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The annual retreat organized by the Vascular Biology & Therapeutics Program and Cardiovascular Research Center (VBT & CVRC) at the Yale School of Medicine took place at the Yale West Campus Conference Center on November 16, 2023. This day-long event provided a remarkable platform for faculty, trainees, and distinguished guest scientists to showcase their research.
- July 20, 2023
Scientists knew there was a link between aging and cancer but had little understanding of the key features of aging that may translate to cancer risk. A new Yale study explores a “fingerprint” in cells associated with cancer and aging to better understand if researchers can predict who is most susceptible to cancer.
- December 02, 2021
Chen Liu, MD, PhD, Chair of the Yale Department of Pathology, recently announced the 2021 Faculty Promotions. The 2021 promotion cycle included Natalia Buza, MD, Professor of Pathology, and Themis Kyriakides, PhD, Professor of Pathology, Paul Cohen, MD, Associate Professor of Pathology, Peter Gershkovich, MD, MHA, Associate Professor of Pathology, and Kurt Schalper, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Pathology.
- February 18, 2021Source: Yale Daily News
Rebecca Byler GRD ’21, a biomedical engineering graduate student at the Yale School of Engineering and Applied Science, received the Philanthropic Educational Organization, or PEO, Scholar Award last week. The Philanthropic Educational Organization grants the merit-based award to women in doctoral programs in the United States and Canada who demonstrate exceptional academic achievement, global experiences and the potential to have a positive impact on society through their work. Byler was selected as one of 100 winners selected from a pool of 928 nominees and received a monetary award to fund further study and research.
- February 09, 2015Source: Yale School of Engineering and Applied Science
Experiments by the Kyrakides Lab at Yale University suggest that arrays of ultra tiny rods made of complex alloys called bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) could be used to produce medical implants with lower risk of rejection, the researchers report.