Professor Nicholas Jonsson of the Institute of Biodiversity Animal health and Comparative Medicine said: Resistance to all the main acaricides is documented well--for example amitraz resistance is seen in about 20%of Australian tick populations and more than 50%of Mexican ticks.
Larch is a professor of medicine of the Michael G. Degroote School of medicine at Mcmaster and member of the Firestone Institute for Respiratory Health at St joseph's Healthcare Hamilton.
and research group leader from the Faculty of health and Medical sciences at University of Copenhagen wanted to understand why for some people opening the fridge
The research that Carvajal Moreno did in collaboration with Jaime Berumen Campos from the Genomic Medicine Unit from General Hospital of Mexico now will be focused in studying stomach esophagus
and Molecular Medicine Laboratory developed a pig model that closely mimics the human gastric environment.
#oepigs have greater anatomic physiologic and immunologic similarities to humans than mice the main animal model used in biomedical research said Raquel Hontecillas co-director of the Nutritional Immunology and Molecular Medicine
#Sports medicine specialists make pitch to prevent overuse injuries in young athletesit stands to reason that young people who play organized sports are going to get injured.
But the incidence of overuse injuries in young athletes has increased at a much quicker rate across all sports for reasons that are no mystery to sports medicine experts.
and many more single-sport athletes said Martin who is director of sports medicine for Wake Forest University athletics and team physician for the Winston-salem Dash minor-league baseball team.
Playing different sports on the other hand is good for young people on multiple levels said Dr. Daryl Rosenbaum who specializes in family medicine and sports medicine at Wake Forest Baptist.
The American Journal of Botany is one of the 10 most influential journals over the last 100 years in the field of biology and medicine according to the Biomedical & Life sciences Division of the Special Libraries Association.
As a consequence of the continued rise in the number of MRSA cases the MRSA guidelines from the Danish Health and Medicines Authority were revised in November 2012.
Lead author Dr Louise Matthews Senior Research Fellow in the Institute of Biodiversity Animal health and Comparative Medicine said:
because medicines for veterinary use must show that animal health is improved. This is problematic because E coli O157 does not harm cattle
This study is an excellent example the interface between veterinary and human medicine and of the concept of'One Health'in action--controlling infections in animals can have a major impact on public health.
The results were published online Sept. 16 in JAMA Internal medicine. According to the U s. Food and Drug Administration nearly 80 percent of antibiotics in the United states are sold for use in livestock feeds.
and Anna Gilmore from the University of Bath UK and the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies published this week in PLOS Medicine.
James Willerson president and medical director and Emerson Perin director of clinical research for cardiovascular medicine all of the Texas Heart Institute.
The above story is provided based on materials by American Medical Association (AMA. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length e
Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital. The study appears online August 29 2013 in BMJ (British Medical Journal.
& Tropical Medicine in collaboration with Durham University and other researchers in the UK and US--is the first systematic review looking at using larval source management (LSM) to control malaria
Lead author Lucy Tusting from the Department of Disease Control at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine said:
The review was carried out by researchers at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine Princeton university and Durham University.
The above story is provided based on materials by London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Note:
Researchers at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical center's Institute for Regenerative Medicine hope the oxygen-generating compound could one day aid in saving
and associate professor of regenerative medicine at Wake Forest Baptist We modified the material so it can be injected into muscle
If successful Harrison said the treatment could potentially extend the window of time known as the golden hour in emergency medicine
The major implication of these findings is that oxygen-generating compounds can potentially reduce the magnitude of the permanent functional deficits resulting from traumatic injury to muscle said George Christ Ph d. co-author and professor of regenerative medicine at Wake Forest Baptist.
The research was funded by the National institutes of health and the Armed forces Institute for Regenerative Medicine. Co-authors are Catherine L. Ward Ph d. Benjamin T. Corona Ph d. James J. Yoo M d. Ph d. Wake Forest Baptist.
Their study appears in the August 22 issue of The New england Journal of Medicine. The World health organization reports that more than 120 million people suffer from lymphatic filariasis commonly known as elephantiasis.
This study follows research that Kazura published in in 2002 The New england Journal of Medicine.
By combining the existing strategy with vector control we are more likely to reach elimination thresholds said Lisa J. Reimer Phd first author on the paper and a lecturer at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.
