ScienceDaily: Top Health News |
- Observation is safe, cost-saving in low-risk prostate cancer, study suggests
- Treating infection may have sting in the tail, parasite study shows
- Promising biomarker for predicting HPV-related oropharynx cancer
- 'Undruggable' cancer may be druggable after all: New target identified
- Quality of waking hours determines ease of falling sleep
- New compound excels at killing persistent and drug-resistant tuberculosis
- Researchers demonstrate use of stem cells to analyze causes, treatment of diabetes
- Diet may affect Alzheimer's disease risk
- Directed in vitro technique may increase insulin resistance among offspring
- Obesity leads to brain inflammation, and low testosterone makes it worse
- New way to improve antibiotic production
- Voices may not trigger brain's reward centers in children with autism
- New drug reverses loss of brain connections in Alzheimer's
- Improving overall employee wellness could yield multiple benefits
- Obesity associated with hearing loss in adolescents
- New medication treats drug-resistant prostate cancer in the laboratory
- Preventing eggs' death from chemotherapy: Scientists discover cause of immature eggs' death from cancer drug and how to prevent it
- Testosterone therapy may help improve pain in men with low testosterone
- Testosterone improves verbal learning and memory in postmenopausal women
- Naturally occurring hormone induces egg maturation
- High-fat diet during pregnancy contributes to offspring's increased weight
- Rett Syndrome protein surrenders some of its secrets
- Protein essential for normal heart function identified
- Medical assessment in the blink of an eye
- People attribute minds to robots, corpses that are targets of harm
- Artificial sweetener a potential treatment for Parkinson's disease
- Blocking overactive receptor in Alzheimer's recovers memory loss and more, mouse study suggests
- Eating behaviors of preschoolers may be related to future risk of heart disease
- Chemical in antibacterial soap fed to nursing rats harms offspring, study finds
- Prenatal exposure to BPA affects fat tissues in sheep
- BPA linked to a common birth defect in boys
- Vitamin D supplementation may delay precocious puberty in girls
- Exposure to BPA in developing prostate increases risk of later cancer: Ubiquitous plasticizers may have long-term health effects
- Bariatric surgery restores nerve cell properties altered by diet
- Infections increase risk of mood disorders, study suggests
- Mice in a 'Big Brother' setup develop social structures
- Vitamin D deficiency may raise allergy and asthma risk in obese children, teens
- Estrogen replacement therapy helps reduce anxiety in anorexia nervosa
- 'Gene signature' test diagnoses benign thyroid growths
- Steroid hormone may be indicator of infant distress
- Weight loss improves memory and alters brain activity in overweight women
- Too little sleep may trigger the 'munchies' by raising levels of an appetite-controlling molecule
- Drugs used to treat heart failure and high blood pressure may help decrease obesity
- Excessive salt consumption appears to be bad for your bones
- Whole body vibration therapy increases bone strength
- Adolescents' high-fat diet impairs memory and learning
- Short-term antidepressant use, stress, high-fat diet linked to long-term weight gain
- Insulin resistance linked to weaker bones
- Babies seeing violence show aggression later
- Coatings could help medical implants function better
- Healthy, full-term babies use a different stress hormone than their mother
- Psychiatric disorders linked to a protein involved in the formation of long-term memories
- Cells play 'tag' to determine direction of movement
- Sibling aggression linked to poor mental health
- Medical marijuana not the answer for teens with chronic pain, doctors say
Observation is safe, cost-saving in low-risk prostate cancer, study suggests Posted: 17 Jun 2013 05:27 PM PDT Researchers find many men with low-risk, localized prostate cancers can safely choose observation instead of undergoing immediate treatment and a have better quality of life while reducing health care costs. |
Treating infection may have sting in the tail, parasite study shows Posted: 17 Jun 2013 05:27 PM PDT Using drugs to treat an infection could allow other co-existing conditions to flourish, a study in wild animals has shown. |
Promising biomarker for predicting HPV-related oropharynx cancer Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:31 PM PDT Researchers have found that antibodies against the human papillomavirus may help identify individuals who are at greatly increased risk of HPV-related cancer of the oropharynx, which is a portion of the throat that contains the tonsils. |
'Undruggable' cancer may be druggable after all: New target identified Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:31 PM PDT Researchers have identified in the most aggressive forms of cancer a gene known to regulate embryonic stem cell self-renewal, beginning a creative search for a drug that can block its activity. |
Quality of waking hours determines ease of falling sleep Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:31 PM PDT The quality of wakefulness affects how quickly a mammal falls asleep, researchers report in a study that identifies two proteins never before linked to alertness and sleep-wake balance. |
