Latest News from: Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

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26-Oct-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Women's Stroke Symptoms Differ from Men's
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new study documents for the first time a significant difference in the way women and men describe their symptoms while they're having a stroke. And that difference may be affecting how women receive emergency stroke treatment.

Released: 22-Oct-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Why Don't All Doctors Treat Patients the Same Way?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

There's lot of room for differences in how individual doctors treat patients. But the differences in care received by Americans in various regions, ethnic groups, and income brackets are even bigger. A Nov. 1 event will examine what's behind this phenomenon.

17-Oct-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Compound Holds Promise for Lupus and Related Diseases
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A chemical cousin of anti-anxiety medications, such as Valium and Xanax, significantly reduces kidney inflammation in mice inbred to develop a disease resembling human systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).

10-Oct-2002 12:00 AM EDT
A Red Flag for Lethal Prostate Cancer
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

High levels of activity in a gene called EZH2 could be a warning sign of metastatic prostate cancer. A future diagnostic test for high levels of the protein encoded by the gene could serve as a red flag for physicians and help save the lives of men with the most dangerous form of the disease.

Released: 26-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Blood Pressure Drug Shown to Cut Stroke, Death Risks
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A drug that reduces high blood pressure in people with a form of the disease that's common later in life also cuts their risk of stroke and death, and does it better than another hypertension drug. The findings suggest losartan should be a front-line hypertension drug.

Released: 24-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Talk Addresses Ethics and the Uninsured
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

How can the U.S. ethically tolerate a situation in which nearly 40 million people lack health insurance? Univ. of Michigan president Mary Sue Coleman, who co-chaired an IOM committee on this issue, will address the problems of the uninsured in an Oct. 9 speech.

Released: 24-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
New Cardiovascular Center Planned at Univ. of Michigan
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

It takes a unified offense to defeat a stubborn foe. That's why the University of Michigan Health System plans to take on the nation's leading killer, cardiovascular disease, in a $168 million center that will unify operating rooms, patient rooms, clinics and labs.

Released: 24-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Media Workshop on Depression in Children and Adolescents
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The University of Michigan Depression Center will hold a media workshop on depression in children and teens on Friday, Oct. 4 in Ann Arbor, MI. The free workshop, featuring top experts, will help reporters learn more about this important issue.

20-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Mutation in Ashkenazi Jews More than Doubles Cancer Risk
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A genetic mutation, most often found in people descended from Ashkenazi Jews, can double or even triple the risk of colorectal cancer, according to new data from an international study.

13-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Health Costs Higher for Motorcyclists Who Crash without Helmets
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Motorcycle riders who crash without a helmet rack up far larger hospital bills than those whose heads were protected in a crash, a new study finds. They also face a higher risk of head injuries, worse overall injury scores, and longer stays in hospitals and rehab.

Released: 7-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Clinical Promise of Anti-Angiogenesis Cancer Drug Explained
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

New laboratory results are telling cancer researchers how an experimental copper-lowering drug works against cancer, by blocking signals that help tumors grow blood vessels to feed their growth. The finding explains the drug's recent promise in clinical trials.

6-Sep-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Artificial Liver Trials Show Progress
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Next week in Berlin, the top life-support doctor from the Univ. of Michigan Health System will present results from the first U.S. clinical trial of an 'artificial liver' system designed to help liver failure patients live until they receive a transplant or recover liver function.

Released: 27-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Of Mice and Men: Deaf Mouse Leads to Human Deafness Gene
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

In a powerful demonstration of how animal research can help humans, a pair of scientific teams is reporting the discovery of a deafness gene in mice that led to the identification of similar genetic defects in people with hearing loss.

Released: 20-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
New $10M Grant Establishes Cancer Imaging Center
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new $10 million grant will help develop medical-imaging scans that may tell future cancer patients where their tumors are, how fast their cancer is growing, what genes have mutated, what treatments might work best, and how they're responding to treatment.

Released: 15-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Stem Cells Found in Adult Peripheral Nervous System
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Scientists at the U-M Medical School have found neural crest stem cells -- primitive cells that generate the peripheral nervous system -- in the gut of adult laboratory rats. The U-M discovery upsets the belief that neural crest stem cells disappear before birth.

9-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Jumping Genes Can Knock Out DNA; Alter Human Genome
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Results of a new University of Michigan study suggest that junk DNA, dismissed by many scientists as mere strings of meaningless genetic code, could have a darker side -- possibly knocking out genes or creating devastating mutations.

Released: 2-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
One Gene, Two Eye Diseases? New Macular Degeneration Link Found
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new study shows that a gene linked to one eye disease, retinitis pigmentosa, also causes a form of macular degeneration. The finding raises an intriguing question: How can a single gene cause two very different eye diseases, each affecting a different segment of vision?

