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UC San Francisco

Mice illustration

One iron protein made old mice remember again

Credit Dingzeyu Li via Unsplash.

Why Lupus May Ease With Age for Some Older Adults

Researchers from UCSF and the Gladstone Institutes identified two cancer drugs that effectively treated a severe Alzheimer's disease model. Pictured from left: Marina Sirota, PhD; Yaqiao Li, PhD; and Yadong Huang, MD, PhD. Photo by Michael Short, Gladstone Institutes.

Cancer Drugs Letrozole and Irinotecan May Reverse Alzheimer’s

Gait metric evaluation and modeling DBS effects on walking in Parkinson's patients.

For Parkinson’s Patients, Smarter Brain Stimulators Help Them Walk Again

Illustration of long covid with a man's brain leaking information

Protein Clues Could Unlock Earlier Diagnosis for “Middle Age Dementia”

A film of various brain scans seen on a lightbox on a wall

CT Scans Could Trigger More Than 100,000 New Cancer Cases

Karunesh Ganguly, MD, PhD (center), works in his lab with graduate students Runfeng Miao (left) and Harsha Peesapati (right). Photo by Noah Berger

Paralyzed man moves robotic arm with his thoughts

Hot air balloon in sky

Dream Delay Could Signal Early Alzheimer’s Risk, Study Finds

A microscopic image of neurons that connect the hippocamus and amygdala in a mouse's brain. The neurons are dyed red and purple

Researchers find brain signature of resilience, suggesting new way to treat depression

woman's hands holding water glass

Drinking Water Does More Than Quench Thirst

vials of blood

New Single Test Can Detect Almost Any Disease-Causing Pathogen in Hours

An illustration that depicts the connection between a ketogenic diet and improved mental health.

Keto Diet’s Hidden Power: New Discovery Links Gut Bacteria to Autoimmune Protection

ambulance at hospital

When it comes to emergency care, ChatGPT overprescribes

Researchers at WashU Medicine have developed a method in mice to reduce damage from spinal cord injuries by using engineered immune cells. Mice that received this treatment showed improved recovery from their injuries, indicating potential for developing this therapy for human use.

New Discovery Could Help Fine-Tune Scarring in Spinal Cord Injuries

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