Archive for 2011/07


$12 Million NIH Grant To Study Acute Lung Injury

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have been awarded more than $11.7 million to study the pathology of severe lung injury. The study, part of a multi-pronged investigation into acute lung injury, or ALI, is funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health…


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Drug Expenses For Children With Asthma More Than Doubled In 10 Years

The percentage of American children treated for asthma increased while their annual drug expenses more than doubled over a 10-year period, according to the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality…


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Development Of Mouse With ‘Off Switch’ In Key Brain Cell Population May Aid Research Into SIDS, Depression

NIH-funded scientists have developed a strain of mice with a built-in off switch that can selectively shut down the animals’ serotonin-producing cells, which make up a brain network controlling breathing, temperature regulation, and mood. The switch controls only the serotonin-producing cells, and does not affect any other cells in the animal’s brains or bodies…


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Taking The Pressure Off Newborns’ Lungs

Children born with heart defects that pummel their lungs with up to three times the normal blood volume quickly find their lungs in jeopardy as well. Georgia Health Sciences University researchers are working to take the pressure off by augmenting a natural recycling system that enables blood vessels to temporarily handle the extra workload until the heart problem is resolved…


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Rare Paralyzing Disease GBS Affecting People On US-Mexico Border

Health officials in the US state of Arizona said on Tuesday there are now 24 reported cases of a rare paralyzing disease known as Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) affecting people on both sides of the border between the US and Mexico…


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New National Program To Further Develop The Science Of Glycobiology

Scientists at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have received a major 7-year, $18 million grant to begin translating emerging discoveries in the field of glycosciences into new discoveries and therapies related to heart, lung and blood diseases. Glycobiology is the study of glycans (carbohydrate chains) and their crucial roles in molecular and cellular biology…


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Easily Portable And Implantable Artificial Lung Could Be In Use In Clinical Trials Within 10 Years

An artificial lung built by Cleveland researchers has reached efficiencies akin to the genuine organ, using air - not pure oxygen as current man-made lungs require - for the source of the essential element…


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New Avenues Open Up For Mesothelioma Targeted Therapy

Researchers from the lab of Antonio Giordano, M.D., Ph.D., the Founder and Director of the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, have identified new potential anti-tumor agents that might be effective in treating mesothelioma, one of the deadliest cancer tumors…


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Antibiotic Beats Cranberry Capsules In Preventing Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections - Antibiotic Resistance A Concern

A human study found that trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX), an antibiotic, was more effective at preventing recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) among premenopausal females than cranberry capsules. The researchers, from the Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, reported their findings in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine…


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Asthma Risk Lower In Breastfed Babies

Babies fed only on breast milk up to the age of six months have a lower risk of developing asthma-related symptoms in early childhood, and this appears to be independent of infectious and allergic diseases, according to a study by researchers at the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam in The Netherlands that was published early online recently in the European Respiratory Journal…


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