Petrie Dish
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.
Support for Petrie Dish comes from Mama’s Café, serving elevated comfort food, craft cocktails and Texas beers on tap, 7 days a week. More information at mamascafesa.com
Latest Episodes
-
Imagine one day your child bites down on something and the enamel on one of their teeth starts to crumble. That can happen in a condition called molar incisor hypomineralization — otherwise known as chalky teeth.
-
More than six-million American adults are experiencing heart failure right now.
-
-
If you’re experiencing chronic pain, adjusting your diet might help.
-
Loneliness and social isolation can make you as sick as obesity or 15 cigarettes a day.
-
COVID’s winter wave has blanketed the nation, along with flu. After a brief decline, hospitalizations for both COVID and flu have increased again in Texas.
-
When people think about things they can do to stay healthy, they don’t think about their teeth nearly enough.
-
It’s a big moment, when someone — often dad — cuts a newborn’s umbilical cord. But before you cut it, you clamp it to stop blood flow, and UT Health San Antonio is involved in a study that’s trying to determine whether when you clamp the cord matters in babies with congenital heart disease.
-
When Bruce Willis, an action movie star known for his way with words, started to lose his language skills, it made news. He had aphasia.
-
“No study had been funded to really look at the needs of our Latino cancer survivors. We're the first study to be doing this," said Dr. Amelie Ramirez, chair of Population Health Sciences at UT Health San Antonio. "And they are so grateful to us because they said, 'nobody's bothered to ask me about my cancer journey.'”