New compound excels at killing persistent and drug-resistant tuberculosis Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:31 PM PDT Scientists have identified a highly promising new anti-tuberculosis compound that attacks the tuberculosis bacterium in two different ways. |
Researchers demonstrate use of stem cells to analyze causes, treatment of diabetes Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:31 PM PDT Scientists have generated patient-specific beta cells, or insulin-producing cells, that accurately reflect the features of maturity-onset diabetes of the young. |
Diet may affect Alzheimer's disease risk Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:28 PM PDT The lipidation states (or modifications) in certain proteins in the brain that are related to the development of Alzheimer disease appear to differ depending on genotype and cognitive diseases, and levels of these protein and peptides appear to be influenced by diet, according to a new report. |
Directed in vitro technique may increase insulin resistance among offspring Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:28 PM PDT A special type of in vitro fertilization, or IVF, may increase the risk for insulin resistance among children conceived in this way, according to a new study from Greece. |
Obesity leads to brain inflammation, and low testosterone makes it worse Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:28 PM PDT Low testosterone worsens the harmful effects of obesity in the nervous system, a new study in mice finds. |
New way to improve antibiotic production Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:09 PM PDT New research findings could reduce production times and therefore costs for antibiotic producers. |
Voices may not trigger brain's reward centers in children with autism Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:08 PM PDT In autism, brain regions tailored to respond to voices are poorly connected to reward-processing circuits, according to a new study. |
New drug reverses loss of brain connections in Alzheimer's Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:08 PM PDT The first experimental drug to boost brain synapses lost in Alzheimer's disease has been developed by researchers. |
Improving overall employee wellness could yield multiple benefits Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:07 PM PDT Controlling health care costs is crucial for manufacturers to remain competitive. That's why researchers are working with manufacturers to determine if employee wellness programs will cut costs and improve productivity. |
Obesity associated with hearing loss in adolescents Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:07 PM PDT Obese adolescents are more likely than their normal-weight counterparts to have hearing loss, according to results of a new study. Findings showed that obese adolescents had increased hearing loss across all frequencies and were almost twice as likely to have unilateral (one-sided) low-frequency hearing loss. |
New medication treats drug-resistant prostate cancer in the laboratory Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:07 PM PDT A new drug called pyrvinium pamoate inhibits aggressive forms of prostate cancer that are resistant to standard drugs, according to a study conducted in an animal model. |
Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:23 AM PDT Young women who have cancer treatment often lose their fertility because chemotherapy and radiation can damage or kill their immature ovarian eggs, called oocytes. Now, scientists have found the molecular pathway that can prevent the death of immature ovarian eggs due to chemotherapy, potentially preserving fertility and endocrine function. Scientists achieved this in mice by adding a currently approved chemotherapy drug, imatinib mesylate, to another chemotherapy drug cisplatin. |
Testosterone therapy may help improve pain in men with low testosterone Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:20 AM PDT Testosterone therapy is associated with decreased pain perception in men with low testosterone levels related to opioid (narcotic) pain relievers (analgesics), a new study finds. |
Testosterone improves verbal learning and memory in postmenopausal women Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:20 AM PDT Postmenopausal women had better improvement in verbal learning and memory after receiving treatment with testosterone gel, compared with women who received sham treatment with a placebo, a new study found. |
Naturally occurring hormone induces egg maturation Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:20 AM PDT The naturally occurring hormone kisspeptin effectively induces egg maturation during infertility treatment, according to a clinical in vitro fertilization (IVF) study. |
High-fat diet during pregnancy contributes to offspring's increased weight Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:20 AM PDT Exposure to a high-fat diet in the womb and after birth can permanently change the cells in the brain that control food intake, predisposing monkeys to overeating and an increased preference for fatty and sugary foods, a new study finds. |