Indeed clinicians sometimes smoke alongside patients as a way of creating a rapport with them said Judith Prochaska Phd MPH associate professor of medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research center
or progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus according to a report published by JAMA Internal medicine a JAMA Network publication.
The above story is provided based on materials by American Medical Association (AMA. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length h
Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. Pascual said the findings show that environmental methods for sustainable disease control are needed urgently.
In addition to Baeza and Pascual the authors of the PNAS paper are Menno Jan Bouma of the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Ramesh Dhiman of India's National Institute of Malaria Research
and decreasing screen time says cardiologist and senior study author Elizabeth Jackson M d. M p h. assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical school.
and Richard Coker from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine based in Bangkok in an accompanying editorial?
Researchers from the University of Zurich's Institute of Social and Preventive medicine investigated whether these young Swiss men read up on addictive substances such as alcohol tobacco cannabis
Generally consumers of addictive substances are more likely to seek information on addictive substances compared to abstainers explains Meichun Mohler-Kuo a lecturer at the Institute of Social and Preventive medicine.
Children need a good night's sleep for their overall school performance said Kristin Avis Ph d. associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics Division of Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine.
& Food Expo John Peters Ph d. professor of medicine at the University of Colorado and chief of strategy and innovation at the school's Anschutz Health and Wellness Center presented data from an experiment
Biointerfaces point to potential use for cranberry derivatives to hinder the spread of germs in implantable medical devices such as catheters
As fears rise over antibiotic resistance two experts on The british Medical Journal website today debate
Essentially all our breakthroughs in human clinical medicine have been tested initially or perfected in animal models Wheeler said.
This method is promising to pave the way for various real-time medical applications Tammer looks ahead.
It could have broad impacts in agriculture and medicine that affect people's lives especially in developing countries.
Sheng Yang He a Howard Hughes Medical Institute-Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Investigator and an MSU University Distinguished Professor in the DOE Plant Research Laboratory and Plant
Rye collaborated on the research with Dong-Hua Chen and Wah Chiu at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston Damian Madan and Zohn Lin at Princeton university Jeremy Weaver at Texas A&m
Rye collaborated on the research with Dong-Hua Chen and Wah Chiu at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston Damian Madan and Zohn Lin at Princeton university Jeremy Weaver at Texas A&m
Antimicrobial resistance in veterinary medicine has received a considerable amount of recognition as a potential factor leading to antimicrobial resistance in human medicine Lubbers said.
and the United states and the controversy of mosquito management will likely arise every summer said Estella Geraghty associate professor of clinical internal medicine at UC Davis
Chen Castner and Woroniecka were Brown undergraduatess who joined the project as Brown-Howard Hughes Medical Institute Summer Scholars.
Based on this study we would say not said Kylie Kavanagh D. V. M. assistant professor of pathology-comparative medicine at Wake Forest Baptist
GM085022) National institutes of health NRSA (F32-HG004830) The Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the National Science Foundation (MCB-1024999.
#¢Introduce a requirement for medicine authorisation of all non-tobacco nicotine containing products to prevent promotion to young adults who are nonsmokers.#¢
and Germany published in this week's PLOS Medicine. The researchers led by Stanton Glantz from the Center for Tobacco Control Research
and the Institute of Medicine related to the Institute's landmark 2001 report Clearing the smoke--a report that set the tone for the development and regulation of tobacco products in the US particularly those claiming to be less dangerous.
and legal firms to access the IOM proceedings (that led to the FDA-commissioned Institute of Medicine report on tobacco products)
There was a lack of clear policy on tobacco industry engagement by the Institute of Medicine which combined with the general presumption of honesty upon
or because we think it might help our health in other ways said Dr. Kirsten Tillisch an associate professor of medicine at UCLA's David Geffen School of medicine
and neurological disorders said Dr. Emeran Mayer a professor of medicine physiology and psychiatry at the David Geffen School of medicine at UCLA and the study's senior author.
