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Promising clinical trials in Alzheimer's prevention "I just know that my brain's not right," said Carrie Richardson, 44. "And so, I hate it. I just want it to be normal." At 41, Carrie developed early-onset Alzheimer's disease. The condition is caused by rare genetic mutations that essentially guarantee ...
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Expert Shares PsA Screening Tips for People With Psoriasis SAN ANTONIO — In the course of caring for individuals with psoriasis, clinicians should have patients complete the validated Psoriasis Epidemiology Screening Tool (PEST) for psoriatic arthritis (PsA) every 6 months, as recommended by the National ...
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The FDA will lift warnings on hormone therapy for menopause The Food and Drug Administration says it is removing the black box safety warnings from all hormone therapy creams, pills and other treatments prescribed to ease the symptoms of menopause and perimenopause. The prominent warnings said these therapies ...
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Breast Cancer: 'Morning-After Pill' May Lower Risk in Premenopausal Women Researchers say that a drug used as an emergency contraceptive or to treat fibroids may help lower breast cancer risk. Ulipristal acetate, the "morning after pill," was found to reduce the activity of breast cells where cancers start.
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Oral Immunotherapy Helps Many Kids Lose Food Allergies, Studies Say Children benefited from being fed small amounts of food allergens to desensitize them, according to a pair of studies presented over the weekend at a meeting of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology in Orlando, Florida.
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Why women are embracing testosterone But some women are taking testosterone at far higher doses, ones that approach those taken by transgender people, who use hormone replacement therapy to address gender dysphoria. New York Times Magazine writer Susan Dominus spoke to many of them for an ...
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Acetaminophen use during pregnancy not clearly linked to autism, ADHD: Review The topic has been in the headlines since September when President Donald Trump warned that acetaminophen use in pregnancy was "associated with a very increased risk of autism" and the president advised pregnant women, "Don't take Tylenol.".
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Dundee and US surgeons achieve world-first stroke surgery using robot Prof Iris Grunwald, of the University of Dundee, performed the remote thrombectomy - the removal of blood clots after a stroke - on a human cadaver that had been donated to medical science. The professor was ...
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The surprising connection between coffee and your heartbeat Your coffee addiction may have a surprising health benefit. Just one cup of joe is associated with reduced occurrence of atrial fibrillation (AF), a common form of abnormal heartbeat that causes your heart to race and can lead to blood clots, ...
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Canada loses measles elimination status amid year-long outbreak: Health officials The Public Health Agency of Canada said it was informed of the loss by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) after more than 12 months of continuous measles transmission. Canada's outbreak began in late October 2024 with more than 5,100 measles cases ...
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Maternal type 1 diabetes may protect children from developing the disease Environmental factors can interfere with early development and have lasting effects on health. These outcomes are often driven by epigenetic mechanisms, such as DNA methylation, which alter gene expression without altering the genetic code itself. Such ...
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World Immunization Day 2025: Expanding Adult Vaccines To Guard India's Health While childhood programs have progressed, adult vaccine coverage remains low in India. From influenza and pneumococcal to HPV and zoster, adult-vaccines can protect health, productivity and public welfare. Advertisement. Written by: Shreya Goswami ...
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No Clear Autism Link With Prenatal Tylenol, Major Review Finds A comprehensive review of all existing evidence about acetaminophen (Tylenol) use during pregnancy and the risk of autism or attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children found no clear link between the two.
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Can your gut bacteria predict your age and lifestyle? New study says yes By analyzing co-abundance networks in 938 healthy adults, scientists discovered how lifestyle factors subtly rewire bacterial relationships in the gut, offering a more powerful way to predict health traits than abundance-based models.
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Can people with heart disease drink coffee? Researchers found that drinking coffee daily reduced the risk of atrial fibrillation, a common heart rhythm disorder. This finding challenges previous advice to avoid caffeine. The study indicates coffee is not only safe but potentially protective for ...
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Coffee may protect people against irregular heartbeats, new US study finds Marcus, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at University of California, San Francisco, told NBC News the trial's outcome to him indicates "how protective caffeinated coffee does seem to be to prevent atrial fibrillation".
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AHA: Long-Term Melatonin Use for Insomnia Tied to Higher Risk for Heart Failure Additionally, all-cause mortality was higher in melatonin users (7.8% vs 4.3%; HR, 2.09). Similar results were seen when the analysis was limited to 2 or more melatonin fills ≥90 days ...
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Australian Scientists Use Bacteria As "Living Medicines" To Kill Cancer Cells Bacteria are rapidly emerging as a new class of "living medicines" used to kill cancer cells. ... We're still a long way from a "cure" for cancer. But one day we could have programmable, self-navigating bacteria that find tumours, release treatment only ...
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Tailored vitamin D3 supplementation lowers risk of heart attack recurrence In a large, randomized clinical trial, Intermountain Health researchers have found that treating heart attack patients in a "target to treat" fashion, where patients' blood levels of vitamin D were monitored and vitamin D3 dosing adjusted to achieve ...
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As Days Get Darker, Experts Warn of Rising Seasonal Depression SUNDAY, Nov. 9, 2025 (HealthDay News) — As the days get shorter and temperatures drop, many people start to feel a noticeable shift in their mood, a condition known as seasonal affective disorder. This type of depression — commonly known as SAD ...
