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News releases are provided by the Health Sciences Media Relations Office.  Current news releases are listed below.  You may also search for news articles below by category, title, date or article keywords.

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Recent News Articles

June 18, 2013
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School of Nursing clinic fights spread of TB on L.A.'s skid row

Each morning as the gate to fenced-in Gladys Park is unlocked, homeless men and women move in from wherever they have spent the night on downtown L.A.'s skid row. One group gathers near the portable bathroom stalls in the park; others take over a picnic shelter for their daily domino game. A few claim park benches to watch the activity - legal or otherwise - on Gladys Avenue.   As a new ....
June 18, 2013

The Boston Marathon

  From left to right: Christina Kim, Simi Singer and Jill Weisman Four hours and nine minutes into this year’s historic Boston Marathon, two pressure-cooker bombs exploded at the finish line, killing three people and injuring hundreds of spectators. The Patriot’s Day event on April 15 — the world’s oldest and largest marathon — drew 500,000 spectators ....
June 18, 2013

Timely treatment after stroke is crucial, UCLA researchers report

For years, the mantra of neurologists treating stroke victims has been "time equals brain." That's because getting a patient to the emergency room quickly to receive a drug that dissolves the stroke-causing blood clot can make a significant difference in how much brain tissue is saved or lost.   But specific information has been limited on just how the timing of giving the intravenous drug — ....
June 17, 2013

After-school exercise and nutrition programs can help reduce childhood obesity

UCLA RESEARCH ALERT    FINDINGS:                             Research has shown that children from low-income neighborhoods are at higher risk of being obese and overweight than children from affluent neighborhoods; in fact, one-third of low-income children ....
June 17, 2013

New alternative to surgery lets doctors remove suspicious polyps, keep colon intact

Millions of people each year have polyps successfully removed during colonoscopies. But when a suspicious polyp is bigger than a marble or in a hard-to-reach location, patients are referred for surgery to remove a portion of their colon — even if doctors aren't sure whether the polyp is cancerous or not.    Since only 15 percent of all polyps turn out to be malignant, many patients ....
June 14, 2013

UCLA pediatric neurosurgeon named co-editor-in-chief of journal Epilepsia

Dr. Gary Mathern, professor of pediatric neurosurgery and director of the UCLA Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery Program at Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA, has been appointed co-editor-in-chief of Epilepsia, the official journal of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) and the leading source for current clinical and research results on all aspects of epilepsy. Mathern will serve as co-editor-in-chief ....
June 13, 2013

Hormone therapy for endometrial cancer targets connective tissue, not tumor cells

 Dr. Sanaz Memarzadeh Deanna Janzen The female hormone progesterone has been used for several decades as a therapy for endometrial cancer, which starts in the lining of the uterus. Yet scientists didn't understand the mechanisms behind the therapy or its site of action. Now, a new a study from the G.O. Discovery Lab team at UCLA and UCLA collaborators shows that progesterone, ....
June 13, 2013

UCLA Seeks Adults with Acne for Study on Effects of Vitamin D

UCLA researchers seek adults, ages 18 and older with mild to moderate facial acne, for a study about the effects of Vitamin D on the skin and immune system. Researchers at the UCLA Center for Human Nutrition and UCLA Division of Dermatology are teaming up to assess if Vitamin D, a natural hormone that plays an essential role in the immune system's fight against invading bacteria, may also be effective ....
June 12, 2013

Antihistamines may increase pregnancy risks for women with severe morning sickness

Women with a severe form of morning sickness who take antihistamines to help them sleep through their debilitating nausea are significantly more likely to experience premature births or have low–birth-weight babies, a UCLA study has found.   The findings, the first to link antihistamine use to adverse pregnancy outcomes, are important because babies born at 37 weeks or earlier often are ....
June 11, 2013

Hyundai Hope on Wheels awards grant to Children's Discovery and Innovation Institute at Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA

