The dailysciencedigest’s Podcast

Scientists recreate enterovirus infection in a new model of the human intestine - Ep. 95

6 min · 5. kesä 2026
jakson Scientists recreate enterovirus infection in a new model of the human intestine - Ep. 95 kansikuva

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Episode about Scientists recreate enterovirus infection in a new model of the human intestine Research completed for: Scientists recreate enterovirus infection in a new model of the human intestine Key Findings: Researchers at the University of Tokyo have built a miniaturized ‘intestine-on-a-chip’ that faithfully mimics the structure, mucus layer, and peristaltic motion of the human gut. Using the system, the team maintained a productive, weeks-long infection with enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) and observed that the virus exploits the epithelial turnover of the gut to spread while dampening interferon-based immune signaling. The platform therefore offers an ethically sound, highly controllable alternative to Verified Facts: 1 Unverified Claims: 0 Overall Confidence: 7.2/10 The research provides comprehensive coverage of the topic with 5 key facts, 1 helpful analogies, and addresses 3 common misconceptions.

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jakson Hidden Fungal World — Inside Earth’s Mycorrhizal Superhighway kansikuva

Hidden Fungal World — Inside Earth’s Mycorrhizal Superhighway

Fungal superhighway and the hidden fungal world beneath our feet revealed Underground fungi network and mycorrhizal networks mapped across 110 quadrillion kilometers of Earth’s soils Discover how this forest underground network—the wood wide web—moves carbon, water, and nutrients while shaping climate and ecosystems What You'll Learn: * How mycorrhizal networks form a global fungal superhighway connecting roots, soils, and entire ecosystems * Why a single teaspoon of healthy soil can hold up to 100 meters of 5 µm-wide fungal hyphae—and what that means for soil health * How a 110 quadrillion kilometer underground fungi network compares to 724 astronomical units and a Solar System-spanning scale * The role of soil fungi in moving an estimated 4 billion tons of carbon dioxide into soils each year * How fungi and climate change are linked through carbon storage in soil and underground nutrient cycling * Why some estimates suggest fungal networks may channel 13 gigatons of water to plants annually—and why that number still needs verification * How the newly mapped hidden fungal world could transform conservation, reforestation, and regenerative agriculture strategies * Practical ways scientists and land stewards might protect and restore the wood wide web to build climate resilience

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jakson Prenatal health and early diet may shape fatty liver risk, study suggests - Ep. 104 kansikuva

Prenatal health and early diet may shape fatty liver risk, study suggests - Ep. 104

Episode about Prenatal health and early diet may shape fatty liver risk, study suggests Research completed for: Prenatal health and early diet may shape fatty liver risk, study suggests Key Findings: Emerging evidence shows that the roots of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can be traced back to the womb and the first years of life. Maternal obesity, gestational diabetes, nutrient imbalances, and the infant’s post-natal diet appear to ‘program’ liver metabolism through hormonal, epigenetic and microbiome-mediated pathways. Children exposed to these factors have a measurably higher liver‐fat fraction and a greater likelihood of developing NAFLD and its complications later in life. Verified Facts: 1 Unverified Claims: 0 Overall Confidence: 6.7/10 The research provides comprehensive coverage of the topic with 5 key facts, 1 helpful analogies, and addresses 5 common misconceptions.

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Written exposure therapy can provide transformative, scalable PTSD care - Ep. 103

Episode about Written exposure therapy can provide transformative, scalable PTSD care Research completed for: Written exposure therapy can provide transformative, scalable PTSD care Key Findings: Written Exposure Therapy is a brief, five-session, structured writing intervention that repeatedly exposes individuals to the memory of their trauma on paper. In randomized controlled trials (RCTs), WET has shown PTSD symptom reductions comparable to gold-standard treatments such as Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) and Prolonged Exposure (PE), but with far fewer therapy hours, lower dropout rates, and minimal clinician training requirements—making it highly scalable for health systems that fac Verified Facts: 0 Unverified Claims: 1 Overall Confidence: 6.1/10 The research provides comprehensive coverage of the topic with 6 key facts, 1 helpful analogies, and addresses 4 common misconceptions.

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Most Australians with dementia excluded from voluntary assisted dying, study finds - Ep. 101

Episode about Most Australians with dementia excluded from voluntary assisted dying, study finds Research completed for: Most Australians with dementia excluded from voluntary assisted dying, study finds Key Findings: A 2024 University of Southern Queensland study led by Prof. Kerstin Braun shows that 70–80 % of Australians who will develop dementia would not meet the legal criteria for voluntary assisted dying in any state or territory, primarily because every Australian VAD statute requires the person to have decision-making capacity both when they request and when they receive the life-ending medication. Dementia’s progressive cognitive decline means that, by the time symptoms are severe enough to satisfy Verified Facts: 1 Unverified Claims: 0 Overall Confidence: 6.6/10 The research provides comprehensive coverage of the topic with 5 key facts, 1 helpful analogies, and addresses 4 common misconceptions.

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