Bacterial pathogen shows alarming resistance to common cleaners, chemists discover
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 22-Apr-2025 07:08 ET (22-Apr-2025 11:08 GMT/UTC)
A new study reveals widespread resistance of a major bacterial pathogen to the active ingredients in cleaning agents commonly used in hospitals and homes.
Danielle Mor, PhD, a neuroscientist in the Department of Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, will receive $2.3 million in funding as part of the National Institutes of Health High-Risk, High-Reward Research program.
After only one to three days of a whiplash injury, scientists can predict which patients will develop chronic pain based on the extent of cross ‘talk’ between two regions of the brain, and the person’s anxiety level after the injury, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study that will be published in Nature Mental Health.
The study showed the more the hippocampus – the brain’s memory center — talked to the cortex – involved in long term memory storage — the more likely the person is to develop chronic pain. In addition, the higher a person’s anxiety immediately after the car accident, the more precisely scientists could predict the chronic pain people reported one year after the accident.
This is the first study to show that only a few days after a given injury, the brain can adapt in a way that imparts a risk for the development of chronic pain.