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Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Study Links Air Pollution to Clogged Arteries
Got high cholesterol? You might want to stay away from air pollution. That's the message of a new UCLA study linking diesel exhaust to atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, which significantly increases one's risk for heart attack and stroke.
July 25, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Initiative to Improve Heart Failure Care at Nation’s Hospitals Makes Major Gains, According to UCLA Study
A national initiative designed to improve heart-failure patient care in hospitals proved effective at increasing hospital's adherence to key quality-of-care performance measures and reducing the length of hospital stays for patients.
July 23, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Researchers Show That Culture Influences Brain Cells
A thumbs-up signifies "I'm good." The rubbing of one pointed forefinger against the other means "shame on you." The infamous middle-finger salute — well, you know. Gestures that convey meaning without speech are used and recognized by nearly everyone in our society, but to someone from a foreign country, they may be incomprehensible.
July 17, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Academic Study Finds HIV Protease Inhibitor Drugs May Adversely Affect the Scaffolding of the Cell Nucleus
UCLA scientists, along with collaborators from Purdue University, have demonstrated that HIV protease inhibitors — crucial drugs for HIV treatment — block a cellular enzyme important for generating the structural scaffolding for the cell nucleus.
July 16, 2007
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3 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA and HBRI Scientists Isolate Chemical Found in Curry That May Help Immune System Clear Amyloid Plaques Found in Alzheimer’s Disease
Researchers have isolated bisdemethoxycurcumin, an ingredient in curcumin that may help the immune system clear the amyloid beta that forms the plaques found in Alzheimer's disease. Curcumin is a natural substance found in tumeric root, frequently used in Indian curries.
July 16, 2007
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2 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Medical Center Rated One of America’s Top Three Hospitals, Best in West for 18th Consecutive Year by U.S. News & World Report
UCLA Medical Center ranks as one of the top three American hospitals — and the best hospital in the western United States for the 18th consecutive year — according to a U.S. News & World Report survey that reviewed patient outcomes data, reputation among physicians and other care-related factors.
July 13, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Erosion of California’s Job-Based Insurance Highlights Need for Health Care System Reforms, Says UCLA Report
The continued erosion of California's job-based health insurance — which the vast majority of insured residents rely upon to pay for medical services — is a clear indication of the need to reform the state's health care system, according to a new report from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
July 11, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Self-Monitoring Helps Reduce High-Risk Behavior Among HIV-Positive People, UCLA Study Finds
There are many effective, albeit expensive, intervention programs aimed at encouraging HIV-positive people to practice less risky behavior. But a new UCLA AIDS Institute study has found that self-monitoring by these patients is not only an effective strategy but is inexpensive and easy to implement as well.
July 5, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA School of Dentistry Is Only Dental School Awarded Howard Hughes Medical Institute 2007 Biomedical Research Institutions Initiative Grant
Imagine being only 16 years old and working side by side at a lab bench with noted scientists at one of the nation's foremost research universities. Beginning in September, this dream will become a reality for some fortunate Los Angeles high school students with an interest in oral health.
June 25, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Study First to Show Autistic Brains Can Be Trained to Recognize Visual and Vocal Cues
To understand the meaning of a conversation, kids automatically do what adults do —besides processing the meaning of words, they unconsciously "read" the expression on a person's face and listen to their tone of voice, then integrate that information with the context at hand to discern meaning, be it humor, anger, irony or straightforwardness.
June 22, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Putting Feelings Into Words Produces Therapeutic Effects in the Brain; UCLA Neuroimaging Study Supports Ancient Buddhist Teachings
Why does putting our feelings into words — talking with a therapist or friend, writing in a journal — help us to feel better? A new brain imaging study by UCLA psychologists reveals why verbalizing our feelings makes our sadness, anger and pain less intense.
June 21, 2007
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7 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
University of California Establishes Charitable Foundation in Hong Kong, Receives Generous Donation to Establish Chair at UCLA
The University of California is pleased to announce the establishment of University of California Foundation Limited, a qualified charitable organization in Hong Kong. One of the first gifts received, a generous donation from William E. (Chip) Connor and family, will establish an endowed chair in cardiothoracic transplantation surgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
June 20, 2007
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3 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Scientist Named to Endowed Chair in Gerontology
Jorge R. Barrio (Agoura Hills, Calif.), professor of molecular and medical pharmacology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, has been appointed to UCLA's Elizabeth and Thomas Plott Chair in Gerontology.
June 19, 2007
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3 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Anaheim Ducks Stanley Cup Goalie’s Son Underwent Promising Eye Surgery at UCLA
The infant son of Anaheim Ducks' star goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere and his wife, Kristen, underwent surgery Tuesday to correct a deformed right eye.
June 13, 2007
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3 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
2.5 Million Californians Struggle to Put Food on the Table, UCLA Research Shows
More than 2.5 million low-income Californians cannot afford adequate food for their families on a consistent basis, according to a new policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
June 12, 2007
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4 min read
Cancer,
Healthy Lifestyle
A Healthy Prostate: Tips to Help Prevent Prostate Cancer
Prostate Cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in men. More than 218,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer this year alone, and more than 27,000 will die. June is Prostate Cancer Awareness Month, and with Father's Day approaching, it's a great time think about the ways men can keep their prostates healthy and be proactive about cancer prevention.
June 10, 2007
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2 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
PG-13 Films Not Safe for Kids, UCLA Researchers Say
PG-13 films have lots of "happy violence," say UCLA researchers. Borrowing from the late communications theorist George Gerbner, happy violence is that which is "cool, swift and painless."
June 7, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Stem Cell Researchers Reprogram Normal Tissue Cells Into Cells With the Same Properties as Embryonic Stem Cells
Researchers at the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine at UCLA were able to take normal tissue cells and reprogram them into cells with the same unlimited properties as embryonic stem cells, the cells that are able to give rise to every cell type found in the body.
June 7, 2007
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5 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
UCLA Research Implicates Myelin in Early Evolution of Huntington’s Disease
Last month, Dr. George Bartzokis, director of the UCLA Memory Disorders and Alzheimer's Disease Clinic, suggested in the journal Alzheimer's Dementia that the breakdown of a type of myelin that develops late in life promotes the buildup of toxic amyloid plaques long associated with Alzheimer's disease.
June 7, 2007
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4 min read
Healthy Lifestyle
Researchers at UCLA Develop New Nanomaterials to Deliver Anticancer Drugs to Kill Cancer Cells
Researchers at UCLA have successfully manipulated nanomaterials to create a new drug-delivery system that promises to solve the challenge of the poor water solubility of today's most promising anticancer drugs and thereby increase their effectiveness.
June 6, 2007
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4 min read