NIH Radio
Audio Reports
A genetic study sheds new light on possible treatment strategies for the most common form of lung cancer.
They're the clinician researchers and medical scientists of tomorrow. And for two days in early November, they gathered at the NIH Clinical Center to learn from seasoned veterans and to take measure of the shoes they would seek to fill some day.
A newly-updated book called Alzheimer's Disease: Unraveling
the Mystery is now available from the National Institute on Aging.
A mechanism in the body which typically helps a person heal from an injury, may actually be causing patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) to get worse, researchers at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and their collaborators have found.
Parkinson's disease occurs most often among the elderly and the risk increases with age.
Management of hepatitis B is a challenge for physicians and patients due to an incomplete understanding of the disease course, complex treatment indications, and the lack of large studies focusing on important health outcomes.
Forty-seven scientists have won funding from the National Institutes of Health worth some 138-million dollars over five years..
As obesity rates in children continue to soar, type 2 diabetes, a disease that used to be seen primarily in adults over age 45, is now being diagnosed in young people. Being overweight increases the risk for type 2 diabetes.
In a National Cancer Institute study, researchers have discovered clues about how cancer cells develop resistance to chemotherapy.
Obesity is a serious health problem in America today. People suffering from this condition find themselves at increased risk for a variety of ailments, such as Type 2 Diabetes, cardiovascular disease and some types of cancer — not to mention the increased costs of health care throughout the lifespan. Researchers at the NIH Clinical Center are constantly seeking new and better ways to combat this national epidemic.
New research indicates that the most pervasive global strain of HIV began spreading among humans closer to the turn of the century, not during the 1930s, as previously reported. FREE MP3 audio reports from the National Institutes of Health, your reliable health information source. Questions? Contact: This page was last reviewed on
November 14, 2008
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