Researchers at the Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah, and the University of Utah School of Medicine, have demonstrated that a gene therapy can ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Diabetes may physically rewire the human heart, study says
Diabetes has long been treated as a disease of blood sugar, but a growing body of research suggests it is also a disease of ...
Lower cardiac output has been tied to poorer cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the temporal lobes of older adults without heart failure, a finding that adds to a growing body of research linking heart ...
A New Brunswick biochemistry professor is using fish to better understand the impact that taurine — an amino acid — could ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
The heart has its own ‘brain’ and here is why that is critical
Maintaining a stable heartbeat is critical for survival. Your heart must constantly adapt its output to meet changing demands ...
New research from Karolinska Institutet and Columbia University shows that the heart has a mini-brain – its own nervous system that controls the heartbeat. A better understanding of this system, which ...
AN INTERNATIONAL team of scientists have provided new insight into the Frank-Starling mechanism; a fundamental aspect of human heart function. The Frank-Starling mechanism described more than a ...
A new gene therapy can reverse the effects of heart failure and restore heart function in a large animal model. The therapy increases the amount of blood the heart can pump and dramatically improves ...
Developing new drugs is one of the riskiest and most expensive endeavors in science. Today, The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) announced a bold initiative to improve that trajectory, powered by an up to $30 ...
A new gene therapy can reverse the effects of heart failure and restore heart function in a large animal model. The therapy increases the amount of blood the heart can pump and dramatically improves ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results