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Cure found for COVID-19 with a single dose of an already FDA approved drug?


A collaborative study led by the Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute (BDI) with the Peter Doherty Institute of Infection and Immunity (Doherty Institute), a joint venture of the University of Melbourne and Royal Melbourne Hospital, has shown that an anti-parasitic drug already available around the world kills the virus within 48 hours.
Although several clinical trials are now underway to test possible therapies, the worldwide response to the COVID-19 outbreak has been largely limited to monitoring/containment. Ivermectin, an FDA-approved anti-parasitic previously shown to have broad-19 spectrum anti-viral activity in vitro, is an inhibitor of the causative virus.
The use of Ivermectin to combat COVID-19 depends on pre-clinical testing and clinical trials, with funding urgently required to progress the work. ....

South Australia , Kylie Wagstaff , David Jans , University Of Melbourne , Doherty Institute , Immunity Doherty Institute , Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute , Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory , Antiviral Research , Peter Doherty Institute Of Infection , Peter Doherty Institute , Royal Melbourne Hospital , Monash University Led , Melbourne Hospital , Senior Medical Scientist , Professor David Jans , Professor Jans , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , கைலி வாக்ஸ்டாஃப் , டேவிட் ஜான்ஸ் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மெல்போர்ன் , டோவர்டீ நிறுவனம் , நோய் எதிர்ப்பு சக்தி டோவர்டீ நிறுவனம் , விக்டோரியன் தொற்று நோய்கள் குறிப்பு ஆய்வகம் , பீட்டர் டோவர்டீ நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தொற்று , பீட்டர் டோவர்டீ நிறுவனம் ,

Newcastle University: Engineers and biologists team up to reveal how seals evolved to swim


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New research combines cutting-edge engineering with animal behaviour to explain the origins of efficient swimming in Nature’s underwater acrobats: Seals and Sea Lions.
Seals and sea lions are fast swimming ocean predators that use their flippers to literally fly through the water. But not all seals are the same: some swim with their front flippers while others propel themselves with their back feet.
In Australia, there are fur seals and sea lions that have wing-like front flippers specialised for swimming, while in the Northern Hemisphere, grey and harbor seals have stubby, clawed paws and swim with their feet. But the reasons why these two different ways of swimming evolved has perplexed biologists for generations. Is one style better than the other? ....

South Australia , Alistair Evans , Shibo Wang , David Hocking , Ben Burville , Fiona Anderson , Sea Lions , Newcastle University , Newcastle University Dr Ben Burville , Monash University , Monash University School Of Biological Sciences , Aerospace Engineering , Northern Hemisphere , Monash University Led , Current Biology , Monash University School , Biological Sciences , Fluid Dynamics , Taronga Zoo , Associate Professor Alistair Evans , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , அலிஸ்டர் எவன்ஸ் , ஷிபோ வாங் , டேவிட் ஹாக்கிங் , பியோனா ஆண்டர்சன் , கடல் சிங்கங்கள் ,

Engineers and biologists reveal how seals evolved to swim


Monash University
Video: vision of seals swimming in zoos with explanations
Graphic:seal species and their flippers
Graphic: Seal flipper anatomy
Image: Leopard seal flipper and 3D models
New research combines cutting-edge engineering with animal behaviour to explain the origins of efficient swimming in Nature’s underwater acrobats: Seals and Sea Lions.
Seals and sea lions are fast swimming ocean predators that use their flippers to literally fly through the water. But not all seals are the same: some swim with their front flippers while others propel themselves with their back feet.
In Australia, we have fur seals and sea lions that have wing-like front flippers specialised for swimming, while in the Northern Hemisphere, grey and harbor seals have stubby, clawed paws and swim with their feet. But the reasons why these two different ways of swimming evolved has perplexed biologists for generations. Is one style better than the other? ....

South Australia , Alistair Evans , Shibo Wang , David Hocking , Sea Lions , Monash University , Monash University School Of Biological Sciences , Aerospace Engineering , Northern Hemisphere , Monash University Led , Current Biology , Monash University School , Biological Sciences , Fluid Dynamics , Taronga Zoo , Associate Professor Alistair Evans , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , அலிஸ்டர் எவன்ஸ் , ஷிபோ வாங் , டேவிட் ஹாக்கிங் , கடல் சிங்கங்கள் , மோனாஷ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மோனாஷ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் பள்ளி ஆஃப் உயிரியல் அறிவியல் , விண்வெளி பொறியியல் , வடக்கு அரைக்கோளம் , மோனாஷ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் வழிநடத்தியது ,