928 Results
2

Faculty Awards 2021: Kenneth Sherman

April 8, 2021

Kenneth E. Sherman, MD, PhD, is Gould Professor of Medicine and Director of the UC Division of Digestive Diseases in the Department of Internal Medicine. He is this year recipient of the University of Cincinnati Distinguished Research Professor Award.

3

Solving the puzzle for a deadly problem

April 6, 2021

UC researchers are opening a national clinical trial to see if a therapy that has shown promise in treating lung and uterine cancer could be applied to pancreatic cancer, too.

4

UC student leads effort to clean up campus adjacent Coy Field

April 7, 2021

Karthikeyan Sakthivel, a senior medical sciences undergraduate at the University of Cincinnati, has adopted Coy Field in an attempt to keep the green space clean and ready for use by UC students, area high schoolers and the community. Sakthivel is planning another cleanup event for Coy Field, which is adjacent to the university campus.

7

Reader’s Digest: What Is Lupus—And 9 Everyday Things That Trigger It

April 8, 2021

Reader’s Digest cited the research and expertise of Gaurav Gulati, MD, assistant professor in the UC Division of Immunology, Allergy and Rheumatology. Gulati has stated that particulates in air pollution and ultraviolet light can serve as an environmental triggers for lupus 'flares.'

8

Health Shots: Research decodes the smallest dose of peanuts that can trigger people with allergies

March 31, 2021

Research from Lynne Haber, PhD, a toxicologist in the UC College of Medicine, uses patient data from multiple locations and mathematical models to estimate an “eliciting dose” — or the amount of peanut protein that will cause or elicit an allergic reaction in a certain percentage of peanut sensitive patients. The study was published in the journal Food and Chemical Toxicology and has been featured in media reports.

10

Pumping the ‘brain brake’ in pediatric anxiety

March 31, 2021

A new study reveals that an evidence-based treatment may help predict treatment outcomes for adolescents with anxiety disorders. University of Cincinnati researchers say this could determine medication effectiveness more quickly to help patients.