Why does a new study on depression have people asking their doctors about their SSRI medications? Will sequencing the human genome soon be affordable for almost everyone? On Petrie Dish, join host and veteran reporter Bonnie Petrie for deep dives into a wide range of bioscience and medicine stories.
…
continue reading
Welcome to The Brain Trust, a podcast for and by physicians designed to help improve screening, diagnosis, and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias in clinical workflows. Tune in weekly to hear our guest primary care clinicians discuss innovative ways to support patients and their families in better managing brain disease.
…
continue reading
How can you improve lives within your community? How do you solve real problems around you? Hear from people who took matters into their own hands, to help those around them through innovative initiatives with social purpose. Find out how social entrepreneurs drive impact to make a difference. This podcast is by Expo Live, produced by Kerning Cultures Network.
…
continue reading
When people think about things they can do to stay healthy, they don’t think about their teeth nearly enough.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
CDC alerts U.S. doctors and travelers to Mexico: Watch for dengue
10:50
10:50
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
10:50Mosquito season has begun in earnest, and until November, there is an increased risk for mosquito-borne illnesses, including dengue fever. CDC has urged U.S. doctors to watch for dengue, particularly in people who've traveled to countries where the virus is endemic. But several states, including Texas, have reported locally acquired cases of dengue…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: The Center for Brain Health could revolutionize how we think about dementia
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A newly constructed center for studying and treating diseases of the brain will open in San Antonio at the end of the year. The Center for Brain Health could revolutionize how we understand disorders like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and ALS.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Psychedelics and the Texas Trip Part 3: The Road Ahead
46:15
46:15
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
46:15In the final installment of this three-part series, Bonnie Petrie and reporter Robin Berghaus go from an isolated stretch of desert along the Rio Grande, where wild peyote grows, to the exuberant rooms at SXSW, where they consider the future of psychedelics-as-medicine, and back to the hallowed halls of the Texas Legislature, where the future of th…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: An app for detecting dementia decades early
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A digital tool that uses artificial intelligence to analyze speech patterns could help doctors detect dementia in patients when other signs and symptoms are not perceptible.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Fighting antibiotic-resistant infections with viruses
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A San Antonio collaborative is developing treatments for antibiotic-resistant infections using viruses known as phages. The effort is urgent as infections that don't respond to antibiotics are projected to kill 39 million people by 2050.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Disease registries, 'individual tragedies,' and more with the Autism Society of Texas
7:54
7:54
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
7:54Petrie Dish host Bonnie Petrie has a wide-ranging conversation with the executive director of the Autism Society of Texas as Robert Kennedy's HHS focuses on the rise in autism diagnoses.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Improving knee replacement outcomes
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Blood flow restriction ahead of surgery could be key.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Studying eating disorders in older Hispanic women with food insecurity
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A San Antonio researcher hopes to dispel myths about who is at risk for eating disorders while studying the interaction between binge eating disorder and food insecurity in older Hispanic women.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Why did the CDC shelve a warning about measles and the need for vaccination?
