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Sleep practices during infant illnesses may increase risk of sudden infant death

  • medicalxpress.com language
  • 2025-10-19 01:40 event
  • 17 hours ago schedule
Sleep practices during infant illnesses may increase risk of sudden infant death
When a child falls ill, caregivers often change how and where the infant sleeps—wanting to keep them close through the night. But new research from Johns Hopkins Children's Center suggests that some of these changes—although well-intentioned—contradict proven safe sleep practices for infants, and may do more harm than good.

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1. Drug combo cuts risk of death in advanced prostate cancer by 40%, clinical trial finds

  • 3 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Men whose prostate cancer returns after surgery or radiation therapy may now benefit from a new drug combination shown in clinical trials to cut the risk of death by more than 40%.

2. Music could help ease pain from surgery or illness. Scientists are listening

  • 17 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Nurse Rod Salaysay works with all kinds of instruments in the hospital: a thermometer, a stethoscope and sometimes his guitar and ukulele.

3. Sleep practices during infant illnesses may increase risk of sudden infant death

  • 17 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

When a child falls ill, caregivers often change how and where the infant sleeps—wanting to keep them close through the night. But new research from Johns Hopkins Children's Center suggests that some of these changes—although well-intentioned—contradict proven safe sleep practices for infants, and may do more harm than good.

4. Which cooking oil is best? Asking how they're made could tell you more

  • 19 hours ago schedule
  • medicalxpress.com language

Vegetable oils are everywhere, and almost everyone has an opinion about them. From clever marketing in supermarket aisles to headlines about deforestation, they have become both the heroes and villains of the modern diet. But vegetable oils are vital to our lives and can help to address food insecurity.

5. Social media usage linked to lower cognitive performance in preteens

  • 23 hours ago schedule
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Increasing social media usage among children has been linked to a decline in cognitive performance. A JAMA study involving 6,554 adolescents aged 9–13 found that those who spent more time on social media scored lower in oral reading, memory, and vocabulary tests.

6. New monoclonal antibody prevents malaria infection in early clinical trial

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Malaria remains one of the leading causes of death among children in sub-Saharan Africa, claiming more than 600,000 lives each year worldwide with limited efficacy in currently available treatments and vaccines. Now a new early-stage clinical trial found that a novel monoclonal antibody provided dose-dependent full protection against the malaria parasite with minimal side effects.

7. Oral drug combination extends progression-free survival in advanced ER-positive breast cancer

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  • medicalxpress.com language

Patients with estrogen-receptor-positive HER-2-negative advanced breast cancer showed significantly improved progression-free survival when treated with an oral combination regimen that includes giredestrant, a novel, next-generation selective estrogen receptor degrader and full antagonist, compared to a standard combination approach. These findings, from the phase 3 evERA Breast Cancer study, are presented today by Dr. Erica Mayer of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at the annual meeting of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) in Berlin, Germany.

8. Lab-grown brains with all major cell types support next-generation therapy research

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  • medicalxpress.com language

A new 3D human brain tissue platform developed by MIT researchers is the first to integrate all major brain cell types, including neurons, glial cells and the vasculature into a single culture. Grown from individual donors' induced pluripotent stem cells, these models—dubbed Multicellular Integrated Brains (miBrains)—replicate key features and functions of human brain tissue, are readily customizable through gene editing, and can be produced in quantities that support large-scale research.

9. How lifestyle and environment reshape the sperm epigenome and why it matters for fertility, embryos and child health

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  • medicalxpress.com language

A review in Clinical Epigenetics synthesizes growing evidence that paternal lifestyle and environmental exposures such as diet, obesity, smoking, endocrine-disrupting chemicals, and stress alter sperm epigenetic marks (DNA methylation, histone retention, and small non-coding RNAs). These changes can influence sperm quality and fertilizing ability, early embryo development, assisted reproduction outcomes, and long-term health risks in offspring.

10. How the auditory cortex syncs with behavior to help the brain become a better listener

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  • medicalxpress.com language

When we are engaged in a task, our brain's auditory system changes how it works. One of the main auditory centers of the brain, the auditory cortex, is filled with neural activity that is not sound-driven—rather, this activity times the task, each neuron ticking at a different moment during task performance.

11. Stringent climate policies could offer major health and economic gains by 2030

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  • medicalxpress.com language

Air pollution is one of the world's leading health risks, contributing to nearly one in eight deaths globally. A new study published in Science Advances by the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC) shows that stringent climate policies designed to avoid temporarily exceeding 1.5°C warming could prevent hundreds of thousands of premature deaths while avoiding trillions of dollars in economic damages.

12. How immune cells deliver their deadly cargo: An unexpected connection to lipid metabolism

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  • medicalxpress.com language

When immune cells strike, precision is everything. New research reveals how natural killer and T cells orchestrate the release of toxic granules—microscopic packages that destroy virus-infected or cancerous cells.

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