Heart disease: Exercise may lower risk by 23% by reducing stress
Exercise can lower heart disease risk by affecting stress responses in the brain, and especially benefit people with depression, a new study has shown.
Exercise can lower heart disease risk by affecting stress responses in the brain, and especially benefit people with depression, a new study has shown.
Since the previous edition, we have added two chapters: Chapter 6 Intracranial monitoring and Chapter 8 Quantitative EEG. We have updated all nomenclature to adhere…
This systematic review and consensus statement reviews literature on the definition of neurological device abandonment and develops a consensus definition.
Learn from AMA member medical students about how easy it is to get involved, create change and bolster your advocacy and leadership credentials.
Dr Charles Raison, the Director of Clinical Research at the Usona Institute and Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, talks to…
Reshaping the drug war in one of Central America’s most lawless corners, the fentanyl boom has devastated the trade in opium poppies used to make…
Eosinophils are a rare immune cell subset with important roles in Th2 immunity and, recently, in cancer. Interleukin IL-33 (IL-33) is well recognized for its…
Cancer remains a formidable global health challenge, with metastasis being a key contributor to its lethality. Abundant high molecular mass hyaluronic acid, a major non-protein…
Ferroptosis is a cell death mechanism that has attracted significant attention as a potential basis for the development of new cancer therapies. Validation of ferroptosis…
In homeostasis, counterbalanced morphogen signalling gradients along the vertical axis of the intestinal mucosa regulate the fate and function of epithelial and stromal cell compartments.…
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) contains an extensive stroma that modulates response to therapy, contributing to the dismal prognosis associated with this cancer. Evidence suggests that…