8:17
8:17
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
8:17The Centers for Disease Control recently buried a warning about the potential for more measles outbreaks and the need for people to get vaccinated, according to a new report from ProPublica.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Studying stressed out rats to understand PTSD in humans
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10David Morilak, PhD, a professor of pharmacology and director of the Center for Biomedical Neuroscience at UT Health San Antonio, studies rats in an effort to understand the characteristics of stressful events that can lead to PTSD in humans.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Pursuing precision medicine for Alzheimer's disease
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A cutting-edge technology and an exciting recent hire hint at exciting developments in the future of precision medicine in the diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer's disease.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Anti-aging drug shows promise in marmosets
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Adam Salmon, PhD, studies aging in marmosets. He and his team recently concluded that an immunosuppressant called rapamycin extends the lifespan of marmosets. This has significant implications for the study of aging in humans.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Star cells may be the key to preserving brain function after stroke
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A medication that appears to preserve brain function after a stroke will soon go into human trials. The San Antonio researcher who discovered the medication's potential more than two decades ago is still leading the team.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Cognitive deficits from concussions can linger
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10People with concussions get checked out pretty thoroughly by their doctors, but for some, there are cognitive changes and deficits that doctors don’t pick up.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Psychedelics and the Texas Trip Part 2: The Science and History of the Medicine
33:10
33:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
33:10Patients have been leaving the United States to try psychedelic therapies to treat their depression, PTSD, traumatic brain injuries, and substance use disorders. With so many patients finding relief, why do psychedelic therapies mostly remain illegal in the U.S., and how do psychedelics actually work?…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: A potential game-changer in the fight against deadly oral cancer
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Oral squamous cell carcinoma kills about half of the people who get it, and there have been no new treatments developed for half a century. A UT Health San Antonio dentist has developed a novel drug that may offer these patients a better chance at survival.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading
Host Bonnie Petrie talks with Dr. Jason Bowling about the other two diseases in the MMR vaccine, mumps and rubella.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Help for women's pelvic health disorders
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Pelvic health disorders can disrupt women's quality of life. The conditions might be considered common and inevitable, but they should not be ignored.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Psychedelics and the Texas Trip Part 1: Unlikely Allies
32:50
32:50
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
32:50Host Bonnie Petrie and reporter Robin Berghaus explore the potential of psychedelic medication as a treatment for mental health diagnoses like depression and PTSD, particularly for use in the veteran population.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Sabotaging the molecular engines of some pediatric cancers
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A San Antonio researcher is working on a drug that could treat Ewing sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma without lifelong side effects. It would be the first new treatment option for these childhood cancers in 30 years.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: A Texas measles update and why experts warn this is just the beginning
6:38
6:38
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
6:38An outbreak of measles in West Texas has infected nearly 100 people, most of them unvaccinated children. Dr. Peter Hotez says the ecosystem that led to the elimination of measles in the United States in 2000 has changed as vaccination rates fall, and there will likely be more breakthrough outbreaks of all vaccine-preventable infections.…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Taking on America's number one killer
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10More than six-million American adults are experiencing heart failure right now.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: CDC purge of forbidden words online creates real-world fear
8:22
8:22
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
8:22Host Bonnie Petrie speaks with Cherise Rohr-Allegrini, CEO of the San Antonio AIDS Foundation.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: A breakthrough for glioblastoma patients that may lengthen lives
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A new technique for delivering radiation to glioblastoma brain tumors may allow doctors to use much higher doses while preserving healthy brain tissue. UT Health San Antonio's Andrew Brenner, MD, PhD, says this may give patients more time.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: Should the US leave the WHO? 'Your Local Epidemiologist' weighs in
22:59
22:59
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
22:59President Donald Trump has signed an executive order that would withdraw the United States from the World Health Organization. Epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina and TPR's Bonnie Petrie talk about whether Trump's concerns are valid and what the U.S. could lose if it leaves.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Veterans write new endings for their nightmares
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10A San Antonio sleep disorder and PTSD researcher uses cognitive behavioral therapy to reduce the frequency and intensity of nightmares.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading
Plants-2-Plate is a six-month program that helps people adopt a whole food, plant-based diet.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: San Antonio scientist discovers how stress triggers migraines
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10UT Health San Antonio neuroscientist Yu Shin Kim, PhD, has discovered how stress causes migraines, which could lead to treatments that prevent them.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: Dr. Peter Hotez talks about anti-science activism, antisemitism, and RFK Jr.
35:05
35:05
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
35:05Texas vaccine scientist Dr. Peter Hotez spoke with Bonnie Petrie about what it's like to be the target of anti-science activists, his continued commitment to fighting medical misinformation, and his thoughts on the nomination of anti-vaccine crusader Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head the Department of Health and Human Services.…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Exercise affects men and women differently
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Physical exercise impacts every type of tissue in the body and affects males and females differently. Data gathered at UT Health San Antonio. It’s part of a nationwide, multi-site study on exercise and the human body.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Why are neurodevelopmental disorders common in Duchenne muscular dystrophy?
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Around 30% of boys diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy also experience cognitive dysfunction and neurodevelopmental disorders like autism and ADHD. A UT Health San Antonio neuroscientist is doing research he hopes will uncover what is causing these deficits and how they might be treated.
