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Newer, Pricier Prostate Cancer Radiation No Better Than Old: Study

Newer, Pricier Prostate Cancer Radiation No Better Than Old: Study

Posted 2:00 PM 5/20/2013 by By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, May 20 (HealthDay News) -- The costly form of radiation therapy that has become the norm for prostate cancer in the United States may be no better than the older, cheaper variety -- at least for some men, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that among more than 1,000 U.S. men (More)

5/18/2013

New Device May Show Doctors More of the Colon

New Device May Show Doctors More of the Colon

Posted 10:00 AM 5/18/2013 by By Brenda Goodman
HealthDay Reporter

SATURDAY, May 18 (HealthDay News) -- A new device that gives doctors a better view during colonoscopies may help them miss fewer suspicious growths during those exams, a new study shows.

Colonoscopies are the recommended screening tests for colorectal cancer, which is the second leading (More)

5/17/2013

Heart Attack? Doctors Soon May Have an App for That

Heart Attack? Doctors Soon May Have an App for That

Posted 12:00 PM 5/17/2013 by By Brenda Goodman
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, May 17 (HealthDay News) -- There are apps that turn your smartphone into a metal detector, a musical instrument and a GPS system, and now there's an app that may help doctors save your life if you're having a heart attack.

The app, which was designed by engineers and critical care (More)

5/16/2013

High-Frequency Noise Boosts Math Skills in Study

High-Frequency Noise Boosts Math Skills in Study

Posted 10:00 AM 5/16/2013 by By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Could you someday zap your way to a smarter brain? Preliminary new research suggests that it's a possibility: Scientists report that they were able to improve the math-calculation skills of college students by buzzing their brains with doses of random (More)

5/14/2013

Costlier Heart Device May Not Be Worth It, Study Suggests

Costlier Heart Device May Not Be Worth It, Study Suggests

Posted 2:00 PM 5/14/2013 by By Brenda Goodman
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, May 14 (HealthDay News) -- Patients prone to dangerously fast heart rhythms may get just as much help and have fewer complications with less-expensive implanted defibrillators that run one wire to the heart instead of two, a new study shows.

Implantable cardioverter (More)

5/9/2013

iPads Could Affect Implanted Heart Devices, Early Study Finds

iPads Could Affect Implanted Heart Devices, Early Study Finds

Posted 10:00 AM 5/9/2013 by By Barbara Bronson Gray
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, May 9 (HealthDay News) -- Sprawled out on the couch, reading the news on your iPad, you'd never think you could be putting yourself at risk. But you might be, if you happen to have an implanted heart device.

Magnetic interference could alter the settings and even deactivate the (More)

Swimming Pools May Pose Hazard for People With Heart Devices

Wireless Pacemaker Shows Promise in Early Study

5/7/2013

Programming Implanted Defibrillators to React More Slowly Might Be Safer: Study

Programming Implanted Defibrillators to React More Slowly Might Be Safer: Study

Posted 2:00 PM 5/7/2013 by By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, May 7 (HealthDay News) -- By slowing down the programmed response rate on implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), doctors can reduce the number of shocks these devices deliver without causing a significant increase in the risk of fainting or death, new research suggests.

(More)...
5/2/2013

Brain Wiring May Explain Unhealthy Obsession With Looks

Brain Wiring May Explain Unhealthy Obsession With Looks

Posted 2:00 PM 5/2/2013 by Robert Preidt

THURSDAY, May 2 (HealthDay News) -- Abnormal brain wiring may explain why some people become so fixated on their appearance that their obsession makes it hard for them to function, a new study suggests.

The study included people with body dysmorphic disorder, a mental illness that causes (More)

Future 'Smart' Objects Could Chat While They Help

Longer Wait for Mammogram After Benign Breast Biopsy May Be Warranted

Brain Differences Seen in Kids With Conduct Problems

5/1/2013

Kelly the Robot Helps Kids Tackle Autism

Kelly the Robot Helps Kids Tackle Autism

Posted 10:00 AM 5/1/2013 by By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 1 (HealthDay News) -- Using a kid-friendly robot during behavioral therapy sessions may help some children with autism gain better social skills, a preliminary study suggests.

The study, of 19 children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), found that kids tended to do (More)

4/30/2013

Implants May Delay Breast Cancer Detection, Raise Death Risk

Implants May Delay Breast Cancer Detection, Raise Death Risk

Posted 5:00 PM 4/30/2013 by By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, April 30 (HealthDay News) -- Women with breast implants could run the risk of having breast cancer diagnosed at later stages, when survival might be worse, according to Canadian researchers.

Breast implants can make it more difficult to diagnose breast cancer early because they (More)

Paralyzed Patient Moves Prosthetic Arm With Her Mind

4/29/2013

Why Johnny Can't Add, Even After Tutoring

Why Johnny Can't Add, Even After Tutoring

Posted 2:00 PM 4/29/2013 by Robert Preidt

MONDAY, April 29 (HealthDay News) -- Whether your child will benefit from math tutoring may depend more on brain structure than intelligence, a small study suggests.

The size and wiring of certain brain structures predicted how much a child would benefit from (More)

4/26/2013

Interns' Schedules Shortchange Patients, Study Suggests

Interns' Schedules Shortchange Patients, Study Suggests

Posted 2:00 PM 4/26/2013 by Robert Preidt

FRIDAY, April 26 (HealthDay News) -- Doctors-in-training spend too little time with patients, a small new study suggests.

Researchers tracked 29 first-year medical interns at Baltimore's two large academic medical centers for three weeks during January 2012, for a total of nearly 900 (More)

4/24/2013

'Off-the-Shelf' Artificial Blood Vessels Show Promise

'Off-the-Shelf' Artificial Blood Vessels Show Promise

Posted 12:00 PM 4/24/2013 by Robert Preidt

WEDNESDAY, April 24 (HealthDay News) -- Artificial blood vessels may one day reduce some complications of dialysis treatment in people with kidney failure, according to the results of early research in animals.

These so-called "off-the-shelf" blood vessels were implanted in the primates (More)

Can You Feel Empathy for a Robot?

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