This article is authored by Dr. Ashok Punjabi is a consultant cardiologist with 40 years of non-invase and invasive ...
Scientists have found that hidden health signals coating your cells could change medicine forever. The new study by Edith Cowan University (ECU) School of Medical and Health Sciences has shown sugar ...
Abstract: Heart disease remains a leading cause of mortality worldwide, necessitating early and accurate detection to improve patient outcomes. This paper presents a Heart Disease Prediction System ...
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. This story first ran in Dispatches, our weekly newsletter from our reporters about their recent investigations. Sign up to receive ...
Abstract: This Study will explore how the IoT and machine learning predict heart disease risks through real-time wearable device and sensor data. The Cleveland and Hungarian datasets have relevant ...
A single infusion of an experimental gene-editing drug seemed to reduce LDL long-term in a small trial. The results may point to something “curative,” one expert said. By Gina Kolata In a small, ...
EMBL researchers created SDR-seq, a next-generation tool that decodes both DNA and RNA from the same cell. It finally opens access to non-coding regions, where most disease-associated genetic variants ...
Haley Billey bought an Oura Ring to track her fertility. It arrived the day after she learned she was pregnant. She slipped the $450 titanium band on anyway. Months of worrisome readings on measures ...
A tool developed by the American Heart Association (AHA), proven to accurately predict heart disease risk for Americans, can be applied to the global population, a new study led by NYU Langone Health ...
Researchers at the University of Glasgow have developed a new way to test networks, which they claim is 25,000 times faster than traditional approaches. Shenjia Ding, a research student at the ...
Doctors have been drilled for decades on the four big risks for heart disease, which kills more Americans every year than any other illness. The fearsome foursome: hypertension, smoking, high levels ...
The clues to the heart attack that killed a Stanford researcher weren’t hiding in his anatomy — they were stored on his wrist. The man, a 76-year-old visiting scholar in geneticist Michael Snyder’s ...