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Increased focus on the mental health of young obesity surgery patients

Published 13 September 2016 Study points out how important follow-ups are to evaluate patients’ psychological well-being after gastric bypass surgery. Photo: Shutterstock Research from Lund University shows that one in five adolescents who have undergone obesity surgery experience poor mental health. Some have even had suicidal thoughts. The study is based on follow-up studies of 88 adolescents wh

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/increased-focus-mental-health-young-obesity-surgery-patients - 2025-01-19

WATCH: Making strides in 5G-technology

Published 17 September 2016 Researchers at Lund and Bristol universities are making great strides in 5G technology. Photo: C. Schubert Researchers at the universities of Lund and Bristol have conducted a number of experiments using a form of 5G technology called Massive MIMO (multiple input, multiple output), and set not one but two world records in so-called spectrum efficiency for wireless commu

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/watch-making-strides-5g-technology - 2025-01-19

Lund University plays a key role in mapping the Milky Way

Published 19 September 2016 The first image of the entire sky produced with the help of Gaia data. Photo: ESA/Gaia/DPAC The European Space Agency’s satellite Gaia is now delivering its first results after having travelled around the sun for more than two years. The goal is to draw up a whole new map of the Milky Way, showing where the billion different stars are located and how they move. Lennart

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-plays-key-role-mapping-milky-way - 2025-01-19

Stem cell researcher receives the Fernström Prize

Published 20 September 2016 Malin Parmar, Professor of Cellular neurosciences. Photo: Kennet Ruona Is it possible to convert a patient’s own skin cells into functioning nerve cells? Or insert healthy genes to reprogram the cells of a damaged brain? Stem cell researcher Malin Parmar at Lund University in Sweden is studying these types of issues, in close collaboration with clinical researchers. She

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/stem-cell-researcher-receives-fernstrom-prize - 2025-01-19

Lund University among the world's top 100 in latest THE ranking

Published 21 September 2016 Lund University is ranked in 96th place in the latest Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings 2016/17. The Times Higher Education ranking follows on from the recent release of the QS World University Rankings 2016/17, in which Lund University is ranked 73rd best in the world and the number one university in Sweden.The Times Higher Education ranking lists

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-among-worlds-top-100-latest-ranking - 2025-01-19

Join the annual Law Day in Lund

Published 23 September 2016 Welcome to the annual Law Day at Lund University on 1 October 2016. Photo: K. Ruona We are pleased to invite you to Law Day at the Faculty of Law on Saturday 1 October! The day will include interesting and thought-provoking popular science lectures held by our teaching staff and researchers, inspiring guided tours including a visit to our library, moot courts with judge

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/join-annual-law-day-lund - 2025-01-19

Lund University biologist receives the Ig Nobel Prize

Published 23 September 2016 Horse-flies are highly attracted to darker-coated horses but not as much white horses. Scientists have now uncovered why this is. Photo: Shutterstock Susanne Åkesson, Professor of Evolutionary Ecology at Lund University in Sweden, has been awarded the prestigious Ig Nobel Prize. The prize, which she shares with six other researchers from Hungary and Spain, was presented

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-biologist-receives-ig-nobel-prize - 2025-01-19

New research delimits the possible causes of celiac disease

Published 23 September 2016 New study indicates that the amount of gluten could be a more important clue than breast-feeding or the timing of the introduction of gluten for continued research into the causes of gluten intolerance. Photo: Shutterstock The amount of gluten could be a more important clue than breast-feeding or the timing of the introduction of gluten for continued research into the c

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/new-research-delimits-possible-causes-celiac-disease - 2025-01-19

Czech-Danish duo receives major award

Published 26 September 2016 Jiri Lukas (left) and Jiri Bartek (right), the 2016 recipient of the Eric K. Fernström Nordic Prize.P otographer: Kennet Ruona This year’s Nordic Prize from the Fernström Foundation – one of the largest medical prizes in Scandinavia– is awarded to two cancer researchers, Jiri Bartek and Jiri Lukas, for their research on cellular responses to DNA damage. Genetically dama

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/czech-danish-duo-receives-major-award - 2025-01-19

Researchers uncover the skin barrier

Published 27 September 2016 The PSI synchrotron radiation facility in Switzerland. To the left is the beamline that sends out the X-rays. The sample is attached to the small copper plate slightly to the right, and in the right-hand corner is the detector. PHOTO: Jenny Andersson Researchers at the Faculty of Science at Lund University in Sweden can now explain how the properties of the skin change

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/researchers-uncover-skin-barrier - 2025-01-19

New imaging technique in Alzheimer’s disease - opens up possibilities for new drug development

