Thanksgiving is often a time for thinking about your belly. For those with an inflammatory bowel diseases like ulcerative colitis, feasting can be associated with stress, even when food isn’t a trigger for the painful symptoms. New research in mice suggests that certain foods—especially those high in tryptophan, like turkey, pork, nuts and seeds—could reduce the risk of a colitis flare. The findings point to a noninvasive method of improving long-term colitis management, if the results are validated in people.
New target identified for pulmonary hypertension treatment
Indiana University School of Medicine researchers at the school’s South Bend regional campus, in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Notre Dame, have identified a new therapeutic target for pulmonary hypertension, a type of high blood pressure that affects the blood vessels in the lungs. Their findings were recently published in Circulation Research.
Study investigates using telemedicine for flu diagnosis
Imagine you’re feeling achy. You have a cough, and you might have a fever. It’s flu season, so you want to have a doctor check you out. Almost a quarter of Americans now opt for a telehealth visit, which public health experts say has helped to keep sick people out of community spaces where they can spread illness.
Lawlessness, corruption scandals in UPND worry Dr Mwelwa
By NATION REPORTER
POLITICAL analyst Lawrence Mwelwa has observed that the level of confusions and scandals that have rocked the UPND government is unprecedented.
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Research finds sex differences in immune response and metabolism drive Alzheimer’s disease
Cleveland Clinic researchers analyzed genes and brain tissue of patients with Alzheimer’s and found that differences in brain immunometabolism—the interactions between the immune system and the ways cells create energy—may contribute to women’s increased risk for the disease and its severity.
Keep telehealth alive and well, experts tell Senate subcommittee
To many Americans, telehealth options for connecting with their health care providers seemed to spring to life suddenly in 2020—even though some virtual care options started years before that.
Merging rural and urban ACA rating areas improved health insurance choice and premiums for rural consumers in Texas
For people living in rural areas, accessing quality health care services can sometimes be difficult. A large portion of this difficulty can be boiled down to supply and demand. Rural residents tend to be older and less healthy, increasing health care demand, while a shortage of providers and limited choices in health insurance coverage affect supply.
Hearing loss is associated with subtle changes in the brain
Hearing loss affects more than 60 percent of adults aged 70 and older in the United States and is known to be related to an increased risk of dementia. The reason for this association is not fully understood.
More deaths than malaria and HIV/AIDS: What Africa is doing to fight the silent epidemic of antibiotic resistance
Each year antimicrobial resistance—the ability of microbes to survive agents designed to kill them— claims more lives than malaria and HIV/Aids combined. Africa bears the brunt of this development, which thrives on inequality and poverty. Nadine Dreyer asked Tom Nyirenda, a research scientist with over 27 years’ experience in infectious diseases, what health organizations on the continent are doing to fight this threat to medical progress.
Researchers help unravel brain processes involved in vision
Faced with images that break the expected pattern, like a do not enter sign where a stop sign is expected, how does the brain react and learn compared to being shown images that match what was predicted?