Bracket-busting upsets, Cinderella stories, OT buzzer beaters – March Madness is here! Or, as some urologists think of it, vasectomy promotion season.
Since 2004, urologists have been promoting vasectomies every March, promising patients…

Bracket-busting upsets, Cinderella stories, OT buzzer beaters – March Madness is here! Or, as some urologists think of it, vasectomy promotion season.
Since 2004, urologists have been promoting vasectomies every March, promising patients…

Imagine you’re a server at a busy restaurant that requires you to wear a form-fitting, polyester shirt as part of the uniform. When a hot flash hits, you are a sweaty mess. You really wish your employer would let you wear a cotton T-shirt…

Metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MASLD) impacts roughly 30% of people globally and has long lacked effective, targeted therapies. Now, researchers have uncovered a key genetic factor that worsens the condition. Even more surprising, the…

Today, let’s delve into the recent trends in therapeutic antibody…

Today, let’s delve into the recent trends in therapeutic antibody…

The human gut hosts a wide variety of microbial species including bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Intestinal parasites were also once a typical part of this community; healthy humans played host to these…

Researchers from the University of Oslo (UiO), Akershus University Hospital (Ahus), and international collaborators have published a new expert review in Nature Aging. The paper brings together more than 25 scientists, including clinicians and…

In 2015, Kylie Jenner was 18 years old and already one of the most photographed people on the planet. That fall, photos began circulating of a noticeably different smile. Brighter. More symmetrical. The kind of smile you’d spend years working…

For more than 100 years, scientists have pursued the idea of insulin in pill form, often described as a “dream” treatment for diabetes. The challenge has been the body itself. Enzymes in the digestive system break down insulin before it can work,…

Moderate consumption of caffeinated coffee or tea is linked to an 18% lower risk of dementia and better cognitive performance. The corresponding study was published in JAMA.
“We also compared people with…