
Blood clots, which made news recently when former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was hospitalized, also occur in otherwise healthy people who have none of the traditional risks. Read More

In the near future, scientists may be able to reproduce blood-forming stem cells in a laboratory, according to Dr. Sean Morrison, director of the Children's Research Institute at UT Southwestern. Read More

A good year for mountain cedar means a very bad year for North Texas allergy sufferers. Read More

Hundreds of emergency medicine experts from around the nation are in Dallas to share the latest life-saving advances. Read More

New data has led to numerous improvements including a 50 percent drop (over two years) for the most serious type of heart attack - the sudden blockage of an artery. Read More

Chemotherapy and other traditional cancer therapies do a great job of shrinking most tumors. But some cancer cells manage to escape and seed new tumor growth – a problem that has vexed scientists for years. Read More

Two studies by researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center could lead to new treatments for lupus and other autoimmune diseases and strengthen therapies for viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections. Read More

Stacy Cook, a 32-year-old mother of three boys, lived a life behind closed curtains, shuttered blinds, and dimmed lights as she suffered through agonizing migraines. Read More

The most fit middle-age adults are much less likely to develop dementia in their senior years than those who are the least fit at midlife, according to a new study by The Cooper Institute, Cooper Clinic and UT Southwestern researchers. Read More

A mother and her daughter are leaning on each other as they cope with cancer while receiving treatment at Simmons Cancer Center. Read More