• Identifying your values can prolong your life

    Studies have shown that individuals who have meaning and purpose in their lives live longer and are healthier than those without, writes Dr. Samuel Mathis for the Daily News. Mathis encourages his readers to come up with their own values and guiding principles that help guide and define their meaning and purpose.

  • Painting in the 17th century could be risky

    Painting in the 17th century was a risky business write Drs. Norbert Herzog and David Niesel. Research has found a number of different toxic compounds including arsenic, sulfur, tin and lead in the paint used at that time.

  • Vaccines keep Santa’s reindeer healthy

    Did you know that reindeer need vaccines to stay healthy? Drs. Richard Rupp and Megan Berman explain in their latest Vaccine Smarts column.

  • Joy is not just a holiday word

    Joy is an inside job, not based on external achievements, material goods, fame, power or wealth, writes Dr. Victor S. Sierpina in his column for the Daily News. Gratefulness and joy have scientifically demonstrated health benefits and it’s something Sierpina says he will be focusing on in 2025.

  • Brain scanning shows that gender and sex are different

    Recent biomedical research suggests that gender and sex utilize different areas of the brain and have distinct communication networks, write Drs. Norbert Herzog and David Niesel in their Medical Discovery News column.

  • U of Texas Medical Branch, Wyss Center partner to research neurotechnology

    Becker’s reports on the newly announced partnership between UTMB and the Wyss Center. The partnership aims to implement Wyss Center technologies at UTMB's new Moody Brain Health Institute to enhance therapies for neurological and mental health disorders, Becker’s reports.

  • UTMB doctors, researchers made historical strides in 2024

    The Daily News reviews some of the groundbreaking advances in health care and science that occurred at UTMB during 2024. Some highlights featured in the article include UTMB researchers logging $168 million in sponsored research, the first robotic uniportal lobectomy, a nasal spray designed to treat Alzheimer’s and many other exciting developments.

  • Link between environmental toxins and autoimmune diseases grows

    Autoimmune diseases occur when the immune system, which is designed to protect the body from infections and other harmful agents, begins attacking the body’s own cells, writes Dr. Hasan Yasin. Recent research, he writes, has highlighted the growing connection between environmental toxins and the rise of autoimmune diseases.

  • Hypothyroidism may be associated with increased medical, implant complications after TSA

    Healio reports on a UTMB study that found that hypothyroidism may be associated with increased perioperative and implant complications after shoulder arthroplasty. “This is a valuable finding which holds significant importance for both surgeons and hypothyroid patients, influencing their choices between shoulder arthroplasty and non-surgical options,” Jad J. Lawand, medical student at UTMB, and colleagues wrote in the study.

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