Rewiring Relief | Breakthroughs Can't Wait
What if one of the most powerful ways to ease the side effects of cancer treatment didn’t come from a drug prescription, but from movement?That’s the focus of Ian Kleckner, PhD, MPH, associate professor and director of the Cancer Control Mind & Body Lab at the University of Maryland School of Nursing. A physicist-turned-psychologist and neuroscientist with a passion for understanding how the mind and body work together, Kleckner is studying how exercise can reduce the painful, long-lasting nerve symptoms caused by chemotherapy — known as chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy.Backed by the National Institutes of Health and American Cancer Society, Kleckner’s lab uses methods from neuroscience, physiology, and behavioral science to examine how walking and resistance exercise can improve not only physical function, but also brain activity, balance, and mood in people with cancer. The lab’s work is grounded in his belief that the key to treating neuropathy lies not only in the nerves in the hands and feet, but in the brain’s ability to adapt and retrain the body.This spotlight is part of Breakthroughs Can’t Wait: Changing the Future Today, a campaign highlighting how federally funded research at the University of Maryland, Baltimore is driving health innovation.๐ Learn more about his research: https://www.umaryland.edu/breakthroughs
#BreakthroughsCantWait #NIHResearch #HealthInnovation #ExerciseScience #PainRelief #MentalHealthMatters #OncologyCare
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- 1:03Artificial Blood That Could Save Lives at Crash Sites | Breakthroughs Can't WaitWhat if medics could give life-saving blood to trauma victims—without needing a donor? With U.S. Department of Defense support, researchers at the University of Maryland, Baltimore are developing artificial blood that could stabilize patients before they even reach a hospital. ๐ Faster care. More lives saved. Learn more: umaryland.edu/breakthroughs #ArtificialBlood #TraumaCare #EmergencyMedicine #BreakthroughsCantWait #FederalResearch #DARPA #MedicalInnovation #Science
- 4:57How Freeze-Dried Blood Could Save Lives | Breakthroughs Can't WaitCan an artificial blood product keep trauma victims alive until they can reach a medical facility?Allan Doctor, MD, professor and director of the Center for Blood Oxygen Transport and Hemostasis at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and research collaborator Joga Gobburu, PhD, professor and director of the Center for Translational Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, are optimistic they are on the cusp of developing the world’s first viable artificial blood.๐งช Breakthroughs Can’t Wait: UMB research drives innovation, improves lives, and tackles global challenges. But we can’t do it without continued support.๐ Learn more and support research that saves lives: https://www.umaryland.edu/breakthroughs#BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB #ArtificialBlood #MedicalBreakthrough #TraumaCare #LifeSavingResearch #BiomedicalInnovation #EmergencyMedicine #ClinicalResearch #TranslationalMedicine #MedicalInnovation#BloodSubstitute
- 0:55How AI and Chatbots Could Transform Healthcare Diagnosis | Breakthroughs Can’t WaitAhmed Sultan, BDS, PhD, is advancing a powerful new frontier in healthcare: multimodal AI. By combining imaging, chatbots, and machine learning, his NIH-funded research may dramatically improve early diagnosis and reduce medical errors. ๐ University of Maryland, Baltimore ๐ฌ Funded by the National Institutes of Health ๐ก Discover how this tech could save lives—and why Breakthroughs Can’t Wait. https://umaryland/edu/breakthroughs#BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB #AIinHealthcare #MedicalInnovation #ChatbotHealth #RadiologyAI #NIHResearch
- 0:51How AI in Dentistry Could Reduce Diagnostic Errors and Save LivesFatigue is one of the most dangerous risks in medical diagnostics. At the University of Maryland School of Dentistry, Ahmed Sultan, BDS, PhD, is using artificial intelligence to support pathologists and radiologists in detecting oral cancers earlier and more accurately. This NIH-funded research could revolutionize dental care — minimizing human error and improving patient outcomes. #OralCancer #ArtificialIntelligence #NIHResearch #DentalInnovation #HealthcareAI #Radiology #BreakthroughsCantWait #Science #DentalSchool Learn more: https://vist.ly/3n5j835
- 4:51Using AI to Prevent Medical Errors | Breakthroughs Can’t WaitWhat if your dentist had a second set of eyes — powered by AI — to help spot cancer earlier and improve patient outcomes?That’s the driving question behind the work of Ahmed Sultan, BDS, PhD, a pioneer in the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in oral health care. Sultan directs the Division of Artificial Intelligence Research at the University of Maryland School of Dentistry, the first such division at a dental school in the United States. His work is advancing a new era of diagnostics, where AI tools assist clinicians in detecting disease earlier, improving outcomes, and closing care gaps.“We’re seeing more administrative burden and clinician fatigue, which increases the risk of missing things,” Sultan explained. “AI can triage cases and flag abnormalities early, helping dentists and pathologists prioritize serious conditions before they’re overlooked.”๐ Learn more: https://www.umaryland.edu/breakthroughs#NIHResearch #HealthcareInnovation #DiagnosticAccuracy #HospitalSafety #HealthTech #BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB #UMD #UMB #universityofmaryland #Dentistry #radiology #Science #artificialintelligence #aiinhealthcare
- 0:44Using AI to Catch Oral Cancer Early | Breakthroughs Can’t WaitWhat if artificial intelligence could help spot oral cancer earlier — before symptoms even appear?At the University of Maryland School of Dentistry, Ahmed Sultan is leading NIH-funded research to develop AI tools that detect early-stage oral cancer, especially in communities with limited access to care. This work combines innovation and equity to save lives through faster, more accurate diagnosis.๐ Learn more: https://vist.ly/3n5gjp9#OralCancer #EarlyDetection #AIHealthTech #AhmedSultan #NIHResearch #HealthcareEquity #MedicalInnovation #BreakthroughsCantWait #CancerScreening #Science #Dentistry