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Newswise: Rutgers to Open Alzheimer’s and Dementia Clinical Research and Treatment Center
Released: 1-Feb-2023 12:35 PM EST
Rutgers to Open Alzheimer’s and Dementia Clinical Research and Treatment Center
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences (RBHS) is launching the Herbert and Jacqueline Krieger Klein Alzheimer’s and Dementia Clinical Research and Treatment Center. Based at the Rutgers Brain Health Institute and scheduled to open in fall 2023, the center will offer research expertise from the institute, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and the Rutgers Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research as well as facilitate clinical research in Alzheimer’s disease that could result in new medical treatments.

Released: 1-Feb-2023 12:05 PM EST
Academic medical centers are linked to better health outcomes at neighboring hospitals, researchers find
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

A new study suggests that the presence of academic medical centers within a healthcare market is linked to better outcomes for patients treated at nearby community hospitals.

Newswise:Video Embedded university-of-oregon-picks-prominent-harvard-psychologist-to-lead-the-ballmer-institute-for-children-s-behavioral-health
VIDEO
Released: 31-Jan-2023 6:55 PM EST
University of Oregon Picks Prominent Harvard Psychologist to Lead The Ballmer Institute for Children’s Behavioral Health
University of Oregon

The University of Oregon is proud to announce Katie McLaughlin, a professor and influential clinical psychologist, has been selected to lead the Portland-based Ballmer Institute for Children’s Behavioral Health.

   
Released: 31-Jan-2023 1:15 PM EST
Artificial Blood Product One Step Closer to Reality With $46 Million in Federal Funding
University of Maryland School of Medicine

A University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) physician-scientist will head a new federally-funded research program to develop and test a whole blood product, storable at room temperature, that can be used to transfuse wounded soldiers in the field within 30 minutes of injury, potentially saving thousands of lives.

Newswise: University of Oklahoma Biomedical Engineer Focuses on Restoring Movement After Stroke
Released: 31-Jan-2023 12:40 PM EST
University of Oklahoma Biomedical Engineer Focuses on Restoring Movement After Stroke
University of Oklahoma, Gallogly College of Engineering

Biomedical engineer Yuan Yang has received nearly $2 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association to examine the impact of strokes and the movement impairments stroke patients suffer.

Newswise: Focused ultrasound technique leads to release of neurodegenerative disorders biomarkers
27-Jan-2023 3:10 PM EST
Focused ultrasound technique leads to release of neurodegenerative disorders biomarkers
Washington University in St. Louis

Using focused-ultrasound-mediated liquid biopsy in a mouse model released more tau proteins and another biomarker into the blood than without the intervention. This noninvasive method could facilitate diagnosis of neurodegenerative disorders, according to research from Washington University in St. Louis.

Newswise: Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Awarded $2.5 Million Grant to Address Youth Mental Health Crisis by Training Primary Care Pediatricians in Behavioral and Mental Health
Released: 31-Jan-2023 8:05 AM EST
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Awarded $2.5 Million Grant to Address Youth Mental Health Crisis by Training Primary Care Pediatricians in Behavioral and Mental Health
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Awarded $2.5 Million Grant to Address Youth Mental Health Crisis by Training Primary Care Pediatricians in Behavioral and Mental Health.

Released: 30-Jan-2023 5:20 PM EST
SLU Researcher Receives $1.76 Million NIH Grant to Create STAR, an HIV-Focused Experiential Research and Capacity Building Program for Students and Young Researchers
Saint Louis University Medical Center

Using a crowdsourcing framework utilized over the past five years, Juliet Iwelunmor, Ph.D., professor of global health and behavioral science and health education at Saint Louis University’s College for Public Health and Social Justice, is taking what she learned from empowering youth in Nigeria to identify young people in the United States who aim to become the next generation of HIV researchers, leaders and innovators in the field.

Newswise: Tumor microbiome linked to immunotherapy success in sarcoma patients
Released: 30-Jan-2023 4:55 PM EST
Tumor microbiome linked to immunotherapy success in sarcoma patients
UC Davis Health

A new UC Davis study reveals the interaction between tumor microbiome and the immune system may be the secret to improving outcomes for sarcoma patients.

