Latest News from: UT Southwestern Medical Center

Filters close
Released: 20-Aug-2021 8:05 AM EDT
NEJM: Anticoagulants Help Moderately Ill COVID-19 Patients
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Moderately ill patients hospitalized with COVID-19 have better chances of survival if treated with therapeutic-dose anticoagulation, according to an international study involving 121 sites, including UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Released: 19-Aug-2021 12:30 PM EDT
A Master Gear in The Circadian Clock
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – Aug. 19, 2021 – A gene called Npas4, already known to play a key role in balancing excitatory and inhibitory inputs in brain cells, appears to also be a master timekeeper for the brain’s circadian clock, new research led by UT Southwestern scientists suggests. The finding, published online today in Neuron, broadens understanding of the circadian clock’s molecular mechanisms, which could eventually lead to new treatments for managing challenges such as jet lag, shift work, and sleep disorders.

Released: 11-Aug-2021 1:40 PM EDT
Increasing The Immune System’s Appetite For Cancer Protectors
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A two-arm molecule can effectively deplete cancer-protecting cells inside tumors, allowing the immune system to fight off tumors without becoming overactive. The finding, published online in Science Translational Medicine, could leaA two-arm molecule can effectively deplete cancer-protecting cells inside tumors, allowing the immune system to fight off tumors without becoming overactive. The finding, published online in Science Translational Medicine, could lead to new types of cancer immunotherapies.d to new types of cancer immunotherapies.

Released: 10-Aug-2021 12:30 PM EDT
Hunting Down The Mutations That Cause Cancer Drug Resistance
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Using a virus to purposely mutate genes that produce cancer-driving proteins could shed light on the resistance that inevitably develops to cancer drugs that target them, a new study led by UT Southwestern scientists suggests. The findings, published online in Cancer Research, could help researchers develop drugs that circumvent resistance, validate new drug targets, or better understand the interaction between drugs and their target proteins.

Released: 5-Aug-2021 11:05 AM EDT
Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Developed to Assess Metastatic Potential in Skin Cancers
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Using artificial intelligence (AI), researchers from UT Southwestern have developed a way to accurately predict which skin cancers are highly metastatic. The findings, published as the July cover article of Cell Systems, show the potential for AI-based tools to revolutionize pathology for cancer and a variety of other diseases.

Released: 5-Aug-2021 8:45 AM EDT
Headaches Are Vastly Undertreated Among Racial And Socioeconomic Groups
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – August 5, 2021 – Significant disparities exist in diagnosing and treating headaches by race, socioeconomic level, and insurance status, despite the fact that headaches afflict nearly all racial and ethnic groups at the same rate, according to research led by UT Southwestern Medical Center faculty.

Released: 4-Aug-2021 11:25 AM EDT
Common Weight-Loss Drug Successfully Targets Fat That Can Endanger Heart Health
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – August 4, 2021 – Researchers at UT Southwestern announced successful results of a clinical trial for a commonly prescribed weight-loss drug called liraglutide. In adults who are overweight or have obesity combined with high cardiovascular risk, once-daily liraglutide combined with lifestyle interventions significantly lowered two types of fat that have been associated with risk to heart health: visceral fat and ectopic fat.

Released: 30-Jul-2021 12:15 PM EDT
UT Southwestern Finds Crucial New Molecular Mechanisms And Biomarkers in Ovarian Cancer
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – July 30, 2021 – UT Southwestern faculty have discovered what appears to be an Achilles’ heel in ovarian cancers, as well as new biomarkers that could point to which patients are the best candidates for possible new treatments.

Released: 29-Jul-2021 8:00 AM EDT
UT Southwestern Selected Among Best Employers For Women By Forbes
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – July 29, 2021 – Forbes and Statista have selected UT Southwestern among the top 40 Best Employers for Women 2021.

Released: 28-Jul-2021 1:30 PM EDT
Fighting Off Food Poisoning Depends on The Time Of Day
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – July 28, 2021 – The body’s ability to prevent food poisoning by producing a natural antimicrobial compound increases during the day, when exposure to noxious bacteria is most likely, a new study by UT Southwestern scientists suggests. The findings, published online in Cell, could eventually lead to timed therapies and vaccination regimens designed to maximize this immune response.

