Local 12: Music creation's impact on the brain after cancer
August 4, 2021
UC researchers launched a new study looking treating a common brain problem that results after therapy for cancer.
August 4, 2021
UC researchers launched a new study looking treating a common brain problem that results after therapy for cancer.
August 17, 2020
UC researchers from the College of Medicine and DAAP are working together to see how a music app may help patients who experience "chemobrain."
March 24, 2022
The University of Cincinnati is enrolling patients for a new clinical trial testing a two-pronged immunotherapy approach to treat glioblastomas, deadly brain tumors.
August 27, 2021
UC research examining a music app to help breast cancer survivors is mentioned by Forbes.
September 23, 2022
The University of Cincinnati's Pankaj Desai, PhD, has received a $1.19 million grant from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to continue research into the use of a drug called letrozole to treat glioblastomas, the most deadly form of brain tumors.
May 18, 2021
UC's Daniel Pomeranz Krummel, PhD, discusses new brain cancer research with Liz Bonis on Local 12's What's Happening in Health program.
May 7, 2021
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati, in collaboration with the Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University, have found that using ultrasound combined with RNA-loaded nanoparticles could help infiltrate the blood-brain barrier and deliver targeted, more effective treatment to brain tumors, while eliminating uncomfortable side effects.
January 8, 2021
Brett Kissela, MD, senior associate dean for clinical research at the UC College of Medicine and chief of research services at UC Health, learned he received the placebo in the Moderna vaccine clinical trial. He then received the real vaccine to show that he believes in the science.
March 22, 2021
A UC study reveals a visual correlation between the severity of COVID-19 in the lungs (using CT scans) and the severity of effects on patients' brains (using MRI scans).
March 15, 2021
University of Cincinnati researchers say for the first time they have a visual correlation between the severity of COVID-19 in the lungs and the effect on patients' brains, WVXU-FM reports.