Monthly Archives: May 2010

Novel Therapeutic Approach Shows Promise Against Multiple Bacterial Pathogens

May 29, 2010
By

A team of scientists from government, academia and private industry has developed a novel treatment that protects mice from infection with the bacterium that causes tularemia, a highly infectious disease of rodents, sometimes transmitted to people, and also known as rabbit fever. In additional experiments with human immune cells, the treatment also demonstrated protection...

Read more »

Newer Heart Surgery for Infants Offers First-Year Survival Benefit over Traditional Procedure

May 29, 2010
By

Infants born with a severely underdeveloped heart who undergo a newer surgical procedure are more likely to survive their first year and not require a heart transplant than those who have a more traditional surgical procedure, according to a report by researchers supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which is...

Read more »

NIH Study Finds That Overweight Girls Who Lose Weight Reduce Adult Diabetes Risk

May 29, 2010
By

Infants born with a severely underdeveloped heart who undergo a newer surgical procedure are more likely to survive their first year and not require a heart transplant than those who have a more traditional surgical procedure, according to a report by researchers supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which is...

Read more »

In Mouse Study, Researchers Discover New Mechanism for Clearing Blockages from Smallest Blood Vessels

May 29, 2010
By

Researchers at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine have identified in mice a previously unknown protective mechanism by which the smallest blood vessels remove blood clots and other blockages from the brain. The findings provide insights into mechanisms that may be involved in age-related cognitive decline, Alzheimer’s disease and recovery from stroke.

Read more »

Gene Pattern May Identify Kidney Transplant Recipients Who Don’t Need Life-long Anti-rejection Drugs

May 29, 2010
By

Researchers have identified a distinct pattern of gene expression in the largest reported group of kidney transplant recipients who have not rejected the transplant kidneys even though they stopped taking anti-rejection drugs. This finding may help identify other transplant recipients who could safely reduce or end use of immunosuppressive therapy. In 2008, more than...

Read more »

Computers Analyze Environmental Factors in Diabetes

May 29, 2010
By

Like many complex diseases, diabetes results from the interplay of genetic and environmental factors. To examine genetic risk factors, scientists pore over the human genome sequence. Environmental factors have been trickier to pin down because there is no way to evaluate them comprehensively.Now, researchers at Stanford University present what they call an environment-wide association...

Read more »

Experimental Vaccine Protects Monkeys from New Ebola Virus

May 29, 2010
By

New research has found that an experimental Ebola vaccine developed by researchers at the National Institutes of Health protects monkeys against not only the two most lethal Ebola virus species for which it was originally designed, both recognized in 1976, but also against a newer Ebola virus species that was identified in 2007.

Read more »

National Institutes of Health-Sponsored Workshop Provides Guidelines for Soy Research

May 29, 2010
By

Participants in a workshop sponsored by the National Institutes of Health have developed guidelines on designing and evaluating clinical research studies investigating soy, representing the first guidelines of their kind in the field of soy research. The guidelines are published in the June 2010 issue of The Journal of Nutrition.

Read more »

Link to Financial Conflict of Interest Notice of Proposed Rule Making

May 29, 2010
By

Partnerships between NIH-funded researchers and industry are often essential to the process of moving discoveries from the bench to the bedside. However, managing Financial Conflicts of Interest (FCOI) can be a major challenge because of the complex relationships among government, academia, and industry. A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which is open for public comment...

Read more »

NIH Human Microbiome Project Researchers Publish First Genomic Collection of Human Microbes

May 29, 2010
By

The Human Microbiome Project (HMP) today published an analysis of 178 genomes from microbes that live in or on the human body. The researchers discovered novel genes and proteins that serve functions in human health and disease, adding a new level of understanding to what is known about the complexity and diversity of these...

Read more »