Rett Syndrome protein surrenders some of its secrets Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:25 AM PDT Discovery of a mutant gene responsible for a disease is a milestone, but for most conditions, it may be only a first step towards a treatment or cure. Understanding Rett Syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder, is further complicated by the fact that the implicated gene controls a suite of other genes. Two papers, published in today's Nature Neuroscience and Nature, reveal key steps in how mutations in the gene for methyl CpG-binding protein cause the condition. |
Protein essential for normal heart function identified Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:25 AM PDT Scientists show that a protein called MCL-1, which promotes cell survival, is essential for normal heart function. |
Medical assessment in the blink of an eye Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:25 AM PDT Have you ever thought that you knew something about the world in the blink of an eye? It turns out that radiologists can do this with mammograms, the x-ray images used for breast cancer screening. Cytologists, who screen micrographic images of cervical cells to detect cervical cancer, have a similar ability. A new study takes a closer look at the skill these specialists have. |
People attribute minds to robots, corpses that are targets of harm Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:24 AM PDT As Descartes famously noted, there's no way to really know that another person has a mind -- every mind we observe is, in a sense, a mind we create. Now, new research suggests that victimization may be one condition that leads us to perceive minds in others, even in entities we don't normally think of as having minds, such as a corpse or a robot. |
Artificial sweetener a potential treatment for Parkinson's disease Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:24 AM PDT Mannitol is widely used as an artificial sweetener in gum and candy, and, with FDA sanction, is also used as a diuretic. Now medical researchers have found that mannitol could also be a novel therapy for the treatment of Parkinson's and other neurodegenerative diseases. |
Blocking overactive receptor in Alzheimer's recovers memory loss and more, mouse study suggests Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:23 AM PDT A new study shows that memory pathology in older mice with Alzheimer's disease can be reversed with treatment. |
Eating behaviors of preschoolers may be related to future risk of heart disease Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:23 AM PDT Eating behaviors of preschoolers may be associated with risk of cardiovascular disease in later life, suggests a new study. |
Chemical in antibacterial soap fed to nursing rats harms offspring, study finds Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:21 AM PDT A mother's exposure to triclocarban, a common antibacterial chemical, while nursing her babies shortens the life of her female offspring, a new study in rats finds. |
Prenatal exposure to BPA affects fat tissues in sheep Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:21 AM PDT New research suggests that fetal exposure to the common environmental chemical bisphenol A, or BPA, causes increased inflammation in fat tissues after birth, which can lead to obesity and metabolic syndrome. |
BPA linked to a common birth defect in boys Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:21 AM PDT A new study links fetal exposure to a common chemical pollutant, bisphenol A (BPA), to defects of a testicular hormone in newborn boys with undescended testicles. The results suggest yet another potential harmful effect of BPA, which is widely used in many plastics, liners of food cans and dental sealants. |
Vitamin D supplementation may delay precocious puberty in girls Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:21 AM PDT Vitamin D supplementation may help delay early onset of puberty in girls, a new clinical study finds. |
Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:21 AM PDT Early exposure to BPA (bisphenol A) -- an additive commonly found in plastic water bottles and soup can liners -- causes an increased cancer risk in an animal model of human prostate cancer. |
Bariatric surgery restores nerve cell properties altered by diet Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:13 AM PDT Understanding how gastric bypass surgery changes the properties of nerve cells that help regulate the digestive system could lead to new treatments that produce the same results without surgery, according to scientists who have shown how surgery restores some properties of nerve cells that tell people their stomachs are full. |
Infections increase risk of mood disorders, study suggests Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:13 AM PDT New research shows that every third person who is diagnosed for the first time with a mood disorder has been admitted to hospital with an infection prior to the diagnosis. The study is the largest of its kind to date to show a clear correlation between infection levels and the risk of developing mood disorders. |
Mice in a 'Big Brother' setup develop social structures Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:13 AM PDT New research into mouse social behavior finds signs of leadership and reveals features of "autistic" mouse society. |
Vitamin D deficiency may raise allergy and asthma risk in obese children, teens Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:11 AM PDT One reason why obese children and teenagers are more likely to have hard-to-control asthma and allergies may be vitamin D deficiency, a new study finds. |
