Adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) have a persistently high risk for cardiac reoperation, according to a new study.
Haupt is a health and wellness editor at TIME. Haupt is a health and wellness editor at TIME. More than 99% of people who suffer a heart attack, stroke, or heart failure have at least one risk factor ...
Is vitamin D important for a healthy heart? This very question is the focus of research. With less than 40 percent of adults adequately supplied with the vitamin, it’s crucial to understand the ...
Enterprises have been piloting and testing different AI tools for the past few years to figure out what their adoption strategy will look like. Investors think that period of experimentation is coming ...
A new study shows that machine-learning models can accurately predict daily crop transpiration using direct plant measurements and environmental data. By training models on seven years of ...
A secret weapon that can lower cholesterol has been flying under the radar for more than 20 years. It’s called the portfolio diet—and it has been gaining followers, thanks to rising interest in ...
Reintroduction of the Cyclin A2 gene enables adult human cardiomyocytes to divide, producing functional daughter cells and promoting heart repair. The therapy uses a replication-deficient adenoviral ...
First tool to estimate percentiles of 30-year heart disease risk for adults ages 30–59 Aims to spark earlier prevention efforts amid rising diabetes and hypertension in young adults Men showed the ...
Just as saving for retirement starts early, so should protecting your heart. A new Northwestern Medicine study introduces a first-of-its-kind online calculator that uses percentiles to help younger ...
1 School of Computing and Data Science, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Boston, USA. 2 Department of Computer Science and Quantitative Methods, Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, USA. 3 ...
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for millions of deaths each year according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Early detection of these diseases ...