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Fall 2001 - Volume 12, No 4

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Articles
Faculty Members Launch Wayne State University Physician Group

 

Students Help Students

 

WSU Establishes Premier Nanobiotechnology Center in Midwest

 

Improving Survival for Obese Breast Cancer Patients

 

Distinguished Professor Honored by American Hemophilia Foundation

 

Genetic Studies Underway for Inherited Aneurysms

 

Scientific Computing Program Offers Training in New Skill Sets

 

WSU School of Medicine Graduates 228 New Doctors

 

Assistant Dean Leads International Efforts for WSU School of Medicine

 

State Funding May Boost Perinatal Research at WSU

 

New Chair of Radiology's Work Could Reduce Need for Hysterectomies

 

Heart Attack Patients with Normal ECGs Can Have Adverse Outcomes

 

Multiple Sclerosis Research Focuses on Axons

 

Researcher Leads International Health Efforts in West Africa

 

Dr. Gray to Lead Graduate Medical Education Programs for WSU, DMC

 

New Urologist Offers Incontinence Treatment

 

Ceremony Welcomes 256 New Medical Students

 

Graduate Student Wins National Award

 

African-American Physician Honored for Her Career-Long Achievements

 

New Medical Students Learn to Celebrate Differences and Understand Similarities

 

Anti-Tobacco Crusader and Movie Star Visit WSU School of Medicine

 

Dr. Gallagher Recognized for Service as Academic Senate President

 

WSU Hosts Conference on African-American Health

 

Minority Research Day Honors Graduate, Undergraduate Students

 

Program Offers Research Opportunities to Local High School Students

 

$1 Million Pledged for Biomedical Department

 

The Wayne State University School of Medicine Welcomes the Class of 2005

 

New Graduate Students Welcomed

 

Training Researchers in Genomics

 

WSU's Blaine White Elected to Prestigious Institute of Medicine

New Chair of Radiology’s Work Could Reduce Need for Hysterectomies


Dr. Goodwin has been recruited to chair radiology and serve as the Detroit Medical Center’s radiologist-in-chief.

Scott Goodwin, MD, who was the first in the United States to introduce a novel technique to treat fibroid tumors without hysterectomy, recently was named chair of the Wayne State University School of Medicine’s Department of Radiology. Dr. Goodwin also will serve as the Detroit Medical Center’s specialist in chief for radiology.

Dr. Goodwin, a Harvard Medical School graduate, previously served as chief of cardiovascular and interventional radiology at the University of California-Los Angeles Medical Center.

“Dr. Goodwin will be a dynamic addition to the School of Medicine’s faculty,” said Dean John Crissman, MD. “His exemplary research and his dedication to finding new and better ways to treat disease make him a valuable asset in two of our areas of excellence, women’s health and cancer research and treatment.”

In 1996, Dr. Goodwin was the first in the United States to introduce uterine artery embolization, a treatment that involves blocking the blood flow to fibroid tumors by inserting particles into the arteries leading to the tumors. Without blood flow, the tumors shrink and die.

This technique, which is about 85 percent successful, may eliminate the need for hysterectomies, the traditional approach to removing fibroid tumors. It’s estimated that of the 600,000 women who have hysterectomies annually, 200,000 of them have the procedure to remove fibroid tumors.

Dr. Goodwin also is studying new drugs that may be useful in treating liver tumors. Because chemotherapy drugs are toxic to both the body and cancerous tumors, researchers are working to find new ways of delivering drugs specifically to tumors, rather than the entire body. Dr. Goodwin is working on a class of drugs that use magnetically targeted carriers.

In addition to these research initiatives, Dr. Goodwin is looking forward to updating computer systems that will improve and expedite patient care. He’s also working to increase the required radiology training WSU medical students must have to graduate, so they can be better prepared to make competent decisions as doctors about what tests a patient needs. Such training could lead to better diagnosis as well as lower health-care costs and shorter hospital stays.

Dr. Goodwin also is co-authoring a book on fibroid tumors for the Warner Books series, “What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About.” The book is due out sometime next year.

Notes

Honors

Rounds

Continuing Medical Education

Women's Health Lecture Series