Estrogen replacement therapy helps reduce anxiety in anorexia nervosa Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT Estrogen replacement therapy is associated with a significant decrease in anxiety symptoms among girls with anorexia nervosa, a new clinical trial finds. |
'Gene signature' test diagnoses benign thyroid growths Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT A new genetic test accurately and consistently diagnoses benign growths, or nodules, on the thyroid gland, according to a study from Chile. |
Steroid hormone may be indicator of infant distress Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT During labor and delivery, infants preferentially secrete a different stress hormone than their mothers do, according to a new clinical study. |
Weight loss improves memory and alters brain activity in overweight women Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT Memory improves in older, overweight women after they lose weight by dieting, and their brain activity actually changes in the regions of the brain that are important for memory tasks, a new study finds. |
Too little sleep may trigger the 'munchies' by raising levels of an appetite-controlling molecule Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT Insufficient sleep may contribute to weight gain and obesity by raising levels of a substance in the body that is a natural appetite stimulant, a new study finds. |
Drugs used to treat heart failure and high blood pressure may help decrease obesity Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT A type of drug normally used to treat heart failure and high blood pressure helped prevent weight gain and other complications related to a high-fat diet in an animal study. |
Excessive salt consumption appears to be bad for your bones Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT A high-salt diet raises a woman's risk of breaking a bone after menopause, no matter what her bone density is, according to a new study. |
Whole body vibration therapy increases bone strength Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:09 AM PDT A treatment known as whole body vibration therapy significantly increases bone strength among adolescents with cerebral palsy, a new clinical trial from New Zealand shows. |
Adolescents' high-fat diet impairs memory and learning Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:08 AM PDT A high-fat diet in adolescence appears to have long-lasting effects on learning and memory during adulthood, a new study in mice finds. |
Short-term antidepressant use, stress, high-fat diet linked to long-term weight gain Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:08 AM PDT Short-term use of antidepressants, combined with stress and a high-fat diet, is associated with long-term increases in body weight, a new animal study finds. |
Insulin resistance linked to weaker bones Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:07 AM PDT Reduced effectiveness of the hormone insulin, or insulin resistance, is associated with weakened bones, a clinical study shows. |
Babies seeing violence show aggression later Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:07 AM PDT Aggression in school-age children may have its origins in children 3 years old and younger who witnessed violence between their mothers and partners, according to a new study. |
Coatings could help medical implants function better Posted: 17 Jun 2013 08:06 AM PDT Researchers have been working on the customized synthesis of biocompatible polymers that can coat sensors that are then implanted into the body to cloak them from the immune system. |
Healthy, full-term babies use a different stress hormone than their mother Posted: 17 Jun 2013 07:46 AM PDT New research has identified how a steroid hormone may indicate infant distress during labor and delivery. The study suggests that a full-term, healthy baby preferentially secretes a different stress hormone than its mother does. |
Psychiatric disorders linked to a protein involved in the formation of long-term memories Posted: 17 Jun 2013 07:45 AM PDT Scientists have discovered a protein that regulates synaptic ion channels that have been tied to bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. |
Cells play 'tag' to determine direction of movement Posted: 17 Jun 2013 06:24 AM PDT Researchers have found that cells in our bodies, when moving collectively, carry out something similar to a game of 'tag' to coordinate their movement in a particular direction. |
Sibling aggression linked to poor mental health Posted: 17 Jun 2013 06:11 AM PDT Fights between siblings are so common they're often dismissed as simply part of growing up. Yet a new study finds that sibling aggression is associated with significantly worse mental health in children and adolescents. In some cases, effects of sibling aggression on mental health were the same as those of peer aggression. |
Medical marijuana not the answer for teens with chronic pain, doctors say Posted: 17 Jun 2013 06:09 AM PDT Adolescents can have chronic pain, just like adults. As patients, their parents and physicians search for solutions, there is one increasingly available option they should avoid, researchers say: medical marijuana. |
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