Stanford researchers are using AI to personalize care for premature infants, eliminating sources of lead poisoning and shaping a new model of marine conservation restoration in this week's roundup.
Stanford researchers have developed an AI that can predict future disease risk using data from just one night of sleep. The system analyzes detailed physiological signals, looking for hidden patterns ...
Medicine, faculty don’t typically flock to voluntary training programs. But over the past five years, a professional coaching ...
Stanford scientists regrow cartilage by blocking an ageing enzyme, reversing arthritis damage in mice and human tissue ...
Stanford Medicine names radiology chair Umar Mahmood, MD, PhD, to lead clinical care and research starting Jan. 16, 2024.
SleepFM showed especially strong results for Parkinson’s disease (C-index 0.89), dementia (0.85), hypertensive heart disease (0.84), heart attack (0.81), prostate cancer (0.89), breast cancer (0.87), ...
Scientists at Stanford Medicine have discovered a treatment that can reverse cartilage loss in aging joints and even prevent arthritis after knee injuries. By blocking a protein linked to aging, the ...
Fitgurú on MSN
The end of knee pain? Stanford researchers discover breakthrough method to regrow cartilage
In a revolutionary discovery, scientists have identified a specific protein that, when blocked, allows the body to naturally ...
With the release of ChatGPT, what had long been science fiction became a reality, leaving healthcare wondering where medicine meets machine. This week, Stanford Medicine and Stanford Institute for ...
From the Community | Stanford Medicine community demands an end to Stanford’s complicity in genocide
Dear Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford Healthcare and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital leadership, We write this letter not only as the healthcare professionals, trainees and scientists that ...
A clinical trial found that a brief, calorie-restricted diet improved symptoms and reduced inflammation in people with Crohn’s disease. “What should I eat?” may be the question doctors hear most often ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results