The WHO said access to fertility care remains “severely limited” despite the scale of the issue. In many countries, tests and treatments are paid largely out of pocket, leaving people with high financial burdens.
In some…

The WHO said access to fertility care remains “severely limited” despite the scale of the issue. In many countries, tests and treatments are paid largely out of pocket, leaving people with high financial burdens.
In some…

The treatment of a slow-growing brain tumor is often accompanied by impaired cognitive functions such as difficulties with shifting focus and impaired language ability. This has been shown by a study managed by the University of…

Long-term exposure to toxic air can substantially weaken the health benefits of regular exercise, suggests a new study by an international team including UCL (University College London) researchers.
The study, published in the…

Researchers from the Leibniz Institute on Aging – Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI) in Jena, Germany, the Molecular Biotechnology Centre (MBC) in Turin and the University of Turin, Italy, have discovered a fundamental mechanism of aging…

Inside cells, RNAs and proteins form tiny, liquid-like droplets called biomolecular condensates. These droplets are essential for organizing cellular life, yet why some RNAs cluster more readily than others has remained unclear….

A pair of circulating proteins may significantly improve both early identification and risk stratification for patients with uterine sarcoma, according to a new study.1 If further validated in future studies, having a reliable, non-invasive…

High-intensity interval training boosts fitness and muscle endurance more effectively than traditional home exercise programmes in people recently diagnosed with inflammatory muscle disease. That is the conclusion of a new study…
By Daniel de Bomford
Vaccine programs are a culmination of all that makes humanity exceptional. Hundreds of years of collective research, spanning dozens of disciplines, carried out by supply chains involving scores of people, result in…

An injection that blocks the activity of a protein involved in aging reverses naturally occurring cartilage loss in the knee joints of old mice, a Stanford Medicine-led study has found. The treatment also prevented the development…

Bird flu viruses are a particular threat to humans because they can replicate at temperatures higher than a typical fever, one of the body’s ways of stopping viruses in their tracks, according to new research led by the universities…