NEW YORK (AP) -- Aggressively treating diabetes doesn't prevent heart problems and deaths any better than standard treatment for lowering blood sugar, Australian researchers reported Friday....
... looks set to add an information-age approach to diagnosing heart problems. The technique could circumvent the problem of the failing stethoscope skills of medical graduates and reduce errors of ...
... 'Aaaah.' But, research published in the inaugural issue of the International Journal of Medical Engineering and Informatics looks set to add an information-age approach to diagnosing heart problems...
... also showed that treatment with the drug pravastatin reduced the number of fatal and non-fatal heart problems more effectively amongst the group of patients with the most damaged kidneys—although the ...
... conditions like diabetes, which are commonly associated with heart problems" says lead author Dr Sandra ... average age of 67. The remaining 38% had heart disease and type 2 diabetes. They were slightly ...
... well below national limits, is associated with an increased risk of hospitalization for the elderly with heart problems, according to a study published today in Circulation: Journal of the American ...
... them recognize atypical symptoms, or realize that someone their age could even be at risk for a heart problem. We also learned much more about their experiences with the healthcare system in terms of ...
... brain and increased risks for heart problems. To understand the way that marijuana might cause these side ... levels. These findings might explain why marijuana users suffer from brain and cardiac problems ...
Children who survive cancer face a much greater risk of heart problems later in life than their brothers and sisters who did not have cancer, new research shows....
... significantly higher levels of diabetes, blood pressure and heart problems. For example, 40 per cent of men in Cluster Five reported problems with cardiovascular disease, compared with less then ...
... of the studies also showed that cholesterol-lowering medications could cut the risk of heart problems by about one-third—and suggested that Viagra and other compounds in the same drug family might ...
... cholesterol levels were not at increased risk of developing heart problems while taking hormones (estrogen ... health risks and benefits, including coronary heart disease, stroke, venous thrombosis, breast ...
... In the majority of cases the athletes appear healthy and there is no previous clinical sign of heart problems. The clinical usefulness of pre-screening programmes to identify people at high risk has ...
Athletes who take part in competitive sport should be screened for potentially fatal heart problems before they compete, according to a study.
... stem cells may offer an option in repairing genetic heart problems," says Satsuki Yamada, M.D., ... reproduced prominent features of human malignant heart failure in a series of genetically altered mice. ...