New Study to Explore Link Between Hypertension Treatment and Development of Heart Failure Feb. 12, 2022 Researchers at the College of Medicine – Phoenix have received a grant from the National Institutes of Health to study how medications used to treat hypertension may provide insight into novel treatments to produce long-lasting protection against heart disease. Taben Hale, PhD, associate professor and director of the Hale Laboratory, will lead the study. AZBio
NIH Uses $4.5M in Grant Funds to Create Collaborative Research Centers Focused on Valley Fever Feb. 11, 2022 U.S. Representatives Kevin MacCarthy (R-CA) and David Schweikert (R-AZ), co-chairs of the Congressional Valley Fever Task Force, have previously called for research funding to combat the disease. Both congressmen were praised by the Valley Fever Center for Excellence at the University of Arizona and Valley Fever Institute at Kern Medical for their efforts. Homeland Prep News
Lutrick Receives All of Us Arizona Health Champion Award Feb. 10, 2022 Dr. Karen Lutrick of the UArizona College of Medicine – Tucson was recognized for her work to further research on COVID-19 and vaccine effectiveness. Read more Image
Female Faculty Seek to Spark Girls’ Interest in Science Feb. 10, 2022 Health Sciences experts in a variety of fields are part of an international movement to encourage girls and women to enter STEM fields. Read more Image
Immigrant Syndrome: The Schools of an Invisible Battle Feb. 10, 2022 For Frank Moreno, MD, professor of psychiatry at the College of Medicine – Tucson, migrants have levels of stress and depression associated with their condition that reflect other social factors, conditions he assures are conducive to developing other types of health problems such as "headaches, ulcers, high blood pressure, problems regulating blood sugar, all chronic diseases are complicated by stress." Telemundo Arizona
Does Stress Cause Cognitive Decline? Feb. 10, 2022 Chronic stress among the elderly can make the problem worse, says Roberta Diaz Brinton, PhD, director of the Center for Innovation in Brain Science at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson. She says that elderly stress caused by everything from loneliness to finances to poor health can make mental decline worse. Discover Magazine
Undernourished Infants at Risk for Lung Restriction, Weaker Health as Adults, UArizona Health Sciences Study Finds Feb. 10, 2022 Infants and children with poor nutrition and growth are more likely to suffer from a serious respiratory condition that has been linked to comorbidities and early mortality as adults, according to researchers at the University of Arizona Health Sciences. The study, published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, is the first to identify early-life risk factors for spirometric restriction in adult life. SCIENMAG
UArizona Health Sciences Medical Students Give Free Medical Care to Underserved in Dire Times Feb. 10, 2022 The University of Arizona Health Sciences has provided medical care to hundreds of families in need during the pandemic. It’s through free student-run clinics at the College of Medicine – Tucson with a commitment to underserved people, also known as CUP clinics. KGUN-TV (Tucson, AZ)
New Research on Valley Fever Aimed at Transforming Understanding of Disease Feb. 10, 2022 John Galgiani, MD, director of the UArizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence, estimated a vaccine would cost $200 million to fully develop. Dr. Galgiani is currently testing a vaccine that will be used in dogs and hopes to deploy to veterinarians by 2023. The
Undernourished Infants at Risk for Lung Restriction, Weaker Health as Adults, UArizona Health Sciences Study Finds Feb. 9, 2022 A UArizona Health Sciences-led study identified poor childhood nutrition and growth as risk factors for lung disease and weaker health as an adult. Read more Image