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How some people with HIV can control the virus without treatment

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  • 2025-06-12 02:50 event
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How some people with HIV can control the virus without treatment
Researchers at the Department of Medicine, Huddinge, have presented new research on how some people with HIV can control the virus without treatment. The results show that gut bacteria and a specific dipeptide can play an important role and open up new ways to prevent HIV.

2.649. Q&A: Researcher discusses mapping how nutrients move through the body to treat cancer

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When you swallow a vitamin or eat a meal, the nutrients you've ingested flow into your stomach, break down, and enter your bloodstream. But what happens next? How do nutrients move from your arteries into the cells where they actually do their jobs? What determines whether some nutrients go to the brain, while others power your immune system instead?

2.650. Hundreds of laid-off CDC employees are being reinstated

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More than 460 laid-off employees at the nation's top public health agency received notices Wednesday that they are being reinstated, according to a union representing the workers.

2.651. Older home care clients' agency can manifest as resistance and adaptation

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Older home care clients perceive themselves as capable individuals who can cope despite having daily needs for help and assistance, but this is something social and health care professionals do not always recognize, a recent study from the University of Eastern Finland shows. The study examined experiences of agency among older home care clients. Maintaining agency in daily life supports older individuals' well-being and meaningful life at home.

2.652. Shorter telomeres linked to increased risk of age-related brain diseases

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Scientists from Mass General Brigham explored the associations between telomere length—which decreases as a person ages or is exposed to unhealthy environments—and the risk for age-related brain diseases. The research team found evidence suggesting that healthier lifestyle choices could mitigate telomere length-associated risks.

2.653. Researchers challenge FDA warning on common epilepsy drug

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Rutgers Health researchers found that lamotrigine, a widely prescribed antiseizure medication, to be safe in older adults with epilepsy, contrary to a safety warning by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The study has been published in Neurology.

2.654. Neural maps used to locate rewards may be disrupted in dementia and heightened in addiction

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Imagine you're walking to work when the unspeakable occurs: Your favorite coffee shop—where you stop every day—is closed. You groggily navigate to a newly opened coffee shop a couple blocks away, which, you're pleased to discover, actually makes quite a good morning brew. Soon, you find yourself looking forward to stopping at the new location instead of the old one.

2.655. How AI can be integrated seamlessly into pathological diagnosis

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Algorithms from artificial intelligence (AI) are being used more and more frequently, including for medical diagnosis. However, their potential is barely being tapped in a number of areas. A collaborative project from Universitätsklinikum Erlangen (UKER) at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) and Gravina Hospital in Caltagirone (Italy) is showing that it does not need to be that way.

2.656. 988 crisis hotline contacted more than 16 million times between its launch and December 2024

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Opportunities remain to increase use of the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, according to a research letter published in JAMA Network Open.

2.657. Ultra-processed foods may affect the brain and lead to overeating

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Studies have linked the high consumption of ultra-processed foods with multiple diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease, and dementia. A recent international study explored the connection between ultra-processed food consumption and brain structure.

2.658. How some people with HIV can control the virus without treatment

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Researchers at the Department of Medicine, Huddinge, have presented new research on how some people with HIV can control the virus without treatment. The results show that gut bacteria and a specific dipeptide can play an important role and open up new ways to prevent HIV.

2.659. In utero exposure to climate disasters linked to changes in child brain development

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Climate disasters may be leaving invisible imprints on developing brains before birth, according to new research from The City University of New York Graduate Center (CUNY Graduate Center) and Queens College. Scientists discovered that children whose mothers experienced Superstorm Sandy during pregnancy showed distinct brain differences that could affect their emotional development for years to come.

2.660. Why caffeine might hold the key to preventing sudden infant death syndrome

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After decades of stalled national progress in reducing the rate of Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID), a category of infant mortality that includes sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), researchers at Rutgers Health have proposed an unexpected solution: Caffeine might protect babies by preventing dangerous drops in oxygen that may trigger deaths.

2.661. Protein 'referee' could hold key to stopping some breast cancers from spreading

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A University of Alberta research team has identified a key protein involved in the normal growth of mammary glands during puberty that misfires in some breast cancers, and is now searching for drugs to reverse the problem.

2.662. Large-scale study maps the first step in Alzheimer's protein aggregation

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A new large-scale study has mapped the first molecular events that drive the formation of harmful amyloid protein aggregates found in Alzheimer's disease, pointing toward a new potential therapeutic target.

2.663. Attrition rates high among lesbian, gay, bisexual medical students

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Medical school attrition rates are high among lesbian, gay, or bisexual (LGB) medical students, according to a research letter published online June 10 in JAMA Network Open.

2.664. Drug combination shows promise for early treatment after myocardial infarction

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Researchers from the Germans Trias i Pujol research institute (IGTP) have conducted a preclinical study on the effects of the drug empagliflozin, alone or in combination with sacubitril/valsartan, in the early phase following a myocardial infarction. the combination of the two showed promising results.

2.665. Health care job growth dropped during pandemic, recovered by 2024

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Health care employment growth decreased during the pandemic but recovered by 2024, according to a research letter published online June 5 in the JAMA.

2.666. Clinical trial significantly improves detection of hidden blood clots in stroke patients

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A clinical trial led by London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute (LHSCRI) and Western University's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry may enhance how medical professionals detect hidden blood clots responsible for strokes.

2.667. Cervical cancer affects not only women, but also mental health and finances of their family

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A new Swedish registry study shows that women who are affected by cervical cancer are not only at risk of mental health and financial difficulties themselves—their children and partners also appear to be negatively affected. The study is published in JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

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