Medicine

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Medicine
fromwww.independent.co.uk
5 hours ago

How erectile dysfunction stigma' is being exploited by criminals'

About 20 million illegal erectile dysfunction pills were seized in five years; many contain no or wrong active ingredients, hidden drugs, or toxic substances.
fromwww.theguardian.com
40 minutes ago

Wear shades in winter and follow the 20-20-20 rule: experts on 13 ways to look after your eyes

The front of the eye, and the cornea in particular, has more nerve endings per millimetre square than anywhere else in the body, says Dr Dilani Siriwardena, a consultant NHS ophthalmologist at Moorfields eye hospital in London and vice-president of the Royal College of Ophthalmologists. So it can be very sensitive. The tiniest scratch or piece of grit in your eye can feel like a brick.
Medicine
Medicine
fromNextgov.com
8 hours ago

VA takes initial steps to create a centralized database of veteran research info, official says

VA is creating a singular, real-time database and dashboard to consolidate veteran clinical trial enrollment data and resolve data siloing and interoperability issues.
Medicine
fromNews Center
13 hours ago

Common Anti-Seizure Drug Prevents Alzheimer's Plaques from Forming - News Center

Levetiracetam prevents neurons from producing toxic amyloid-beta 42 by blocking its accumulation in synaptic vesicles, stopping plaque formation before it begins.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
6 hours ago

3 Designers Built the Knee Recovery Tool 40% of Seniors Need - Yanko Design

There's something quietly radical about designing for pain. Not the dramatic, cinematic kind, but the daily grind of chronic discomfort that shapes how millions of people move through their lives. That's exactly what Madhav Binu, Kriti V, and Himvall Sindhu set out to tackle with Revive, a home-based rehabilitation device for knee osteoarthritis patients. The numbers tell a sobering story. Forty percent of India's elderly population lives with knee osteoarthritis, a condition that doesn't just hurt.
Medicine
fromBustle
10 hours ago

Here's What's Actually Happening To Your Brain During A Migraine

If you get migraines, you already know they don't just stay in your head. The pounding pain might be the headline symptom, but the real story is how an attack can throw your entire body out of whack - making light feel blinding, everyday sounds unbearable, and even simple texts impossible to answer. That's because a migraine isn't just about sore neck muscles or scalp tension. It's a full-body neurological event, driven by a cascade of changes in the brain.
Medicine
Medicine
fromIndependent
12 hours ago

GP who criticised Covid vaccines says no evidence of 'unsafe practice'

A family doctor argued forceful moral disagreement with State policy on Covid-19 vaccines and guidelines does not amount to professional misconduct.
#glp-1-drugs
#glp-1-receptor-agonists
fromNature
1 day ago
Medicine

The 'astounding' rise of semaglutide - and what's next for weight-loss drugs

fromNature
1 day ago
Medicine

The 'astounding' rise of semaglutide - and what's next for weight-loss drugs

#vitt
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
23 hours ago

Grieving widow's warning over blood thinners

Apixaban can cause delayed intracranial bleeding after minor head injuries; older patients may not always receive sufficiently clear warnings, risking fatal outcomes.
Medicine
fromScary Mommy
11 hours ago

Everything You Want To Know About Peptides In Skincare, From Derms

Topical peptides signal skin cells to boost collagen, strengthen the barrier, reduce inflammation, and improve texture, firmness, and long-term skin resilience.
Medicine
fromIndependent
1 day ago

Stay Well: I sweat a lot and it's affecting my self esteem. Why is this and what can I do about it?

Hyperhidrosis causes distress through excessive underarm, palm, and foot sweating and can be managed with treatments from OTC remedies to Botox or surgery.
Medicine
fromThe New Yorker
15 hours ago

A Terrifying Scam and the System That Made It Possible

Product-liability lawsuits can provide victims compensation, but opaque settlement processes enable scammers to exploit claimants through deceptive offers, coerced paperwork, and low payouts.
fromPsychology Today
16 hours ago

Why Longevity Doctors Fail Us

We are all going to die. No one is happy about that. Today, the internet is full of claims about diets and supplements that will help us live longer. One writer suggested that there are at least 320 longevity clinics operating around the world; some charge $100,000 or more annually for access to their magic elixirs. Unfortunately, the search for a formula that can prevent death, or delay it for a very long time, has a long history of failures.
Medicine
Medicine
fromNews Center
6 hours ago

