Search

Showing 1 - 24 of 26 results

Previous| 1 | 2 |Next


Scientists Discover a New Hormone that Can Build Strong Bones News

Scientists Discover a New Hormone that Can Build Strong Bones

A newly discovered hormone that keeps the bones of breastfeeding women strong could also help bone fractures heal and treat osteoporosis in the broader population.
Prostate Cancer Test Is Missing Early Disease in Transgender Women News

Prostate Cancer Test Is Missing Early Disease in Transgender Women

Transgender women on hormone therapy tend to skew artificially low on prostate cancer screening tests, which may give false reassurance and delay diagnosis and treatment, reports a new study led by UC San Francisco.
Algorithm Improves Blood Sugar Control in Hospitalized Patients News

Algorithm Improves Blood Sugar Control in Hospitalized Patients

Controlling blood sugar in the hospital setting is challenging for a variety of reasons including inconsistent caloric intake, changes in kidney and liver function, surgery, infections, and limitations in labor-intensive glucose monitoring and insulin administration.
UCSF Research Vital to First Drug for Deadly Bone Disease News

UCSF Research Vital to First Drug for Deadly Bone Disease

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently approved palovarotene (Sohonos) as the first treatment for fibrodysplasia ossifcans progressiva (FOP), a severely disabling condition that causes abnormal bone formation in place of soft and connective tissues.
Researchers Identify New Glucose Control Target That Could Lead to Novel Therapeutic Approaches News

Researchers Identify New Glucose Control Target That Could Lead to Novel Therapeutic Approaches

A 2017 study co-led by UCSF researchers found that a high-fat diet (HFD) is associated with the accumulation of inflammatory cells called microglia in the hypothalamus, which in turn increases the susceptibility of mice to overeat and gain excess weight.
Can What Works to Treat Cancer Work for Diabetes? News

Can What Works to Treat Cancer Work for Diabetes?

To live with type 1 diabetes is to be ruled by relentless routine. Food must be carefully monitored, and the only treatment, subcutaneous insulin, is burdensome...
New Hypoparathyroidism Guidelines and Emerging PTH Replacement Therapies for Improved Patient Outcomes News

New Hypoparathyroidism Guidelines and Emerging PTH Replacement Therapies for Improved Patient Outcomes

New guidelines from the Second International Workshop on the Evaluation and Management of Hypoparathyroidism provide clinicians with the latest evidence-based recommendations for the prevention, diagnosis and management of this rare disease.
Low-Risk Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Case Studies: Patient-Centered Approaches to Treatment News

Low-Risk Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Case Studies: Patient-Centered Approaches to Treatment

A 2022 UCSF study found that, since publication of the 2015 American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines, surgeons nationwide are performing more thyroid lobectomies for low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) proportional to other thyroid surgeries for the condition.
UCSF Internal Medicine Specialist Celebrated for Diabetes Epidemiology Research News

UCSF Internal Medicine Specialist Celebrated for Diabetes Epidemiology Research

Alka M. Kanaya, MD, UC San Francisco primary care physician and researcher, has been honored with the 2023 Kelly West Award for Outstanding Achievement in Epidemiology from the American Diabetes Association (ADA).
Incidental Thyroid Nodules: Benign Bump or Big Deal? Video

Incidental Thyroid Nodules: Benign Bump or Big Deal?

A lump on the thyroid is a common finding in both physical exams and imaging studies, but the significance varies greatly.
UCSF Research Instrumental in Approval of Breakthrough Diabetes Therapy News

UCSF Research Instrumental in Approval of Breakthrough Diabetes Therapy

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently approved the use of a new drug Teplizumab, an immunotherapy drug which has been shown to significantly delay the onset of type 1 diabetes.
Autoantibody for Acquired Lipodystrophy Identified, Bringing Hope for Therapeutics News

Autoantibody for Acquired Lipodystrophy Identified, Bringing Hope for Therapeutics

UCSF investigators have found an autoantibody biomarker for acquired lipodystrophy, paving the way for novel treatment options for this complex condition, which causes adipose tissue loss and metabolic complications.
New Research Linking Type 1 Diabetes to Genetic Mutations May Lead to Precision Medicine News

New Research Linking Type 1 Diabetes to Genetic Mutations May Lead to Precision Medicine

