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AI scientists and doctors partner to understand who is at risk for persistent post-surgical pain

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  • 2025-06-20 20:22 event
  • 2 months ago schedule
AI scientists and doctors partner to understand who is at risk for persistent post-surgical pain
One of the most common surgical complications is postoperative pain that persists long after the surgical incision has healed, striking anywhere between 10–35% of the estimated 300 million people worldwide who undergo surgery yearly.

3.077. Fecal transplant shows potential as first-line treatment for C. difficile infection

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A fecal transplant performs as well as antibiotics in treating people with a bacterial infection that can cause life-threatening diarrhea, a new study says.

3.078. New cases of meningococcal disease have been detected. What are the symptoms? Who can get vaccinated?

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Two Tasmanian women have been hospitalized with invasive meningococcal disease, bringing the number of cases nationally so far this year to 48. Health authorities are urging people to watch for symptoms and to check if they're eligible for vaccination.

3.079. Silent night: Anatomical solutions for snoring

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Snoring is often dismissed as a harmless quirk—or the punchline of bedtime jokes—but it can signal deeper issues that go beyond mere acoustic annoyance.

3.080. Retinal asymmetry between eyes may serve as early indicator of cognitive frailty

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A new study led by researchers at National Taiwan University (NTU) reveals that subtle differences in retinal thickness between the eyes—known as inter-eye retinal asymmetry—may serve as an early and accessible biomarker for cognitive frailty, a high-risk condition combining mild cognitive impairment with physical frailty.

3.081. British holidaymaker dies from rabies: What you need to know if you're going abroad this summer

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The recent death of a British woman from rabies after a holiday in Morocco is a sobering reminder of the risks posed by this almost universally fatal disease, once symptoms begin.

3.082. How to stay safe during heat waves—and the heat stroke warning signs to watch for

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Beach trips, cookouts and other outdoor activities are in full swing as summer arrives and the first widespread heat wave of 2025 hits the U.S.

3.083. Experts explain how skipping screen time, studying infants' brain growth may improve health, long-term learning

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The connections a baby's brain forms during the first two years of life, coupled with a baby's genetic makeup, offer a window into their development. Cedars-Sinai pediatric neurologists, developmental neuroscientists and brain imaging experts are working to better understand infant brain connections and genetics to improve health outcomes for future generations.

3.084. Most Medicare beneficiaries may pay more for drugs under the Inflation Reduction Act

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Making prescription drugs more affordable was a key goal of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). However, most Medicare beneficiaries may end up paying more out of pocket for medicines as Part D plans adjust to the law's new provisions, according to a new white paper from the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics.

3.085. Airborne fungal spores may help predict COVID-19 and flu surges

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Monitoring fungal spores in the outdoor air can predict surges in flu and COVID-19 infections, especially during the fall, according to a new study. The study is presented at ASM Microbe 2025 in Los Angeles.

3.086. AI scientists and doctors partner to understand who is at risk for persistent post-surgical pain

  • 2 months ago schedule
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One of the most common surgical complications is postoperative pain that persists long after the surgical incision has healed, striking anywhere between 10–35% of the estimated 300 million people worldwide who undergo surgery yearly.

3.087. Gut microbiome: A new frontier for chronic fatigue and long COVID management

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Imagine living with a persistent, debilitating fatigue that no amount of rest can alleviate, coupled with a constellation of other symptoms such as brain fog, pain, and sleep disturbances. This is the reality for millions suffering from Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS). Now, envision a similar struggle following a viral infection, a condition increasingly recognized as long COVID.

3.088. Africa battles to halt cholera cases as funding cuts hurt

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Health-funding cuts are wreaking havoc on many African countries' ability to gain control of diseases such as cholera, according to the continent's main health-advisory body.

3.089. #SkinnyTok rebranded eating disorders dangerously fast

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#SkinnyTok is dead. Or at least that's what TikTok wants you to believe after its recent ban of the hashtag promoting an extreme thin ideal. That might have appeased regulators, but it shouldn't satisfy parents of teens on the app. An army of influencers is keeping the trend alive, putting vulnerable young people in harm's way.

3.090. When data disappear: Researcher examines impact of limiting public health stats

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Tom McAndrew, a computational scientist and associate professor in Lehigh's College of Health, recently published a paper in The Lancet Digital Health, examining the consequences of rolling back public health data that researchers and health care providers rely on to make treatment decisions during the influenza season.

3.091. Human–AI collectives make the most accurate medical diagnoses, according to new study

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Artificial intelligence (AI) can effectively support doctors in making diagnoses. It makes different mistakes than humans—and this complementarity represents a previously untapped strength. An international team has now systematically demonstrated for the first time that combining human expertise with AI models leads to the most accurate open-ended diagnoses. Their paper is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

3.092. Brain organizes visuomotor associations into structured graph-like mental schemes, study finds

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Graphs, visual representations outlining the relationships between different entities, concepts or variables, can be very effective in summarizing complex patterns and information. Past psychology studies suggest that the human brain stores memories and experiences following graph-like and structured patterns, specifically as a network of associations, also referred to as cognitive graphs.

3.093. Virtual reality could help stroke survivors regain movement

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A paper published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews has found that virtual reality (VR), when used in addition to standard therapy, can help stroke survivors regain arm movement. The findings suggest that VR could be a promising tool to boost rehabilitation efforts, particularly by increasing the amount of therapy patients receive.

3.094. Inaccuracies found in key studies for blockbuster heart drug ticagrelor

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In a follow-up investigation into the multibillion-dollar drug ticagrelor, The BMJ has uncovered fresh concerns, this time in key platelet studies used in its FDA approval.

3.095. Personalized cancer vaccines slow tumor recurrence in mouse models

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Using a newly discovered byproduct of dying cancer cells, University of Wisconsin–Madison researchers are developing personalized vaccines that could help keep aggressive tumors from recurring.

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