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Released: 5-Dec-2019 11:00 AM EST
Mouse Study Shows Nerve Signaling Pathway Critical to Healing Fractures
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Sticks and stones may break one’s bones, but healing them requires the production of a protein signal that stimulates the generation, growth and spread of vital nerve cells, or neurons, throughout the injured area. That’s the finding of a recent Johns Hopkins Medicine study that used mice to demonstrate what likely takes place during human fracture repair as well.

1-Dec-2019 8:00 AM EST
A Cancer Drug Trial For Dogs Presented At The RSNA Annual Meeting
Johns Hopkins Medicine

What do you do when your best friend is diagnosed with a cancer that kills most of its patients within a few months? A few brave dog owners turned to Johns Hopkins, where veterinarians, radiologists and physicists have teamed up to conduct an experimental trial of a therapy they hope will extend the lives of their beloved pets.

   
Released: 3-Dec-2019 8:00 AM EST
Five Things Nobel Laureate Gregg Semenza Wishes Everyone Knew About Science
Johns Hopkins Medicine

On Dec. 10, Johns Hopkins scientist Gregg Semenza, M.D., Ph.D., along with William Kaelin Jr., M.D., and Peter Ratcliffe, M.D., will accept the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in Stockholm, Sweden, for the groundbreaking discovery of the gene that controls how cells respond to low oxygen levels.

   
Released: 27-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Helper Protein Worsens Diabetic Eye Disease
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a recent study using mice, lab-grown human retinal cells and patient samples, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they found evidence of a new pathway that may contribute to degeneration of the light sensitive tissue at the back of the eye. The findings, they conclude, bring scientists a step closer to developing new drugs for a central vision-destroying complication of diabetes that affects an estimated 750,000 Americans.

Released: 26-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Johns Hopkins Experts Available in Observance of World AIDS Day
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Nearly 40 million people around the world are living with HIV, and experts believe about 20% do not know their status. In the U.S., more than 1 million people in the U.S. are living with HIV.

Released: 21-Nov-2019 9:00 AM EST
Investigational Drug for People with Treatment-Resistant Epilepsy
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Imagine not being able to drive, shower alone or even work because you are never quite sure when the next seizure will leave you incapacitated. Hope may be on the horizon for epilepsy patients who have had limited success with seizure drugs. In a study, led by a Johns Hopkins lead investigator, of 437 patients across 107 institutions in 16 countries, researchers found that the investigational drug cenobamate reduced seizures 55% on the two highest doses of this medication that were tested over the entire treatment period.

Released: 21-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Media Advisory: Johns Hopkins Medicine to Host Maryland Hepatitis Summit
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In the United States, hepatitis C virus kills more people than HIV and 59 other infectious diseases combined. Maryland is one of the states hit hardest by the hepatitis C epidemic.

14-Nov-2019 10:00 AM EST
Diabetes, Heart Problems And Redundant Imaging Scans Are Among Johns Hopkins-Led Performance Improvement Topics on ‘High-Value Care’
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Experts from 80 medical centers in the U.S., Canada and Norway will convene Nov. 15–17 in Baltimore, Maryland, to share best practices and performance improvement initiatives designed to reduce unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures and improve the overall value of health care.

Released: 14-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
How HIV Infection May Raise The Risk For Sudden Cardiac Death: New Study Sheds Light
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The success of antiretroviral therapies has extended the lives of people living with HIV, long enough for other chronic health conditions to emerge, including a recently documented uptick in sudden death.

Released: 13-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Johns Hopkins Launches Hub for Immunology and Engineering Research
Johns Hopkins Medicine

If the saying that two heads are better than one is true, then joining two fields of science may be better than one to spur more advances in medicine. With a $6.7 million, five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers will bring together immunologists, oncologists and biomedical engineers in an effort to build new tools to treat cancer and autoimmune diseases.

Released: 8-Nov-2019 2:50 PM EST
Glutamine-Blocking Drug Slows Tumor Growth And Strengthens Anti-Tumor Response
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A compound developed by Johns Hopkins researchers that blocks glutamine metabolism can slow tumor growth, alter the tumor microenvironment and promote the production of durable and highly active anti-tumor T cells.

Released: 7-Nov-2019 11:00 AM EST
Study Shows Artificial Intelligence Can Detect Language Problems Tied to Liver Failure
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Natural language processing, the technology that lets computers read, decipher, understand and make sense of human language, is the driving force behind internet search engines, email filters, digital assistants such as Amazon’s Alexa and Apple’s Siri, and language-to-language translation apps. Now, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have given this technology a new job as a clinical detective, diagnosing the early and subtle signs of language-associated cognitive impairments in patients with failing livers.

