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Couples should never go to bed angry, right? It might be time to rethink that

  • medicalxpress.com language
  • 2025-10-04 17:32 event
  • 3 hours ago schedule
Couples should never go to bed angry, right? It might be time to rethink that
It's late at night, and you have been stewing all day about something your partner did to annoy you. The time to resolve it is now because, as everyone knows, you should never go to bed angry, right?

7.449. Literally Everything These “Mean Girl” Podcasters Say About Handwashing Is Wrong

  • 3 years ago schedule
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“Sometimes with my roommates home, I'll, like, turn the water on because I'm like, I don't want them to think I'm, like, disgusting.”View Entire Post ›

7.450. My Hunt For The Perfect Travel And Toiletry Bag Combo

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From Béis to Baggu, here are some great travel and toiletry bag options for your next trip.View Entire Post ›

7.451. 16 Derm-Recommended Products To Use ASAP If You've Been Neglecting Your Skin

  • 3 years ago schedule
  • buzzfeednews.com language

It's not too late to turn it all around.View Entire Post ›

7.452. This Is The Unique Sunscreen Pam And Hailey Have Been Using

  • 3 years ago schedule
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According to Instagram, Bieber counts the multitasking formula among her empties.View Entire Post ›

7.453. Drew Barrymore Is Being Called “Real And Genuine” After Documenting Her “First Perimenopause Hot Flash” On Live TV While Interviewing Jennifer Aniston And Adam Sandler

  • 3 years ago schedule
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“I don’t know that I have ever heard a celebrity talk about a hot flash in the moment. Thank you for being so real.”View Entire Post ›

7.454. This $16 French Moisturizer Is Amazon’s Best-Kept Beauty Secret

  • 3 years ago schedule
  • buzzfeednews.com language

The Embryolisse Lait-Crème Concentré is a multi-tasking hidden gem of a facial cream.View Entire Post ›

7.455. Lila Moss Opened Up About What It Was Like Being Diagnosed With Type 1 Diabetes

  • 3 years ago schedule
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After the model opened up about her experience being diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, we asked experts about the autoimmune condition, the differences between type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and how this diagnosis can change your life.View Entire Post ›

7.456. Why Reviewers Swear By This $28 Tool For Back Pain Relief

  • 3 years ago schedule
  • buzzfeednews.com language

An acupuncturist explains how this scary-looking acupressure mat can help relieve back pain.View Entire Post ›

1. Stabilization of neuropathy scores seen after gene editing therapy for rare nerve disease

  • 18 minutes ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

University College London's National Amyloidosis Center leads a multinational team reporting that a single infusion of an in vivo gene-editing therapy (nexiguran ziclumeran) produced rapid, deep, and durable reductions in serum transthyretin for hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy, with disease measures largely stable or improved through 24 months.

2. Couples should never go to bed angry, right? It might be time to rethink that

  • 3 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

It's late at night, and you have been stewing all day about something your partner did to annoy you. The time to resolve it is now because, as everyone knows, you should never go to bed angry, right?

3. Restoring order to dividing cancer cells may halt triple negative breast cancer spread

  • 3 hours ago schedule
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Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive and hardest forms of breast cancer to treat, but a new study led by Weill Cornell Medicine suggests a surprising way to stop it from spreading. Researchers have discovered that an enzyme called EZH2 drives TNBC cells to divide abnormally, which enables them to relocate to distant organs. The preclinical study also found drugs that block EZH2 could restore order to dividing cells and thwart the spread of TNBC cells.

4. CT scan changes over one year predict outcomes in fibrotic lung disease

  • 3 hours ago schedule
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Researchers at National Jewish Health have shown that subtle increases in lung scarring, detected by an artificial intelligence-based tool on CT scans taken one year apart, are associated with disease progression and survival in patients with fibrotic interstitial lung disease. The findings, recently published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, suggest that computer-based image analysis may provide an earlier, more objective way to identify patients at highest risk for worsening disease.

5. Study of 86 chikungunya outbreaks reveals unpredictability in size and severity

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The symptoms come on quickly—acute fever, followed by debilitating joint pain that can last for months. Though rarely fatal, the chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne illness, can be particularly severe for high-risk individuals, including newborns and older adults.

6. Tiny sugars in the brain disrupt emotional circuits, fueling depression

  • 19 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Depression is a serious disorder that disrupts daily life through lethargy, sleep disturbance, and social withdrawal, and also increases the risk of suicide. The number of depression patients has steadily increased over the years, affecting more than 280 million people worldwide as of 2025. Now, researchers have uncovered a new pathological mechanism that could provide clues for the diagnosis and treatment of depression.

7. Newly discovered key switch for cellular energy balance could pave way for Parkinson's disease therapies

  • 19 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A key switch for cellular energy balance has been discovered in cells, and it could potentially become the target of new therapies for diseases ranging from Parkinson's to rare disorders caused by defects in mitochondria.

8. Concussion history in NCAA athletes yields mixed health outcomes

  • 20 hours ago schedule
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New research investigating health outcomes in NCAA athletes during their first year after leaving college sports found that some health measures were worse than expected, but others actually improved.

9. Study: Flu vaccine uptake consistently highest for Asian patients, lowest for Black patients

  • 21 hours ago schedule
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Persistent racial differences in flu vaccination uptake are seen across ages and flu seasons, according to a study published in the Oct. 3 issue of Vaccine.

10. How better software choices could cut US health care costs

  • 21 hours ago schedule
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Denied insurance claims are among the biggest challenges facing the U.S. health care system—driving up costs and leaving providers with billions in unpaid bills.

11. Chiropractic care associated with reduction in opioid use disorder in patients with low back pain

  • 21 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A new multi-institutional study, led by University Hospitals Connor Whole Health, found that adults with newly diagnosed low back pain with or without sciatica who initially received spinal manipulative therapy administered by a chiropractor were significantly less likely to be diagnosed with opioid use disorder over a two-year follow-up compared to those prescribed ibuprofen.

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