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New heated drug baths provide hope for patients with stomach cancer

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Mayo Clinic researchers used a new approach to chemotherapy to more than double the typical survival rate for patients with stomach cancer and peritoneal metastasis, which is cancer that has spread to the lining of the abdominal cavity, according to a study published in the Annals of Surgical Oncology.

Stomach cancer, which is also called ...Read more

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Physician group calls for increased syphilis screening for pregnant women

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) is recommending that all pregnant individuals be screened for syphilis three times during pregnancy. The recommendation comes as cases of newborns with syphilis has spiked in recent years. In it's practice advisory, ACOG calls for three screenings, once at the first prenatal care ...Read more

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Your cellphone may be causing nearsightedness, now at epidemic levels

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Around half of the global population could need corrective lenses by 2050 — a health care burden that already costs Americans an estimated $7.2 billion annually. It’s because myopia, also known as nearsightedness, is at epidemic levels, according to Rochester Institute of Technology professor Andrew Herbert.

With May being Healthy Vision ...Read more

Night Sweats And Hot Flashes Continue For Over Two Decades

Health Advice / Keith Roach /

DEAR DR. ROACH: I am 72 years old and otherwise fairly healthy, but I am writing to you in desperation. I have talked with every doctor I have had in the past 15 years, and no one has been able to give me any help. I have had severe hot flashes for over 22 years, and I am miserable. The first eight years consisted of night sweats when I ...Read more

Vitamin D -- a hormone workhorse for your health

Vitamin D is an interesting vitamin since it's actually a hormone. It's mostly produced by exposure of your skin to sunlight -- about 10% of your body's active vitamin D comes from foods you eat. When your body produces vitamin D from the sun and absorbs it from food, the liver and kidneys convert it into the hormone calcitriol.

In your body, ...Read more

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CDC, FDA, USDA answer big questions about the growing bird flu outbreak

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Representatives with multiple agencies including the CDC, the United States Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday discussed the latest news about bird flu in the U.S.

The agencies are continuing to test milk, dairy products and meat to ensure they can not spread the virus, and working to monitor farm ...Read more

Can a 911 drone stop your bleeding? It'll fly to Florida emergencies for DIY rescues

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

A Florida county will be one of the first in the nation to dispatch a drone that responds to 911 calls.

On Wednesday, Manatee County was set to launch a new pilot program that uses a drone to deliver a defibrillator, a tourniquet, or naloxone — an opioid-overdose antidote — to emergency scenes. The program is meant to reduce response times ...Read more

Power outages linked to heat and storms are rising, and low-income communities are most at risk, as a new NYC study shows

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Many Americans think of power outages as infrequent inconveniences, but that’s quickly changing. Nationwide, major power outages have increased tenfold since 1980, largely because of an aging electrical grid and damage sustained from severe storms as the planet warms.

At the same time, electricity demand is rising as the population ...Read more

Baby orangutan born at Tampa's Busch Gardens via C-section was a rare feat

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

TAMPA, Fla. — Luna loved the ultrasound game.

The 26-year-old orangutan at Busch Gardens would come up to the mesh screening that separates the primates from the humans that care for them and happily present her belly.

Dr. Maria Spriggs, chief veterinarian at Busch Gardens, would use that play time to put an ultrasound probe on Luna’s ...Read more

Environmental Nutrition: Spring into asparagus

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Asparagus is a seasonal favorite.

The folklore

Asparagus, whose name means stalk or shoot in Greek, was first cultivated about 2,500 years ago in Greece, where it was used medicinally to treat toothaches and help prevent bee stings. Considered a delicacy since ancient times, this dainty and nutritious spear continues to be a delicious ...Read more

5 healthy reasons to crave more cauliflower

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

The goodness of cauliflower goes beyond its ability to become almost anything you can imagine in the kitchen — a crust, a “wing,” a rice, a mash, and the list goes on. Cauliflower’s mild flavor, satisfying texture, and chameleon-like versatility makes it not only a hearty and nutritious add-in as is, but also an inventive and savvy swap ...Read more

Cellulitis: How long does it take to heal on legs?

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Cellulitis is an infection of the deep layers of the skin. It develops when bacteria enter through a cut, bite, or wound — including tiny breaks in cracked, dry skin. Common skin-dwelling bacteria, Staphylococcus or Streptococcus, are the usual culprits. Although cellulitis can occur anywhere on the body, the most common location is the lower ...Read more

Mayo Clinic Q&A: What is cholangiocarcinoma and how is it treated?

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

DEAR MAYO CLINIC: My mother has been experiencing unusual and persistent fatigue, abdominal pain, and jaundice. After undergoing a CT scan, her doctor diagnosed her with cholangiocarcinoma. What is this type of cancer? And what treatment options are available?

ANSWER: Cholangiocarcinoma is a rare cancer that develops from the bile ducts, which ...Read more

Dying From a Broken Heart

Health Advice / Scott LaFee /

Between 2011 and 2018, the number of women hospitalized for heart attacks declined at a greater rate compared to men in a study of six different high-income countries. However, in all six countries, women had higher mortality rates and were less likely to receive cardiac interventions, such as catheterization or treatment to restore blood flow...Read more

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Mayo Clinic Minute: Using lasers on the brain to treat seizures

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

For roughly a third of people with epilepsy, medication does not control their seizures. Depending on where those seizures originate in the brain, laser therapy can be an option for adults and children.

It's treatment for epileptic seizures that uses a laser on the brain.

"LITT is laser interstitial thermal therapy," says Dr. Jamie Van Gompel,...Read more

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Exposed to Agent Orange at US bases, veterans face cancer without VA compensation

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

As a young GI at Fort Ord in Monterey County, California, Dean Osborn spent much of his time in the oceanside woodlands, training on soil and guzzling water from streams and aquifers now known to be contaminated with cancer-causing pollutants.

“They were marching the snot out of us,” he said, recalling his year and a half stationed on the ...Read more

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Mayo Clinic Minute: Reasons to be a living kidney donor

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Nearly 100,000 people in the U.S. are on the waiting list for kidney transplant, according to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network. Finding a donor kidney that is compatible and matches the right blood and tissue types can be the biggest challenge, especially when the donor pool isn't as large as the number of people who need a ...Read more

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Mayo Clinic Minute: Good carbs for optimal health

Health Advice / Health & Fitness /

Do you push away the breadbasket or opt out of any meal that includes macaroni? If so, chances are you are one of the millions of people watching your carbs, or carbohydrates.

Dr. Christine Nguyen, a Mayo Clinic family physician, says not all carbs are bad, and there are plenty of foods with good carbs. Fiber-rich foods like whole grains, ...Read more

Amid Meds And A New Diet, Sibo Symptoms Fail To Improve

Health Advice / Keith Roach /

DEAR DR. ROACH: I was diagnosed with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) by my gastroenterologist over three years ago. I was tested using the tube method. (I followed a diet the day before, then blew into tubes the day of.) I am so bloated that I cannot wear any of my clothes because I look as though I'm ready to deliver a baby any ...Read more

The tale of telomeres: It's never too late to prevent DNA damage

Nobel laureate Elizabeth Blackburn, says, "Telomeres are the protective caps at the ends of chromosomes ... They are like the tips of shoelaces. If you lose the tips, the ends start fraying." This "fraying" affects your ability to produce more stem cells, which are like mother cells that can turn into any other cell in your body and repair ...Read more