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Leva länge och vara frisk ända till slutet

Alla vill vi väl leva länge, men vara friska ända till slutet. Men är det ens möjligt att bli riktigt gammal utan att bli sjuk? Olle Melander planerar själv att bli 85 år. Och han har gjort en del livsstilsförändringar för att kunna nå sitt mål. Olle Melander är professor i internmedicin och överläkare vid Skånes universitetssjukhus. Han har nyligen själv gjort en hälsoresa och det är hans egen fo

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/leva-lange-och-vara-frisk-anda-till-slutet - 2026-07-17

Människans bästa vän spårar insulinkänningar

Den här artikeln är över 5 år gammal, och informationen kan därför vara inaktuell. Hundar har med framgång tränats för att larma om blodsockerfall långt innan matte eller husse själv känner något. Nu visar engelska forskare att många hundar gör det spontant. Visste man hur de gör kanske det vore möjligt att konstruera ett instrument som gör samma sak, menar forskarna. Ett stort och ibland farligt

https://www.diabetesportalen.lu.se/artikel/manniskans-basta-van-sparar-insulinkanningar - 2026-07-17

Forskarkommentar på nationell delrapport om ansvarsfull internationalisering

Nu i april kom den första delrapporten i regeringsuppdraget om ansvarsfull internationalisering. Det handlar om att skapa nationella riktlinjer och en nationell stödstruktur för ansvarsfull internationalisering. Rapportförfattare är UHR, Vinnova och Vetenskapsrådet. Tommy Shih och Sylvia Schwaag Serger på Ekonomihögskolan vid Lunds universitet har varit forskarstöd till utredningen. Mycket i utred

https://www.ehl.lu.se/artikel/forskarkommentar-pa-nationell-delrapport-om-ansvarsfull-internationalisering - 2026-07-17

PhD student Christie Nicoson is the Agenda 2030 Award winner 2024

While we are inundated with data on rising temperatures, carbon dioxide levels and melting glaciers, there are other areas that are also affected by a warming planet. Political scientist Christie Nicoson explores the relationship between gender, climate change and peace and finds that they are closely linked. She is now receiving the Agenda 2030 Award for 2024. Can you tell us about your backgroun

https://www.svet.lu.se/en/article/phd-student-christie-nicoson-agenda-2030-award-winner-2024 - 2026-07-17

Tools to turn young people’s climate-related stress into hope

Those teaching about climate change and sustainability report that students learning about these topics often feel disheartened, anxious and helpless. Researchers at Lund University together with international experts have co-created a set of exercises designed to give teachers and students tools to transform climate-related stress and anxiety into action and hope. “We have noticed that many of ou

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/tools-turn-young-peoples-climate-related-stress-hope - 2026-07-17

Does one service fit all?

Perhaps not, argues Yulia Vakulenko. At least not when it comes to the delivery service needs and preferences of rural versus urban e-consumers in the age of consumer-centric supply chain management. The new age of consumer-centric supply chain management highlights the benefits of placing the consumer at the core of strategy development and operations design. Recent e-commerce shifts translate in

https://www.lusem.lu.se/article/does-one-service-fit-all - 2026-07-17

Cell-specific Biomarkers in the Blood Reflect What Happens in the Brain During Stroke

By analysing small microvesicles that cells release to communicate with their surroundings in the blood, researchers at Lund University map what happens in the brains of stroke patients. The study published in the scientific journal Stroke expands our understanding of stroke and opens doors to new treatment strategies.
 schemic stroke, caused by a blood clot in the brain, is the leading cause of d

https://www.multipark.lu.se/article/cell-specific-biomarkers-blood-reflect-what-happens-brain-during-stroke - 2026-07-17

Cell-specific Biomarkers in the Blood Reflect What Happens in the Brain During Stroke

By analysing small microvesicles that cells release to communicate with their surroundings in the blood, researchers at Lund University map what happens in the brains of stroke patients. The study published in the scientific journal Stroke expands our understanding of stroke and opens doors to new treatment strategies.
 Ischemic stroke, caused by a blood clot in the brain, is the leading cause of

https://www.medicine.lu.se/article/cell-specific-biomarkers-blood-reflect-what-happens-brain-during-stroke - 2026-07-17

Dinosaurs were the first to take the perspectives of others

Understanding that others hold different viewpoints from your own is essential for human sociality. Adopting another person’s visual perspective is a complex skill that emerges around the age of two. A new study from Lund University in Sweden, published in Science Advances, suggests that this ability first arose in dinosaurs, at least 60 million years before it appeared in mammals. These findings

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/dinosaurs-were-first-take-perspectives-others - 2026-07-17

