Low Diastolic Blood Pressure Linked to Subclinical Myocardial Damage and Coronary Events: ARIC Analysis

Low Diastolic Blood Pressure Linked to Subclinical Myocardial Damage and Coronary Events: ARIC Analysis

Very low diastolic blood pressure (DBP) is associated with an increased risk of subclinical myocardial damage, particularly among individuals with diastolic pressures less than 60 mm Hg, according to the results of a new... read more

New tool helps measure how costs of care impact cancer patients

New tool helps measure how costs of care impact cancer patients

For many patients, the uncertainty and stress that can come with cancer treatment is compounded by what is now known as "financial toxicity", the anxiety and distress that follow health care and medication expenses, often... read more

Vivantis Offers a Zika RT-qPCR Kit in Response to Virus Epidemic

In response to the need to fast detection of the virus, Vivantis, a leading manufacturer at the forefront of real-time PCR technology has developed the ViPrimePlus Zika Virus RT-qPCR kit.... read more

Bacterial molecule trains the immune system to tolerate infection without inducing illness

Bacterial molecule trains the immune system to tolerate infection without inducing illness

Pathogen infection has been considered to have one of two general outcomes - either the infected organism develops some level of illness or its immune system fights off and eliminates the invading pathogen.... read more

Adjunctive azithromycin reduces risk of non-elective cesarean post-operative infection: The C/SOAP trial

Adjunctive azithromycin reduces risk of non-elective cesarean post-operative infection: The C/SOAP trial

Women receiving azithromycin in addition to standard antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean section (c-section) were 49% less likely to develop endometritis and postoperative wound infections compared to those who received only... read more

Use of Evidence-Based Medical Therapy Steadily Improving in Acute MI Patients Postdischarge

Use of Evidence-Based Medical Therapy Steadily Improving in Acute MI Patients Postdischarge

Over a recent 10-year period, there has been an improvement in the prescription of evidence-based medical therapy for patients who survive and are discharged from hospital after an MI, a new analysis shows.... read more

Researchers identify genes that may cause gum disease

Researchers identify genes that may cause gum disease

Columbia University scientists say they have identified 41 master regulator genes that may cause gum disease in a first-of-its-kind study.... read more

Frontline PARP inhibitor shrinks tumors in BRCA-positive breast patients

Frontline PARP inhibitor shrinks tumors in BRCA-positive breast patients

All 13 newly diagnosed breast cancer patients with BRCA mutations had their tumors shrink significantly when treated with a PARP inhibitor ahead of frontline presurgical chemotherapy in a pilot study at The University of... read more

New Ecosystem Test Strongly Predicts Ovarian Cancer Survival

New Ecosystem Test Strongly Predicts Ovarian Cancer Survival

Assessing the cell ecosystems at sites where ovarian cancer has spread round the body strongly predicts the chances of surviving from the disease, a new study reports. ... read more

New Treatment Guidelines for Rare Lung Disease

New Treatment Guidelines for Rare Lung Disease

Clinical practice guidelines created for the treatment and diagnosis of lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM).... read more

Use of interventions improves patient care for viral hepatitis

Researchers recommend multiple, inexpensive interventions be included in screening, diagnosis and treatment programs for patients with hepatitis B and C viruses, in an effort to optimize the outcomes of hepatitis care.... read more

Hydrocortisone and Septic Shock in Patients With Severe Sepsis

Hydrocortisone and Septic Shock in Patients With Severe Sepsis

This randomized clinical trial compares the effects of hydrocortisone vs placebo on development of septic shock among intensive care patients with severe sepsis who were not in septic shock.... read more

Rivaroxaban associated with increased bleeding risk compared with dabigatran in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation

Rivaroxaban associated with increased bleeding risk compared with dabigatran in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation

There was a total of 52 240 new starts of dabigatran and 66 651 new starts of rivaroxaban during the study period. Rivaroxaban was associated with a non-significant decrease in thromboembolic stroke. There was also a non-significant... read more

Transcranial direct current stimulation enhances cognitive training in Parkinson’s

Transcranial direct current stimulation enhances cognitive training in Parkinson’s

Transcranial direct current stimulation plus cognitive training may produce the best cognitive results in Parkinson’s patients with mild cognitive impairment. tDCS adds cognitive benefit when combined with cognitive training... read more

Gene could lead to ALS therapies

Gene could lead to ALS therapies

Researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev say their new gene study could lead to new treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.... read more

Glycemic control, mortality, and hypoglycemia in critically ill patients: a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Glycemic control, mortality, and hypoglycemia in critically ill patients: a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Network meta-analysis showed no mortality benefit of tight glycemic control in critically ill patients, but fivefold more hypoglycemia versus mild or very mild control.... read more

Urine test may detect Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

Urine test may detect Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

Researchers at the Medical Research Council in Britain have discovered it may be possible to test patients for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease using urine samples.... read more