Monthly Archives: April 2022

New Study Findings: Micronutrients Showed Promise for ADHD

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common impairing psychiatric condition affecting 5% to 7% of children. It can often persist into adulthood, with increased risk of poor educational achievement, substance abuse, incarceration, and ongoing psychiatric problems.  Current pharmacological treatments improve ADHD symptoms for many individuals, but concern continues over side effects, stigma, and long-term effects such […]

Turning On Human Cell Pluripotency

A new study from researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and collaborating institutions reported in the journal Nature Cell Biology insights into the mechanism of how human NANOG facilitates the activation of cell pluripotency.  Human NANOG expression resets stem cells to group-state pluripotency. In the study researchers identified unique features of human NANOG that relate […]

Seven Hours of Sleep are Optimal for Middle and Old Age

A good night’s sleep plays an important role in our health and cognitive function, it not only helps maintaining a good overall health, but it also helps in maintaining our psychological health.  As we get older, we can start having alterations in our sleep patterns, which is thought to contribute to cognitive decline and psychiatric […]

New Advance in Cancer Treatment with Sound Technology

Liver cancer is one of the top ten causes of cancer-related deaths worldwide and in the United States. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) accounts for 75% of all liver cancer cases, most frequently occurring in patients with chronic liver diseases.  The liver is also a frequent site for metastases originating from colorectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, melanoma, lung […]

Long COVID Treatment Using Immune-Boosting

Most individuals with COVID-19 recover fully after infection within the initial 3 to 4 weeks. However, around 10-30% of individuals experience lingering symptoms weeks to months after the acute phase of the illness, a phase that has been called long COVID or post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.  Severe illness with COVID-19 is characterized by excessive inflammation and […]

Platelet-Rich Plasma for the Treatment of Epicondylitis

What is Epicondylitis?  Lateral epicondylitis, also known as tennis elbow, is a painful condition that occurs when tendons in your elbow are overloaded, usually by repetitive motions of the wrist and arm.  Despite its name, athletes aren’t the only people who develop tennis elbow. People whose jobs feature the types of motions that can lead […]

One Inflammation Disorder can Exacerbate Another

In a new study, researchers from the School of Dental Medicine in collaboration with an international team that included colleagues at the Technical University of Dresden found a mechanism by which innate immune memory can cause one type of inflammation condition to increase susceptibility to another.  For the study, the team used gum disease as […]

Chronic Pain-Induced Psychiatric Disorders

Pain is essential for our survival because it functions as a biological alarm for impeding or actual tissue damage. However, chronic pain is a persistent, inescapable stress, which leads to maladaptive emotional states.  Studies have reported depression and anxiety-like behaviors in animal models of chronic pain, which suggest that it causes plastic changes in neural […]

Bacteria in Urine Could Help Diagnose Prostate Cancer

Prostate cancer is the most common nonskin malignancy in men in developed countries, with over 250,000 deaths annually worldwide. Its clinical course can be highly heterogeneous, and critical decisions are made about the likelihood of aggressive disease based on information obtained at presentation, including histopathological scores.  Genetic inheritance and ethnicity have established roles in prostate […]

New Study Finds That a Poor Diet, Independently of Genetic Risk is Associated with a Higher Risk of Diabetes

The burden of type 2 diabetes is not equally distributed, as susceptibility to environmental factors varies between and within human populations. This observation has led many to presume that diet and lifestyle factors may yield different effects depending on inherited genetic susceptibility.  In a recently published study, researchers from the Massachusetts General Hospital in the […]