Fitgurú on MSN
New study raises alarms about aspartame: Long-term use may affect brain and heart health
A year-long experiment found that even low doses of aspartame—well below current safety limits—may disrupt brain energy use ...
Young minds are easily molded. Each new experience rewires a child's brain circuitry, adding and removing synaptic ...
Researchers have shown, for the first time, that a person’s beliefs about nicotine influences brain activity, producing a dose-dependent effect that was only thought to occur with pharmaceutical ...
In the first long-term and real-world reflective study of its kind, scientists have uncovered new detrimental health impacts of the artificial sweetener aspartame that echoes those found in shorter ...
ZME Science on MSN
Aspartame Is Marketed as a Safer Sugar Swap But New Research Shows Long Term Low Doses May Strain the Brain and Heart
A year-long experiment raises new doubts about the safety limits of one of the most popular artificial sweeteners.
News Medical on MSN
High-dose antibiotic does not reduce mortality in tuberculous meningitis
A higher dose of the antibiotic rifampicin does not improve survival rates for patients with tuberculous meningitis. This ...
Mount Sinai researchers have shown for the first time that a person's beliefs related to drugs can influence their own brain activity and behavioral responses in a way comparable to the dose-dependent ...
Radiation therapy is a common treatment for brain cancer. While it can effectively target and destroy cancer cells, it can also cause side effects. The side effects of radiation therapy for brain ...
Brain distribution of the MDM2 inhibitor, RG7112: Single dose escalation and repeated doses studies.
UGT1A1 genotype effects on PK, PD and toxicities of belinostat administered by 48 h continuous infusion. Exposure-response analysis from a Phase 2 study of the Syk inhibitor entospletinib in patients ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists can tune brain signals up or down to treat disorders
For decades, neurology treated the brain like a black box, nudging it with drugs and hoping symptoms would ease. Now researchers are learning to adjust the brain’s own electrical language with far ...
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