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CLINICAL TRIALS, STUDIES, REGISTRIES, DATA

View the latest clinical trials, studies, data, and updates.

Black Men and heart transplant

Black Men May Be Less Likely to Receive a Heart Transplant than White Men, Women | According to JAMA Published Study

“Since the algorithm for matching patients with donors is changing across for all organs, this was a prime time to better understand whether transplant team decisions to accept a donated organ varied by patient race and gender,” she said. “We wanted to understand how the process of receiving a transplant after listing varied by race and gender, and the combination of the two, so that steps can be taken to make that process more equitable,” said Khadijah Breathett, MD.

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NYU/Brain: Brain Recordings in People Before Surgery Reveal How All Minds Plan What to Say Prior to Speaking

Led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the study results add to evidence that neighboring brain regions, the inferior frontal gyrus and the motor cortex, play an important role in such planning before words are said aloud. Both are part of the folded top layers of the brain, or cerebral cortex, which has long been known to control the muscle (motor) movements in the throat and mouth needed to produce speech. Less clear until now was how closely these regions determine the mix of sounds and words people want to say aloud, the authors report.

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Auxilius Pharma Announces Top-line Results of its First-in-Human Clinical Study into the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Tolerability of Antianginal AUX-001

AUX-001 is an innovative, once-daily, extended-release formulation of Nicorandil. For decades, immediate-release, twice daily Nicorandil has been a cornerstone treatment for chronic angina symptoms outside the US, distinguished by its dual mechanism of action that targets both the micro- and macrovascular coronary artery flow bed, and providing sustained angina symptom relief without the common issue of tachyphylaxis seen with other anti-anginal vasodilators like long-acting nitrates. AUX-001 offers efficacy comparable to conventional anti-anginal medications such as beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and long-acting nitrates while also potentially enhancing control of the underlying coronary disease and reducing angina related hospitalizations.

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