Best Conditions for Legionella Growth

Best Conditions for Legionella Growth

Researchers have identified the optimal conditions for the growth of Legionella which causes a very serious, often deadly, type of pneumonia, Legionnaires' disease. Inspired by a number of large Legionnaires' outbreaks,... read more

Attenuated T-cell Vaccination Helps SLE Patients

Attenuated T-cell Vaccination Helps SLE Patients

Vaccinating systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients with attenuated T-cells improved their symptoms, according to results of a small controlled trial. T-cells are immune cells that play a key role in lupus.... read more

FDA Recommendation: Reduce Max Storage Limit of RBCs

FDA Recommendation: Reduce Max Storage Limit of RBCs

A group of researchers are asking the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reduce maximum storage limit for red blood cells from 6 weeks to 5 weeks, as long as there are sufficient blood supplies available. The researchers... read more

Catheter safeguards at hospitals reduce infections and save money

Catheter safeguards at hospitals reduce infections and save money

U.S. hospitals are reducing bloodstream infections related to catheters by implementing rigorous safeguards that also save millions of healthcare dollars each year, according to research led by Cedars-Sinai.... read more

A New Organ you didn't know you had: The Mesentery

A New Organ you didn't know you had: The Mesentery

The research of Dr. J. Calvin Coffey, foundation chair of surgery at the University of Limerick, is reclassifying this part of the digestive system as a contiguous organ. In a new study, Coffey has established the anatomy... read more

Waging War Against CABSIs

Waging War Against CABSIs

Catheter-associated bloodstream infections (CABSIs) are on the decline, according to the 2016 National and State Healthcare-Associated Infections Progress Report. The report, published by the CDC, showed that between 2008... read more

In-Bed Cycling Feasible for ICU Patients on Ventilation

In-Bed Cycling Feasible for ICU Patients on Ventilation

TryCYCLE was the first study in the CYCLE research program. In TryCYCLE, we determined it was safe and feasible to bike with mechanically ventilated medical surgical patients very early in their ICU stay.... read more

PERTs Aim to Disentangle Gordian Knot of Acute Pulmonary Embolism

PERTs Aim to Disentangle Gordian Knot of Acute Pulmonary Embolism

The concept of a rapid response team for acute PE has spread quickly across the United States, although the impact remains unclear. A recently published research letter in CHEST showed that the most common specialties involved... read more

Airway Driving Pressure and Lung Stress in ARDS Patients

Airway Driving Pressure and Lung Stress in ARDS Patients

Since the first description of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the 1960s, numerous studies have sought the optimal tidal volume, positive end-expiratory pressure, plateau pressure, and inspired fraction of oxygen... read more

New molecular map reveals how cells spew out potassium

New molecular map reveals how cells spew out potassium

New research from The Rockefeller University has determined, for the first time, the complete structure of an ion channel that plays an important role in cellular electrical signaling by sending potassium ions out of the... read more

Pain Sensitivity Plays a Role in Unrecognized Myocardial Infarction

Pain Sensitivity Plays a Role in Unrecognized Myocardial Infarction

People who experience unrecognized or silent myocardial infarction may have reduced pain sensitivity compared with those whose Myocardial Infarction is noticed, according to the results of a study recently published online... read more

New Blood Draw Protocol can reduce risks for pediatric patients

New Blood Draw Protocol can reduce risks for pediatric patients

Researchers report that implementing a checklist-style set of procedures appears to cut almost in half the number of potentially unnecessary blood culture draws in critically ill children without endangering doctors'... read more

Professor Wins Outstanding Investigator Award for Lung Disease Antioxidant Studies

Professor Wins Outstanding Investigator Award for Lung Disease Antioxidant Studies

The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) has named the recipient of its inaugural Outstanding Investigator Award: Yvonne Janssen-Heininger, PhD, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the Larner College... read more

Better Skin Grafts After Research on Sweat Glands

Better Skin Grafts After Research on Sweat Glands

Scientists at Rockefeller University have identified the molecular underpinnings that guide the formation of both hair follicles and sweat glands, finding that two opposing signaling pathways, which can suppress one other,... read more