Highlights
A collection of news and information related to Pathology published by this site and its partners.
Displaying items 1-12 of 220
» View wdbj7.com items only
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11-19
Next >
-
Frozen pizza purchase pays off in a big way
South Bend TribuneMark Howie, of South Bend, recently had to make a decision about what to do for dinner. His wife, Molly, had a nephew’s ballgame to attend. He had to fly solo through cuisine-land. So he went to CVS, 51467 U.S. 31 North, to pick up a frozen pizza...Tags: CVS Corp., Colleges and Universities, Indiana University, Vietnam War (1955-1975), University of Maryland, College Park
-
Saying no to surgery
Thom McDaniels is no stranger to surgery. As a longtime athlete and high school football coach, he's spent years putting his knees through the wringer. After injuring his right knee again during football practice, he was told by an orthopedic surgeon that...
Tags: Medical Specialization, Health and Medical Professionals, General Practitioners, Internal Medicine, Medical Procedures and Tests
-
Field trial results released
BROOKINGS - During the 2012 growing season, SDSU Extension staff researched the effectiveness of fungicide seed treatments, cultural controls and foliar fungicides to manage plant diseases. The results are now available for growers to review at iGrow.org....Tags: Plant Diseases, Medical Specialization, Trials, Research
-
Dr. Jerome L. Sullivan III: Pathologist conceived of 'iron hypothesis'
Dr. Jerome L. Sullivan III, the pathologist who first theorized of a link between heart disease and iron levels in the blood, died Friday of complications from diabetes. He was 68. Sullivan, a physician, scientist and professor, was recognized around...Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, People (magazine), Diseases and Illnesses, Heart Disease, Colleges and Universities
-
DNA test planned for human remains
MICHIGAN CITY -- Authorities are hoping science can shed light on the identity of human remains found in a wooded area west of Michigan City. LaPorte County Chief Deputy Coroner Mark Huffman said Monday that samples from the decomposed remains have...Tags: Medical Specialization
-
Human remains to be scientifically tested
WSBT-TV CorrespondentMICHIGAN CITY -- Authorities are hoping science can shed light on the identity of human remains found in a wooded area west of Michigan City. La Porte County Chief Deputy Coroner Mark Huffman said Monday samples from the decomposed remains have been...Tags: Medical Specialization
-
Forensic pathologist masters kuchen
I went to Eureka last week to write a story on the new four-plex there and stopped into the Kuchen Factory for a business question-and-answer story on this page. I was expecting to meet an owner with a German from Russia heritage who probably had...Tags: New York City, Police Investigations, Russia, Medical Specialization, Manhattan (New York City)
-
Impatiens disease changing American gardens
Chicago-area gardeners face a whole new landscape this spring and summer, one without a longtime favorite. Over the last two years, a fungal disease has devastated America's impatiens beds. Downy mildew was reported in Illinois and 35 other states...
Tags: Guinea, Weather, The Home Depot, Syngenta AG, Weather Reports
-
Circumcision study supports HIV theory
Circumcision is known to reduce a man's risk of HIV infection by at least half, but scientists don't know why. A new study offers support for the theory that removing the foreskin deprives troublesome bacteria of a place to live, leaving the immune system...
Tags: HIV, Viral Diseases and Infections, Medical Specialization, City of Hope, Health and Safety at School
-
Supreme Court seems opposed to granting patents on human genes
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court took up a deceptively simple question in a case brought by breast cancer patients and medical researchers: Are human genes patentable? The answer appeared to be "no" during Monday's oral arguments. The justices...
Tags: University of California, Los Angeles, Lawyers, Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks, Medical Specialization, Breast Cancer
-
As Navy rape case unravels, questions of homicide appear
The night began like many at Boorda Hall, a five-story barracks at Naval Station Great Lakes, the Navy's premier training base on the shore of Lake Michigan in Illinois. Somebody announced a party, and the hard drinking and beer pong began. A 21-year-...Tags: Weaponry, Sex Crimes, Suicide, Medical Specialization, Sexual Assault
-
Dr. Lorenz E. and Anastasia U. Zimmerman
Dr. Lorenz E. Zimmerman, the founder of modern ophthalmic pathology, who spent his nearly 60-year career studying diseases of the eye, died March 16 of complications from an infection at the Blakehurst retirement community in Towson. He was 92.
His wife...Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Heart Failure, Nursing, Awards and Prizes, Pittsburgh
May 19, 2013
|Column| South Bend Tribune
May 10, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 10, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
May 6, 2013
|Story| Orlando Sentinel
May 7, 2013
|Story| South Bend Tribune
May 6, 2013
|Story| WSBT-TV
May 2, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
Apr 22, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Apr 15, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 16, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 7, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 30, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Original site for Pathology topic gallery.