Archive for medicine health

OHSU wins national award for its palliative and end-of-life efforts

PORTLAND, Ore. – Oregon Health & Science University has been named a Circle of Life Award winner for its innovative program that improves the care of patients near the end of life or with life-threatening conditions.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

Janet Rowley to receive Presidential Medal of Freedom for cancer chromosome studies

Janet Davison Rowley, MD, a pioneer in demonstrating that cancer is a genetic disease, will receive the 2009 Presidential Medal of Freedom the White House announced Thursday. President Barack Obama will award the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, to Rowley and 15 others at a ceremony Wednesday, August 12.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

Food additive may one day help control blood lipids and reduce disease risk

St. Louis, July 30, 2009 — Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a substance in the liver that helps process fat and glucose. That substance is a component of the common food additive lecithin, and researchers speculate it may one day be possible to use lecithin products to control blood lipids and reduce risk for diabetes, hypertension or cardiovascular disease using treatments delivered in food rather than medication. Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

People at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s age mentally just like noncarriers

WASHINGTON — Australian researchers say that a genotype that heightens the risk for Alzheimer’s disease does not contribute to cognitive change during most of adulthood. The largest study of its kind has found that carriers and non-carriers show the same type and extent of normal age-related cognitive declines, decades before carriers start to more often develop symptoms of dementia. The findings suggest that the higher-risk genotype acts only in later years to layer disease on top of normal aging.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

New HIV test may predict drug resistance

DURHAM, N.C. — Researchers at Duke University Medical Center have developed a highly sensitive test for identifying which drug-resistant strains of HIV are harbored in a patient’s bloodstream.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

Scientists discover new, readily available source of stem cells

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Scientists have discovered a new source of stems cells and have used them to create muscle, bone, fat, blood vessel, nerve and liver cells in the laboratory. The first report showing the isolation of broad potential stem cells from the amniotic fluid that surrounds developing embryos was published today in Nature Biotechnology.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off