Stanford University School of Medicine
'Invisible' stool blood tied to increased risk of premature death'
Having blood in stool may be an early warning for a number of diseases, and could indicate the need for lifestyle change.
'Human blood cells converted into functional neurons'
Generating induced pluripotent stem cells from large numbers of patients is expensive and laborious.
When heart disease runs in the family, exercise tied to lower risk
Exercise appeared linked to a lower risk of heart problems even after researchers accounted for factors like age, gender, ethnicity, etc.
Recent return from deployment tied to preterm births for military women
It’s likely that many women on active duty didn’t realize they were pregnant or receive prenatal care early in their pregnancies.
High blood sugar in pregnancy ups heart risk in babies: study
Infants with genetic diseases, born from multiple pregnancies and those whose mothers had extremely low or high BMI were not included.
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