Published 28 September 2016 The brain of an Alzheimer’s patient in a tau PET image. Red indicates the areas with the highest concentration of the tau protein. In the magnifying glass, a microscope enlargement showing the dark red streaks and islands of tau. Illustration: M. Schöll Tau PET is a new and promising imaging method for Alzheimer’s disease. A case study from Lund University in Sweden now

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/new-imaging-technique-alzheimers-disease-opens-possibilities-new-drug-development - 2025-01-19

Foreign farms increase the risk of conflicts in Africa

Published 2 October 2016 Foreign agricultural companies in Africa are draining the fresh water resources and increasing the competition for water. Photo: Shutterstock For the first time, researchers point to areas in Africa where foreign agricultural companies’ choice of crops and management of fresh water are partly responsible for the increased water shortages and greater competition for water.

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/foreign-farms-increase-risk-conflicts-africa - 2025-01-19

Researchers reconstruct house in ancient Pompeii using 3D technology

Published 4 October 2016 Researchers reconstruct house from old Pompeii using 3D technology By combining traditional archaeology with 3D technology, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have managed to reconstruct a house in Pompeii to its original state before the volcano eruption of Mount Vesuvius thousands of years ago. Unique video material has now been produced, showing their creation of

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/researchers-reconstruct-house-ancient-pompeii-using-3d-technology - 2025-01-19

Breast cancer screening could be better and less painful

Published 6 October 2016 New study looks at ways to successfully conduct breast cancer screening with less pain for women. Photo: Shutterstock The breast cancer screening tests offered to women may in many cases be unnecessarily painful. New research from Lund University in Sweden shows that strong compression of the breast during mammography screening does not automatically lead to a better basis

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/breast-cancer-screening-could-be-better-and-less-painful - 2025-01-19

Type 2 diabetes and obesity – what do we really know?

Published 7 October 2016 Review look at what we know so far about the link between diabetes type 2 and obesity. Photo: PracticalCures.com Social and economic factors have led to a dramatic rise in type 2 diabetes and obesity around the world. In a review in Science, Mark McCarthy, professor at the University of Oxford, UK, and Paul Franks, professor at Lund University, Sweden, examine the knowledg

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/type-2-diabetes-and-obesity-what-do-we-really-know - 2025-01-19

How cells move

Published 11 October 2016 A cell on the move. The process of migration shown in images taken with 15 second intervals. The colours show the force needed to migrate – red representing the most force. Photo: Pontus Nordenfelt It’s a known fact that cells can move around the body, but how they do it has been unknown – until now. Researcher in Infection Medicine Pontus Nordenfelt at Lund University in

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/how-cells-move - 2025-01-19

Small-scale agriculture threatens the rainforest

Published 14 October 2016 Small-scale farmin in Southeast Asia is threatening surrounding forests reports new study. Photo: Y. Clough An extensive study led by a researcher at Lund University in Sweden has mapped the effects of small farmers on the rain forests of Southeast Asia for the first time. The findings are discouraging, with regard to environmental impact, biodiversity and the economy, ov

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/small-scale-agriculture-threatens-rainforest - 2025-01-19

Pioneering course decreases suffering for people with haemophilia around the world

By emma [dot] holm [at] education [dot] lu [dot] se (Emma Holm) - published 14 October 2016 75 percent of all people with haemophilia around the world are left untreated, which causes a great deal of suffering and many severe disabilities. But it is possible to lead a healthy life. This is what the internationally known contract education Haemophilia – from diagnosis to therapy is about. Some 10 y

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/pioneering-course-decreases-suffering-people-haemophilia-around-world - 2025-01-19

WATCH: Could a 300-year old murder mystery finally be solved?

Published 14 October 2016 A skeleton was found during construction work at Leine castle in Niedersachsen, Germany in the summer of 2016. This is where Swedish count Philip Christoph Königsmarck disappeared 322 years ago – could it be him? Lund University in Sweden follows the dangerous love story between Philip Königsmarck and Georg Ludwig’s wife Sophia Dorothea through the love letters they wrote

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/watch-could-300-year-old-murder-mystery-finally-be-solved - 2025-01-19

Faster and better healing of infected wounds using negative pressure technique

Published 14 October 2016 The image shows how the negative pressure treatment of a wound works. Illustration: Stine Høxbroe, Copenhagen, Denmark Shorter wound healing time, fewer dressing changes and the opportunity for earlier discharge from the hospital. These are some of the benefits of negative pressure wound therapy to treat wound infections in connection with vascular surgery at the groin. T

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/faster-and-better-healing-infected-wounds-using-negative-pressure-technique - 2025-01-19