Sentences with phrase «new suggested treatment»

Under the new suggested treatment regimen, the research indicates this would fall to 25 - 35 % - potentially saving up to 80,000 lives a year.

Not exact matches

But scientists are discovering more and more clues that suggest that the key to discovering new treatments for mental illnesses will center on a deeper dive into our DNA.
The statement suggested Jinko's decision was tied to the new tariffs, saying that the company «continues to closely monitor treatment of imports of solar cells and modules under the U.S. trade laws.»
For those who think new state laws aimed at proper treatment of concussions and prevention of long - term brain injury are just a first step, improving medical support is high on the list of suggested next steps.
Government filings also suggest there will be testimony on matters ranging from lobbying on big - ticket items like rent regulation and real estate tax abatements, to Silver's killing of a Manhattan drug treatment clinic and $ 10 million in campaign contributions from New Hyde Park - based Glenwood Management, one of the real estate developers he allegedly shook down.
Hillary Clinton has suggested that Christine Quinn suffered from sexist treatment during her failed New York City mayoral bid.
«Love hormone» oxytocin could provide new treatment for anorexia, study suggests
The finding suggested that new eggs are produced throughout life and was hailed as revealing that there are limitless eggs for IVF treatments.
Labadorf believes that at present, these findings are too preliminary to suggest new clinical treatments.
Connecting to your past can strengthen your defences against depression and PTSD, suggesting new treatments for these disorders
SEEKING TREATMENT Pregnant women coping with depression now may have one less thing to worry about: Prenatal exposure to antidepressants doesn't raise autism risk, two new studies suggest.
Since this is essentially due to better treatment — including surgery, radiotherapy, and medical treatments such as newer anti-androgens — one would have expected that these favourable trends to be much larger below the ages of 70 or 75, but the data suggest that the improvement is extended to the elderly too.
Reported this week, both findings suggest new causes for Alzheimer's, boosting prospects for its treatment and prevention.
New research posted online by the Nature journal Leukemia suggests blocking part of a DNA repair complex that helps some types of leukemia resist treatment can increase the effectiveness of chemotherapy and enhance survival.
DeCicco - Skinner's research suggests a new approach for the treatment of multiple myeloma.
Connecting to your past can strengthen your defences against depression and PTSD, suggesting new treatments for these disorders, says David Robson
«We urgently need new treatments for lung cancer patients, and this research suggests we can boost the effectiveness of an existing drug, rather than switch to another new expensive treatment.
This insight could suggest new lines of treatment.
«Our new study indicates that a differential therapeutic approach can be beneficial for older patients in melanoma and suggests that age should be taken into account to design better treatments for certain cohorts of patients.»
That question turned out to be the basis of a new field, behavioral epigenetics, now so vibrant it has spawned dozens of studies and suggested profound new treatments to heal the brain.
A blood pressure drug may make a type of lung cancer treatment more effective, suggests a new study.
Taken together, the results suggest that people with rheumatoid arthritis may soon have new options for treatment, says Gary Firestein, a rheumatologist at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine.
«Our research suggests that ethosuximide has potential for repurposing as a treatment for multiple neurodegenerative diseases and provides a platform from which new medicines could be developed.
«Our results suggest a new path toward future treatments for Alzheimer's disease,» says Huaxi Xu, Ph.D., the Jeanne and Gary Herberger Leadership Chair of SBP's Neuroscience and Aging Research Center.
The findings suggest a new mechanism for the body's control of fear and anxiety, and point to a new target for the treatment of anxiety disorders.
Dr Jones, said: «This new meta - analysis shows that baclofen is no more effective than placebo on a range of key outcome measures, suggesting that the current increasing use of baclofen as a treatment for alcohol use disorders is premature.»
Moreover, they suggest that inhibition of β - arrestin 2 function might lead to enhanced analgesic effectiveness of morphine and provide potential new avenues for the study and treatment of pain, narcotic tolerance, and dependence.
The international research team behind the study now suggests that targeting inflammation and fibrosis in the small blood vessels of the pancreatic islets may offer a new way of treatment for age - dependent dysregulation of blood glucose levels.
A new study supported by the Milstein Medical Research Program at The Rockefeller University, however, has uncovered the molecular roots of skin discoloration that is often associated with psoriasis, suggesting the possibility of new treatments for pigmentation changes seen not only in psoriasis, but also in other conditions such as eczema and acne.