Released: 7-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
Oxygen-Starved Tumor Cells Have Survival Advantage That Promotes Cancer Spread
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Using cells from human breast cancers and mouse breast cancer models, researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center say they have significant new evidence that tumor cells exposed to low-oxygen conditions have an advantage when it comes to invading and surviving in the bloodstream.

Released: 4-Nov-2019 4:50 PM EST
Some CBD Products May Yield Cannabis-Positive Urine Drug Tests
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a study of six adults, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers report evidence that a single vaping episode of cannabis that is similar in chemical composition to that found in legal hemp products could possibly result in positive results on urine drug screening tests commonly used by many employers and criminal justice or school systems.

Released: 4-Nov-2019 8:00 AM EST
High Number of Births Linked to Worse Cardiovascular Health Among Mothers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Using medical record and survey data collected from more than 3,400 women, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have added to evidence that women who have given birth five or more times were more likely than those who had fewer births to have more risk factors for heart disease, including obesity, high blood pressure and inadequate physical activity.

Released: 31-Oct-2019 11:20 AM EDT
Kidney Cancer Study Uncovers New Subtypes and Clues to Better Diagnosis and Treatment
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In what is believed to be the most comprehensive molecular characterization to date of the most common — and often treatment-resistant — form of kidney cancer, researchers at Johns Hopkins’ departments of pathology and oncology, Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine report evidence for at least three distinct subtypes of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), along with new revelations about the proteins that define them. Their findings could inform overall patient survival and response to treatment.

Released: 31-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Potential Genetic Markers of Multiple Sclerosis Severity
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a bid to determine factors linked to the most debilitating forms of multiple sclerosis (MS), Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have identified three so-called “complement system” genes that appear to play a role in MS-caused vision loss. The researchers were able to single out these genes — known to be integral in the development of the brain and immune systems — by using DNA from MS patients along with high-tech retinal scanning.

Released: 30-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Wearable Activity Trackers a Reliable Tool for Predicting Death Risk in Older Adults
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A federally funded study by Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers shows that wearable accelerometers — mechanical sensors worn like a watch, belt or bracelet to track movement — are a more reliable measure of physical activity and better than patient surveys and other methods used by physicians at assessing five-year risk of death in older adults.

Released: 28-Oct-2019 10:30 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Medicine Celebrates Opening of The Johns Hopkins National Proton Center at Sibley Memorial Hospital, in Collaboration With Children’s National
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Pediatric and adult cancer patients in the District of Columbia and elsewhere will now have access to one of the most advanced, lifesaving proton technologies offered in the U.S. at the newly opened Johns Hopkins National Proton Center at Sibley Memorial Hospital in collaboration with Children’s National Hospital

Released: 28-Oct-2019 2:40 AM EDT
Christina Tsien Named Proton Therapy Medical Director of The Johns Hopkins National Proton Center at Sibley Memorial Hospital
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine has named Christina Tsien, M.D., the clinical director of the new Johns Hopkins National Proton Center at Sibley Memorial Hospital. Curtiland Deville, M.D., will serve as the associate proton director, while retaining his role as the clinical director for the radiation oncology clinic at Sibley Memorial Hospital.

Released: 24-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Electrical Stimulation Aids in Spinal Fusion
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Spine surgeons in the U.S. perform more than 400,000 spinal fusions each year as a way to ease back pain and prevent vertebrae in the spine from wiggling around and doing more damage. However, reports estimate that on average some 30% of these surgeries fail to weld these vertebrae into a single bone, causing continued back pain.

Released: 23-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Medicine Hosts 25th Anniversary of A Woman’s Journey Annual Women’s Health Conference in Baltimore, Maryland
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Since its inception in 1995, the mission for A Woman’s Journey has remained the same: to empower women to make the right health care decisions for their families and themselves.

Released: 22-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Novel Study Documents Marked Slowdown of Cell Division Rates in Old Age
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a novel study comparing healthy cells from people in their 20s with cells from people in their 80s, researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center say they have documented that cell division rates appear to consistently and markedly slow down in humans at older ages.

Released: 21-Oct-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Faculty Members Elected to National Academy of Medicine
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Four faculty members of The Johns Hopkins University have been elected to the National Academy of Medicine (NAM). Announcement of new NAM members (100 total) was made today in conjunction with the academy’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C.

Released: 17-Oct-2019 11:00 AM EDT
DEET Gives Humans an ‘Invisibility Cloak’ to Fend Off Mosquito Bites
Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics

Since its invention during the Second World War for soldiers stationed in countries where malaria transmission rates were high, researchers have worked to pinpoint precisely how DEET actually affects mosquitos. Past studies have analyzed the chemical structure of the repellent, studied the response in easier insects to work with, such as fruit flies, and experimented with genetically engineered mosquito scent receptors grown inside frog eggs. However, the Anopheles mosquito’s neurological response to DEET and other repellents remained largely unknown because directly studying the scent-responsive neurons in the mosquito itself was technically challenging and labor-intensive work.