Released: 2-Aug-2002 12:00 AM EDT
New Predictive Marker Found for Prostate and Colon Cancer
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A protein that interacts with the gene for Huntington's disease could also help physicians diagnose and more effectively treat patients with two of the most common and deadly forms of cancer, according to a new University of Michigan study.

Released: 27-Jul-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Noggin Mutation Causes Rare Congenital Hearing Loss
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

If hearing loss runs in your family and the doctor says it's otosclerosis, it may be important to see a genetic counselor as well as a surgeon, according to new research from the University of Michigan Medical School.

Released: 16-Jul-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Gift Will Sow Seeds of U.S. Depression Center Network
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new $750,000 gift to the University of Michigan Depression Center will accelerate new programs to help people with depression get the treatment they need, and sow the seeds for a potential future network of depression centers across the United States.

Released: 12-Jul-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Book Puts Medical Mistakes Under a Microscope
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

In 1999, the Institute of Medicine's scathing report on the deadly toll of medical errors spurred a movement to increase patient safety. Now, a new book picks up where the IOM left off, diagnosing the causes of errors and offering new ways to think about them.

Released: 12-Jul-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Powerful Burn-Prevention Video Helps Kids
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

An innovative new video teaches about the dangers of fire through the first-person stories of children and teens who have suffered painful burn injuries. Now, it has won a prestigious national award for educational films and is available to schools nationwide.

Released: 9-Jul-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Nanosensors for Astronauts
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Along with space suits, freeze-dried food and barf bags, tomorrow's astronauts may travel with nanomolecular devices inside their white blood cells to detect early signs of damage from dangerous radiation or infection.

14-Jun-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Artificial Lung Showing Promise, as Need Grows
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

An artificial lung that uses tiny hollow fibers and the heart's own pumping power to oxygenate blood is showing promise in pre-clinical studies, and may reach clinical trials in a year. And a new survey of lung transplant programs shows such a device is badly needed.

Released: 7-Jun-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Fibromyalgia Pain Isn't All in Patients‚ Heads
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new brain study confirms what fibromyalgia patients have told skeptical doctors for years: They're really in pain. In fact, they feel severe pain, and have measurable pain signals in their brains, from a gentle finger squeeze that barely feels unpleasant to others.

1-Jun-2002 12:00 AM EDT
New Target in War Against Graft-Versus-Host Disease
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

University of Michigan scientists reported this week that they have discovered how graft-versus-host disease, a common and deadly complication of life-saving bone marrow transplants, attacks and often kills its victims.

27-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Why Do Doctors Lie to Insurers?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new study looks at why some physicians are willing to lie to insurance companies in order for their patients to receive medical treatment. The higher the "hassle factor" of the insurer's appeal process, the larger the number of physicians willing to lie.

21-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
ER Doctors Shouldn't Fear Giving Stroke Clotbusters
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Emergency room physicians can deliver clot-busting drugs to appropriate stroke patients as quickly and safely as dedicated stroke teams, a new study finds. But patients are still taking too long to get to the ER and receive the clotbusting drugs in time.

Released: 15-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
A Big Program for Little Ears: Going Beyond Newborn Hearing Screening
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Many hospitals test newborn babies' hearing, but such programs don't catch every child, ensure follow-up care or spot late-onset hearing loss. Now, a new Michigan program aims to address those issues and ensure early detection and treatment for all kids with hearing loss.

13-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Parasite or Partner? Study Suggests New Role for Junk DNA
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Junk DNA is the Rodney Dangerfield of the genetics world. It makes up nearly half of all human DNA, but many scientists dismiss it as useless gibberish. A new study, however, suggests that segments of junk DNA called LINE-1 elements deserve more respect.

8-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Surprising Findings on Medicaid Kids and the ER
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Across the U.S., more kids are going to hospital ERs than ever, and many visits are for non-urgent problems. But new data show that providing Medicaid through HMOs may be helping reverse some trends, narrowing gaps between Medicaid kids and privately insured ones.

5-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Doctor-Patient E-Mail Study Finds Positive Attitudes on Both Sides
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A e-mail system that "triages" messages from patients to their doctors can help overcome concerns that doctors have about electronic communication, and increase the amount and quality of communication between providers and patients. But it's not perfect.

Released: 4-May-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Katie Couric Wakes Up America on Colonoscopy Screening
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Colonoscopy rates have increased 20 percent since Katie Couric had her live, on-air cancer screening, University of Michigan researchers report. The results the show the power of having a celebrity spokesperson draw attention to a disease.

26-Apr-2002 12:00 AM EDT
Learning Not to Burn: Program Teaches Kids About Dangers of Fire
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new, innovative, hospital-based program being launched nationally this week could help prevent fire-setting and accidental burns among America's children and teens, reducing the devastating effect that arson and fire currently have on the nation's property and health.