Transitions in Dermatology Leadership: Dr. Amy S. Paller to Step Down as Chair - News Center

Amy S. Paller is stepping down as chair of Northwestern's Dermatology after more than twenty years, remaining on faculty and leading clinical and research programs.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
12 hours ago

The volunteers who hug babies who are alone in Chile: It's amazing how the children blossom'

A volunteer-based pilot provides stable daily emotional bonds to hospitalized infants without caregivers to prevent chronic emotional deprivation and support development.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
21 hours ago

Doctor who sold stolen PPE on eBay is struck off register

An NHS doctor who sold stolen PPE on eBay during the COVID-19 pandemic has been struck off the medical register.
Medicine
fromTNW | Deep-Tech
1 day ago

Aerska raises $39M to help RNA medicines reach the brain

Aerska raised $39 million to develop bloodstream-delivered genetic medicines capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier to treat neurodegenerative diseases.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

UK first as cutting-edge therapy used for 'debilitating' heart condition

Atrial fibrillation causes irregular rapid heart rhythms; the Volt Pulsed Field Ablation System offers quicker, same-day treatment, treating more patients per day and speeding recovery.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Who Does It Help? It's a Good Question in Mental Health Care

Subgroup and biomarker-guided analyses reveal that antidepressants can produce faster, stronger responses in specific genetic or biological subgroups, reducing trial-and-error prescribing.
#glp-1-medications
#caffeine
fromNature
3 days ago
Medicine

Daily briefing: Caffeine might reduce dementia risk and slow cognitive decline

fromNature
3 days ago
Medicine

Daily briefing: Caffeine might reduce dementia risk and slow cognitive decline

fromNature
2 days ago

My 'detective' job as a competitive-intelligence consultant for pharma

We provide thought partnership. When a company is developing a drug, there's a lot of work involved, such as understanding the science, designing a study and generating good data. We come in and explain what the standard of care looks like today for their patient population, and what we think it will look like in five to eight years or whenever they plan to launch their therapy.
Medicine
Medicine
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
1 day ago

Armistice Capital increases bicycle therapeutics stake as company awaits regulatory feedback on lead drug candidate - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Bicycle Therapeutics advanced zelenectide pevedotin development while investors increased positions ahead of upcoming regulatory feedback and pivotal trial readouts.
Medicine
fromHuffPost
1 day ago

Plastic Surgeons Say These Are The Cosmetic Procedures Men Are Getting The Most

Men increasingly pursue plastic surgery openly, seeking aesthetic procedures for personal confidence and professional competitiveness amid a stronger appearance-focused culture.
Medicine
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 day ago

First mRNA vaccine to be produced in UK approved by regulators

The Independent seeks donations to fund paywall-free journalism while the UK approves Moderna's domestically manufactured mRNA vaccine for NHS use.
Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

Doctors told a woman she was too young for colon cancer and dismissed her symptoms for years. At 22, she was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer.

Young, healthy individuals can develop colorectal cancer; persistent rectal bleeding and other symptoms require prompt, thorough medical evaluation.
Medicine
fromwww.nature.com
2 days ago

Pre-incision structures reveal principles of DNA nucleotide excision repair

Nucleotide excision repair removes bulky DNA lesions via coordinated recognition, verification, excision, and resynthesis to maintain genome stability and prevent cancer and premature ageing.
Medicine
fromTODAY.com
1 day ago

After a High-Risk Pregnancy, Mom Names Her Child After the Nurse 'God Placed' in Her Life

A perinatal nurse navigator provides continuous compassionate advocacy and emotional support to high-risk pregnant patients, guiding them through medical and personal crises.
Medicine
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Amazon Pharmacy to expand same-day delivery to nearly 4,500 US cities | TechCrunch

Amazon Pharmacy will expand same-day prescription delivery to nearly 4,500 U.S. cities and towns by year-end, adding almost 2,000 communities.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

My patient's near-death experience in hospital left me with worry and guilt. This is how vicarious trauma starts | Ranjana Srivastava

Clinicians must honor clear end-of-life wishes to avoid unwanted resuscitation and rapid escalation when patients have refused life-prolonging treatments.
Medicine
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Dewormer ivermectin as cancer cure? RFK Jr.'s NIH funds "absurd" study.

