logo
Space pharmaceutical industry hopes to be future of medicine

Space pharmaceutical industry hopes to be future of medicine

Yahoo14-05-2025
(NewsNation) — For scientists, space could be the new frontier of medicine, particularly when it comes to creating new pharmaceuticals.
California-based Varda Space Industries is one company hoping outer space can be used to create new medications for people on Earth.
Co-founder Will Bruey told NewsNation the industry is looking beyond Earth for opportunities to 'manipulate chemistry' in new ways.
Strange flying objects reported near Arizona Air Force ranges: FAA
'The reason we make pharmaceuticals in orbit is because the lack of gravity allows us to make drug formulations that you otherwise couldn't on Earth because of Earth's gravity,' he said. 'So it's a whole new way to manipulate chemistry.'
The conditions in orbit cannot be replicated on our planet, so scientists on the ground develop pharmaceutical predictions and test them by sending modules to space. The drugs are analyzed once the capsule returns.
'They can take a formulation that used to be an IV bag and turn it into a shot, or a pill to an inhalable,' Bruey said. 'Those are what I mean by different formulations, and you can create those in the microgravity of space and then bring it back for use for people on Earth.'
New Orleans man takes 2 million steps in 30 days
The growing space industry is allowing for more research, although at the moment, it comes with a significant price tag.
Bruey hopes that, with progress, space will become just another laboratory.
'In the next few years, it will be just scaling up, so more flights, until we get to a daily cadence so that we simply look like another piece of lab equipment for the pharmaceutical industry,' he said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Major mattress retail chain liquidates in Chapter 7 bankruptcy
Major mattress retail chain liquidates in Chapter 7 bankruptcy

Miami Herald

timea few seconds ago

  • Miami Herald

Major mattress retail chain liquidates in Chapter 7 bankruptcy

The U.S. mattress and bedding market has struggled over the last year, as sales dropped in 2024 and in the first quarter of 2025, which has led to factory and store closures and bankruptcy filings. Sales for the first quarter of 2025 declined by 5.7%, totaling $2.4 billion, compared to $2.5 billion in the same period in 2024, according to the International Sleep Products Association's Bedding Market Quarterly, Furniture Today reported. Total units sold in the first quarter also fell by 11.2% year-over-year to 8.7 million units compared to 9.7 units in 2024. Related: Famous handgun maker files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy The association noted in the report that the sales decline in the quarter was impacted by "slowing economic growth, policy uncertainty, and stubborn inflation." The mattress and stationary foundation market in 2024 declined 7.7% in sales to $9.2 billion for the year, and dropped 8.8% in units sold to about 36.5 million units, compared to the previous year. First Quarter 2025 sales: $2.4 billion, 5.7% decline.2024 annual sales: $9.2 billion, 7.7% decline. The mattress and bedding industry's economic issues likely led a California-based retail chain to close its doors permanently. The parent company of mattress and bedding retail chain Mattress Land filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy to liquidate and close all 15 of its stores in four Western states, including California, Nevada, Idaho, and Washington. The Fresno, Calif.-based mattress store chain's owner The Sleep Fit Corp. filed for Chapter 7 protection on July 17, after liquidating and shutting down all of its stores at the end of June, according to The Business Journal of Fresno. Related: Rapper Phora surprises fans with Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing Mattress Land, which was founded in 1996, operated its combination headquarters and retail store in Fresno, as well as stores in Clovis, Visalia, Bakersfield, Merced, Atascadero, and San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Carson City, Sparks, and Reno, Nev.; Spokane Valley and Spokane, Wash., and Coeur d'Alene, Meridien, and Nampa, Idaho. California: Fresno, Clovis, Visalia, Bakersfield, Merced, Atascadero, San Luis Carson City, Sparks, Spokane Valley, Coeur d'Alene, Meridien, and Nampa. The mattress retail chain's website and phone number were both disabled at last check on Aug. 3. Mattress Land's CEO, president, and owner is William J. Van Beurden, who is also chair of Kingsburg, Calif.-based Van Beurden Insurance Services Inc., The Business Journal reported. Mattress industry struggles also led AFM Mattress Company LLC, which operates 57 American Mattress stores, to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on July 6. More Bankruptcy: Major iconic food brand files for Chapter 11 bankruptcyPopular Dairy Queen rival franchisee files Chapter 11 bankruptcyPopular vision care chain files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy The Elk Grove Village, Ill., mattress store chain is likely restructuring debt and reorganizing its business, as its website shows it is still operating 35 stores in the Chicagoland area, five in Florida, eight in Indiana, 22 in Michigan, and five in Missouri. Mattress and bed distributor, CVB Inc., faced an involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing on July 23 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Utah, made by six suppliers, citing about $3.5 million in unpaid debts. The involuntary Chapter 7 filing came months after the company faced a massive recall in September 2024 involving 137,000 of its Lucid brand platform beds that posed a serious fall and injury risk. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Netscape's Lessons for AI Mania
Netscape's Lessons for AI Mania

