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Released: 7-May-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Technology Better Than Tape Measure for Identifying Lymphedema Risk
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) is better than a tape measure for assessing a woman’s risk for developing lymphedema, painful swelling in the arm after breast cancer surgery.

6-May-2019 9:40 AM EDT
Damaged Lungs Regenerated in Study
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A new technique to rehabilitate lungs that are too damaged to be considered for transplant could benefit an increasing population of patients with end-stage lung disease.

Released: 3-May-2019 10:05 AM EDT
VUMC, UCSF Win KidneyX Award for Home Dialysis Design
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A roadmap to create an implantable dialysis system that would allow patients to treat kidney failure at home has won researchers from Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), UC San Francisco (UCSF), and Silicon Kidney one of 15 cash prizes in the inaugural KidneyX’s Redesign Dialysis Phase I competition.

Released: 1-May-2019 4:05 PM EDT
New technology helps patients who require frequent X-rays
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The EOS X-ray imaging system uses ultra-low radiation doses (up to 50 times lower depending on the scan type) to capture 2-D and 3-D images. The scan, complete in about eight to 15 seconds, obtains an image of the body in an upright, load-bearing position, which is more representative of the body’s natural function.

Released: 26-Apr-2019 4:30 PM EDT
Study to Examine Impact of Therapy Animals on Children with Cancer
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Mary Jo Gilmer studies the impact animals can have on children with life-threatening conditions. She recently received a grant from nonprofit Human Animal Bond Research Institute (HABRI) for a pilot program investigating the health benefits of human-animal interactions (HAIs) in reducing suffering of children with cancer undergoing debilitating treatments.

Released: 25-Apr-2019 1:30 PM EDT
Researchers, Patients Meet to Discuss Stevens-Johnson Syndrome
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Scientists and patients from all over the world are gathering in Vancouver, Canada, on Friday and Saturday to discuss new discoveries and future direction in the treatment of Stevens-Johnson syndrome/toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN), a drug-induced disease that has a mortality of up to 50%.

Released: 22-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Asia's Diabetes Epidemic Preferentially Kills Women, the Middle-Aged: Study
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions in Asia and has dramatically increased the risk of premature death, especially among women and middle-aged people, a multinational study led by Vanderbilt University researchers has found.

Released: 22-Apr-2019 9:05 AM EDT
What Should You Do If Someone is Bitten by a North American Pit Viper?
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Warm weather has arrived in Tennessee which means snakebite season is upon us. The venomous snakes native to our region are the pit vipers and consist of copperheads, cottonmouths/water moccasins, and various species of rattlesnakes. Their bites are rarely life-threatening but may require treatment with antivenin.

Released: 16-Apr-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Harvard Geneticist to Receive Vanderbilt Prize in Biomedical Science
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Christine Seidman, MD, whose lab has identified the genetic causes of several human heart diseases including cardiomyopathy (potentially fatal enlargement of the heart) is the recipient of the 2019 Vanderbilt Prize in Biomedical Science, officials at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) announced today.

Released: 4-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Vanderbilt-led Research Team “Sprints” to Stop Zika Virus
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

In January scientists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and colleagues in Boston, Seattle and St. Louis were given an audacious goal to develop — in 90 days — a protective antibody-based treatment that potentially will stop the spread of the Zika virus.

Released: 4-Apr-2019 10:05 AM EDT
DOD Funds Evaluation of Behavioral Intervention for Autism Spectrum Disorder
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The Department of Defense is providing $7 million to better understand how much and which components of Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) are the most effective for young children with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Released: 3-Apr-2019 11:05 AM EDT
Computer Tool Guides Decision-Making for Prostate Cancer Patients
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Prostate cancer patients in Nashville and Los Angeles are benefiting from a computer-based decision aid that implements the latest study results to tailor treatment options to an individual’s quality-of-life priorities.

