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Skeletal muscle signals to brain, brown fat to control aging in mice
Open lines of communication between the body's organs are important to health and often falter with age. A new study in mice by researchers at WashU Medicine shows how signals that travel from skeletal muscle to the brain and then activate brown fat and control core body temperat
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AI flags heart failure risk five years early from routine ECG recordings
Researchers at the Technion Faculty of Biomedical Engineering have achieved a breakthrough in the early detection of heart failure. They developed DeepHHF, an artificial intelligence model that identifies patients at high risk of developing heart failure years before the onset of
Molecular map of liver disease could transform how disease is diagnosed and monitored
A study led by researchers at Open Targets, EMBL's European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), the University of Cambridge and others has identified a set of plasma proteins that could be used to diagnose and monitor patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic live
The long shadow of a short fuse: Study finds parent-teen conflict echoes across generation
Parent-teen tension is often treated as a phase—something to be endured, then forgotten. A common byproduct of growing up.
Among Black people in the U.S., country of birth associated with stroke risk
For Black individuals in the United States, being born in another country was associated with a lower risk of stroke, according to a study published in Neurology. "In the United States, people who identify as Black have a higher rate of stroke compared to other groups and are oft
Study finds how long someone spends online matters, (but also what happens to them there)
Study finds how long someone spends online matters, (but also what happens to them there)
In the digital age, adolescents and young adults increasingly form social connections through online spaces, including social media, gaming and messaging platforms, which serve as venues for identity exploration, peer connection and emotional validation. However, these spaces als
New study examines how and why harm reduction is misunderstood on college campuses
New study examines how and why harm reduction is misunderstood on college campuses
A new study found that students and staff involved with collegiate recovery programs had very different definitions and perceptions of harm reduction and its role in these programs, suggesting opportunities to reframe this public health approach in collegiate settings to build co
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Collaborative process clarifies ICU admissions from ED
From the emergency department (ED) to the intensive care unit (ICU), a clear, collaborative admission process at a Tennessee hospital cut in half the time newly admitted critically ill patients waited to receive specialized care, even as they waited in the ED for an ICU bed to be
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Preparing teachers can support students with asthma
One in every 12 children has asthma, making it the most common chronic condition in children. But many teachers lack the training needed to support those students, according to a new study from the University of Georgia. The paper is published in the Journal of Applied School Psy
Zona 2: por que esse tipo de treino virou tendência entre atletas e especialistas?
Zona 2: por que esse tipo de treino virou tendência entre atletas e especialistas?
O método ganhou espaço por melhorar o condicionamento físico de forma sustentável, mas será que ele é a melhor opção para todo mundo?
Loneliness is making people sick. Doctors can't cure it alone, argues researcher
Loneliness is making people sick. Doctors can't cure it alone, argues researcher
While loneliness has been shown to harm one's health, framing it as a health issue shifts responsibility from society to health care, even though health care alone cannot rebuild social ties, a new University of Michigan study warns.
Cancer clinicians welcome AI that supports human expertise
Cancer clinicians welcome AI that supports human expertise
Artificial intelligence is often presented as a threat to professional work, raising fears about deskilling, job displacement and the loss of human judgment. But new research involving health care professionals using AI in cancer treatment suggests a more nuanced story. The study