stanford medicine

 ARCHIVES  

SUMMER
09
main image special report

Pure science

Has the test tube lost its appeal?

Summer 2009

“A half a century ago, biochemistry was pure basic science. But now we can apply these very fundamental principles and tools to attack real clinical problems.”

BACK ISSUES

Online versions of the magazine from 1999 to present are still accessible. BACK ISSUES »

vr

Subscribe to Stanford Medicine

vr

up front

Prevent the stent

Doctors may be implanting too many artery-opening stents and could improve patient outcomes — and ultimately save lives — if they did more in-depth measurements of blood flow in the vessels to the heart. MORE . . .

Life blood

A new technique neatly sidesteps a major barrier to creating organs from stem cells: the lack of a reliable blood supply for the developing structure. MORE . . .

Do ask, do tell

Every time he goes to a new doctor, Mitchell Lunn faces the question: Should he tell his doctor he’s gay? MORE . . .

The chatterbox

People with a genetic condition called Williams syndrome are famously gregarious. Scientists, looking carefully at brain function in such individuals, think they may now have a better understanding of why this is so. MORE . . .

Woof woof wolf

Slipping through trees or across snow, the wolf has glided into legend on paws of white, gray or — in North America — even black. This last group owes an unexpected debt to the cousins of the domestic dog, say medical school researchers. MORE . . .

Precision warfarin

Scientists have taken a small but important step toward folding a patient’s genetic profile into doctors’ everyday practice. MORE . . .

more departments

Letter from the Dean

Building on basic science

THE BACKSTORY

Chain reaction

©2009 Stanford University  |  Terms of Use  |  About Us
POWERED BY IRT