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Penn Vet Researchers Identify Effective Treatment for Niemann Pick Type C

Penn Vet Researchers Identify Effective Treatment for Niemann Pick Type C

Niemann Pick Disease type C, or NPC, is a disease most people have never heard of, affecting just one person in 150,000. Yet the disease is a devastating one. Frequently diagnosed in children in their elementary school years, sufferers usually die by the time they’re 20.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Mosquitoes Ramp Up Immune Defenses After Sucking Blood, Penn Vet Researcher Finds

Mosquitoes Ramp Up Immune Defenses After Sucking Blood, Penn Vet Researcher Finds

If you were about to enter a crowded subway during flu season, packed with people sneezing and coughing, wouldn’t it be helpful if your immune system recognized the potentially risky situation and bolstered its defenses upon stepping into the train?

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Grad Students Share Expertise Across Disciplines to Address Social Problems

Penn Grad Students Share Expertise Across Disciplines to Address Social Problems

“In today’s world, the stereotype of the nerdy scientist, by himself, looking at a microscope, is no longer accurate and no longer useful,” says Gabriel Innes, a third-year student in the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Vet-Berkeley Study: New Therapy Holds Promise for Restoring Vision

Penn Vet-Berkeley Study: New Therapy Holds Promise for Restoring Vision

A new chemical-genetic therapy restores light responses to the retinas of blind mice and dogs and enables the mice to guide their behavior according to visual cues, setting the stage for clinical trial in humans.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Collaborative Penn-Dresden Study Blocks Multiple Sclerosis Relapses in Mice

Collaborative Penn-Dresden Study Blocks Multiple Sclerosis Relapses in Mice

In multiple sclerosis, the immune system goes rogue, improperly attacking the body’s own central nervous system. Mobility problems and cognitive impairments may arise as the nerve cells become damaged.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn-led Team Pieces Together Signaling Pathway Leading to Obesity

Penn-led Team Pieces Together Signaling Pathway Leading to Obesity

As scientists probe the molecular underpinnings of why some people are prone to obesity and some to leanness, they are discovering that weight maintenance is more complicated than the old “calories in, calories out” adage.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Epidemiological Study by Penn Vet Professor Investigates Parasite-Schizophrenia Connection

Epidemiological Study by Penn Vet Professor Investigates Parasite-Schizophrenia Connection

Many factors, both genetic and environmental, have been blamed for increasing the risk of a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Some, such as a family history of schizophrenia, are widely accepted. Others, such as infection with Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite transmitted by soil, undercooked meat and cat feces, are still viewed with skepticism.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Vet Study Monitors Effects of IV Fluid on Circulation During Surgery

Penn Vet Study Monitors Effects of IV Fluid on Circulation During Surgery

Almost anyone who has spent time in a hospital is familiar with the routine checks of blood pressure and oxygen levels that serve as signposts of a patient’s overall health. But these measures only reflect the pulsing of blood through the large vessels, arteries and veins, not the smaller arterioles, venules and capillaries, which directly feed tissues and cells.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Vet Students Travel the World to Treat Wildlife

Penn Vet Students Travel the World to Treat Wildlife

Every morning this past July, Max Emanuel, a veterinary student at the University of Pennsylvania, would get up and drive to work. But Emanuel’s was no run-of-the-mill morning commute.

Katherine Unger Baillie