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Your search for “drug development” returned 1008 results

Large Study Identifies Genetic Variants Linked to Risk Tolerance and Risky Behaviors

January 14, 2019

An international group that includes researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine has identified 124 genetic variants associated with a person’s willingness to take risks, as reported in a study published January 14, 2019 in Nature Genetics.

UC San Diego Students Design Low-Cost HIV Viral Load Monitoring System for Tijuana, Mexico

July 7, 2016

If not included, the first paragraph from release will be used): Two teams from UC San Diego’s Engineering World Health (EWH) student organization and Global TIES program are combining forces this summer to bring a device they created to monitor viral load in HIV patients to a clinical setting in…

Celebrating 10 Years of UC San Diego’s Physical, Cultural and Intellectual Transformation

June 9, 2022

…and intellectual transformation was developed through an inclusive bottom-up process that engaged more than 10,000 campus and community members. “When I arrived, I could see we needed to create a space for people to talk about their aspirations for the university,” said Khosla. “At the end of that year and…

Biologists Discover Bacteria Communicate Like Neurons in the Brain

October 21, 2015

Biologists at UC San Diego have discovered that bacteria—often viewed as lowly, solitary creatures—are actually quite sophisticated in their social interactions and communicate with one another through similar electrical signaling mechanisms as neurons in the human brain. In a study published in this week’s advance online publication of Nature, the…

UC San Diego Health Expands Leading-Edge Cancer Care in Hillcrest

February 5, 2019

To make it easier for patients to receive world-class cancer care, UC San Diego Health has added a new multidisciplinary cancer clinic in Hillcrest and expanded its infusion center for both oncology patients and others in need of infusion services.

Blood Biopsy Reveals Unique, Targetable Genetic Alterations in Patients with Rare Cancer

August 15, 2017

Using fragments of circulating tumor DNA in blood, University of California San Diego School of Medicine researchers were able to identify theoretically targetable genetic alterations in 66 percent of patients with cancer of unknown primary (CUP), a rare disease with seven to 12 cases per 100,000 people each year.

This Injectable Hydrogel Mitigates Damage to the Right Ventricle of the Heart

March 6, 2024

An injectable hydrogel can mitigate damage to the right ventricle of the heart with chronic pressure overload, according to a new study published March 6 in Journals of the American College of Cardiology: Basic to Translational Science.

Nanosponges Soak Up Toxins Released by Bacterial Infections and Venom

April 14, 2013

Engineers at the University of California, San Diego have invented a “nanosponge” capable of safely removing a broad class of dangerous toxins from the bloodstream – including toxins produced by MRSA, E. coli, poisonous snakes and bees.

Phage Therapy Shows Promise Beyond Treating Infections

November 14, 2019

…forefront of phage therapy development over the past few years. In March 2016, Tom Patterson, a professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine, became the first known person in the United States to undergo intravenous phage therapy for a multidrug resistant bacterial infection, with emergency approval from…

UC San Diego Researchers Honored as Prebys Research Heroes

May 2, 2024

Stephanie Fraley, Marygorret Obonyo and Daniela Valdez-Jasso have been named Prebys Research Heroes. Grants totaling $1.5 million from the Prebys Foundation will support their research focused on advancing health care and medical discoveries.

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