Visionary
Pushing the boundaries of biology and technology to help people see
Pushing the boundaries of biology and technology to help people see
Carla Shatz, her breakthrough discovery in vision and the developing brain
Andrew Huberman on using virtual reality to overcome your fears
How video goggles and a tiny implant could cure blindness
Looking inside the eye with technology once turned to the sky
Removing a tumor from a teen's eye
Curing cataracts in the Himalayas and beyond
Stanford ophthalmology is growing
A protein from human umbilical cord blood appears to improve memory in older mice, suggesting a path for developing a drug to improve mental ability.
A priming protein allows mice to recover faster from injury, presenting a possible method for enabling older people to heal more quickly.
As the population ages and dementia becomes more common, female relatives shoulder the burden of care.
Stanford researchers identify a center in the brainstem that connects different types of breathing to emotional states.
Stanford researchers are testing a drug for lymphedema, a painful condition with few treatment options.
Stanford School of Medicine's dean, Lloyd Minor, MD, on how artificial intelligence could improve cancer diagnosis.
Bestselling author Joyce Maynard on what she learned after her husband's cancer diagnosis about love, life and death.
A Stanford psychiatrist is researching the effects of ketamine on the brains of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder, hoping to determine why the drug relieves symptoms.
Stanford Medicine has published its inaugural Health Trends Report, an annual review and analysis of health care research and open-source data, combined with insights on trends in the health care sector.
Roundworms with bellies of monounsaturated fats — like those found in olive oil, nuts and avocados — live longer.
Stanford Medicine magazine is published four times a year, and each issue focuses on a specific topic.