By Denise Mann
Study Suggests Role for Inhaled Steroids as Rescue Medication
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By Salynn Boyles
Study Suggests Some IV Drug Users Are Shifting to Other Methods of Using Illicit Drugs
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By Brenda Goodman
Researchers Says Poison Centers Are Getting Calls About Caffeine Overdoses in Children
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By Bill Hendrick
Study Shows Risk of Dementia May Increase as Hearing Loss Gets Worse
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By Denise Mann
American Heart Association Warns of Heart Attack Risk for Women With Some Pregnancy Complications
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By Jennifer Warner
Quality of Life Also Reduced by Knee OA and Obesity, Researchers Say
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By Bill Hendrick
Portable Pedaling Exercise Machine Helps Deskbound Workers Burn Calories, Improve Health, Study Finds
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By Jennifer Warner
Problems With Motor Control May Reveal ADHD Severity in Children, Researchers Say
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By Denise Mann
Study: Fiber From Whole Grains Reduces Risk of Dying From Heart Disease, Infections, and Lung Disease
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By Charlene Laino
Study Shows Robotic Therapy May Have Advantages Over Treatment by Human Physical Therapists
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By Denise Mann
Study Shows Doctors Often Fail to Tell Patients About Ongoing Clinical Trials
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
Cords Too Close to Cribs Blamed for 7 Baby Deaths
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By Charlene Laino
Researchers Say tPA Not Given for Mild Strokes Because of Bleeding Risk
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By Charlene Laino
Study Suggests Connection Between Drinking Diet Soda and Risk of Heart Attack and Stroke
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By SAM SIFTON
“One of the saddest things is that the only thing a man can do for eight hours a day, day after day, is work.” This was William Faulkner talking, 1956, an interview with Jean Stein for The Paris Review. He was reminiscing about his early
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My Life in Food 2011-02-11
By SAM SIFTON
So this is what it looks like in black and white: a week’s eating and exercising as the restaurant critic of The Times. It is not entirely representative of everyday life for me. I was on the road from Wednesday on, eating in a city not my own
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By CYNTHIA GORNEY
Here we are, two fast-talking women on estrogen, staring at a wall of live mitochondria from the brain of a rat. Mitochondria are cellular energy generators of unfathomably tiny size, but these are vivid and big because they were hit with dye in a p
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By TARA PARKER-POPE
In 1858, a British epidemiologist named William Farr set out to study what he called the “conjugal condition” of the people of France. He divided the adult population into three distinct categories: the “married,” consisting
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Dr. Does-It-All 2011-02-11
By FRANK BRUNI
As one of the most accomplished cardiothoracic surgeons of his generation, Mehmet Oz has transplanted lungs and repurposed hearts; implanted mechanical devices to provide the pump and pulse for patients that cannot manage that on their own; and othe
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By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
How exercise affects body weight is one of the more intriguing and vexing issues in physiology. Exercise burns calories, no one doubts that, and so it should, in theory, produce weight loss, a fact that has prompted countless people to undertake exe
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