Released: 17-Oct-2019 8:20 AM EDT
Changes in Chromosome Caps May be A Marker for Tumor Aggression in Neurofibromatosis Type 1
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center report that their study of tumor samples from people with the rare genetic syndrome neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) has uncovered novel molecular clues about which tumors are most likely to be aggressive in those with NF1. According to the researchers, the clues could advance the search for more customized and relevant treatments that spare patients exposure to treatments unlikely to work.

Released: 17-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Drug Treats Inflammation Associated With Genetic Heart Disease That Can Be Deadly in Young Athletes
Johns Hopkins Medicine

When young athletes experiences sudden cardiac death as they run down the playing field, it’s usually due to arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM), an inherited heart disease. Now, Johns Hopkins researchers have shed new light on the role of the immune system in the progression of ACM and, in the process, discovered a new drug that might help prevent ACM disease symptoms and progression to heart failure in some patients.

Released: 16-Oct-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Proof-Of-Concept Experiments: Electrical Brain Implants Enable Man to Control Prosthetic Limbs With ‘Thoughts’
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers say these efforts are believed to be the first demonstrations of success with bilateral sensorimotor intracortical implants, or brain-machine interfaces designed to power movement — but also to sense touch — in people with high spinal cord injuries.

Released: 14-Oct-2019 11:00 AM EDT
Flu Season Returns: Protect Yourself Now
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Cases of the flu are already on the rise around the nation as flu season begins. Johns Hopkins Medicine experts say now is the time to fight against the flu as the number of people getting sick from the potentially life-threatening virus will increase in the coming months. Doctors recommend everyone 6 months and older get the flu vaccine each year to prevent the virus or reduce the seriousness if you do get sick.

Released: 7-Oct-2019 11:30 AM EDT
Gregg Semenza Wins 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine For Hypoxia Discovery
Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics

Gregg L. Semenza, M.D., Ph.D., whose discoveries on how cells respond to low oxygen levels have the potential to result in treatments for a variety of illnesses, today was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine by the Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institutet. He shares the award with scientists William G. Kaelin, Jr., M.D. of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Peter J. Ratcliffe of Oxford University.

Released: 5-Oct-2019 1:15 PM EDT
One Step Closer: Johns Hopkins Selects Architect For Early-Stage Planning Of Multidisciplinary Building In Honor Of Henrietta Lacks.
Johns Hopkins Medicine

After a rigorous vetting process, Johns Hopkins University officials announced today their selection of Vines Architecture to lead the planning stages, known as a feasibility study, for a multidisciplinary building that will honor the legacy of Henrietta Lacks.

Released: 3-Oct-2019 10:00 AM EDT
Careful Monitoring of Children Following Cardiac Surgery May Improve Long-Term Outcomes
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a medical records study covering thousands of children, a U.S.-Canadian team led by researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine concludes that while surgery to correct congenital heart disease (CHD) within 10 years after birth may restore young hearts to healthy function, it also may be associated with an increased risk of death and kidney failure within a few months or years after surgery.

Released: 3-Oct-2019 9:00 AM EDT
‘Dietary’ Vulnerability Found in Cancer Cells With Mutated Spliceosomes
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A research team from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center reports it has discovered a metabolic vulnerability in multiple types of cancer cells that bear a common genetic mutation affecting cellular machines called spliceosomes. In test tube and mouse experiments, the researchers learned that the resulting spliceosome malfunction cripples the cells’ chemical process for generating the amino acid serine, making the cancer cells dependent on external (dietary) sources of the amino acid. When mice were fed a serine-restricted diet, their tumors (myeloid sarcomas, the solid tumor version of acute myeloid leukemia) shrank, suggesting that a similar dietary intervention might be helpful for patients bearing the mutation, the researchers say. Among foods high in serine are soybeans, nuts, eggs, lentils, meat and shellfish.

Released: 3-Oct-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Golden Ratio Observed In Human Skulls
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The Golden Ratio, described by Leonardo da Vinci and Luca Pacioli as the Divine Proportion, is an infinite number often found in nature, art and mathematics. It’s a pattern in pinecones, seashells, galaxies and hurricanes.

Released: 2-Oct-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Flu Experts at Johns Hopkins Medicine
Johns Hopkins Medicine

As the 2019–20 flu season gets underway, Johns Hopkins Medicine experts will be available throughout the season to talk with your newsroom about the epidemiology of this year’s virus, as well as provide important information about this year’s vaccine. Flu cases have already begun to appear in the U.S. Flu activity tends to increase in October and can run as late as May.

Released: 1-Oct-2019 2:00 PM EDT
Johns Hopkins Cell Biologist Wins Professional Association’s Highest Honor
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Peter Devreotes, Ph.D., a cell biologist whose research centers on the movement of animal cells, was awarded the 2019 E.B. Wilson Medal from the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB).