Newswise: Orthopaedic Association Awards Grant to Miller School Program Aimed at Mentoring Future Female Orthopaedic Surgeons
Released: 30-Jan-2023 4:45 PM EST
Orthopaedic Association Awards Grant to Miller School Program Aimed at Mentoring Future Female Orthopaedic Surgeons
University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine

To help set the record straight about what it’s like to be a woman in orthopedics, Dr. Julianne Muñoz launched a mentorship group for female medical students, residents, fellows, and attendings, called the Female Orthopedists of Miami Mentorship Organization. The program has been so promising that the AAOS earmarked funding for it through the association’s Inspiring Diversity, Equity, and Access (IDEA) grant program.

Newswise: LJI scientists uncover the structure and function of Inmazeb, the first FDA-approved drug for Ebola virus infection
Released: 30-Jan-2023 4:30 PM EST
LJI scientists uncover the structure and function of Inmazeb, the first FDA-approved drug for Ebola virus infection
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

Inmazeb (REGN-EB3), developed by Regeneron, is a three-antibody cocktail designed to target the Ebola virus glycoprotein. The drug was first approved for clinical use in October 2020, but its exact mechanism of action has remained unclear.

   
Newswise: UT Southwestern cardiologist receives NIH Outstanding Investigator Award
Released: 30-Jan-2023 3:35 PM EST
UT Southwestern cardiologist receives NIH Outstanding Investigator Award
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern physician-scientist Hesham Sadek, M.D., Ph.D., has received the prestigious National Institutes of Health (NIH) Outstanding Investigator Award to support his ongoing research into mechanisms behind heart regeneration that could lead to treatments for heart failure.

Released: 30-Jan-2023 12:40 PM EST
Mayo Clinic to lead new radiotracer trial for detecting pancreatic cancer
Mayo Clinic

In an academic-industrial collaboration, Mayo Clinic is assessing in a clinical trial a new radiotracer in pancreatic cancer imaging.

Released: 30-Jan-2023 11:05 AM EST
Moffitt Cancer Center Joins Weill Cornell Medicine and University of North Carolina to Improve HIV-Related Cancer Care Abroad
Moffitt Cancer Center

Moffitt Cancer Center, Weill Cornell Medicine and the University of North Carolina School of Medicine have received a $3.5 million, five-year grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) to improve screening and preventative treatment of cervical cancer for women living with HIV in low-resource countries.

Released: 30-Jan-2023 9:00 AM EST
Sandia, AMD collaborate to improve stockpile mission
Sandia National Laboratories

Sandia National Laboratories, in partnership with Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national labs, has awarded a contract to AMD that funds research and development of advanced memory technologies expected to accelerate high-performance simulation and computing applications in support of the nation’s stockpile stewardship mission.

Released: 27-Jan-2023 3:40 PM EST
When bugs swipe left
Washington University in St. Louis

Vinegar flies use pheromones to ensure that they court and mate with members of the same species. As new fly species split off from a common ancestor, but continue to share the same environment, they need a way to rapidly diversify their pheromones to suppress inter-species mating. New research identifies a link between the genetic instructions for the production and perception of sex pheromones.

Newswise: AI and health care: DePaul and Rosalind Franklin award interdisciplinary research grants
Released: 27-Jan-2023 3:15 PM EST
AI and health care: DePaul and Rosalind Franklin award interdisciplinary research grants
DePaul University

DePaul University and Rosalind Franklin University of Science and Medicine are funding three faculty research projects that bring together artificial intelligence, biomedical discovery and health care. The competitive grants kickstart research among interdisciplinary teams, which include biologists, computer scientists, a geographer and a physicist.

   
Newswise: EPA Grant Awarded to TTUHSC El Paso to Educate Migrant Farmworkers on Health Effects of Pesticide Use
Released: 27-Jan-2023 1:35 PM EST
EPA Grant Awarded to TTUHSC El Paso to Educate Migrant Farmworkers on Health Effects of Pesticide Use
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

Early exposure to pesticides can affect health later in life, including negative effects to the nervous and endocrine systems in the body. The SWCPEH has partnered with promotores, or community health workers, from Familias Triunfadoras Inc. to educate the local migrant farmworker community. These underserved communities often have poor access to basic necessities and are most in need of preventative and routine health care.

Newswise: A.I. used to predict space weather like Coronal Mass Ejections
Released: 27-Jan-2023 12:40 PM EST
A.I. used to predict space weather like Coronal Mass Ejections
Northumbria University

A Northumbria University physicist has been awarded more than half a million pounds to develop artificial intelligence which will protect the Earth from devastating space storms.

