Now Reading
Stanford University School of Medicine

Stanford University School of Medicine

Stanford University School of Medicine is the medical school of Stanford University

Exercise in a pill crawls closer

New smartwatch algorithm alerts wearers to bodily stress including COVID-19

A new type of experimental magnetic brain stimulation brought rapid remission to almost 80% of participants with severe depression

Could illness and mortality be predicted by your immune system “clock”

Could age-related cognitive decline be reversed?

Drug levels inside the body can be tracked in real time using a custom smartwatch that analyzes the chemicals found in sweat

A treatment that relieved depression in 90% of the participants in small study

Rejuvenating old human cells with stem cell technology

A potential treatment for Lyme disease

A potential diagnostic tool and treatment for Parkinson’s disease

Investigators at the Stanford University School of Medicine have pinpointed a molecular defect that seems almost universal among patients with Parkinson’s disease and those at a high risk of acquiring it. The discovery could provide a way of detecting the neurodegenerative disorder in its earliest stages, before symptoms start to manifest. And it points to the possibility

A potential diagnostic tool and treatment for Parkinson’s disease

Science loves surprises: An entirely new and valuable area of biology for study – small proteins

The bacteria in our gut make thousands of tiny, previously unidentified proteins that could shed light on human health and advance drug development, Stanford researchers have found. Your body is a wonderland. A wonderland teeming with trillions of bacteria, that is. But it’s not as horrifying as it might sound. In fact, there’s mounting evidence

Science loves surprises: An entirely new and valuable area of biology for study – small proteins

Meaningful improvements from a new drug for rheumatoid arthritis patients

In a large trial led by a Stanford investigator, an experimental drug produced clinically meaningful improvements for rheumatoid arthritis patients unresponsive to existing treatments. Rheumatoid arthritis patients getting little or no relief from conventional small-molecule drugs and injectable biologic drugs saw substantial improvement in their condition from daily use of an experimental compound in a

Meaningful improvements from a new drug for rheumatoid arthritis patients

The Latest Bing News on:
Stanford University School of Medicine Research
The Latest Bing News on:
Stanford University School of Medicine Discovery
What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
View Comments (0)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Scroll To Top