It's always weird to me that acetaminophen has such a low therapeutic index, like in order to get enough for it to do anything, you're also on the verge of liver failure (especially if you also drink alcohol). Also it just doesn't work super well in my personal experience --- I hardly feel anything when I take it. And yet it's one of the most commonly taken medicines worldwide.
dreamcompiler · 27m ago
Two tablets work great for me for headaches but results do vary. The danger zone for liver damage is roughly 14 tablets taken all at once. (Less if you've been drinking.) From what I'm told, acetaminophen overdose is quite an unpleasant way to die.
reedf1 · 1h ago
I take it mostly as an anti-pyretic (fever reducer). For which it is extremely effective. It's my drug of choice for colds, flu, etc.
MichaelRo · 7m ago
Well, it doesn't work for high fever (> 39-40 Celsius). For that, I alternate Ibuprofen and sodium metamizole every 4 hours.
For pain release, paracetamol it's very modest. Some effect for light head pain, zero for strong pain. Zero effect for strong back pain. Ibuprofen works better in all these cases but comes with stomach damage if taken for long.
NortySpock · 3h ago
The same website is also for the excellent Science News print magazine, which will ship you top notch science reporting right to your door. My father was a subscriber since, well, whenever blue LEDs were invented, because I recall reading about them in Science News.
Strong recommendation for any science-lover.
shanemhansen · 2h ago
Science News is a big part of my childhood. My stepdad's dad was a subscriber and every issue was handed down to us gently used. I have thousands of back issues.
pugworthy · 1h ago
Same. My highschool library in the 70’s had a subscription and I would read through them with relish.
I'm impressed beyond words by these kids, though I think I'd give her the top prize. Watching my grandfather's final days taken away from him by the effects of morphine has always made me wish so much that we had much more effective non-narcotic painkillers
apwell23 · 21s ago
> Watching my grandfather's final days taken away from him by the effects of morphine
Those were not prbly his final days he was kept alive . he was kept alive by modern medicine. Those final days are not natural part of dying.
She's in top 4, awarded $600? I dunno this is a confusing layout/structure for how the program is conducted seeing as how the headline is $9m awarded.
ricardobeat · 3h ago
Reversible computing, materials science, genetic research… it’s insane that these kids are doing this level of work in high school.
timr · 1h ago
They aren't doing it on their own. Most of these kids are working with established researchers who give them the shape of the project, as well as the tools and the expertise to accomplish it.
More recently the US scientific funding bodies have had summer programs for kids who wouldn't otherwise get that kind of access, but it's still the exception. It takes more than a summer to do this kind of work.
Edit: quick search for the father's name brings up this professor of biochemistry at UT Tyler:
I don't mean to take anything away from the kid or suggest that they don't work hard, are smart, etc., but these kinds of science fairs are fundamentally about access.
carlmr · 14m ago
>these kinds of science fairs are fundamentally about access.
Completely agree there, which kind of brings me to a related thought:
One thing I do wonder is, if you look at a few hundred years ago a lot of the inventors in math, physics, engineering, were a tiny group of people with access to resources and education. You're always reading the same names.
It seems if we as a society could decide that science is more important to us, with 8 billion people on earth, if we gave more access, time and incentives to people we should be able to increase the amount of scientific results exponentially.
AStonesThrow · 1h ago
Science projects are a family affair, more often than not. Ask me how I know.
fracus · 2h ago
I thought morphine didn't cause health damage to the human body apart from addiction and withdrawal symptoms.
shanemhansen · 2h ago
Well it absolutely muddles your mind when you're on it and it causes constipation. It can also depress your respiratory system.
dreamcompiler · 39m ago
And it can make some people very nauseous.
Nobody discusses these mundane drawbacks when they talk about the evils of heroin addiction. When you're high, you puke and you cannot give a shit. Both figuratively and literally.
cjbgkagh · 2h ago
Morphine, like all neurotransmitter drugs, affects the autonomic nervous system which can yield a cornucopia of unwanted and seemingly unrelated side effects. It’s a complex system that’s best treated with care.
lenerdenator · 2h ago
at least according to these people [0], you can overdose on morphine, same as any opiate or opioid. not sure their credentials but it makes sense; it's an opioid/opiate and those can cause respiratory depression.