Released: 2-Apr-2019 9:05 AM EDT
First Artificial Heart Patient Gets Permanent Replacement
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Tim Lowell of Hernando, Mississippi, received the first total artificial heart in the state of Tennessee when the cardiac surgery team at Vanderbilt Health placed the device in his chest on Sept. 26, 2018. The mechanical heart kept him alive for nearly three months until a matching human donor heart became available and he was transplanted on Dec. 16, 2018, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Released: 1-Apr-2019 3:45 PM EDT
Vanderbilt University Medical Center to Acquire Tennova Healthcare- Lebanon from Community Health Systems
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Leaders of Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) today announced plans to purchase Tennova Healthcare-Lebanon, a two-campus facility licensed for 245 beds, from subsidiaries of Community Health Systems, Inc. (CHS). A definitive agreement has been signed for the sale of the facility and related businesses, including physician clinic operations and outpatient services, to VUMC.

   
Released: 28-Mar-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Cancer prevention drug also disables H. pylori bacterium
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A medicine currently being tested as a chemoprevention agent for multiple types of cancer has more than one trick in its bag when it comes to preventing stomach cancer, Vanderbilt researchers have discovered.

   
Released: 27-Mar-2019 11:00 AM EDT
VUMC and TGen Receive $6.1 Million in Grants to Study Deadly Lung Disease
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), an affiliate of City of Hope, along with Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and the Norton Thoracic Institute at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Arizona, have received a $3.5 million federal grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the cause of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) the nation’s most common and severe form of fibrotic lung disease.

Released: 20-Mar-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Small Vessel Disease MRI Marker Linked to Worse Cognitive Health in Older Adults
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Seemingly harmless fluid-filled spaces around the cerebral small vessels, commonly seen on brain MRIs in older adults, are now thought to be associated with more compromised cognitive skills, according to a Vanderbilt University Medical Centerstudy published in Neurology.

Released: 18-Mar-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Study Aims to Predict Treatment Response in Epilepsy Patients
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

With the aid of $2.5 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Vanderbilt researchers are on a quest to develop early biomarkers of treatment outcomes for patients with temporal lobe epilepsy based on their individual brain networks.

Released: 8-Mar-2019 1:05 PM EST
Gene Identified That Increases Risk of Antibiotic Reaction
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and colleagues have identified a gene that increases the risk for a severe and potentially life-threatening reaction to the commonly prescribed antibiotic vancomycin. Routine testing for this gene could improve patient safety and reduce unnecessary avoidance of other antibiotics, they reported in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

Released: 5-Mar-2019 2:05 PM EST
‘Very exciting time’ for sleep research as studies zero in on performance, health
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The science of sleep, and how to get people to do it better, is getting attention from policymakers to researchers who are trying to understand how sleep impacts performance and health.

Released: 28-Feb-2019 11:05 AM EST
Research Shows Frogs Can Adapt To Traffic Noise
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Frogs don’t like living near noisy highways any better than people do, but research from Vanderbilt suggests that frogs, like hardened city-dwellers, can learn to adapt to the constant din of rumbling trucks, rolling tires and honking horns. And, just like those urbanites who can’t get a good night’s sleep without the sporadic sounds of sirens, some frogs have grown accustomed to the rattle and hum of the highway.

15-Feb-2019 10:00 AM EST
Helping Patients Breathe During Dangerous Procedure Prevents Life-Threatening Complications
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Thousands of Americans die each year during a dangerous two-minute procedure to insert a breathing tube. Now a Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) study in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) is showing that using bag-mask ventilation, squeezing air from a bag into the mouth for 60 seconds to help patients’ breathing, improves outcomes and could potentially save lives.

Released: 13-Feb-2019 2:05 PM EST
IBM Watson Health Invests $50M in Joint Research Collaborations with Leading Medical Centers to Advance the Application of AI to Health
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

IBM Watson Health today announced plans to make a 10-year, $50 million investment in joint research collaborations with Brigham and Women’s Hospital – the teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School – and Vanderbilt University Medical Center to advance the science of artificial intelligence (AI) and its application to major public health issues.

13-Feb-2019 11:00 AM EST
Supercomputing Effort Reveals Antibody Secrets
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Using sophisticated gene sequencing and computing techniques, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and the San Diego Supercomputer Center have achieved a first-of-its-kind glimpse into how the body’s immune system gears up to fight off infection.

