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New Skåne study to slow down type 1 diabetes
Published 20 May 2021 In type 1 diabetes, the patient’s own immune system destroys the body’s insulin-producing cells. Researchers at Region Skåne and Lund University are leading a new drug study aimed at halting the immune system’s attack and preserving residual cells in newly diagnosed adults. The new study, dubbed IMPACT, will last a year and be It is aimed at people between the ages of 18 and
https://www.medicine.lu.se/article/new-skane-study-slow-down-type-1-diabetes - 2025-05-23
New Thesis: Three questions to Nicholas Ford
Rewilding - good for the planet and people
Easter holidays and Student application period dates
Virgin birth - beyond the biblical legend
Biologist receives million SEK grant to support Baltic Sea cod stocks
Whisper transcription tool still available in spring term
Epigenetic changes to fat cells following exercise
Published 4 July 2013 Exercise, even in small doses, changes the expression of our innate DNA. New research from Lund University in Sweden has described for the first time what happens on an epigenetic level in fat cells when we undertake physical activity. “Our study shows the positive effects of exercise, because the epigenetic pattern of genes that affect fat storage in the body changes”, says
https://www.ludc.lu.se/article/epigenetic-changes-fat-cells-following-exercise - 2025-05-23
Lund University and City Of Helsingborg Enter into Strategic Partnership
The Ravensbrück Archive receives Memory of the World status
HAIDI Research Activities 2024
Research initiative explores defence willingness and democratic resilience
A new study has investigated the use of the body's own fat to relieve symptoms of knee osteoarthritis
Esther Calvo has successfully defended her thesis!
Training the trainer for team-based learning
Migrating roach have sharper eyesight
Back from Italy: 'I felt the potential of international and interdisciplinary work'
New guide makes it easier for researchers to do things correctly
Published 27 August 2024 Most researchers want to do things correctly and much of the time this is straightforward: you do not need instructions in order to understand that you are to write your own text and not plagiarise others. But not all rules and processes are as obvious and some change over time. In interviews with researchers connected to the HR Excellence in Research project, it emerged t
https://www.staff.lu.se/article/new-guide-makes-it-easier-researchers-do-things-correctly - 2025-05-24