Gene is found to affect pain level 
Los Angeles Times - 1 hour, 43 minutes ago
People who say they are less sensitive to pain than others could be right. Researchers say they have found a gene that appears to affect how people feel discomfort.Save to My Web

Sudanese woman gives birth on Warsaw tram 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Oct 26 6:51 AM
A Sudanese woman gave birth on a tram in the centre of Poland’s capital, ensuring instant celebrity for her baby daughter, Polish media reported on Thursday.Save to My Web

Sonoma West News 
Sonoma West Times and News - Oct 27 12:02 PM
In the spirit of Halloween, Palm Drive Hospital is bringing its best bone experts out of the operating room, radiology department and rehab center for a Skeleton Health Fair this Saturday, Oct. 28, where you can learn how to take better care of your bones - all 206 of them.Save to My Web

Kane County 
Northwest Herald - Oct 27 10:17 PM
THE FINE LINE CREATIVE ARTS CENTER, 6N158 Crane Road, St. Charles, (630) 584-9443 or www.finelineca.org. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, closed Sunday.Save to My Web

Genes: Gene Variation Affects Pain Sensitivity And Risk Of Chronic Pain 
BioresearchOnline - Oct 24 6:17 AM
A new NIH-funded study shows that a specific gene variant in humans affects both sensitivity to short-term (acute) pain in healthy volunteers and the risk of developing chronic pain after one kind of back surgerySave to My Web

Three-in-one Virus Killer Prevents Common, Often Fatal Infections 
Science Daily - Oct 27 6:17 AM
A novel combination therapy drastically reduces the infection rate of three prevalent viruses — and risk of death — in transplant patients with compromised immune systems. Trivirus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), the first multivirus killer of its kind, called, controlled infections caused by three commonplace viruses — cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and adenovirus Save to My Web

Gene affects pain sensitivity: study 
Sydney Morning Herald - Oct 23 5:34 PM
People who say they are less sensitive to pain than others could be right. Researchers in the US said they had found a gene that appears to affect how people feel discomfort.Save to My Web