Category: 4. Health

  • Wildfire smoke can make your outdoor workout hazardous to your health – an exercise scientist explains how to gauge the risk

    Wildfire smoke can make your outdoor workout hazardous to your health – an exercise scientist explains how to gauge the risk

    As the summer’s sunny days take hold, many people turn to outdoor exercise.

    But in parts of North America, pleasant weather often aligns with wildfire season. As summers get drier, both the frequency and the intensity of wildfires have grown, producing more polluting smoke.

    A fire’s smoke can spread across several states, leaving people at risk for the health consequences of air pollution.

    Exercisers and health experts are asking whether the benefits of outdoor exercise are…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: theconversation.com

  • Your Brain’s Hidden Defenses Against Alzheimer’s

    Your Brain’s Hidden Defenses Against Alzheimer’s

    It’s been recognized for some time that Alzheimer’s disease affects brain regions differently and that tau — a protein known to misbehave — plays an important role in the disease. Normally, tau helps stabilize neurons, but in Alzheimer’s disease, it begins to misfold and tangle inside neurons. It spreads across the brain forming toxic clumps that impair neuronal function and ultimately lead to cell death.

    Brain areas like the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus succumb early to tau tangles,…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.sciencedaily.com

  • Bigger crops, fewer nutrients: The hidden cost of climate change

    Bigger crops, fewer nutrients: The hidden cost of climate change

    New preliminary research suggests that a combination of higher atmospheric CO2 and hotter temperatures contribute to a reduction in nutritional quality in food crops, with serious implications for human health and wellbeing.

    Most research into the impact of climate change on food production has focused on crop yield, but the size of the harvest means little if the nutritional value is poor. “Our work looks beyond quantity to the quality of what we eat,” says Jiata Ugwah Ekele, a PhD…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.sciencedaily.com

  • This muscle supplement could rewire the brain—and now scientists can deliver it

    This muscle supplement could rewire the brain—and now scientists can deliver it

    Creatine is popularly known as a muscle-building supplement, but its influence on human muscle function can be a matter of life or death.

    “Creatine is very crucial for energy-consuming cells in skeletal muscle throughout the body, but also in the brain and in the heart,” said Chin-Yi Chen, a research scientist at Virginia Tech’s Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC.

    Chen is part of a research team working to develop a technique that uses focused ultrasound to deliver creatine directly…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.sciencedaily.com

  • Doctors say we’ve been misled about weight and health

    Doctors say we’ve been misled about weight and health

    Focusing solely on achieving weight loss for people with a high body mass index (BMI) may do more harm than good, argue experts in The BMJ.

    Dr Juan Franco and colleagues say, on average, people with high weight will not be able to sustain a clinically relevant weight loss with lifestyle interventions, while the potential harms of weight loss interventions, including the reinforcement of weight stigma, are still unclear.

    They stress that a healthy lifestyle has important benefits, but that…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.sciencedaily.com

  • Four Keys To Successfully Launching AI In Life Sciences

    Four Keys To Successfully Launching AI In Life Sciences

    Artificial intelligence has the potential to transform how life sciences companies engage with patients, physicians, and the broader healthcare ecosystem. But while the promise is real, so are the pitfalls, particularly…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.forbes.com

  • The Secretive Company Hawking Bad Health Advice On Facebook

    The Secretive Company Hawking Bad Health Advice On Facebook

    In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at Immuneering’s slow-and-steady approach to cancer fighting, litigation over vaccine limits, venture funding for digital health, and more. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here.

    In a roughly 57-minute video, a white-haired man in a checkered shirt sits in a blurred hallway. He speaks slowly: “With Donald Trump taking the White House and RFK Jr. now positioned to…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.forbes.com

  • CDC Bird Flu Response Cuts Could Lead To Another Pandemic

    CDC Bird Flu Response Cuts Could Lead To Another Pandemic

    Bird flu remains…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.forbes.com

  • Here’s What Every Woman Should Know About Their Risk Of Breast Cancer

    Here’s What Every Woman Should Know About Their Risk Of Breast Cancer

    Breast cancer rates are rising across the United States, with most diagnoses occurring without a clear, predictable explanation. An estimated 85–90% of cases are sporadic, meaning they result from factors such as environmental exposures rather than a known inherited genetic mutation or strong family history. The lack of identifiable causes in most cases is concerning given that nearly 370,000 people will be diagnosed with breast…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.forbes.com

  • Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results

    Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results

    Finding motivation to exercise can be the greatest challenge in working out. This might be part of the reason why less than a quarter of people achieve the activity goals recommended by the World Health Organization.

    But what if working out could be more enjoyable? One way of achieving this could be opting for types of exercise that fit our personalities. To this end, researchers in the UK now have examined how personality affects what types of exercise we prefer, and our commitment and…

    Continue Reading


    News Source: www.sciencedaily.com