Pre-eclampsia is a puzzling sickness marked by a potentially fatal rise in blood pressure. Every year, it claims the lives of about 70,000 women globally. Scientists lack particular treatment plans because they do not know what causes it.
According to a study, sedentary time accrued from childhood to early adulthood was associated with heart impairment, even in those with normal weights and blood pressure.
According to a recent study, contrary to perceptions that families disintegrated as a result of the hardships and constraints brought on by the Covid-19 outbreak, many families may have strengthened their relationships.
Having a strong, family-centred perspective was one of the most importa
According to data presented at the ESC Congress 2023, middle-aged people who have three or more risk factors—such as modestly raised blood pressure, cholesterol, hyperglycemia, and waist circumference—experience heart attacks and strokes two years earlier than their peers.
“Many people in
A review of electronic medical data for over 45,000 people indicated that COVID-19 infection was strongly related to the development of high blood pressure, according to new research published in Hypertension, an American Heart Association journal.
According to a University of Helsinki study, substituting red and processed meat with pea-protein intake, b and faba bean-based foods ensures enough amino acid intake without having any negative effects on bone metabolism.
As children return to school, two issues are rising to the top of their parents' concerns: the impact of social media and the internet on children's lives.
For the purpose of covering a variety of medical devices with biologically active ingredients, researchers created a very accurate approach. The researchers claim that such a method might usher in a new era of transdermal medicine, including immunisations without shots.
The potential of artificial DNA constructs that, when used in conjunction with antibodies, tell the immune system to focus on malignant cells in particular is highlighted by a recent study.
When deciding how to behave in socially awkward situations, anxious people use a different part of the forebrain than non-anxious people. According to a study by Bob Bramson and Sjoerd Meijer of Radboud University's Donders Institute, this can be seen in brain scans.