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For decades, the number of people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes has steadily increased – until 2012 when this trend suddenly stopped. Danish researchers now link this development to the roll-out of a new diagnosis method.
Reimar Niels Wernich Thomsen is newly-appointed professor of metabolic disease epidemiology at Aarhus University. He conducts research into how more targeted treatment can reduce the risk of serious complications in connection with e.g. overweight…
Do patients with acute kidney injury suffer a long-term decrease in kidney function and therefore a greater risk of chronic kidney and cardiovascular diseases? And what is the prognosis for the different kidney diseases? These are some of the…
In the 1990s, type 2 diabetes meant that the risk of dying from a blood clot was twice as high as it was for non-diabetics. Thanks to preventive treatment, today this excess risk is very small.
The Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science has granted DKK 38 million to the ‘CellX’ project, which aims to provide researchers across Denmark with better access to the analysis of cells and tissues at single-cell level.
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