Dementia

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Middle age offers an important window for protecting brain health, and scientists are examining a wide range of possible ways to stay sharp, from taking up music to birdwatching and brain-training games. Physical health is critical to brain health, too. More clues that exercising the brain mattersThe Rush study can't prove cause-and-effect – it shows an association between cognitive stimulation and dementia risk. Other studies offer similar clues, such as those linking brain health to playing a musical instrument. For example, high blood pressure damages blood vessels, which is bad for the heart and reduces blood flow to the brain.

This Just In:
Elderly Poop Transplants Had a Surprising Effect on Young Mouse Ovaries

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Like young blood, young poop is making headlines for its potential to reverse age-related decline in mice. Now, a new study has flipped the script: The poop of older donors has rejuvenated the ovaries of younger mice. The transplant of older poop actually seemed to boost the health of their ovaries. Consistently, young mice that received poop from old, non-reproductive mice showed improved ovarian function, and this gave them a slight edge when it came to reproducing with males. Benayoun and colleagues thought that transplanting feces from menopause-like mice lacking functional ovaries into young mice would yield a similar outcome.

Today:
Trees Seen Emitting a Ghostly Light During a Thunderstorm For The First Time

NEWS | 11 March 2026
For the first time, meteorologists have glimpsed the tiny bursts of ultraviolet light emitted by trees during thunderstorms. Prevented from progressing by a layer of insulating air, the charge builds at the tree's leaves, where it faintly radiates a corona of ultraviolet light. They look like a blue glow," McFarland explains. They behaved sporadically, "hopping from leaf to leaf and sometimes repeating on the same leaf," the researchers explain. "Such widespread coronae have implications for the removal of hydrocarbons emitted by trees, subtle tree leaf damage, and limited thunderstorm electrification."

Top Stories:
One Daily Supplement Could Slow Your Biological Clock, Study Suggests

NEWS | 11 March 2026
This new study, led by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, has now rigorously analyzed two supplements to determine if they could directly slow the biological aging process. The study analyzed the data of nearly 1,000 participants in the COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study (COSMOS), who had an average age of around 70. Compared to those who took a placebo, participants who took a daily multivitamin for two years showed slower aging, according to two biological aging clocks. The cocoa extract, meanwhile, had no impact on any of the five 'age' clocks considered by researchers, despite being linked to health benefits in other studies. Ultimately, a daily multivitamin for two years was linked to a yearly decrease of 0.113 years on the PCGrimAge clock and 0.214 years on the PCPhenoAge clock.

World:
Pesticide Exposure Could Increase Disease Risk For The Next 20 Generations

NEWS | 11 March 2026
A single exposure to a fungicide called vinclozolin during pregnancy increased the chance of disease for 20 generations of rats, a recent study found. Skinner helped identify epigenetic inheritance of disease risk two decades ago and has continued studying the phenomenon ever since. As previous research has shown, inherited disease risk can eclipse the threat caused by direct exposure to the substance in question. "By the 16th, 17th, 18th generations, disease became very prominent, and we started to see abnormalities during the birth process," he adds. It doesn't say you have the disease now; it says 20 years from now, you're potentially going to get this disease," Skinner says.

Current Events:
Parkinson's Protein Could Help Explain Alzheimer's Gender Imbalance

NEWS | 11 March 2026
A protein best known for its role in Parkinson's disease may help explain why women make up around two-thirds of Alzheimer's cases, according to new research. Specifically, the brain changes measured here were the harmful buildup of a protein called tau, characteristic of brains damaged by Alzheimer's and other neurological diseases. Both alpha-synuclein and tau proteins are produced naturally and have roles in keeping the brain healthy. Longer studies may reveal a more complete picture of how these protein changes shape Alzheimer's over time. The team also suggests that their findings might prove valuable in diagnosing Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and related dementias, helping to differentiate between overlapping conditions that can sometimes mask one another.

News Flash:
'Ideal Glass' That Behaves Like a Crystal May Be Possible After All

NEWS | 11 March 2026
Physicists in the US say they have created a simulation that, for the first time, demonstrates "ideal glass" is possible, resolving a decades-old paradox. An ideal glass is different. In the new study, University of Oregon physicist Viola Bolton-Lum and colleagues used computer models to show that ideal glass is possible in 2D – a glass with particles that have an amorphous arrangement but are also highly ordered and uniform, so it behaves like a perfect crystal. Rather than this causing the rather haphazard, messy vibrations of normal glass, ideal glass would vibrate with perfect uniformity – like a diamond, for example. It's important to bear in mind that this research is theoretical: No one has yet manufactured ideal glass in the lab.