Time-restricted eating helps to improve diabetes outcomes
By
HealthDay News
Sep 15, 2024
The findings were independent of energy intake and based on an eight-hour eating window, regardless of time of day.
Once-weekly efsitora noninferior to degludec for type 2 diabetes
By
HealthDay News
Sep 13, 2024
Once-weekly efsitora was noninferior to once-daily degludec for a decrease in the mean glycated hemoglobin level.
Racial differences seen in pain Rx for older adults with hip fracture
By
HealthDay News
Sep 12, 2024
Black beneficiaries have lower average doses in the first 90 days.
Upper GI mucosal damage tied to later Parkinson’s disease diagnosis
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 11, 2024
The authors say that increased vigilance is warranted for patients with mucosal damage.
Many women continue using menopausal hormone therapy beyond age 65 years
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 11, 2024
The study shows some postmenopausal women have valid reasons to keep taking hormones.
No advantage seen with long-term oxygen therapy for 24 versus 15 hours/day
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 10, 2024
For chronic, severe hypoxemia at rest, the risk for hospitalization or death within one year was comparable for oxygen therapy of 24 or 15 hours/day.
Low-dose triple-pill protocol lowers BP in Black Africans with hypertension
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 10, 2024
The mean home systolic blood pressure was lower with the triple-pill protocol versus the standard-care protocol at month 6.
Empagliflozin confers kidney-protective benefits after acute MI
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 09, 2024
A reduced risk was seen for total hospitalizations for heart failure, total adverse events of heart failure or all-cause mortality.
Adjunctive IV argatroban, eptifibatide do not cut disability after stroke
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 06, 2024
The findings were seen among patients with acute ischemic stroke who were treated with intravenous thrombolysis within three hours after symptom onset.
Psychological resilience protects against earlier death in older adults
By
Haymarket Media
Sep 05, 2024
The findings were seen when adjusting for demographics, clinical factors and health-related behaviors.