The National Cancer Institute is investigating ivermectin for anti-cancer properties despite no scientific evidence supporting its efficacy and prior debunked COVID-19 claims.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago

Could this spider's silk help repair nerves?

Golden orb-web drag-line silk can act as a long-lasting biodegradable scaffold to bridge nerve gaps and support regeneration across centimeter-scale injuries.
#ai-in-healthcare
Medicine
fromComputerworld
2 days ago

AI chatbots are worse than search engines for medical advice

GenAI tools failed to improve urgency assessment and were worse at diagnosing conditions compared with users' usual methods.
fromFortune
2 days ago

Sanofi CEO: The enterprise AI shift will reshape pharma in 2026 | Fortune

At Sanofi, AI has shifted from experimentation to becoming a vital part of our infrastructure. It now powers our R&D decisions, our supply chain and manufacturing processes, and most importantly how we discover and develop medicines. All businesses that have implemented AI in an impactful way face challenges, such as skills gaps and uncertainty, but you move beyond that by embedding AI deeply into teams and systems. This enables AI to become a key, reliable source of sustained productivity and innovation.
Medicine
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

This complex brain network may explain many of Parkinson's stranger symptoms

Parkinson's disrupts communication in a brain network linking bodily functions and cognition, producing motor and nonmotor symptoms beyond movement control.
Medicine
fromNature
3 days ago

China's biotech boom: why the nation must collaborate to stay ahead

China leads in drug manufacturing and biotech innovation, but geopolitical scrutiny and moves toward a closed biotech ecosystem threaten scientific collaboration and global medicine access.
fromEntrepreneur
2 days ago

This Founder Built Natural GLP-1 Alternative Before the Boom

Becca McCarthy says she's always been good at recognizing when something is about to break into the mainstream. She has spent her career inside startups, helping turn early interest into real markets and building products before most people realize there's demand for them. That's why, a few years ago, when she started hearing people in her network talking about GLP-1 drugs, she paid attention.
Medicine
Medicine
fromFuturism
3 days ago

AI-Powered Surgery Tool Repeatedly Injuring Patients, Lawsuits Claim

Integration of AI into the TruDi Navigation System is linked to numerous malfunction reports and serious patient injuries, prompting lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

AI chatbots pose 'dangerous' risk when giving medical advice, study suggests

AI chatbots provide inconsistent and sometimes inaccurate medical advice that can mislead users and create potential risks for health decision-making.
Medicine
fromwww.cbc.ca
3 days ago

Experiencing menopause symptoms? Here's what experts say can help | CBC

Hormone therapy is the gold standard for menopause hot flashes and night sweats, effective for many symptoms but unsuitable for people with certain health risks.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Real World Effects of ADHD Medication

ADHD medication reduces symptoms and significantly lowers real-world harms—criminality, substance abuse, motor-vehicle incidents, and mortality—with benefits persisting after discontinuation.
Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

I was diagnosed with a chronic illness while working at Microsoft. It's shifted how I view success.

A diagnosis of ulcerative colitis prompted major lifestyle and work changes while maintaining a tech career and redefining personal success.
Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

A brain-training game that takes less than 2 hours a week can reduce your risk of developing dementia by 25%, study finds

Regular online speed training ('Double Decision') reduced dementia risk by about 25% among adults aged 65+ over 20 years.
fromVue.js Jobs
2 weeks ago

Software Engineer (front-end) at TidalSense - VueJobs

TidalSense is a respiratory technology company with a mission to transform the diagnosis, monitoring and management of chronic respiratory conditions, such as asthma and COPD. The company has ambitions to enable a population-scale change in respiratory care through global deployment of its technologies. TidalSense has just launched a first-of-its-kind AI-driven (software medical device) diagnostic test for COPD which uses the company's unique, patented, sensor technology embedded in the N-Tidal device.
Medicine
Medicine
fromInsideHook
4 days ago

What Years of Typing and Texting Do to Your Hands

Frequent, prolonged typing and phone use can strain flexor tendons, increasing risk of carpal tunnel and other repetitive-use nerve injuries.
Medicine
fromThe Washington Post
3 days ago

David Liu unlocks the power of gene editing to treat rare genetic diseases

Base and prime gene-editing technologies can precisely correct genetic mutations, enabling personalized therapies that can cure life-threatening inherited diseases.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
3 days ago

