Skip Navigation
 

Audio Reports

play audio Intensive Glucose Control Halves Complications of Longstanding Type 1 Diabetes
—8/19/2009
03:31 | 1.2 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial was a landmark clinical study in people with type 1 diabetes, formerly called juvenile-onset diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes. Funded by the National Institutes of Health, it compared the effects of standard control of blood glucose with intensive control on the development of common diabetes complications. The study found that keeping blood glucose levels as close to normal as possible slows the onset and progression of the eye, nerve, and kidney damage of diabetes. Updated information shows improved long-term outlook.

play audio Delay in Diagnosis of Menopause-like Condition in Young Women Linked to Low Bone Density
—8/13/2009
04:12 | 3.85 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A recent study has found that a delay in diagnosing a menopause-like condition in women and young girls is linked to low bone density which may increase risk for osteoporosis and fractures later in life. The African-American and Asian patients in the study were more likely to have low bone density than were their white counterparts.

play audio Much Touted "Depression Risk Gene" May Not Add to Risk After All
—8/06/2009
02:34 | 906 KB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A range of factors led to the wide acclaim of a 2003 study suggesting a possible gene-environment interaction contributing to depression risk. This study had far-reaching influence on the field, including proposals by some researchers to market a gene test to the public, claiming to be able to predict a person’s risk for depression. However, despite considerable resources being invested in research building upon the 2003 study, attempts to replicate its findings—a key step in the scientific process—had inconsistent results.

play audio Well Water Should be Tested Annually to Reduce Health Risks to Children
—8/06/2009
02:49 | 2.58 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Private well water needs to be tested yearly, and in some cases more often, according to new guidance offered by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). Researchers at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), took a lead role in working with the AAP to develop these recommendations and draft a new AAP policy statement about the things parents should do if their children drink well water.

play audio Mapping Breast Cancer Genes
—8/06/2009
03:41 | 3.37 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

As scientists learn more about the genetic mutations that can lead to cancer, they are able to tailor patient therapy. They can also target people who are at high risk for cancer, so they can benefit from preventative treatments and lifestyles. Breast cancer has been a major focus of cancer genetics and prevention efforts.

play audio Army of Women
—7/29/2009
02:47 | 2:45 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

The Army of Women includes women from around the United States who participate in studies about breast cancer. The joint initiative between the Avon Research Foundation and the Susan Love Research Foundation started in October of 2008. The Army has already enrolled 300,000 women of all ages and ethnicities, healthy women, and women with all stages of breast cancer. Dr. Love spoke at the National Cancer Institute last week.

play audio Researchers Uncover Genetic Variants Linked to Blood Pressure in African-Americans
—7/23/2009
02:41 | 2:45 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A team led by researchers discovered genetic variants related to blood pressure in African-Americans, findings that may provide new clues to treating and preventing hypertension. The effort marks the first time that a relatively new research approach, called a genome-wide association study, has focused on blood pressure and hypertension in an African-American population.

play audio NIH and Wikimedia Foundation Collaborate to Improve Online Health Information
—7/23/2009
02:47 | 2.56 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

The National Institutes of Health and the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit organization that operates the Wikipedia® online encyclopedia, are joining forces to make health and science information more accessible and reliable. This collaboration is the first of its kind for both organizations.

play audio Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder Share Genetic Roots
—7/09/2009
03:15 | 3 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A trio of genome-wide studies—collectively the largest to date—have pinpointed a vast array of genetic variation that together may account for at least one third of the genetic risk for schizophrenia, a brain disorder that’s symptoms can include hallucinations, delusions and disordered thinking. One of the studies traced schizophrenia and bipolar disorder (an illness that causes shifts in a person's mood, energy and ability to function) in part, to the same neighborhood of genes.

play audio United States and the Republic of Chile Partner to Battle Cancer
—7/09/2009
02:52 | 2.5 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A new alliance between the United States National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Chile, aims to accelerate progress against cancer in Hispanic populations in the United States and Latin America by strengthening and expanding cooperation in a broad range of mutual interests, emphasizing basic and clinical cancer research, bioinformatics, data systems and informatics, and transfer of technology.

