More articles about: All Research Topics

map green teal
Health Lab

As Medicaid ‘unwinding’ continues, Michigan report provides key insights

Medicaid expansion’s impact on low-income Michigan residents included reduced uninsurance, increased primary and preventive care, and better financial health.
bacteria teal purple
Health Lab

How bacteria surf cargo through the cell

The University of Michigan researchers found some bacteria ship cellular cargo by “surfing” along proteins called ParA/MinD ATPases
lungs
Health Lab

Impacts of the removal of race-correction in lung pulmonary function tests on lung surgery

A recent study led by Sidra Bonner, M.D., M.P.H, M.S. a surgery resident at the University of Michigan Health, has now provided new information about the clinical impact of race-correction in pulmonary function tests for African American patients with lung cancer undergoing surgical evaluation.
stethoscope
Health Lab

Chronic pain patients who take opioids need better care and coverage

People with chronic pain who take opioids have trouble finding multimodal pain care; insurance and provider education changes are needed, experts say
keyboard stethoscope
Health Lab

Remote learning during pandemic aids medical students with disabilities

Medical students who reported a disability to their school increased by more than 25% during the COVID-19 pandemic, a study shows.
glioma brain scan
Health Lab

Study finds improved survival for incurable brain tumor, providing ‘a crack in the armor’

A potential drug candidate called ONC201 nearly doubled survival for patients with diffuse midline glioma and DIPG.
blue green image
Health Lab

Zooming across time and space simultaneously with superresolution to understand how cells divide

A team at the University of Michigan developed a new kind of superresolution imaging that reveals previously unknown features of how cells divide.
images on computer of scans
Health Lab

Diabetes linked to functional and structural brain changes through MRI

A Michigan Medicine study finds Diabetes linked to functional and structural brain changes through MRI.
computer
Health Lab

Can AI help hospitals spot patients in need of extra non-medical assistance?

Needs related to housing, transportation, food, social support and more can be identified through AI/ML techniques
gloved hand doing microplate samples
Health Lab

Study brings insight to kidney cancer with gene mutation

A study from clinicians and researchers at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center reveals findings from over 800 clinical assays performed for kidney patients with MiTF family gene mutations.
nasal spray
Health Lab

An adjuvanted intranasal vaccine for COVID-19 protects both young and old mice

A collaborative research effort led by the University of Michigan and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has resulted in a nasal vaccine adjuvant that stops infection in both young and old mice.
sperm purple glowing
Health Lab

Modifications to amino acids in sperm could be behind infertility

Researchers at the University of Michigan are now delving into the molecular-level details of sperm formation, with a particular focus on how abnormalities in this process might lead to male-factor infertility.
microscope
Health Lab

Targeting TAK1 protein to treat systemic sclerosis

Researchers at the University of Michigan Health System have identified a protein that may be a new target for treatment of systemic sclerosis.
Brain Organoids Tissue Microscopic Red
Health Lab

Artificially grown ‘mini-brains’ without animal components bring opportunities for neuroscience

University of Michigan researchers developed a novel method to produce artificially grown miniature brains that could impact how neurodegenerative conditions are studied.
women sitting together looking at data
Health Lab

Long in decline, maternal mortality rate trends have stalled in recent years

After decades of falling global maternal mortality rates, has the momentum evaporated? A new WHO report suggests just that, and Michigan Medicine researchers are urging their peers not to take their collective eye off the ball.