Mayo Clinic research has identified a powerful new way to improve the prediction of a patient's long-term cardiovascular ...
Even a one-hour shift can unsettle circadian rhythms and raise stress hormones, particularly for people already living with heart disease or chronic sleep deprivation. A person reaches for an alarm ...
Heart problems are something most people typically associate with aging, but the risk of developing them might be skewing younger than before. A new study reveals more young people in the U.S. who are ...
The death rate of severe heart attacks has risen over the past decade among Americans under 55, new research shows. Reading time 4 minutes Heart attacks have become less life-threatening over time. A ...
Ms. Steinke is the author of “This Is the Door: The Body, Pain and Faith.” That double-humped triangle that we immediately understand as a heart — or love — appeared as an ideogram stamped on coins as ...
More than 99% of people who suffer a heart attack, stroke, or heart failure have at least one risk factor beforehand—yet many have no idea until it’s too late. That’s part of the reason why heart ...
Two affiliated Greek organizations are currently on temporary suspension of new member activities, including Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta Sigma Phi. Alpha Tau Omega and Sigma Chi were recently lifted ...
For years, scientists have been working to unravel the mystery of patients with failing kidneys dying from heart-related complications. Researchers now say they’ve uncovered a clue that explains why ...
The early bird may not only catch the proverbial worm but also have a healthier heart, new research suggests. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and ...
The human heart can lose up to one-third of its cardiomyocyte (heart muscle cells) following a severe heart attack, but a new study found that the heart can regrow these cells following ischemia.
Deaths from both causes are down, but they still eclipse all other causes, according to new statistics. By Nina Agrawal Despite gains in treatment, cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of ...
Nancy Preston didn’t have a heart attack. Nor did she have chest discomfort, shortness of breath or heart palpitations — all symptoms of heart disease. Instead, a routine mammogram led to Preston ...