Machines won't let surgeons target wrong position WJXT Jacksonville Tue, 28 Feb 2012 14:04 PM PST Robots and replacing body parts. It sounds like a science fiction movie, but it's reality and it's going on at Baptist Medical Center and Jacksonville Orthopedic Institute. | Panthers F Versteeg out with injury Eyewitness News Memphis Tue, 28 Feb 2012 13:43 PM PST Florida Panthers forward Kris Versteeg did not travel on the team's current two-game road trip due to an undisclosed lower-body injury. | Jazzercise class mixes dance with cardio TCU Daily Skiff Tue, 28 Feb 2012 13:41 PM PST Jazzercise is not just an â80s workout filled with leg warmers and old ladies, Cass Moffett said. The certified Jazzercise instructor described it as a whole-body workout combining cardio, strength and stretching for a full 55 minutes. | Students can be both fit and happy The Maroon Tue, 28 Feb 2012 13:27 PM PST By: Caitlin Spieker The Loyola Rep It's important to take health and fitness seriously, but it's equally important to avoid obsessing over these things. The 'rules' and suggestions I've written in my past columns provide some groundwork to begin your road toward a fit and healthy body. ... | Seeking harmony of body and mind at Stanford through Shaolin Kung Fu Stanford Report Tue, 28 Feb 2012 13:18 PM PST "The big plus is that I'm learning real kung fu from real Shaolin monks, whom I would have no access to if I were still in China â" all under the California sun," said one Stanford staffer enrolled in a campus Shaolin Kung Fu class. | UPDATE: Coroner identifies deceased Hollister hiker The Pinnacle Tue, 28 Feb 2012 12:28 PM PST The body of a Hollister hiker was extracted Sunday afternoon from the rocky face of a tree-covered mountain jutting high above Highway 152, according to Sgt. Jose Cardoza with the Santa Clara County S | Washington University Receives $3.3M from NIH to Study Virome of Kids GenomeWeb News Tue, 28 Feb 2012 12:03 PM PST NEW YORK (GenomeWeb News) â" Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis plan to use DNA sequencing and genetic analysis to study all of the viruses in the human body in an effort to identify the viruses that make children with weakened immune systems sick, WUSTL said Monday. | Hydrogel could grow new heart tissue, without the need for surgery gizmag Tue, 28 Feb 2012 11:33 AM PST Universities and scientific organizations all over the world are currently looking into ways of growing functioning heart cells on the heart, to replace the tissue that dies when a heart attack occurs. As things currently stand, the body replaces that tissue with non-beating scar tissue, leaving the heart permanently weakened. Most of the experimental techniques for generating new tissue involve ... | | |
|