Oh yeah morphine overdose will kill you dead because you will stop breathing and you won't even know it happened.
The instant antidote is Narcan which is available over the counter at pharmacies in some states.
DontchaKnowit · 2h ago
Yeah its like any other opiod- it depresses respiratory function which can cause death but it isnt directly toxic to any organs like APAP is
AStonesThrow · 2h ago
Nurses in palliative care and hospice are well-known to generously administer morphine in increasing doses, because it eventually takes away all the pain and suffering (of the families and nurses).
The key synthetic step using Ir was published after I graduated (and left Chemistry...) way to make me feel old :)
I'm very impressed by the level of chemistry demonstrated by a 17 year old. During my time as a chemistry student this level of project and synthesis probably could have been included as a chunk of a master's thesis. Did she perform all the synthesis herself? That takes a decent amount of experimental skill and more importantly what lab did she do all of this in?
Any uni ought to be delighted to get a precocious talent like this!
ItsHarper · 3h ago
This would be incredibly cool if it works in reality and not just simulation. Remarkable that the author is just 17.
fracus · 2h ago
She's also a very talented violinist.
epcoa · 3h ago
I’m not going to shit on it, nothing wrong with going into the family business - but it isn’t a complete coincidence that her dad is a PhD biochemist at UT Tyler.
Yeah, it's great to have kids excited about science, but at 17 it's extremely unlikely that she taught herself enough chemistry, organic chemistry and biochemistry to come up with this. She needs years more of college-level coursework. Essentially impossible without a biochemist in the family to guide her.
buckle8017 · 3h ago
It never is, the winner of this competition is in astral radio telescopes.
Something tells me he didn't launch the satellite.
felineflock · 2h ago
With mentorship from Caltech and access to data from NASA’s NEOWISE mission, Matteo created a machine learning algorithm and compiled a groundbreaking database called VarWISE.
I knew someone who reached the final stage of one of these science fairs. Project was done at a lab in an Ivy League university over a couple of summers. Relative was a senior scientist at the lab and guided them every step of the way. Not to discount what these kids are doing, but the reality is that these science fairs have largely become a contest about how well your family is connected to science-fair-friendly research facilities and how good your presentation skills are. I mean, do we really think 17 year olds are out there doing human trials on novel cancer therapies? I’m sure there are some projects that are genuinely thought of and done by the students themselves, but looking at a lot of these PhD level research that are supposedly done as after school projects of high school kids, I can’t help but think the whole thing has become a bit of a farce.
14 · 2h ago
Seeing articles like this is almost hard to read. My kids are very smart but this girl is 1000 times what they are doing. This girl is 1000 times what I am doing.
Maybe it is just imposter syndrome but sometimes I read articles like this and think I fell short in life. But I am also top of my peers at work and I am a health care provider and my clients all request me so I know I am doing good. Sometimes I just wonder what mark I will leave on this world.
Glyptodon · 1h ago
My experience is that stuff like this isn't because someone is wildly smarter than everyone but because there are connections, support, and resources of some form.
throwawaymaths · 1h ago
it's just a four step synthesis. with the help of a phd chemist you could probably learn the steps in three months, and if you put your mind to it you could learn the ochem in a year. this project is the culmination of at least a year-maybe even up to three-of work.
whats surprising is that parents let their kids do ochem at 17!! thats some toxic shit :). safety is why chemistry is not a super popular field at high school level science fairs.
mofunnyman · 53m ago
C'mon, who doesn't like their kids dusted with methylmercury?
snibsnib · 40m ago
I'm not an expert in pharmaceutical chemistry, but this looks like a series of relatively complex and low yield reactions. Would it be likely that this would push the price of this product beyond what is reasonable for a general use drug?
maxerickson · 28m ago
The starting point is ~free (like 2 or 4 cents retail per dose for generic in the US). Given my relatively light usage of pain drugs, I would certainly pay 10x that for reduced toxicity.