Newswise: Study Shows FDA-Approved TB Regimen May Not Work Against the Deadliest Form of TB Due to Multidrug-Resistant Strains
Released: 27-Jan-2023 9:20 AM EST
Study Shows FDA-Approved TB Regimen May Not Work Against the Deadliest Form of TB Due to Multidrug-Resistant Strains
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine investigators say their research indicates a new combination of drugs is needed to find an effective treatment for TB meningitis due to multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains

Released: 26-Jan-2023 4:15 PM EST
Small Study Shows Promise for Antimalarial Monoclonal Antibody to Prevent Malaria
University of Maryland School of Medicine

monoclonal antibody treatment was found to be safe, well tolerated, and effective in protecting against malaria in a small group of healthy volunteers who were exposed to malaria in a challenge study, according to new research published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases by researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM).

Newswise:Video Embedded therapeutic-potential-of-bizarre-jumbo-viruses-tapped-for-10m-hhmi-emerging-pathogens-project
VIDEO
Released: 26-Jan-2023 3:30 PM EST
Therapeutic Potential of Bizarre ‘Jumbo’ Viruses Tapped for $10M HHMI Emerging Pathogens Project
University of California San Diego

UC San Diego and its collaborating partners have been awarded $10 million from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute to leverage the biomedical promise of viruses known as bacteriophages as new therapeutic agents in the fight against the rising crisis of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections.

   
Released: 26-Jan-2023 3:10 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $9.1 Million for Research on Quantum Information Science and Nuclear Physics
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $9.1 million in funding for 13 projects in Quantum Information Science (QIS) with relevance to nuclear physics. Nuclear physics research seeks to discover, explore, and understand all forms of nuclear matter that can exist in the universe – from the subatomic structure of nucleons, to exploding stars, to the emergence of the quark-gluon plasma seconds after the Big Bang.

Released: 26-Jan-2023 1:30 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $125 Million for Research to Enable Next-Generation Batteries and Energy Storage
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $125 million for basic research on rechargeable batteries to provide foundational knowledge needed to transform and decarbonize our energy system through the development and adoption of cost-effective and clean energy sources. The national, economic, and environmental security challenges will not be met solely by incremental improvements to existing clean energy technologies but instead will require transformational technologies founded on new fundamental knowledge and capabilities developed through basic scientific research.

Released: 26-Jan-2023 12:55 PM EST
UAlbany Researchers Receive New Funding for Suicide Prevention Programming
University at Albany, State University of New York

Researchers in University at Albany’s Center for Behavioral Health Promotion and Applied Research in the School of Education have received funding to undertake a new project aimed at reducing risk for suicide and substance use among students experiencing health disparities. The work aims to hone strategies that could be implemented widely across college campuses.

Newswise: ‘Hard to Lose’ Mutations in Tumors May Predict Response to Immunotherapy
25-Jan-2023 9:15 AM EST
‘Hard to Lose’ Mutations in Tumors May Predict Response to Immunotherapy
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Investigators at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and its Bloomberg~Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy have found that a subset of mutations within the overall TMB, termed “persistent mutations,” are less likely to be edited out as cancer evolves, rendering tumors continuously visible to the immune system and predisposing them to respond to immunotherapy.

Released: 26-Jan-2023 10:30 AM EST
ARVO Foundation Names 2023 Winners of Dr. David L. Epstein Award
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) announced today the 2023 recipients of the Dr. David L. Epstein Award:Since 2016, the Dr. David L. Epstein Award has been given annually to a well-established senior investigator with a documented history of conducting eye and vision research in glaucoma and of mentoring clinician-scientists to independent academic and research careers.

Released: 26-Jan-2023 10:00 AM EST
Fear of Public Places Is Common in Adults with Epilepsy
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

A recent study from Heidi Munger Clary, M.D., M.P.H., associate professor of neurology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, shows that phobic and agoraphobic symptoms are common and associated with poor quality of life in people with epilepsy.

Newswise: Keys to Making Immunotherapy Work Against Pancreatic Cancer Found in Tumor Microenvironment
Released: 26-Jan-2023 10:00 AM EST
Keys to Making Immunotherapy Work Against Pancreatic Cancer Found in Tumor Microenvironment
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A new study that analyzed the tumor microenvironment of pancreatic cancer revealed the cause of tumor cell resistance to immunotherapy and resulted in new treatment strategies.

Newswise: Global Team Receives Support from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to Develop Training, Community around New 3D Bioimaging Technology
Released: 26-Jan-2023 9:15 AM EST
Global Team Receives Support from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to Develop Training, Community around New 3D Bioimaging Technology
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative awarded a two-year grant for Advancing Imaging Through Collaborative Projects to Kirk Czymmek, PhD, director of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center’s Advanced Bioimaging Laboratory, Michele Darrow of Rosalind Franklin Institute, and Paul Verkade of the University of Bristol, along with an international team of eight additional scientists.

