Hot Flashes Linked to Increased Risk of Hip Fracture
Large cohort study reveals association between menopausal symptoms and bone health Women who experience moderate to severe hot flashes and night sweats during menopause tend to have lower bone mineral density and higher rates of hip fracture than peers who do not have menopausal symptoms,…
Could Reading Glasses Soon Be a Thing of the Past?
Implantable eye devices that improve vision up close could soon be a viable alternative for aging eyes in the United States A thin ring inserted into the eye could soon offer a reading glasses-free remedy for presbyopia, the blurriness in near vision experienced by many…
Don’t lose sleep over daylight savings
When the clocks “fall back” this year, don’t let gaining an extra hour rob you of needed sleep. There’s plenty you can do now to establish healthy sleep habits and make it easier to reset your internal clock, says Sabrina Brem, FNP-BC, an instructor at…
High-Fat Meals Could Be More Harmful to Males Than Females
Male and female brains are not equal when it comes to the biological response to a high-fat diet. Cedars-Sinai Diabetes and Obesity Research Institute scientist Deborah Clegg, PhD, and a team of international investigators found that the brains of male laboratory mice exposed to the…
‘Bad Luck’ of Random Mutations Plays Predominant Role in Cancer
Statistical modeling links cancer risk with number of stem cell divisions Scientists from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center have created a statistical model that measures the proportion of cancer incidence, across many tissue types, caused mainly by random mutations that occur when stem cells…
Fat Isn’t All Bad: Skin Adipocytes Help Protect Against Infections
When it comes to skin infections, a healthy and robust immune response may depend greatly upon what lies beneath. In a new paper published in the January 2, 2015 issue of Science, researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine report the…
Trastuzumab Continues to Show Life-Altering Benefit
Years After Treatment for HER2-Positve Early Stage Breast Cancer, Trastuzumab Continues to Show Life-Altering Benefit After following breast cancer patients for an average of eight-plus years, researchers say that adding trastuzumab (Herceptin) to chemotherapy significantly improved the overall and disease-free survival of women with early…
New Study Finds Heart Attacks Do Not Have as Strong of a Genetic Link As Previously Suspected
Heart attacks are not as connected to family history and genetics as may have been previously believed, according to a new study by researchers at the Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute in Salt Lake City.These new findings may help those with a family history of…
Males with IBS Report More Social Stress Than Females
Importance of gender-based studies is highlighted by unexpected findings, UB health psychologist says One of the few studies to examine gender differences among patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) has found that males with the condition experience more interpersonal difficulties than do females with the…
Study Shows Medication Is Frequently, Unintentionally Given Incorrectly to Young Children
According to Nationwide Children’s Hospital researchers, 63,000 children under the age of six experienced out-of-hospital medication errors annually between 2002 and 2012. One child is affected every eight minutes, usually by a well-meaning parent or caregiver unintentionally committing a medication error.The most common medication mistakes…
Smartphone Approach for Examining Progression of Diabetic Eye Disease
Smartphone Approach for Examining Progression of Diabetic Eye Disease Offers Comparable Results to Traditional Method Study shows iPhone ophthalmoscope could be an effective, lower-cost solution for monitoring diabetic retinopathy in remote populations A smartphone-based tool may be an effective alternative to traditional ophthalmic imaging equipment…
Diet for your DNA: novel nutrition plan sparks debate around data protection
– personalised nutrition based on an individual’s genotype – nutrigenomics – could have a major impact on reducing lifestyle-linked diseases such as obesity, heart disease and Type II diabetes – a study of more than 9,000 volunteers reveals strict regulations need to be put in…