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Head of Department Professor Marie Arsenian Henriksson is featured researcher of the month at The Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation (Barncancerfonden).
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Nobel Week is soon to come, bringing together all the Nobel Laureates in Stockholm. One of them, Tomas Lindahl, one of this year's three Nobel Laureates in Chemistry, made many of his pioneering discoveries at Karolinska Institutet.
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A population of ‘stop cells’ in the brainstem is essential for the ability of mice to stop their locomotion, according to a new study by scientists at Karolinska Institutet. In an article published in the journal Cell, they report a brainstem pathway specifically dedicated to enforce locomotor arrest: its selective activation stops locomotion, while its silencing favors it. The study thus identifies a novel descending modality essential for gating the episodic nature of locomotor behavior.
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Sonia Lain has been appointed Professor.
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A mechanical valve prosthesis has a better survival record than a biological valve prosthesis, according to a large registry study from Karolinska Institutet. The finding, which is published in the European Heart Journal, can be highly significant, since the use of biological valve prostheses has increased in all age groups in recent years.
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Women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have high levels of androgens in their blood, which has been assumed able to affect fetal development during pregnancy. An international team of researchers led from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden has now identified a hormonal mechanism that might explain why women with PCOS run a higher risk of developing symptoms of mental ill-health, such as anxiety and depression, in adulthood.
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New research from Karolinska Institutet shows that hypersexual disorder – known popularly as sex addiction – can be linked to hyperactive stress systems. In a stress regulation test using the cortisone drug dexamethasone, men with hypersexual disorder showed higher levels of stress hormones than controls, a finding that the researchers hope will contribute to improved therapy for this patient group. The results are published in the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology.
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Jiří Bártek, Professor of Cancer Biology at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics researches the checkpoint systems that monitor cell division in our bodies. These systems are there to ensure that division occurs at the correct pace and to check the quality of DNA replication. Flaws in these controls can lead to cancer and affect ageing and immunity.
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Our sensitivity to harmful substances is determined by our genes. But such substances can also reprogram our DNA, so called epigenetic changes, in response to the environment. Karin Broberg, Professor of Environmental Medicine specialising in Genetics and Epigenetics at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, researches these links between heredity and environment.
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Karolinska Institutet's yearly installation ceremony was held Thursday October 15, 2015, at which new professors, adjunct professors, visiting professors and, not least, foreign adjunct professors were presented. This year's academic prizes and awards were also announced.
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Schizophrenia and other forms of psychosis cause terrible human suffering at a considerable cost to the health services. Christina Dalman's, Professor of Psychiatric Epidemiology at the Department of Public Health Science, work involves identifying the risk factors in order to understand how these conditions develop with a view to improving methods of therapy and prevention.
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Chronic pain affects large groups of patients and is very costly in terms of human suffering and medical resources. Eva Kosek, Professor of Clinical Pain Research specialising in Musculoskeletal Pain at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, researches the causes of chronic pain in the hope that her work will one day lead to new, more efficacious treatments.
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Olli Kallioniemi, Professor of Molecular Precision Medicine, wants to see today’s great life-science advances put to much swifter clinical use. Both as a professor and as the new director of SciLifeLab he is interested in new translational collaborations and the molecular classification of diseases.
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Lisa Juntti-Berggren is Professor of Experimental Medicine at the Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery and researches on diabetes, especially apolipoprotein CIII. She aims to find new drugs for the prevention and treatment of the disease.
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Patrick Sullivan, Professor of Psychiatric Genetics at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, is engaged in major international research collaborations to understand the genetics and biology of schizophrenia. He currently divides his time between the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA, and Karolinska Institutet.
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Bertrand Joseph, Professor of Molecular Cancer Biology specialising in Cell Death at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, researches signals at cellular level that determine if cells are to die or not. His work is relevant for many diseases, such as neurodegenerative diseases and cancer, in which cells take the wrong decision in this choice between life and death.
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How can the education process improve student learning, and what will it take for the necessary changes to actually advance from management decision to implementation? Lena Nilsson-Wikmar is Professor of Physiotherapy specialising in Education at the Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society’s and her research focuses on learning in higher education.
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