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- NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Sexually Transmitted Diseases: situation getting worse???and also better
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- - Thomas Quinn, MD, NIAID, NIH/Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Douglas Lowy, MD, NCI, NIH (2018/01/25)
- - Category : Demystifying Medicine
- The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.
For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/
NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Sexually Transmitted Diseases: situation getting worse???and also better
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- NIH VideoCast - NIGMS Advisory Council - January 2018
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- - NIGMS, NIH (2018/01/24)
- - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
- This is the public broadcast of the NIGMS January 2018 Council for the Open Session.
NIH VideoCast - NIGMS Advisory Council - January 2018
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- NIH VideoCast - Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee - January 2018
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- - NIH (2018/01/20)
- - Category : Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee
- The Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee Meeting in January 17, 2018
For more information go to https://iacc.hhs.gov
NIH VideoCast - Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee - January 2018
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- NIH VideoCast - NICHD Advisory Council Meeting - January 2018
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- - NICHD, NIH (2018/01/20)
- - Category : National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
- To help achieve the goals of the Institute, the NACHHD Council is charged with advising, consulting with, and making recommendations to the NICHD director on matters relating to the research and research support activities and functions of the Institute.
NIH VideoCast - NICHD Advisory Council Meeting - January 2018
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- NIH VideoCast - All of Us Advisory Panel Meeting - January 2018
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- - NIH (2018/01/20)
- - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
- All of Us Advisory Panel Meeting
NIH VideoCast - All of Us Advisory Panel Meeting - January 2018
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- NIH VideoCast - New insights into the human type I interferon response revealed by flavivirus-host interactions
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- - Sonja M. Best, Ph.D., Chief, Innate Immunity and Pathogenesis Unit, Laboratory of Virology, NIAID, NIH (2018/01/20)
- - Category : NIH Director`s Seminars
- NIH Director`s Seminar Series
More than a quarter of the world???s population is at annual risk of infection with flaviviruses, which include West Nile virus, Zika virus, dengue virus, yellow fever virus and tick-borne encephalitis virus. Despite being closely related, these viruses have evolved different mechanisms to evade the type I interferon response. This seminar will discuss two distinct interactions between various flaviviruses and human interferon signaling pathways. These two studies provide new insight into regulation of interferon signaling through the IFNAR receptor, as well as the antiviral functions of the interferon response that may contribute to flavivirus evolution and emergence.
NIH VideoCast - New insights into the human type I interferon response revealed by flavivirus-host interactions
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- NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: 1) Transcriptional and Functional Consequences of Noncoding RNA-Mediated Crosstalk Between Interferon and Calcium in Sj??gren???s Syndrome and 2) Gene Therapy for Salivary Gland Hypofunction
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- - 1) Ilias Alevizos, DMD, PhD, Tenure-Track Investigator, Sj??gren???s Syndrome and Salivary Gland Dysfunction Unit and Director, Sjogren???s Syndrome Clinic, NIDCR, NIH and 2) Jay Chiorini, PhD, Senior Investigator, Adeno-Associated Virus Biology Section, Molecular Physiology and Therapeutics Branch, NIDCR, NIH (2018/01/19)
- - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds
- CC Grand Rounds: 1) Transcriptional and Functional Consequences of Noncoding RNA-Mediated Crosstalk Between Interferon and Calcium in Sj??gren???s Syndrome and 2) Gene Therapy for Salivary Gland Hypofunction
For more information go to http://www.cc.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.html
NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: 1) Transcriptional and Functional Consequences of Noncoding RNA-Mediated Crosstalk Between Interferon and Calcium in Sj??gren???s Syndrome and 2) Gene Therapy for Salivary Gland Hypofunction
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- NIH VideoCast - National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Advisory Council/Cures Acceleration Network Review Board - January 2018
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- - National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, NIH (2018/01/18)
- - Category : NCATS Council
- The Jan. 11, 2018, joint meeting of the NCATS Advisory Council and the Cures Acceleration Network Review Board will feature presentations from NCATS Director Christopher P. Austin, M.D., and others about the Center???s initiatives, policies, programs and future direction. For more information, visit: https://ncats.nih.gov/advisory/council and https://ncats.nih.gov/advisory/canboard
For more information go to https://ncats.nih.gov/events
NIH VideoCast - National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Advisory Council/Cures Acceleration Network Review Board - January 2018
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- NIH VideoCast - Scientific Advisory Meeting ??? Graduation Ceremony
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- - Dr. Wilson and Dr. Hodges (2018/01/18)
- - Category : Special
- Certificate of completion award ceremony
NIH VideoCast - Scientific Advisory Meeting ??? Graduation Ceremony
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- NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Is Childhood Leukemia Curable?