Dr. Vivan Chang Hyundai Hope on Wheels and Los Angeles-area Hyundai dealers have awarded a $75,000 Hyundai Scholar Grant to Dr. Vivian Chang, a clinical instructor in pediatric hematology and oncology and co-director of the Pediatric Cancer Predisposition Clinic at Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA, for her work researching DNA sequencing technology to identify cancerous genes. Mattel ....
June 11, 2013

Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA rated among nation's top pediatric hospitals by U.S. News

Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA has been recognized as one of the nation's best pediatric hospitals by U.S. News & World Report and is among a select group of hospitals to be ranked in all 10 of the specialty areas reviewed in the magazine's 2013–14 "Best Children's Hospitals" survey.   Nationally, the hospital was recognized for excellence in the following categories: nephrology ....
June 09, 2013

Santa Monica Shooting Victims Taken to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center and UCLA Medical Center, Santa Monica

Updated June 9, 2013 at 12:00 pmMarcela Franco, age 26, who was in critical condition in the intensive care unit, died this morning. The family requests privacy at this time. The other patient, Debra Fine, was discharged home in good condition Saturday evening. No spokespersons from UCLA are available for interviews and no press briefings are scheduled.  People with type-O negative, type-O ....
June 07, 2013

UCLA earns elite ranking on survey of state physician groups' patient-care capabilities

The UCLA Medical Group has earned a four-star ranking, the highest achievement possible, in the California Association of Physician Groups' (CAPG) seventh annual Standards of Excellence survey.   The survey is a voluntary, critical self-assessment for the CAPG's 150 medical group members in California. It tallies the "tools" required for health care systems to deliver a better patient experience, ....
June 05, 2013

Fat chance: Scientists unexpectedly discover stress-resistant stem cells in adipose tissue

These pluripotent cells, isolated from fat tissue removed during liposuction, expressed many embryonic stem cell markers and were able to differentiate into muscle, bone, fat, cardiac, neuronal and liver cells. Researchers from the UCLA Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology have isolated a new population of primitive, stress-resistant human pluripotent stem cells that are easily derived ....
June 04, 2013

Bladder cancer recurrence and mortality could decline with better treatment compliance

Researchers at UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center led by Dr. Karim Chamie have found that more intense surveillance and treatment of bladder cancer in the first two years after diagnosis could reduce the number of patients whose cancer returns after treatment and lower the disease's death rate. The study was published online ahead of press today in the journal Cancer.   Based on the ....
June 03, 2013

Common gene known to cause inherited autism now linked to specific behaviors

The genetic malady known as Fragile X syndrome is the most common cause of inherited autism and intellectual disability. Brain scientists know the gene defect that causes the syndrome and understand the damage it does in misshaping the brain's synapses — the connections between neurons. But how this abnormal shaping of synapses translates into abnormal behavior is unclear.   Now, researchers ....
June 02, 2013

New cancer drug shows promise for treating advanced melanoma

Researchers from UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center report that a new drug in preliminary tests has shown promising results with very manageable side effects for treating patients with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.   The results were presented at the 2013 meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology today in Chicago by Dr. Antoni Ribas, professor of medicine in ....
May 31, 2013

Simple screening test at UCLA catches newborn's hidden heart condition

Baby Gaël Villegas Before he was discharged from the hospital, baby Gaël Villegas received the standard panel of newborn screenings to check for genetic and metabolic diseases and hearing. The results showed a healthy baby. Then, one more screening — a non-mandatory test that Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA routinely offers — was performed to check for critical ....
May 30, 2013
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Take 15 minutes to learn lifesaving Hands-Only CPR

Take a 15-minute work break Tuesday to save a life. The UCLA Center for Prehospital Care and Campus Emergency Medical Services will be offering free Hands-Only CPR training Tuesday, June 4, in Bruin Plaza between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in honor of National CPR Week. A second CPR training location will also be available at the same time at the Dining Commons patio of the UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center. ....
May 30, 2013

UCLA-led team may have found key to cause of Cushing disease

UCLA RESEARCH ALERT   FINDINGS:                           Cushing disease is a life-threatening disorder most commonly triggered by tumors, often benign, in the pituitary glands, resulting in excess production of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH). The condition ....
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