Released: 30-Sep-2019 11:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Medicine Announces $80 Million Expansion at Green Spring Station
Johns Hopkins Medicine

As part of an $80 million expansion at Green Spring Station, Johns Hopkins Medicine celebrated the official opening of the newly built Pavilion III at Green Spring Station with a private grand opening event on Sept. 27 and a free community health fair on Sept. 28.

Released: 30-Sep-2019 10:00 AM EDT
James P. Holland, New President of Johns Hopkins HealthCare
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine welcomes James P. Holland as the new president of Johns Hopkins HealthCare. Holland assumed the role effective Sept. 30, 2019.

Released: 30-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Nanoparticles Wiggling Through Mucus May Predict Severe COPD
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a proof-of-concept experiment, researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have successfully used microscopic man-made particles to predict the severity of patients’ chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) by measuring how quickly the particles move through mucus samples. The technique, say the researchers, could eventually help doctors deliver more effective treatments sooner.

Released: 30-Sep-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Researchers Advance Search For Safer, Easier Way to Deliver Vision-Saving Gene Therapy to The Retina
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In experiments with rats, pigs and monkeys, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have developed a way to deliver sight-saving gene therapy to the retina. If proved safe and effective in humans, the technique could provide a new, more permanent therapeutic option for patients with common diseases such as wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and it could potentially replace defective genes in patients with inherited retinal disease.

Released: 26-Sep-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Researchers Discover New, Treatable Pathway Known to Cause Hypertension in Obese People
Johns Hopkins Medicine

There’s no question that as body weight increases, so too does blood pressure. Now, in a study of mice, Johns Hopkins researchers have revealed exactly which molecules are likely responsible for the link between obesity and blood pressure. Blocking one of these molecules — a signaling channel that’s found in a tiny organ on the side of your neck — effectively lowers blood pressure in obese mice, the researchers reported recently in the journal Circulation Research.

Released: 25-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins researchers identify one driver of melanoma spread
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Using a small noncoding RNA, microRNA 211, and tools that track the stability and decay of the protein-coding and noncoding RNAs in lab-grown melanoma cells, a team led by a Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center researcher identified highly unstable RNA molecules in human melanomas, including a novel miR-211 target gene DUSP3.

Released: 24-Sep-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Survey Suggests Elderly Patients With Diabetes May Favor More Aggressive Blood Sugar Control Than Clinical Guidelines Call For
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Survey results of a national sample of elderly people with type 2 diabetes suggest that many long-time patients downplay medical and social factors that underpin professional recommendations for fewer medications and less aggressive treatment of high blood sugar.

Released: 23-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
“Metabolic Inhibitor” Compound Extends Survival in Mice with MYC-Expressing Pediatric Brain Tumors
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Versions of an antibiotic drug called DON first isolated from soil bacteria more than 60 years ago have shown promising signs of extending survival in mice models of especially lethal pediatric brain tumors marked by the high expression of a cancer-causing gene known as the MYC oncogene, according to results of two studies from researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.

Released: 19-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Stem Cells With ‘Dual Identity’ Linked to Loss of Smell From Sinus Inflammation
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In experiments with mice and human tissue samples, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers report evidence that neuronal stem cells in the part of the nose responsible for the sense of smell transform themselves to perpetuate the long-term inflammation in chronic sinusitis.

Released: 18-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Researchers ID Compound That Could Play A Novel Role In Halting Pancreatic Cancer Progression
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In early test tube and mouse studies, investigators at Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center have found that nonmuscle myosin IIC (MYH14), a protein activated in response to mechanical stress, helps promote metastatic behavior in pancreatic cancer cells, and that the compound 4-hydroxyacetophenone (4-HAP), known to stiffen myosin IIC-containing cells, can send it into overdrive, overwhelming the ability of cells to invade nearby tissue.

Released: 16-Sep-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Starting HIV Treatment in ERs May Be Key to Ending HIV Spread Worldwide
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a follow-up study conducted in South Africa, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have evidence that hospital emergency departments (EDs) worldwide may be key strategic settings for curbing the spread of HIV infections in hard-to-reach populations if the EDs jump-start treatment and case management as well as diagnosis of the disease. A report on the findings was published in August in EClinicalMedicine.

Released: 16-Sep-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Hopkins Medicine Unveils $80 Million Green Spring Station Expansion With A Community Health Fair And Tours of New Facility
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine will unveil an $80 million Green Spring Station expansion with a grand opening community health fair on Saturday, Sept. 28, from 10 a.m.–1 p.m. at Pavilion III. The free health fair will feature health screenings, family-friendly demonstrations and refreshments. Tours of the facility will also be offered.



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