Symptoms, age, lifestyle, health history, and gender all reveal important
clues about a patients heart health.
Not exact matches
Researchers are currently investigating many other
patient groups, including those with cancer, mental illness and suicidal tendencies, using LIWC to uncover
clues about their emotional well - being and their mental state.
He hopes researchers will mine the treasure trove for
clues about the genetic and lifestyle factors behind diseases such as cancer and dementia, and identify
patients who might benefit from new drugs.
However, a new study published in Cell Reports provides
clues about how the dose of transplanted bone marrow might affect
patients undergoing this risky procedure, frequently used to treat cancer and blood diseases.
Researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania recently found a shared genetic link in the autoimmune response among PV
patients that provides important new
clues about how autoantibodies in PV originate.
«Our comparison of lean
patients and their overweight or obese counterparts gives us
clues about risk factors for this disease that go beyond a person's weight,» said Paul Angulo, MD, section chief of hepatology in the division of digestive diseases and nutrition at the University of Kentucky Medical Center.
Now a new study from the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania found that shifting use of anti-PD-1 drugs to before surgery may provide
clues about which
patients will benefit and which may be at increased risk for recurrence.
By showing how the protein works in healthy
patients, the study offers important
clues about what may be happening when people develop the disease itself.
One of the first
clues pathologists look for in tissue from a newly diagnosed breast cancer
patient is the estrogen receptor, a nuclear protein that converts hormonal messages in the bloodstream into instructions for the cell
about how to behave.
That freedom of
patient speech is necessary if the doctor is to get
clues about the medical enigma before him.