Hiding in plain sight
Even teens who aren’t especially thin could be dangerously ill from atypical anorexia nervosa, according to new research.
Even teens who aren’t especially thin could be dangerously ill from atypical anorexia nervosa, according to new research.
How Stanford physicians and researchers prepare patients to thrive after surgery
Guided by lasers, fluorescence and real-time imaging, surgeons develop new ways to enhance precision
Brain scans of a group of adolescents in California’s Salinas Valley show a direct link between pesticides they were exposed to in utero and certain brain functions.
When nerve cells’ power packs go wrong
Surgeon performs Stanford Medicine’s first scar-free thyroid removal.
Treating blood clots in the brain goes from fast to faster to fastest
Plans, dreams and day-to-day work for a team studying the sense of touch
Researchers hope discovery of brain cells that make pain unpleasant can lead to treatments for chronic pain patients
Researchers have identified a brain-circuitry link between how much food mice consume and social interactions, which could lead to treatments for people with anorexia.