>

Research

  • x-ray of lungs with a suspicious spot highlighted in red

    Team explores fungal infection quandary in lung cancer screenings

    Benign lesions caused by a common fungus can mimic those caused by cancer in the lungs. A Vanderbilt research team is on the hunt for a non-invasive way for doctors to tell the two diseases apart. Read More

    Apr 18, 2019

  • Profile of Asian man in glasses smoking a cigarette

    Asian nations in early tobacco epidemic: study

    Asian countries are in the early stages of a tobacco smoking epidemic with habits mirroring those of the United States from past decades, setting the stage for a spike in future deaths from smoking-related diseases. Read More

    Apr 18, 2019

  • Concept of DNA molecule composed of computer imagery like numbers

    Researchers find high-risk genes for schizophrenia

    Using a unique computational framework they developed, a team of scientist cyber-sleuths in the Vanderbilt University Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics and the Vanderbilt Genetics Institute has identified 104 high-risk genes for schizophrenia. Read More

    Apr 18, 2019

  • Senior Kris Quah named a Knight-Hennessy Scholar

    Senior Kris Quah named a Knight-Hennessy Scholar

    Vanderbilt senior Kris Quah has been named to the second global cohort of Knight-Hennessy Scholars, which was selected from a pool of more than 4,000 applicants. The program awards full funding for postgraduate study at Stanford University to up to 100 graduate students each year in order to develop a community of future global leaders... Read More

    Apr 17, 2019

  • Silhouettes of businessman and businesswoman arguing standing by railing

    Enhancing feelings of connectedness helps people treat wrongdoers equally: Study

    Cultural norms can affect how we respond to mistreatment at work, but it is possible to shift that perspective to make it easier to call out wrongdoers who are closely related. Read More

    Apr 15, 2019

  • Army Futures Command, Vanderbilt ink partnership to encourage innovation, education for both

    Army Futures Command, Vanderbilt ink partnership to encourage innovation, education for both

    Army Futures Command and Vanderbilt University signed an agreement April 9 that links creative, innovative soldiers with top-tier Vanderbilt University experts so that ideas quickly can become useful products. Leaders from the two groups say this five-year education partnership agreement is a potential model for military-academic collaboration across the nation, not only on research and... Read More

    Apr 15, 2019

  • seated man in silhouette

    Indicators of despair rising among Gen X-ers entering middle age

    In 2016, a surprising decline in life expectancy was ascribed to "deaths of despair" among working-class middle-aged white men displaced by a changing economy. However, new research shows indicators of despair are rising among Americans approaching middle age regardless of race, education and gender. Read More

    Apr 15, 2019

  • An African-American male healthcare worker checks the fluid levels in the patients IV drip

    How bugs overcome host defenses

    Eric Skaar and colleagues have figured out how a common bug responsible for ventilator-associated pneumonia responds when starved of zinc, a metal it needs to survive, which may lead to new therapeutic targets for the dangerous infection. Read More

    Apr 12, 2019

  • 3D render DNA strands

    Discovery aids search for cancer biomarkers

    A report by researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center has shattered conventional wisdom about how cells, including cancer cells, shed DNA into the bloodstream. Read More

    Apr 12, 2019

  • Hand x-ray view on a black background

    Keeping bone in its place

    Jonathan Schoenecker, Stephanie Moore-Lotridge and colleagues have found a new target for treating a condition that causes bone to form in soft tissue, reducing mobility. Read More

    Apr 12, 2019

  • wire inbox overflowing with documents next to empty wire outbox

    The arrestin-GPCR connection

    Vsevolod Gurevich and colleagues have discovered new insights into arrestin proteins, which turn off a cell's environmental message "inbox." Read More

    Apr 12, 2019

  • photo of prostate x-ray

    Pathways of radiosensitization

    Austin Kirschner and colleagues are learning more about how the cancer drug enzalutamide combines with radiation therapy to treat difficult prostate tumors. Read More

    Apr 12, 2019

  • Rama Kumaran: Musical Talent and Mentor

    Musical Talent and Mentor: Rama Kumaran, BMus’19

    Rama Kumaran initially intended to study both science and flute when he came to Vanderbilt. He says he didn’t come expecting to know everything. “But I expected to do everything," he says. Read More

    Apr 11, 2019

  • Acrylic yellow and red colorful ink in water abstract isolated on white background

    Drug interaction causes hypotension

    A commonly used muscle relaxant can cause severely low blood pressure in patients already taking a CYP1A2 inhibitor, such as ciprofloxacin, find Cecilia Chung and colleagues. Read More

    Apr 4, 2019

  • Cheerful boy sitting on playroom floor, looking towards the camera, smiling, with electric wheelchair in the background

    Cardiac dysfunction in Duchenne’s

    Jonathan Soslow and colleagues have found more clues to why people with Duchenne muscular dystrophy are at risk for a certain kind of heart problem. Read More

    Apr 4, 2019

  • SOS written in sand on beach

    Cancer’s SOS

    Stephen Fesik and colleagues have uncovered more details about how a crucial component of RAS proteins, which trigger about a third of all tumors, work. This finding will help advance the discovery of new cancer therapies. Read More

    Apr 4, 2019

  • Helicobacter Pylori bacterium, medical illustration pathogenic microorganism in human stomach

    Cancer prevention drug also disables H. pylori bacterium

    A medicine currently being tested as a chemoprevention agent for multiple types of cancer has more than one trick in its bag when it comes to preventing stomach cancer, Vanderbilt researchers have discovered. Read More

    Mar 28, 2019

  • 3D Illustration of Lungs

    VUMC and TGen receive $6.1 million in grants to study deadly lung disease

    VUMC has received significant grants to study pulmonary fibrosis, a progressive and irreversible disease characterized by shortness of breath and a dry cough. Read More

    Mar 28, 2019

  • Cardboard boxes on conveyor roller in distribution warehouse, Delivery and packaging service concept background. 3d illustration (Cardboard boxes on conveyor roller in distribution warehouse, Delivery and packaging service concept background. 3d illus

    Unraveling endocytosis

    Jason McGurn and colleagues have uncovered new insights into the complex and highly coordinated endocytic trafficking mechanism, which is an essential part of many cellular processes including sodium resorption by the kidney and regulation of blood plasma sodium levels. Read More

    Mar 28, 2019

  • illustration of head dissolving into pixels

    Treatment resistance of mental disorders studied

    A $3.4 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health will fund Vanderbilt research on treatment resistance in patients with major depressive disorder and schizophrenia. Read More

    Mar 28, 2019