News & Events
Displaying 625 - 640 of 716
Displaying 625 - 640 of 716
Rise in Deadly Skin Cancers Among Young Women is Linked to Wealth
UCSF Melanoma Surgery
May 10, 2011
"Sun tanning, apparently - at least among well-off young white women. In the United States, more than 90 percent of the most deadly skin cancers - malignant melanomas - occur in the white population. Among young women the incidence is rising most rapidly. The risk of melanoma already has more than doubled among...
Evolution of Critical Care Nurse Practitioner Role Within a US Academic Medical Center
UCSF Surgical and Critical Care NP Fellowship Program
April 16, 2011
A paper co-authored by Thomas Farley, RN, NP, ACNP-BC, co-Director of the Surgical and Critical Care NP Fellowship Program at UCSF, in the journal "ICU Director", discusses the integration of nurse practitioners into the Critical Care Medicine Service at UCSF Medical Center : Abstract: Nurse practitioners are...
UCSF Study Prompts Calls to Repeal Ban on Transplanted Organs from HIV-Positive Donors
UCSF Transplant Surgery
April 11, 2011
Last year, a team led by Dr. Peter Stock of UCSF reported on results from a large multicenter study testing the safety and feasibility of transplanting kidneys where both the donor and recipients were infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The results, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine...
SF Wraparound Project Plays Key Role in Defusing Gang Violence
San Francisco Wraparound Project at Zuckerberg San Francisco General
April 05, 2011
Missionlocal.org reports on a story entitled "The Gang War That Wasn’t" in which representatives of the San Francisco Wraparound Project played a critical role in averting violence after angry members of rival gangs converged on SFGH's Emergency Room. Did the Mission avert a gang war? At a community meeting last...
Campbell Receives Honors for Contributions as Trauma Surgeon at SFGH
UCSF Department of Surgery at Zuckerberg San Francisco General
April 01, 2011
"Andre Campbell, MD, a UCSF professor of surgery, was recognized on March 29 by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors for his outstanding service as a trauma and acute care surgeon at San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH)."
UCSF Liver Transplant Team Shares Expertise in Latin America
UCSF Transplant Surgery
March 23, 2011
"Previously, Uruguay had tried to go it alone, but high mortality rates soon caused doctors to shut the program down. After their initial visit, the UCSF transplant team, including anesthesiologist Claus U. Niemann, MD (pictured first), and surgeons Ryutaro Hirose, MD (pictured second), and Peter Stock, MD, PhD,...
Spina Bifida Study a "Huge Gamechanger for Fetal Surgery"
UCSF Fetal Treatment Center
February 09, 2011
For years, surgeons have been seeking ways of operating on babies in the womb, reasoning that medical abnormalities are easier to address while the fetus is still developing. Now, for the first time, a large clinical trial has shown that fetal surgery can also benefit infants with non life-threatening conditions...
Mother’s Stem Cells Likely Key To Treating Genetic Disease Before Birth
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
January 18, 2011
UCSF News reports on f etal stem cell transplantation, taking healthy cells from the bone marrow of a donor, and transplanting them into the fetus through ultrasound-guided injections with the goal of having the implanted cells, or graft, replenish the patient’s supply of healthy blood-forming cells. UCSF...
Transplant Service Chief Talks Living Donor Liver Transplants
UCSF Transplant Surgery
January 07, 2011
" John Roberts, M.D., chief of the UCSF Transplant Service and a leading expert in liver transplant surgery for adults and children, recently talked with Andrew Schorr of Patient Power about the risks and benefits of living donor liver transplant surgery. Liver transplants provide patients a chance for a longer...
Patient Tells New York Times He's Thrilled with his Sleek Neckline
UCSF Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
December 22, 2010
The New York Times reports on the use of neck-lifts, a plastic surgery procedure to improve sagging necks and double chins. The Times interviewed William Y. Hoffman, M.D. (pictured right), Professor and Chief of the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at UCSF for the story. NECKS don’t lie. Sagging...
Death of Richard Holbrooke Unique Teachable Moment for Aortic Aneurysm Screening
UCSF Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
December 14, 2010
Richard Holbrooke, U.S. Special Representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan died on December 13, 2010 of complications related to a tear in his aorta. A USA Today article suggested that "Holbrooke most likely was unaware that his aorta had ballooned into an aneurysm". Holbrooke, who was 69, died several days after...
Serendipitous Discovery of a Cancer Starter
UCSF Surgical Oncology Program
December 08, 2010
Then post-graduate student Eric Nakakura, M.D., Ph.D., working in the lab of Johns' Hopkins cancer biologist Barry Nelkin, was struck by how the migration of neurological cells to form the developing brain bore an uncanny similarly to the inexorable migration of invasive cells to distant sites in cancer metastasis...
Kidney Transplants Found Safe in HIV Patients
UCSF Transplant Surgery
November 18, 2010
"People infected with the AIDS virus can safely receive a kidney transplant, researchers reported on Wednesday. The finding, published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, is good news for people with HIV who are more prone to kidney disease, in part because of the drugs they must take to stay healthy...
Institute for Fetal and Neonatal Health 1st Annual Research Symposium
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
November 02, 2010
UCSF announces the formation of the Institute for Fetal and Neonatal Health symposium brings together clinicians and basic scientists involved in different aspects of development and fetal intervention.
Rescuing Liver Function in Patients at Risk of Liver Failure
Willenbring Lab
October 22, 2010
UCSF scientists have received two large grants from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to refine their human embryonic stem cell-based strategies for treating neurological diseases and liver failure. A team led by Mark Zern, MD, of the University of California, Davis, and including co-principal...
The Center for Bioengineering and Tissue Regeneration Opens A Newly Renovated Laboratory
UCSF Department of Surgery
October 21, 2010
The UCSF Center for Bioengineering and Tissue Regeneration, led by Valerie Weaver, PhD, Professor of Surgery, moves into newly renovated lab space. This new, fully equipped lab facility provides an ideal environment for UCSF researchers to carry out the center's initiative to better understand cancer and therefore...