Aspirin appears to slow early emphysema
by Bruce Sylvester: Aspirin use might slow progression of early emphysema, researchers reported on May 17, 2015 at American Thoracic Society International Conference.
by Bruce Sylvester: Aspirin use might slow progression of early emphysema, researchers reported on May 17, 2015 at American Thoracic Society International Conference.
by Bruce Sylvester: Seniors with migraines who smoke appear to be at an increased risk of stroke, researchers reported on July 22, 2015 in Neurology.
by Bruce Sylvester: Patients with depression or anxiety who were prescribed opioids for chronic lower back pain have achieved significantly less pain relief and were more likely to abuse their… read more.
by Bruce Sylvester: Researchers from two newly published studies patients report that patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 infection and with or without cirrhosis have… read more.
Vijayveer Bonthapally et al, Cambridge, MA, USA / by Maria Dalby. AETHERA is a randomised, placebo-controlled phase III study to evaluate whether consolidation treatment with brentuximab vedotin can… read more.
Zeinab Ali Abou Yehia et al, Houston, TX, USA / by Maria Dalby. PET-CT scans appear to be more sensitive than bone marrow biopsies for detecting bone marrow… read more.
John Ultmann Memorial Lecture / by Maria Dalby. Cutaneous lymphomas are rare conditions that require careful linking of clinical features with pathological findings for accurate diagnoses and effective… read more.
Steven H Swerdlow, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, USA, / by Maria Dalby. Knowledge is evolving fast in the field of lymphoma and the 2008 World Health Organization… read more.
Dr Andrew Davies, Southampton, UK, Professor John Radford, The University of Manchester, UK, Professor Peter Johnson, Southampton University, UK, Dr Karl Peggs, University College Hospital, London, Professor Stephen… read more.
Interview with Professor Joseph Connors, Vancouver, BC, Canada, who spoke for the motion in this key debate at ICML 2015. Interview by Esther Drain.
by Bruce Sylvester: Persons with high rates of diabetes-related complications appear to be more likely to develop dementia as they get older than persons with fewer diabetes-related complications, South… read more.
New research reveals that it only takes two weeks of not using their legs for young people to lose a third of their muscular strength, leaving them on… read more.