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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (JHUSOM)

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (JHUSOM)

The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (JHUSOM), located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States (founded in 1893) is the academic medical teaching and research arm of the Johns Hopkins University, founded in 1876

The ability to repair muscle injury and disease with lab grown self-sustainable muscle stem cells – in mice

Visual evidence that most if not all medical nanoparticles deliver their payload to a cell’s interior

A “fortunate accident” uncovers a way to boost the immune system to fight MRSA and other dangerous skin infections

Tiny shape-changing machines deliver medicine efficiently to the GI tract

Does psilocybin tamp down the brain’s ego center?

Testing a drug that may halt an overactive immune response before it ramps up

Can “primitive” stem cells regenerate blood vessels in the eye?

Uncloaking cancer cells and revealing them so the immune system can deal with them

It looks like intermittent fasting really does work

For many people, the New Year is a time to adopt new habits as a renewed commitment to personal health. Newly enthusiastic fitness buffs pack into gyms and grocery stores are filled with shoppers eager to try out new diets. But, does scientific evidence support the claims made for these diets? In a review article

It looks like intermittent fasting really does work

A good system for delivering biological medicines straight to the inside of a cell?

Scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine report they have created a tiny, nanosize container that can slip inside cells and deliver protein-based medicines and gene therapies of any size — even hefty ones attached to the gene-editing tool called CRISPR. If their creation – constructed of a biodegradable polymer — passes more laboratory testing, it could

A good system for delivering biological medicines straight to the inside of a cell?

Controlling 2 prosthetic arms simultaneously with your thoughts

Researchers from the Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) and School of Medicine (SOM) have, for the first time, demonstrated simultaneous control of two of the world’s most advanced prosthetic limbs through a brain-machine interface. The team is also developing strategies for providing sensory feedback for both hands at the same time using neural

Controlling 2 prosthetic arms simultaneously with your thoughts

Scientists are a step closer to developing artificial lymph nodes that can spark T-cells to fight disease

In a proof-of-principle study in mice, scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine report the creation of a specialized gel that acts like a lymph node to successfully activate and multiply cancer-fighting immune system T-cells. The work puts scientists a step closer, they say, to injecting such artificial lymph nodes into people and sparking T-cells to fight

Scientists are a step closer to developing artificial lymph nodes that can spark T-cells to fight disease

New hope for those with diabetic macular edema and macular degeneration

Experiments show new therapy slows blood vessel leakage associated with diabetic macular edema and macular degeneration In studies with lab-grown human cells and in mice, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have found that an experimental drug may be twice as good at fighting vision loss as previously thought. The new research shows that the compound, named

New hope for those with diabetic macular edema and macular degeneration

Using PET scans to calculate in real time how much of an immunotherapy drug reaches a tumor

The glow could someday help us use cancer drugs more efficiently. Experimenting with mice, Johns Hopkins researchers report they have successfully used positron emission tomography (PET) scans to calculate in real time how much of an immunotherapy drug reaches a tumor and what parts of a cancer remain unaffected. The technique uses PET imaging of

Using PET scans to calculate in real time how much of an immunotherapy drug reaches a tumor

Electrical stimulation significantly improves the production of spinal fusion

Researchers from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of published data on the effect of electrical stimulation therapies on spinal fusion. They found significant improvement overall in the rates of bone fusion following a course of electrical stimulation in both preclinical (animal) and clinical (human) studies. Detailed findings

Electrical stimulation significantly improves the production of spinal fusion

An experimental drug that slows the progression of Parkinson’s disease itself — as well as its symptoms — in mice

Johns Hopkins researchers say they have developed an experimental drug, similar to compounds used to treat diabetes, that slows the progression of Parkinson’s disease itself — as well as its symptoms — in mice. In experiments performed with cultures of human brain cells and live mouse models, they report the drug blocked the degradation of

An experimental drug that slows the progression of Parkinson’s disease itself — as well as its symptoms — in mice

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