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Can losing your sense of smell predict heart failure?
The News-Times· 2 days agoLosing the ability to smell properly – a common sensory deficit as people age – may help predict or even contribute to the development of heart failure, new research suggests. The study, published ...
This Personality Change Could Actually Be a Sign of Infection, According to Doctors
Parade· 4 days ago"Understanding early symptoms of potential infection increases the ability for earlier intervention...
They’re young and athletic — and ill with a condition called POTS
U-T San Diego· 5 days agoKaleigh Levine was running drills in the gym with her lacrosse team at Notre Dame College in South...
What’s Going Around: Outdoor injuries, dehydration, allergies, asthma flare-ups
ClickOnDetroit· 2 days agoHere’s our weekly round-up of what illnesses are spreading the most in Metro Detroit communities,...
How Moderna’s newly approved RSV vaccine could impact 2024 revenue - Boston Business Journal
The Business Journals· 6 days agoThe RSV vaccine will now be reviewed at the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices...
Early Memory Problems Linked to Increased Tau
Medscape· 2 days agoSelf- and partner reports of early memory issues are associated with higher levels of tau tangles, even before detectable clinical symptoms.
Celiac Disease: Five Things to Know
Medscape· 3 days agoCeliac disease is a chronic, immune-mediated, systemic disorder caused by intolerance to gluten — a protein present in rye, barley, and wheat grains —...
Midlife Weight Gain for Women Isn't Inevitable
Medscape· 2 days agoSuccessful weight-reduction strategies exist to combat the natural, but nonetheless detrimental, physiologic changes that accompany midlife.
How to Prevent Motion Sickness on Land, at Sea, in the Air
Medscape· 4 days agoBehavioral strategies and pharmacologic treatments can prevent nausea and vomiting from spoiling...
Dynamic Troponin Changes Unreliable for MI in Acute Stroke
Medscape· 2 days agoIn acute ischemic stroke, high baseline, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin values are a better indicator of myocardial infarction than dynamic changes in troponin levels, new data suggested.