Skip to content
Therese_Johansson

Image -

Therese_Johansson

Therese Johansson, Doctoral student at the Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology and WOMHER, Uppsala University.
Mikael Wallerstedt
License:
Media Use
The content may be downloaded by journalists, bloggers, columnists, creators of public opinion, etc. It can be used and shared in different media channels to convey, narrate, and comment on your press releases, posts, or information, provided that the content is unmodified. The author or creator shall be attributed to the extent and in the manner required by good practice (this means, for example, that photographers should be attributed).
By:
Mikael Wallerstedt
Copyright:
Mikael Wallerstedt
File format:
.jpg
Size:
6573 x 4727, 6.21 MB
Download

Topics

Categories

Contacts

Related content

  • Therese Johansson, postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology and WOMHER

    Different menopausal hormone treatments pose different risks

    Researchers have analysed the effects of seven different hormone treatments for menopausal symptoms, and the risk of blood clots, stroke and heart attack. The risks differ depending on the active substance and how the medicine is taken. The study involves around one million women aged 50-58 and is the largest and most comprehensive study of currently prescribed hormonal substances in the world.

  • Genetics influence the risk of blood clots in oral contraceptive users

    Women with a high genetic predisposition for blood clots are six times more likely to develop a blood clot during the first two years of using contraceptive pills according to a new study from Uppsala University. The results have been published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.