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Major NIH study seeks to understand unusual forms of diabetes – Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis

Getty images Most diabetes patients have either type 1, which is managed with insulin injections, or type 2, treated with other medications. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis are part of a national research network aiming to discover rare forms of diabetes as a first step toward providing more effective treatments for forms of the disorder that don t fit neatly into either type 1 or type 2. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis is part of a national research network aiming to discover rare forms of diabetes as a first step toward providing more effective treatments. Most patients diagnosed with diabetes have either type 1, which is managed with insulin injections because patients can’t make their own insulin, or type 2, in which patients either don’t make enough insulin or don’t respond well to the insulin their bodies produce. People with type 2 diabetes are treated with medications.

Algorithm analyzes mammograms, signals need for more breast cancer screening | The Source

New software could facilitate more consistent assessment of cancer risk Breast tissue can range from almost entirely fatty (left) to dense (right). Since both healthy but dense breast tissue and cancerous tissue appear light on mammograms, women with dense breasts may need additional or alternative screening to detect breast cancer. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Whiterabbit.ai have developed a software that assesses breast density and can help identify women who could benefit from additional screening. (Image: Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology) February 2, 2021 SHARE Not only does dense breast tissue increase the chance that a woman will develop breast cancer, the tissue creates white shadows on mammograms, obscuring the images and making it harder for doctors to identify potentially cancerous growths.

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