Oct 2 2020 This Week in Cardiology
Scientific trust, publishing incentives, and the EXCEL trial, Vitamin D and COVID, and time-restricted eating are discussed by John Mandrola, MD, in this week’s podcast.
Scientific trust, publishing incentives, and the EXCEL trial, Vitamin D and COVID, and time-restricted eating are discussed by John Mandrola, MD, in this week’s podcast.
New sensors can transform earbuds into powerful health monitors that track brain activity and lactate levels in sweat. They could help doctors diagnose, monitor, and…
New sensors can transform earbuds into powerful health monitors that track brain activity and lactate levels in sweat. They could help doctors diagnose, monitor, and…
New sensors can transform earbuds into powerful health monitors that track brain activity and lactate levels in sweat. They could help doctors diagnose, monitor, and…
Women with breast cancer who had breast reconstruction following mastectomy did as well or better from shorter bursts of higher-dose radiation compared with conventional therapy,…
The FDA on Tuesday published letters warning two online vendors to stop selling unapproved versions of semaglutide and tirzepatide.
Some contract drug manufacturers are investing billions of dollars to expand or build factories that fill the injection pens used to administer treatments like Novo…
The number of US employers who cover obesity medications, including Wegovy from Novo Nordisk that belongs to a class of GLP-1 drugs, could nearly double…
The US has detected its first case of avian flu on a commercial poultry farm since April, in a flock of 47,300 turkeys in Jerauld…
The bacteria that causes melioidosis has been discovered in the continental US for the first time, and with a death rate as high as 50%,…
A small study in Lynch syndrome patients may be the first to reveal immunological reactions to physical activity.