Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 20th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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TV crime shows like Bones and CSI are quick to explain each death by showing highly detailed scans and video images of victims’ insides. Traditional autopsies, if shown at all, are at best in supporting roles to the high-tech equipment, and usually gloss over the sometimes physically grueling tasks of sawing through skin and bone.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 20th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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As part of First Lady Michelle Obama’s Joining Forces initiative, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine is teaming up with the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) and the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine (AACOM) to create a new generation of doctors, medical schools and research facilities that will make sure our military veterans and their families receive the care worthy of their service.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 13th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Thousands more American senior citizens with kidney disease are good candidates for transplants and could get them if physicians would get past outdated medical biases and put them on transplant waiting lists, according to a new study by Johns Hopkins researchers.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 13th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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After a 20-year quest to find a genetic driver for prostate cancer that strikes men at younger ages and runs in families, researchers have identified a rare, inherited mutation linked to a significantly higher risk of the disease.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 12th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Neuroscientists at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have discovered how the sense of touch is wired in the skin and nervous system. The new findings, published Dec. 22 in Cell, open new doors for understanding how the brain collects and processes information from hairy skin.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 12th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Researchers at Johns Hopkins have shown that DNA changes in a gene that drives the growth of a form of lung cancer can make the cancer’s cells resistant to cancer drugs. The findings show that some classes of drugs won’t work, and certain types of so-called kinase inhibitors like erlotinib—may be the most effective at treating non-small cell lung cancers with those DNA changes. Some kinase inhibitors block a protein known as EGFR from directing cells to multiply.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 12th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Cancer cells have been long known to have a “sweet tooth,” using vast amounts of glucose for energy and for building blocks for cell replication.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 12th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Monitoring Internet search traffic about influenza may prove to be a better way for hospital emergency rooms to prepare for a surge in sick patients compared to waiting for outdated government flu case reports. A report on the value of the Internet search tool for emergency departments, studied by a team of researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine over a 21-month period, is published in the January 9 issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 9th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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Building on the success of recent Hopkins research showing obese participants were able to lose significant weight and keep it off for two years using telephone coaching and a specially designed website, Johns Hopkins Medicine is collaborating with Healthways to help bring the innovative weight-loss program to many more who could benefit from it.

Posted by TheCyberDoctor
Dated: 9th January 2012
Filled Under: John Hopkins Medicine News
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