For example, many of the genes in the new networks are related to cancer, suggesting that certain cancer treatments that target these genes might also be useful to treat ASD.
These findings suggest that antibody - positive patients being treated with Remicade should not be switched to treatment with the biosimilar, since these antibodies will interact with the new drug and potentially lead to a loss of response.
«Beta blockers may lead to new novel triple negative breast cancer treatments: New research suggests that adrenaline can act on tumor cells via a cell surface receptor called the beta2 - adrenoceptor and that changes in signaling within the cell make it highly invasive.&raqnew novel triple negative breast cancer treatments: New research suggests that adrenaline can act on tumor cells via a cell surface receptor called the beta2 - adrenoceptor and that changes in signaling within the cell make it highly invasive.&raqNew research suggests that adrenaline can act on tumor cells via a cell surface receptor called the beta2 - adrenoceptor and that changes in signaling within the cell make it highly invasive.»
A new study suggest major cancer genes play a bigger role than thought in childhood cancer, potentially influencing surveillance, genetic testing, and treatment.
The organoids have already helped clarify new pathways that lead to pancreatic cancer, Tuveson says, and unpublished data suggest that they will help researchers predict which treatments will be most effective.
A new study led by University of Kentucky researchers suggests a new approach to develop highly - potent drugs which could overcome current shortcomings of low drug efficacy and multi-drug resistance in the treatment of cancer as well as viral and bacterial infections.
Newer evidence suggests that the shorter course of treatment does not reduce the benefits of therapy; in addition this can reduce antibiotic - related side effects, the risk of Clostridium difficile, a serious diarrheal infection, antibiotic resistance and costs, said Dr. Kalil.
Now, after running the APOE - free patient through a battery of cognitive tests, it appears that he is fairly normal, suggesting treatments that attempt to eliminate or limit the protein could be safer than expected, The New York Times reports.
In addition to illuminating how the drug, amlexanox, reverses obesity, diabetes and fatty liver disease, the findings suggest a new pathway for future treatments.
Iyadurai stressed the new research does not suggest a video game can instantly cure PTSD, but that it does suggests alternative treatments for the symptoms.
While such basic research can suggest new treatment targets, the speakers noted that there are many obstacles before clinical treatment of brain disorders with optogenetics becomes a reality.
«With a key challenge being that resistance to drugs is spreading faster than new drugs are being developed and approved,» they suggest that «the use of encapsulated, nanobody - targeted drugs as described here has the potential to reverse resistance to many first - line treatments
Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is the most effective treatment for menopausal symptoms, in particular for younger women at the onset of the menopause, suggests a new review published today (19 December) in The Obstetrician & Gynaecologist (TOG).
The long term follow - up results suggest that new treatment strategies incorporating neoadjuvant chemotherapy are required, because adjuvant chemotherapy does not demonstrate any significant long term benefit on overall survival or disease - free survival.»
«Our findings suggest that e-learning can provide an efficient and scalable approach to training large numbers of clinicians in new evidence - based treatments,» said Dr. Bradley D. Stein, the study's lead author, a practicing psychiatrist and a senior scientist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization.
«These exciting new results suggest that drugs that reduce the activity of TRIM21 could be highly effective new tools for the treatment of conditions that are driven by high oxidative stress, including liver and heart disease,» Zong said.
The data from the rociletinib clinical trials suggest that we may be able to successfully target and overcome resistance to EGFR inhibitors and bring new, targeted treatments to patients who need them the most.»
Noting the potential of gene therapy to be a one - time treatment for rare and serious diseases that otherwise cost hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars in chronic care over a lifetime, Stuart Orkin, MD, and co-author Philip Reilly, MD, JD, of Third Rock Ventures, seek to «catalyze the discussion» by suggesting several new models for valuing, pricing and developing gene therapy.
Three new studies suggest ways to home in on cancer cells during treatment, leaving surrounding healthy tissue unharmed.
Pfaff's new results, though, suggest that general motor neurons might not do the trick — the best treatment may require the right subtypes of motor neurons.
A new study suggests that the virus responsible for the ongoing Ebola outbreak in West Africa is not evolving as quickly as earlier reports had suggested, helping to alleviate fears that it could become more contagious and more resistant to current treatments.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z