By Robert Preidt
Women who deliver full-term infants with low birth weights have nearly double the risk of developing ischemic heart disease, a new study says.
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By Randy Dotinga
Current recommendations from experts urge new mothers to breast-feed their newborns for the first six months of life. But, a new survey out of Scotland suggests that for many women, this expectation just isn’t realistic.
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By Mary Brophy Marcus
Exercise is a plus for women trying to become pregnant, but overdoing workouts might make it harder to conceive — unless you’re overweight, researchers report.
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By Robert Preidt
People who have mild vascular disease that damages the eyes’ retinas are more likely to have vascular disease in the brain that causes thinking and memory problems, new research indicates.
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By Yale University
Exposure to radiation from cell phones during pregnancy affects the brain development of offspring, potentially leading to hyperactivity, a new study suggests.
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By Stanford University Medical Center
Geneticist Michael Snyder, PhD, has almost no privacy. For more than two years, he and his lab members at the Stanford University School of Medicine pored over his body's most intimate secrets: the sequence of his DNA, the RNA and proteins produced
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By University of Vermont
A close look at kissing bugs revealed to biologist Lori Stevens that a surprising number of them feast on people. Her new study, published by the Centers for Disease Control, shows that the bugs might bring a little-known -- but dangerous -- tropica
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By Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncologicas (CNIO)
Can a gene simultaneously protect against cancer and favor its growth? Researchers at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre have discovered a gene with this double-edged property and suspect there may be many more that share it. In the words o
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By Kessler Foundation
Kessler Foundation scientists have shown for the first time that outdoor temperature significantly affects cognitive functioning in multiple sclerosis (MS). While it is recognized that disease activity increases during warmer months, this is the fir
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By Wayne State University - Office of the Vice President for Research
A team of neuroscientists led by a Wayne State University School of Medicine professor has discovered stark developmental differences in brain network function in children of parents with schizophrenia when compared to those with no family history o
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By UCLA
For every individual who's a victim of Alzheimer's -- some 5.4 million persons in the United States alone -- there's a related victim: the caregiver. Spouse, son, daughter, other relative or friend, the loneliness, exhaustion, fear and most of all s
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By University of Adelaide
A major study led by the University of Adelaide has found that women who have had one prior cesarean can lower the risk of death and serious complications for their next baby -- and themselves -- by electing to have another cesarean.
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By JAMA and Archives Journals
In the E coli outbreak in Germany in May 2011, treatment with azithromycin was associated with a lower frequency of long-term carriage of the bacteria and shorter duration of shedding of the bacteria in stool specimens, according to a study in the M
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By American Heart Association
Scientists say they have identified five eating patterns for U.S. adults that are strongly influenced by age, race, region, gender, income and education.
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By American Heart Association
Cooling the palms of the hands while working out could help you stick with a physical activity program, according to a small study presented at the American Heart Association's Epidemiology and Prevention/Nutrition, Physical Activity and Metabolism
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
About Two-Thirds of at-Risk Young Women Miss Test for Fertility-Robbing STD
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By John Hopkins Medicine
Overweight people who shed pounds, especially belly fat, can improve the function of their blood vessels no matter whether they are on a low-carb or a low-fat diet, according to a study being presented by Johns Hopkins researchers at an American Hea
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By European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE)
Men's diets, in particular the amount and type of different fats they eat, could be associated with their semen quality according to the results of a study published online in the journal Human Reproduction.
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By Salynn Boyles
Natural Birth After a C-Section Shown to Be Slightly Riskier Than Repeat Surgery, but Complication Rate Low for Both
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By University of Warwick
New research at the University of Warwick into 50 years of motherhood manuals has revealed how despite their differences they have always issued advice as orders and set unattainably high standards for new mums and babies.
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