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Dental shame stops people seeking help for oral health issues, study warns

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  • 2025-10-10 00:20 event
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Dental shame stops people seeking help for oral health issues, study warns
Shame can lead people to avoid getting treatment for dental issues, potentially worsening oral health inequalities, a new study warns.

16. Brain 'pacemaker' helps alleviate stuttering in patient case

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While stuttering was believed to have purely psychological causes up until about 30 years ago, scientists today attribute it to a variety of factors capable of contributing to its development. For instance, several genes have been identified that increase the risk of stuttering, and anatomically, the brains of individuals with speech flow disorders show differences in neural connections and brain activity compared to those who speak fluently.

17. Monitoring stress from the surface of the body

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Today, my laboratory looks more like a scene from a sci-fi film than a psychology research space. Wires snake across tables, sensors lay carefully arranged on trays, and a bucket of ice water sits in the corner, quietly waiting its turn.

18. Running with a stroller lowers impact and potential injury risk, researchers find

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For many parents with young children, getting back into a running routine means dragging out the jogging stroller. While it's no surprise that pushing a bulky three-wheeler can feel harder and change the way you run, a new study led by researchers from Penn State Berks found that runners experience less impact per step, reducing their overall risk for injury.

19. Pan-disease atlas maps molecular fingerprints of health, disease and aging

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A new study has mapped the distinct molecular "fingerprints" that 59 diseases leave in an individual's blood protein, which could enable blood tests to discern troubling signs from those that are more common.

20. Collaborative AI passes U.S. medical exams

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A council of five AI models working together, discussing their answers through an iterative process, achieved 97%, 93%, and 94% accuracy on 325 medical exam questions spanning the three stages of the U.S. Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE), according to a study published in PLOS Medicine by researcher Yahya Shaikh of Baltimore, U.S., and colleagues.

21. Imaging technique reveals an ecosystem that determines how eggs mature and ovaries age

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The ticking of the biological clock is especially loud in the ovaries—the organs that store and release a woman's eggs. From age 25 to 40, a woman's chance of conceiving each month decreases drastically.

22. Acidic tumor environment promotes survival and growth of pancreatic cancer cells, study shows

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Tumors are not a comfortable place to live: oxygen deficiency, nutrient scarcity, and the accumulation of sometimes harmful metabolic products constantly stress cancer cells.

23. Kidney cancer drug shows promise against dangerous calcium imbalance caused by tumors

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Elevated calcium levels in the blood—a complication of kidney cancers known as hypercalcemia—may be successfully treated with a class of medications called HIF-2α inhibitors developed by UT Southwestern Medical Center, a new study shows. The findings, published in Cancer Discovery by a team at UTSW, offer hope to patients who develop this condition.

24. Studying a sex-specific role of a special enzyme in the development of diabetes

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Dr. Ahmed Lawan, an assistant professor in the College of Science at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of The University of Alabama System, has published a paper in the journal Cells that demonstrates there is a potential gender component in the development of diabetes as it relates to the function of a particular enzyme.

25. Dental shame stops people seeking help for oral health issues, study warns

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Shame can lead people to avoid getting treatment for dental issues, potentially worsening oral health inequalities, a new study warns.

26. Research highlights solutions to critical gaps in dementia and childhood cancer care

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In the United States, significant numbers of adults with dementia require long-term care services. For example, around 750,000 people who live in nursing homes have a diagnosis of dementia. However, transportation insecurity for this population has not received sufficient attention. Although long-term care facilities provide basic medical services, residents with dementia often need external, preventative, and follow-up care such as specialist visits, diagnostics, and dental or vision services. Without reliable nonemergency medical transportation, these needs may go unmet.

27. Without proper support, a diagnosis of dyslexia risks being just a label

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Whether and when to use the label "dyslexia" has been a perennial debate in education.

28. Potential link between chronic pain, immune condition found

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University of Arizona researchers may have uncovered a connection between chronic pain and a somewhat uncommon immune condition, opening the door to future research on immune biomarkers for chronic pain.

29. Hormone replacement therapy may help restore immunity in menopausal women

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A study led by researchers at Queen Mary University of London has found that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may help reverse changes in the immune system caused by menopause, potentially boosting immune health. The research reveals new evidence that menopause significantly alters women's immune system, increasing their vulnerability to infections.

30. Surgery may not be required for some breast lesions, research suggests

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Researchers at King's have found that certain breast lesions identified during routine screening may not always require removal. The findings could help reduce unnecessary procedures while maintaining high standards of patient safety.

31. Study reveals a link between World Trade Center toxic exposures and lung cancer

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The health risks from toxic exposures at Ground Zero of the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks are well documented, and diseases caused by those exposures continue to plague WTC responders as we approach 25 years since 9/11. A new study, led by researchers affiliated with the Stony Brook WTC Health and Wellness Program, centers on responder disease incidence for one of the deadliest cancers—lung cancer.

32. Why social connection matters to your health

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It might sound like a contradiction, but if you're feeling lonely, you're not alone.

33. Three bathroom items you shouldn't really share, according to an expert

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Imagine you're away from home but forgot to pack your towel, razor or toothbrush.

34. 'Smart insulin' shows promise in reducing hypoglycemia bouts

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Researchers at the Indiana University School of Medicine have discovered a new way to regulate blood glucose levels using a lab-designed protein, possibly opening the door to a new treatment avenue for people with type 1 diabetes.

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