By Oleg Butovsky
Researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) are the first to discover that changes in monocytes (a type of white blood cell) are a biomarker for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease. This finding also brings the medic
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By Uma Reddy
Vaginal delivery for early preterm fetuses presenting head first, or vertex presentation, had a high rate of success with no difference in neonatal mortality compared to cesarean delivery, a new study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics
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By Jeffrey P. Marcoe
Researchers at the University of Michigan Health System are helping to quell parents' worry about why infants seem to get sick so often.
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By Harry Reid
Fourteen years ago, I read an editorial in the Sun with the headline, “A Man’s World for Prescriptions.” When this editorial was published, the birth control pill, a proven and basic part of women’s health care for several de
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By David Baines
Colin McCabe of Abbotsford promoted several U.S. junior companies under three different pseudonyms, BCSC alleges
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By Mary Turner
We'll preface this by saying that a good dose of common sense, not to mention sound science, says that libido is far too multi-faceted to be induced by a single magical food, drink or nutritional supplement.
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By Cindy Brach
Is it possible for a health care system to redesign its services to better educate patients to deal with their immediate health issues and also become more savvy consumers of medicine in the long run?
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By UPI
More than 50 percent of U.S. adults take vitamins, herbs or supplements but many may not know some contain prescription drugs or toxic metals, a doctor says.
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By PMLiVE
Pfizer has sold its former R&D centre in Sandwich, Kent to Discovery Park Limited for an undisclosed sum after talks with another property consortium fell through in May.
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Sexy senior moments 2012-08-06
By REED TUCKER
A den of silver foxes light up the big screen — in more ways than one.
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By Kathleen Doheny
People Who Lied Less Reported Better Relationships, Improved Mental, Physical Health: Study
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By Johns Hopkins Medicine
Working with mice, Johns Hopkins researchers say they have figured out how stem cells found in a part of the brain responsible for learning, memory and mood regulation decide to remain dormant or create new brain cells. Apparently, the stem cells &q
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By Hassan Masoud
When you're just a few microns long, swimming can be difficult. At that size scale, the viscosity of water is more like that of honey, and momentum can't be relied upon to maintain forward motion.
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By University of Washington
Researchers have made a major advance in efforts to regenerate damaged hearts. Grafts of human cardiac muscle cells, grown from embryonic stem cells, coupled electrically and contracted synchronously with host muscle following transplantation in gui
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By Saswata Talukdar
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine say neutrophils, an abundant type of white blood cell typically tasked with attacking bacteria and other foreign invaders, also plays an unexpected role in mediating insulin r
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By P.C. Hopewell
An international research team, led from the University of Leeds, has found that a common anti-angina drug could help protect the heart against carbon monoxide poisoning. Animal studies have shown that the anti-angina drug ranolazine can significant
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By American Psychological Association
Grateful teens are more likely than their less grateful peers to be happy, less likely to abuse drugs and alcohol and less likely to have behavior problems at school, according to research presented at the American Psychological Association's 120th
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By Daniel E Neafsey
Genetic variability revealed in malaria genomes newly sequenced by two multi-national research teams points to new challenges in efforts to eradicate the parasite, but also offers a clearer and more detailed picture of its genetic composition, provi
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By Sungmin Son
It's a longstanding question in biology: How do cells know when to progress through the cell cycle?
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By Yu Sun
Developing resistance to chemotherapy is a nearly universal, ultimately lethal consequence for cancer patients with solid tumors -- such as those of the breast, prostate, lung and colon -- that have metastasized, or spread, throughout the body. A te
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