The work done by Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine faculty members (and even some students) is regularly highlighted in newspapers, online media outlets and more. Below you’ll find links to articles and videos of Feinberg in the news.
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What they found was that not only did participants sleep much better in the room with overall darkness, they had much lower levels of insulin. This is a major finding, because insulin is the hormonal signal to the body to increase weight. The higher your insulin levels are, the more weight you gain, regardless of how much you eat or exercise. “Our preliminary findings show that a single night of light exposure during sleep acutely impacts measures of insulin resistance,” lead author Ivy Cheung Mason said in a statement. “Light exposure overnight during sleep has been shown to disrupt sleep, but these data indicate that it may also have the potential to influence metabolism.”
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Lurie Children’s Hospital and Northwestern Medicine are teaming up to try and address this. On Saturday at six different sites in northern Illinois and in the Chicago area, they’re offering safe places to get rid of extra prescription pills. The goal is to reduce the risk of addiction. Dr. Jonah Stulberg is one of the people leading that effort. He’s an assistant professor of surgery at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine and he joined us on the line.
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Researchers at Northwestern University School of Medicine in Chicago noted that another aspect of aging in men is that a larger share of testosterone is converted to estrogen by a hormone called aromatase. In this study with mice, the investigators found that rising estrogen levels weaken the abdominal wall. They concluded this could lead to a hernia[…]”It may make sense to treat at-risk men with an aromatase inhibitor that could decrease estrogen and strengthen the muscle,” study leader Dr. Serdar Bulun said in a university news release.
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New research from Northwestern University shows animals know what time it is. Buzz60’s Sean Dowling has more. Buzz60
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A new study from Northwestern University revealed that animals can judge time. The study, published Monday in the journal Nature Neuroscience, is “one of the most convincing experiments” to show that animals understand time. “Does your dog know that it took you twice as long to get its food as it took yesterday? There wasn’t a good answer for that before,” study co-author Daniel Dombeck said in a press release. “This is one of the most convincing experiments to show that animals really do have an explicit representation of time in their brains when they are challenged to measure a time interval.”
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A 2017 paper by Northwestern University researchers Alex Song, Thomas Severini and Ravi Allada published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science examined travel by big league teams from 1992-2011. “We observed that jet-lag effects were largely evident after eastward travel with very limited effects after westward travel,” the authors wrote. “Jet lag impacted both home and away defensive performance. Remarkably, the vast majority of these effects for both home and away teams could be explained by a single measure, home runs allowed.”
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The videoconferencing program connects stroke patients with vascular neurologists at Northwestern Memorial so they can conduct examinations, interpret brain scan results and make treatment recommendations in consultation with Franciscan physicians, according to the statement. “This unique affiliation will offer enhanced care to residents in areas who may have limited access to leading specialists and cutting-edge clinical trials,” Dr. Maciej Lesniak, Michael J. Marchese professor of neurosurgery and chair of the department of neurological surgery at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, said in the statement.
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In this study with mice, the investigators found that rising estrogen levels weaken the abdominal wall. They concluded this could lead to a hernia. However, the researchers also found that an estrogen-lowering drug called an aromatase inhibitor prevented hernias in the mice. The study authors theorized this approach might also work in people. “It may make sense to treat at-risk men with an aromatase inhibitor that could decrease estrogen and strengthen the muscle,” study leader Dr. Serdar Bulun said in a university news release.
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The U.S. surgeon general is encouraging employers to stock opioid overdose-reversal drugs in workplace first-aid kits. “We can’t fix the opioid epidemic from our silos,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams said today during a panel discussion at Northwestern Medicine’s Prentice Women’s Hospital. Health care professionals and business professionals “must partner together.”
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Elizabeth McNally, a cardiologist and director of the Center for Genetic Medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said that, years ago, she was excited by the findings from Anversa’s lab, but then had trouble replicating them herself. She described a “religious fervor” that took hold among those who believed that c-kit cells were regenerating the heart that has continued as researchers have sought to find factors that could be responsible for what she described as “tiny to nonexistent” effects. “It’s disappointing that it took so many years for this to come out,” McNally said. “It’s one question whether the trial should even continue, and I think at the highest level the individuals supporting the trial should really review that.”