Carver College of Medicine

pile of fish oil capsules

UI study: Omega-3s may not help thinking skills after all

Wednesday, September 25, 2013
New research led by University of Iowa investigators suggests that omega-3 fatty acids found in foods such as salmon and nuts don't benefit thinking and memory skills.
Dr. Pat Winokur

UI testing vaccine for deadly flu strain

Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Pat Winokur of UI Health Care is testing a vaccine for a potentially deadly strain of influenza that killed dozens of people in China earlier this year, a strain so unfamiliar in humans that the vaccine may have to be combined with adjuvants, compounds that help boost immune system response.
stylized DNA strand

The science of evolution

Friday, September 20, 2013
Today the overwhelming majority of scientists in Iowa, the United States, and across the world agree that biological evolution explains the diversity of life on our planet.
Myles Peterman

Cedar Rapids boy is Kid Captain when Hawkeyes host Western Michigan

Friday, September 20, 2013
Doctors learned Myles Peterman would be born with hydroencephalitis—a buildup of fluid inside the skull that puts pressure on the brain—and spina bifida, a birth defect in which the spinal column does not close completely while the baby is still in the womb. Now 13, he's had a variety of surgeries and comes to UI Children's Hospital a few times a year.
researcher working in lab

Iowa researchers use skin cells to gain insights into retinitis pigmentosa

Thursday, September 19, 2013
A team led by the Ed Stone and Budd Tucker of the University of Iowa has gained valuable insights into retinitis pigmentosa (RP) caused by defects in the gene USH2A, which, depending on how it’s mutated, can cause vision loss from RP or combined vision and hearing loss from Usher syndrome.

Wearing back braces prevents need for spinal correction surgery in children with AIS

Thursday, September 19, 2013
A multi-center study led by University of Iowa researchers to determine whether wearing back braces would prevent the need for spinal correction surgery in children with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis was cut short when early results were overwhelmingly in favor of bracing.
scoliosis back brace

New study lends conclusive support to a scoliosis treatment

Thursday, September 19, 2013
UI orthopedic surgeon Stuart Weinstein has published conclusive evidence that back braces are effective in treating scoliosis: “There were a lot of doctors like me who treat scoliosis as the primary focus of their practice who had doubts about whether bracing was effective.”
x-rays of curved spines

UI researchers: Back braces are effective

Thursday, September 19, 2013
University of Iowa researchers Stuart Weinstein and Lori Dolan led a study team that set out to compare the risk of curve progression in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis who wore a brace with patients who did not.

UI Vaccine Unit to test vaccine for a potentially lethal strain of flu

Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Vaccine research specialists with University of Iowa Health Care, in collaboration with colleagues across the country, are preparing for the potential pandemic spread of a new bird flu strain (H7N9) that caused severe disease in China last spring.

Antibiotic-resistant staph infections down significantly

Wednesday, September 18, 2013
The number of "invasive" MRSA cases—severe infections that typically require hospitalization, and can be fatal—has declined significantly in the United States.
microscopic bacteria

Centers for Disease Controls releases report warning of 'super bugs'

Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Dr. Dan Diekema, director of the Division of Infectious Disease for University of Iowa Health Care, said overuse of antibiotics is a huge problem in the U.S., one that’s led to bacteria that can resist even the toughest drugs.

UI cancer chief involved in national cancer progress report

Tuesday, September 17, 2013
George Weiner, M.D., director of the Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center at the UI, was a co-author of the American Association for Cancer Research’s third annual Cancer Progress Report, which illustrates how research, along with clinical insight, have improved prevention, detection, diagnosis, and treatment for cancer.