Ragweed mugwort plantain and pigweed have more than just their unappealing appearance in common--they're some of the worst offenders to allergy sufferers said Robert Valet M d. assistant professor of Medicine and an allergist at Vanderbilt University Medical center's Asthma
The work was funded by the U s. Environmental protection agency U s. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences U s. National Science Foundation Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Australian
The study is published online ahead of print in the Journal of Academic Medicine. Bias can affect clinical care
and the doctor-patient relationship and even a patient's willingness or desire to go see their physician so it is crucial that we try to deal with any bias during medical school said David Miller M d. associate professor of internal medicine at Wake Forest Baptist
At Wake Forest Baptist all third-year medical students in the family medicine clerkship must complete the online IAT
The above story is provided based on materials by American Medical Association (AMA. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length n
The above story is provided based on materials by American Medical Association (AMA. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length n
The study was supported by CONACYT (Mexico) Howard Hughes Medical Institute the University at Buffalo College of Arts and Sciences and the National Science Foundation.
These findings published May 8 in The Journal of Clinical Investigation suggest micrornas could be targeted for the development of new medical interventions aimed at improving muscle fitness in people with chronic illness or injury.
The above story is provided based on materials by Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute. The original article was written by Heather Buschman.
The NIH grant is allowing the team at the University of Michigan Medical System to expand its work in this important area
Figs are also a source of traditional medicine with sap being used to treat a variety of illnesses from intestinal upsets to heart problems and malaria.
and medical director of the International Heart & Lung Institute at The Center for Restorative Medicine in Palm springs Calif. Simple removal of'healthy'lectin-containing foods
The National Academy of Sciences National Academy of Engineering Institute of Medicine and National Research Council make up the National Academies.
while Type 2 helps in forming muscle said Osvaldo Delbono M d. Ph d. professor of internal medicine at Wake Forest Baptist and senior author of the study.
and ash and generate this signal says Noel holder of Salk's Arthur and Julie Woodrow Chair and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
More research is needed to understand exactly how the change in shape of the KAI2 protein activates a genetic pathway that regulates germination says Chory the Howard H. and Maryam R. Newman Chair in Plant Biology and a Howard Hughes Medical
The multi-institutional study led by researchers at The Cardiovascular Institute part of the University of Medicine
The TONE study identified several polymorphisms that relate to weight sensitivity with regard to hypertension according to principal investigator John B. Kostis MD John G. Detwiler professor of cardiology professor of medicine and pharmacology
and research fellow in medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Cardiology Division alumnus of Robert Wood Johnson Medical school
Tulane University School of Public health and Tropical Medicine; Wake Forest School of medicine; The Johns hopkins university School of medicine; and Welch Center for Prevention Epidemiology and Clinical Research Johns Hopkins Medical institutions also contributed to the study.
#Vets and medical doctors should team up to tackle diseases transmitted from animals to humansa new study at the Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) in Antwerp analyses the impact of animal brucellosis and bovine tuberculosis (BTB) on animals
The above story is provided based on materials by Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length g
Biological sciences and Medical sciences a baseline adherence to a Mediterranean diet (Mediet) is associated with a lower risk of hyperuricemia defined as a serum uric acid (SUA) concentration higher than 7mg/dl in men and higher than 6mg
and pets said Knight also a faculty member at CU-Boulder's Biofrontiers Institute and an Early Career Howard Hughes Medical Institute Scientist.
A paper on the subject was published today in the new online science and biomedical journal elife a joint initiative of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute the Max Planck Society and the Wellcome Trust fund.
The study was funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America and the National institutes of health.
Analysis of the honeybee genome suggests that they lack many of the immune-system genes of other insects raising the possibility that honeybees'use of medicine has been partly responsible
what may be an advance in developing GUMBOS-based materials with far-reaching medical electronic and other uses.
Abnormally higher levels of ROS can cause neural stem cells to start differentiating Guan is a professor in the Molecular Medicine & Genetics division of the U-M Department of Internal medicine and in the Department of Cell & Developmental Biology.
-M Department of Neurology research lab member Christine Bian and Yuan Zhu Ph d. an associate professor in Molecular Medicine & Genetics and Cell & Developmental Biology.
The research was supported by National Institute of General Medical sciences grant GM052890. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by University of Michigan Health System.
which algae grow in open ponds Solazyme grows microalgae in total darkness in the same kind of fermentation vats used to produce vinegar medicines and scores of other products.
and other nutrients to grow in the huge industrial fermentation tanks that make everything from vinegar and yogurt to insulin and other medicines.
and the Medical Research Council has agreed a grant for the proposed clinical trial. Abstract title:
If you look at any basic virology textbook it will say that these are categories that distinguish all viruses said lead researcher Stanley M. Lemon MD professor of medicine and a member of UNC Lineberger and the Center for Translational Immunology.
