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Released: 23-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Study Measures ADA Compliance of Kansas City Fitness Centers
University of Kansas

According to a study of 34 public fitness centers in the Kansas City metropolitan area, no facilities are completely accessible for people who use wheelchairs. This is the only study published on the compliance of fitness centers to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA).

Released: 30-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Mental Exercise May Help Stave Off Parkinson's
University of Kansas

People who have Parkinson's disease may someday find themselves undergoing a mental training regimen that helps them respond better to the drugs they take and to avoid surgery. Studies by researchers at the University of Kansas hint that exercising your brain every day might be just as important as 20 minutes of physical exercise.

Released: 20-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Taxol May Help in Fight Against Alzheimer's
University of Kansas

Two University of Kansas researchers have shown that Taxol, already proven effective in fighting ovarian and breast cancer, may someday also help in the battle against Alzheimer's disease. In laboratory studies, the two KU scientists have used taxol to slow the damage done to brain cells by the poisonous protein fibers that cause Alzheimer's.

9-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
More Proof that Green Tea may Postpone Cancer, Heart Disease
University of Kansas

An antioxidant found in green tea is at least 100 times more effective than vitamin C and 25 times better than vitamin E at protecting cells and their genetic material, DNA, from damage believed to be linked to cancer, heart disease and other potentially life-threatening illnesses, University of Kansas research shows.The antioxidant, known as epigallocatechin gallate, or EGCG, carries twice the antioxidant punch of resveratrol, found in red wine, according to the study.

26-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Men Who Donate Blood May Reduce Risk of Heart Disease
University of Kansas

Men who donate blood may reduce their risk of heart disease by up to 30 percent, according to a study led by David Meyers, M.D., professor of internal medicine and preventive medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The study is published in the August issue of the journal Heart.

Released: 23-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Largest Monarch Migration in 20 Years Expected in Kansas
University of Kansas

Tens of millions of monarch butterflies will stampede through Kansas in September, and a researcher at the University of Kansas is ready for the show.

Released: 17-Apr-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Researchers Find Evidence Universe May Have Axis
University of Kansas

The universe, like the Earth, may have its own axis, according to observational data collected by researchers at the University of Kansas and University of Rochester in New York. The research brings into question Albert Einstein's "Theory of Relativity," which is based on assumptions of a centerless, directionless universe, as well as upon the constancy of the speed of light.

Released: 18-Mar-1997 12:00 AM EST
Did Birds Come from Dinosaurs
University of Kansas

LAWRENCE -- Another match has been set in a long-running academic debate about whether birds descended from dinosaurs. At issue, said Larry Dean Martin, curator of paleontology at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, is whether these dinosaurs had feathers.

Released: 3-Jan-1997 12:00 AM EST
Replacement For Solvents
University of Kansas

A solvent used in the food-processing trade is expected to help the pharmaceutical industry replace environmentally unfriendly and expensive solvents in the manufacture of drugs. By using supercritical carbon dioxide, or CO2, in the pharmaceutical process, researchers at the University of Kansas have successfully replaced some chemical solvents.

   

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