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Posts tagged: reverse

Study targets key molecule to reverse kidney damage in mice

March 7, 2012
(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) In findings that may lead to clinical trials of a promising new drug for kidney disease, researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and their colleagues have identified a key molecular player and shown how a targeted experimental drug can reverse kidney damage in ...

Stem Cell Treatment Might Reverse Heart Attack Damage

February 14, 2012
By Mary Brophy Marcus HealthDay Reporter MONDAY, Feb. 13 (HealthDay News) -- Stem cell therapy's promise for healing damaged tissues may have gotten a bit closer to reality. In a small, early study, heart damage was reversed in heart-attack patients treated with ...

Exercise can reverse negative effects of maternal obesity

February 9, 2012
(Medical Xpress) -- Exercise is the key to overcoming the adverse metabolic effects passed on to offspring by their overweight mothers, with research showing for the first time these effects can be almost completely reversed through physical activity.

Reverse inclusion and the question of disability

January 17, 2012
Wheelchair basketball: It's a fast, skillful game, dazzling to watch, gruelling to play. It's also a sport that in Canada has become one of the most inclusive, welcoming athletes with disability and able-bodied athletes alike to its leagues and teams. And athletes like it that way.

Reverse spectroscopy eliminates background noise and cleans up images

December 23, 2011
Optical techniques enable us to examine single molecules, but do we really understand what we are seeing? After all, the fuzziness caused by effects such as light interference makes these images very difficult to interpret.

Research team uses optogenetics to reverse effects of cocaine

December 8, 2011
(Medical Xpress) -- A team of Swiss researchers, led by Christian Lüscher of the University of Geneva, has found the first casual link between cocaine use and physical brain changes and in so doing, as they describe in their paper published in Nature, have also come up with a means ...

Engineered, drug-secreting blood vessels reverse anemia in mice

November 16, 2011
Patients who rely on recombinant, protein-based drugs must often endure frequent injections, often several times a week, or intravenous therapy. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston demonstrate the possibility that blood vessels, made from genetically engineered cells, could secrete the drug on demand directly into the bloodstream. In the November 17 ...

Engineered, drug-secreting blood vessels reverse anemia in mice

November 15, 2011
Patients who rely on recombinant, protein-based drugs must often endure frequent injections, often several times a week, or intravenous therapy. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston demonstrate the possibility that blood vessels, made from genetically engineered cells, could secrete the drug on demand directly into the bloodstream. In the November 17 ...

Engineered, drug-secreting blood vessels reverse anemia in mice

November 15, 2011
(Children's Hospital Boston) Patients who rely on recombinant, protein-based drugs must often endure frequent injections, often several times a week, or intravenous therapy. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston demonstrate the possibility that blood vessels, made from genetically engineered cells, could secrete the drug on demand directly into the bloodstream. In ...

Gene therapy and stem cell transplantation successfully reverse hemophilia A

November 3, 2011
For the first time, researchers have combined gene therapy and stem cell transplantation to successfully reverse the severe, crippling bleeding disorder hemophilia A in large animals, opening the door to the development of new therapies for human patients.

Turning On Fetal Hemoglobin To Reverse Sickle Cell Anemia

October 15, 2011
Not long after birth, human babies transition from producing blood containing oxygen-rich fetal hemoglobin to blood bearing the adult hemoglobin protein. For children with sickle cell disease, the transition from the fetal to adult form of hemoglobin - the oxygen-carrying protein in blood - marks the onset of anemia and ...

Potential To Reverse Smoke-Induced Damage And Disease In The Lungs

October 14, 2011
By studying mice exposed to tobacco smoke for a period of months, researchers have new insight into how emphysema and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) develops. In Cell, a Cell Press publication, they also report a promising new way to reverse the lung damage underlying these conditions. "It has not ...