Corp. and Fourth Military Medical University in China contributed to the article. Cedars-Sinai researchers were supported by a Young Investigator Award and a Challenge Award from the Prostate Cancer Foundation research grants (P01 CA098912 and R01 CA122602) from the National institutes of health a Department of defense Idea
The above story is provided based on materials by Johns Hopkins Medicine. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
In Biomaterials a team from Wake Forest Baptist Medical center's Institute for Regenerative Medicine report that in the laboratory setting engineered ovaries showed sustained release of the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone.
-or cell-based hormone therapy--essentially an artificial ovary-to deliver sex hormones in a more natural manner than drugs said Emmanuel C. Opara Ph d. professor of regenerative medicine and senior author.
and section head of reproductive medicine at Wake Forest Baptist. The graft format would bring certain advantages:
and diet but also lower their food costs Flynn says Flynn is also an associate professor of medicine at The Warren Alpert Medical school of Brown University.
and can be delivered by simply eating the plant said senior author Dr. Alan M. Fogelman executive chair of the department of medicine
which positively impacts cholesterol said the study's corresponding author Srinavasa T. Reddy a UCLA professor of medicine and of molecular and medical pharmacology.
If the work in animal models applies to humans said Fogelman who is also the Castera Professor of Medicine at UCLA consuming forms of genetically modified foods that contain apoa-1-related peptides could potentially help improve these conditions.
This is one of the first examples in translational research using an edible plant as a delivery vehicle for a new approach to cholesterol said Judith Gasson a professor of medicine and biological chemistry director of UCLA
The study is published in the March 18 issue of the American Journal of Preventive medicine. We wanted to take this intervention out to people in the community rather than having them have to come to us in a clinical setting said the study's lead author Jeff Katula Ph d. assistant professor of health and exercise sciences at Wake Forest University and joint
The Cancer Institute of New jersey is a Center of Excellence of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical school.
and lack of employment would be related to a higher level of relighting says Dr. Steinberg who is also an associate professor of medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical school and an associate professor of health education and behavioral science at UMDNJ
Steinberg and colleagues suggest key components of tobacco dependence treatment that could be affected by these findings include the dosage of medicines prescribed
because it sheds light on an aspect of medicine that has long been obscure: how vaccines work.
and has been used for centuries against diabetes in the folk medicines of China and India. Following this line of thinking Agarwal
and vegetables in school meals may give a small boost to the amount of these foods in adolescents'diets according to a study published in the American Journal of Preventive medicine.
and may be even more dangerous than we previously thought said Harvey Hecht MD associate director of cardiac imaging and professor of medicine at Mount sinai Medical center and study author.
and who were enrolled already in the Flight attendant Medical Research Institute (FAMRI)- International Early Lung cancer Action Program CT screening program from 2005-2012.
This study was funded by the Flight attendants Medical Research Institute. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by American College of Cardiology.
#Stressed proteins can cause blood clots for hoursnew research from Rice university Baylor College of Medicine (BCM)
Moake a senior research scientist in bioengineering at Rice and professor of medicine at BCM said the work is vitally important
Other sponsors of the meeting included the American Legacy Foundation the World health organization the International Development Research Centre the Medical University of South carolina the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project
of regenerative medicine at Wake Forest Baptist's Institute for Regenerative Medicine and colleagues. The new research complements a 2012 report by Almeida-Porada's team that identified stem cells in cord blood that are involved in blood vessel formation
and in the United states. The researcher team led Dr. Anneli Ivarsson at the Department of public health and Clinical Medicine speculate that there may be a window of opportunity in which an infanwe now have proven this way of introducing gluten reduces the risk of getting celiac disease says Dr
#Growing medicines in plants requires new regulations, experts sayscientists say amending an EU directive on GMOS could help stimulate innovation in making cheaper vaccines pharmaceuticals
and more than 11000 concurrent out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) logged by Houston Emergency Medical Services (EMS).
but make an important contribution to health care cost containment said senior author Stanton A. Glantz Phd a UCSF professor of medicine and director of the UCSF Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education.
The propagation of antibiotic resistance has been perceived as a medical or microbiology-related problem Alvarez said.
