
Many clinicians believe that depression goes hand in hand with cognitive difficulties such as memory problems or difficulties concentrating and paying attention, but a recent review of nearly 20 years of literature conducted by researchers from UT Southwe Read More

Treatment of obesity in adolescents should be a priority because obesity portends other diseases, such as cardiac problems, hypertension and diabetes, later in life, said Dr. Livingston, director of UT Southwestern’s Clinical Center for the Surgical Man Read More
For some people, cold weather sports like those in Winter Olympic competitions can increase the symptoms of exercise-induced asthma. Read More
If you are inspired to start exercising after watching the Winter Olympics but aren’t enthusiastic about the bracing weather, you don’t have to wait for springtime. Read More
Ice skating isn’t just for energetic children or for the elite athletes competing in the Winter Olympics. It’s also an excellent hobby for women in their 40s and 50s, say doctors at UT Southwestern Medical Center. Read More

DALLAS – Feb. 5, 2010 – Nine students from universities across the country have earned a Sara and Frank McKnight Prize in Undergraduate Sciences at UT Southwestern Medical Center. The national competition honors top research projects submit Read More

Dr. Kim Orth, associate professor of molecular biology at UT Southwestern Medical Center, was honored today with the 2010 Norman Hackerman Award in Chemical Research for pioneering work focusing on the mechanisms bacteria use to cause disease. Read More

Prostate cancer cells are more likely to spread to other parts of the body if a specific gene quits functioning normally, according to new data from researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center. Read More
Pain sufferers sometimes intensify their pain levels by adding layers of mental anguish, say UT Southwestern Medical Center psychologists. But, by learning and using mindfulness – attending to the present without judgment – the physical pai Read More
Each year, millions of Americans make New Year’s resolutions to exercise more, lose weight or work on their personal relationships. By February, many of those resolutions have become distant memories. Read More