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Johns Hopkins Medicine News

News about Johns Hopkins Medicine activities in patient care, research, and education.
  1. Johns Hopkins Scientists Discover What Drives the Development of a Fatal Form of Malaria

    Platelets - those tiny, unassuming cells that cause blood to clot and scabs to form when you cut yourself - play an important early role in promoting cerebral malaria, an often lethal complication that occurs mostly in children. Affecting as many as half a billion people in tropical and subtropical regions, malaria is one of the oldest recorded diseases and the parasite responsible for it, Plasmodium, among the most studied pathogens of all time. Still, cerebral malaria, which results from a combination of blood vessel and immune system dysfunction, is not well understood.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/08_18_08.html
  2. Rare Case in a Baltimore Couple Explains Why Some Infected with HIV Remain Symptom Free for Years Without Antiretroviral Drugs

    AIDS experts at Johns Hopkins say they have compelling evidence that some people with HIV who for years and even decades show extremely low levels of the virus in their blood never progress to full-blown AIDS and remain symptom free even without treatment, probably do so because of the strength of their immune systems, not any defects in the strain of HIV that infected them in the first place.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/08_12_08.html
  3. Low Vitamin D Levels Pose Large Threat to Health

    Researchers at Johns Hopkins are reporting what is believed to be the most conclusive evidence to date that inadequate levels of vitamin D, obtained from milk, fortified cereals and exposure to sunlight, lead to substantially increased risk of death.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/08_11_08.html
  4. HIV Expert Says One Step Down, Two More To Go In Quest To Cure AIDS

    A Johns Hopkins expert in HIV and how the AIDS virus hides in the body says antiretroviral drugs have stopped HIV from replicating, the first of three key steps needed to rid people of the virus.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/08_06_08.html
  5. New Uses for Old-Line Diabetes Monitoring Test: Screening and Diagnosis

    A blood test currently used as the gold standard for monitoring people already under care for diabetes may have far wider use in identifying millions with undetected diabetes, a team led by a Johns Hopkins physician suggests.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/07_31_08.html
  6. Like Eavesdropping at a Party: Johns Hopkins Scientists Discover How a Tiny Protein Senses All the Communications in a Cell

    Cells rely on calcium as a universal means of communication. For example, a sudden rush of calcium can trigger nerve cells to convey thoughts in the brain or cause a heart cell to beat. A longstanding mystery has been how cells and molecules manage to appropriately sense and respond to the variety of calcium fluctuations within cells.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/07_31a_08.html
  7. Note to People with Scarred and Stiffened Lungs: Monitor Your Sleep Before Severe Fatigue Sets In

    Family, friends and neighbors remember Lisa Sandler Spaeth as an active mother of two in Potomac, Md., with a lot on the go, juggling her son’s baseball games and her daughter’s horseback-riding lessons with numerous committee obligations, organizing women’s activities at her local synagogue. Add to this Spaeth’s thriving home business turned wholesale supplier - making custom hair accessories for children - which she founded with her mother.
    http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/07_29_08.html
 

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