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Disrupted sleep in teens identified as suicide risk factor

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  • 2025-10-23 11:10 event
  • 5 hours ago schedule
Disrupted sleep in teens identified as suicide risk factor
Teenagers who don't get enough sleep on school nights or have interrupted sleep are at greater risk of suicide, new research from the University of Warwick has found.

8.572. 16 Derm-Recommended Products To Use ASAP If You've Been Neglecting Your Skin

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

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

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According to Instagram, Bieber counts the multitasking formula among her empties.View Entire Post ›

8.574. 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

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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 ›

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

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

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

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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 ›

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

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

1. Experts present scientific evidence to support classification of postpartum psychosis as a distinct disease

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An international panel of leading experts on women's mental health is recommending that postpartum psychosis be recognized as a distinct category of mental illness and classified accordingly within standardized medical coding systems.

2. Gastroesophageal reflux disease linked to increased risk for incident acute myocardial infarction

  • 3 hours ago schedule
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Patients with preexisting gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) have an increased risk for incident acute myocardial infarction (AMI), according to a study published online Oct. 13 in JGH Open.

3. Sentinel lymph node biopsy noninferior to lymphadenectomy in cervical cancer

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For patients with early-stage cervical cancer, sentinel lymph node biopsy alone is noninferior to lymphadenectomy with respect to disease-free survival, according to a study published online Oct. 15 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

4. Disrupted sleep in teens identified as suicide risk factor

  • 5 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Teenagers who don't get enough sleep on school nights or have interrupted sleep are at greater risk of suicide, new research from the University of Warwick has found.

5. Drug that stops tumors' blood supply could help kids with bone cancer live longer

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Ewing sarcoma is one of the most common bone cancers seen in children, and if it spreads, it can be deadly. One study found that under a quarter of children with multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma survived five years after their diagnosis.

6. IBS affects women more than men—here's why

  • 10 hours ago schedule
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For a while, the "hot girls have stomach problems" trend on social media has been a way for women to destigmatize irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

7. Semaglutide helps heart regardless of how much weight lost, study reveals

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Anti-obesity medication semaglutide may help to prevent heart attacks and other major cardiac events regardless of how much weight people lose while taking the drug, according to a new study led by a UCL researcher.

8. Early life sugar restriction linked to lasting heart benefits in adulthood

  • 10 hours ago schedule
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Restricted sugar intake during early life is linked to lower risks of several heart conditions in adulthood, including heart attack, heart failure, and stroke, finds a study published by The BMJ using data from the end of UK sugar rationing in 1953.

9. Report provides global picture of wide inequalities in care for women's cancers

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One in five women with breast or cervical cancer in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are diagnosed at an early stage, compared with more than one in three in high-income countries (HICs), new research suggests. For ovarian cancer, the proportion of women diagnosed with early-stage disease was generally lower than 20% (one in five) worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in LMICs.

10. Alterations in gut microbiota linked to health-related quality of life outcomes in IBD

  • 12 hours ago schedule
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For patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), alterations in gut microbiota are associated with health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes, according to a study published online Sept. 29 in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

11. PET imaging of inflammation predicts recovery, guides therapy after heart attack

  • 12 hours ago schedule
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A new approach to PET imaging offers a promising way for physicians to promptly identify patients who are at risk for poor functional recovery after a heart attack, according to new research published in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

12. A less invasive, more effective method to analyze immunotherapy efficacy

  • 12 hours ago schedule
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Immunotherapy has been one of the most promising advancements in cancer treatment. However, consistency in immunotherapy treatment effectiveness remains a formidable challenge. Now, Cancer Center at Illinois member Kun Wang, Binbin Wang, a post-doctoral researcher at the National Cancer Institute, and Robert Saddawi-Konefka, a physician-scientist at MD Anderson Cancer Center (formerly at UCSD) are taking the guesswork out of cancer treatments through a predictive model for determining immunotherapy treatment effectiveness.

13. Immune cell pockets found in lymphoma tumors offer new targets for personalized therapies

  • 12 hours ago schedule
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By analyzing the tumor environment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have identified seven distinct cellular microenvironments, providing a framework to develop therapies that will engage a patient's immune system to attack cancer cells. Each microenvironment showed a different mix of cells and its own pattern of communication between tumor B-cells and immune cells.

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