play audio Ask Your Health Care Team About Your Type 2 Diabetes
—7/07/2009
03:11 | 2.9 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

People with type 2 diabetes are faced with a serious disease that can lead to problems such as heart attack, stroke, blindness, kidney failure, and lower limb amputations. However, the sooner that people with type 2 diabetes are able to manage their disease, the better their chances are of avoiding or delaying these serious problems.

play audio Second Gene Linked to Familial Testicular Cancer
—7/01/2009
03:16 | 3 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Specific variations or mutations in a particular can gene raise a man’s risk of familial, or inherited, testicular germ-cell cancer, the most common form of this disease. This is only the second gene to be identified that affects the risk of familial testicular cancer, and the first gene in a key biochemical pathway.

play audio Prevention Program Helps Teens Prevail Over a Gene Linked to Risky Behavior
—7/01/2009
02:58 | 2.7 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Researchers developed a program called "Strong African American Families" to help rural African American 11-year-olds avoid such risky behaviors as drinking, smoking marijuana, and sexual activity. DNA test results showed some youths carried a gene found to increase the risk of substance use. Teens who had the gene but didn’t participate in the program were almost twice as likely to have engaged in the risky behaviors as teens who had the gene and took part in the SAAF program.

play audio Scientists Discover New Genetic Immune Disorder in Children
—6/26/2009
03:51 | 3.5 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Your immune system plays an important function in your health—it protects you against viruses, bacteria, and other toxins that can cause disease. In autoinflammatory diseases, however, the immune system goes awry, causing unprovoked and dangerous inflammation. Now, researchers have discovered a new autoinflammatory syndrome, a rare genetic condition that affects children around the time of birth.

play audio Sarcoidosis: an Overview
—6/26/2009
03:00 | 2.8 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

Sarcoidosis is a multi-systemic inflammatory disorder of unknown cause, and has no cure. Sarcoidosis affects people of all ages and races; however, it's more common among women than men, and among African Americans and those of Asian, German, Irish, Puerto Rican and Scandinavian origin. In the U.S., the disease affects African Americans somewhat more often and more severely than whites. Currently, there are several NIH-funded studies recruiting volunteers for studies on sarcoidosis.

play audio Low-Key Anti Smoking PSAs are More Likely to be Remembered than Attention-Grabbing PSAs
—6/18/2009
03:14 | 2.7 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

This study reveals that low-key and attention-grabbing anti-smoking PSAs stimulate different patterns of activity in smokers’ brains; and that smokers are more likely to remember seeing the low-key PSAs than the attention-grabbing ones.

play audio NIH Announces New Program to Develop Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases
—6/17/2009
03:36 | 3.3 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

The National Institutes of Health is launching its first drug development pipeline to produce new treatments for rare and neglected diseases. With a new program specifically intended to stimulate research collaborations, NIH is hoping to take the risk out of making drugs that are often less profitable.

play audio Study Finds Unexpected Bacterial Diversity on Human Skin—6/17/2009
03:41 | 3.4 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

The health of our skin—one of the body’s first lines of defense against illness and injury—depends upon the delicate balance between our own cells and the millions of bacteria and other one-celled microbes that live on its surface. To better understand this balance, National Institutes of Health researchers have set out to explore the skin’s microbiome, which is all of the DNA, or genomes, of all of the microbes that inhabit human skin. Their initial analysis, published recently in the journal Science, reveals that our skin is home to a much wider array of bacteria than previously thought.

play audio Citalopram No Better Than Placebo Treatment for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders—6/04/2009
03:21 | 3.1 MB |Transcript | Get RealPlayer | Right Click to Download MP3 File

A recent study has found that citalopram, a medication commonly prescribed to children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), was no more effective than placebo treatment for these children.

 
NIH Radio
NIH Radio en espanol

FREE MP3 audio reports from the National Institutes of Health, your reliable health information source.

Questions? Contact:
Joe Balintfy
NIH News Media Branch
301-435-7557

NIH Radio is a service of the Office of Communications & Public Liaison.
This page was last reviewed on August 19, 2009 .
National Institutes of Health - The Nation's Medical Research Agency U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Health Information Page NIH Grants News and Events Research Institutes and Centers About NIH