And then it isn't necessarily the case that the identified reactions are the most cost effective available.
throwawaymaths · 3h ago
impressive for a high schooler but this just adds a protecting group onto tylenol. am i missing something?
edit: oh i see. its really blurry but the silyl modified tylenol is predicted to have good trpv1 binding computationally. afaict no in vitro or in vivo studies were done. could be cool. not sure if diethylethynylphenylsilyl group has good Lipinski properties though (i suspect not)
edit: s/aspirin/Tylenol
abrookewood · 3h ago
It isn't aspirin - Acetaminophen, also known as N-acetyl-para-aminophenol (APAP) or paracetamol
throwawaymaths · 3h ago
lol yeah sorry brain too deep into synthetic chemistry bits. thanks.
aethrum · 2h ago
Reminds me of this drug company I was pitched a while ago:
How about don’t fucking take it because it’s toxic?
mewse-hn · 3h ago
so is this already patented by Regeneron?
colingauvin · 2h ago
They would need to show efficacy to patent it. It seems like this is all computational.
throwawaymaths · 1h ago
no she did the synthesis and the yields are averaged? over >5 replicates <== just doing that is pretty (spiritually?) impressive, most phd chemists wouldn't do that kind of reproduction of results.
refurb · 1h ago
Only for a utility patent, not for a composition of matter patent.
throwawaymaths · 3h ago
regeneron is the sponsor of STS. used to be well known as the Westinghouse STS, then intel took it over in the aughts
For pain release, paracetamol it's very modest. Some effect for light head pain, zero for strong pain. Zero effect for strong back pain. Ibuprofen works better in all these cases but comes with stomach damage if taken for long.
Strong recommendation for any science-lover.
I'm impressed beyond words by these kids, though I think I'd give her the top prize. Watching my grandfather's final days taken away from him by the effects of morphine has always made me wish so much that we had much more effective non-narcotic painkillers
Those were not prbly his final days he was kept alive . he was kept alive by modern medicine. Those final days are not natural part of dying.
She's in top 4, awarded $600? I dunno this is a confusing layout/structure for how the program is conducted seeing as how the headline is $9m awarded.
More recently the US scientific funding bodies have had summer programs for kids who wouldn't otherwise get that kind of access, but it's still the exception. It takes more than a summer to do this kind of work.
Edit: quick search for the father's name brings up this professor of biochemistry at UT Tyler:
https://www.uttyler.edu/directory/chemistry/lee-jiyong.php
and mom's name brings up this professor of pharmaceutical science:
https://www.unthsc.edu/college-of-pharmacy/eul-hyun-suh
I don't mean to take anything away from the kid or suggest that they don't work hard, are smart, etc., but these kinds of science fairs are fundamentally about access.
Completely agree there, which kind of brings me to a related thought:
One thing I do wonder is, if you look at a few hundred years ago a lot of the inventors in math, physics, engineering, were a tiny group of people with access to resources and education. You're always reading the same names.
It seems if we as a society could decide that science is more important to us, with 8 billion people on earth, if we gave more access, time and incentives to people we should be able to increase the amount of scientific results exponentially.
Nobody discusses these mundane drawbacks when they talk about the evils of heroin addiction. When you're high, you puke and you cannot give a shit. Both figuratively and literally.
[0]https://www.addictiongroup.org/drugs/opioids/morphine/overdo...
The instant antidote is Narcan which is available over the counter at pharmacies in some states.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4594093/
I'm very impressed by the level of chemistry demonstrated by a 17 year old. During my time as a chemistry student this level of project and synthesis probably could have been included as a chunk of a master's thesis. Did she perform all the synthesis herself? That takes a decent amount of experimental skill and more importantly what lab did she do all of this in?
Any uni ought to be delighted to get a precocious talent like this!
Something tells me he didn't launch the satellite.
https://www.societyforscience.org/regeneron-sts/2025-student...
whats surprising is that parents let their kids do ochem at 17!! thats some toxic shit :). safety is why chemistry is not a super popular field at high school level science fairs.
And then it isn't necessarily the case that the identified reactions are the most cost effective available.
edit: oh i see. its really blurry but the silyl modified tylenol is predicted to have good trpv1 binding computationally. afaict no in vitro or in vivo studies were done. could be cool. not sure if diethylethynylphenylsilyl group has good Lipinski properties though (i suspect not)
edit: s/aspirin/Tylenol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antibe_Therapeutics