{ "items": [ "\n\n
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\n \n\n \n25 May 2019
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\n \n\n \n24 May 2019
\n \n \n \nDepartment of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, Dr Oliver Stone\u2019s paper \u201cParaxial mesoderm is the major source of lymphatic endothelium\u201d published in Developmental Cell reveals the earliest known step in the formation of the lymphatic vasculature.
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\n \n\n \n8 May 2019
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\n \n\n \n17 April 2019
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\n \n\n \n29 March 2019
\n \n \n \nCongratulations are in order for Professor Damian Tyler, who has been awarded a renewal of his British Heart Foundation Senior Fellowship. The award will fund a project designed to develop a new imaging approach, enabling doctors to diagnose heart diseases more accurately.
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\n \n\n \n5 March 2019
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\n \n\n \n8 February 2019
\n \n \n \nRDM scientists develop new method that uses a marine coral protein to visualise calcium flow through heart muscle fibres.
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\n \n\n \n5 February 2019
\n \n \n \nA study of over 96,000 UK men and women, of average age 64.5 years, has found that those with chronic conditions are spending considerably less time on physical activity than their healthy peers, so are missing out on its health management benefits.
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\n \n\n \n4 February 2019
\n \n \n \nDr Elizabeth Ormondroyd comments on recent NHS plans in The Conversation.
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\n \n\n \n4 February 2019
\n \n \n \nResearch carried out by the Department of Physiology, Anatomy & Genetics represents advances in vascular development knowledge.
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\n \n\n \n4 February 2019
\n \n \n \nResearchers in the Radcliffe Department of Medicine identify a faulty molecular brake that interferes with heart muscle\u2019s ability to contract and relax
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\n \n\n \n1 February 2019
\n \n \n \nStatin therapy reduces major vascular events, such as heart attacks and strokes, in people of all ages, including those over the age of 75, according to a new study published in The Lancet.
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\n \n\n \n23 January 2019
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\n \n\n \n14 January 2019
\n \n \n \nAdvanced MRI methods find this correlation even in 'mild' heart failure.
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\n \n\n \n2 January 2019
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\n \n\n \n20 November 2018
\n \n \n \nThe Mexican tetra fish can repair its heart after damage. The Mommersteeg Group's paper \"Heart regeneration in the Mexican cavefish\" suggests that a particular gene may hold the key to this inherent ability. If they can lock down exactly how this works, it may be possible to revolutionise how we heal damaged human hearts.
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\n \n\n \n13 November 2018
\n \n \n \nSmoking, diabetes and high blood pressure increase the risk of a heart attack more in women than in men, new research from The George Institute for Global Health at the University of Oxford has found.
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\n \n\n \n8 November 2018
\n \n \n \nOCMR study uses advanced MRI to find those most at risk
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\n \n\n \n8 November 2018
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\n \n\n \n23 October 2018
\n \n \n \nIn the late 1960s Miles Vaughan Williams, a member of the staff in the Oxford Department of Pharmacology and Fellow of Hertford College (1955-85), introduced a novel classification of drugs used to treat cardiac arrhythmias. This scheme has been very widely used around the world and has led to the development of new drugs that have saved countless lives. Our understanding of the control of cardiac rhythm has developed in that time and a group of cardiovascular scientists from Oxford, Cambridge and Beijing led by Associate Professor Ming Lei decided that the time was ripe to modernise the classification and to celebrate the centenary of the birth of Vaughan Williams.
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