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Living Lab in Ageing and Long-Term Care: a unique selling point for UM
12-12-2018The purpose of these changes in long-term care is to improve the quality of life of vulnerable older people. At the Living Lab in Ageing and Long-Term Care in South Limburg, these improvements go hand in hand with high-quality scientific research. The Living Lab in Ageing and Long-Term Care celebrates its 20th anniversary.
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Vitrojet, indispensable for electron microscopes
02-11-2018Thanks to cryo-electron microscopy, scientists can see inside cells, all the way down to the molecular level. This revolution makes it possible to analyze the precise composition of the many thousands of proteins. It might also reveal the mysteries of how diseases such as Alzheimer’s or tuberculosis develop.
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Professors Wijnen and Drop honoured
23-08-2018Professors Wynand Wijnen and Riet Drop are being posthumously honoured through the naming of a new classroom after each of them.
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Maastricht University is a linchpin in national microscopy research
12-04-2018The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) is allocating more than 17 million euros in subsidies for the further development of a Dutch network for electron microscopy (NEMI). Almost 5 million of this will go to UM. From Maastricht, the M4I institute of university professors Ron Heeren (mass spectrometry) and Peter Peters (cryo-electron microscopy) is one of the initiators of NEMI.
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Prediabetes results in damage to small blood vessels
19-12-2016Damage to small blood vessels in prediabetes (mumc+ news).
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Nerve damage after chemotherapy underestimated
17-12-2016Certain types of chemotherapy cause a greater degree of nerve damage than was previously thought (PhD conferral Tonneke Beijers).
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Alternative for phlebotomy in haemochromatosis
13-12-2016The selective withdrawal of red blood cells as a treatment for haemochromatosis (iron overload) is an effective and patient-friendly alternative to phlebotomy (bloodletting) (PhD conferral Eva Rombout).