Released: 31-Jan-2019 9:00 AM EST
Minority Kidney Transplants Could Increase with New Option
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Kidney transplant recipients are now benefiting from donor organs that do not match their blood type but are compatible and just as safe, according to a Vanderbilt University Medical Center study in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

24-Jan-2019 11:05 AM EST
Long-Term Unemployment, Clinician Shortage Linked to Increase in Babies Born with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Babies born after being exposed to opioids before birth are more likely to be delivered in regions of the U.S. with high rates of long-term unemployment and lower levels of mental health services, according to a study from researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the RAND Corporation.

Released: 29-Jan-2019 9:40 AM EST
Nasal Whooping Cough Vaccine Trial Underway at Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt vaccine researchers are enrolling adult volunteers in a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-sponsored Phase II clinical trial that will study a next generation pertussis vaccine that may protect people from whooping cough.

Released: 25-Jan-2019 9:40 AM EST
VUMC Scientists ‘Sprint’ to Find Anti-Zika Antibodies
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Scientists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and colleagues in Boston, Seattle and St. Louis are racing to develop — in a mere 90 days — a protective antibody-based treatment that can stop the spread of the Zika virus.

Released: 24-Jan-2019 3:05 PM EST
Discovery Could Advance Blood Pressure Treatments
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A team of Vanderbilt University Medical Center researchers, working with the U.S. Department of Veteran’s Affairs (VA), has discovered genetic associations with blood pressure that could guide future treatments for patients with hypertension.

Released: 23-Jan-2019 4:05 PM EST
Major Grant to Bolster Research on Inflammation-Related Cancers
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Cancer Research UK has awarded a 20-million-pound grant (about $26 million U.S.) to a team of international investigators, including Vanderbilt’s James Goldenring, MD, PhD, to study inflammation-related cancers.

Released: 23-Jan-2019 3:05 PM EST
Normal variations in thyroid function may be linked to atrial fibrillation risk
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A study by researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center has strengthened the link between thyroid function and atrial fibrillation (AF), an irregular heart rhythm that increases the risk of stroke and other heart-related complications.

Released: 23-Jan-2019 10:00 AM EST
Study Finds Unique Form of Chronic Sinusitis in Older Patients
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Older patients with a diagnosis of chronic sinusitis — a disease of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses that often persists over many years — have a unique inflammatory signature that may render them less responsive to steroid treatment, according to a new study published by Vanderbilt researchers.

Released: 22-Jan-2019 2:05 PM EST
Vanderbilt Transplant Center Debuts New Mobile App
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Patients and providers now have instant access to Tennessee’s only full-service transplant center on their smartphones and mobile devices.

Released: 17-Jan-2019 2:05 PM EST
Wilkins Named Vice President for Health Equity
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Consuelo Wilkins, MD, MSCI, associate professor of Medicine and executive director of the Meharry-Vanderbilt Alliance, has been named to the newly created positions of Vice President for Health Equity at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Associate Dean for Health Equity with the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.

Released: 14-Jan-2019 11:05 AM EST
Vanderbilt Set New Heart, Overall Transplant Record in 2018
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) set a new record for total transplants among its five organ specialties in 2018 with more than 500 transplants.

Released: 17-Dec-2018 11:05 AM EST
Early Postpartum Opioids Linked with Persistent Usage
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt researchers have published findings indicating that regardless of whether a woman delivers a child by cesarean section or by vaginal birth, if they fill prescriptions for opioid pain medications early in the postpartum period, they are at increased risk of developing persistent opioid use.

Released: 13-Dec-2018 1:00 PM EST
Study shows magnesium optimizes vitamin D status
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

A randomized trial by Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center researchers indicates that magnesium optimizes vitamin D status, raising it in people with deficient levels and lowering it in people with high levels.

12-Dec-2018 9:30 AM EST
High-Dose Antipsychotics Place Children at Increased Risk of Unexpected Death
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Children and young adults without psychosis who are prescribed high-dose antipsychotic medications are at increased risk of unexpected death, despite the availability of other medications to treat their conditions, according to a Vanderbilt University Medical Center study published today in JAMA Psychiatry.

