Silent Damage First: Alzheimer’s Disease Could Have Two Phases
Alzheimer’s disease might damage the brain in two distinct phases, a new study suggests.
Spinal cord injuries can cause the body to go haywire, with misfiring nerves causing dangerous “fight-or-flight” responses.
A new form of psychotherapy appears to work even better at treating chronic pain in older adults than gold-standard cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), a new study finds.
Animal studies are often considered a first step in finding new drugs and treatments for human diseases, but a new review has discovered that precious few actually produce real-world therapies.
Dolphins living off the coasts of Georgia and Florida have elevated levels of mercury in their bodies, new research shows.
Nearly a quarter of Americans who lost their pandemic-era Medicaid coverage say they're now without any health insurance, a new survey finds.
Laboratory tests used by millions of Americans are soon to be classified as medical devices, and as such be regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the agency announced Monday.
Kentucky resident Chasity Harney embraced a thoroughly healthy lifestyle -- eating right, exercising and never touching tobacco.
Eating healthy can lower the risk of heart disease in breast cancer survivors, a new study has found.