The Library’s Quick bites for researchers continues to grow with new topics

When Quick Bites for Researchers launched in spring 2025, it began as an experiment — an attempt to open up a new and informal channel between researchers and the library’s expertise. One year on, librarians Fredrik Larsson and Anja Zimmerman can look back at an initiative that not only survived its first year, but is now ramping up.“We wanted to find a simple, low-threshold way to support researc

https://www.science.lu.se/internal/article/librarys-quick-bites-researchers-continues-grow-new-topics - 2026-07-17

Panel 3: Beyond the Desirable: Critical Perspectives on Media-Modernity

This article is over 5 years old, and the information may therefore be outdated. Chairs: Britta Ohm, Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Bern, Switzerland, Per Ståhlberg, Department of Media and Communication Studies, Södertörn University, Sweden & Vibodh Parthasarathi, Centre for Culture, Media & Governance, Jamia Milia Islamia, India. VENUE: Edilrummet, Akademiska Föreningen (AF), Sa

https://www.sasnet.lu.se/article/panel-3-beyond-desirable-critical-perspectives-media-modernity - 2026-07-17

Transposable elements in the healthy and diseased human brain: A Ph.D. Interview with Raquel Garza Gómez

Raquel Garza Gómez is a Ph.D. student at Lund University, who will be defending her thesis on January 19, 2024. With a background in computational biology, Raquel's research focuses on studying the role of transposable elements in the human brain. Transposable elements refer to DNA sequences capable of moving from one part of the genome to another. Her research aims to provide a better understandi

https://www.multipark.lu.se/article/transposable-elements-healthy-and-diseased-human-brain-phd-interview-raquel-garza-gomez - 2026-07-17

Segregation graver threat than ISIS returnees in the long run

This article is over 5 years old, and the information may therefore be outdated. A few weeks after the terrorist attack on Drottninggatan in Stockholm, researchers caution against describing reality as a black-and-white struggle between good and evil. If you want to protect society against extremism, it is important that you understand how and why it occurs. Although radicalised youth who return f

https://www.staff.lu.se/article/segregation-graver-threat-isis-returnees-long-run - 2026-07-17

Decoding the repetitive genome: Christopher Douse awarded a Consolidator Grant from SSMF

Christopher Douse, Associate Professor at Lund University’s Faculty of Medicine and group leader at the Lund Stem Cell Center, has been awarded a Consolidator Grant from the Swedish Society for Medical Research (SSMF). The five-year, SEK 11 million award will support his team’s research into how repetitive DNA sequences linked to neurological diseases are controlled in the development of the human

https://www.stemcellcenter.lu.se/article/decoding-repetitive-genome-christopher-douse-awarded-consolidator-grant-ssmf - 2026-07-17

Tracing an academic startup’s journey from lab discovery to cancer therapy

– I have red cells in my dish! When the phone call from PhD student Fábio Rosa came through, Professor Filipe Pereira knew that this was the start of something big. All their work had been leading to this moment. The red cells in the dish were from a mouse, and Filipe and his colleagues had been trying to reprogramme them into dendritic cells, specfically type 1 conventional dendritic cells, (cDC1

https://www.stemcellcenter.lu.se/article/tracing-academic-startups-journey-lab-discovery-cancer-therapy - 2026-07-17

“If we are going to have animal testing – then we have to do it well”

Veterinarian in charge Anders Forslid is retiring after 30 years working to improve the welfare of research animals at Lund University. He has witnessed a paradigm shift in animal health and animal experiments, and the way animal testing and humans’ obligations are viewed has changed. When Anders Forslid started out as a laboratory animal veterinarian at Lund University, he received a fairly cool

https://www.staff.lu.se/article/if-we-are-going-have-animal-testing-then-we-have-do-it-well - 2026-07-18

How B cells are programmed early in life can impact long-term immune health

B cells and the antibodies they produce play an important role in our immune system, protecting us from the microscopic enemies that make us ill. Uncovering how they form and are ‘programmed’ during development is key to better understanding the immune response to infections and vaccinations. A new study by researchers from Lund University in Sweden provides new insights into the origin and develo

https://www.medicine.lu.se/article/how-b-cells-are-programmed-early-life-can-impact-long-term-immune-health - 2026-07-17

How B cells are programmed early in life can impact long-term immune health

B cells and the antibodies they produce play an important role in our immune system, protecting us from the microscopic enemies that make us ill. Uncovering how they form and are ‘programmed’ during development is key to better understanding the immune response to infections and vaccinations. A new study by researchers from Lund Stem Cell Center at Lund University in Sweden provides new insights i

https://www.stemcellcenter.lu.se/article/how-b-cells-are-programmed-early-life-can-impact-long-term-immune-health - 2026-07-17