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Research Feature
Joncita Todechine, a mother of four who lives on the Navajo Nation, knows all too well what can trigger asthma symptoms in her daughter Ashley. But she didn’t always. She recalls a time in 2013, living in Phoenix and attending medical assistant school, when she rushed her then-three-year-old to the Indian Medical Center. “She was really sick,”...
Showing 10 out of 1705 results
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NHLBI in the Press
The population of the Mediterranean island of Sardinia has made important contributions to genome-wide association studies of complex disease traits.
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NHLBI in the Press
A protein called sarcolipin protects mice against obesity, according to a recent study. Additional experiments showed that this protein regulates energy metabolism in muscle.
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NHLBI in the Press
Researchers are reporting a high prevalence of sleep apnea in a large population of African-Americans but note that the majority, nearly 95 percent, were undiagnosed and untreated.
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NHLBI in the Press
Ventricular tachycardia is a life-threatening fast heart rhythm that occurs frequently in heart attack patients and can lead to sudden cardiac death.
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NHLBI in the Press
White blood cells such as neutrophils may defend against infection, but they also have destructive properties.
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NHLBI in the Press
Older patients, women, and racial and ethnic minorities carry a disproportionate burden of heart failure in the general population, but their enrollment in clinical trials has been lower than expected.
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NHLBI in the Press
Researchers are reporting new insights into the genetic and cellular changes associated with the development of nasal polyps, soft outgrowths that can appear in the nasal passages and sinuses and cause breathing problems and infections.
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NHLBI in the Press
Researchers partly funded by NHLBI have identified a drug that could treat, and perhaps reverse, pulmonary arterial hypertension, a severe lung disease with a five-year survival rate of 50 percent. The findings were published in the American Journal of Respiratory Critical Care Medicine.
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NHLBI in the Press
Researchers are reporting new evidence that surgery to prevent abnormal acid reflux appears promising for slowing the progress of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), an incurable disease that causes scarring of the lungs and often results in death from respiratory failure.