By Springer
Confronted with a high blood pressure value in a diabetic patient, most doctors would treat aggressively with medications. According to new research, however, delaying drug treatment for up to a year is unlikely to be harmful. The delay allows docto
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By Rush University Medical Center
A Rush University Medical Center led international research team has announced that a treatment to prevent bleeding episodes in children with hemophilia A also is effective for adolescents and adults.
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By University of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences
Personalized prognostic tools and gene-based therapies may improve the survival and quality of life of patients suffering from glioblastoma, an aggressive and deadly form of brain cancer, reports a new University of Illinois study funded by the NIH
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By University at Buffalo
In the images of fruit flies, clusters of neurons are all lit up, forming a brightly glowing network of highways within the brain.
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By University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing
With the prodding of new federal legislation, electronic health records (EHRs) are rapidly becoming part of the daily practice of hospital nurses -- the frontline providers of care. In the first large study of its kind, researchers at the University
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By Van Andel Research Institute
A recent Van Andel Research Institute (VARI) study published in the journal Science investigating the molecular structure and function of an essential plant hormone could profoundly change our understanding of a key cell process, and might ultimatel
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By University of Colorado Denver
With growing concern that excessive levels of fructose may pose a great health risk -- causing high blood pressure, kidney disease and diabetes -- researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, along with their colleagues at the Unive
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By Simon Fraser University
Simon Fraser University associate professor James Wakeling is adding to the arsenal of increasingly sophisticated medical imaging tools with a new signal-processing method for viewing muscle activation details that have never been seen before.
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By UCSF
After people with low-grade glioma, a type of brain cancer, undergo neurosurgery to remove the tumors, they face variable odds of survival -- depending largely on how rapidly the cancer recurs. Even though their doctors monitor the tumor closely wit
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By Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
For the first time, a team from the Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire (IGBMC, Université de Strasbourg/CNRS/Inserm) has obtained a high-resolution(1), full 3D image of a small but vital molecu
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By University of Michigan
Only about one in five young adults in their late 30s received a flu shot during the 2009-2010 swine flu epidemic, according to a University of Michigan report that details the behavior and attitudes of Generation X.
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By Penn State
The skeletal structure of the foot and ankle differs significantly between human sprinters and non-sprinters, according to Penn State researchers. Their findings not only help explain why some people are faster runners than others, but also may be u
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By University of Alabama
Although their diets were similar, typically-developing children, in one study, had healthier levels of "good" cholesterol and fatty acids than did children with autism.
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By American Association for Cancer Research
Glioblastoma, a lethal brain cancer, is one of the most resistant to available therapies and patients typically live approximately 15 months.
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By Lifespan
A newly published paper from Rhode Island Hospital reports on the impact to patients if five personality disorders are removed from the upcoming revision to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 5th edition (DSM-5). Based on their study, the resear
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By Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., Publishers
The time for commercial development of gene therapy has come. Patients with diseases treatable and curable with gene therapy deserve access to the technology, which has demonstrated both its effectiveness and feasibility, says James Wilson, MD, PhD,
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By McGill University Health Centre
A saliva test used to diagnose the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), is comparable in accuracy to the traditional blood test, according to a new study led by the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) and McGill Univer
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By UCLA
With a lack of effective treatments for Alzheimer's, most of us would think long and hard about whether we wanted to know years in advance if we were genetically predisposed to develop the disease. For researchers, however, such knowledge is a windo
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By Norwegian Institute of Public Health
A new study supports previous findings that children delivered by Caesarean section have an increased risk of developing asthma.
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By Linkoping University
Researchers at Linköping University are now launching a plan to effectively treat psoriasis. About 300 000 Swedes suffer from the difficult to treat disease, which manifests itself in scaly and often itchy patches on the skin. The reason is tha
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