Released: 5-Dec-2018 5:05 PM EST
Heart Patients Reduce Bleeding Risk with Drug Combination
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Cardiovascular patients at risk for gastrointestinal bleeding from taking oral anticoagulants like warfarin reduce that risk by 34 percent when taking a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) in combination, according to a Vanderbilt University Medical Center study published in JAMA.

Released: 20-Nov-2018 1:05 PM EST
Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt Urges Caution in Toy Selection This Holiday Season
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

As shoppers search for sales this season, injury prevention advocates want to raise awareness about the need to choose age-appropriate toys for young children.

   
Released: 20-Nov-2018 10:15 AM EST
Vanderbilt Discovery Could Neutralize West Nile Virus
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and colleagues have isolated a human monoclonal antibody that can “neutralize” the West Nile virus and potentially prevent a leading cause of viral encephalitis (brain inflammation) in the United States.

Released: 15-Nov-2018 9:30 AM EST
Vanderbilt Research Hub to Examine Issues Faced by Children at Risk for Poor Health, Education Outcomes
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Experts from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine’s Department of Health Policy and Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College of Education and Human Development are joining efforts to establish a Policies for Action (P4A) Research Hub at Vanderbilt to better understand and develop recommendations to address the needs of some of Tennessee’s most vulnerable children, including children in immigrant families and children with prenatal exposure to opioids.

   
9-Nov-2018 9:40 AM EST
Spectrum of cardiovascular toxicities with immune checkpoint inhibitors revealed
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The study, published online Nov. 12 in TheLancetOncology,augments previous work by Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) researchers who first reported in 2016 rare but fatal cardiac side effects from the most widely prescribed class of immunotherapies. The researchers used VigiBase, a global database of drug complications maintained by the World Health Organization, to track adverse cardiovascular reactions in the latest study.

Released: 12-Nov-2018 1:05 PM EST
David G. Harrison awarded AHA Basic Research Prize for 2018
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

David G. Harrison, MD, the Betty and Jack Bailey Professor of Cardiology and director of the Division of Clinical Pharmacology at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, has been awarded the American Heart Association’s Basic Research Prize for 2018.

31-Oct-2018 3:50 PM EDT
Team Seeks to Identify Immune Response to Influenza
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt researchers, as part of the International Human Vaccines Project, are searching for the key to lasting protection against influenza by examining naturally protecting cells found in bone marrow.

26-Oct-2018 1:05 PM EDT
Mass Shootings May Trigger Unnecessary Blood Donations
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Mass shootings often trigger a sharp increase in blood donations for affected communities but more than 15 percent of the product intended to save lives could be discarded, according to a study released today in The Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery.

Released: 22-Oct-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Antipsychotics Ineffective For Treating ICU Delirium
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Critically ill patients are not benefitting from antipsychotic medications that have been used to treat delirium in intensive care units (ICUs) for more than four decades, according to a study released today in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Released: 27-Sep-2018 4:05 PM EDT
Vanderbilt Implants Tennessee’s First Artificial Heart
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s Cardiac Surgery Team performed Tennessee’s first total artificial heart implantation Wednesday, Sept. 26, on a 56-year-old man with congestive heart failure.

Released: 27-Sep-2018 10:55 AM EDT
University Health Network and Vanderbilt Health Affiliated Network Join Forces to Create Statewide Value-Based Healthcare Alliance
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The University Health Network (UHN), a clinically integrated network and accountable care organization (ACO) based in Knoxville that includes The University of Tennessee Medical Center (UTMC) and University Physicians’ Association, as well as various partnerships and joint ventures with physicians and healthcare companies across East Tennessee, announces an affiliation with the Vanderbilt Health Affiliated Network (VHAN), a network of providers working together to transform healthcare to be more proactive, accessible, and affordable for all. The new relationship with UHN creates a statewide network that can improve the quality and reduce the cost of healthcare across Tennessee.

Released: 19-Sep-2018 10:05 AM EDT
More Doctor Visits Lead to Less Suicide Attempts for Fibromyalgia Patients
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Fibromyalgia patients who regularly visit their physicians are much less likely to attempt suicide than those who do not, according to a new Vanderbilt University Medical Center study published in Arthritis Care & Research.



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