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  • newEven one drink a day may raise mouth cancer risk
    New research suggests that even light alcohol use may carry serious risks. A large study in India found that drinking just one standard drink a day is linked to a roughly 50% higher risk of mouth cancer, with the greatest danger tied to locally brewed alcohol. When alcohol use overlaps with chewing tobacco, the effect becomes especially severe, potentially explaining nearly two-thirds of all cases nationwide.
    - 2 hours ago 31 Dec 25, 7:28am -
  • newWhat cannabis really does for chronic pain
    Cannabis products with higher THC levels may slightly reduce chronic pain, particularly nerve pain, according to a review of multiple clinical trials. The improvement was small and short-lived, while side effects were more common. Products with little or no THC, including CBD-only formulations, showed no clear benefit. Researchers say more long-term studies are needed.
    - 2 hours ago 31 Dec 25, 7:14am -
  • newSwearing may unlock hidden strength, study finds
    Letting a swear word fly when you’re struggling might do more than blow off steam—it could actually make you stronger. Research published by the American Psychological Association found that people who swear during physical challenges can push themselves harder and last longer. The boost seems to come from swearing’s ability to lower inhibitions, increase confidence, and help people slip into a focused “flow” state.
    - 3 hours ago 31 Dec 25, 6:27am -
  • newWhere you live may be fueling aggressive breast cancer
    New research shows that women living near Superfund sites are more likely to develop aggressive and metastatic breast cancers. The studies found higher risks for hard-to-treat subtypes like triple-negative breast cancer, especially in areas with greater air pollution. Scientists also discovered molecular tumor changes linked to neighborhood deprivation. The findings point to environmental exposure and social conditions as key factors shaping cancer outcomes.
    - 6 hours ago 31 Dec 25, 3:26am -
  • MIT scientists find a way to rejuvenate the immune system as we age
    As the immune system weakens with age, scientists have found a way to restore some of its lost strength. By delivering mRNA to the liver, they created a temporary source of immune-boosting signals that normally come from the thymus. Older mice treated this way produced more effective T cells and responded far better to vaccines and cancer treatments. The strategy could one day help extend healthy years of life.
    - 1 day ago 30 Dec 25, 4:10am -
  • The brain has a hidden language and scientists just found it
    Researchers have created a protein that can detect the faint chemical signals neurons receive from other brain cells. By tracking glutamate in real time, scientists can finally see how neurons process incoming information before sending signals onward. This reveals a missing layer of brain communication that has been invisible until now. The discovery could reshape how scientists study learning, memory, and brain disease.
    - 1 day ago 30 Dec 25, 3:35am -
  • After the LA fires hospitals saw a sudden surge in illness
    After the January 2025 LA wildfires, hospitals recorded a surge in serious health problems. Emergency visits for heart attacks, lung illness, and general sickness rose sharply in the following three months. Researchers believe fine particles from wildfire smoke, along with stress, may have triggered these effects. Unusual blood test changes point to hidden health impacts that lingered well beyond the fires themselves.
    - 1 day ago 30 Dec 25, 3:18am -
  • Mini brains reveal clear brain signals of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
    Tiny lab-grown brains are offering an unprecedented look at how schizophrenia and bipolar disorder disrupt neural activity. Researchers found distinct electrical firing patterns that could identify these conditions with high accuracy. The discovery opens the door to more precise diagnoses and personalized drug testing. Instead of guessing medications, doctors may one day see what works before treating the patient.
    - 3 days ago 28 Dec 25, 6:14pm -
  • Losing weight in midlife may have a hidden brain cost
    Weight loss restored healthy metabolism in both young and mid-aged mice, but the brain told a different story. In mid-aged animals, slimming down actually worsened inflammation in a brain region tied to appetite and energy balance. While this inflammation eventually subsided, brain inflammation has been linked to cognitive decline and neurodegenerative disease. The results suggest that weight loss in midlife may not be as straightforward as once thought.
    - 3 days ago 28 Dec 25, 2:09pm -
  • Why your vitamin D supplements might not be working
    A randomized trial from Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center reveals that magnesium may be the missing key to keeping vitamin D levels in balance. The study found that magnesium raised vitamin D in people who were deficient while dialing it down in those with overly high levels—suggesting a powerful regulating effect. This could help explain why vitamin D supplements don’t work the same way for everyone and why past studies linking vitamin D to cancer and heart disease have produced mixed results…
    - 3 days ago 28 Dec 25, 12:30pm -
  • A massive scientific review put alternative autism therapies to the test
    A major new review has put hundreds of alternative autism treatments under the microscope—and most didn’t hold up. Scientists analyzed decades of research and found little reliable evidence that popular approaches like probiotics, acupuncture, or music therapy truly work. Alarmingly, safety was often ignored, with many treatments never properly evaluated for side effects. The researchers stress that looking at the full body of evidence matters far more than trusting a single hopeful study.
    - 3 days ago 28 Dec 25, 12:02pm -
  • Stanford scientists uncover why mRNA COVID vaccines can trigger heart inflammation
    Stanford scientists have uncovered how mRNA COVID-19 vaccines can very rarely trigger heart inflammation in young men — and how that risk might be reduced. They found that the vaccines can spark a two-step immune reaction that floods the body with inflammatory signals, drawing aggressive immune cells into the heart and causing temporary injury.
    - 4 days ago 27 Dec 25, 9:22pm -
  • A rare cancer-fighting plant compound has finally been decoded
    UBC Okanagan researchers have uncovered how plants create mitraphylline, a rare natural compound linked to anti-cancer effects. By identifying two key enzymes that shape and twist molecules into their final form, the team solved a puzzle that had stumped scientists for years. The discovery could make it far easier to produce mitraphylline and related compounds sustainably. It also highlights plants as master chemists with untapped medical potential.
    - 4 days ago 27 Dec 25, 8:35pm -
  • Cancer cells depend on a dangerous DNA repair trick
    Researchers have discovered how cells activate a last-resort DNA repair system when severe damage strikes. When genetic tangles overwhelm normal repair pathways, cells flip on a fast but error-prone emergency fix that helps them survive. Some cancer cells rely heavily on this backup system, even though it makes their DNA more unstable. Blocking this process could expose a powerful new way to target tumors.
    - 4 days ago 27 Dec 25, 4:50pm -
  • Eating more vitamin C can physically change your skin
    Vitamin C doesn’t just belong in skincare products—it works even better when you eat it. Scientists discovered that vitamin C from food travels through the bloodstream into every layer of the skin, boosting collagen and skin renewal. People who ate two vitamin C–packed kiwifruit daily showed thicker, healthier skin. The findings suggest glowing skin really does start from within.
    - 4 days ago 26 Dec 25, 9:48pm -

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