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A gymnast performs a back walkover on the balance beam

From injury to backflips: A path to recovery for gymnasts

Clinical, Research
Gymnasts can create the illusion that gravity doesn’t exist. As they spring from one acrobatic skill into the next, they leave spectators little time to consider the strain they’re putting on their wrists, elbows, and shoulders. Nonetheless, a single back handspring exerts force equal to two to four times an athlete’s weight on their upper ... Read More about From injury to backflips: A path to recovery for gymnasts
Tagged: hand and upper extremity, injury prevention, orthopedics, sports injury, sports medicine
A vial with drops of liquid going in.

From ‘hit to vial’: Discovery and optimization of a promising vaccine adjuvant

Basic/Translational, Research
Many vaccines are only partially effective, have waning efficacy, or do not work well in the very young or the very old. For more than a decade, Ofer Levy, MD, PhD, and David Dowling, PhD, in the Precision Vaccines Program at Boston Children’s Hospital, have tried improving vaccines by adding compounds known as adjuvants to ... Read More about From ‘hit to vial’: Discovery and optimization of a promising vaccine adjuvant
Tagged: drug development, vaccines
A boy gazing out a window

Firearm suicides in children and youth: A state-by-state look

Data Science, Research
At a time when mental health problems are skyrocketing, a new study provides one of the most comprehensive state-by-state accountings to date of firearm suicides in children and youth. The findings, published in JAMA Pediatrics, are eye-opening — but could also help in crafting interventions. Lois Lee, MD, MPH, in the Division of Emergency Medicine ... Read More about Firearm suicides in children and youth: A state-by-state look
Tagged: mental health, policy, public health, research, suicide
A masked researcher at the lab bench pipetting, to illustrate idea of genome sequencing.

Making genome sequencing a first-line test in rare disease

Clinical, Research
Children with rare diseases often undergo years of medical visits and genetic testing before they get a diagnosis. Over the past few years, clinics have started to embrace exome sequencing as a first genetic test, skipping time-consuming testing of individual genes and gene panels and getting to a diagnosis faster. But exome sequencing doesn’t always ... Read More about Making genome sequencing a first-line test in rare disease
Tagged: exome sequencing, genetics and genomics, rare disease
A dendritic cell in the crosshairs.

Boosting vaccines for the elderly with ‘hyperactivators’

Basic/Translational, Research
As we age our immune systems start to flag, leaving us more susceptible to cancer and infections — and less responsive to vaccines and cancer immunotherapies. Going to the heart of the problem, Jonathan Kagan, PhD, a researcher in immunology at Boston Children’s Hospital, has identified a way to rejuvenate the elderly immune system. His ... Read More about Boosting vaccines for the elderly with ‘hyperactivators’
Tagged: aging, cancer, immunology, vaccines
Intestines and a brain, with a feedback loop between them, highlighting the concept of the microbiome influencing OCD.

The gut-brain connection: A new approach to OCD and tic disorders?

Clinical, Research
It’s natural for young children to use routines to help them navigate the world and for older children and teens to zero in on interests and hobbies. But if they veer into disruptive, unwanted obsessions or thoughts or the need to perform compulsive rituals, they may have obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). We know that OCD is ... Read More about The gut-brain connection: A new approach to OCD and tic disorders?
Tagged: diet, microbiome, neuroscience, research
Amar Majmundar and Nina Mann on a bridge connecting Boston Children's Hospital with a parking garage.

Two rising stars in kidney genetics: Nina Mann and Amar Majmundar

People, Research
A healthy, functional kidney must maintain a delicate balance of water, nutrients, and electrolytes so it can properly filter the blood and produce urine. That often makes caring for patients with kidney disease an exercise in chemistry and mathematics — an aspect of nephrology that attracted two young physician-scientists. Coming from different paths, Nina Mann, ... Read More about Two rising stars in kidney genetics: Nina Mann and Amar Majmundar
Tagged: genetics and genomics, kidney failure, nephrology, research rising stars
A person with pain hotspots with an immune cell and neuron in dialog.

A deeper understanding of inflammatory pain could reveal new solutions

Basic/Translational, Research
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen are the main go-to for inflammatory pain caused by wounds, infection, sunburn, arthritis, and other triggers. NSAIDs work pretty well, but chronic use can cause side effects, and they aren’t equally effective for all sources of pain. Could we identify a more effective, safer analgesic that doesn’t involve ... Read More about A deeper understanding of inflammatory pain could reveal new solutions
Tagged: cellular and molecular medicine, immunology, neuroinflammation, neurology, pain
A brain with hotspots highlighted, with squiggles suggesting seizures.

Can we prevent seizures in Sturge-Weber syndrome?

Clinical, Research
Port wine stains — capillary malformations on the skin — are the most visible manifestation of Sturge-Weber syndrome. However, up to 60 percent of babies with birthmarks in high-risk locations (forehead and upper eyelid) also have capillary malformations in their brain. Of these, 75 to 90 percent will experience a seizure before the age of 2, ... Read More about Can we prevent seizures in Sturge-Weber syndrome?
Tagged: epilepsy, research, seizures, sturge weber syndrome
A drawing of a heart with several mitochondria.

Mitochondrial transfer restores heart muscle — but how?

Basic/Translational, Research
Transferring mitochondria from a patient’s healthy skeletal muscle to damaged, ischemic heart tissue has been shown to restore heart muscle, increase energy production, and improve ventricular function. After pioneering preclinical work by James McCully, PhD, at Boston Children’s Hospital about a decade ago, cardiac surgeons led by Sitaram Emani, MD, have been testing it as ... Read More about Mitochondrial transfer restores heart muscle — but how?
Tagged: cardiac research, cardiac surgery, cell therapy, cellular and molecular medicine, heart, heart center, stem cells, tissue engineering, transplant

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