Released: 28-Jul-2021 9:00 AM EDT
UT Southwestern Among Top 25 in Nation in Eight Specialties Ranked By U.S. News ‘Best Hospitals’
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwesternonce again is ranked the No. 1 hospital in Dallas-Fort Worth – the nation’s fourth-largest metro area – among 132 regional hospitals and second in Texas among 566 hospitals for the fifth consecutive year. The recognition comes several months after UT Southwestern completed expansion of its William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital.

Released: 22-Jul-2021 8:00 AM EDT
Structural Biology Provides Long-Sought Solution to Innate Immunity Puzzle
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern researchers report the first structural confirmation that endogenous – or self-made – molecules can set off innate immunity in mammals via a pair of immune cell proteins called the TLR4−MD-2 receptor complex. The work has wide-ranging implications for finding ways to treat and possibly prevent autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and antiphospholipid syndrome.

Released: 21-Jul-2021 2:30 PM EDT
Researchers Find Immune Component to Rare Neurodegenerative Disease
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern researchers have identified an immune protein tied to the rare neurodegenerative condition known as Niemann-Pick disease type C. The finding, made in mouse models and published online in Nature, could offer a powerful new therapeutic target for Niemann-Pick disease type C, a condition that was identified more than a century ago but still lacks effective treatments.

Released: 21-Jul-2021 8:00 AM EDT
In Memoriam: Dr. Jere Mitchell Helped Lay Foundations of Exercise Physiology, Changed Medical Practice on Bed Rest
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Jere Mitchell, M.D., former director of the Harry S. Moss Heart Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center and an internationally recognized exercise physiologist whose seminal findings on maximal oxygen uptake changed conventional medical practice on bed rest and laid the foundation for central command physiology, died July 17. He was 92.

Released: 6-Jul-2021 5:00 PM EDT
UT Southwestern Scientists Closing in on Map of The Mammalian Immune System
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Using artificial intelligence, UT Southwestern scientists have identified thousands of genetic mutations likely to affect the immune system in mice. The work is part of one Nobel laureate’s quest to find virtually all such variations in mammals.

Released: 30-Jun-2021 4:55 PM EDT
Cardio Health Decline Tied to Midlife Wealth
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 30, 2021 – A relative decline in wealth during midlife increases the likelihood of a cardiac event or heart disease after age 65 while an increase in wealth between ages 50 and 64 is associated with lower cardiovascular risk, according to a new study in JAMA Cardiology.

Released: 29-Jun-2021 1:45 PM EDT
Novel Microscopy Method At UT Southwestern Provides Look Into Future of Cell Biology
UT Southwestern Medical Center

What if a microscope allowed us to explore the 3D microcosm of blood vessels, nerves, and cancer cells instantaneously in virtual reality? What if it could provide views from multiple directions in real time without physically moving the specimen and worked up to 100 times faster than current technology?

Released: 28-Jun-2021 2:50 PM EDT
Texas Health Informatics Alliance Launches, Opens Registration For Its First Conference
UT Southwestern Medical Center

The University of Texas at Arlington (UTA), University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth), and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (UTSW) are pleased to announce the formation of the Texas Health Informatics Alliance (THIA) and plans for its first Texas Health Informatics Alliance Conference, to be held virtually on Sept. 9.

Released: 28-Jun-2021 2:40 PM EDT
Lowering Iron in Fat Cells Prevented Weight Gain in Mice
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 28, 2021 – Lowering iron content in fat cells prevented mice fed a high-fat diet from gaining excess weight and developing associated health problems by limiting the amount of lipids absorbed by the intestines, UT Southwestern scientists report in a new study. The findings, published online in Cell Metabolism, could eventually lead to new strategies to protect people against obesity and related diseases.