Newswise: Researchers Unravel Why Episodes of Low Blood Sugar Worsen Eye Disease in People with Diabetes
Released: 26-Jan-2023 9:00 AM EST
Researchers Unravel Why Episodes of Low Blood Sugar Worsen Eye Disease in People with Diabetes
Johns Hopkins Medicine

People with diabetes who experience periods of low blood sugar — a common occurrence in those new to blood sugar management — are more likely to have worsening diabetic eye disease. Now, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have linked such low blood sugar levels with a molecular pathway that is turned on in oxygen-starved cells in the eye.

Newswise: Mount Sinai Researchers Awarded $12 Million NIH Grant to Create a Center to Unravel Novel Causes of Food Allergy and Atopic Dermatitis
Released: 25-Jan-2023 4:10 PM EST
Mount Sinai Researchers Awarded $12 Million NIH Grant to Create a Center to Unravel Novel Causes of Food Allergy and Atopic Dermatitis
Mount Sinai Health System

Mount Sinai researchers have been awarded $12 million over five years by the National Institutes of Health to create a center to elucidate novel causes of, and contributing factors to, food allergies and atopic dermatitis. The Systems Biology of Early Atopy (SunBEAm) Analysis and Bioinformatics Center intends to develop a better understanding of allergy development. The center will apply systems biology to identify early-life markers of risk for food allergies and atopic dermatitis (also known as eczema), as well as biological pathways underlying these common conditions, through the profiling and analysis of longitudinal multi-omics data from a multi-center pre-birth cohort of 2,500 children.

Newswise: ‘Exotic hadrons’ research to advance knowledge of nuclear physics
Released: 25-Jan-2023 4:10 PM EST
‘Exotic hadrons’ research to advance knowledge of nuclear physics
Indiana University

IU physicist Adam Szczepaniak is leading a project exploring the physics of exotic hadrons — a largely unexplored group of subatomic particles — under a $1.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Newswise: $2.9M NIH Grant to Study Genetics of IBD in Hispanic Population
Released: 25-Jan-2023 4:05 PM EST
$2.9M NIH Grant to Study Genetics of IBD in Hispanic Population
University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine

Researchers at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine were awarded a $2.9 million grant by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to spend the next five years collecting and analyzing the genetic data of more than 3,000 Hispanic individuals, to better understand IBD in that community.

Newswise: A stretchable, wearable patch for cardiac ultrasound
Released: 25-Jan-2023 2:30 PM EST
A stretchable, wearable patch for cardiac ultrasound
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

After years of research, an NIH-funded team has developed a wearable cardiac ultrasound imager that can non-invasively capture real-time images of the human heart. The prototype patch, which is about the size of a postage stamp, can be worn during exercise, providing valuable cardiac information when the heart is under stress.

Newswise:Video Embedded computer-model-of-influenza-virus-shows-universal-vaccine-promise
VIDEO
Released: 25-Jan-2023 12:35 PM EST
Computer Model of Influenza Virus Shows Universal Vaccine Promise
University of California San Diego

For the first time, researchers at UC San Diego have created an atomic-level computer model of the H1N1 virus that reveals new vulnerabilities, suggesting possible strategies for the design of future vaccines and antivirals against influenza.

   
Released: 25-Jan-2023 12:05 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $105 Million for Research to Support the Biopreparedness Research Virtual Environment (BRaVE) Initiative
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $105 million for research in biopreparedness. This funding, provided by the Office of Science, will support fundamental research to accelerate breakthroughs in support of the Biopreparedness Research Virtual Environment (BRaVE) initiative.

Newswise: Special Vascular Cells Adjust Blood Flow in Brain Capillaries Based on Local Energy Needs
Released: 25-Jan-2023 11:35 AM EST
Special Vascular Cells Adjust Blood Flow in Brain Capillaries Based on Local Energy Needs
University of Maryland School of Medicine

University of Maryland School of Medicine’s researchers have discovered that a certain type of cell that sits on top of the brain’s smallest blood vessels senses when their brain region needs energy. When glucose levels are low, these cells signal blood vessels to dilate, increasing the blood flow regionally and allowing more energy to fuel that part of the brain.

