By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
The ability of men and women to have staying power and a strong level of commitment in their romantic relationships can be traced back to their early childhood and adolescence, a new study finds.
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By Amanda Gardner
Science has shown that diets that veer close to starvation can make everything from mice to monkeys live longer.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
A procedure commonly used in breast reconstruction but lacking evidence as to its safety does, in fact, appear to be safe and unlikely to increase the chances of breast cancer returning, a new study has found.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Children who are successfully treated for cancer are at greater risk of developing mild to severe gastrointestinal problems down the road, a new study finds.
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By Jenifer Goodwin
The symptoms and severity of autism vary widely, but new research shows remarkable similarities at the molecular level in the brains of people with the disorder.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Older adults who say they’ve had a life-changing religious experience are more likely to have a greater decrease in size of the hippocampus, the part of the brain critical to learning and memory, new research finds.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
This Friday, the start of the Memorial Day weekend, is also “Don’t Fry Day,” a time for skin-safety experts to remind Americans about the hazards of overexposure to sunlight.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
The Internet has put the world at people’s fingertips, but in some cases it has also allowed banned or controlled substances to slip within their grasp, British researchers warn.
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By Serena Gordon
The incidence of bacterial meningitis dropped by 31 percent between 1998 and 2007, new government research shows.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
About 19 percent of U.S. adults aged 24 to 32 have high blood pressure, but many of them are unaware that they have the potentially life-threatening condition, new research reveals.
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By Maureen Salamon
Home-based exercise managed by a physical therapist is just as effective at restoring stroke patients’ walking ability as a formal rehabilitation program using a specialized treadmill, a new study indicates.
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By Amanda Gardner
Precision-tinted glasses seem to help prevent migraines in people whose pain is triggered by certain visual patterns, new research indicates.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
College football scouts tend to seek high school football players who are bigger and faster than the rest, according to new research.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Caffeine, a known stimulant, has been shown to cause rapid heart rate, nausea, anxiety and depression. Now, new research reveals that caffeine consumption may make it harder for a woman to get pregnant.
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By Kathleen Doheny
Combining omega-3 fatty acids with blood-thinning drugs may reduce the risk of heart attacks in patients who’ve had stents placed in their coronary arteries, a new European study suggests.
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By Randy Dotinga
Wide differences in care for people who’ve had a stroke still exist between whites and ethnic minorities in the United States, according to a joint report issued by the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Changes in the swine flu virus over the past three decades can be traced, at least in part, to the transportation of live pigs, a new study reports.
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By Steven Reinberg
For men with advanced hormone-resistant prostate cancer who have also failed chemotherapy, the new drug Zytiga (abiraterone acetate) along with the steroid prednisone appears to boost survival, researchers report.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Lists of the side effects for prescription medications on drug labels, packaging and advertisements have mushroomed up to an average of 70 per medication, a new study reports.
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By Amanda Gardner
As Americans sit — literally — in more sedentary jobs, they’re packing on the pounds, and it’s this inertia that’s a major contributor to the obesity epidemic, new research suggests.
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