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Penn-Rochester Study Identifies a Novel Way to Deliver Drugs to Control Dental Plaque

Penn-Rochester Study Identifies a Novel Way to Deliver Drugs to Control Dental Plaque

Therapeutic agents intended to reduce dental plaque and prevent tooth decay are often removed by saliva and the act of swallowing before they can take effect. But a team of researchers has developed a way to keep the drugs from being washed away.

Katherine Unger Baillie , Peter Iglinski

Penn Celebrates National Public Health Week

Penn Celebrates National Public Health Week

Penn's health schools are celebrating National Public Health Week by featuring stories that highlight public health efforts across the University. Follow along on Twitter at ‪#‎PennOneHealth‬. ***

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Researchers Use ‘Soft’ Nanoparticles to Model Behavior at Interfaces

Penn Researchers Use ‘Soft’ Nanoparticles to Model Behavior at Interfaces

Where water and oil meet, a two-dimensional world exists. This interface presents a potentially useful set of properties for chemists and engineers, but getting anything more complex than a soap molecule to stay there and behave predictably remains a challenge.   

Evan Lerner

Penn Team Discovers New Liquid Crystal Configurations

Penn Team Discovers New Liquid Crystal Configurations

Oil-based liquid crystals are ubiquitous; a deep understanding of their properties is behind the displays found in most computer monitors, televisions and smartphones. Water-based liquid crystals are less well understood, though their biocompatibility makes them a potential candidate for a variety of biological and medical applications. 

Evan Lerner

Swimming Algae Offer Penn Researchers Insights Into Living Fluid Dynamics

Swimming Algae Offer Penn Researchers Insights Into Living Fluid Dynamics

 By Madeleine Stone  @themadstoneNone of us would be alive if sperm cells didn’t know how to swim, or if the cilia in our lungs couldn’t prevent fluid buildup. But we know very little about the dynamics of so-called “living fluids,” those containing cells, microorganisms or other biological structures.

Evan Lerner

New Penn Program Studies the Body’s Cells, One By One

New Penn Program Studies the Body’s Cells, One By One

By Sarah Welsh Cancer starts with a single cell going haywire. What is it about that one cell that makes it different from the rest, setting it on a path of destruction? A new program at the University of Pennsylvania may help find an answer to that and many other questions.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Vet Team Points to New Colon Cancer Culprit

Penn Vet Team Points to New Colon Cancer Culprit

Colon cancer is a heavily studied disease — and for good reason. It is one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and its numbers are on the rise, from 500,000 deaths in 1990 to 700,000 in 2010.

Katherine Unger Baillie