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.
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 ...
Medicine, faculty don’t typically flock to voluntary training programs. But over the past five years, a professional coaching ...
Alzheimer’s may destroy memory by flipping a single molecular switch that tells neurons to prune their own connections. Researchers found that both amyloid beta and inflammation converge on the same ...
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.
Tweaking a pattern of wound healing established millions of years ago may enable scar-free injury repair after surgery or trauma, Stanford Medicine researchers have found. If results from their study, ...
An artificial intelligence-based tool can predict the medical trajectories of individual premature newborns from blood samples collected soon after they are born, a Stanford Medicine-led study has ...
Stanford Cardinal senior Chisom Okpara will miss the rest of the season following an injury sustained Jan. 10th against Virginia, university says.
Research conducted by Stanford Medicine has revealed a striking connection between colour vision deficiency and bladder cancer survival rates. The study, published on January 15 in Nature Health, ...
Dr. Berenika Maciejewicz, a triple-doctor and an expert in longevity, leads the company’s interdisciplinary team to ...
A treatment that helps worn-out joints grow new cartilage may sound like science fiction, but new research from Stanford ...