(2)
Preliminary data from the non-powered U.S. Phase 2 study of 40 hospitalized patients shows that orally-administered opaganib was safe, with no material safety differences between opaganib and control arms
Consistent trends demonstrate greater improvement in reducing oxygen requirement by end of treatment at Day 14 in the opaganib-treated arm across key primary and secondary efficacy outcomes, correlating with clinical improvement as defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) ordinal scale
The opaganib-treated arm demonstrated a greater improvement in reaching room air within 14 days (52.6% vs. 22.2%); greater improvement in reduction to 50% supplemental oxygen by Day 14 (89.5% vs. 66.7%); a higher proportion of patients discharged by Day 14 (73.7% vs. 55.6%) and a greater reduction in the median total oxygen requirement (AUC) over 14 days (68.0% vs. 46.7%)
RedHill Biopharma Announces Positive Top-Line Safety and Efficacy Data from Phase 2 COVID-19 Study of Opaganib | ANP Pers Support perssupport.nl - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from perssupport.nl Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A family in Bangladesh appears to have no fingerprints due to a genetic mutation so rare it is thought to affect only a small number of people in the world.
Apu Sarker, 22, and the men in his family share the condition which leaves the pads of their fingers smooth and devoid of the unique ridges that make up fingerprints, the BBC s Mir Sabbir reported.
Where having no fingerprints caused few problems for Sarker s grandfather, the same can t be said decades later.
Fingerprints are now used for everything from passing through airports to opening smartphones.
In Bangladesh, providing fingerprints is also a necessary step in applying for National ID cards, passports and driver s licenses.
Латвийский — вот это чеснок, а китайский полностью утратил свои бактерицидные качества gorod.lv - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gorod.lv Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
For the first time, scientists have recorded how our brains navigate physical space and keep track of others location, suggesting that our brains generate a common code to mark where other people are in relation to ourselves.
Researchers used a special backpack to wirelessly monitor the brain waves of epilepsy patients as each one walked around an empty room hunting for a hidden, two-foot spot.
In an article published in Nature, the scientists report that the waves flowed in a distinct pattern suggesting that each individual’s brain had mapped out the walls and other boundaries.
Interestingly, each participant’s brain waves flowed in a similar manner when they sat in the corner of the room and watched someone else walk around, suggesting these waves were also used to track other people’s movements.