AuthorsPosts by Amiran Faikridze
Internal Medicine
A New Test Detects Head and Neck Cancer Years in Advance
A new study has shown that a blood test can detect head and neck cancer related to the human papillomavirus (HPV) up to 10...
Internal Medicine
Personalized Medicine in Action: Stanford’s New Drug for Rare Blood Cancer
Fewer than half of people with a subtype of Myeloid/Lymphoid Neoplasms (MLN) are alive one year after diagnosis. This statistic underscores the critical need...
Internal Medicine
Novartis’s Multidisciplinary Medical Platforms: Progress in Radioligand Therapy and RNA Interference
The traditional model of the pharmaceutical industry focuses on developing single-use drugs. However, platform-based approaches are gaining ground in modern medicine, as the limitations...
Internal Medicine
Revolutionary Breakthrough in Diabetes Treatment: New Therapy Works Without Suppressing the Immune System
Research by a group of scientists from Uppsala University in Sweden, published in the prestigious The New England Journal of Medicine, significantly changes the...
Internal Medicine
New US Research Partnership Promises 3D-Printed Kidney
Trestle Biotherapeutics, a company that works on 3D-printing kidney tissue, is starting a research partnership with Humacyte, which specializes in the large-scale production of...
Internal Medicine
Less Inpatient Care, More Outpatient Visits — 2024 Healthcare Statistics
The 2024 report by the National Statistics Office of Georgia (Geostat) provides a detailed overview of trends and results in the healthcare sector. In...
Internal Medicine
New Research Simplifies Endometriosis Diagnosis
Recent research shows that endometriosis is often accompanied by other conditions, including cancer, chronic bowel diseases, and migraines. Endometriosis, which affects about 10% of...
Neurology
A “Molecular Editor” Could Cure Prion and Other Neurodegenerative Diseases
Diseases caused by toxic proteins, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob syndrome (CJD), may soon become curable. A molecular editor called CHARM effectively "turns off" the disease...
