Domain EYEION.com for sale! This premium domain is available now at Kadomain.com

My shins hurt after running. Could it be shin splints?

  • medicalxpress.com language
  • 2025-06-30 23:04 event
  • 2 months ago schedule
My shins hurt after running. Could it be shin splints?
If you've started running for the first time, started again after a break, or your workout is more intense, you might have felt it. A dull, nagging ache down your shins after you exercise.

2.766. One in three Florida third graders have untreated cavities: How parents can protect their children's teeth

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

"He hides his smile in every school photo," Jayden's mother told me, holding up a picture of her 6-year-old son.

2.767. How the brain supports social processing as people age

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Because aging weakens cognitive skills, older people can struggle to read difficult social cues. A brain region involved in attention and arousal—the locus coeruleus (LC)—helps with complex tasks, and its connections to the cortex may adapt as humans age to support cognition.

2.768. Using music to explore the dynamics of emotions

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

How does the human brain track emotions and support transitions between these emotions? In a new eNeuro paper, Matthew Sachs and colleagues, from Columbia University, used music and an advanced approach for assessing brain activity to shed light on the context dependence and fluctuating nature of emotions.

2.769. From sore muscles to smartwatches and stubborn belly fat: Answers to six of the most common fitness questions

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

In a world flooded with fitness fads and "quick-fix" workout plans, solid evidence can often get drowned out. Yet the science is clear: jogging for just five to ten minutes a day can lower your risk of dying from heart disease and even reduce your overall risk of dying from any cause. This kind of research rarely gets the attention it deserves.

2.770. What happens to your brain when you watch videos online at faster speeds than normal

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Many of us have gotten into the habit of listening to podcasts, audiobooks and other online content at increased playback speeds. For younger people, it might even be the norm. One survey of students in California, for instance, showed that 89% changed the playback speed of online lectures, while there have been numerous articles in the media about how common speedy viewing has become.

2.771. Love summer but hate winter? Here's why your mood shifts so much with the seasons

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Summer is the UK's best-loved season. It's easy to see why, with the warmer, sunnier weather it brings. But the temperature isn't the only reason people prefer midsummer to the dark days of winter. Many also report their mood is better during the warmer months.

2.772. Socioeconomic status can affect spoken language success in deaf children with cochlear implants

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A recent study of outcomes in infants and young deaf children with cochlear implants (implanted electronic hearing device), suggests that socioeconomic status (SES) plays a major role in whether spoken language becomes their primary communication mode. The researchers found that communication primarily using spoken language occurred in 85% of commercially insured children with cochlear implants compared to 33% of Medicaid-eligible children. Results were published in the journal Laryngoscope.

2.773. Parkinson's drug reduces symptoms in treatment-resistant depression, clinical trial finds

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A drug used for Parkinson's disease has been shown to be effective in reducing the symptoms of difficult to treat depression, according to a study led by the University of Oxford.

2.774. Nestle, other food companies vow to ban artificial colors

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Nestle has joined a growing list of major food companies pledging to voluntarily eliminate artificial colors from their U.S. products by the middle of next year amid mounting health concerns.

2.775. My shins hurt after running. Could it be shin splints?

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

If you've started running for the first time, started again after a break, or your workout is more intense, you might have felt it. A dull, nagging ache down your shins after you exercise.

2.776. Can sweets be addictive? First validated tool aims to measure the behavior

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Why is it so hard to stop at just one cookie? For many people, sweet foods like chocolate, pastries, and candy aren't just a treat—they're a source of craving, guilt and emotional struggle. A newly published pilot study introduces the FitMIND Foundation Sweets Addiction Scale (FFSAS)—the first validated tool developed specifically to measure addiction-like behaviors related to sweets.

2.777. Researchers find serious flaws in trials with adult ADHD patients

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Millions of adults around the world are diagnosed with ADHD every year, and there is a great need for research in the field. However, much clinical research on adult ADHD suffers from serious methodological shortcomings that make it difficult to use the results in practice, researchers from the University of Copenhagen and the University of Sao Paulo show in a new study.

2.778. Psoriasis patients seeking unverified dietary advice on social media, researchers warn

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

U.K. adults with psoriasis may be compromising their health and risking exacerbating their skin condition by seeking unverified dietary advice on social media, Herts researchers have warned.

2.779. Immersive virtual reality shows plants and green decor in hospital rooms may aid stress recovery

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A study from Texas A&M University reveals that hospital rooms designed with natural elements—like indoor plants, green decor and views of green nature—significantly enhance relaxation and mental clarity in simulated patients, even when experienced through virtual reality (VR).

2.780. Neuroscientists remain steadfastly uncertain about how the brain encodes memory

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Researchers from Monash University, in collaboration with the European Biostasis Foundation and Apex Neuroscience, have revealed that although most neuroscientists agree that long-term memories depend primarily on neuronal connectivity patterns, significant uncertainties persist regarding precisely how these memories are structurally encoded.

2.781. Discovery of key brain repair mechanism in vascular dementia reveals promising therapeutic target

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A new study from UCLA Health has uncovered how inflammation in brain blood vessels exacerbates damage in vascular dementia and demonstrated that targeting this process with a repurposed drug can promote brain repair and functional recovery in mice.

2.782. A world-first clinical trial is studying exactly what works for IBS (and how)

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (commonly known as IBS) affects about 1 in 5 Australians. It's a chronic and often debilitating condition, with symptoms including abdominal pain, bloating, constipation, diarrhea and unpredictable bowel movements.

2.783. COVID-19 pandemic linked to surge in digestive disorders, new study finds

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A study led by Cedars-Sinai investigators has uncovered a significant uptick in chronic digestive disorders, like irritable bowel syndrome, during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study findings, published in the journal Neurogastroenterology & Motility, highlight a potential link between pandemic-related stress on the gut–brain axis.

2.784. AI model spots gastric cancer on routine CT scans with high accuracy, outperforming radiologists

  • 2 months ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

A collaboration of leading Chinese research institutions has developed an artificial intelligence-based method called GRAPE, demonstrating high accuracy in detecting gastric cancer from routine noncontrast CT scans.

Cookie Policy

We use cookies and similar technologies to help the site provide a better user experience. By using the website you agree to our Cookie Policy, Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.