Decoding the Mystery Of Alzheimer's Disease
Researchers investigating Alzheimer’s disease are focusing on the hormone estrogen.
Researchers investigating Alzheimer’s disease are focusing on the hormone estrogen.
Dr. Bonnie LaFleur, a research professor in the University of Arizona R. Ken Coit College of Pharmacy, has been appointed to a five-year term on the Data Safety Monitoring Committee for the National Institutes of Health Common Fund’s Nutrition for Precision Health, powered by the All of Us Research Program.
Meet this year's Fab 50 nurses and more winners named by the Tucson Nurses Week Foundation.
Price Fishback, Takeshi Inomata, Chris Segrin, Kathy Short and Todd Vanderah are the University of Arizona's newest Regents Professors. The university's highest faculty rank honors exceptional achievements that merit national and international recognition.
University of Arizona Health Sciences researchers are using organoids to design novel therapies and better understand cancer and rare diseases.
You cannot feel it, but your immune system is currently waging a war against infection, cancer and other diseases. In fact, a vast network of organs, white blood cells, antibodies and chemicals are fighting microscopic battles every minute of every day.
Scientists have developed a wireless, battery-free implant capable of monitoring dopamine signals in the brain in real-time in small animal models, an advance that could aid in understanding the role neurochemicals play in neurological disorders.
Scientists have developed a wireless, battery-free implant capable of monitoring dopamine signals in the brain in real-time in small animal models, an advance that could aid in understanding the role neurochemicals play in neurological disorders.
A new study suggests that too much – or too little – office noise has a negative effect on employee well-being. The sweet spot? About 50 decibels, comparable to moderate rain or birdsong.
Three years into the pandemic, many medical experts have let their guards down and resumed some semblance of normal life, though most agree there is still a time and place for COVID-19 precautions, The Washington Post reported March 12.