Wall Street Journal

timea minute ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Netscape's Lessons for AI Mania

The initial public offering was filed at $14. Everyone wanted shares, so Morgan Stanley set the deal price at $28. As trading started, the stock popped to $74, ending the day at $58. Tech star Figma? The latest SPAC? No, it was 30 years ago this week, Aug. 9, 1995. The Journal's Molly Baker nailed it: 'It took General Dynamics Corp. 43 years to become a corporation worth today's $2.7 billion in the stock market. It took Netscape Communications Corp. about a minute.' Remember, Netscape was a money-losing company with only $16.6 million in sales in its previous six months. Worth $2.7 billion! That's the equivalent of Nvidia shares going up 11 cents today. We've come a long way, baby.

LISTEN: How Noah Hawley and FX Brought ‘Alien: Earth' to Life; Kevin Feige Gets Candid as Comic Con Approaches
LISTEN: How Noah Hawley and FX Brought ‘Alien: Earth' to Life; Kevin Feige Gets Candid as Comic Con Approaches

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

LISTEN: How Noah Hawley and FX Brought ‘Alien: Earth' to Life; Kevin Feige Gets Candid as Comic Con Approaches

About eight years ago, multihyphenate Noah Hawley wrote a five-page pitch for FX on what he would do with the 'Alien' franchise if he ever got the chance to work in the world established in 1979 by Ridley Scott's seminal film. Next month, FX will unveil its wildly ambitious, first-ever TV series take on the sci-fi franchise that has spawned eight other films across the past five decades. On the latest episode of the 'Daily Variety' podcast, Daniel D'Addario, Variety's chief correspondent, offers insights into his inside look at the making of 'Alien: Earth' that is featured as 's July 23 cover story. More from Variety 'Alien: Earth' Is Wildly Ambitious, Expensive and Stars a Talented Actor Who Refuses to Play by Hollywood's Rules. Inside FX's Risky Bet for a New Blockbuster Series Neon's 'Next Wave of Horror' Comic-Con Panel to Feature 'Together' Stars Alison Brie and Dave Franco, Osgood Perkins, Tatiana Maslany and More (EXCLUSIVE) Scott Free Eyes Further Series Adaptations of Ridley Scott and Tony Scott Movies Following 'Alien: Earth' and 'Blade Runner 2099' D'Addario reports that all of the major components of Hawley's eight-year-old outline made it into the final series, which drops on FX and Hulu Aug. 12. That's a testament to the strength of the writer-producer's vision for adapting 'Alien' as a TV series for the present day. D'Addario notes that Hawley is a famously prolific 'idea machine' who has the trust of FX leadership. That's important given all that FX has riding on 'Alien: Earth,' which has topped the budget of FX's previous most expensive series. 'He's a novelist. He's written and directed feature films, and he just has the ability to work through this IP world without having it feel like a crass brand extension. It's 'Alien,' but it is fundamentally a Noah Hawley show as well,' D'Addario says. Also featured in today's episode is a conversation with Adam B. Vary, Variety's senior entertainment writer, about what to expect from San Diego Comic Con, which begins on July 24 and is always a mile-marker for studios and networks. Vary also discusses his recent sit down with Marvel chief Kevin Feige, who delivered a candid assessment of the studio's recent struggles. Feige cited a startling statistic that illustrated how Marvel simply became overextended in recent years as it ramped up production to feed series and movies to Disney+, which has been an enormous priority for parent company Disney. From 2008 to 2019, Marvel produced about 50 total hours worth of film and TV content. In the last six years, Marvel has produced more than 120 hours. 'That massive increase in volume really diluted the brand, diluted their quality. At one point he said, for the first time, quantity trumped quality.' And, that's a pretty blunt assessment for what went wrong,' Vary says. As for Comic Con, Vary predicts it will be less of a launchpad than in the past as Marvel is not hosting its usual state-of-the-industry presentation (hence Feige's charm offensive with journalists), nor does DC Studios have a big presence this year. 'It's generally going to be a little bit of a quieter Comic Con,' Vary says. Daily Variety Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store