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TitleDescriptionRelation Is Part OfDate
1 20 EXTENDED FAMILIES NEEDED TO STUDY POSSIBLE GENETIC PREDISPOSITION TO TOXEMIA IN PREGNANT WOMENToxemia or pre-eclampsia, which is pregnancy-induced hypertension and a major cause of fetal and maternal death in childbirth, may have a genetic link, according to researchers in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Utah School of Medicine.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1987-09-21
2 OPHTHALMOLOGY DEPARTMENT RECEIVES RESEARCH GRANTSALT LAKE CITY-The Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Utah Health Sciences Center has received a $35,000 grant from Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB) to advance research into the causes, treatment and prevention of eye diseases.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1988-01-21
3 NEW ELECTRON MICROSCOPE ENHANCES BLINDNESS RESEARCH AT UOphthalmic researchers at the University of Utah School of Medicine are using a sophisticated transmission electron microscope (TEM) to help solve the mysteries of vision.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1989-08-31
4 OPHTHALMOLOGY DEPARTMENT RECEIVES RESEARCH GRANTThe Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Utah School of Medicine has received a $45,000 grant from Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB) to advance research into the prevention and treatment of blinding eye diseases.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1990-02-13
5 HARRIS GRANT BOLSTERS ARTIFICIAL VISION RESEARCH AT UA Salt Lake City foundation has presented a $25,000 grant to the Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Utah to further basic research in artificial vision, which ultimately may provide a limited visual function for the blind.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1991-02-15
6 $50,000 MORAN PRIZE FOR VISION RESEARCH TO HIGHLIGHT U'S VISUAL SCIENCE SYMPOSIUMPresentation of the first Moran Prize for Vision Research, a $50,000 award, will highlight the third annual Great Basin Visual Science Symposium August 21, sponsored by the John Moran Eye Center at the University of Utah.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News1997-08-20
7 NOTED MOLECULAR BIOLOGIST TO SPEAK ABOUT STEM CELL RESEARCH AT U NEUROLOGY DEPARTMENT'S LANDA LECTURE"Building and Rebuilding Animals from Stem Cells," is the subject of this year's Jerome Joseph Landa Memorial Lecture to be given by Ronald McKay, Ph.D., chief of the Laboratory of Molecular Biology at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2001-07-10
8 2002 September 22 Press Release: 2002 Lasker Awards for Medical Research-Willem J Kolff MD PhDLast week most of you received press materials from the Albert and Mary Lasker Foundation, embargoed until Sunday, September 22, announcing the recipients of the 2002 Lasker Awards for Medical Research.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2002-09-18
9 2 U OF U MEDICAL SCHOOL FACULTY NAMED FINALISTS FOR STOEL RIVES UTAH INNOVATION AWARDSTwo University of Utah School of Medicine researchers have been named finalists for this year's Stoel Rives Utah Innovation Awards. The awards will be presented at the Edison Conference on the U of U campus May 19-20.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-05-14
10 MULTICENTER STUDY LED BY U MEDICAL SCHOOL RESEARCHERS ADVANCES FIGHT AGAINST NEUROFIBROMATOSISThe fight against neurofibromatosis type 1-a common, inherited neurocutaneous disorder affecting one in 4,000 people worldwide-got a boost recently with a grant for the design of a multicenter clinical trial on a severe manifestation of the disease. The study is being spearheaded by University of Ut...Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-06-14
11 NATURAL SELECTION AT WORK IN GENETIC VARIATION TO TASTE OR NOT TASTE BITTER COMPOUND, U OF U RESEARCHERS SAYSALT LAKE CITY - A genetic variation seen worldwide in which people either taste or do not taste a bitter, synthetic compound called PTC has been preserved by natural selection, University of Utah and National Institutes of Health researchers have reported.Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-06-23
12 HUNTSMAN CANCER INSTITUTE RESEARCHERS DISCOVER NEW ROLE FOR APC GENESALT LAKE CITY, September 9, 2004-Mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumor suppressor gene have been found to cause 85 percent of colon cancers. Now researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute know why-in a paper published on-line today in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, they explai...Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-08-09
13 Researchers Develop Fast Track Way to Discover How Cells are RegulatedSALT LAKE CITY, September 17, 2004-Researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at the University of Utah and a collaborator at the University of California at Santa Cruz report they have developed a unique computational approach to investigate a regulatory network for gene expression that is impl...Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-09-17
14 How a Hormone Regulates IronOct. 28,2004 - A new study from the University of Utah and the University of California, Los Angeles, found how a hormone called hepcidin regulates the iron uptake from the diet and its distribution in the body. The study may lead to future treatments for chronic anemia and for diseases of iron over...Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-10-28
15 Medical/Science Reporters and Editors:In a study reported online today in the journal Human Genetics, University of Utah researchers have published the first major confirmation of the presence of a prostate cancer predisposition gene on the X chromosome. The original discovery of the gene was reported by Johns Hopkins researchers in 199...Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News2004-12-08
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