After receiving $2 million in philanthropic gifts in honor of Thomas Hartman, the Thomas Hartman Center for Parkinson’s Research in the Stony Brook University Department of Neurobiology and Behavior was dedicated in a ceremony on June 13th, 2013. Thomas Hartman was a much loved priest, television and radio personality, and believer in many causes who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2004.
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Tags: 2014, 2013, Northeast, New York, Stony Brook University, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Research Funding, NY, Stony Brook, funding news, SunySB
Science researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently received a $3 million grant that will be distributed over five years to join the Women’s Interagency HIV study (WIHS). Michael Saag, M.D. is the study’s principal investigator, and Mirjam-Collete Kempf, Ph.D., M.P.H. is the co-principal investigator. The researchers will begin recruiting women for the study this coming October.
Tags: 2014, 2013, Alabama, University of Alabama, Southern, BioResearch Product Faire Event, UAlab, Birmingham, AL, University of Alabama at Birmingham, new funding
Funded in part by grants from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the NIH, researchers at the University of California, San Diego have come up with a simple, easily repeated RNA-based technique of generating human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). The study was published in the August 1st edition of Cell Stem Cell. The researchers’ method has wide-ranging applications for others searching for new cell therapies and use in other stem cell studies.
Tags: 2014, CA, University of California San Diego, 2013, Stem Cells, Stem cell research, Southwest, California, San Diego, SDVS, UCSD, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation recently gave the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill $8 million to improve the health of mothers and infants in Malawi. UNC Project-Malawi was originally established to address the HIV/AIDS crisis in Malawi, and now works in improving the problems associated with malaria, pediatrics, trauma, burns, cancer, family planning, emergency obstetrics, tuberculosis and other infectious diseases. This story comes in the wake of a report that North Carolina triangle universities received $2 billion in funding last school year.
Tags: 2014, 2013, North Carolina, University of North Carolina, Southern, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Front Line event, NC, Front Line, Chapel Hill, UNC
Tags: 2014, 2013, Northeast, New York, Columbia University, Columbia, BioResearch Product Faire Event, NY, New York City
Science researchers at Georgetown University recently published a study in the Journal of Infectious Diseases that shows that the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine a Georgetown University doctor helped to invent has lead to the number of infections among teenage girls across the United States being cut in half. According to a Georgetown University news article, the vaccine was created to treat and get rid of two forms of the HPV virus, which results in most cervical cancer cases nationwide, along with head and neck cancer, anal cancer and penile cancer.
Tags: 2014, 2013, Georgetown University, Washington DC, Northeast, D.C., Geotwn, BioResearch Product Faire Event
Researchers at Ohio State University have come up with a dependable way to use a finger-stick blood sample to detect fibromyalgia syndrome, a complex pain disorder that often is complicated to diagnose. The test could potentially reduce the wait for diagnosis by five years if it’s someday made available to primary care physicians.
Tags: 2014, Midwest, 2013, Ohio State University, Ohio, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Columbus, OH, OhStu, OSU
The University of California, San Francisco was recently ranked number two in the country for receiving biomedical research grants from the NIH, and it was also the number one ranked public school in the country for receiving these grants. According to the University of California, San Francisco news page, this funding allows UCSF researchers to undertake groundbreaking studies that aim at a better understanding of cancer, diabetes, HIV, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and cardiovascular disease.
Tags: 2014, CA, University of California San Francisco, 2013, University of California San Francisco Parnassus, Southwest, California, San Francisco, SFVS, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase, UCSF, UC San Francisco, Parnassus
Researchers at Columbia University recently conducted a study aiming to identify an Alzheimer’s gene in African-Americans. The results were published in the April 10 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, and the study was funded by NIH research grants. African-Americans with the ABCA7 gene have almost twice the amount of risk of developing late-onset Alzheimer’s disease. According to a Columbia University news article, the gene is involved in producing cholesterol and lipids, and researchers believe that lipid metabolism may be a key pathway in Alzheimer’s disease in African-Americans, more so than it may be in white people.
Tags: 2014, 2013, Northeast, New York, Columbia University, Columbia, BioResearch Product Faire Event, NY, New York City
Science researchers at the University of Pittsburgh recently published a study that found that patients suffering from SAD – Seasonal Affective Disorder – had misconceptions about sleep similar to those of insomniacs that prevent them from sleeping soundly at night. According to a University of Pittsburgh news article, the paper was titled “The Role of Beliefs and Attitudes About Sleep in Seasonal and Nonseasonal Mood Disorder, and Nondepressed Controls” and was published in the Journal of Affective Disorders this May.
Tags: 2014, 2013, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Northeast, UPITT, BioResearch Product Faire Event, PA, Pittsburgh