Nimrit Goraya MD Donald Wesson MD (Texas A&m College of Medicine) and their colleagues tested this by randomizing 71 patients with hypertensive stage 4 CKD to receive added fruits and vegetables
We do believe that to some extent these findings are going to be applicable to other important areas of disease beyond sepsis said Daren Knoell senior author of the study and a professor of pharmacy and internal medicine at Ohio State.
and geriatric medicine at Wake Forest Baptist Medical center and research director of its Sticht Center on Aging is the principal investigator in a National institutes of health-funded study into the effectiveness of insulin administered through the nose in treating individuals with mild cognitive impairment
because they're kind of paying it forward by assisting in advancing medical knowledge or because the study offers some type of compensation.
One of the most important ways you can contribute directly to science is by volunteering to participate in studies said Christina Hugenschmidt an instructor in gerontology and geriatric medicine at Wake Forest Baptist.
but whenever you read about groundbreaking new science in human medicine it means that hundreds
She specializes in neonatal and perinatal medicine. Of 175 very-low-birth-weight infants 23 (13 percent) developed sepsis from gram-positive bacteria such as staphylococci Streptococcus and Enterococcus species and gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli
--and natural rubber allergenicity a global medical concern for those repeatedly exposed to latex-containing products (e g. gloves).
Dr. Robert Moore a pediatric pulmonologist at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM; and former BCM scientist Jacob Gage now with Nano3d Biosciences.
D. formerly from the Department of Nutrition Harvard School of Public health and currently at the Channing Division of Network Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital and colleagues analyzed data from 20 cohort studies of women
and the numbers are increasing said Atul Butte MD Phd associate professor of systems medicine in pediatrics.
Other co-authors were John Ioannidis MD Phd professor of medicine and of health research and policy;
The Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health National Library of Medicine National Institute of General Medical sciences and other National institutes of health agencies funded the study.
and education--are published in the current issue of the American Journal of Preventive medicine. There's a natural tendency to see our findings
Research published last year in the New england Journal of Medicine reported a strong association between a nation's chocolate consumption
His research was published January 14 in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. Vitamin d deficiency is a risk factor for a number of illnesses including asthma and allergies in children.
of which may contribute to obesity are associated with adverse medical conditions and health outcomes for many people but until now the health effects of these types of poor diets have not been characterized for people who live to 75 years of age and older said Pao Ying Hsao postdoctoral fellow
and a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and of internal medicine at UC Davis. But our research helps to dispel the myth that gluteal fat is'innocent.'
Other authors of the study entitled Increased Chemerin and Decreased Omentin-1 in Both Adipose tissue and Plasma in Nascent Metabolic syndrome include Sridevi Devaraj of Baylor College of Medicine Harmeet
We expect this combination of properties will lead to new products with unique capabilities for the aerospace automotive medical and smart-clothing markets.
#Research revisiting the safety of GM weevil-resistant peas in mice contradicts previous risk assessment findingsresearchers at the Medical University of Vienna have conducted feeding trials with mice to investigate the allergenicity of genetically modified (GM) weevil-resistant peas.
This research was conducted at the Medical University of Vienna as part of the European commission Framework 7-funded GMSAFOOD project.
The study published in Occupational and Environmental Medicine is a collaboration between scientists at King's college London and Anhui Medical University China along with colleagues in the UK and USA.
Dr Ruoling Chen also a visiting professor at Anhui Medical University said:''Passive smoking should be considered an important risk factor for severe dementia syndromes as this study in China shows.
#New company applies regenerative medicine to corneal transplantsocular Systems Inc. OSI) Wake Forest Baptist Medical center
whose Institute for Regenerative Medicine is conducting the research and the North carolina Eye Bank is an example of the type of collaboration that is a strategic goal of the Piedmont Triad Research Park (PTRP).
The goal of the new partnership is use regenerative medicine technology to meet this increased demand.
and scaffolds can theoretically be applied to almost any tissue in the body said Anthony Atala M d. director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine.
Shay Soker Ph d. professor of regenerative medicine at Wake Forest Baptist is the lead scientist for the project.
Other team members are Tracy Criswell Ph d. instructor of regenerative medicine; Ocular Systems Inc. scientists Jin San Choi Ph d. and Belinda Wagner Ph d.;
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