Released: 28-Jun-2021 2:30 PM EDT
UT Southwestern Investigators Report First Analysis Of Pioneering Kidney Cancer Radiation Approach in Clinical Trial
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A new approach using precisely targeted, high-dose radiation to treat invasive kidney cancer proves safe, based on a clinical trial by the UT Southwestern Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center’s kidney cancer program. The study, published in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, could offer new hope for patients with a historically dismal condition.

Released: 24-Jun-2021 12:35 PM EDT
HER3 Gene Mutations Can Worsen Tumor Growth in Breast Cancer, Study Suggests
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 24, 2021 – Mutations in a gene related to HER2, a gene frequently implicated in breast cancers and a variety of other malignancies, can amplify activity that spurs tumor growth, a new study led by UT Southwestern researchers suggests. The findings, published online in Cancer Cell, could explain why many patients with HER2 mutations don’t respond to inhibitors that target this cancer driver and require other treatment.

Released: 23-Jun-2021 11:15 AM EDT
New NIH Grant Supports Ongoing UTSW Investigation of Debilitating Complications of Blood Clots in Teens
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 23, 2021 – UT Southwestern will lead a multicenter investigation into why children and young adults experience decreased physical activity and shortness of breath after experiencing blood clots, thanks to a four-year $2.97 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Released: 14-Jun-2021 11:05 AM EDT
Study Finds Dosing Strategy May Affect Immunotherapy Outcomes
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 14, 2021 – Overweight cancer patients receiving immunotherapy treatments live more than twice as long as lighter patients, but only when dosing is weight-based, according to a study by cancer researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Released: 9-Jun-2021 11:05 AM EDT
Not Just A Phase For RNAS
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 9, 2021 – A phenomenon in which an RNA named NORAD drives a protein named Pumilio to form liquid droplets in cells, much like oil in water, appears to tightly regulate the activity of Pumilio. A new study led by UT Southwestern scientists suggests that such RNA-driven “phase separation,” in turn, protects against genome instability, premature aging, and neurodegenerative diseases, and may represent a previously unrecognized way for RNAs to regulate cellular processes.

Released: 4-Jun-2021 10:00 AM EDT
Giving Brown Fat A Boost to Fight Type 2 Diabetes
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – June 4, 2021 – Increasing a protein concentrated in brown fat appears to lower blood sugar, promote insulin sensitivity, and protect against fatty liver disease by remodeling white fat to a healthier state, a new study led by UT Southwestern scientists suggests. The finding, published online in Nature Communications, could eventually lead to new solutions for patients with diabetes and related conditions.

Released: 2-Jun-2021 11:55 AM EDT
UTSW Among Top Three Companies in The Nation For New Graduates
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 28, 2021 – UT Southwestern Medical Center ranked No. 3 in the nation on Forbes’ list of America’s Best Employers For New Graduates, placing it in the top 1 percent, and highest among academic medical centers.

   
Released: 28-May-2021 1:45 PM EDT
Same Difference: Two Halves of The Hippocampus Have Different Gene Activity
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 28, 2021 – A study of gene activity in the brain’s hippocampus, led by UT Southwestern researchers, has identified marked differences between the region’s anterior and posterior portions. The findings, published today in Neuron, could shed light on a variety of brain disorders that involve the hippocampus and may eventually help lead to new, targeted treatments.

Released: 21-May-2021 12:55 PM EDT
How Human Cells And Pathogenic Shigella Engage in Battle
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 21, 2021 – One member of a large protein family that is known to stop the spread of bacterial infections by prompting infected human cells to self-destruct appears to kill the infectious bacteria instead, a new study led by UT Southwestern scientists shows. However, some bacteria have their own mechanism to thwart this attack, nullifying the deadly protein by tagging it for destruction.

Released: 20-May-2021 10:00 AM EDT
Experimental Drug Makes Radiation Therapy More Effective, Less Damaging
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 20, 2021 – An experimental drug that has shown promise in protecting healthy tissue from collateral damage caused by radiation therapy for cancer also appears to enhance radiation’s capacity to kill tumors, a new study led by UT Southwestern scientists shows. The findings, published online in Science Translational Medicine, could provide a much-needed boost to the radiation treatments used against a variety of tumor types.

