Sentences with phrase «issue of nature medicine»

Lung Cancer Breakthrough A study published in the September, 1998 issue of Nature Medicine concerned a preliminary trial using gene therapy to treat lung cancer.
In the report, published in the December 2007 issue of Nature Medicine, researchers from the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California report that rosiglitazone (Avandia) has been shown to interfere with >> Read Article
July 25, 2011 Two genetic variations predict second cancers after radiation treatment for children with Hodgkin lymphoma A genome - wide association study published in the August issue of Nature Medicine has found two tiny genetic variations that can predict which patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma are most likely to develop radiation - induced second cancers years after treatment.
In the June 2005 issue of Nature Medicine, a group led by Alexandra Trkola of the University of Zurich in Switzerland described how it had scant success with a cocktail of three bNAbs given to 14 HIV - infected humans.
A part of the immune system appears to help prion diseases spread to the brain, according to research in the April issue of Nature Medicine.
In this month's issue of Nature Medicine, scientists show that the virus causes the symptoms in much the same way as faulty genes do, suggesting that a single therapy could work against the disease.
The method, described in the January issue of Nature Medicine, could be of great value in providing better protection to infants and AIDS patients against life - threatening diseases such as pneumonia and meningitis.
The findings, reported in the current issue of Nature Medicine, could lead to new treatments for strokes and spinal cord injuries.
Reporting in the 19 September issue of Nature Medicine, the team discovered that embryos often get stuck in the oviducts of these mice and can't reach the uterus.
These findings are supported by similar research from the laboratory of Paul S. Frenette, Ph.D., at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, also reported in the Oct. 19 issue of Nature Medicine.
In the current issue of Nature Medicine, John Pezzuto of the University of Illinois at Chicago and his colleagues report that a compound called betulinic acid triggers apoptosis or programmed cell death, in cultured melanoma cells.
Published in the August 2015 issue of Nature Medicine, the new findings show that a small molecule called N1 - methylnicotinamide prevents metabolic complications caused by a high - fat diet.
He adds that the findings, which are published in the online 26 September issue of Nature Medicine, may be applicable to other infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, for which no highly effective vaccine exists.
Tu describes her work in some detail in an essay in the October issue of Nature Medicine.
Now, a trio of studies in the July issue of Nature Medicine opens new avenues for plaque research by presenting a new animal model for plaque formation, a diagnostic tool for spotting them, and a possible way to break them down.
Now a report in this month's issue of Nature Medicine may provide an explanation: A key bone marrow protein causes immune cells in mouse transplant recipients to self - destruct.
But help may be on the way: Scientists report in next month's issue of Nature Medicine that rats unable to digest lactose, a sugar in dairy foods, are cured by a pill that stitches new genes into the cells of the gut.
The finding, reported in next month's issue of Nature Medicine, raises new questions about whether people could contract exotic diseases if animal organs become routinely transplanted into human patients.
In the February issue of Nature Medicine, researchers report that triclosan, often used in mouthwash and acne creams, can cure mice of malaria.
But a new finding, reported in the March issue of Nature Medicine, indicates that this protection is not absolute.
In the June 2010 issue of Nature Medicine, in an interview with theBoston - based researcher, Daley tells how he further changed the focus of his work after Prof. Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University, who won the 2010 Kyoto Prize for advanced technology, made known his successes with iPS cells in 2007: «Once Yamanaka solved the problem, I turned around virtually my entire programme to take advantage of that breakthrough,» he says.

Not exact matches

Carol served as a guest editor of special issues on Childbirth Connection's Transforming Maternity Care project (Women's Health Issues, 2010), on The Nature and Management of Labor Pain (American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2002) and on medically unnecessary cesarean sections (Social Science & Medicine, issues on Childbirth Connection's Transforming Maternity Care project (Women's Health Issues, 2010), on The Nature and Management of Labor Pain (American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2002) and on medically unnecessary cesarean sections (Social Science & Medicine, Issues, 2010), on The Nature and Management of Labor Pain (American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2002) and on medically unnecessary cesarean sections (Social Science & Medicine, 1993).
The study, presented in the 16 August issue of Nature, mirrors a paper by a group from the Imperial College School of Medicine at St. Mary's in London, published in the 31 July issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The finding, reported in the Apr. 28 issue of Nature Communications, adds to evidence for the intimate link between stem cells and cancer, and advances prospects for regenerative medicine and cancer treatments.
Their research is published in today's issue of the journal Nature Medicine.
The findings from the lab of Stowers Investigator Linheng Li, Ph.D., described in the Oct. 19 issue of the journal Nature Medicine, could cause researchers to rethink what they know about the workings of megakaryocytes and potentially lead to new treatments for patients recovering from chemotherapy or organ transplantation.
St. Jude led the international research effort, results of which appear in the current issue of the journal Nature Medicine.
Their discovery of NIRVs in mammalian genomes corroborates a study in the 7 January issue of Nature in which John Coffin of Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston and colleagues reported that another group of RNA viruses that lack reverse transcriptase, bornavirus, can integrate their genes into mammals.
A new study published in the Oct. 9 issue of the journal Nature Medicine demonstrates, for the first time, that glioblastoma (GBM), the most common and most lethal brain tumor, is driven by two distinct subsets of cancer stem cells.
In a paper published in the March 25, 2010 issue of Nature, researchers working at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies and the Center of Regenerative Medicine in Barcelona (CMRB) identified a fish heart cell population that is the source of this astonishing healing feat, a finding that could provide insight into how mammalian hearts might be coaxed into repairing themselves after injury brought on by heart attack.
Led by Gladstone Investigator Bruce Conklin, MD, the research team describes in the latest issue of Nature Methods how they have solved one of science and medicine's most pressing problems: how to efficiently and accurately capture rare genetic mutations that cause disease — as well as how to fix them.
Their strategy, described in the Jan. 4, 2009 issue of the journal Nature Medicine, could not only prove a very useful method to faithfully reproduce different types of tumors but also to elucidate the nature of elusive cancer stem Nature Medicine, could not only prove a very useful method to faithfully reproduce different types of tumors but also to elucidate the nature of elusive cancer stem nature of elusive cancer stem cells.
They reviewed every issue of six top - tier international journals (JAMA, Lancet, the New England Journal of Medicine, Cell, Nature and Science), and four mid-ranking journals (British Medical Journal, JAMA Internal Medicine, Journal of Cell Science, FASEB Journal), chosen to represent the clinical and basic science aspects of research.
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