Rush University Medical Center Leads Nationwide Clinical Trial Of Nutritional Drink For Alzheimer’s

Rush University Medical Center is leading a nationwide clinical trial of a nutritional drink to determine whether it can improve cognitive performance in people with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.
The study follows recently released results from an earlier trial conducted in Europe showing that the drink, called Souvenaid, improved verbal recall in people with mild disease [...]

Beyond The Ice: Technique For Preserving Pre-Transplant Livers Promises To Improve Patient Outcomes And Expand The Organ Pool

Preserving organs on ice prior to transplantation, an approach known as cold storage or CS, has been the standard practice in liver transplant for 20 years. Now there is new evidence that a technique called hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) may offer an improvement, according to the first-ever study comparing the impact of the two techniques [...]

Diagnosis Of Early-Stage Ovarian Cancer By Ultrasound Plus Proteomic Blood Analyses

Noninvasive contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging, combined with proteomic analyses of blood samples may help physicians identify early-stage ovarian cancer and save the lives of many women, according to an article published in the February issue of the American Journal of Roentgenology. Proteomics is the study of proteins, particularly their structure and function.

Next-Gen Sequencing Used To Rapidly Discover Genetic Cause Of Devastating Disorder

Two scientists from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) are part of an international team that has discovered a genetic mutation that causes Joubert Syndrome. JBTS, as it is commonly called, is a devastating inherited neurological disease that is very rare in the general population but found relatively more often among Ashkenazi Jews.

Surplus Of Serotonin Receptors May Explain Failure Of Antidepressants In Some Patients

An excess of one type of serotonin receptor in the center of the brain may explain why antidepressants fail to relieve symptoms of depression for 50 percent of patients, a new study from researchers at Columbia University Medical Center shows.