Lung cancer affects more individuals each year than any other malignancy. Nonetheless, a new study led by Curtin University revealed that people with incurable forms of the condition may survive longer if they engage in less than five minutes of physical activity per day.
Slow waves, which are normally only present in the brain during sleep, are also present during awake in patients with epilepsy and may protect against the condition's heightened brain excitability, according to a new study led by UCL researchers.
A new study investigated the importance of temperature in determining where animal species are currently found in order to better understand how a warming climate may impact where they may live in the future.
For many years, healthcare professionals have known that lupus, an autoimmune disease, affects women nine times more than males. Some of the variables that contribute to the disease's high incidence in women have remained unknown, but Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers have found answers in
The volume of cerebellar grey matter in teenagers is proportional to their level of physical fitness since childhood. According to a new study from the Universities of Jyvaskyla and Eastern Finland, adolescents with higher Crus I grey matter volumes were also stronger, faster, and more agile
Researchers have devised a growth chart for tracking muscle mass in growing youngsters using artificial intelligence and the largest paediatric brain MRI dataset to date.
The new study, led by Brigham and Women's Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, dis
A new study finds that reading, creating, and sharing poetry can help people cope with loneliness or isolation, as well as lessen symptoms of anxiety and despair.
Thousands of young people survive firearm injuries each year, in addition to those who die. According to the findings of the new study published in Health Affairs, the impact of these injuries reverberates for months and years, with rippling effects on parents and siblings.
According to a new study from Wake Forest University School of Medicine, fragility is associated with greater chances of death and serious morbidity after surgery.