Drinking 2-3 cups of coffee a day tied to lower dementia risk - Harvard Gazette

Drinking two to three cups of coffee daily or one to two cups of caffeinated tea reduces dementia risk and slows cognitive decline.
#telehealth
fromFuturism
3 days ago

Forget the NFL: New Sport Forces Two Massive Guys to Smash Into Each Other like Rhinos

Turns out the sci-fi filmmakers got it backwards. All those '70s and '80s dystopias like "Rollerball," "The Running Man," "Death Race 2000," imagined futures in which sports were full of gadgets and gimmicks like armored cars, rocket-powered motorbikes, and electrified arenas. In reality, we got the opposite - the padding's gone, and the high-tech monitoring equipment is nowhere to be found.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

'Weight-loss jab helped me find my cancer'

The cancer was fastacting, and if I'd left it even six months, the outcome could have been much worse,
Medicine
Medicine
fromScary Mommy
3 days ago

Tube-Feeding Is A Journey, But One Mom Is Making The Most of It

Tube-feeding families manage unpredictable, ongoing medical challenges, intensive caregiving, and slow, incremental progress while addressing feeding complications and nutritional risks.
fromFuturism
4 days ago

Hospital Evacuated When Man Arrives With WW1 Shell Stuck in the Wildest Part of His Body Imaginable

Now, in a twist to the age-old story that even the writing room of "Grey's Anatomy" couldn't have come up with, a man in France was rushed to the operating room after staffers at the Rangueil Hospital in Toulouse found out he had shoved a 37mm brass-and-copper "collectible shell" that was used by the Imperial German Army during World War 1 up his rectum.
Medicine
Medicine
fromMail Online
5 days ago

What would YOUR Winter Olympic sport be? Take the test to find out

Different Winter Olympic sports favor distinct body types and mindsets, so choose a winter sport based on physique and temperament.
Medicine
fromBusiness Matters
1 week ago

How North York Sleep & Diagnostic Centre Built a Community-First Clinic

North York Sleep & Diagnostic Centre provides physician-led high-quality sleep diagnostics and treatment in Toronto, prioritizing clinical rigor, credentials, and patient-centered care.
Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
5 days ago

Hims & Hers removes a knock-off weight loss drug days after introducing it

Hims & Hers launched, then halted, a compounded once-daily semaglutide pill after the FDA moved to restrict mass-marketed, unapproved compounded GLP-1 drug sales.
fromZDNET
5 days ago

This USB-C accessory gave my iPhone and Android an unexpectedly useful superpower

As someone who spends a lot of time outdoors (and someone who got hit with Lyme disease), it's astonishing how often I forget to apply insect repellent. Just the other night, I spent the last half of a five-mile walk in a thick, annoying cloud of houseflies. Irritating, but at least they don't bite. Not like horseflies... Now those things know how to bite! I've watched them land on my sleeve and start gnawing through the fabric.
Medicine
#ski-jumping
fromFuturism
4 days ago
Medicine

The Crotch-Based Allegations at the Winter Olympics Are Getting Stranger and Stranger

fromFuturism
4 days ago
Medicine

The Crotch-Based Allegations at the Winter Olympics Are Getting Stranger and Stranger

Medicine
fromwww.dw.com
5 days ago

How the Epstein-Barr virus triggers MS in some people

Epstein-Barr virus infection combined with specific genetic factors can trigger multiple sclerosis by provoking immune attacks on myelin.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Drug-Induced Nodding-Not a Nice Nap

Recurrent opioid "nodding" reflects hypoxia that can produce anoxic brain injury and cumulative cognitive damage even when overdoses are non-fatal.
fromenglish.elpais.com
6 days ago

When your body becomes a brewery

He wasn't crazy. His body had literally turned into a brewery. Cases like this have been mere medical anecdotes for decades, but they have just received the most solid scientific validation yet. A study published in Nature Microbiology, conducted by researchers at the University of California (UC) San Diego and Massachusetts General Hospital, has finally identified what happens inside the gut of these patients. More importantly, it has found a treatment that works: a stool transplant.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Deafening, draining and potentially deadly: are we facing a snoring epidemic?

