Health & Medicine
-
Health & MedicineBreast milk may not be enough
Breast-fed infants need vitamin D supplements, at least in winter.
By Janet Raloff -
Health & MedicineSauna use among dads linked to tumors in children
Men who expose themselves to excessive heat in the weeks before they conceive children may place their future offspring at unnecessary risk of brain cancer.
By Ben Harder -
Health & MedicineHow to Wash Up in the Wilderness
Many campers who wash their dishes in the wilderness use methods that don't consistently remove all bacteria.
By Ben Harder -
Health & MedicineOrigins of Ache: Immune proteins may yield chronic-pain clues
People with chronic pain that has no underlying disease have low concentrations of proteins in the cytokine family that restrain inflammation.
By Nathan Seppa -
Health & MedicineFewer Drugs, Same Outcome: Simpler HIV regimens are effective
In two studies, AIDS clinicians found that standard three-drug regimens fight HIV as well as four-drug treatments do, and that a single drug might maintain a patient's health once the virus is suppressed.
By Eric Jaffe -
Health & MedicineThe Screen Team
New and experimental methods of screening for colorectal cancer that patients find less unpleasant than current tests could take a bite out of the malignancy's toll.
By Ben Harder -
Health & MedicineJuice May Slow Prostate Cancer Growth (with recipe)
Compounds in pomegranate juice show promise in curbing the growth of prostate cancer.
By Janet Raloff -
Health & MedicineTotal Recall: Drug shows long-lasting boosts of memory in rats
Research in rats shows that an experimental drug completely regenerates parts of the brain crucial to forming memories.
By Eric Jaffe -
Health & MedicineNeed for Speed: Faster-acting tuberculosis drugs now in testing would limit deaths
Drugs that take only 2 months to cure tuberculosis instead of the usual 6 months could prevent millions of TB infections and deaths.
By Nathan Seppa -
Health & MedicineScientists find midnight-snack center in brain
Researchers have tracked down the location of a body clock that appears to be regulated by food.
-
Health & MedicineBlood sugar and spice
Eating cayenne pepper with meals may mitigate a hormonal response to food that's linked to diabetes.
By Ben Harder -
Health & MedicineDrug rescues cells that age too fast
A new drug shows promise toward correcting the accelerated cellular aging typical of Werner syndrome.
By Janet Raloff