News & Events
Displaying 593 - 608 of 706
Displaying 593 - 608 of 706
Magnets May Pull Kids With Sunken Chests Out Of Operating Room
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
July 30, 2012
A new method for repairing Pectus Exacavatum using magnets and an external brace, developed by Michael Harrison , a pediatric surgeon at the University of California, San Francisco's Benioff Children's Hospital , could provide an alternative to the surgery.
Deadly Liver Cancer May Be Triggered by Cells Changing Identity, UCSF Study Shows
Willenbring Lab
July 16, 2012
Intrahepatic bile duct cancer, a rare and deadly form of cancer, known formally as cholangiocarcinoma, has been assumed to derive from cells in the bile ducts of the liver. However, a n international team, led by Holger F. Willenbring, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Developmental and Stem Cell Biology in the...
Kids With Chest Wall Deformities Get Comprehensive Care at Clinic
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
July 09, 2012
Justin is being treated at the UCSF Comprehensive Center for Chest Wall Deformities, a new interdisciplinary pediatric clinic at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital that offers a wide range of interventions for children with all types of chest wall deformities, from common to complex. Justin has the most common chest...
A Life-Changing Offer From a Family Friend
UCSF Transplant Surgery
June 14, 2012
Liver cancer patients in need of an organ transplant often face a cruel reality -- while waiting for a deceased-donor liver, their cancer may worsen, spreading to other organs and making them ineligible for a transplant. With two children to raise and time ticking down, Amy Baghdadi was fast running out of options...
Hepatobiliary & Pancreas Service at UCSF
UCSF Department of Surgery
June 01, 2012
In July 2011, the Department of Surgery created a new Hepatobiliary and Pancreas Service naming Carlos Corvera M.D., a hepatobiliary surgical oncologist, as its Chief. The multidisciplinary program brings together faculty members from surgery, hepatology, medical oncology, anesthesia, radiology and pathology to...
UCSF Pediatric Surgery publishes CDH patient guidebook for iPad
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
May 25, 2012
UCSF Pediatric Surgery has published thier first interactive Patient Guide iBook for the iPad. This multimedia guidebook is a free educational resource for families who are faced with Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH). More guidebooks are being planned as well as epub versions for other ebook readers. The...
John Roberts, M.D. Elected President of the National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing's Board of Directors
UCSF Transplant Surgery
May 09, 2012
John P. Roberts, M.D., Professor and Chief of Transplant Surgery and the Organ Transplant Service at UCSF, has been elected President of the National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing ( OPTN/UNOS) Board of Directors. Roberts will serve a one-year term beginning in late...
Hanmin Lee, M.D. Selected as one of UCSF’s "Exceptional Physicians of 2012"
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
April 17, 2012
Hanmin Lee, M.D. has been selected as one of the UCSF Medical Center's " Exceptional Physicians of 2012". Dr. Lee is Professor, Surgery, Pediatrics, Ob-Gyn and Reproductive Health Services, Chief of the Division of Pediatric Surgery, Director of the UCSF Fetal Treatment Center, and the Surgeon-in-Chief of UCSF...
UCSF Patients Part of Nation's Longest Living Kidney Transplant Chain
UCSF Transplant Surgery
March 15, 2012
"Neither man had a donor who was a match. But each had a family member willing to donate a kidney to a stranger, allowing them all to be part of chain which would, in turn, give Baty and Cienfuegos kidneys from other strangers. With 17 participating hospitals in 11 states, the chain consisted of 30 people willing...
UCSF Transplant Surgeon Dr. Sandy Feng to Lead Consensus Conference on Kidney Paired Donation (KPD)
UCSF Transplant Surgery
February 18, 2012
In excess of 90,000 people are on the waiting list for kidney transplants, fewer than 17,000 receive one each year, and about 4,500 die on the waiting list. Even where a relative or friend is willing to donate a kidney, the kidney may not be a biological match. To address this problem, paired kidney exchange...
Surgeons Seek Kid-Sized Tools for the Operating Room
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
January 27, 2012
UCSF has received about a million dollars since 2009. That money has supported the development of tools to treat scoliosis, kidney failure and sunken chest, among other conditions. The pectus, or sunken chest device, is in clinical trials.
Avoiding Surgery in the Elderly
January 25, 2012
The New York Times reports in its "The New Old Age - Caring and Coping Blog" on the high-risk of performing surgery in older adults, even for otherwised routine operations. Even operations considered fairly routine in younger patients, like appendectomies, become high-risk for nursing home residents. “Something...
UCSF-Pfizer Collaboration Project to Fast-Track Treatments for Lung Cancer
UCSF Thoracic Oncology Program
January 09, 2012
A team consisting of Hassan Lemjabbar-Alaoui, Ph.D., Assistant Adjunct Professor of Surgery and principal Investigator in the Thoracic Oncology Laboratory and Alaoui Lab, and Steven Rosen, PhD, Professor and Vice-chair of the Department of Anatomy, are developing a novel treatment for lung cancer in a unique...
UCSF Vascular Surgery Creates Innovative Center for Limb Preservation
UCSF Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
December 06, 2011
The UCSF Division of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery announces the opening of the UCSF Center for Limb Preservation & Wound Care. Led by vascular surgeon Michael S. Conte, M.D. (pictured left), and podiatric surgeon Alexander M. Reyzelman, D.P.M. (pictured right), the Center, the first of its kind in the Bay Area...
UCSF Consortium Collaborates to Invent Medical Devices for Children
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
November 01, 2011
The UCSF "D'Vice Squad," a group of innovators from across the Bay Area, has drawn from diverse disciplines over the last two years to develop medical devices for children. Now the squad's hard work has been rewarded with a $1 million grant from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand its work over...