9-Apr-2002 12:00 AM EDT
An Early Warning System for Dangerous Breast Cancer?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new laboratory study suggests that a tiny protein called RhoC found in breast tumors could be used as an early warning system, potentially spotting dangerously aggressive breast cancer before it begins to spread, and identifying the need for aggressive treatment.

Released: 6-Apr-2002 12:00 AM EST
U-M Medical School Advances in Rankings
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The University of Michigan Medical School is one of the 10 best research-oriented medical schools in the country, according to the annual "Best Graduate Schools" rankings released by U.S. News & World Report.

3-Apr-2002 12:00 AM EST
Leptin Linked to Obesity and Blood Clots
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

High levels of leptin, a hormone produced by fat cells in the body, could explain why obese people develop dangerous blood clots -- which can cause heart attacks and strokes -- more often than people who are not overweight.

3-Apr-2002 12:00 AM EST
New Genetic Marker for Prostate Cancer - More Accurate than PSA
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Using the power of advanced DNA microarray technology, scientists have found a gene that triggers production of large amounts of a specific protein in cancerous prostate cells. The protein is present only in malignant cells and is easily visible when stained.

Released: 29-Mar-2002 12:00 AM EST
New Health Insurance Approaches to be Debated
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Faced with skyrocketing health insurance costs, many companies are looking seriously at new health benefit plans, such as medical savings accounts and "defined contributions". This emerging trend will be discussed at an April 12 forum at the Univ. of Michigan.

Released: 22-Mar-2002 12:00 AM EST
U-M Medical School Jumps to 8th Nationally in FY2001 NIH Grant Rankings
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Biomedical researchers at U-Michigan Medical School received a record $213M in funding from the NIH in federal fiscal year 2001, making the school eighth in the nation and third among public universities in total NIH grants. Last year, U-M Medical School was ranked number 10; this is the first time the school has achieved the eighth-ranked position.

20-Mar-2002 12:00 AM EST
As Heart Patients Flock to Alternative Medicine, Hazards May Lurk
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Nearly three-quarters of heart patients surveyed in a new study used some kind of alternative medicine approach to help them heal. But dietary supplements chosen by one-third of them could interact with their heart medications to raise their risk of health problems.

13-Mar-2002 12:00 AM EST
Closing the Gaps in Heart Attack Care
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Despite huge advances in heart attack care in recent years, many American heart attack victims never get all the tests, treatments and counseling they should. But a new study at 10 Michigan hospitals shows there may be a way to close this gap, through simple reminders.

5-Mar-2002 12:00 AM EST
Link Found Between Kids‚ Sleep and Attention Problems
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Children who snore often are nearly twice as likely to have attention and hyperactivity problems, and the link is strong for other sleep problems, a new study finds. The results provide some of the most solid evidence ever of a link between sleep and behavior.

Released: 28-Feb-2002 12:00 AM EST
Anthrax Spores Use Failsafe Protection System
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new study by University of Michigan scientists shows that germination of anthrax spores requires the coordinated activity of several genes, receptor proteins and amino acids in at least two simultaneous signaling pathways.

Released: 29-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Complementary and Alternative Medicine Curriculum an Interdisciplinary Model
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

U-M Medical School launches a 3-tiered approach to CAM education. A $1.5M, five-year NIH grant funds a CAM learning thread into M.D. program, a graduate sequence in holistic health and healing, and creates a CAM faculty development program.

Released: 15-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Pain in the Gut? Don't Blame Stomach Acid
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

When it comes to cooling the burning pain of gastritis, reducing the amount of acid in the stomach may seem like a good idea. But two new studies with laboratory mice, conducted by scientists at the U-M Medical School, indicate it could be exactly the wrong thing to do.

Released: 9-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Movie's Release Brings Schizophrenia Into Public View
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Movie critics and audiences are applauding "A Beautiful Mind", whose central character has schizophrenia. But the film may achieve a higher purpose than entertainment, one expert says: it could raise the public's awareness about a common but overlooked mental illness.

Released: 4-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Melanoma Web Sites Give Incomplete Or Wrong Information
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Internet sites devoted to melanoma may seem trustworthy, but the information they provide is often only skin-deep. In fact, the majority of sites have incomplete facts about the potentially deadly form of skin cancer, and about one in eight had an inaccuracy.

Released: 7-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Curriculum Reform Reflects Importance of Spirituality, Culture on Health and Healing
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

New U-M Medical School Program helps students value patients' cultural differences, appreciate the impact of culture, spirituality and other uniquely personal attributes on health and healing, recognize the role of communication in treating patients.

1-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Smaller Hospitals OK for Bypass Surgery - If Your Risk Is Small
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Patients whose overall health is good - aside from clogged arteries - do fine if they have a bypass at a hospital that does less than 200 of the operations a year. But moderate- and high-risk patients, such as those with diabetes, should be sure to seek out a major hospital.



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