Hormone therapy within five years of menopause lowers Alzheimer’s risk
FDA Highlights by Bruce Sylvester – Women who start hormone therapy within 5 years of menopause onset could reduce their risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease,
FDA Highlights by Bruce Sylvester – Women who start hormone therapy within 5 years of menopause onset could reduce their risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease,
FDA Highlights by Bruce Sylvester – Women who start hormone therapy within 5 years of menopause onset could reduce their risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease,
A study a appearing in the December, 2012 issue of the journal SLEEP suggests that more nightly sleep in mildly sleepy, healthy adults can increase daytime alertness and,… read more.
This article has been initiated, funded and reviewed by Mercury Pharma. The management of moderate pain can be a challenge as it calls for more than simple analgesics… read more.
http://www.eurekalert.org/multimedia/pub/51742.php?from=230078 Researchers have shown that transplanting stem cells derived from normal mouse blood vessels into the hearts of mice that model the pathology associated with Duchenne muscular dystrophy… read more.
Safe and effective – Researchers have found that tumour “separation surgery” followed by high-dose hypofractionated stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or high-dose single-fraction SRS is safe and effective in controlling… read more.
The image (below), from a Brigham and Women’s Hospital study, shows the Default Mode Network in patients with chronic low back pain (cLBP) and in healthy subjects (CONTROLS)… read more.
Researchers from the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester are leading the largest ever study of the genetics relating to lung disease.
Deliberately inflicting carefully controlled painful stimuli on human volunteers and seeing how well specific drugs reduce the feeling of pain can be an effective way of testing new… read more.
Companionship has the potential to reduce pain linked to nerve damage, according to a new study.
Liposomes packed with local anesthetic could block the nerve signals that reprogram pain centers and cause chronic, debilitating pain.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, especially aspirin, may help prevent serious liver problems, a large observational study suggested.