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Mashup Score: 24Changing Behaviors: Personalized Prompts from an App Increase Your Physical Activity - 5 month(s) ago
Physical activity has many health benefits, including a reduction in chronic diseases associated with aging and leading an inactive lifestyle such as obesity, diabetes, and heart di sease. One measure of physical activity is how many steps you take per day – a measure that is easily collected by smart phones, smart watches, or other digital devices. Recently, the MyHeart Counts Cardiovascular Health study collected step count physical activity data from over 50000 users and showed that digital intervention
Source: med.stanford.eduCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet
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Mashup Score: 58Reversing a disease: FOXF1 fixes Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension - 5 month(s) ago
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a debilitating disease that worsens over time; ultimately leading to right heart failure and death. PAH is caused by dysfunction of cells in our lung arteries called endothelial cells. Previous studies have shown that lung endothelial cell dysfunction in PAH is related to DNA damage not being repaired. In a recent study led by Sarasa Isobe, MD, PhD, and BASE Director Marlene Rabinovitch, MD and published in Nature Communications, investigators identified the
Source: med.stanford.eduCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet
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Mashup Score: 40
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Science Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.
Source: stanford.zoom.usCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet-
We'll kick off @StanfordCVI seminar series Tue 9/12 12-1pm PST by Dr. Bonnie Ky at @PennCardiology @PennMedicine, editor of @JACC #CardioOnc. Hosted by @SCVI_Mavens women in science. Zoom link: https://t.co/oD1xyw8xBX @StanfordDeptMed @Stanford_ChEMH @SeanM_Wu @CardioOncology https://t.co/yn7FCvMvop
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Mashup Score: 40
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Science Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.
Source: stanford.zoom.usCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet-
We'll kick off @StanfordCVI seminar series Tue 9/12 12-1pm PST by Dr. Bonnie Ky at @PennCardiology @PennMedicine, editor of @JACC #CardioOnc. Hosted by @SCVI_Mavens women in science. Zoom link: https://t.co/oD1xyw8xBX @StanfordDeptMed @Stanford_ChEMH @SeanM_Wu @CardioOncology https://t.co/yn7FCvMvop
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Mashup Score: 114
Prolonged tachycardia—a risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality—can induce cardiomyopathy in the absence of structural disease in the heart. Here, by leveraging human patient data, a canine model of tachycardia and engineered heart tissue generated from human induced pluripotent stem cells, we show that metabolic rewiring during tachycardia drives contractile dysfunction by…
Source: www.nature.comCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet-
Congrats to @StanfordCVI scientists & collaborators @CUAnschutz @templemedschool @SantAnnaPisa @GreenstoneBio for their recent @natBME paper elucidating the mechanism of #tachycadia induced #cardiomyopathy using mutiscale models. https://t.co/vkqOVEvtu0 @chengyi_tu @S_NarayanMD https://t.co/V9z7Ikugiy
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Mashup Score: 40
The Office for People With Developmental Disabilities today announced that a multi-institute team, including a physician-researcher from the New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities’ (OPWDD) Institute for Basic Research in Developmental Disabilities (IBR) has published a study of a link between rare variants in the NAA10 gene and cardiac arrhythmia. Individuals with these rare variants exhibit symptoms such as developmental delay, intellectual disability and cardiac dysfunction.
Source: opwdd.ny.govCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet
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Mashup Score: 34
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Science Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.
Source: comsync.lijit.comCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet
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Mashup Score: 40
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Science Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.
Source: stanford.zoom.usCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet-
We'll kick off @StanfordCVI seminar series Tue 9/12 12-1pm PST by Dr. Bonnie Ky at @PennCardiology @PennMedicine, editor of @JACC #CardioOnc. Hosted by @SCVI_Mavens women in science. Zoom link: https://t.co/oD1xyw8xBX @StanfordDeptMed @Stanford_ChEMH @SeanM_Wu @CardioOncology https://t.co/yn7FCvMvop
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Mashup Score: 40
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Science Seminar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.
Source: stanford.zoom.usCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet-
We'll kick off @StanfordCVI seminar series Tue 9/12 12-1pm PST by Dr. Bonnie Ky at @PennCardiology @PennMedicine, editor of @JACC #CardioOnc. Hosted by @SCVI_Mavens women in science. Zoom link: https://t.co/oD1xyw8xBX @StanfordDeptMed @Stanford_ChEMH @SeanM_Wu @CardioOncology https://t.co/yn7FCvMvop
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Mashup Score: 19A Better Way to Predict Complex Genotypes with Limited Data - 7 month(s) ago
Our immune system protects us from pathogens like viruses and bacteria, but it can also cause significant problems. Our immune system’s job is to recognize foreign material in our bodies and initiate processes to clear it. This is almost always desirable, but a primary case where it’s a problem is after tissue transplants. We want our bodies to respond to the new tissue as though it belongs to our own bodies, but our immune system is designed to flag new tissue as ‘foreign’ and activate processes to
Source: med.stanford.eduCategories: General Medicine News, CardiologistsTweet
Congratulations to @danseungkim, @euanashley, and @StanfordCVI scientists on their recent EHJ Digital Health article on personalized interventions improving physical activity! @ESC_Journals @StanfordMed @StanfordDeptMed @Adrienne_Llyn https://t.co/5ywAeVkK7d