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Released: 2-May-2025 6:30 PM EDT
Psychosis Symptoms Emerge in Surprising Pattern, Researchers Find
Yale School of Medicine

Patients with psychosis have a disrupted connection to reality, often suffering from delusions and hallucinations. These symptoms have been thought to arise from the same brain processes, but a new Yale study upends this long-held belief. The new study examined the natural progression of delusions and hallucinations i...

Released: 2-May-2025 6:25 PM EDT
Skin Injury May Bring on Food Allergies
Yale School of Medicine

There’s a mysterious connection between our skin and our guts, specifically when it comes to food allergies. For reasons scientists don’t fully understand, chronic skin conditions such as eczema are linked to food allergies; while the national prevalence of childhood food allergies is only around 8%, that prevale...

Released: 2-May-2025 6:15 PM EDT
Identifying Factors Associated With Diminished Active Life Expectancy Among Older Adults
Yale School of Medicine

Most older adults prioritize retaining the ability to bathe, dress, walk, and perform household tasks independently as they age. Yet much remains to be understood about the causes of disability among this age group. In a new Yale study, ...

Newswise: UAH researchers’ climate study quantifies Urban Heat Island warming effects related to population density for the first time
Release date: 2-May-2025 6:10 PM EDT
UAH researchers’ climate study quantifies Urban Heat Island warming effects related to population density for the first time
University of Alabama Huntsville

A new research study from The University of Alabama in Huntsville, a part of The University of Alabama System, addresses the question, how much have urban areas warmed from the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect?UAH Earth System Science Center Research Scientist Dr.

Released: 2-May-2025 6:10 PM EDT
Yale Researchers Advance Work in Diagnosing and Preventing Tickborne Diseases
Yale School of Medicine

New research led by Yale School of Medicine (YSM) advances the goals of creating a diagnostic test and vaccines for tickborne diseases.

Released: 2-May-2025 6:00 PM EDT
Neutrophils in the Immune System Help Build Healthy Skin
Yale School of Medicine

Neutrophils, the most abundant immune cells in our bodies, are known for their destructive roles: killing pathogens, clearing out infections, and, sometimes to our detriment, wreaking havoc on surrounding tissues in the process.

Release date: 2-May-2025 4:55 PM EDT
Harnessing artificial intelligence to transform vision research
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

Salt Lake City, Utah — Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping the way we comprehend, detect and treat eye conditions, bringing new hope to millions worldwide. During the upcoming week (May 4 - 8) at the 2025 Annual Meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) in Salt Lake City, Utah, researchers will share breakthroughs on how AI is influencing the future of eye and vision health research and patient care, from enhancing clinical decision-making to simplifying workflows to equip patients with educational tools to create personalized care plans.

Release date: 2-May-2025 4:30 PM EDT
New brain mapping technique sheds light on Alzheimer’s development
Tulane University

Researchers at Tulane University have created a first-of-its-kind subcellular map of an area of the brain commonly affected by Alzheimer’s disease, a key step toward unraveling the mysteries of how the degenerative brain disease develops. The study illuminated the genetic mechanisms that cause the loss of brain cells that allow the disease to progress and identified a key protein as a potential target for treatment.

Newswise: GI cancer rates don’t easily represent diverse groups
Release date: 2-May-2025 2:30 PM EDT
GI cancer rates don’t easily represent diverse groups
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

Among the subpopulations, researchers also found marked differences in health outcomes, socioeconomic status, education, and immigration status that can be easily obscured when these groups are characterized as a single population, the authors wrote. These differences challenge the presumption that gastrointestinal cancers affect each subpopulation similarly, said lead author Dr. Vicki Tang.

Newswise: Social support weighted in endometrial cancer outcomes
Release date: 2-May-2025 2:25 PM EDT
Social support weighted in endometrial cancer outcomes
University of Washington School of Medicine

Newly funded research by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) will study 250 women over five years to find out how they fare after their diagnosis and the extent social support, or lack thereof, plays a part in their recovery and survival. The $6.8 million study will begin in September and continue through 2030.


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