…
continue reading
For the last five years, first responders all over the world have been watching San Antonio.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Scanning the brain to improve treatment for traumatized teens
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Around 20% of teens who have experienced emotional trauma don't respond to talk therapy. UT Health San Antonio is using neuroimaging to track brain changes in traumatized teens during a course of therapy to see if they can figure out why, which could lead to the development of more personalized treatments that will help more teens heal.…
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: Climate change disasters are hazardous to children's mental health
33:34
33:34
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
33:34As climate change-driven weather disasters become more frequent and intense, it's becoming clear that they are leaving a mark on children's mental health. Clinical psychologist Julie Kaplow explores the risks of this type of trauma to a child's long-term mental health and ways to mitigate the damage.…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: A hopeful time for people with epilepsy
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Up to two percent of Texans have epilepsy. Dr. Charles Szabo at UT Health San Antonio has developed an epilepsy surgery program and is leading groundbreaking research and clinical trials that offer hope to those with the seizure disorder who don't respond to existing medications.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Diagnosing CTE before death
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10CTE can rob a person of their memories and ability to make decisions and plans. It can also cause a person to become a threat to themselves and, sometimes, others. But the disease, caused by repeated head trauma, can't be definitively diagnosed before death. A San Antonio researcher hopes to help change that.…
…
continue reading
UT Health San Antonio oncologist Josephine Taverna envisions a revolution in lung cancer treatment.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Exercise is medicine for people with Parkinson's disease
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Exercise can improve function and slow disease progression in people with Parkinson's disease, but why? A UT Health San Antonio researcher is studying patients who exercise and play virtual reality games to see if she can figure out the answer.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Caring for veteran caregivers
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Caregivers for members of the military and veterans experience depression at a higher rate than any other group in the nation and that can be lethal.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Using technology to improve health equity
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Remote technology can bring health interventions to patients who may struggle to get themselves to care because of where they live or how much money they have. Tae Joon Moon, Ph.D., has found that transdermal alcohol monitors are a remote tech that might help treat people with alcohol use disorder.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: Climate change — a crime against children
36:45
36:45
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
36:45Pediatrician Debra Hendrickson says climate change is the greatest crime ever committed against children. She's written a book detailing the impact of climate change on children's health and offers a call-to-action for parents and other adults to do something before it really is too late.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading
Cancer care is about to experience a silver tsunami.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: UT Health researcher creates mice with fully functioning human immune systems
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10THX mice can be used to study anything that requires a vigorous human immune response, from cancer medications to vaccines and organ transplantation. The mice were created at UT Health San Antonio using human stem cells, but what makes them unique is they also received a dose of estrogen. This is the critical point, according to Dr. Paolo Casali, t…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Developing new medications to manage cancer pain
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10Shivani Ruparel, Ph.D., Associate Professor and Director of Research in the Department of Endodontics at UT Health San Antonio, and her team are working on potential analgesics to help mitigate cancer pain.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: Studying the chemical miscommunication that may lead to obesity
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10The chemical cross-communication between the guts and other organs that occurs when a person metabolizes nutrients begins before we open our mouths, when we see or smell food. The answer to why some people develop obesity, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders, and why some people respond so well to medicines like Ozempic, might lie in those sign…
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: When COVID targets the heart, danger can linger
28:49
28:49
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
28:49For at least a year after being infected with the COVID virus, people may be at increased risk of developing a new heart-related problem. Those problems can range from blood clots to arrythmias to a sudden, catastrophic heart attack. In this episode of Petrie Dish, Bonnie Petrie talks with a Harvard cardiologist about why this can happen, and how t…
…
continue reading

1
Science & Medicine: The link between sleep apnea and persistent pain
2:10
2:10
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
2:10New research from UT Health San Antonio finds a link between obstructive sleep apnea and persistent pain, suggesting that the intermittant lack of oxygen caused by apnea decreases a person's ability to recover from painful stimuli.By Bonnie Petrie
…
continue reading

1
Petrie Dish: Using artificial intelligence to solve medical mysteries
29:22
29:22
Play later
Play later
Lists
Like
Liked
29:22Millions of Americans are suffering from undiagnosed illnesses. Many are told their symptoms are imagined. Could artificial intelligence change the game, figuring out how to diagnose rare and difficult to diagnose diseases, leading to better understanding of their causes and better treatments? One San Antonio researcher thinks so.…
…
continue reading