Research News

Brain represented as leaves on a tree being held by a trunk and branches represented as hands.
  • Shedding light on severe MS
    10/25/24

    UB studies of this rare form of the disease show that grey matter volume, not lesions, are key in severe MS and that novel tools can better assess them.

  • RSV, flu, COVID in kids
    11/29/22

    Infectious disease expert Oscar G. Gómez-Duarte talks with UBNow about the alarming surge in these viruses among kids and what parents can do to keep them healthy.

  • UB joins I-Corps Hub
    11/29/22

    The $15 million NSF program, based at Cornell, will foster innovation and accelerate economic development in Western New York.

  • Gore addresses intentional violence as public health issue
    11/23/22

    The Jacobs School alumnus was the keynote speaker for the Community Health Equity Research Institute’s annual research day.

  • Monitoring air pollution on Buffalo’s East Side
    11/23/22

    The EPA initiative aims to improve health outcomes in neighborhoods whose residents are more likely to suffer chronic, serious diseases.

  • Adapting concussion treatment to military
    11/18/22

    UB researchers have received a $4.8 million federal grant to launch a clinical trial that will take their protocol for treating concussed athletes and apply it to the military environment.

  • Study examines role of arterial stiffness in disease
    11/16/22

    Yongho Bae is exploring how changes in arterial stiffness elicit vascular smooth muscle cell behaviors that contribute to cardiovascular disease.

  • Krzyzanski named ISoP fellow
    11/15/22

    The UB pharmacy professor is being honored for outstanding professional and scientific contributions to the global pharmacometrics community.

  • Healthy tips for the holidays
    11/15/22

    UB researchers Katherine Balantekin and Mark Seery offer strategies for ensuring your holiday season is healthy, happy and stress-free.

  • Helping MS clinicians talk to patients about brain atrophy
    11/14/22

    Neuroimaging researchers, providers and people with MS developed novel guidelines on how to communicate about a devastating topic.

  • Study provides new understanding of pain disparities
    11/11/22

    Racial/ethnic disparities in pain prevalence are much greater than previously thought, according to UB medical sociologist Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk.
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