In the News - News
Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine have created an experimental blood test that, for the first time, determines a "Bioenergetic Health Index," or BHI, by gauging the performance of mitochondria, the cell's energy powerhouses. They report their laboratory findings in a recent issue of the journal Clinical Science.
From WSFA.com
Markus Bredel, M.D., Ph.D., professor in the UAB Department of Radiation Oncology and senior scientist in the neuro-oncology program at the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center, and colleagues show how a phenomenon known as 'alternative splicing' allows brain tumors to incapacitate a key tumor suppressor gene, and that splicing happens in a tissue-specific context in a study published online in The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Markus Bredel, M.D., Ph.D., professor in the UAB Department of Radiation Oncology and senior scientist in the neuro-oncology program at the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center, and colleagues show how a phenomenon known as 'alternative splicing' allows brain tumors to incapacitate a key tumor suppressor gene, and that splicing happens in a tissue-specific context in a study published online in The Journal of Clinical Investigation
I called David Schwebel, a psychology professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who has studied pedestrian behavior. He agreed that warm weather may be a Florida factor (places like Arizona and Las Vegas fare similarly) and added this: Warm places tend to be hubs for the homeless, who can bring issues of mental illness and substance abuse and who, by definition, walk around outside.
After Dr. Sergio Stagno announced he was stepping down as the chair of the department of pediatrics at the University of Alabama School of Medicine and physician-in-chief of Children's of Alabama, the university began a nationwide search for his replacement. That search ended today when UAB announced that Dr. Mitchell Cohen of Cincinnati's Children Hospital Medical Center would succeed Stagno and begin his duties Sept. 1
"Systemic JIA is likely best classified as an autoinflammatory disease, based upon the robust clinical response to IL-1 inhibition and the absence of known autoantibodies, autoreactive T-cells, or association with HLA genotypes," explained Timothy Beukelman, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who was a co-author of the updated ACR guidelines.
Two new studies find that statins, drugs often prescribed to lower cholesterol, do not improve the health of patients who have chronic obstrutive pulmonary disease (COPD) or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Investigators at the University of Alabama at Birmingham participated in the study of the patients with COPD.