Released: 20-May-2021 7:00 AM EDT
UT Southwestern Detects First Reported B.1.617.2 (Indian) Variant In North Texas
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 20, 2021 – UT Southwestern Medical Center scientists have identified the first two cases of the B.1.617.2 (Indian origin) variant of COVID-19 infection in North Texas using next-generation sequencing technologies along with targeted PCR testing.

Released: 12-May-2021 10:00 AM EDT
Scientists Identify Source of Weight Gain From Antipsychotics
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 12, 2021 – Scientists with UT Southwestern’s Peter O’Donnell Jr. Brain Institute have identified the molecular mechanism that can cause weight gain for those using a common antipsychotic medication. The findings, published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, suggest new ways to counteract the weight gain, including a drug recently approved to treat genetic obesity, according to the study, which involved collaborations with scientists at UT Dallas and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.

Released: 10-May-2021 11:05 AM EDT
How Legionella Makes Itself At Home
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 10, 2021 – Scientists at UT Southwestern have discovered a key protein that helps the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease to set up house in the cells of humans and other hosts. The findings, published in Science, could offer insights into how other bacteria are able to survive inside cells, knowledge that could lead to new treatments for a wide variety of infections.

Released: 6-May-2021 5:45 PM EDT
Laser Procedure Offers Advantages For Rare Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – May 6, 2021 – Using a laser for a rare brain surgery to treat drop seizures, which cause a child with epilepsy to suddenly fall, holds some advantages over a traditional open craniotomy, including shorter hospital stays for patients, a study led by UT Southwestern researchers indicates. The findings, published in the Journal of Neurosurgery, provide the first quantitative data comparing the two types of surgery, called corpus callosotomies.

Released: 30-Apr-2021 1:00 PM EDT
New Gene Editing Strategies Developed For Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 30, 2021 – UT Southwestern scientists successfully employed a new type of gene therapy to treat mice with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), uniquely utilizing CRISPR-Cas9-based tools to restore a large section of the dystrophin protein that is missing in many DMD patients. The approach, described online today in the journal Science Advances, could lead to a treatment for DMD and inform the treatment of other inherited diseases.

Released: 29-Apr-2021 10:35 AM EDT
Quality Improvement Project Boosts Depression Screening Among Cancer Patients
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 28, 2021 – Depression screening among cancer patients improved by 40 percent to cover more than 90 percent of patients under a quality improvement program launched by a multidisciplinary team at UT Southwestern Medical Center and Southwestern Health Resources.

Released: 27-Apr-2021 12:05 PM EDT
Researchers Identify Protein Produced After Stroke That Triggers Neurodegeneration
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 27, 2021 – Researchers with the Peter O’Donnell Jr. Brain Institute at UT Southwestern have identified a new protein implicated in cell death that provides a potential therapeutic target that could prevent or delay the progress of neurodegenerative diseases following a stroke.

Released: 26-Apr-2021 4:50 PM EDT
Two UTSW Faculty Elected to Prestigious National Academy of Sciences
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 26, 2021 – The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) today elected two UT Southwestern scientists in the fields of biochemistry and physiology into its membership, one of the highest honors for American scientists.

Released: 24-Apr-2021 8:00 PM EDT
UT Southwestern Identifies First Reported Brazil Variant of SARS-CoV-2 in North Texas
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 24, 2021 – UT Southwestern Medical Center scientists have identified the first cases of the Brazilian variant of COVID-19 infection in North Texas using next-generation sequencing technologies along with PCR testing.

Released: 22-Apr-2021 12:15 PM EDT
Blacks, Hispanics, Impoverished People Have Worse Survival Rates Among Teens, Adults Under 40 With Cancer
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 22, 2021 – Being Black or Hispanic, living in high-poverty neighborhoods, and having Medicaid or no insurance coverage are associated with higher mortality in men and women under 40 with cancer, a review by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers found.

Released: 21-Apr-2021 11:05 AM EDT
Consistent Use of Food Pantries Needed to Address Food Insecurity, Related Health Issues
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 21, 2021 – Food banks should be used more consistently rather than only during emergencies to better address food insecurity and related health issues, a joint study by researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center and economists at the University of Dallas shows.