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- - Nirali Shah, MD, NCI, NIH (2018/01/18)
- - Category : Demystifying Medicine
- The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.
For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov
NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Is Childhood Leukemia Curable?
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- NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: Great Teachers: Very Early Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Similar Yet Different from Adult-Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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- - Kathleen E. Sullivan, MD, PhD, Professor of Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Wallace Chair and Chief, Division of Allergy and Immunology, Children???s Hospital of Philadelphia (2018/01/13)
- - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds
- CC Grand Rounds: Great Teachers: Very Early Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Similar Yet Different from Adult-Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease
For more information go to http://www.cc.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.html
NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: Great Teachers: Very Early Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Similar Yet Different from Adult-Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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- NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Emerging Infections: A Perpetual Challenge and Removing Agents from the Blood Supply
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- - Anthony S. Fauci, MD, NIAID, NIH and Robert Allison, MD, MPH, CC, NIH (2018/01/11)
- - Category : Demystifying Medicine
- The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.
For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/
NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Emerging Infections: A Perpetual Challenge and Removing Agents from the Blood Supply
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- NIH VideoCast - Synapses, Muscular Dystrophy and Schizophrenia
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- - Lin Mei, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University (2018/01/10)
- - Category : Neuroscience
- NIH Neuroscience Series Seminar
The brain contains billions of nerve cells, or neurons, which receive and integrate signals from the environment, and which govern the body`s responses. Nervous system activity is made possible by synapses, contacts formed either between neurons or between a neuron and a target cell. Synapses are asymmetric structures in which neurotransmitter molecules are released from the presynaptic membrane and activate receptors on the postsynaptic membrane, thus establishing neuronal communication. As such, synapses are fundamental units of neural circuitry and enable complex behaviors. Research in Dr. Mei???s lab has focused on mechanisms of synapse formation, neurotransmission, and synaptic plasticity. Their studies contribute to a better understanding of these processes and development of potential therapeutic strategies for psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, autism, and depression and neurological disorders such as muscular dystrophy, spinal cord injury, and epilepsy
For more information go to https://neuroscience.nih.gov/neuroseries/Home.aspx
NIH VideoCast - Synapses, Muscular Dystrophy and Schizophrenia
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- NIH VideoCast - Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury in Women Workshop (Day 1)
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- - NINDS, NIH (2017/12/21)
- - Category : Conferences
- The purpose of the ???Understanding TBI in Women??? workshop is to bring together researchers and clinicians to identify knowledge gaps, best practices, and target populations in research that focuses on females and/or sex differences within the field of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Women are under-represented in TBI clinical trials, and the reasons for this disparity in enrollment need to be identified and addressed. In addition, pre-clinical studies have often excluded females or have used ovariectomized rather than intact animals, leading to an incomplete understanding of TBI in females. This workshop will focus on the existing knowledge regarding sex differences in TBI research and how these differences can be incorporated in pre-clinical and clinical efforts going forward. Deliverables from the workshop will include a White Paper that can be converted into a journal publication that describes the workshop, outlines the state of the science, and identifies future directions for research.
For more information go to https://meetings.ninds.nih.gov/meetings/Womens_TBI_Workshop/
NIH VideoCast - Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury in Women Workshop (Day 1)
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- NIH VideoCast - Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury in Women Workshop (Day 2)
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- - NINDS, NIH (2017/12/21)
- - Category : Conferences
- The purpose of the ???Understanding TBI in Women??? workshop is to bring together researchers and clinicians to identify knowledge gaps, best practices, and target populations in research that focuses on females and/or sex differences within the field of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Women are under-represented in TBI clinical trials, and the reasons for this disparity in enrollment need to be identified and addressed. In addition, pre-clinical studies have often excluded females or have used ovariectomized rather than intact animals, leading to an incomplete understanding of TBI in females. This workshop will focus on the existing knowledge regarding sex differences in TBI research and how these differences can be incorporated in pre-clinical and clinical efforts going forward. Deliverables from the workshop will include a White Paper that can be converted into a journal publication that describes the workshop, outlines the state of the science, and identifies future directions for research.
