Stanford Medicine News
Precision Health
Read about Stanford Medicine's vision for leading the biomedical revolution.
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Stanford's big data conference: How 1s and 0s are advancing medicine
Massive, ongoing advances in computational processing power and interconnectedness are already changing the way medical research is done. But even more-disruptive outcomes—including changes in the very practice of medicine at the day-to-day clinical level—lie just ahead.
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Stanford team makes switching off cells with light as easy as switching them on
In 2005, a Stanford University scientist discovered how to switch brain cells on or off with light pulses by using special proteins from microbes to pass electrical current into neurons.
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Blood test could provide rapid, accurate method of detecting solid cancers, study finds
A blood sample could one day be enough to diagnose many types of solid cancers, or to monitor the amount of cancer in a patient’s body and responses to treatment. Previous versions of the approach, which relies on monitoring levels of tumor DNA circulating in the blood, have required cumbersome and time-consuming steps to customize it to each patient or have not been sufficiently sensitive.
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New Clinical Genomics Program Blends Stanford’s Capabilities and Expertise to Advance Patient Care
A new pilot program in clinical genomics will allow a small group of patients at Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford to have their DNA deciphered to help doctors with diagnosis and treatment.
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Michael Levitt wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Michael Levitt, PhD, professor of structural biology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, has won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
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Thomas Sudhof wins Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Neuroscientist Thomas Südhof, MD, professor of molecular and cellular physiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
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Scientists reveal how beta-amyloid may cause Alzheimer's
Scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine have shown how a protein fragment known as beta-amyloid, strongly implicated in Alzheimer’s disease, begins destroying synapses before it clumps into plaques that lead to nerve cell death.
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$11.4 million grant launches new Center for Collective Cell Decisions
A new center at Stanford will bring together a diverse group of faculty with a common goal: to understand the collective behaviors of interacting cells. The Center for Collective Cell Decisions has been established with a five-year, $11.4-million grant from the National Centers for Systems Biology, part of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
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Stanford Launches New Cancer Initiative
The Stanford Cancer Initiative combines its medical school, hospital, clinics, and Stanford Cancer Institute to invest $250 million in four critical areas. Learn more.
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Addressing faculty senate, dean shares vision for leading 'biomedical revolution'
In his first presentation to Stanford's Faculty Senate, Lloyd Minor, MD, dean of the School of Medicine, said the goal of the Campaign for Stanford Medicine is to "lead the biomedical revolution" by promoting fundamental, clinical and translational discovery, by transforming patient care and by training future leaders.
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Anellovirus Research
Prof. Stephen Quake's research on the anellovirus as a signal of weak immune system after transplant surgery. You can help medical research at Stanford.
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Grant from Li Ka Shing Foundation to fund big data initiative and conference at Stanford
Researchers at the School of Medicine and Oxford University are currently developing ways to mine the vast amounts of biomedical data housed in public databases to speed the discovery of new drugs, improve patient care and reduce health-care costs.