When Matt Hillier was in his 20s, he went camping with a friend who was a nurse. In the morning she told him she had been shocked by the snoring coming from his tent. She basically said, For a 25-year-old non-smoker who's quite skinny, you snore pretty loudly,' says Hiller, now 32. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.
Medicine
#lindsey-vonn
fromBusiness Insider
6 days ago

For brain surgery patients, a robot could be the key to faster recovery

When Dr. Homoud Aldahash started the three-hour process of removing a tumor about the size of a walnut from a patient's brain, it was an experience unlike any other in his 25 years as a neurosurgeon. It wasn't Aldahash's gloved hands slicing 68-year-old Mohammed Almutrafi's right frontal lobe, but surgical instruments attached to a set of robotic arms, which Aldahash controlled from a console where he sat three meters away.
Medicine
Medicine
fromNature
1 week ago

Cheap AI chatbots transform medical diagnoses in places with limited care

Cheap large language models can substantially improve diagnostic accuracy and support under-resourced clinicians and community health workers in low- and middle-income settings.
Medicine
fromVue.js Jobs
6 days ago

Senior Web Application Developer - Medical Imaging at Heartflow - VueJobs

Heartflow provides AI-driven, non-invasive 3D cardiac imaging and physiological analysis to improve diagnosis and management of coronary artery disease.
Medicine
fromScienceDaily
6 days ago

Scientists found a hidden fat switch and turned it off

Blocking a newly identified enzyme required for fat production prevented weight gain, reduced liver damage, and lowered harmful cholesterol in animal studies.
#statins
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

When to worry about forgetfulness versus when it's just normal aging: a neurologist finally explains clearly - Silicon Canals

You know that moment when you walk into a room and completely forget why you went there? Or when someone you've known for years walks up to you at the grocery store and their name just... vanishes from your brain? Last week, I spent ten minutes searching for my reading glasses while they were sitting on top of my head. My first thought wasn't "oh, silly me." It was "Is this how it starts?"
Medicine
Medicine
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
6 days ago

RCEM urges action as long hospital stays reach worst levels this winter - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Record high long hospital stays, rising staff absences, and ambulance handover delays require long-term, system-wide government action and support for emergency staff.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
6 days ago

Court upholds return of surgeon who harassed staff

The Court of Appeal dismissed the GMC's challenge, allowing transplant surgeon James Gilbert to return to practice despite findings of sexual harassment.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Brave Steps: Facing Eating Fears and Finding Strength

Early sensory-based fear of choking can cause severe food avoidance in children, impairing growth, social functioning, and requiring multidisciplinary, family-involved treatment.
Medicine
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Are people spending less on food when they take weight-loss drugs?

Some individuals who can afford costly weight-loss medications may reduce household grocery spending significantly, offsetting part of the medication cost.
Medicine
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

I kept finding mysterious bruises everywhere-then a doctor told me what was actually going on - Silicon Canals

Unexplained, easy bruising—especially new or widespread—can indicate medical issues and merits prompt evaluation including blood tests for platelets, clotting, and vitamins.
Medicine
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

I'm Caring For My Aging Father. It's Taken Over My Life.

Father likely has Alzheimer's causing profound cognitive decline; eldest daughter carries unpaid caregiving responsibilities, manages medical decisions and paperwork, and experiences emotional burden.
Medicine
fromTNW | Quantum-Tech
1 week ago

QT Sense raises 4M to advance a quantum sensing platform

Quantum Nuova raised €4 million to advance a live-cell nanodiamond quantum-sensor platform that measures oxidative stress, metabolic shifts, and free radical activity in real time for disease research.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

New AI tool predicts brain age, dementia risk, cancer survival - Harvard Gazette

BrainIAC, a brain imaging adaptive core, accurately extracts multiple disease risk signals from routine brain MRIs using self-supervised learning and limited training data.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

People are turning themselves into lab rats': the injectable peptides craze sweeping the US

Grey-market injectable peptides are unapproved, widely used by biohackers despite lacking reliable safety data, quality control, and presenting potential health and legal risks.
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Stay Well: I went to the GP with jaw pain and was told I may have TMD. What is it and how can I fix it?

Around half a million Irish people suffer from what is called 'temporomandibular disorder', with women affected at a higher rate than men. Discomfort, clicking and pain in the jaw can be at best a nuisance, and at worst debilitating. People who suffer from temporomandibular disorder (TMD), which refers to a variety of conditions that affect the jaw area, can experience stress, chronic pain and poor sleep.
Medicine
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