Cancer risk may increase with too much dietary protein
School of Medicine researchers suggest that eating less protein may help protect against certain cancers that are not directly associated with obesity. Lean people on a long-term, low-protein, low-calorie diet or regular endurance exercisers have lower levels of growth factors and hormones linked to cancer.
Clinical simulation technology used to improve communication of medical teams
David Murray demonstrates defibrillation techniques to a group of students in the Clinical Simulation Center.The Institute of Medicine estimates that medical errors are the eighth leading cause of death in the United States, and poor communication can be a major source of those errors. Now the Clinical Simulation Center at Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis hopes to improve patient safety by using clinical simulators to find the source of miscommunications during medical treatments.
From dreaming of rockets to treating depression
Photo by Robert Boston
For those in grief, psychologist offers strategies to make it through the season
Photo by Susan SternerFinding comfort while grieving.The parties, family gatherings, gift exchanges and other activities of the holiday season can provide a much-needed distraction from the events of the world. But for those who have lost a loved one, the holidays are often less a distraction and more a reminder of loss. A psychologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis says for those who are grieving, a “normal” holiday season may not be possible, but there are strategies that can be used to help things go more smoothly.
Longer Life Foundation brings in visiting scholar, awards grants
Steven N. Blair, an expert in the associations between lifestyle and health, is foundation’s first visiting scholar.
Glaucoma risk can be predicted through model
School of Medicine investigators have developed a model to identify patients at high risk of developing glaucoma.
Researchers study reimbursing living organ donors for out-of-pocket expenses
More than 80,000 people in the United States are on waiting lists for organ transplants. Some will have to wait for the death of a matching donor, but more and more people are receiving organs from living donors. In an effort to close the gap between organ supply and demand, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine, the University of Michigan and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons are studying ways to reimburse living donors for some of their out-of-pocket expenses when they choose to donate an organ.
Van Gelder named Becker Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences
A specialist with the Barnes Retina Institute, Van Gelder also directs the Uveitis Service for the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences.
Cigarette smoking shown to delay tendon-to-bone healing
School of Medicine researchers studied healing in the shoulders of 72 rats following rotator cuff surgery.
Erotic images elicit strong response in human brain
School of Medicine researchers found that volunteers’ brains produced electrical responses to erotic images that were stronger than those elicited by other material viewed.
View More Stories