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11-Jul-2006 3:00 PM EDT
Brain-Computer Link Lets Paralyzed Patients Convert Thoughts Into Actions
University of Chicago Medical Center

A multi-institutional team of researchers has found that people with long-standing, severe paralysis can generate signals in the area of the brain responsible for voluntary movement and these signals can be detected, recorded, routed out of the brain to a computer and converted into actions -- enabling a paralyzed patient to perform basic tasks.

30-May-2006 4:20 PM EDT
Small Naps a Big Help for Young Docs on Long Shifts
University of Chicago Medical Center

The first study to assess the benefits of naps for medical residents during extended shifts found that although sleep time increased by only about one hour, interns felt that even small gains in sleep led to substantial improvements in fatigue, sleep quality and ability to care for patients.

8-May-2006 9:15 AM EDT
Full Year of Treatment Helps Infants and Children with Toxoplasmosis
University of Chicago Medical Center

The first long-term study shows that treatment with pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine during the first year of life leads to a lasting reduction in brain and eye damage for children born with toxoplasmosis. These findings renew the appeal for screening and early treatment for this infection in pregnant women and newborns.

3-May-2006 5:30 PM EDT
Selectively Blocking Inflammatory Signals May Protect Mice from MS
University of Chicago Medical Center

A new way to preserve the cells that surround and protect nerves could lead to new treatments for demyelinating diseases such a multiple sclerosis.

26-Apr-2006 9:00 AM EDT
Survey Examines Doctors' Religious Characteristics
University of Chicago Medical Center

Although 45 percent of physicians do not inquire about religious belief, 55 percent do; 10 percent of them do so "always." While 81 percent rarely or never pray with patients, 19 percent do. A survey of physicians' religious characteristics found no consensus about what is appropriate, suggesting that physicians will "need to grapple" with these deeply rooted differences.

24-Apr-2006 4:10 PM EDT
"Uniquely Human" Component of Language Found in Gregarious Birds
University of Chicago Medical Center

Linguists have argued that certain patterns of language organization are the exclusive province of humans. These syntactical capacities have been used to define the boundaries between humans and other creatures. Now researchers have discovered the capacity to recognize such patterns in starlings.

3-Apr-2006 8:00 AM EDT
Newly Found Species Fills Evolutionary Gap Between Fish and Land Animals
University of Chicago

Paleontologists have discovered fossils of a species that provides the missing evolutionary link between fish and the first animals that walked out of water onto land about 375 million years ago.

22-Mar-2006 1:05 PM EST
Prescription Flip-Side: Guidelines for Medication Withdrawal
University of Chicago Medical Center

University of Chicago physicians propose the first general framework for withholding or discontinuing medications, adding life expectancy, goals of care, treatment targets and time until benefit to the usual equation of drug plusses and minuses.

20-Mar-2006 8:00 AM EST
Efforts to Replicate Controversial Diabetes Therapy Bring Partial Success
University of Chicago Medical Center

Researchers have been able to confirm most but not all of the results of a high-profile study that brought new hope to diabetes patients. This study provides a boost for efforts to reverse type-1 diabetes in recently diagnosed patients but not for efforts to grow new islets from spleens.

6-Mar-2006 12:35 PM EST
Most Human-Chimp Differences Due to Gene Regulation – Not Genes
University of Chicago Medical Center

Although their genes are virtually identical, humans and chimpanzees differ substantially. This study provides powerful new evidence for a 30-year-old theory, that the differences are due more to changes in gene regulation than differences in individual genes.

6-Mar-2006 7:25 PM EST
Scientists Provide New Evidence for Cellular Cause of SIDS
University of Chicago

Scientists have found strong support that a disturbance of a specific neurochemical can lead to sudden infant death syndrome. They describe what happens during hypoxia when levels of the hormone serotonin are disturbed in the specific group of neurons showed to be responsible for gasping, which resets the normal breathing pattern for babies.

2-Mar-2006 8:25 PM EST
Scan of Human Genome Reveals More than 700 Recently Evolving Genes
University of Chicago

University of Chicago researchers have scanned the entire human genome in search of genetic variations that may signal recent evolution and found more than 700 that may be targets of recent natural positive selection during the past 10,000 years of human evolution.

Released: 6-Mar-2006 2:20 PM EST
Seminar Examines Biology of Pain, Nerve Repair in Peripheral Nerve Disease
University of Chicago Medical Center

The Jack Miller Center for Peripheral Neuropathy at the University of Chicago will present its second biennial scientific symposium on the "Frontiers of Peripheral Nerve Research," from 9 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. on Friday, April 28, 2006.

16-Feb-2006 1:25 PM EST
OTC Decongestant Equals Prescription Drug for Hay Fever
University of Chicago Medical Center

There is no difference between an over-the-counter decongestant and a prescription medication that costs almost four times as much in relieving hay fever symptoms. Daily doses of 240 mg of pseudoephedrine were just as effective as 10 mg daily of montelukast at relieving symptoms without additional side effects.

31-Jan-2006 1:55 PM EST
Gene Variation Increases SIDS Risk in African Americans
University of Chicago Medical Center

Five percent of deaths from SIDS in African Americans can be traced to defects in one gene. Half of those deaths result from a common variation that increases an infant's risk of developing an abnormal heart rhythm during times of environmental stress.

13-Dec-2005 2:40 PM EST
Potential Cause of Breathing Problems for Rett Syndrome Found
University of Chicago Medical Center

A multi-institutional team has taken a crucial step toward understanding and treating Rett syndrome, a rare and often-misdiagnosed neurodevelopmental disorder that affects 1 in 10,000 children, mostly females.



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