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Karolinska Institutet - English

Fatty liver more common in children of mothers with obesity18.7.2021 22:01:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

Children and young people whose mothers had a BMI greater than 30 during early pregnancy are at an increased risk of fatty liver disease. This is shown in a register-based study from Karolinska Institutet and Harvard University published in the journal Journal of Hepatology. As obesity rates increase also in women at a child-bearing age, more and more young people are at risk of developing fatty liver disease, the researchers say.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Immediate skin-to-skin contact after birth improves survival of pre-term babies26.5.2021 21:00:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

Continuous skin-to-skin contact starting immediately after delivery even before the baby has been stabilised can reduce mortality by 25 per cent in infants with a very low birth weight. This according to a study in low- and middle-income countries coordinated by the WHO on the initiative of researchers at Karolinska Institutet published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Frozen eggs and ovarian tissue helped women conceive children after breast cancer19.11.2020 16:00:00 CET | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

Women with breast cancer whose eggs or ovarian tissue were frozen had more children after their diagnosis than women who did not undergo fertility preservation using those methods before start of cancer treatment. That is according to a study by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden that is published in the journal JAMA Oncology. According to the researchers, the result highlights the importance of reproductive counseling and fertility preservation for women who are diagnosed with cancer at a young age.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Apgar score effective in assessing health of preterm infants2.7.2020 04:00:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

The vitality of preterm infants should be assessed with an Apgar score, a tool used to measure the health of newborns immediately after birth. That is the conclusion by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden who in a large observational study examined the value of Apgar scores for preterm infants. The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Pregnant women with type 1 diabetes are at risk of giving birth prematurely23.4.2019 08:40:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

[PRESS RELEASE 2019-04-23] Pregnant women with type 1 diabetes are at increased risk of delivering their baby prematurely. The risk increases as blood sugar levels rise, however women who maintain the recommended levels also risk giving birth prematurely. These are the findings from researchers at Karolinska Institutet and the Sahlgrenska Academy in Sweden, published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Cerebral palsy survey in Uganda fills knowledge gap26.10.2017 04:00:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

[PRESS RELEASE 2017-10-26] Cerebral palsy is more common and has higher mortality in Uganda than in high income countries. The underlying brain injury often occurs after the first month after birth, probably caused by malaria, a new population based study by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden and Makerere University in Uganda reports. The study, which is published in The Lancet Global Health, is the largest of its kind on cerebral palsy in Africa.
Karolinska Institutet - English

Most heart muscle cells formed during childhood12.6.2015 06:15:00 CEST | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

New human heart muscle cells can be formed, but this mainly happens during the first ten years of life, according to a new study from Karolinska Institutet. Other cell types, however, are replaced more quickly. The study, which is published in the journal Cell, demonstrates that the heart muscle is regenerated throughout a person's life, supporting the idea that it is possible to stimulate the rebuilding of lost heart tissue.
Karolinska Institutet - English

New knowledge about the human brain’s plasticity7.11.2014 07:00:00 CET | Karolinska Institutet - English | Press Release

The brain's plasticity and its adaptability to new situations do not function the way researchers previously thought, according to a new study published in the journal Cell. Earlier theories are based on laboratory animals, but now researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have studied the human brain. The results show that a type of support cell, the oligodendrocyte, which plays an important role in the cell-cell communication in the nervous system, is more sophisticated in humans than in rats and mice - a fact that may contribute to the superior plasticity of the human brain.
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