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81

First global guidelines for pregnancy and inflammatory bowel disease developed

For women with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), pregnancy can be an uncertain time due to limited clinical data about how IBD medications impact pregnancy outcomes and infants who have been exposed to IBD medications in utero. As a matter of policy, pregnant women are excluded from clinical trials of experimental therapies for IBD and when […]

82

Amino acid glutamine important for eye health, finds study

The retina places a large energy demand on the body, in part due to the activity of photoreceptors. These specialized cells are responsible for receiving light and transmitting visual information to the brain. Photoreceptor death is the cause of vision loss in many retinal diseases, and there are no effective therapies that improve their survival. […]

83

Pilot study provides foundation for understanding how music therapy improves pain after pancreatic surgery

A study from University Hospitals Connor Whole Health has found that it was feasible to conduct a live music-assisted relaxation and imagery session among patients admitted for pancreatic surgery. Participants described the music therapy intervention as beneficial and useful throughout recovery while also providing feedback to improve the intervention and data collection procedures moving forward. […]

84

Resilience: What protects infants from sudden infant death syndrome?

The sudden, unexpected and medically unexplained death of an infant during sleep, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), remains to be fully understood. A European research group has now presented a new explanatory model in the current issue of the scientific journal Human Nature. This model focuses primarily on the exciting question of what role the […]

85

From Womb to Wellness: The Impact of Prenatal and Perinatal Factors on Cardiovascular Health in Childhood, study finds

Associations between prenatal and perinatal factors and cardiovascular health (CVH) trajectories in children from childhood through adolescence were investigated, emphasizing the significance of the American Heart Association’s Life’s Essential 8 (LE8) framework. This framework includes four behavioral (diet, physical activity, sleep duration, nicotine exposure) and four biological factors (BMI, blood pressure, glucose, cholesterol) assessed on […]

86

‘Inflammatory’ diet during pregnancy may raise child’s diabetes type 1 risk

A diet high in foods with the potential to promote low grade inflammation during pregnancy may raise that child’s risk of developing type 1 diabetes, suggests Danish research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. This dietary pattern was associated with a 16% heightened risk for every unit increase in a dietary […]

87

Embracing Hope: Study assesses Impact of Skin-to-Skin Contact on Neurodevelopment in Preterm Infants

Preterm neonates face a heightened risk of neurodevelopmental impairments, and understanding protective factors against the adverse effects of preterm birth is critical. Recent study aimed to determine if immediate skin-to-skin contact (SSC) provides beneficial neurodevelopmental outcomes in these infants during early childhood. A total of 108 very preterm neonates, aged 28 to 31 weeks at […]

88

New research supports Ivermectin as an effective strategy to control malaria transmission

Ivermectin administered to the whole population significantly reduces malaria transmission, offering new hope in the fight against the disease. The BOHEMIA trial, the largest study on ivermectin for malaria to date, showed a 26% reduction in new malaria infection on top of existing bed nets, providing strong evidence of ivermectin’s potential as a complementary tool […]

89

Vitamin D supplementation reduced IBD-related hospitalizations and corticosteroid use: Study

A new study published in the journal of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology showed that the possibility of vitamin D supplementation as an inexpensive adjuvant in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was supported by its association with a decrease in IBD-related ED visits, hospitalizations, and corticosteroid use. Providing vitamin D is undoubtedly the most […]

90

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

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. The hypothesis, published in […]