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Results 3481 - 3490 of 26721 for AIDS
  • News - 21 Mar 2005
    Men and women living in fishing villages across the world have been found to be between five and ten times more vulnerable to the disease than other communities.
  • News - 7 Mar 2005
    The Tulane National Primate Research Center received a five-year grant of more than $2 million from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to study the ability of some monkey...
  • News - 5 Mar 2005
    In a study, entitled Aids in Africa, compiled over two years, using over 150 experts, the UN predicts that nearly 90 million Africans could be infected in the next 20 years if the epidemic is not...
  • News - 1 Mar 2005
    Australian researchers have made a major discovery in the fight against AIDS, with the development of a novel, simple and safe technique for boosting the body’s immune response to deadly viruses like...
  • News - 28 Feb 2005
    A mammography aid designed to improve patient comfort, used together with additional training for radiology technologists, improves breast positioning and yields better image results for women and...
  • News - 27 Feb 2005
    Scientists from Tibotec Pharmaceuticals Ltd. presented data on several new compounds for the treatment of HIV/AIDS at the 12th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), held...
  • News - 22 Feb 2005
    Benitec today announced a collaboration with City of Hope (based in Duarte California) to develop a novel T-cell based therapy for AIDS patients.
  • News - 22 Feb 2005
    Prospects for a safe, effective AIDS vaccine are improving as researchers from the public and private sectors begin to collaborate in new and creative ways, researchers said recently at the 2005...
  • News - 20 Feb 2005
    A new study on whether the model used to identify patients most in need of a liver transplant can be improved upon found that measuring serum sodium in potential transplant patients helps to better...
  • News - 14 Feb 2005
    Researchers at Johns Hopkins have concluded that sudden, temporary spikes in the amount of HIV in the body, commonly called blips, do not always mean the virus is developing resistance to AIDS drugs.

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