Damaris Christensen

All Stories by Damaris Christensen

  1. Health & Medicine

    Sex, smell and appetite

    A study of sexual dysfunction in mutated mice may help explain the connection between smell and appetite.

  2. Health & Medicine

    Hunger hormone gone awry?

    People with an inherited form of obesity caused by constant hunger pangs have higher-than-normal blood concentrations of ghrelin, a hormone believed to boost appetite.

  3. Health & Medicine

    Diabetes problems aren’t just old news

    Children who developed a type of diabetes that normally occurs only in adults suffer kidney failure, miscarriages, and death in their 20s.

  4. Health & Medicine

    Autopsies suggest insulin is underused

    Autopsy studies indicate that the insulin-producing cells of people with type II diabetes are damaged.

  5. Health & Medicine

    Chemical stops allergic reaction in tests

    Researchers have developed a protein that short-circuits allergic reactions in mice and in tissue cultures of human cells.

  6. Health & Medicine

    Shuttling medicines via blood cells

    Researchers have developed a way of encapsulating drugs in red blood cells, which can be used to deliver low doses of anti-inflammatory drugs to cystic fibrosis patients.

  7. Health & Medicine

    Standing Up to Gravity

    Studies in space can help physicians better understand a disorder in which patients get faint or dizzy while standing.

  8. Health & Medicine

    Learning from leprosy’s nerve damage

    The bacterium that causes leprosy directly damages a protective sheathing around many nerve cells.

  9. Health & Medicine

    What Activates AIDS?

    New studies suggest that a natural process called immune activation—the signaling that alerts immune cells of foreign invaders—plays a key role in explaining why infection with the human immunodeficiency virus progresses to AIDS more quickly in some people than in others.

  10. Chemistry

    The World of Wine

    Improved analytical instruments and powerful computers are now enabling scientists to better determine a chemical fingerprint for products from different wine-producing regions.

  11. Health & Medicine

    No benefit from screening

    Two large studies confirm that a urine test for a common childhood cancer—neuroblastoma—offers no benefit.

  12. Health & Medicine

    Virus gives cancer the cold treatment

    A genetically engineered version of a common cold virus appears to kill cancer cells without harming healthy tissue.