Pharmacy Professor in Search of Treatments for Acute Kidney Injury uky.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uky.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (May 28, 2021) The University of Kentucky Alumni Association, Fayette County Cooperative Extension and UK Human Resources Staff Career Development are pleased to announce Job Club’s 2021 summer schedule. The purpose of the Central Kentucky Job Club is to provide a positive environment for motivated job seekers to meet, connect, share and learn. The group is free and open to the public and meets at 9 a.m. the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. In an effort to continue to provide Job Club while practicing responsible social distancing during the evolving COVID-19 situation, the summer schedule will be offered online via Zoom.
Video by UK Public Relations and Strategic Communications.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (May 7, 2021) If you ask Matthew Farmer what inspired him to pursue a degree in chemistry, his answer is simple:
“My childhood.”
Farmer, from Harlan, Kentucky, would often play outside as a child, exploring his surroundings and observing how things worked in nature. For him, it wasn’t enough to be told that something “just happens” he had to know the mechanisms behind
why it happened.
“I became interested in chemistry because it deals with the minutia of how things interact with other things, and also themselves,” Farmer said. “Chemistry is the best way to explain how things happen at the ground level, and then work your way up.”
Made with artemisia annua plants grown on Kentucky farms, ArtemiLife coffee is now being used in a unique Markey clinical trial.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 26, 2021) From Kentucky farms to University of Kentucky labs and now to Kentucky patients, the UK Markey Cancer Center has officially launched a unique new clinical trial to test whether Artemisia annua extract can prevent ovarian cancer recurrence. Markey will be the first site worldwide to initiate a cancer clinical trial that evaluates its anti-cancer activity in humans using ArtemiLife™ Inc. coffee products, which are made using the leaves of the Artemisia annua plant.
Roughly one in every 75 women will develop ovarian cancer, which often spreads beyond the ovary before detection. According to 2020 data estimates from the American Cancer Society, the predicted death rate for ovarian cancer is about 64%.
Drug synthesized from Kentucky-grown plant shows promise in treating ovarian cancer news-medical.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from news-medical.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.