By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
The northeastern United States may see a significant increase in cases of Lyme disease this spring, an expert warns.
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By Amanda Gardner
With a recent flood of new regulations or proposals aimed at governing lifestyle choices such as smoking, eating or cellphone use, is the United States in danger of becoming a “nanny state”?
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By Serena Gordon
A new type of medication for type 2 diabetes helps to lower blood sugar levels when used in concert with insulin and other diabetes drugs, new research suggests.
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By Carina Storrs
The memory blips and distractible moments that women say they experience during menopause may be as real as the hot flashes and poor sleep, a new study suggests.
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By Jackson Laboratory
Jackson Laboratory researchers have demonstrated that a single, targeted X-ray treatment of an individual eye in young, glaucoma-prone mice provided that eye with apparently life-long and typically complete protection from glaucoma.
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By Northwestern University
The number of American children leaving doctors' offices with an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis has risen 66 percent in 10 years, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study. Over this same timeframe, specialists, inste
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By Robert Preidt
A state’s level of wealth affects women’s heart disease risk, a new study says.
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By JAMA/Archives journals
An antioxidant combination of vitamin E, vitamin C and α-lipoic acid (E/C/ALA) was not associated with changes in some cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers related to Alzheimer disease in a randomized controlled trial, according to a study published
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By Amanda Gardner
Ibuprofen has been used for decades to treat pain. Now, research suggests the drug’s anti-inflammatory properties also may help prevent the piercing headaches and other symptoms of altitude sickness.
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By University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Food-borne diseases might soon have another warrior to contend with, thanks to a new molecule discovered by chemists at the University of Illinois. The new antibiotic, an analog of the widely used food preservative nisin, also has potential to be a
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By Robert Preidt
Calculating the difference in blood pressure readings taken from the left and right arms might help predict a patient’s odds of dying from heart disease, a new study suggests.
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By Steven Reinberg
Aspirin, a popular weapon in the war against heart attacks, may also play a role in cancer prevention and treatment, three new British studies suggest.
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By University of California - Irvine
By analyzing the hundreds of metabolic products present in the liver, researchers with the UC Irvine Center for Epigenetics & Metabolism have discovered that circadian rhythms -- our own body clock -- greatly control the production of such key b
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By University of Utah Health Sciences
Researchers from Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at the University of Utah report they have discovered a method to identify cancer-causing rearrangements of genetic material called chromosomal translocations quickly, accurately, and inexpensively. A
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By Imperial College London
Scientists are one step closer to making more complex microscopic biological machines, following improvements in the way that they can "re-wire" DNA in yeast, according to research recently published in the journal PLoS ONE.
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
3 Firms to Sell Ibandronate, Once-Monthly Osteoporosis Pill
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By Society for Women's Health Research
A migraine is the most common type of headache that propels patients to seek care from their doctors. Roughly 30 million Americans suffer from migraine headaches, with women affected almost three times more often than men, according to statistics fr
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By Cari Nierenberg
Knoxville Leads List for a Third Straight Year; 8 Out of 10 Top Spots Are in the South
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By University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati have found evidence that, in addition to affecting the heart, brain and nervous system, bisphenol A (BPA), could affect a mammal's ability to reproduce by altering the structure of the uterus in ways that
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By Kathleen Doheny
Small Study Found Method Safe, Effective for Treating Aging Hands
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