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전체 8345
  • Ethics Grand Rounds: Can Patients Be Involuntarily Detained When They May Pose a Risk to Others?
    • - Lawrence O. Gostin, J.D., Johns Hopkins University (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds
    NIH Clinical Center Grand Rounds

    For more information, visit
    http://clinicalcenter.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.shtml

    Ethics Grand Rounds: Can Patients Be Involuntarily Detained When They May Pose a Risk to Others?

  • Stars in Nutrition & Cancer - Mechanisms Leading to the Formation of Human Malignancies
    • - Robert Weinberg, Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    Stars in Nutrition & Cancer - Mechanisms Leading to the Formation of Human Malignancies

  • Anticancer Nanomedicines: Current Status and Future Opportunities
    • - Duncan, R.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NCI Nanotechnology

    Anticancer Nanomedicines: Current Status and Future Opportunities

  • Chasing Free Radicals: Use of Nitroxide Antioxidants in Cancer Treatment and Prevention (NIH-Only)
    • - James B. Mitchell, Ph.D., Center for Cancer Research, NCI (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NCI CCR Grand Rounds (NIH Only)
    Center for Cancer Research - National Cancer Institute Grand Rounds

    The primary educational objective of these seminars is to provide new information, ideas, and discussion about timely areas of research with impact on the field of oncology. A secondary educational objective is to elicit participation by individuals from all divisions of the intramural NCI, and thus facilitate more interactions among investigators and groups in the NCI.

    Chasing Free Radicals: Use of Nitroxide Antioxidants in Cancer Treatment and Prevention (NIH-Only)

  • TRACO: Clinical Trials - Chemotherapy
    • - Wigginton, J.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : TRACO

    TRACO: Clinical Trials - Chemotherapy

  • Translational Immunology Related to Cancer (Day 2)
    • - National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences

    Translational Immunology Related to Cancer (Day 2)

  • Translational Immunology Related to Cancer (Day 1)
    • - National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences

    Translational Immunology Related to Cancer (Day 1)

  • NIH History Day 2005: AIDS in the 1980s
    • - Harden, Victoria Angela.
      NIH History Day (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    NIH History Day 2005: AIDS in the 1980s

  • Demystifying Medicine - Coronary Heart Disease
    • - Richard Cannon, NHLBI and Bryan Brewer, NHLBI (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Demystifying Medicine
    The course includes presentation of patients, pathology, diagnosis and therapy in the context of major disease problems and current research. Primarily directed toward Ph.D. students, fellows, and staff, it is also of interest to medical students and clinicians. The course is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their application to major human diseases. Each session includes clinical and basic science components which are presented by NIH staff and outside invitees.

    For more information, visit
    http://www1.od.nih.gov/oir/DemystifyingMed/index.html

    Demystifying Medicine - Coronary Heart Disease

  • Homeostasis and the Single Neuron
    • - Murthy, Venkatesh.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Neuroscience

    Homeostasis and the Single Neuron

  • 1918 Influenza Pandemic and Lessons for the Future
    • - Taubenberger, Jeffery.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Emergency Preparedness and Biodefense

    1918 Influenza Pandemic and Lessons for the Future

  • Neutrophil Polarity and Direction-Finding
    • - Henry Bourne, M.D., University of California San Francisco (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    Innate and adaptive immunity depend critically upon the ability of leukocytes to form a distinct front and back (polarity) and to point the front in an appropriate direction (directional sensing). In differentiated HL-60 cells, a model for the neutrophil, polarity is stimulated by binding of a chemoattractant to a single species of receptor, but mediated by distinct signaling pathways. These pathways promote formation of different cytoskeletal assemblies, which oppose one another and separate into separate front and back domains. Directional sensing requires the neutrophil to interpret the extracellular gradient of attractant in order to orient polarity. We are beginning to apply a new set of tools to learn how polarity is biased in the correct direction by gradients of attractant.

    For more information, visit
    http://www.cmpharm.ucsf.edu/bourne

    WALS

    Neutrophil Polarity and Direction-Finding

  • Investments 301
    • - The NIH Work/Life Center (WLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    The final session in our "Investments" series covers advanced mutual fund comparison, advanced asset allocation, advanced risk, and advanced portfolio review.

    The NIH Work/Life Center (WLC), in cooperation with the NIH Employee Assistance Program, presents the ???Faces & Phases of Life??? seminar series for 2005.

    For more information, visit
    http://wlc.od.nih.gov/faces.asp

    Investments 301

  • Sharing Results of Genetic Research Tests with Minors
    • - Hirschhorn, Kurt.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds

    Sharing Results of Genetic Research Tests with Minors

  • How DNA Viruses Deal with Stress
    • - Jim Alwine, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    Today???s talk examines how DNA viral infections deal with the consequences of inducing cellular stress responses. During infection by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and simian virus 40 (SV40), cellular stress responses are triggered due to the stress of the viral infection, for example, the greatly increased metabolic and synthetic rates needed to produce new virions. The stress responses may be induced due to nutrient deprivation, hypoxia or the induction of the unfolded protein response (UPR), a form of endoplasmic reticulum stress.

    For more information, visit
    http://www.med.upenn.edu/camb/faculty/mv/alwine.html

    The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.

    How DNA Viruses Deal with Stress

  • Ethical Issues in International Research - Session 6
    • - Wertheimer, Alan.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Bioethics

    Ethical Issues in International Research - Session 6

  • Ascorbic Acid in Humans: Tight Control and Unexpected Consequences for Cancer Therapy (NIH-Only)
    • - Levine, Mark.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NCI CCR Grand Rounds (NIH Only)

    Ascorbic Acid in Humans: Tight Control and Unexpected Consequences for Cancer Therapy (NIH-Only)

  • The Role of Protein Phosphorylation in Nonhomologous End Joining
    • - Lees-Miller, Susan.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair

    The Role of Protein Phosphorylation in Nonhomologous End Joining

  • Bedside to Bench and Back Again: Understand, Treat and Prevent HSV and VZV Infections
    • - Stephen Straus, M.D., Director, NCCAM and Senior Investigator, NIAID (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    NIH Director Elias Zerhouni noted in the New England Journal of Medicine, ???Advances in our understanding of biologic systems and development of powerful new tools that can be applied at both the bench and the bedside ??? genomics, proteomics, transgenic animal models, structural biology, biochemistry and imaging technologies ??? offer unprecedented prospects for advancing knowledge of human disorders in a translational context. For 28 years, Stephen Straus has been an intramural scientist in NIAID doing bench-to-bedside research. He has achieved an outstanding record as a scientific leader, conducting his own basic, translational, and clinical research. His research interests are in human viral and immunologic diseases, including chronic fatigue syndrome, Lyme disease, AIDS, hepatitis B, genital herpes and chronic post-herpetic pain.

    http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dir/labs/LCI/mvs.htm

    WALS

    Bedside to Bench and Back Again: Understand, Treat and Prevent HSV and VZV Infections

  • Global Climate, Environmental Pathogens and Human Health: a New Paradigm
    • - Colwell, Rita R.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    Global Climate, Environmental Pathogens and Human Health: a New Paradigm