Newswise: More Steps, Moderate Physical Activity Cuts Dementia, Cognitive Impairment Risk
24-Jan-2023 6:35 PM EST
More Steps, Moderate Physical Activity Cuts Dementia, Cognitive Impairment Risk
University of California San Diego

UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science study: senior women were less likely to develop mild cognitive impairment or dementia if they did more daily walking and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity.

Released: 24-Jan-2023 4:30 PM EST
Care Costs More in Consolidated Health Systems
Harvard Medical School

Nationwide study shows integrated health systems yield marginal increases in quality of care with higher costs for medical services, compared with care delivered by independent hospitals and physician practices. Proponents of health system mergers have argued that consolidation brings higher value care.

Newswise: Transportation deserts get a lift from collaboration between NYU Tandon and Dollaride
Released: 24-Jan-2023 12:55 PM EST
Transportation deserts get a lift from collaboration between NYU Tandon and Dollaride
NYU Tandon School of Engineering

Millions of New Yorkers live in “transit deserts” – areas in which public transportation is not easily accessed – but a major grant from New York State means Dollaride, in collaboration with Tandon’s C2SMART Center (the Connected Cities for Smart Mobility Toward Accessible and Resilient Transportation), will help fill that gap with environmentally-friendly electric vehicles.

Newswise: Study Shows Missed Nursing Care is a Key Factor in Adverse Outcomes for Very Low Birthweight Infants
Released: 24-Jan-2023 12:00 PM EST
Study Shows Missed Nursing Care is a Key Factor in Adverse Outcomes for Very Low Birthweight Infants
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

Sometimes hospital staff nurses cannot provide required care due to time constraints. This reality can contribute to potentially dire outcomes for very low birthweight (VLBW) infants, who weigh less than 3.3 lbs. at birth.

Newswise: Power of cancer drugs may see boost by targeting newly ID’d pathway
23-Jan-2023 2:05 PM EST
Power of cancer drugs may see boost by targeting newly ID’d pathway
Washington University in St. Louis

Proteins labeled with colored tags fill the main compartment — but not the nuclei (blue) — of human cervical cancer cells. Green cells contain the protein TRPV2, red cells contain STING, and yellow and orange cells contain a mixture of both. The proteins are part of a newly discovered DNA-protection pathway that potentially could be targeted to improve cancer therapies, according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

Newswise: Researchers circumvent radiation resistance in subtype of brain tumors
20-Jan-2023 2:10 PM EST
Researchers circumvent radiation resistance in subtype of brain tumors
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

In a new study, researchers at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center uncovered a gene that is overexpressed in mutated IDH1. Studies in human cells and a novel mouse model both show that this gene, called ZMYND8, plays a critical role in the radiation resistance. When they knocked down the gene, the glioma cells became responsive to radiation treatment.

Released: 24-Jan-2023 9:00 AM EST
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Receives $1.5 Million Award to Help Expand Use of Pediatric MRI to Developing Countries
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

CHLA team receives grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to create MRI image analysis tools for pediatric brain research. Because magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can image soft tissue and brain structures, it is used to diagnose conditions in pediatric neurology as well as to investigate brain development.

Released: 23-Jan-2023 1:05 PM EST
Head Injury is Associated with Doubled Mortality Rate Long-Term, Penn Study Finds
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

A new study reveals adults who suffered any head injury during a 30-year study period had two times the rate of mortality than those who did not have any head injury, and mortality rates among those with moderate or severe head injuries were nearly three times higher.

Released: 23-Jan-2023 11:05 AM EST
ARVO Foundation Announces Recipients of 2023 Pfizer Ophthalmics Carl Camras Translational Research Award
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) Foundation announced today the recipients of the 2023 Pfizer Ophthalmics Carl Camras Translational Research Award:Granted annually to young investigators working in areas of translational research, each recipient will be awarded $12,000.

Newswise: A First Clinical Trial for Down Syndrome Regression Disorder Earns $5.3 Million NIH Grant
Released: 23-Jan-2023 9:00 AM EST
A First Clinical Trial for Down Syndrome Regression Disorder Earns $5.3 Million NIH Grant
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles has launched the first clinical trial for Down syndrome regression disorder (DSRD), a rare and debilitating condition that affects adolescents and young adults with Down

13-Jan-2023 4:20 PM EST
Dollar Stores Are Growing as Food Retailers in the U.S.
Tufts University

Tufts University researchers have found that dollar stores are now the fastest-growing food retailers in the contiguous United States—and have doubled their share in rural areas. Households with more purchases at dollar stores also tend to be lower-income and headed by people of color.

   


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