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New 'wonder drug' could cut your cholesterol in half - after just one dose A small trial of 15 people with high cholesterol, despite taking conventional, lifelong medications to lower it, showed significant reductions in two major risk factors for heart disease after receiving a single gene-editing treatment at the highest dose.
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A simple blood test can detect 50 types of cancer: We explain In addition to earlier detection, the study from GRAIL, a biotechnology company, showed that its multi-cancer early detection (MCED) testing method found cancers in organs that don't have routine screening tests.
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New Research Shatters the Myth of Gluten Sensitivity Researchers found that most people who report symptoms are reacting to fermentable carbohydrates or psychological factors rather than gluten itself. Gut-Brain Connection Redefines Gluten Sensitivity. A major scientific review has found that what many ...
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'Skin cancer diagnosis was a really big shock' BBC Sharon McLucas, who has her hair tied back and is in a green top ... A woman who was diagnosed with a malignant melanoma is urging islanders to take skin protection seriously. The warning comes after a ...
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A cup of coffee a day may keep irregular heartbeat away: study CANBERRA, Nov. 10 (Xinhua) -- A daily cup of coffee may protect against atrial fibrillation (AF), an irregular heartbeat that can cause heart failure, stroke, and premature death, a study has found. Researchers have discovered a surprising heart health ...
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Music can stave off dementia by up to 40 per cent, Monash study finds Listening to music when you are over 70 years of age has been linked to a 39 per cent reduction in the risk of dementia, according to a Monash University-led study of over 10,800 older people. The study, led by Monash honours student Emma Jaffa, ...
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Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children The findings should help healthcare professionals give evidence-based advice to women, and reassure mothers about the use of paracetamol during pregnancy if indicated." Paracetamol (acetaminophen) is the recommended treatment for pain and ...
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Why getting fit over 40 matters (and how anyone can do it) The goal is to clock up 150 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise a week or 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity to maximise benefits, such as improved cardiovascular health and reduced risk of diabetes and certain cancers.
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The healthy, humble cheese that dietitians, shoppers and TikTokers can't get enough of If you watched your mum or grandmother diet in the '80s, or come from a European family, chances are you have grown up seeing a tub of cottage cheese in the fridge. Synonymous with all things dieting 40 years ago, while cottage cheese is not for ...
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DECAF: Does One Cup of Coffee a Day Keep AFib Away? Christopher X. Wong, MBBS, MPH, PhD, et al., randomized 200 patients with persistent AFib or with atrial flutter with a history of AFib, to regular caffeinated coffee consumption (a least one cup a day) following cardioversion or to coffee and caffeine ...
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ACAAI: COVID-19 Vaccination Reduces Risk for Multiple Infections in Children With Atopic Dermatitis HealthDay News — For children with atopic dermatitis (AD), COVID-19 mRNA vaccination is associated with a reduced incidence of multiple infections and allergic complications, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the American College ...
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Goodbye, Cavities? Scientists Just Found a Way to Regrow Tooth Enamel A newly developed material has been used to create a gel capable of repairing and rebuilding tooth enamel, offering a potential breakthrough in both preventive and restorative dental care.
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Art Calms Us in Ways Reproductions Can't Clinical relevance: Viewing original art in a gallery, rather than reproductions, can lower stress hormones while promoting calmer heart rhythms and emotional engagement. The gallery group showed higher heart-rate variability and a wave-like rhythm of ...
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More daily asthma-related ED visits occur on thunderstorm days "While this doesn't prove cause and effect, it highlights how weather can be associated with asthma flare-ups," Diala Merheb, MD, internal medicine resident at the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, told Healio.
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Why do people love spicy food – even when it hurts to eat it? Tearing up, sweating and other bodily functions are all signs that the body is trying to expel spicy foods as quickly as possible. But there is a simple reason why some people enjoy those sensations. Joel Snape. Mon 10 Nov 2025 04.00 EST Last modified ...
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Gluten sensitivity: Is it real? New research shatters the myth Non-coeliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) is the term used when people who do not have coeliac disease or wheat allergy nonetheless report symptoms such as bloating, stomach pain, fatigue, or "brain-fog" after eating gluten-containing foods.
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Older people playing pickleball isn't risky – it's medicine Supervised strength training and joyful movement aren't risks, they're medicine. Let's encourage pickleball, hiking or dancing – anything that builds confidence and keeps people strong. Injuries we can manage, frailty we can't.
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Impacts of Diet on Brain Health Dietitian Angela Ginn-Meadow joined the FOX 45 Morning Show to discuss some brain health tips for Alzheimer's Awareness Month.
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Drug Discovery to Overcome Anti-Microbial Resistance With deep expertise spanning microbiology, molecular biology, PK/PD, and translational models, we partner with pharma, biotech, and academia to deliver innovative solutions against antimicrobial resistance - from concept to clinic.
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Washington University researchers look into possibly game-changing medicine for Alzheimer's ST. LOUIS, Mo. (First Alert 4) -Washington University researchers are studying antibody drugs that can be a game-changer for Alzheimer's research and for those more likely to get the disease. Two medicines have been approved that can slow cognitive ...
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AHA25: AstraZeneca makes strong case for baxdrostat with detailed 24-hour data in resistant hypertension trial Strengthening last month's top-line positive results for its investigational aldosterone synthase inhibitor baxdrostat over a 24-hour period in a treatment-resistant hypertension trial, AstraZeneca unveiled full data from the Phase III Bax24 study ...
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