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Posts tagged: step

New three-step process for DMD newborn screening

March 20, 2012
Investigators at Nationwide Children's Hospital, working with the DNA Sequencing Core Facility at the University of Utah, have developed an approach to newborn screening (NBS) for the life-threatening genetic disorder, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and potentially other muscular dystrophies.

Step forward in research into new treatments for brain edema

March 19, 2012
Cerebral edemas are accumulations of fluid into the intra- or extracellular spaces of the brain and it can result from several factors such as stroke or head trauma, among others. Cerebral edema is a serious problem in neurology. While in other organs swelling does not lead to ...

Step forward in research into new treatments for brain edema

March 19, 2012
(IDIBELL-Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute) Researchers from IDIBELL, the University of Barcelona and CIBERER have found that one function of the protein GlialCAM, which is genetically altered in patients with a rare disease, named Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts, is to regulate the activity of the channel that allows the passage ...

CDC takes critical step to reinvigorate fight against tobacco use

March 16, 2012
The following is a statement by Matthew L. Myers, President, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today has taken a critical step to reinvigorate the fight against tobacco use – the nation's leading preventable cause of death – by launching the government's first-ever paid, nationwide ...

Discovery Of Protein That Could Switch Off Cardiovascular Disease Is A Step Closer To Prevention

March 13, 2012
Researchers from Queen Mary, University of London and the University of Surrey have found a protein inside blood vessels with an ability to protect the body from substances which cause cardiovascular disease. The findings, published online in the journal Cardiovascular Research, have revealed the protein pregnane X receptor (PXR) can ...

A Step Closer To Understanding Autoimmune Diseases

March 8, 2012
Understanding why immune cells, called T-cells, attack the body is vital in the war against autoimmune diseases like diabetes. University of Alberta researcher Troy Baldwin is a step closer to understanding why the body's T-cells sometimes attack healthy cells causing autoimmune diseases. Baldwin and graduate student Alex Suen looked at ...

Researchers refute widely accepted hypothesis about causative step in ALS

March 1, 2012
In science, refuting a hypothesis can be as significant as proving one, all the more so in research aimed at elucidating how diseases proceed with a view toward preventing, treating, or curing them. Such a discovery can save scientists from spending precious years of effort exploring a dead end. In ...

New ‘magnetic yeast’ marks step toward harnessing Nature’s magnetic capabilities

February 29, 2012
Researchers at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and Harvard Medical School have developed a method for inducing magnetic sensitivity in an organism that is not naturally magnetic—yeast. Their technology could potentially be used to magnetize a variety of different cell types in medical, industrial and ...

A giant little step in cancer treatment opening up new therapeutic horizons

February 27, 2012
Barcelona, 27 February 2012. A study headed up by the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO) heralds a new horizon in the fight against cancer, opening up a parallel dimension to existing treatment options. The data, published today in the Journal of Clinical Oncology , demonstrate that by combining ...

Researchers take a step forward in transplanting pig cells to regenerate human cartilage

February 22, 2012
Researchers from the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) have studied for the first time the response of human NK cells (Natural Killer) against porcine chondrocytes (cartilage cells).

Johnson & Johnson CEO to step down in April

February 22, 2012
(AP) -- Johnson & Johnson's longtime CEO Bill Weldon is stepping down as the health care giant's top executive after an embarrassing string of recalls of everything from Tylenol to Benadryl that has cost the company hundreds of millions of dollars and consumers' trust.

A step forward in effort to regenerate damaged nerves

February 21, 2012
(University of Rochester Medical Center) A surprising set of cells may hold potential for aiding nerve transplants in patients who have severe nerve damage -- the type of wound often caused by gunshots, stabbings, car accidents, or action on the battlefield.