This content is machine translated Current status and future prospects Cell and gene therapies in modern cardiology Cell and gene therapies are considered highly innovative but also challenging approaches in modern cardiology. While early hopes for adult stem cells from bone marrow or skeletal muscle were largely...…
View Post 6 min This content is machine translated Rare diseases Crigler-Najjar syndrome The syndrome, first described by the two doctors Dr. John Crigler and Dr. Victor Najjar in 1952, is characterized by a congenital disorder in the metabolism of bilirubin. Existing treatment…
View Post 5 min This content is machine translated Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Progress in gene therapy and future prospects Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetic cardiomyopathy worldwide, affecting around 1 in 500 people. Current therapeutic interventions include lifestyle optimization, medications, septal reduction therapies and, rarely, heart transplantation.…
View Post 6 min This content is machine translated Hemophilia A and B Gene therapies show promising results The goals of hemophilia therapy are becoming increasingly ambitious. The aim is now to normalize coagulation as far as possible. For adult patients, gene therapy is now one of many…
View Post 13 min This content is machine translated Gene Therapy New ways in treatment Gene therapy, a long-time beacon of hope in medical research, is finally finding its way into the clinic to cure monogenetic diseases. This provides medicine with a new therapy that…
View Post 5 min This content is machine translated EHA Congress in Copenhagen New therapeutic options and improved survival in acute leukemias This year, the congress of the European Hematology Association (EHA) was held in Copenhagen from June 9-12. We report encouraging study results on the therapy of AML in elderly patients…
View Post 5 min This content is machine translated Tuberculosis, HIV and tropical diseases Infectious diseases that also affect Switzerland(er) Worldwide, around 53 million people die of tuberculosis, HIV and malaria within a year. The inhabitants of tropical and poor countries are particularly affected. But even the rich Switzerland is…