UCSF researchers have discovered specific genetic mutations that can cause type 1 diabetes. This groundbreaking work could result in effective precision treatments for patients.
UCSF Case Study: Same-Day Discharge After Pheochromocytoma Removal News

UCSF Case Study: Same-Day Discharge After Pheochromocytoma Removal

San Francisco endocrine surgeon Sanziana Roman, MD, performed a posterior retroperitoneoscopic adrenalectomy (PRA) to remove a pheochromocytoma. This approach enabled the patient to be discharged home within hours of surgery and avoid prolonged hospitalization, thereby minimizing COVID-19 risk.
Activating Immune Surveillance Mechanisms Shows Promise for Treating Diabetes and Pulmonary Fibrosis News

Activating Immune Surveillance Mechanisms Shows Promise for Treating Diabetes and Pulmonary Fibrosis

Researchers at UC San Francisco recently found that activating invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells eliminated inflammatory senescent cells associated with chronic diseases in vivo. In the study, obese mice showed improved glucose control and mice with pulmonary fibrosis had decreased lung fibrosis and increased survival.
Handling Hypothyroidism: Management Basics and Pearls Video

Handling Hypothyroidism: Management Basics and Pearls

Get more comfortable assessing patients for this common disorder, determining whether treatment is appropriate and initiating levothyroxine therapy. Endocrinologist Chienying Liu, MD, illuminates such issues as when to treat subclinical hypothyroidism.
Virtual Inpatient Diabetes Management Tools Minimize COVID-19 Risk for Staff and Improve Patient Outcomes News

Virtual Inpatient Diabetes Management Tools Minimize COVID-19 Risk for Staff and Improve Patient Outcomes

Automated virtual tools for inpatient diabetes management in use at UC San Francisco have helped the medical staff deliver safe and effective patient care while reducing their exposure to SARS-CoV-2.
UCSF’s Julie Ann Sosa, MD, Named President-Elect of the American Thyroid Association News

UCSF’s Julie Ann Sosa, MD, Named President-Elect of the American Thyroid Association

Julie Ann Sosa, MD, MA, FACS, endocrine surgeon and chair of the Department of Surgery at UC San Francisco, has been named president-elect of the American Thyroid Association (ATA). She was previously the ATA’s treasurer.
Knotty Problems of the Neck: A Guide for Primary Care Video

Knotty Problems of the Neck: A Guide for Primary Care

Endocrine surgeon Wen T. Shen, MD, MA, offers guidance on everything from physical exams to presurgical workups, including key factors in risk assessment, when to order imaging (and what type), and how to pick up on hyperparathyroidism, an underdiagnosed disorder with wide-ranging symptoms.
Complex Drugs, Complex Patients: Navigating New Options for Diabetes Management Video

Complex Drugs, Complex Patients: Navigating New Options for Diabetes Management

Robert J. Rushakoff, MD, helps providers get up to speed on the latest drugs, explaining benefits, crucial caveats, and factors ranging from expense to nonadherence.
Accidental Adrenal Findings: How to Identify the Serious “Incidentaloma” Video

Accidental Adrenal Findings: How to Identify the Serious “Incidentaloma”

In this guide to working up adrenal masses, endocrinologist Chienying Liu, MD, clears away the confusion on screening and interpretation of results. She provides usable flowcharts and tables showing appropriate tests to order as well as guidelines on testing protocols that optimize accuracy.
The Incidental Adrenal Mass: Workup Guide for a Common Finding Video

The Incidental Adrenal Mass: Workup Guide for a Common Finding

A frequent guest star on abdominal images taken to assess other conditions, an adrenal mass may be benign or serious, such as pheochromocytoma – making workup essential.
UCSF MD Link: Web-Based Communication Portal for Physicians Document

UCSF MD Link: Web-Based Communication Portal for Physicians

Our web portal allows referring physicians to securely access their patients’ entire electronic health record, make online referral requests and communicate with our physicians directly and securely.
Know Your Thyroid: Here’s Help With Understanding Nodules and Cancer Video

Know Your Thyroid: Here’s Help With Understanding Nodules and Cancer

Thyroid disease is increasingly common. In this video, UCSF specialists clearly explain the basics of thyroid nodules and thyroid cancer, helping patients make sense of their treatment options, from monitoring to surgery to radioactive iodine.

Showing 1 - 24 of 26 results

Previous| 1 | 2 |Next