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Aug 10, 2022 | UCI School of Medicine
New UCI-led research reveals the circadian clock influences cell growth, metabolism and tumor progression
Study illustrates how both genetic and environmental disruption of the circadian clock can drive colorectal cancer progression
Jul 29, 2022 | UCI News
Precision health perspectives
Alpesh Amin discusses how utilizing health data can lead to the very best care and chance for good health
Jul 18, 2022 | UCI News
What gene changes and blood could tell us about the opioid crisis
UCI scientists win $3.5 million grant for bold addiction research
Jul 13, 2022 | UCI News
Research reveals how brain inflammation may link Alzheimer’s risk, sleep disturbance
Multisite team included UCI, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Wake Forest University
Jul 06, 2022 | UCI School of Medicine
UCI researcher leads study linking ALS to immune and central nervous systems
Findings show promise of bone marrow transplants as novel treatment approach
Jun 26, 2022 | UCI School of Medicine
New UCI-led study reveals characteristics of stable Vitiligo skin disease
Discovery may lead to new treatments to reduce inflammation and promote repigmentation.
Jun 22, 2022 | UCI School of Medicine
UCI neuroscientists create maps of the brain after traumatic brain injury
Findings shed new light on memory and epilepsy. Dr. Robert Hunt and PhD student Alexa Tierno from the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology were involved in this study.
Jun 07, 2022 | UCI News
UCI wins 5-year, $14M NIH grant to study brain circuits susceptible to aging, Alzheimer’s disease
Findings will advance development of better early diagnostic tools, new treatment strategies
Jun 02, 2022 | UCI News
UCI research finds parents’ unpredictable behavior may impair optimal brain circuit formation
Disrupted development increases vulnerability to mental illness, substance abuse
May 31, 2022 | UCI School of Medicine
New UCI-led study finds that your genetic sex determines the way your muscle “talks” to other tissues in your body
A new University of California, Irvine-led study identifies sex-specific circuits of muscle signaling to other tissues and that the organs and processes muscle impacts are markedly different between males and females.