Showing 4641-4650 of 7005 results for "".
- Improving Eye Tracking to Assess Brain Disordershttps://reachmd.com/news/improving-eye-tracking-to-assess-brain-disorders/2468221/A University of Houston engineering team has developed wearable sensors to examine eye movement to assess brain disorders or damage to the brain. Many brain diseases and problems show up as eye symptoms, often before other symptoms appear. You see, eyes are not merely
- Ground-Breaking Study Will Use AI to Explore Links Between Chronic Inflammation, Diet, and Long-Term Health Conditionshttps://reachmd.com/news/ground-breaking-study-will-use-ai-to-explore-links-between-chronic-inflammation-diet-and-long-term-health-conditions/2468182/A pioneering £4.8million, eight-year project will harness artificial intelligence (AI) to investigate the link between nutrition, health inequality and the development of multiple long-term conditions. More than a quarter of the UK’s adult population live with two o
- Cannabis and Older Adults: Poll Shows Current Use Patterns, Beliefs, and Riskshttps://reachmd.com/news/cannabis-and-older-adults-poll-shows-current-use-patterns-beliefs-and-risks/2468164/Newswise — Whether they’re using it for recreational or medical reasons, a sizable percentage of people in their 50s and older have smoked, eaten, drunk or applied to their skin at least one form of cannabis in the past year, a new poll shows.In all, 21% of people age 50 and old
- UMass Amherst Researcher to Use Wearable Sleep Trackers, AI to Predict Early Signs of Alzheimer’shttps://reachmd.com/news/umass-amherst-researcher-to-use-wearable-sleep-trackers-ai-to-predict-early-signs-of-alzheimers/2468142/The National Institutes of Health has awarded Joyita Dutta, professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, $3.9 million over five years to study if wearable sleep trackers can predict blo
- Anxiety and Depression Linked to Chronic Pain in Childrenhttps://reachmd.com/news/anxiety-and-depression-linked-to-chronic-pain-in-children/2468137/Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Young people with chronic pain are three times more likely than their peers to also have
- How the Scars of Demolished Brain Tumors Seed Relapsehttps://reachmd.com/news/how-the-scars-of-demolished-brain-tumors-seed-relapse/2468136/SEPTEMBER 9, 2024, NEW YORK – A Ludwig Cancer Research study has discovered that recurrent tumors of the aggressive brain cancer glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) grow out of the fibrous scars of malignant predecessors destroyed by interventions such as radiotherapy, surge
- While Vaccines Target the Changing Parts of Coronavirus, Researchers Suggest It’s the Unchanging Parts We Also Need to Pay Attention tohttps://reachmd.com/news/while-vaccines-target-the-changing-parts-of-coronavirus-researchers-suggest-its-the-unchanging-parts-we-also-need-to-pay-attention-to/2468117/Grand Rapids, Mich., Sept. 9, 2024 – For the past three years, Corewell Health researchers have been studying the genetic code of the virus that causes COVID-19 to better understand how it is changing and how to avoid another pandemic. Much of the world’s focus has bee
- New Primary Care Model Slashes Wait Times: Same Day Care Transforms Liveshttps://reachmd.com/news/new-primary-care-model-slashes-wait-times-same-day-care-transforms-lives/2468120/You wake up in the morning groggy and clammy. You’re congested and coughing; it hurts to swallow. All your joints are achy. You drag yourself to the kitchen and while you make
- An Obesity Drug Prevents Covid Deaths, Study Suggestshttps://reachmd.com/news/an-obesity-drug-prevents-covid-deaths-study-suggests/2468102/Wegovy, the popular obesity drug, may have yet another surprising benefit. In a large clinical trial, people taking the drug during the pandemic were less likely to die of Covid-19, r
- Immune Pathway Linked to Long COVID Lung Scarring Discoveredhttps://reachmd.com/news/immune-pathway-linked-to-long-covid-lung-scarring-discovered/2468072/Register for free to listen to this article Thank you. Listen to this article using the player above. ✖<