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Audio Reports

play audio Healing Process Found to Backfire in Lung Patients—10/31/2008
2:45 | 2.5 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

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.

play audio NIHSeniorHealth Website Featuring Parkinson's Disease—10/31/2008
2:06 | 1.9 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Parkinson's disease occurs most often among the elderly and the risk increases with age.

play audio Panel Advocates Improved Understanding of Hepatitis B and Screening of High-Risk Populations—10/24/2008
2:09 | 2.3 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

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.

play audio NIH Extends Its Commitment to Transformative Research with $138 Million for Director's Pioneer and New Innovator Awards in 2008—10/24/2008
2:33 | 2.8 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Forty-seven scientists have won funding from the National Institutes of Health worth some 138-million dollars over five years..

play audio Lowering the Risk for Type 2 Diabetes in Teens—10/17/2008
2:32 | 2.3 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

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.

play audio Gene delivers clues about How Cancer Cells Develop Resistance to Chemotherapy Drug—10/17/2008
2:00 | 1.8 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

In a National Cancer Institute study, researchers have discovered clues about how cancer cells develop resistance to chemotherapy.

play audio Preventing Excessive Weight Gain in Adolescent Girls at High Risk for Adult Obesity—10/10/2008
3:11 | 2.9 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

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.

play audio New Findings Indicate HIV/AIDS Pandemic Began Earlier than Previously Thought—10/10/2008
2:40 | 471 KB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

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.

play audio About One Quarter of U.S. Women are Affected by Pelvic Floor Disorders—10/03/2008
2:17 | 2.1 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Nearly 24 percent of U.S. women are affected with one or more pelvic floor disorders according to a National Institutes of Health study.

play audio Brain's Reward Circuit Activity Mostly Ebbs as We Age—10/03/2008
3:05 | 2.8 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Researchers have found that the brain's reward-circuit activity mostly ebbs as we age.

play audio NIDDK Launches Effort to Advance Study of Urologic Chronic Pelvic Pain Disorders—09/26/2008
2:49 | 2.6 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Urologic pelvic pain disorders such as interstitial cystitis and chronic prostatis have been assumed to be bladder and prostate problems. However, no other causes have been identified and there is no uniformly effective treatment for either disorder.

play audio Newer Antipsychotics No Better Than Older Drug in Treating Child and Adolescent Schizophrenia—09/26/2008
2:38 | 2.4 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Two newer atypical antipsychotic medications were no more effective than an older conventional antipsychotic for treating schizophrenia in children and adolescents according to a new study.

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This page was last reviewed on October 31, 2008 .
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