Released: 19-Apr-2021 10:25 AM EDT
Once-A-Week Insulin Treatment Could Be Game-Changing For Patients With Diabetes
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – April 19, 2021 – Treating people with Type 2 diabetes with a new once-a-week injectable insulin therapy proved to be safe and as effective as daily insulin injections, according to the results of two international clinical trials published online today in Diabetes Care. The studies suggest that the once-weekly treatment could provide a convenient alternative to the burden of daily insulin shots for diabetes patients.

13-Apr-2021 10:05 AM EDT
Chemical modification of RNA could play key role in polycystic kidney disease
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A chemical modification of RNA that can be influenced by diet appears to play a key role in polycystic kidney disease, an inherited disorder that is the fourth leading cause of kidney failure in the U.S., UT Southwestern researchers report in a new study. The findings, published online today in Cell Metabolism, suggest new ways to treat this incurable condition.

8-Apr-2021 8:05 AM EDT
Scientists Discover Jumping Genes That Can Protect Against Blood Cancers
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Surprising role for so-called “jumping” genes that are a source of genetic mutations responsible for a number of human diseases.

Released: 30-Mar-2021 9:00 AM EDT
Helping Childhood-Onset Lupus Patients Stay Healthy As Adults
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March 30, 2021 – UT Southwestern researchers have identified factors that put patients with childhood-onset lupus at elevated risk for poor outcomes, such as end-stage renal disease or death, as they transition from pediatric to adult health care. The findings, published online in Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, emphasize the precarious nature of this period and shine a spotlight on areas prime for intervention to help protect these vulnerable patients.

Released: 29-Mar-2021 11:45 AM EDT
Even With Regular Exercise, Astronaut’s Heart Left Smaller After A Year In Space
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March. 29, 2021 – With NASA preparing to send humans to Mars in the 2030s, researchers are studying the physical effects of spending long periods in space. Now a new study by scientists at UT Southwestern shows that the heart of an astronaut who spent nearly a year aboard the International Space Station shrank, even with regular exercise, although it continued to function well.

Released: 23-Mar-2021 12:50 PM EDT
Real-World Data At UT Southwestern Shows Benefit of Early Vaccination on Health Care Workforce
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March 23, 2021 – Vaccinating health care workers resulted in an immediate and notable reduction of positive COVID-19 cases among employees, reducing the number of required isolations and quarantines by more than 90 percent, according to data at UT Southwestern Medical Center published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Released: 23-Mar-2021 9:00 AM EDT
Exercise Boosts Blood Flow to The Brain, Study Finds
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March 23, 2021 – It’s not just your legs and heart that get a workout when you walk briskly; exercise affects your brain as well. A new study by researchers at UT Southwestern shows that when older adults with mild memory loss followed an exercise program for a year, the blood flow to their brains increased. The results were published online today in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.

Released: 17-Mar-2021 12:00 PM EDT
The a7 Protein is Ready For Its Close-Up
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March 17, 2021 – UT Southwestern researchers have identified the structure of a key member of a family of proteins called nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in three different shapes. The work, published online today in Cell, could eventually lead to new pharmaceutical treatments for a large range of diseases or infections including schizophrenia, lung cancer, and even COVID-19.

Released: 10-Mar-2021 11:35 AM EST
Riding The Wave to Memory-Forming Genetics
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern scientists have identified key genes involved in brain waves that are pivotal for encoding memories. The findings, published online this week in Nature Neuroscience, could eventually be used to develop novel therapies for people with memory loss disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.

Released: 8-Mar-2021 2:05 PM EST
Speeding Treatment For Urinary Tract Infections in Children
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – March 8, 2021 – A study led by UT Southwestern and Children’s Health researchers defines parameters for the number of white blood cells that must be present in children’s urine at different concentrations to suggest a urinary tract infection (UTI). The findings, published recently in Pediatrics, could help speed treatment of this common condition and prevent potentially lifelong complications.



close
0.24796