Medical | featured news

Patients’ Genes Seen as Future of Cancer Care

Cancer - NY Times

Major academic medical centers in New York and around the country are spending and recruiting heavily in what has become an arms race within the war on cancer. The investments are based on the belief that the medical establishment is moving toward the routine sequencing of every patient’s genome in the quest for “precision medicine,” a course for prevention and treatment based on the special, even unique characteristics of the patient’s genes.

 

Altered T-Cell Therapy Shows Promise for Acute Leukemia

Genetically altering a patient’s immune cells has, for the first time, produced remissions in adults with a deadly type of acute leukemia. In one patient, all trace of the disease vanished in 8 days.

 

Man Grows Penis on His Own Arm

A British man born without a penis is set to have one sculpted from his arm. Security guard Andrew Wardle, 39, beat odds of 20 million to one when he was born with fully-functioning testicles but no manhood.

 

iPhone turned into microscope for £5

iPhone Microscope

Scientists in Tanzania turned an iPhone into an amateur microscope to check schoolchildren for intestinal worms.

 

Scientists say baby born with HIV apparently cured

Dr. Deborah Persaud - AP

A baby born with the AIDS virus appears to have been cured, scientists announced Sunday, describing the case of a child from Mississippi who's now 2 1/2 and has been off medication for about a year with no signs of infection....

 

Scientists to fliers: let your flatulence fly

Flying increases flatulence, according to an article published Friday in the peer-reviewed New Zealand Medical Journal, and passengers should release the gas -- or risk painful medical consequences.

 

Scientists use 3-D printing to help grow an ear

Ear Created from 3D Printer

The work is a first step toward one day growing customized new ears. Scientists at Cornell have put 3-D printing to an incredible medical use: They've made an ear remarkably similar to a natural one. Using 3-D images of a human ear, they printed a mold to be injected with gel containing collagen from rats' tails, HealthDay reports. Next, they added cartilage from cows' ears.

 

Overused Medical Tests, Therapies Detailed By Major Doctor Groups

Don't be afraid to question your doctor and ask, "Do I really need that?" That's the advice from leading medical groups who came up dozens of tests and treatments that physicians too often prescribe when they shouldn't. No worrisome stroke signs? Then don't screen a healthy person for a clogged neck artery, the family physicians say. It could lead to risky surgery for a blockage too small to matter.

 

FDA approves first retinal implant for rare eye disease

Retina Implant

The U.S. health regulator approved the first implantable device for treating a rare, genetic, eye disease that can lead to blindness.

 

Totally blind mice get sight back

Eye

Totally blind mice have had their sight restored by injections of light-sensing cells into the eye, UK researchers report.

 

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