Basic Science News at Duke School of Medicine

Breaking New Ground in Pain Relief: A Novel Approach to Non-Opioid Therapeutics

Researchers at Duke University are developing a new, non-addictive way to treat chronic pain using a natural compound in the body called adenosine. Their early results show this approach could be more effective than current medications and offer a safer alternative to opioids, with fewer side effects and no risk of addiction.

Learning the Language of the Brain

She’s mapping the brain in bold new ways and the ripple effects are already reaching patients. How Nanthia Suthana’s cutting-edge brain stimulation technique is shaping treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder, Parkinson’s, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and binge eating.

As the Planet Warms, Fungi Find a Way In

As global temperatures rise, fungi are evolving to survive in warmer environments—potentially breaching the human body’s natural thermal defenses. At a Duke University symposium, scientists warned that climate change may be fueling the emergence of heat-tolerant fungal pathogens, posing a growing threat to public health.

What Makes Us Human

If 98.8% of our DNA is the same as that of a chimpanzee, what changes in the remaining 1.2% make us human?

Honey, I Shrunk the Proteins

A Duke University School of Medicine team reimagines a sci-fi classic as real-world biotech that can speed up biological research.