For more information go to https://meetings.ninds.nih.gov/meetings/Womens_TBI_Workshop
NIH VideoCast - Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury in Women Workshop (Day 2)
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- NIH VideoCast - DNA Damage Signaling to Immune Checkpoints
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- - Christopher James Bakkenist, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology, Julius Paul and Freeda Greenberger Chair in Radiation Oncology Research, Vice Chair for Basic Science, University of Pittsburgh (2017/12/21)
- - Category : DNA Repair
- DNA Repair videoconference
Acrobat Slides
NIH VideoCast - DNA Damage Signaling to Immune Checkpoints
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- NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: (1) Depression in Adolescents: Mechanisms and Treatment of a Global Health Concern and (2) Mechanism-based Treatments for Irritability in Youth
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- - (1) Argyris Stringaris, MD, PhD, MRC Psych Chief, Mood Brain and Developmental Unit, NIMH, NIH and (2) Melissa Brotman, PhD, Director, Neuroscience and Novel Therapeutics, Section on Mood Dysregulation and Neuroscience, Emotion and Development Branch, NIMH, NIH (2017/12/21)
- - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds
- CC Grand Rounds: (1) Depression in Adolescents: Mechanisms and Treatment of a Global Health Concern and (2) Mechanism-based Treatments for Irritability in Youth
For more information go to http://www.cc.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.html
NIH VideoCast - CC Grand Rounds: (1) Depression in Adolescents: Mechanisms and Treatment of a Global Health Concern and (2) Mechanism-based Treatments for Irritability in Youth
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- NIH VideoCast - Advisory Committee to the Director - December 2017 (Day 1)
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- - Office of the Director, NIH (2017/12/19)
- - Category : Advisory Committee to the Director of the NIH
- Advisory Committee to the Director
NIH VideoCast - Advisory Committee to the Director - December 2017 (Day 1)
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- NIH VideoCast - Advisory Committee to the Director - December 2017 (Day 2)
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- - Office of the Director, NIH (2017/12/19)
- - Category : Advisory Committee to the Director of the NIH
- Advisory Committee to the Director
NIH VideoCast - Advisory Committee to the Director - December 2017 (Day 2)
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- NIH VideoCast - Moving and Removing Neuronal Mitochondria
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- - Thomas Schwarz, Ph.D., Boston Children`s Hospital, F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center (2017/12/19)
- - Category : Neuroscience
- NIH Neuroscience Series Seminar
Dr. Schwarz lab is focused on the cell biology of the neuron and seeks to understand how nerve cells work, acquire their shape, and make their connections. They do so with the expectation that understanding how the cell functions can give them insight into the pathology of neurological disorders when those functions fail. Moreover, much as the shape and style of a building is constrained and influenced by the properties of the building materials, so too is the architecture and circuitry of the brain dependent on how these cellular components operate.
The research interests of Dr. Schwarz lab include 1) axonal transport of organelles, particularly mitochondria, by kinesins and dynein; 2) the development and structural plasticity of synapses; and 3) the trafficking of membrane proteins and exocytosis, particularly in neurons. Their inquiries into these fundamental processes have brought them in contact with translational questions of neurodevelopmental disorders and neurodegenerative diseases. The etiology of Parkinson`s Disease and peripheral neuropathies have become a particular concern of their group. Projects move back and forth between Drosophila melanogaster, mice, rats, and cell lines as the scientific question demands. They approach each question through a combination of genetics, biochemistry, electrophysiology, cell biology, and imaging.
For more information go to https://neuroscience.nih.gov/neuroseries/Home.aspx
NIH VideoCast - Moving and Removing Neuronal Mitochondria